80_FR_17203 80 FR 17142 - Registration and Financial Security Requirements for Brokers of Property and Freight Forwarders; Association of Independent Property Brokers and Agents' Exemption Application

80 FR 17142 - Registration and Financial Security Requirements for Brokers of Property and Freight Forwarders; Association of Independent Property Brokers and Agents' Exemption Application

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 61 (March 31, 2015)

Page Range17142-17147
FR Document2015-07353

FMCSA denies an application from the Association of Independent Property Brokers and Agents (AIPBA) for an exemption for all property brokers and freight forwarders from the $75,000 bond provision included in section 32918 of the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21), now codified in 49 U.S.C. 13906. AIPBA filed its request pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 13541 on August 14, 2013. On December 26, 2013, FMCSA published a notice in the Federal Register requesting comments from all interested parties on AIPBA's exemption application. After reviewing the public comments, the Agency has concluded that the exemption should be denied on the basis that 49 U.S.C.13541 does not give FMCSA the authority to essentially nullify a statutory provision by exempting the entire class of persons subject to the provision. Furthermore, even if the Agency had the authority to issue such a blanket exemption, AIPBA's exemption application does not meet the factors provided in section 13541 because (1) the new $75,000 bond requirement is necessary to carry out the National Transportation Policy at 49 U.S.C.13101, (2) there has been no showing that the $75,000 requirement ``is not needed to protect shippers from the abuse of market power'' and (3) the requested exemption is not in the public interest.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 61 (Tuesday, March 31, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 61 (Tuesday, March 31, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 17142-17147]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-07353]


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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration

[FMCSA-2013-0513]


Registration and Financial Security Requirements for Brokers of 
Property and Freight Forwarders; Association of Independent Property 
Brokers and Agents' Exemption Application

AGENCY: Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA).

ACTION: Notice of denial of application for exemption.

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SUMMARY: FMCSA denies an application from the Association of 
Independent Property Brokers and Agents (AIPBA) for an exemption for 
all property brokers and freight forwarders from the $75,000 bond 
provision included in section 32918 of the Moving Ahead for Progress in 
the 21st Century Act (MAP-21), now codified in 49 U.S.C. 13906. AIPBA 
filed its request pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 13541 on August 14, 2013. On 
December 26, 2013, FMCSA published a notice in the Federal Register 
requesting comments from all interested parties on AIPBA's exemption 
application. After reviewing the public comments, the Agency has 
concluded that the exemption should be denied on the basis that 49 
U.S.C.13541 does not give FMCSA the authority to essentially nullify a 
statutory provision by exempting the entire class of persons subject to 
the provision. Furthermore, even if the Agency had the authority to 
issue such a blanket exemption, AIPBA's exemption application does not 
meet the factors provided in section 13541 because (1) the new $75,000 
bond requirement is necessary to carry out the National Transportation 
Policy at 49 U.S.C.13101, (2) there has been no showing that the 
$75,000 requirement ``is not needed to protect shippers from the abuse 
of market power'' and (3) the requested exemption is not in the public 
interest.

DATES: This decision is effective March 31, 2015.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Thomas Yager, Chief of Driver and 
Carrier Operations, (202) 366-4001 or [email protected], FMCSA, 
Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., Washington, DC 
20590.

ADDRESSES: For access to the docket to read background documents, 
including those referenced in this document, or to read comments 
received, go to:
     Regulations.gov, http://www.regulations.gov, at any time 
and insert FMCSA-2013-0513 in the ``Keyword'' box, and then click 
``Search.''
     Docket Management Facility, Room W12-140, DOT Building, 
1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., Washington, DC 20590. You may view the docket 
online by visiting the facility between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday 
through Friday except Federal holidays.

Viewing Comments and Documents

    AIPBA's exemption application and all public comments are available 
in the public docket. To view comments filed in this docket, go to 
http://www.regulations.gov and click on the ``Read Comments'' box in 
the upper right hand side of the screen. Then, in the ``Keyword'' box, 
insert ``FMCSA-2013-0513'' and click ``Search.'' Next, click ``Open 
Docket Folder'' in the ``Actions'' column. Finally, in the ``Title'' 
column, click on the document you would like to review. If you do not 
have access to the Internet, you may view the docket by visiting the 
Docket Management Facility at the address above.

Privacy Act

    In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c), DOT solicits comments from the 
public to better inform its rulemaking process. DOT posts these 
comments, without edit, including any personal information the 
commenter provides, to www.regulations.gov, as described in the system 
of records notice (DOT/ALL-14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at 
www.dot.gov/privacy.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Legal Basis for the Exemption Application and Proceeding

    Section 13541(a) of title 49 of the United States Code (49 U.S.C. 
13541) requires the Secretary of Transportation (Secretary) to exempt a 
person, class of persons, or a transaction or service from the 
application, in whole or in part, of a provision of 49 U.S.C., Subtitle 
IV, Part B (Chapters 131-149), or to use the exemption authority to 
modify the application of a provision of 49 U.S.C. Chapters 131-149 as 
it applies to such person, class, transaction, or service when the 
Secretary finds that the application of the provision:
     Is not necessary to carry out the transportation policy of 
49 U.S.C. 13101

[[Page 17143]]

     Is not needed to protect shippers from the abuse of market 
power or that the transaction or service is of limited scope; and
     Is in the public interest.
The exemption authority provided by section 13541 ``may not be used to 
relieve a person from the application of, and compliance with, any law, 
rule, regulation, standard, or order pertaining to cargo loss and 
damage [or] insurance . . . .'' 49 U.S.C. 13541(e)(1).
    AIPBA seeks an exemption from the $75,000 financial security 
requirements for brokers and freight forwarders at 49 U.S.C. 13906 (b) 
& (c). Section 13906 is located in 49 U.S.C. Subtitle IV Part B 
(chapter 139) and therefore may be considered within the general scope 
of the exemption authority provided by section 13541. The Secretary may 
begin a section 13541 exemption proceeding on the application of an 
interested party. 49 U.S.C. 13541(b). See, e.g., Motor Carrier 
Financial Information Reporting Requirements-Request for Public 
Comments, 68 FR 48987 (Aug. 15, 2003). The Secretary may ``specify the 
period of time during which an exemption'' is effective and may revoke 
the exemption ``to the extent specified, on finding that application of 
a provision of [49 U.S.C. Chapters 131-149] to the person, class, or 
transportation is necessary to carry out the transportation policy of 
[49 U.S.C.] section 13101.'' 49 U.S.C. 13541(c), (d).
    The Administrator of FMCSA has been delegated authority under 49 
CFR 1.87 to carry out the functions vested in the Secretary by 49 
U.S.C. 13541.

Background

    On July 6, 2012, the President signed MAP-21 into law, which 
included a number of mandatory, non-discretionary changes to FMCSA 
programs. Some of these changes amended the financial security 
requirements applicable to property brokers and freight forwarders 
operating under FMCSA's jurisdiction. Pub.L. 112-141, Sec.  32918, 126 
Stat. 405 (codified at 49 U.S.C. 13906(b) & (c)). More specifically, 49 
U.S.C. 13906(b) and (c) requires brokers and freight forwarders to 
provide evidence of minimum financial security in the amount of 
$75,000.
    On September 5, 2013, FMCSA published guidance (78 FR 54720) 
``concerning the implementation of certain provisions of . . . (MAP-21) 
concerning persons acting as a broker or a freight forwarder.'' On 
October 1, 2013, FMCSA issued regulations requiring brokers and freight 
forwarders to have a $75,000 surety bond or trust fund in effect. 49 
CFR 387.307(a), 387.403(c); 78 FR 60226, 60233.
    On November 14, 2013, after initially filing a complaint and then 
voluntarily dismissing the case in district court, AIPBA filed a 
petition for review in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 
Circuit. Association of Independent Property Brokers and Agents, Inc. 
v. Foxx, No. 13-15238-D (11th Cir.). The petition alleges that the 
Agency's October 1, 2013 final rule was improperly issued without 
notice and comment. The court, upon AIPBA's request, has stayed the 
case pending the resolution of this exemption proceeding.
    On January 23, 2015, AIPBA instituted another proceeding in the 
United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, 
seeking to invalidate the $75,000 bond requirement from 49 U.S.C. 
13906. Association of Independent Property Brokers and Agents, Inc. v. 
Foxx et al, No. 5:15-cv-00038-JSM-PRL (M.D. Fla.). No additional briefs 
or rulings have been filed in the district court case.

AIPBA Exemption Application

    In an August 14, 2013 letter to the Secretary, AIPBA, through its 
counsel, requested that the Department ``permanently exempt all 
property brokers and freight forwarders from the $75,000 broker bond 
provision of MAP-21. . . .'' AIPBA argues that the ``$75,000 broker 
surety bond amount is not necessary to carry out the transportation 
policy of section 13101, [or] . . . to protect shippers from the abuse 
of market power . . . and . . . is not in the public interest.'' AIPBA 
seeks a categorical exemption ``so that property brokers and forwarders 
can continue to do business under the existing bond regulations.'' A 
copy of the exemption application is included in the docket referenced 
at the beginning of this notice.
    First, AIPBA believes that the $75,000 bond requirement is contrary 
to the transportation policy of 49 U.S.C. 13101 because it violates the 
federal government's policy to ``encourage fair competition, and 
reasonable rates for transportation by motor carriers of property'' and 
to ``allow a variety of quality and price options to meet changing 
market demands and the diverse requirements of the shipping and 
traveling public,'' citing 49 U.S.C. 13101(a) (2)(A),(D).
    AIPBA also argues that the $75,000 broker bond requirement ``is not 
necessary to protect shippers from the abuse of market power.'' 
According to AIPBA,''[t]he unnecessarily high $75,000 broker bond 
requirement will cause the majority of property brokers to leave the 
marketplace, which will expose shippers to abuses of market power by 
the few large property brokers able to stay in business.''
    With regard to the public interest, AIPBA believes that the new 
bond requirement will ``cause a significant increase in consumer prices 
once the supply of property brokers is drastically reduced.'' AIPBA 
indicated that a lack of competition will require shippers to pay more 
for transportation services. In addition to predicting that small and 
mid-sized brokers will be forced out of the marketplace due to the new 
higher bond requirement, AIPBA believes the new requirement will serve 
as a barrier to entry into the marketplace for other property brokers.
    Finally, while AIPBA acknowledges that ``there are certain 
regulations from which [the Secretary] cannot issue exemptions,'' it 
believes that:

``. . . the broker bond does not fall into one of the listed 
categories. Specifically, the bond is a financial security rather 
than a type of required insurance, a distinction emphasized in 49 
U.S.C 13906 by the choice of a bond or insurance as well as MAP-21's 
proposed amendment to 49 U.S.C. 13906, which still requires the 
broker bond but deletes all reference to insurance.''

Request for Comments

    On December 26, 2013, FMCSA requested public comment on the AIPBA 
exemption application (78 FR 78472). Specifically, FMCSA requested 
comments on whether the Agency should grant or deny AIPBA's 
application, in whole or in part. The Agency also requested comments on 
how it should apply 49 U.S.C. 13541(a)(1-3) to AIPBA's request.

Discussion of Public Comments

General Discussion

    FMCSA received 80 responses to the December 26, 2013, notice, 23 of 
which were anonymous. Most of the commenters (52, including 16 of the 
anonymous commenters) supported the AIPBA application for an exemption 
and 26 (including 7 of the anonymous commenters) opposed the request. 
The named commenters are: Micah Applebee; AIPBA; Dave Britton; William 
Cohen; Gerard Coyle; Sue Cuthbertson; Raymond Donahue; Rodney 
Falkenstein; Christine Friend; Philip Fulmer; Kelley Gabor; Ray Gerdes; 
Kathy Harris; David Hoke; Scott Housely; Matt Kloss; James Lamb (2 
responses); Deborah J. Larson; Lew Levy; Stuart Looney (LineHaul 
Logistics, Inc.); Angela Maccombs; Michael Majerek; Mike Manzella; 
Aaron Menice; Deborah McCoy; Jenny Merkey; Michael Millard (2 
responses); John Miller; Gaetono P. Monteleone

[[Page 17144]]

(Transport Management Service Corporation); Ronald Morales; Hugh Nolan; 
Chris Olson; Charles Onsum; the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers 
Association (OOIDA); M. Peters; James Powers; Roger's Freight, LLC; 
James Randolph; Kevin Reidy; Paul Rosenweig, Jr.; Bev Smith; Michael 
Stanley (SMS Transportation); Robert Schwartz; Tracey Spence; the 
Surety & Fidelity Association of America (SFAA); Kelly Swickard; John 
Thomas; The Transportation Intermediaries Association (TIA); Veles 
Logistics, Inc.; Patrick Walsh; Werner Enterprises, Inc.; and, Gregory 
Williamson (Williamson's Enterprises). One commenter provided only his 
first name, Larry, and one hand-written comment (from Mike) included an 
illegible last name.
    Many of the commenters who wrote in support of AIPBA's application 
believe the increased bond requirement has resulted in a significant 
decrease in the number of freight forwarders and brokers with the 
requisite authority from FMCSA. Some of these commenters argue that the 
increased bond requirement has resulted in the loss of jobs and an 
adverse impact on consumer prices. A number of the commenters who 
identified themselves as brokers argued the new requirement is intended 
to reduce competition by eliminating small businesses rather than to 
reduce fraud. Several commenters also argue that implementation of the 
$75,000 bond requirement is inconsistent with the transportation policy 
in 49 U.S.C. 13101.
    Commenters writing in opposition to AIPBA's application argue that 
the previous $10,000 bond requirement was originally set in 1979 and 
that small trucking companies, especially owner operators, will be 
better protected and have better business opportunities with the 
$75,000 bond. A number of these commenters include brokers who state 
that obtaining the higher bond amount was relatively easy. And some 
state that the previous $10,000 bond was insufficient and resulted in 
transportation service providers being left unpaid after the broker 
went out of business.

Specific Issues Raised by AIPBA and Supporters of AIPBA's Application

Unintended Consequences
    A number of the commenters writing in support of AIPBA's 
application believe the increased bond requirement has resulted in 
unintended consequences such as brokers and freight forwarders being 
forced out of the industry, a loss of jobs and decreased rates for 
trucking companies. AIPBA indicated in its comments that the total 
number of property brokers on October 1, 2013, was 21,565 and that 
8,218 broker operating authority registrations have been revoked since 
December 1, 2013. AIPBA indicated that the total number of freight 
forwarders on October 1, 2013, was 2,212 with 1,583 freight forwarder 
operating authority registrations revoked since December 1, 2013.\1\ 
AIPBA believes there will be a secondary wave of revocations when 
bonding companies that rushed to acquire market share adjust their 
rates after the financial security market settles.
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    \1\ AIPBA's comments were dated January 22, 2014.
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    AIPBA also argues the increase in the bond requirements has 
resulted in the loss of jobs and an adverse impact on consumer prices. 
AIPBA believes the increase in bonds has had an adverse impact on rates 
for truckers as well.
Incremental Increase in Bond Requirement
    Matt Kloss supports the AIPBA exemption in part and believes FMCSA 
should consider an incremental increase in the bond limit rather than 
leaving the limit at $75,000. He states that he has been in the 
brokerage business for 12 years and he has never had a successful 
filing against his bond. He explains that he is not in the business to 
steal money from trucking companies. He argues that ``[e]stablished 
companies with good histories should have been required to increase the 
bond to $20,000 this year, with future increases that are manageable.''
    An anonymous commenter believes that the bond requirement ``. . . 
should be initially lowered to a more reasonable amount of $25,000.'' 
This commenter also argued that the rules should require a $25,000 fee 
per agent for large brokers.
Costs of the $75,000 Bond Will Drive Brokers Out of the Industry
    Sue Cuthbertson discusses the premiums that she had to pay to 
comply with the $75,000 bond requirement. She explains that she used to 
pay $900 per year for her broker bond and she now has to pay $3,500 per 
year for the $75,000 bond. She says that she could barely stay in 
business paying the $900.
    An anonymous commenter writing in support of the AIPBA application 
describes a similar experience with premiums for the $75,000 bond. The 
commenter explains that initially the premium quoted was $3,500. 
However, after the commenter shopped around for better rates, the same 
company quoted the commenter a more favorable premium of $1,300.

Specific Comments by Opponents of AIPBA's Application

Protection of the General Public's, Shippers' and Carriers' Financial 
Interests
    OOIDA believes that the $75,000 bond requirement helps to increase 
carriers' comfort in dealing with brokers they do not know and as such 
helps promote efficiency in the marketplace. According to OOIDA:

    ``Many of OOIDA's members are small business men and women who 
operate under their own federal operating authority and rely upon 
brokers to find freight to meet their business goals. Part of the 
efficiency of the current transportation marketplace is that brokers 
match motor carriers available to haul freight and shippers needing 
to move freight--parties who do not have an ongoing relationship, 
but who might make mutually beneficial connections on a load by load 
basis. This efficiency in the marketplace is increased greatly when 
motor carriers feel comfortable taking loads from brokers who they 
do [not] know (apparent omission in original). By securing the debts 
of brokers to the motor carrier, the federal broker bond or trust is 
intended to give motor carriers confidence that they will be paid 
when they are doing business with a broker they do not know.''

    OOIDA also argues that ``raising the bond or trust amount to 
$75,000 is intended to reduce harm caused by undercapitalized brokers 
who steal transportation service from motor carriers--the protected 
parties under the broker bond or trust statute . . . The $10,000 bond 
or trust was simply not sufficient to serve its intended purpose--to 
protect the motor carriers from non-payment by brokers.'' OOIDA also 
comments on the connection between the new $75,000 financial 
responsibility requirement and the National Transportation Policy (NTP) 
at 49 U.S.C. 13101. According to OOIDA, ``[b]y this statute, Congress 
burnished the national transportation goals of encouraging `sound 
economic conditions in transportation, including sound economic 
conditions among carriers;' 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(1)(C), and acted to 
promote efficient transportation and to enable efficient and well-
managed carriers to . . . maintain fair wages and working conditions. 
Sections 13101(a)(2)(B)&(F).''
    Stuart Looney states:

    ``The purpose for requiring the posting of a bond is well 
established as furthering protection to the general public. The 
public is well served with this requirement as freight brokering is 
an easy entry undertaking and is fraught with many thinly 
capitalized and reasonably unprofessional participants.''


[[Page 17145]]


    The Surety & Fidelity Association of America (SFAA) believes a bond 
requirement of less than $75,000 would deprive shippers and carriers of 
the additional protection that Congress thought was necessary. 
According to SFAA ``the intent of the bond is to protect shippers and 
motor carriers . . . There are a number of cases in which the $10,000 
bond was not sufficient to pay all claims in the full amount . . . .'' 
SFAA cited multiple cases for its proposition.
    SFAA also argues that the surety bond:

``. . . protects the public interest by ensuring that FMCSA licenses 
are provided to qualified, well-capitalized brokers and freight 
forwarders . . . While claims handling is a critical function of the 
surety, another equally critical function is the surety's 
prequalification of a principal before the surety will write a bond. 
A surety will review the capabilities and financial strength of 
bonds applicants and provide bonds only to those entities that the 
surety has determined are capable of performing the underlying 
obligation . . . The bond provides financial protection to shippers 
and carriers, which serves to reduce costs in the long run by 
eliminating the need for a carrier or shipper to include the risk of 
nonpayment in its pricing.''

    The Transportation Intermediaries Association (TIA) indicates that 
eliminating the bond requirement is ``not acceptable'' to shippers or 
carriers. According to TIA, 2 major trucking organizations, the 
American Trucking Associations (ATA) and OOIDA have supported 
increasing the bond well above the new $75,000 amount. According to 
TIA, in a 2009 letter, ``ATA cited a study they conducted indicating 
that only 13 percent of carriers' claims against brokers were satisfied 
by the $10,000 bond.'' According to TIA, in recent years, its members 
have seen shippers demand $100,000 bonds to exclusively protect one 
shipper.
    Werner Enterprises, Inc. (Werner) argues that ``[t]he eroded value 
of the bond since it was last adjusted to $10,000 in 1977'' means 
``there is essentially no real security for broker misconduct.''
    Veles Logistics Inc. (Veles), which describes itself as a ``small 
group of owner-operators,'' believes the $75,000 bond will help to get 
rid of ``unstable unsafe financially weak and fraudulent brokers.'' 
Veles also believes the new bond requirement will increase the prices 
of loads by eliminating ``third and fourth and fifth resellers out of 
the freight moving chain.''
    Scott Housely argues:

    ``The brokerage limit as it stand[s] at $75,000.00 addresses a 
larger problem of unethical brokers who have not invested in the 
industry and don't intend to. Carriers in the past had little 
recourse in collecting bad debt from brokers or the shippers that 
they worked for due to the transient nature of many brokers. The 
limit as it stands does not [impede] any good brokers and enhances 
the relationship with the asset based carriers who are the backbone 
of the entire system. Please keep the current rule in place.''

Granting the Exemption Would Eliminate the Bond Requirement
    OOIDA expresses concern that if FMCSA granted AIPBA's request, the 
Agency would not have the discretion to return to the $10,000 bond 
limit; the Agency would have to allow brokers to operate without having 
a bond. OOIDA argues:

    ``The application would have the effect of permitting all 
brokers to operate without a broker bond or trust of any amount. 
When Congress enacted a $75,000 bond or trust statute, it repealed 
the $10,000 bond or trust statute. AIPBA's requested exemption would 
not reenact the $10,000 bond or trust requirement; it would exempt 
all property brokers from the requirement to carry any bond or 
trust. The statute found at 49 U.S.C. 13541 only permits FMCSA to 
grant exemptions from certain statutory requirements. It does not 
permit FMCSA to amend or revise applicable statutes. FMCSA has no 
power to institute a bond or trust requirement of any amount other 
than the statutorily set $75,000 amount. The goal of AIPBA's 
application, the creation of a broker industry with no bond or trust 
protecting the motor carrier industry, would completely subvert 
congressional intent.''

Costs of the Bond are Reasonable
    Werner states:

    ``The bond cost is a problem for some brokers for good reason. A 
bond such as this which is designed to guaranty the integrity and 
ability of a party to respond for their failures to another party is 
priced not only upon the total exposure of the company writing the 
bond but also upon the financial strength of the party being bonded. 
Our experience was that the cost of our $10,000 bond was $77 per 
year which increased to $338 for a $75,000 bond. The cost increase 
is not significant. Companies that are experiencing higher costs may 
be the companies for whom the shippers and motor carriers need 
protection.''

    TIA states:

    It is ironic that those making the argument to eliminate the 
bond increase because some brokers and forwarders cannot afford it, 
actually make the case for the higher bond. Congress determined that 
companies should not handle other people's money if they cannot 
afford to protect it. Broker and forwarder bonds are available in 
the marketplace today for less than $6,000 per year.

    TIA argues that when the cost for the bond is spread over an 
average of 5 loads per day, the bond premium works out to be less than 
$5.00 per load.

FMCSA Decision

    FMCSA has considered AIPBA's exemption request and all of the 
comments received, including AIPBA's subsequent comments, and FMCSA 
denies the request. FMCSA does not have the authority to disregard 
Congress's directive in the revised statutory provision by exempting 
all property brokers and freight forwarders from the bond requirement. 
Essentially, AIPBA's opposition to the increase in the bond amount is a 
challenge to Congress's judgment that the increase is necessary and 
appropriate, indeed in the public interest.
    Furthermore, even if the Agency had the authority to grant AIPBA's 
exemption application, AIPBA's request does not meet the three part 
statutory test in 49 U.S.C. 13541. Specifically, FMCSA finds that the 
$75,000 bond requirement at 49 U.S.C. 13906(b)-(c) is necessary to 
carry out the transportation policy of section 13101, and is needed to 
protect shippers from the abuse of market power. . . .'' \2\ Moreover, 
and most critically, an industry-wide exemption for brokers and freight 
forwarders from the $75,000 bond requirement is not in the public 
interest.
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    \2\ AIPBA does not argue that ``the transaction or service is of 
limited scope,'' 49 U.S.C. 13541(a)(2), nor do other commenters.
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The Scope of FMCSA's Exemption Authority

    In Section 32918 of MAP-21, Congress expressly mandated that all 
FMCSA regulated brokers and freight forwarders have a minimum of 
$75,000 in financial security. 49 U.S.C. 13906(b),(c). AIPBA asks the 
Agency to permanently exempt all property brokers and freight 
forwarders subject to section 32918's $75,000 bond requirement. FMCSA 
is denying AIPBA's exemption application because the Agency lacks the 
authority to issue the kind of blanket exemption that AIPBA seeks.
    While section 13541 gives the Agency broad authority to exempt 
certain persons or transactions, FMCSA does not have the authority to 
effectively nullify a statute by exempting the entire class of persons 
subject to the bond requirement, as AIPBA requests. 49 U.S.C. 13541(a); 
Terran ex rel. Terran v. Secretary of Health and Human Services, 195 
F.3d 1302, 1312 (Fed. Cir. 1999) (``The Constitution does not authorize 
members of the executive branch to enact, amend, or repeal 
statutes.''). AIPBA's request would

[[Page 17146]]

amount to a usurpation of a congressional mandate. Therefore, because 
the Agency lacks the authority to grant AIPBA's blanket exemption, the 
Agency is denying AIPBA's exemption application.

Public Interest

    Even if FMCSA had the authority to grant AIPBA's exemption 
application, a blanket exemption covering all brokers and freight 
forwarders is not in the public interest. ``Congress is presumed to 
legislate in the public interest.'' Time Warner Entertainment Co. L.P. 
v. F.C.C., 810 F.Supp. 1302, 1304 n.6 (D.D.C. 1992). As discussed 
above, granting an exemption to all brokers and freight forwarders 
would flout a clear and recent congressional directive and statement of 
the public interest. Further, numerous commenters have persuaded FMCSA 
that such an exemption is not in the public interest.
    First, FMCSA finds that granting AIPBA's request would undermine 
the purpose of the bond requirement--the protection of shippers and 
motor carriers that utilize brokers and freight forwarders as third 
party intermediaries. FMCSA's predecessor, the Interstate Commerce 
Commission (ICC), very clearly stated that `` `[t]he legislative 
history . . . clearly reveals that the primary purpose of Congress in 
regulating motor transportation brokers is to protect carriers and the 
traveling and shipping public against dishonest and financially 
unstable middlemen in the transportation industry.' '' Clarification of 
Insurance Regulation, 3 I.C.C.2d 689, 692 (1987)(quoting Carla Ticket 
Service, Inc., Broker Application, 94 M.C.C. 579, 580 (1964)).
    According to OOIDA, ``[t]he $10,000 bond or trust was simply not 
sufficient to serve its intended purpose--to protect the motor carriers 
from non-payment by brokers.'' And, as SFAA notes, ``the intent of the 
bond is to protect shippers and motor carriers. A bond in a lesser 
amount would deprive shippers and carriers of the additional protection 
that Congress thought was necessary. There are a number of cases in 
which the $10,000 bond was not sufficient to pay all claims in the full 
amount. . . .'' Moreover, according to TIA, in 2009, ``ATA cited a 
study they conducted indicating that only 13 percent of carriers' 
claims against brokers were satisfied by the $10,000 bond.'' This 
unanimity of input from members of the three industries most affected 
by the $75,000 requirement (transportation intermediaries, motor 
carriers and the surety bond industry) is noteworthy. Given that the 
purpose of the financial security requirement is to protect shippers 
and motor carriers, and the widespread view that the previous $10,000 
requirement \3\ was deficient in performing that function, it would not 
serve the public interest to grant AIPBA's requested exemption. FMCSA 
will not perpetuate, through the grant of an exemption, the pre-MAP-21 
status quo of shippers and motor carriers not being able to collect 
from financially insolvent brokers. Neither AIPBA nor any of the 
commenters that supported its request have shown how the public 
interest in protecting shippers and motor carriers would be served by 
granting the requested exemption.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ FMCSA, by regulation, raised the bond requirement to $25,000 
for household goods (HHG) brokers in 2010. 49 CFR 387.307 (2012). 
Pursuant to regulation, as of October 1, 2013, all FMCSA regulated 
brokers and freight forwarders (HHG and non-HHG) are required to 
have $75,000 in financial security. 49 CFR 387.307(a) (brokers); 49 
CFR 387.403(c)(freight forwarders).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    On the other hand, in its exemption application, AIPBA argues that 
the $75,000 broker surety bond amount is ``not in the public 
interest.'' AIPBA argues that the $75,000 broker bond would:

. . . cause a significant increase in consumer prices once the 
supply of property brokers is drastically reduced . . . In addition, 
the high amount of the broker bond will not only cause existing 
small and mid-size property brokers to leave the marketplace, but 
will also serve as a barrier to entry by other property brokers . . 
. The statutory loss of broker licenses on October 1, without 
further warning, will cause chaos in the trucking and shipping 
industry, and will cause thousands of brokers to lose their 
livelihood on October 1, 2013, a date now less than 60 days away. 
This will result in an immediate loss of jobs for these brokers and 
the agents they employ. It will also cause significant supply chain 
disruptions. Such a scenario is not in the public interest.

    In its January 22, 2014, comments in response to FMCSA's Federal 
Register Notice in this proceeding, AIPBA states ``[w]ith regard to the 
public interest . . . a lack of competition will require shippers to 
pay more for transportation services.'' AIPBA also argues that ``it is 
in the public interest to allow open competition, as the public 
benefits from lower consumer prices and increased employment. A larger 
pool of property brokers provides more competition and better access to 
brokers for shippers, which reduces the overall prices of products to 
consumers.''
    FMCSA acknowledges that the number of FMCSA-registered brokers and 
freight forwarders declined after the $75,000 bond requirement went 
into effect on October 1, 2013. Between September 2013 and December 
2013, the number of freight forwarders with active authority dropped 
from 2,351 to 925. The number of freight forwarders then increased to 
1,208 by December 2014. During this same period, the number of active 
brokers dropped from 21,375 to 13,839, and then increased to 15,471 in 
December 2014. However, AIPBA has provided no proof of a causal 
connection between the broker license revocations and an adverse impact 
on consumer prices or an adverse impact on rates for truckers.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ In late-filed comments, James P. Lamb, AIPBA's president, 
alleged that the broker bond increase in MAP-21 ``caused 9,800 
intermediaries to lose their licenses, first time jobless claims 
then shot up, consumer prices are on the increase, and truckers' 
rates are down for all equipment types. . . .''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Moreover, even if AIPBA had shown that the $75,000 requirement 
caused all of the consequences it alleges, it has not focused on the 
key public interest implicated in the broker bond--the protection of 
motor carriers and shippers. It has not provided, nor have we 
discerned, any evidence that shippers or motor carriers would be 
adequately protected by the pre-MAP-21 bond requirement.

Abuse of Market Power

    In its exemption application, AIPBA asserts that ``[t]he $75,000 
broker surety bond amount is not necessary to protect shippers from the 
abuse of market power.'' To the contrary, AIPBA asserts that 
``[e]xemption from the increased broker amount will protect shippers 
from an abuse of market power. The unnecessarily high $75,000 broker 
bond requirement will cause the majority of property brokers to leave 
the marketplace, which will expose shippers to abuses of market power 
by the few large property brokers able to stay in business.'' In its 
subsequent comments, AIPBA reiterates its assertion that the new 
``minimum financial security is not necessary to protect shippers from 
abuse of market power.'' AIPBA argues that ``the new minimum security 
amount is the direct result of collusion to abuse market power. The 
exemption would help stop the loss of property brokers and provide more 
options for shippers, which would protect shippers.'' Other commenters 
did not address the abuse of market power.
    Based on the record before it, FMCSA cannot find that application 
of the $75,000 broker/freight forwarder bond requirement under 49 
U.S.C. 13906(b),(c) ``is not needed to protect shippers from the abuse 
of market power. . . .'' 49 U.S.C. 13541(a)(2). While AIPBA 
hypothesizes that a smaller brokerage industry will abuse its market 
power with regard to shippers, it

[[Page 17147]]

provides no evidence outlining such abuse. Moreover, it provides no 
evidence that the new $75,000 bond requirement is not required to 
protect against such abuse of market power. Without any evidence, FMCSA 
will not exempt an entire industry from a clearly articulated 
congressional directive to raise the broker and freight forwarder 
financial responsibility requirements.

National Transportation Policy (NTP)

    Finally, in its application, AIPBA argues that the $75,000 bond 
requirement is contrary to the transportation policy of 49 U.S.C. 
13101, because it violates the federal government's policy to 
``encourage fair competition, and reasonable rates for transportation 
by motor carriers of property'' and to ``allow a variety of quality and 
price options to meet changing market demands and the diverse 
requirements of the shipping and traveling public. . . .'' 49 U.S.C. 
13101(a)(2)(A), (D). AIPBA argues that the new broker bond amount 
``will likely result in a loss of tens of thousands of jobs and higher 
consumer prices as a matter of supply and demand.'' Further, according 
to AIPBA, ``per Kevin Reid of the National Association for Minority 
Truckers, the anti-competitive effects of the new broker bond 
requirement will detrimentally affect the participation of minorities 
in the motor carrier system, which is another violation of the 
transportation policy.''
    In its docket comments in this proceeding, AIPBA argues that ``a 
$75,000 bond to protect carriers is not necessary to implement the 
national transportation policy because there is no shipper bond to 
protect carriers when they receive loads without the involvement of an 
intermediary.'' Further, AIPBA argues that ``enforcement of the new 
financial security minimum is contrary to the national transportation 
policy of 49 U.S.C. 13101 because it restricts opportunity, competition 
and reasonable rates.''
    On the other hand, with regard to the National Transportation 
Policy (NTP), OOIDA argues that Congress's new $75,000 requirement 
``burnished the national transportation goals of encouraging `sound 
economic conditions in transportation, including sound economic 
conditions among carriers;' 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(1)(C), and acted to 
promote efficient transportation and to enable efficient and well-
managed carriers to . . . maintain fair wages and working conditions. 
Sections 13101(a)(2)(B)&(F).'' OOIDA's point is well taken.
    While AIPBA is correct that the NTP provides that the policy of the 
United States Government is to ``encourage fair competition, and 
reasonable rates for transportation by motor carriers of property,'' 
``allow a variety of quality and price options to meet changing market 
demands and the diverse requirements of the shipping and traveling 
public'', 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(A), (D), and ``promote greater 
participation by minorities in the motor carrier system,'' 49 U.S.C. 
3101(a)(2)(J), these are not the only elements of the NTP. Among other 
goals, the NTP provides that federal transportation policy includes 
``promot[ing] efficiency in the motor carrier transportation system . . 
. ,'' 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(B), meeting the needs of shippers, 49 
U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(C), and ``enabl[ing] efficient and well-managed 
carriers to earn adequate profits, attract capital, and maintain fair 
wages and working conditions. . . .'' 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(F).
    FMCSA finds that application of the $75,000 broker and freight 
forwarder financial responsibility requirements under 49 U.S.C. 
13906(b), (c) is ``necessary to carry out the transportation policy of 
section 13101. . . .'' 49 U.S.C. 13541(a)(1). First, Congress set that 
amount as the minimum requirement and in so doing, must be presumed to 
have acted in a manner consistent with the NTP. Second, as OOIDA, TIA 
and SFAA have shown, the previous $10,000 bond was inadequate in the 
event of broker financial problems. In such instances, both shippers 
and motor carriers faced losses. Accordingly, applying the new $75,000 
bond amount is necessary to meet the ``needs of shippers,'' 49 U.S.C. 
13101(a)(2)(C), and to allow motor carriers to ``earn adequate profits 
[and] attract capital,'' 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(F), as directed by the 
NTP.
    Moreover, AIPBA has not shown why applying the new $75,000 
requirement is not necessary to carry out those provisions of the NTP. 
FMCSA does not believe that AIPBA has provided evidence that there has 
been a decrease in motor carrier competition or an increase in shipping 
rates due to the implementation of the $75,000 bond requirement. Indeed 
at p. 5 of their docket comments, AIPBA admits that rates have actually 
decreased. Further, aside from an unsubstantiated projection, AIPBA 
makes no showing that the new $75,000 requirement will undermine the 
NTP's goal of ``promot[ing] greater participation by minorities in the 
motor carrier system. . . .'' 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(J).
    FMCSA does not find that the $75,000 financial responsibility 
requirement for brokers/freight forwarders is ``not necessary to carry 
out the transportation policy of section 13101. . . .'' 49 U.S.C. 
13541(a)(1). Nor does FMCSA find that continued regulation under 
section 13906(b), (c) ``is not needed to protect shippers from the 
abuse of market power'' or that the transaction or service at issue is 
of ``limited scope. . . .'' 49 U.S.C. 13541(a)(2). Finally, granting 
the exemption requested by AIPBA is not in the public interest. 49 
U.S.C. 13541(a)(3). Accordingly, AIBPA's request is denied.

    Issued on: March 25, 2015.
T.F. Scott Darling, III,
Chief Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2015-07353 Filed 3-30-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-EX-P



                                                    17142                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 61 / Tuesday, March 31, 2015 / Notices

                                                    pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 10502(b). A final                   By the Board, Rachel D. Campbell,                   New Jersey Ave. SE., Washington, DC
                                                    decision will be issued by June 29,                     Director, Office of Proceedings.                      20590.
                                                    2015.                                                   Kenyatta Clay,
                                                                                                                                                                  ADDRESSES: For access to the docket to
                                                                                                            Clearance Clerk.                                      read background documents, including
                                                       Any OFA under 49 CFR 1152.27(b)(2)
                                                    will be due by July 9, 2015, or 10 days                 [FR Doc. 2015–07243 Filed 3–30–15; 8:45 am]           those referenced in this document, or to
                                                    after service of a decision granting the                BILLING CODE 4915–01–P                                read comments received, go to:
                                                    petition for exemption, whichever                                                                                • Regulations.gov, http://
                                                    occurs first. Each OFA must be                                                                                www.regulations.gov, at any time and
                                                                                                            DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION                          insert FMCSA–2013–0513 in the
                                                    accompanied by a $1,600 filing fee. See
                                                                                                                                                                  ‘‘Keyword’’ box, and then click
                                                    49 CFR 1002.2(f)(25).                                   Federal Motor Carrier Safety                          ‘‘Search.’’
                                                       All interested persons should be                     Administration                                           • Docket Management Facility, Room
                                                    aware that, following abandonment, the                                                                        W12–140, DOT Building, 1200 New
                                                                                                            [FMCSA–2013–0513]
                                                    Line may be suitable for other public                                                                         Jersey Ave. SE., Washington, DC 20590.
                                                    use, including interim trail use. Any                   Registration and Financial Security                   You may view the docket online by
                                                    request for a public use condition under                Requirements for Brokers of Property                  visiting the facility between 9 a.m. and
                                                    49 CFR 1152.28 or for trail use/rail                    and Freight Forwarders; Association of                5 p.m., Monday through Friday except
                                                    banking under 49 CFR 1152.29 will be                    Independent Property Brokers and                      Federal holidays.
                                                    due no later than April 20, 2015. Each                  Agents’ Exemption Application                         Viewing Comments and Documents
                                                    trail request must be accompanied by a
                                                                                                            AGENCY: Federal Motor Carrier Safety                     AIPBA’s exemption application and
                                                    $300 filing fee. See 49 CFR
                                                                                                            Administration (FMCSA).                               all public comments are available in the
                                                    1002.2(f)(27).                                                                                                public docket. To view comments filed
                                                                                                            ACTION: Notice of denial of application
                                                       All filings in response to this notice               for exemption.                                        in this docket, go to http://
                                                    must refer to Docket No. AB 303 (Sub-                                                                         www.regulations.gov and click on the
                                                    No. 46X) and must be sent to: (1)                       SUMMARY:   FMCSA denies an application                ‘‘Read Comments’’ box in the upper
                                                    Surface Transportation Board, 395 E                     from the Association of Independent                   right hand side of the screen. Then, in
                                                    Street SW., Washington, DC 20423–                       Property Brokers and Agents (AIPBA)                   the ‘‘Keyword’’ box, insert ‘‘FMCSA–
                                                    0001; and (2) Robert A. Wimbish,                        for an exemption for all property                     2013–0513’’ and click ‘‘Search.’’ Next,
                                                    Fletcher & Sippel LLC, 29 North Wacker                  brokers and freight forwarders from the               click ‘‘Open Docket Folder’’ in the
                                                    Drive, Suite 920, Chicago, IL 60606–                    $75,000 bond provision included in                    ‘‘Actions’’ column. Finally, in the
                                                    2832. Replies to the petition are due on                section 32918 of the Moving Ahead for                 ‘‘Title’’ column, click on the document
                                                    or before April 20, 2015.                               Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP–                you would like to review. If you do not
                                                                                                            21), now codified in 49 U.S.C. 13906.                 have access to the Internet, you may
                                                       Persons seeking further information                  AIPBA filed its request pursuant to 49                view the docket by visiting the Docket
                                                    concerning abandonment procedures                       U.S.C. 13541 on August 14, 2013. On                   Management Facility at the address
                                                    may contact the Board’s Office of Public                December 26, 2013, FMCSA published a                  above.
                                                    Assistance, Governmental Affairs and                    notice in the Federal Register
                                                    Compliance at (202) 245–0238 or refer                                                                         Privacy Act
                                                                                                            requesting comments from all interested
                                                    to the full abandonment regulations at                  parties on AIPBA’s exemption                            In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c),
                                                    49 CFR part 1152. Questions concerning                  application. After reviewing the public               DOT solicits comments from the public
                                                    environmental issues may be directed to                 comments, the Agency has concluded                    to better inform its rulemaking process.
                                                    the Board’s Office of Environmental                     that the exemption should be denied on                DOT posts these comments, without
                                                    Analysis (OEA) at (202) 245–0305.                       the basis that 49 U.S.C.13541 does not                edit, including any personal information
                                                    Assistance for the hearing impaired is                  give FMCSA the authority to essentially               the commenter provides, to
                                                    available through the Federal                           nullify a statutory provision by                      www.regulations.gov, as described in
                                                                                                            exempting the entire class of persons                 the system of records notice (DOT/ALL–
                                                    Information Relay Service at 1–800–
                                                                                                            subject to the provision. Furthermore,                14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at
                                                    877–8339.
                                                                                                            even if the Agency had the authority to               www.dot.gov/privacy.
                                                       An environmental assessment (EA) (or                                                                       SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                                                                            issue such a blanket exemption,
                                                    environmental impact statement (EIS), if
                                                                                                            AIPBA’s exemption application does                    Legal Basis for the Exemption
                                                    necessary) prepared by OEA will be
                                                                                                            not meet the factors provided in section              Application and Proceeding
                                                    served upon all parties of record and
                                                                                                            13541 because (1) the new $75,000 bond
                                                    upon any other agencies or persons who                                                                           Section 13541(a) of title 49 of the
                                                                                                            requirement is necessary to carry out the
                                                    comment during its preparation. Other                                                                         United States Code (49 U.S.C. 13541)
                                                                                                            National Transportation Policy at 49
                                                    interested persons may contact OEA to                                                                         requires the Secretary of Transportation
                                                                                                            U.S.C.13101, (2) there has been no
                                                    obtain a copy of the EA (or EIS). EAs in                                                                      (Secretary) to exempt a person, class of
                                                                                                            showing that the $75,000 requirement
                                                    abandonment proceedings normally will                                                                         persons, or a transaction or service from
                                                                                                            ‘‘is not needed to protect shippers from
                                                    be made available within 60 days of the                                                                       the application, in whole or in part, of
                                                                                                            the abuse of market power’’ and (3) the
                                                    filing of the petition. The deadline for                                                                      a provision of 49 U.S.C., Subtitle IV,
                                                                                                            requested exemption is not in the public
                                                                                                                                                                  Part B (Chapters 131–149), or to use the
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    submission of comments on the EA                        interest.
                                                    generally will be within 30 days of its                                                                       exemption authority to modify the
                                                                                                            DATES: This decision is effective March               application of a provision of 49 U.S.C.
                                                    service.                                                31, 2015.                                             Chapters 131–149 as it applies to such
                                                       Board decisions and notices are                      FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.                  person, class, transaction, or service
                                                    available on our Web site at                            Thomas Yager, Chief of Driver and                     when the Secretary finds that the
                                                    ‘‘WWW.STB.DOT.GOV.’’                                    Carrier Operations, (202) 366–4001 or                 application of the provision:
                                                       Decided: March 25, 2015.                             thomas.yager@dot.gov, FMCSA,                             • Is not necessary to carry out the
                                                                                                            Department of Transportation, 1200                    transportation policy of 49 U.S.C. 13101


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                                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 61 / Tuesday, March 31, 2015 / Notices                                                 17143

                                                       • Is not needed to protect shippers                     On November 14, 2013, after initially              power by the few large property brokers
                                                    from the abuse of market power or that                  filing a complaint and then voluntarily               able to stay in business.’’
                                                    the transaction or service is of limited                dismissing the case in district court,                  With regard to the public interest,
                                                    scope; and                                              AIPBA filed a petition for review in the              AIPBA believes that the new bond
                                                       • Is in the public interest.                         U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh                requirement will ‘‘cause a significant
                                                    The exemption authority provided by                     Circuit. Association of Independent                   increase in consumer prices once the
                                                    section 13541 ‘‘may not be used to                      Property Brokers and Agents, Inc. v.                  supply of property brokers is drastically
                                                    relieve a person from the application of,               Foxx, No. 13–15238–D (11th Cir.). The                 reduced.’’ AIPBA indicated that a lack
                                                    and compliance with, any law, rule,                     petition alleges that the Agency’s                    of competition will require shippers to
                                                    regulation, standard, or order pertaining               October 1, 2013 final rule was                        pay more for transportation services. In
                                                    to cargo loss and damage [or] insurance                 improperly issued without notice and                  addition to predicting that small and
                                                    . . . .’’ 49 U.S.C. 13541(e)(1).                        comment. The court, upon AIPBA’s                      mid-sized brokers will be forced out of
                                                       AIPBA seeks an exemption from the                    request, has stayed the case pending the              the marketplace due to the new higher
                                                    $75,000 financial security requirements                 resolution of this exemption proceeding.              bond requirement, AIPBA believes the
                                                    for brokers and freight forwarders at 49                   On January 23, 2015, AIPBA                         new requirement will serve as a barrier
                                                    U.S.C. 13906 (b) & (c). Section 13906 is                instituted another proceeding in the                  to entry into the marketplace for other
                                                    located in 49 U.S.C. Subtitle IV Part B                 United States District Court for the                  property brokers.
                                                    (chapter 139) and therefore may be                      Middle District of Florida, seeking to                  Finally, while AIPBA acknowledges
                                                    considered within the general scope of                  invalidate the $75,000 bond                           that ‘‘there are certain regulations from
                                                    the exemption authority provided by                     requirement from 49 U.S.C. 13906.                     which [the Secretary] cannot issue
                                                    section 13541. The Secretary may begin                  Association of Independent Property                   exemptions,’’ it believes that:
                                                    a section 13541 exemption proceeding                    Brokers and Agents, Inc. v. Foxx et al,
                                                    on the application of an interested                                                                           ‘‘. . . the broker bond does not fall into one
                                                                                                            No. 5:15–cv–00038–JSM–PRL (M.D.
                                                    party. 49 U.S.C. 13541(b). See, e.g.,                                                                         of the listed categories. Specifically, the bond
                                                                                                            Fla.). No additional briefs or rulings                is a financial security rather than a type of
                                                    Motor Carrier Financial Information                     have been filed in the district court case.           required insurance, a distinction emphasized
                                                    Reporting Requirements-Request for                                                                            in 49 U.S.C 13906 by the choice of a bond
                                                    Public Comments, 68 FR 48987 (Aug.                      AIPBA Exemption Application
                                                                                                                                                                  or insurance as well as MAP–21’s proposed
                                                    15, 2003). The Secretary may ‘‘specify                     In an August 14, 2013 letter to the                amendment to 49 U.S.C. 13906, which still
                                                    the period of time during which an                      Secretary, AIPBA, through its counsel,                requires the broker bond but deletes all
                                                    exemption’’ is effective and may revoke                 requested that the Department                         reference to insurance.’’
                                                    the exemption ‘‘to the extent specified,                ‘‘permanently exempt all property
                                                    on finding that application of a                        brokers and freight forwarders from the               Request for Comments
                                                    provision of [49 U.S.C. Chapters 131–                   $75,000 broker bond provision of MAP–                   On December 26, 2013, FMCSA
                                                    149] to the person, class, or                           21. . . .’’ AIPBA argues that the                     requested public comment on the
                                                    transportation is necessary to carry out                ‘‘$75,000 broker surety bond amount is                AIPBA exemption application (78 FR
                                                    the transportation policy of [49 U.S.C.]                not necessary to carry out the                        78472). Specifically, FMCSA requested
                                                    section 13101.’’ 49 U.S.C. 13541(c), (d).               transportation policy of section 13101,               comments on whether the Agency
                                                       The Administrator of FMCSA has                       [or] . . . to protect shippers from the               should grant or deny AIPBA’s
                                                    been delegated authority under 49 CFR                   abuse of market power . . . and . . . is              application, in whole or in part. The
                                                    1.87 to carry out the functions vested in               not in the public interest.’’ AIPBA seeks             Agency also requested comments on
                                                    the Secretary by 49 U.S.C. 13541.                       a categorical exemption ‘‘so that                     how it should apply 49 U.S.C.
                                                                                                            property brokers and forwarders can                   13541(a)(1–3) to AIPBA’s request.
                                                    Background                                              continue to do business under the
                                                       On July 6, 2012, the President signed                existing bond regulations.’’ A copy of                Discussion of Public Comments
                                                    MAP–21 into law, which included a                       the exemption application is included                 General Discussion
                                                    number of mandatory, non-discretionary                  in the docket referenced at the
                                                    changes to FMCSA programs. Some of                      beginning of this notice.                               FMCSA received 80 responses to the
                                                    these changes amended the financial                        First, AIPBA believes that the $75,000             December 26, 2013, notice, 23 of which
                                                    security requirements applicable to                     bond requirement is contrary to the                   were anonymous. Most of the
                                                    property brokers and freight forwarders                 transportation policy of 49 U.S.C. 13101              commenters (52, including 16 of the
                                                    operating under FMCSA’s jurisdiction.                   because it violates the federal                       anonymous commenters) supported the
                                                    Pub.L. 112–141, § 32918, 126 Stat. 405                  government’s policy to ‘‘encourage fair               AIPBA application for an exemption
                                                    (codified at 49 U.S.C. 13906(b) & (c)).                 competition, and reasonable rates for                 and 26 (including 7 of the anonymous
                                                    More specifically, 49 U.S.C. 13906(b)                   transportation by motor carriers of                   commenters) opposed the request. The
                                                    and (c) requires brokers and freight                    property’’ and to ‘‘allow a variety of                named commenters are: Micah
                                                    forwarders to provide evidence of                       quality and price options to meet                     Applebee; AIPBA; Dave Britton;
                                                    minimum financial security in the                       changing market demands and the                       William Cohen; Gerard Coyle; Sue
                                                    amount of $75,000.                                      diverse requirements of the shipping                  Cuthbertson; Raymond Donahue;
                                                       On September 5, 2013, FMCSA                          and traveling public,’’ citing 49 U.S.C.              Rodney Falkenstein; Christine Friend;
                                                    published guidance (78 FR 54720)                        13101(a) (2)(A),(D).                                  Philip Fulmer; Kelley Gabor; Ray
                                                    ‘‘concerning the implementation of                         AIPBA also argues that the $75,000                 Gerdes; Kathy Harris; David Hoke; Scott
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    certain provisions of . . . (MAP–21)                    broker bond requirement ‘‘is not                      Housely; Matt Kloss; James Lamb (2
                                                    concerning persons acting as a broker or                necessary to protect shippers from the                responses); Deborah J. Larson; Lew
                                                    a freight forwarder.’’ On October 1,                    abuse of market power.’’ According to                 Levy; Stuart Looney (LineHaul
                                                    2013, FMCSA issued regulations                          AIPBA,’’[t]he unnecessarily high                      Logistics, Inc.); Angela Maccombs;
                                                    requiring brokers and freight forwarders                $75,000 broker bond requirement will                  Michael Majerek; Mike Manzella; Aaron
                                                    to have a $75,000 surety bond or trust                  cause the majority of property brokers to             Menice; Deborah McCoy; Jenny Merkey;
                                                    fund in effect. 49 CFR 387.307(a),                      leave the marketplace, which will                     Michael Millard (2 responses); John
                                                    387.403(c); 78 FR 60226, 60233.                         expose shippers to abuses of market                   Miller; Gaetono P. Monteleone


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                                                    17144                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 61 / Tuesday, March 31, 2015 / Notices

                                                    (Transport Management Service                           AIPBA indicated in its comments that                  the commenter a more favorable
                                                    Corporation); Ronald Morales; Hugh                      the total number of property brokers on               premium of $1,300.
                                                    Nolan; Chris Olson; Charles Onsum; the                  October 1, 2013, was 21,565 and that
                                                                                                                                                                  Specific Comments by Opponents of
                                                    Owner-Operator Independent Drivers                      8,218 broker operating authority
                                                                                                                                                                  AIPBA’s Application
                                                    Association (OOIDA); M. Peters; James                   registrations have been revoked since
                                                    Powers; Roger’s Freight, LLC; James                     December 1, 2013. AIPBA indicated that                Protection of the General Public’s,
                                                    Randolph; Kevin Reidy; Paul                             the total number of freight forwarders                Shippers’ and Carriers’ Financial
                                                    Rosenweig, Jr.; Bev Smith; Michael                      on October 1, 2013, was 2,212 with                    Interests
                                                    Stanley (SMS Transportation); Robert                    1,583 freight forwarder operating                        OOIDA believes that the $75,000 bond
                                                    Schwartz; Tracey Spence; the Surety &                   authority registrations revoked since                 requirement helps to increase carriers’
                                                    Fidelity Association of America (SFAA);                 December 1, 2013.1 AIPBA believes                     comfort in dealing with brokers they do
                                                    Kelly Swickard; John Thomas; The                        there will be a secondary wave of                     not know and as such helps promote
                                                    Transportation Intermediaries                           revocations when bonding companies                    efficiency in the marketplace. According
                                                    Association (TIA); Veles Logistics, Inc.;               that rushed to acquire market share                   to OOIDA:
                                                    Patrick Walsh; Werner Enterprises, Inc.;                adjust their rates after the financial
                                                                                                                                                                     ‘‘Many of OOIDA’s members are small
                                                    and, Gregory Williamson (Williamson’s                   security market settles.                              business men and women who operate under
                                                    Enterprises). One commenter provided                      AIPBA also argues the increase in the               their own federal operating authority and
                                                    only his first name, Larry, and one                     bond requirements has resulted in the                 rely upon brokers to find freight to meet their
                                                    hand-written comment (from Mike)                        loss of jobs and an adverse impact on                 business goals. Part of the efficiency of the
                                                    included an illegible last name.                        consumer prices. AIPBA believes the                   current transportation marketplace is that
                                                       Many of the commenters who wrote                     increase in bonds has had an adverse                  brokers match motor carriers available to
                                                    in support of AIPBA’s application                       impact on rates for truckers as well.                 haul freight and shippers needing to move
                                                    believe the increased bond requirement                                                                        freight—parties who do not have an ongoing
                                                                                                            Incremental Increase in Bond                          relationship, but who might make mutually
                                                    has resulted in a significant decrease in
                                                                                                            Requirement                                           beneficial connections on a load by load
                                                    the number of freight forwarders and                                                                          basis. This efficiency in the marketplace is
                                                    brokers with the requisite authority                       Matt Kloss supports the AIPBA                      increased greatly when motor carriers feel
                                                    from FMCSA. Some of these                               exemption in part and believes FMCSA                  comfortable taking loads from brokers who
                                                    commenters argue that the increased                     should consider an incremental increase               they do [not] know (apparent omission in
                                                    bond requirement has resulted in the                    in the bond limit rather than leaving the             original). By securing the debts of brokers to
                                                    loss of jobs and an adverse impact on                   limit at $75,000. He states that he has               the motor carrier, the federal broker bond or
                                                    consumer prices. A number of the                        been in the brokerage business for 12                 trust is intended to give motor carriers
                                                    commenters who identified themselves                    years and he has never had a successful               confidence that they will be paid when they
                                                                                                            filing against his bond. He explains that             are doing business with a broker they do not
                                                    as brokers argued the new requirement                                                                         know.’’
                                                    is intended to reduce competition by                    he is not in the business to steal money
                                                    eliminating small businesses rather than                from trucking companies. He argues that                  OOIDA also argues that ‘‘raising the
                                                    to reduce fraud. Several commenters                     ‘‘[e]stablished companies with good                   bond or trust amount to $75,000 is
                                                    also argue that implementation of the                   histories should have been required to                intended to reduce harm caused by
                                                    $75,000 bond requirement is                             increase the bond to $20,000 this year,               undercapitalized brokers who steal
                                                    inconsistent with the transportation                    with future increases that are                        transportation service from motor
                                                    policy in 49 U.S.C. 13101.                              manageable.’’                                         carriers—the protected parties under the
                                                       Commenters writing in opposition to                     An anonymous commenter believes                    broker bond or trust statute . . . The
                                                    AIPBA’s application argue that the                      that the bond requirement ‘‘. . . should              $10,000 bond or trust was simply not
                                                    previous $10,000 bond requirement was                   be initially lowered to a more                        sufficient to serve its intended
                                                    originally set in 1979 and that small                   reasonable amount of $25,000.’’ This                  purpose—to protect the motor carriers
                                                    trucking companies, especially owner                    commenter also argued that the rules                  from non-payment by brokers.’’ OOIDA
                                                    operators, will be better protected and                 should require a $25,000 fee per agent                also comments on the connection
                                                    have better business opportunities with                 for large brokers.                                    between the new $75,000 financial
                                                    the $75,000 bond. A number of these                                                                           responsibility requirement and the
                                                                                                            Costs of the $75,000 Bond Will Drive
                                                    commenters include brokers who state                                                                          National Transportation Policy (NTP) at
                                                                                                            Brokers Out of the Industry
                                                    that obtaining the higher bond amount                                                                         49 U.S.C. 13101. According to OOIDA,
                                                    was relatively easy. And some state that                   Sue Cuthbertson discusses the                      ‘‘[b]y this statute, Congress burnished
                                                    the previous $10,000 bond was                           premiums that she had to pay to comply                the national transportation goals of
                                                    insufficient and resulted in                            with the $75,000 bond requirement. She                encouraging ‘sound economic
                                                    transportation service providers being                  explains that she used to pay $900 per                conditions in transportation, including
                                                    left unpaid after the broker went out of                year for her broker bond and she now                  sound economic conditions among
                                                    business.                                               has to pay $3,500 per year for the                    carriers;’ 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(1)(C), and
                                                                                                            $75,000 bond. She says that she could                 acted to promote efficient transportation
                                                    Specific Issues Raised by AIPBA and                     barely stay in business paying the $900.              and to enable efficient and well-
                                                    Supporters of AIPBA’s Application                          An anonymous commenter writing in                  managed carriers to . . . maintain fair
                                                    Unintended Consequences                                 support of the AIPBA application                      wages and working conditions. Sections
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                                                                                                            describes a similar experience with                   13101(a)(2)(B)&(F).’’
                                                       A number of the commenters writing                   premiums for the $75,000 bond. The                       Stuart Looney states:
                                                    in support of AIPBA’s application                       commenter explains that initially the
                                                    believe the increased bond requirement                                                                           ‘‘The purpose for requiring the posting of
                                                                                                            premium quoted was $3,500. However,                   a bond is well established as furthering
                                                    has resulted in unintended                              after the commenter shopped around for                protection to the general public. The public
                                                    consequences such as brokers and                        better rates, the same company quoted                 is well served with this requirement as
                                                    freight forwarders being forced out of                                                                        freight brokering is an easy entry undertaking
                                                    the industry, a loss of jobs and                          1 AIPBA’s comments were dated January 22,           and is fraught with many thinly capitalized
                                                    decreased rates for trucking companies.                 2014.                                                 and reasonably unprofessional participants.’’



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                                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 61 / Tuesday, March 31, 2015 / Notices                                                       17145

                                                       The Surety & Fidelity Association of                 unethical brokers who have not invested in            loads per day, the bond premium works
                                                    America (SFAA) believes a bond                          the industry and don’t intend to. Carriers in         out to be less than $5.00 per load.
                                                    requirement of less than $75,000 would                  the past had little recourse in collecting bad
                                                                                                            debt from brokers or the shippers that they           FMCSA Decision
                                                    deprive shippers and carriers of the
                                                                                                            worked for due to the transient nature of
                                                    additional protection that Congress                                                                              FMCSA has considered AIPBA’s
                                                                                                            many brokers. The limit as it stands does not
                                                    thought was necessary. According to                     [impede] any good brokers and enhances the            exemption request and all of the
                                                    SFAA ‘‘the intent of the bond is to                     relationship with the asset based carriers            comments received, including AIPBA’s
                                                    protect shippers and motor carriers . . .               who are the backbone of the entire system.            subsequent comments, and FMCSA
                                                    There are a number of cases in which                    Please keep the current rule in place.’’              denies the request. FMCSA does not
                                                    the $10,000 bond was not sufficient to                                                                        have the authority to disregard
                                                    pay all claims in the full amount                       Granting the Exemption Would                          Congress’s directive in the revised
                                                    . . . .’’ SFAA cited multiple cases for its             Eliminate the Bond Requirement                        statutory provision by exempting all
                                                    proposition.                                              OOIDA expresses concern that if                     property brokers and freight forwarders
                                                       SFAA also argues that the surety                     FMCSA granted AIPBA’s request, the                    from the bond requirement. Essentially,
                                                    bond:                                                   Agency would not have the discretion to               AIPBA’s opposition to the increase in
                                                    ‘‘. . . protects the public interest by ensuring        return to the $10,000 bond limit; the                 the bond amount is a challenge to
                                                    that FMCSA licenses are provided to                     Agency would have to allow brokers to                 Congress’s judgment that the increase is
                                                    qualified, well-capitalized brokers and freight         operate without having a bond. OOIDA                  necessary and appropriate, indeed in
                                                    forwarders . . . While claims handling is a                                                                   the public interest.
                                                                                                            argues:
                                                    critical function of the surety, another                                                                         Furthermore, even if the Agency had
                                                    equally critical function is the surety’s                 ‘‘The application would have the effect of
                                                                                                                                                                  the authority to grant AIPBA’s
                                                    prequalification of a principal before the              permitting all brokers to operate without a
                                                    surety will write a bond. A surety will review          broker bond or trust of any amount. When              exemption application, AIPBA’s request
                                                    the capabilities and financial strength of              Congress enacted a $75,000 bond or trust              does not meet the three part statutory
                                                    bonds applicants and provide bonds only to              statute, it repealed the $10,000 bond or trust        test in 49 U.S.C. 13541. Specifically,
                                                    those entities that the surety has determined           statute. AIPBA’s requested exemption would            FMCSA finds that the $75,000 bond
                                                    are capable of performing the underlying                not reenact the $10,000 bond or trust                 requirement at 49 U.S.C. 13906(b)–(c) is
                                                    obligation . . . The bond provides financial            requirement; it would exempt all property             necessary to carry out the transportation
                                                    protection to shippers and carriers, which              brokers from the requirement to carry any             policy of section 13101, and is needed
                                                    serves to reduce costs in the long run by               bond or trust. The statute found at 49 U.S.C.
                                                                                                                                                                  to protect shippers from the abuse of
                                                    eliminating the need for a carrier or shipper           13541 only permits FMCSA to grant
                                                    to include the risk of nonpayment in its                exemptions from certain statutory                     market power. . . .’’ 2 Moreover, and
                                                    pricing.’’                                              requirements. It does not permit FMCSA to             most critically, an industry-wide
                                                                                                            amend or revise applicable statutes. FMCSA            exemption for brokers and freight
                                                       The Transportation Intermediaries
                                                                                                            has no power to institute a bond or trust             forwarders from the $75,000 bond
                                                    Association (TIA) indicates that                        requirement of any amount other than the              requirement is not in the public interest.
                                                    eliminating the bond requirement is                     statutorily set $75,000 amount. The goal of
                                                    ‘‘not acceptable’’ to shippers or carriers.             AIPBA’s application, the creation of a broker         The Scope of FMCSA’s Exemption
                                                    According to TIA, 2 major trucking                      industry with no bond or trust protecting the         Authority
                                                    organizations, the American Trucking                    motor carrier industry, would completely                In Section 32918 of MAP–21,
                                                    Associations (ATA) and OOIDA have                       subvert congressional intent.’’
                                                                                                                                                                  Congress expressly mandated that all
                                                    supported increasing the bond well                                                                            FMCSA regulated brokers and freight
                                                    above the new $75,000 amount.                           Costs of the Bond are Reasonable
                                                                                                                                                                  forwarders have a minimum of $75,000
                                                    According to TIA, in a 2009 letter,                       Werner states:                                      in financial security. 49 U.S.C.
                                                    ‘‘ATA cited a study they conducted                         ‘‘The bond cost is a problem for some              13906(b),(c). AIPBA asks the Agency to
                                                    indicating that only 13 percent of                      brokers for good reason. A bond such as this          permanently exempt all property
                                                    carriers’ claims against brokers were                   which is designed to guaranty the integrity           brokers and freight forwarders subject to
                                                    satisfied by the $10,000 bond.’’                        and ability of a party to respond for their           section 32918’s $75,000 bond
                                                    According to TIA, in recent years, its                  failures to another party is priced not only
                                                                                                                                                                  requirement. FMCSA is denying
                                                    members have seen shippers demand                       upon the total exposure of the company
                                                                                                            writing the bond but also upon the financial          AIPBA’s exemption application because
                                                    $100,000 bonds to exclusively protect                                                                         the Agency lacks the authority to issue
                                                    one shipper.                                            strength of the party being bonded. Our
                                                                                                            experience was that the cost of our $10,000           the kind of blanket exemption that
                                                       Werner Enterprises, Inc. (Werner)
                                                                                                            bond was $77 per year which increased to              AIPBA seeks.
                                                    argues that ‘‘[t]he eroded value of the                 $338 for a $75,000 bond. The cost increase              While section 13541 gives the Agency
                                                    bond since it was last adjusted to                      is not significant. Companies that are                broad authority to exempt certain
                                                    $10,000 in 1977’’ means ‘‘there is                      experiencing higher costs may be the                  persons or transactions, FMCSA does
                                                    essentially no real security for broker                 companies for whom the shippers and motor             not have the authority to effectively
                                                    misconduct.’’                                           carriers need protection.’’
                                                                                                                                                                  nullify a statute by exempting the entire
                                                       Veles Logistics Inc. (Veles), which                    TIA states:                                         class of persons subject to the bond
                                                    describes itself as a ‘‘small group of
                                                                                                              It is ironic that those making the argument         requirement, as AIPBA requests. 49
                                                    owner-operators,’’ believes the $75,000
                                                                                                            to eliminate the bond increase because some           U.S.C. 13541(a); Terran ex rel. Terran v.
                                                    bond will help to get rid of ‘‘unstable
                                                                                                            brokers and forwarders cannot afford it,              Secretary of Health and Human
                                                    unsafe financially weak and fraudulent
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                                                                                                            actually make the case for the higher bond.           Services, 195 F.3d 1302, 1312 (Fed. Cir.
                                                    brokers.’’ Veles also believes the new                  Congress determined that companies should             1999) (‘‘The Constitution does not
                                                    bond requirement will increase the                      not handle other people’s money if they               authorize members of the executive
                                                    prices of loads by eliminating ‘‘third                  cannot afford to protect it. Broker and
                                                                                                                                                                  branch to enact, amend, or repeal
                                                    and fourth and fifth resellers out of the               forwarder bonds are available in the
                                                                                                            marketplace today for less than $6,000 per            statutes.’’). AIPBA’s request would
                                                    freight moving chain.’’
                                                       Scott Housely argues:                                year.
                                                                                                                                                                    2 AIPBA does not argue that ‘‘the transaction or

                                                      ‘‘The brokerage limit as it stand[s] at                 TIA argues that when the cost for the               service is of limited scope,’’ 49 U.S.C. 13541(a)(2),
                                                    $75,000.00 addresses a larger problem of                bond is spread over an average of 5                   nor do other commenters.



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                                                    17146                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 61 / Tuesday, March 31, 2015 / Notices

                                                    amount to a usurpation of a                             protect shippers and motor carriers, and              active authority dropped from 2,351 to
                                                    congressional mandate. Therefore,                       the widespread view that the previous                 925. The number of freight forwarders
                                                    because the Agency lacks the authority                  $10,000 requirement 3 was deficient in                then increased to 1,208 by December
                                                    to grant AIPBA’s blanket exemption, the                 performing that function, it would not                2014. During this same period, the
                                                    Agency is denying AIPBA’s exemption                     serve the public interest to grant                    number of active brokers dropped from
                                                    application.                                            AIPBA’s requested exemption. FMCSA                    21,375 to 13,839, and then increased to
                                                                                                            will not perpetuate, through the grant of             15,471 in December 2014. However,
                                                    Public Interest
                                                                                                            an exemption, the pre-MAP–21 status                   AIPBA has provided no proof of a
                                                       Even if FMCSA had the authority to                   quo of shippers and motor carriers not                causal connection between the broker
                                                    grant AIPBA’s exemption application, a                  being able to collect from financially                license revocations and an adverse
                                                    blanket exemption covering all brokers                  insolvent brokers. Neither AIPBA nor                  impact on consumer prices or an
                                                    and freight forwarders is not in the                    any of the commenters that supported                  adverse impact on rates for truckers.4
                                                    public interest. ‘‘Congress is presumed                 its request have shown how the public                    Moreover, even if AIPBA had shown
                                                    to legislate in the public interest.’’ Time             interest in protecting shippers and                   that the $75,000 requirement caused all
                                                    Warner Entertainment Co. L.P. v. F.C.C.,                motor carriers would be served by                     of the consequences it alleges, it has not
                                                    810 F.Supp. 1302, 1304 n.6 (D.D.C.                      granting the requested exemption.                     focused on the key public interest
                                                    1992). As discussed above, granting an                     On the other hand, in its exemption                implicated in the broker bond—the
                                                    exemption to all brokers and freight                    application, AIPBA argues that the                    protection of motor carriers and
                                                    forwarders would flout a clear and                      $75,000 broker surety bond amount is                  shippers. It has not provided, nor have
                                                    recent congressional directive and                      ‘‘not in the public interest.’’ AIPBA                 we discerned, any evidence that
                                                    statement of the public interest. Further,              argues that the $75,000 broker bond                   shippers or motor carriers would be
                                                    numerous commenters have persuaded                      would:                                                adequately protected by the pre-MAP–
                                                    FMCSA that such an exemption is not                                                                           21 bond requirement.
                                                    in the public interest.                                 . . . cause a significant increase in consumer
                                                                                                            prices once the supply of property brokers is         Abuse of Market Power
                                                       First, FMCSA finds that granting
                                                                                                            drastically reduced . . . In addition, the high
                                                    AIPBA’s request would undermine the                     amount of the broker bond will not only                  In its exemption application, AIPBA
                                                    purpose of the bond requirement—the                     cause existing small and mid-size property            asserts that ‘‘[t]he $75,000 broker surety
                                                    protection of shippers and motor                        brokers to leave the marketplace, but will            bond amount is not necessary to protect
                                                    carriers that utilize brokers and freight               also serve as a barrier to entry by other             shippers from the abuse of market
                                                    forwarders as third party intermediaries.               property brokers . . . The statutory loss of          power.’’ To the contrary, AIPBA asserts
                                                    FMCSA’s predecessor, the Interstate                     broker licenses on October 1, without further         that ‘‘[e]xemption from the increased
                                                    Commerce Commission (ICC), very                         warning, will cause chaos in the trucking and         broker amount will protect shippers
                                                    clearly stated that ‘‘ ‘[t]he legislative               shipping industry, and will cause thousands           from an abuse of market power. The
                                                                                                            of brokers to lose their livelihood on October
                                                    history . . . clearly reveals that the                                                                        unnecessarily high $75,000 broker bond
                                                                                                            1, 2013, a date now less than 60 days away.
                                                    primary purpose of Congress in                          This will result in an immediate loss of jobs         requirement will cause the majority of
                                                    regulating motor transportation brokers                 for these brokers and the agents they employ.         property brokers to leave the
                                                    is to protect carriers and the traveling                It will also cause significant supply chain           marketplace, which will expose
                                                    and shipping public against dishonest                   disruptions. Such a scenario is not in the            shippers to abuses of market power by
                                                    and financially unstable middlemen in                   public interest.                                      the few large property brokers able to
                                                    the transportation industry.’ ’’                           In its January 22, 2014, comments in               stay in business.’’ In its subsequent
                                                    Clarification of Insurance Regulation, 3                response to FMCSA’s Federal Register                  comments, AIPBA reiterates its
                                                    I.C.C.2d 689, 692 (1987)(quoting Carla                  Notice in this proceeding, AIPBA states               assertion that the new ‘‘minimum
                                                    Ticket Service, Inc., Broker Application,               ‘‘[w]ith regard to the public interest . . .          financial security is not necessary to
                                                    94 M.C.C. 579, 580 (1964)).                             a lack of competition will require                    protect shippers from abuse of market
                                                       According to OOIDA, ‘‘[t]he $10,000                                                                        power.’’ AIPBA argues that ‘‘the new
                                                                                                            shippers to pay more for transportation
                                                    bond or trust was simply not sufficient                                                                       minimum security amount is the direct
                                                                                                            services.’’ AIPBA also argues that ‘‘it is
                                                    to serve its intended purpose—to                                                                              result of collusion to abuse market
                                                                                                            in the public interest to allow open
                                                    protect the motor carriers from non-                                                                          power. The exemption would help stop
                                                                                                            competition, as the public benefits from
                                                    payment by brokers.’’ And, as SFAA                                                                            the loss of property brokers and provide
                                                                                                            lower consumer prices and increased
                                                    notes, ‘‘the intent of the bond is to                                                                         more options for shippers, which would
                                                                                                            employment. A larger pool of property
                                                    protect shippers and motor carriers. A                                                                        protect shippers.’’ Other commenters
                                                                                                            brokers provides more competition and
                                                    bond in a lesser amount would deprive                                                                         did not address the abuse of market
                                                                                                            better access to brokers for shippers,
                                                    shippers and carriers of the additional                                                                       power.
                                                                                                            which reduces the overall prices of
                                                    protection that Congress thought was                                                                             Based on the record before it, FMCSA
                                                                                                            products to consumers.’’
                                                    necessary. There are a number of cases                     FMCSA acknowledges that the                        cannot find that application of the
                                                    in which the $10,000 bond was not                       number of FMCSA-registered brokers                    $75,000 broker/freight forwarder bond
                                                    sufficient to pay all claims in the full                and freight forwarders declined after the             requirement under 49 U.S.C.
                                                    amount. . . .’’ Moreover, according to                  $75,000 bond requirement went into                    13906(b),(c) ‘‘is not needed to protect
                                                    TIA, in 2009, ‘‘ATA cited a study they                  effect on October 1, 2013. Between                    shippers from the abuse of market
                                                    conducted indicating that only 13                       September 2013 and December 2013,                     power. . . .’’ 49 U.S.C. 13541(a)(2).
                                                    percent of carriers’ claims against                                                                           While AIPBA hypothesizes that a
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                                                                                                            the number of freight forwarders with
                                                    brokers were satisfied by the $10,000                                                                         smaller brokerage industry will abuse its
                                                    bond.’’ This unanimity of input from                      3 FMCSA, by regulation, raised the bond             market power with regard to shippers, it
                                                    members of the three industries most                    requirement to $25,000 for household goods (HHG)
                                                    affected by the $75,000 requirement                     brokers in 2010. 49 CFR 387.307 (2012). Pursuant         4 In late-filed comments, James P. Lamb, AIPBA’s

                                                    (transportation intermediaries, motor                   to regulation, as of October 1, 2013, all FMCSA       president, alleged that the broker bond increase in
                                                                                                            regulated brokers and freight forwarders (HHG and     MAP–21 ‘‘caused 9,800 intermediaries to lose their
                                                    carriers and the surety bond industry) is               non-HHG) are required to have $75,000 in financial    licenses, first time jobless claims then shot up,
                                                    noteworthy. Given that the purpose of                   security. 49 CFR 387.307(a) (brokers); 49 CFR         consumer prices are on the increase, and truckers’
                                                    the financial security requirement is to                387.403(c)(freight forwarders).                       rates are down for all equipment types. . . .’’



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                                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 61 / Tuesday, March 31, 2015 / Notices                                                  17147

                                                    provides no evidence outlining such                        While AIPBA is correct that the NTP                   FMCSA does not find that the $75,000
                                                    abuse. Moreover, it provides no                         provides that the policy of the United                financial responsibility requirement for
                                                    evidence that the new $75,000 bond                      States Government is to ‘‘encourage fair              brokers/freight forwarders is ‘‘not
                                                    requirement is not required to protect                  competition, and reasonable rates for                 necessary to carry out the transportation
                                                    against such abuse of market power.                     transportation by motor carriers of                   policy of section 13101. . . .’’ 49 U.S.C.
                                                    Without any evidence, FMCSA will not                    property,’’ ‘‘allow a variety of quality              13541(a)(1). Nor does FMCSA find that
                                                    exempt an entire industry from a clearly                and price options to meet changing                    continued regulation under section
                                                    articulated congressional directive to                  market demands and the diverse                        13906(b), (c) ‘‘is not needed to protect
                                                    raise the broker and freight forwarder                  requirements of the shipping and                      shippers from the abuse of market
                                                    financial responsibility requirements.                  traveling public’’, 49 U.S.C.                         power’’ or that the transaction or service
                                                    National Transportation Policy (NTP)                    13101(a)(2)(A), (D), and ‘‘promote                    at issue is of ‘‘limited scope. . . .’’ 49
                                                                                                            greater participation by minorities in the            U.S.C. 13541(a)(2). Finally, granting the
                                                       Finally, in its application, AIPBA                   motor carrier system,’’ 49 U.S.C.                     exemption requested by AIPBA is not in
                                                    argues that the $75,000 bond                            3101(a)(2)(J), these are not the only                 the public interest. 49 U.S.C.
                                                    requirement is contrary to the                          elements of the NTP. Among other                      13541(a)(3). Accordingly, AIBPA’s
                                                    transportation policy of 49 U.S.C.                      goals, the NTP provides that federal                  request is denied.
                                                    13101, because it violates the federal                  transportation policy includes
                                                    government’s policy to ‘‘encourage fair                                                                         Issued on: March 25, 2015.
                                                                                                            ‘‘promot[ing] efficiency in the motor                 T.F. Scott Darling, III,
                                                    competition, and reasonable rates for                   carrier transportation system . . . ,’’ 49
                                                    transportation by motor carriers of                                                                           Chief Counsel.
                                                                                                            U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(B), meeting the needs
                                                    property’’ and to ‘‘allow a variety of                  of shippers, 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(C),                [FR Doc. 2015–07353 Filed 3–30–15; 8:45 am]
                                                    quality and price options to meet                       and ‘‘enabl[ing] efficient and well-                  BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
                                                    changing market demands and the                         managed carriers to earn adequate
                                                    diverse requirements of the shipping                    profits, attract capital, and maintain fair
                                                    and traveling public. . . .’’ 49 U.S.C.                                                                       DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
                                                                                                            wages and working conditions. . . .’’ 49
                                                    13101(a)(2)(A), (D). AIPBA argues that                  U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(F).
                                                    the new broker bond amount ‘‘will                                                                             Federal Transit Administration
                                                                                                               FMCSA finds that application of the
                                                    likely result in a loss of tens of
                                                                                                            $75,000 broker and freight forwarder                  Notice of Intent To Prepare an
                                                    thousands of jobs and higher consumer
                                                    prices as a matter of supply and                        financial responsibility requirements                 Environmental Impact Statement for
                                                    demand.’’ Further, according to AIPBA,                  under 49 U.S.C. 13906(b), (c) is                      the GA 400 Transit Initiative in Fulton
                                                    ‘‘per Kevin Reid of the National                        ‘‘necessary to carry out the                          County, Georgia
                                                    Association for Minority Truckers, the                  transportation policy of section 13101.
                                                                                                            . . .’’ 49 U.S.C. 13541(a)(1). First,                 AGENCY:  Federal Transit Administration
                                                    anti-competitive effects of the new                                                                           (FTA), DOT.
                                                    broker bond requirement will                            Congress set that amount as the
                                                    detrimentally affect the participation of               minimum requirement and in so doing,                  ACTION: Notice of Intent (NOI) to prepare
                                                    minorities in the motor carrier system,                 must be presumed to have acted in a                   an Environmental Impact Statement
                                                    which is another violation of the                       manner consistent with the NTP.                       (EIS) and Section 4(f) Evaluation.
                                                    transportation policy.’’                                Second, as OOIDA, TIA and SFAA have
                                                       In its docket comments in this                       shown, the previous $10,000 bond was                  SUMMARY:   The Federal Transit
                                                    proceeding, AIPBA argues that ‘‘a                       inadequate in the event of broker                     Administration (FTA) and the
                                                    $75,000 bond to protect carriers is not                 financial problems. In such instances,                Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit
                                                    necessary to implement the national                     both shippers and motor carriers faced                Authority (MARTA) issue this Notice of
                                                    transportation policy because there is no               losses. Accordingly, applying the new                 Intent (NOI) to prepare an
                                                    shipper bond to protect carriers when                   $75,000 bond amount is necessary to                   Environmental Impact Statement (EIS)
                                                    they receive loads without the                          meet the ‘‘needs of shippers,’’ 49 U.S.C.             and an evaluation per 49 U.S.C, 303 and
                                                    involvement of an intermediary.’’                       13101(a)(2)(C), and to allow motor                    23 CFR 774 (‘‘Section 4(f)’’) for the
                                                    Further, AIPBA argues that                              carriers to ‘‘earn adequate profits [and]             extension of high capacity, rapid transit
                                                    ‘‘enforcement of the new financial                      attract capital,’’ 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(F),          in the Georgia (GA) 400 corridor in
                                                    security minimum is contrary to the                     as directed by the NTP.                               north Fulton County, GA from
                                                    national transportation policy of 49                       Moreover, AIPBA has not shown why                  Dunwoody to Alpharetta. The EIS and
                                                    U.S.C. 13101 because it restricts                       applying the new $75,000 requirement                  Section 4(f) Evaluation will be prepared
                                                    opportunity, competition and                            is not necessary to carry out those                   in accordance with regulations
                                                    reasonable rates.’’                                     provisions of the NTP. FMCSA does not                 implementing the National
                                                       On the other hand, with regard to the                believe that AIPBA has provided                       Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and
                                                    National Transportation Policy (NTP),                   evidence that there has been a decrease               40 CFR parts 1500 through 1508,
                                                    OOIDA argues that Congress’s new                        in motor carrier competition or an                    Section 4(f), as well as FTA’s
                                                    $75,000 requirement ‘‘burnished the                     increase in shipping rates due to the                 regulations and guidance implementing
                                                    national transportation goals of                        implementation of the $75,000 bond                    NEPA (23 CFR 771).
                                                    encouraging ‘sound economic                             requirement. Indeed at p. 5 of their                     The purpose of this NOI is to: (1)
                                                    conditions in transportation, including                 docket comments, AIPBA admits that                    Advise the public and agencies that
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    sound economic conditions among                         rates have actually decreased. Further,               MARTA in coordination with the FTA
                                                    carriers;’ 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(1)(C), and                aside from an unsubstantiated                         is preparing an EIS for the proposed
                                                    acted to promote efficient transportation               projection, AIPBA makes no showing                    project; (2) provide information
                                                    and to enable efficient and well-                       that the new $75,000 requirement will                 including previous planning studies and
                                                    managed carriers to . . . maintain fair                 undermine the NTP’s goal of                           decision, purpose and need, and
                                                    wages and working conditions. Sections                  ‘‘promot[ing] greater participation by                alternatives being considered; and, (3)
                                                    13101(a)(2)(B)&(F).’’ OOIDA’s point is                  minorities in the motor carrier system.               invite public and agency participation
                                                    well taken.                                             . . .’’ 49 U.S.C. 13101(a)(2)(J).                     in the EIS process, which includes a


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Document Created: 2015-12-18 11:48:21
Document Modified: 2015-12-18 11:48:21
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
ActionNotice of denial of application for exemption.
DatesThis decision is effective March 31, 2015.
ContactMr. Thomas Yager, Chief of Driver and Carrier Operations, (202) 366-4001 or [email protected], FMCSA, Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., Washington, DC 20590.
FR Citation80 FR 17142 

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