81_FR_17184 81 FR 17125 - Review of Commodity, Boxcar, and Trailer-on-Flatcar/Container-on-Flatcar (TOFC/COFC) Exemptions

81 FR 17125 - Review of Commodity, Boxcar, and Trailer-on-Flatcar/Container-on-Flatcar (TOFC/COFC) Exemptions

SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 59 (March 28, 2016)

Page Range17125-17132
FR Document2016-06956

The Surface Transportation Board (Board or STB) seeks public comment on its proposal to revoke the existing class exemptions for crushed or broken stone or rip rap; hydraulic cement; and coke produced from coal, primary iron or steel products, and iron or steel scrap, wastes or tailings. The Board also invites interested parties to file, during the comment period for these proposed rules, comments regarding the possible revocation of other commodity class exemptions.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 59 (Monday, March 28, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 59 (Monday, March 28, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 17125-17132]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-06956]


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SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD

49 CFR Part 1039

[Docket No. EP 704 (Sub-No. 1)]


Review of Commodity, Boxcar, and Trailer-on-Flatcar/Container-on-
Flatcar (TOFC/COFC) Exemptions

AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board.

ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.

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SUMMARY: The Surface Transportation Board (Board or STB) seeks public 
comment on its proposal to revoke the existing class exemptions for 
crushed or broken stone or rip rap; hydraulic cement; and coke produced 
from coal, primary iron or steel products, and iron or steel scrap, 
wastes or tailings. The Board also invites interested parties to file, 
during the comment period for these proposed rules, comments regarding 
the possible revocation of other commodity class exemptions.

DATES: Comments on the proposed rulemaking are due on or before May 27, 
2016; replies are due June 27, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Any filings submitted in this proceeding must be submitted 
either via the Board's e-filing format or in the traditional paper 
format. Any person using e-filing should attach a document and 
otherwise comply with the instructions found at the E-FILING link on 
the Board's Web site at www.stb.dot.gov. Any person submitting a filing 
in the traditional paper format should send an original and 10 copies 
and also an electronic version to: Surface Transportation Board, Attn: 
Docket No. EP 704 (Sub-No. 1), 395 E Street SW., Washington, DC 20423-
0001.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Scott Zimmerman at (202) 245-0386. 
Assistance for the hearing impaired is available through the Federal 
Information Relay Services (FIRS) at 1-800-877-8339.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Introduction

    In 1976, as part of the Railroad Revitalization and Regulatory 
Reform Act of 1976, Public Law 94-210, 90 Stat. 31, Congress gave the 
Board broad authority to exempt rail carriers from regulation when such 
regulation was not needed to protect against abuses of market power. 
The Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC or Commission) first exercised 
its exemption authority in Rail General Exemption Authority--Fresh 
Fruits & Vegetables, 361 I.C.C. 211 (1979), categorically exempting the 
transportation of certain fresh fruits and vegetables from its 
regulations.
    Congress revised the statutory exemption standard in the Staggers 
Rail Act of 1980, 94 Stat. 1895, to provide that the agency shall 
exempt a person, class of persons, or a transaction or service when it 
finds that the application of a provision of 49 U.S.C. subtitle IV (1) 
is not necessary to carry out the transportation policy of section 
10101a; and (2) either (a) the transaction or service is of limited 
scope, or (b) the application of the statute is not necessary to 
protect shippers from the abuse of market power. The exemption 
provision, which is now codified at 49 U.S.C. 10502,\1\ also provides 
that the agency may revoke an exemption (partially or completely) if 
the agency later determines that the application of the Interstate 
Commerce Act is necessary to carry out the Rail Transportation Policy 
at 49 U.S.C. 10101 (the RTP). See section 10502(d).
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    \1\ There have been additional changes to the exemption 
provision since the Staggers Act with regard to the process and 
timing of exemption proceedings. The substantive standard, however, 
has remained the same.
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    Pursuant to its exemption authority, the ICC, and later the Board, 
exempted from regulation the transportation by rail of numerous other 
individual commodities, finding that traffic for these individual 
commodities was sufficiently competitive and that railroads lacked the 
ability to subject shippers to an abuse of market power.\2\ These 
commodity exemptions are codified at 49 CFR 1039.10 and 1039.11. The 
Commission also exempted rail (and truck) operations provided in 
connection with trailer-on-flatcar/container-on-flatcar (TOFC/COFC) 
services, at 49 CFR pt. 1090,\3\ and the rail transportation of all 
commodities in single-line boxcar service, at 49 CFR 1039.14.\4\
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    \2\ See Rail Gen. Exemption Auth.--Nonferrous Recyclables, 3 
S.T.B. 62 (1998); Rail Gen. Exemption Auth.--Pet. of AAR to Exempt 
Rail Transp. of Selected Commodity Groups, 9 I.C.C.2d 969 (1993); 
Exemption from Regulation--Rail Transp. Frozen Food, 367 I.C.C. 859 
(1983); Liquid Iron Chloride, 367 I.C.C. 347 (1983); Rail Gen. 
Exemption Auth.--Miscellaneous Agric. Commodities, 367 I.C.C. 298 
(1983).
    \3\ See Improvement of TOFC/COFC Regulation, 364 I.C.C. 731 
(1981); Improvement of TOFC/COFC Regulations (R.R.-Affiliated Motor 
Carriers & Other Motor Carriers), 3 I.C.C.2d 869 (1987); Improvement 
of TOFC/COFC Regulations (Pickup & Delivery), 6 I.C.C.2d 208 (1989).
    \4\ See Exemption from Regulation--Boxcar Traffic, 367 I.C.C. 
425 (1983); Exemption from Regulation--Boxcar Traffic, 367 I.C.C. 
747 (1983), Exemption from Regulation--Boxcar Traffic, 3 I.C.C.2d 23 
(1986). See also Brae Corp. v. United States, 740 F.2d 1023 (D.C. 
Cir. 1984).
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February 2011 Hearing

    The agency's exemption decisions were instrumental in the U.S. rail 
system's transition from a heavily regulated, financially weak 
component of the economy into a mature, healthy industry that operates 
with limited oversight. However, more than 30 years have passed since 
many of the commodity exemptions were adopted, and there have been many 
changes in the railroad industry over that period. In more recent 
years, the Board received informal inquiries questioning the relevance 
or necessity of some of the existing commodity exemptions. The Board, 
therefore, requested public comment and held a public hearing in 
February 2011 to explore the continued utility of, and the issues 
surrounding, the various commodity exemptions under 49 CFR 1039.10 and 
1039.11, the boxcar exemption under 49 CFR 1039.14, and the TOFC/COFC 
exemption under 49 CFR pt. 1090. The Board encouraged interested 
parties to address the effectiveness of the exemptions in the 
marketplace, whether the rationale behind any of these exemptions 
should be revisited, and whether the exemptions should be subject to 
periodic review.
    The Board received written comment from numerous parties 
representing a diverse group of stakeholders including railroads, 
shippers, and the U.S. Department of Transportation. Twenty-one 
individuals testified at the hearing. The Board has considered those 
written comments and the oral testimony in developing the proposal 
discussed below.

Proposed Rule

    As discussed above, pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 10502(d), the Board may 
revoke an exemption, in whole or in part, when it finds that regulation 
is necessary to carry out the RTP. After considering the oral testimony 
and written comments, waybill rate data for years 1992 through 2013,\5\ 
and other industry information, the Board now proposes to revoke the 
commodity exemptions for the following Standard Transportation 
Commodity Code (STCC) groups: STCC

[[Page 17126]]

No. 14-2, crushed or broken stone or rip rap; STCC No. 29-914, coke 
produced from coal; STCC No. 33-12, primary iron or steel products 
(plates, pipes, and rods); STCC No. 32-4, hydraulic cement; and STCC 
No. 40-211, iron or steel scrap, wastes or tailings.\6\
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    \5\ The Board reviewed a 22-year period of confidential waybill 
data, beginning with information filed in 1992 and ending with data 
filed in 2013, the most recent on file with the Board.
    \6\ The Standard Transportation Commodity Code is a numerical 
code used to identify commodities and groupings of commodities. The 
initial two digits represent a broad commodity grouping; subsequent 
numbers indicate smaller sub-groupings or individual commodities. 
See Rail Gen. Exemption Auth.--Pet. of AAR to Exempt Rail Transp. of 
Selected Commodity Groups, 9 I.C.C.2d 969 n.2 (1993).
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    With regard to each of these commodity groups, the dynamics of the 
particular transportation markets appear to have changed so 
significantly since the exemptions were first promulgated as to warrant 
the application of the Interstate Commerce Act in order to carry out 
the Rail Transportation Policy. As discussed below, these changes point 
toward an increased likelihood of railroad market power for each of 
these specific commodity groups. This conclusion is also supported by 
the fact that railroad waybill rate data for these commodities shows a 
substantial increase in revenue from potentially captive traffic (i.e., 
traffic with a revenue-to-variable cost (R/VC) ratio of more than 180%) 
over the last 22 years.\7\ Thus, with respect to these commodities, the 
Board believes that reestablishing regulatory oversight is necessary to 
foster sound economic conditions in transportation, 49 U.S.C. 10101(5), 
maintain reasonable rates where there is an absence of effective 
competition, section 10101(6), and prohibit predatory pricing and 
practices, avoid undue concentrations of market power, and prohibit 
unlawful discrimination, section 10101(12).
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    \7\ R/VC ratios in excess of the market dominance threshold of 
180% do not, standing alone, establish market power or an abuse of 
such power. Thus, the Board bases its proposal to revoke these 
commodity class exemptions on a variety of marketplace changes 
described in this notice of proposed rulemaking. However, R/VC 
ratios have long been used by the Board as one indication of market 
power, and it is appropriate to rely on this data as supporting 
evidence.
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    The purpose of this proposal is to restore shippers' access to the 
Board's regulatory oversight and processes--in particular, shippers of 
those commodities where evidence indicates that the competitive 
landscape has changed significantly enough to indicate that renewed 
regulation is needed to carry out the RTP. The Board is committed to 
ensuring that stakeholders have an appropriate, meaningful path to the 
Board, and the proposal here is an important step towards that goal. 
The Board also welcomes interested parties to file comments regarding 
the possible revocation of other commodity class exemptions; such 
comments should address any marketplace changes comparable to the ones 
described below.
1. STCC Nos. 14-2, Crushed or Broken Stone or Rip Rap
    In Rail General Exemption Authority--Petition of AAR to Exempt Rail 
Transportation of Selected Commodity Groups (Petition of AAR) 9 
I.C.C.2d 969 (1993), the Commission exempted from its regulation the 
railroad transportation of several commodities, including crushed or 
broken stone or rip rap (crushed stone).\8\ After reviewing broad, 
market-share data, the Commission found that the rail transportation of 
crushed stone consisted of short hauls and was characterized by 
declining or stagnant revenue per unit of service--market 
characteristics not consistent with a finding of market power. Id. at 
974. Thus, the Commission concluded that regulation of this commodity 
was not necessary to carry out the transportation policy of section 
10101 because transportation was competitive, and an exemption would, 
among other things, minimize the need for federal regulatory control; 
increase competition between rail carriers and trucks by allowing 
quick, selective rate changes in response to competition; and allow 
more efficient management by allowing pricing changes in response to 
changing business conditions. Id. at 973.
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    \8\ In that decision, the Commission exempted the railroad 
transportation of 16 other classes of commodities as well.
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    In its February 2011 hearing comments, Texas Crushed Stone (TCS), a 
limestone quarry operator, argued that the Board should consider 
revoking the class exemption for crushed stone or aggregates. (TCS 
Comments 8.) TCS stated that the business landscape of the railroad 
industry had changed since the Staggers Rail Act of 1980 was enacted. 
(Id. at 4.) TCS also claimed that intramodal competition had been 
reduced as a result of railroad consolidation and asserted that some 
railroads had abused their market power by aggressively increasing rail 
transportation rates. (Id. at 8.) TCS maintained that trucking was not 
a practical check on railroad market power as there are not enough 
trucks or drivers to handle the volumes it had shipped in the past. 
(Id. at 5.) TCS also asserted that the preponderance of its shipments 
were captive, as most of its customers were served by one railroad. 
(Id. at 5.) Accordingly, TCS requested that the Board revoke the 
exemptions for crushed stone so that TCS can seek regulatory relief 
from unfair rates and unreasonable practices. (Id. at 6.)
    When the Commission first exempted the rail transportation of this 
commodity group, testimony provided by witnesses on behalf of 
individual rail carriers indicated that this commodity group was 
subject to motor carrier competition because movements were often short 
haul in nature. Petition of AAR, 9 I.C.C.2d at 975. The Commission also 
found, based on data provided by AAR, that the rail market share of 
this commodity group was 5.4% in 1975, 4.8% in 1980, 4.0% in 1985, and 
4.6% in 1990, evidencing a lack of railroad market dominance. Id. at 
974. Recent information suggests that certain market dynamics may have 
changed significantly.
    While it appears that railroads still have a relatively small modal 
market share of the overall commodity group, TCS's testimony suggests 
that trucking does not effectively limit railroad market power with 
respect to this commodity group. Moreover, waybill data analysis 
demonstrates that the average R/VC ratio for potentially captive 
traffic for this commodity group increased from 232.2% in 1992 to 
254.9% in 2013. Similarly, the percentage of potentially captive 
traffic by revenue for this commodity group during the 22-year review 
period increased from 14.8% in 1992 to 62.0% in 2013. These significant 
changes indicate that revocation of the exemption may be necessary to 
carry out the RTP provisions discussed above with regard to crushed or 
broken stone or rip rap.
2. STCC Nos. 29-914, Coke Produced From Coal; 33-12, Primary Iron or 
Steel Products (Plates, Pipes, and Rods); and 40-211, Iron or Steel 
Scrap, Wastes, or Tailings
    In Petition of AAR, 9 I.C.C.2d at 978, the Commission also exempted 
from its regulation the railroad transportation of coke produced from 
coal, as well as primary iron or steel products. With regard to coke 
produced from coal, the Commission observed that there was, overall, a 
significant railroad market share for this commodity.\9\ Id. 
Nevertheless, based on other evidence, the ICC determined that there 
was product competition, intramodal competition, and depressed prices 
for coke. Id. For example, the ICC concluded that the average revenue 
per

[[Page 17127]]

ton-mile for coke had increased at rates below inflation. Also, the 
American Iron and Steel Institute supported the exemption and asserted, 
among other things, that an exemption would reduce the administrative 
burden associated with tariff and contract filing. Viewing the 
testimony from a trade association of shippers to be especially 
probative, the Commission exempted the rail transportation for coke 
produced from coal. Id.
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    \9\ The Board considered combined market share data for coke 
produced from coal and petroleum coke. AAR subsequently withdrew its 
request for the exemption of petroleum coke.
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    In determining whether to exempt the rail transportation of primary 
iron or steel products, the Commission reviewed modal market share data 
for this commodity group. 9 I.C.C.2d at 979. The agency concluded that 
fluctuating railroad market shares over the course of 15 years (i.e., 
40.4% (1975), 39.2% (1980), 29.7% (1985), and 37.8% (1990)) was 
consistent with a lack of market power. The Commission also noted that 
much of this traffic moved under contract. After considering the data, 
along with the testimony submitted from witnesses of individual 
railroads and a statement from the American Iron and Steel Institute 
supporting the exemption, the Commission exempted this class of 
commodities.
    A few years later, in Rail General Exemption Authority--Exemption 
of Ferrous Recyclables, Docket No. EP 346 (Sub-No. 35) (ICC served May 
16, 1995), the Commission exempted from regulation the railroad 
transportation of iron or steel scrap, wastes and tailings (STCC No. 
40-211). The Commission found the transportation of this commodity 
group to be extremely competitive. Specifically, the ICC found that 
intramodal competition with other railroads and intermodal competition 
with trucks and barges existed in many markets. Id. at 3. Also, the 
Commission determined that there was exceptionally strong geographic 
competition for this commodity group, which would further inhibit 
railroads from exercising market power. Id. Further, the Commission 
found the iron and steel scrap traffic average R/VC ratios of 139.5% in 
1991 and 138.6% in 1992, more than 40 percentage points less than the 
Commission's statutory 180% R/VC rate threshold. Id. at 4. Accordingly, 
the Commission concluded that it was reasonable to assume that the 
majority of the individual carload R/VC ratios were also below the 
jurisdictional threshold. Id.
    Several changes relating to the transportation of these commodity 
groups suggest that railroads have greater market power today than they 
did when the ICC issued its exemption decisions. First, as a general 
matter, in the last several decades, the United States has been 
generating more scrap and requiring less traditional steel production 
in general, which has led the steelmaking industry to shift away from 
traditional blast furnaces towards electric arc furnaces (EAF) to 
convert scrap into new steel.\10\ This trend towards the utilization of 
EAFs has resulted in the movement of steel production away from the 
Great Lakes region to the South.\11\ When steel production was located 
primarily in the Great Lakes region, water carriage was an option for 
transportation--e.g., over the Great Lakes themselves--but is now less 
so after the migration to the South. With respect to trucking, a review 
of confidential waybill data for 1992 and 2013 demonstrates that the 
average length of haul (weighted by tons) for primary iron or steel 
products and iron or steel scrap has increased for non-intermodal and 
non-boxcar movements. For primary iron or steel products, the average 
length of haul has increased by 74 miles, from 652 miles to 726. 
Similarly, the average length of haul for iron or steel scrap has 
increased 114 miles, from 306 miles in 1992, to 420 miles in 2013. 
Although it is unknown what specific factors have contributed to such 
increases, this data is one indication of trucking being less 
competitive in today's marketplace.\12\ For these reasons, railroads 
may be enjoying more market power now than in the early 1990's over 
shippers in the iron and steel industry.\13\ We note that the 
submission of modal market share data over time (between railroads, 
trucks and barge) with regard to these commodity groups will be helpful 
in assessing the degree to which the geographic migration may have 
affected intermodal competition.
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    \10\ John W. Miller, Times Have Changed: New Plan for a Century-
Old U.S. Steel Mill, Wall Street Journal (Jan. 28, 2014), http://blogs.wsj.com/corporate-intelligence/2014/01/28/times-have-changed-new-plan-for-a-century-old-u-s-steel-mill/.
    \11\ AMM Staff, Electric Arc Furnace Production Keeps Moving 
South, American Metal Market (Aug. 27, 2015, 4:12 p.m.), http://www.amm.com/Article/3483752/Electric-arc-furnace-production-keeps-moving-south.html.
    \12\ Trucking becomes less viable when the length of haul 
exceeds 500 miles because any transport over that threshold, in many 
instances, could not be completed in one day. Increases in the 
average length of haul for the above mentioned commodities is one 
possible indicator that there are more movements exceeding the 500-
mile threshold--thereby contributing to less competitive pressure 
from trucking.
    \13\ During the Board's February 2011 proceeding, AK Steel 
Corporation (AK Steel), a steel producer with seven steelmaking and 
finishing plants in the United States, filed comments arguing that 
the rationale underlying many of the exemptions no longer exists or 
is otherwise inapplicable in today's market. According to AK Steel, 
due to the characteristics of its particular freight, it must ship 
via rail because other modes, such as truck, are not viable options. 
(AK Steel Comments 3.) AK Steel further notes that, in many 
instances, its facilities are captive to a single railroad and are 
subject to monopoly railroad power and market dominant pricing. (Id. 
at 5.)
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    Similar arguments with regard to EAFs are also applicable to coke 
produced from coal (STCC No. 29-914). Years ago, blast furnaces in 
Pennsylvania, for instance, were not located far from coke sources in 
that same area. These short-haul distances potentially allowed for a 
significant volume of coke to be shipped to blast furnaces on trucks 
for use in the steelmaking process. However, a review of the Board's 
confidential waybill rate data indicates that the average length of 
haul for non-intermodal, non-boxcar coke produced from coal has 
increased by 39 miles, from 372 miles in 1992, to 411 in 2013. A 39-
mile increase in the average length of haul is consistent with more 
transportation movements exceeding 500 miles in 2013 than in 1992, 
which supports the Board's concern that there is less competition from 
the trucking industry to transport this commodity.
    We are aware that, in one rate reasonableness case, the complaining 
shipper requested that the exemption for coke be partially revoked. See 
FMC Wyo. Corp. v. Union Pac. R.R., NOR 42022 et al., slip op. at 13 
n.17 (STB served May 12, 2000). Although the Board found that there was 
not sufficient evidence to revoke the exemption for coke at that time, 
more recent quantitative findings, discussed below, lend support to the 
idea that the transportation market for that commodity might have 
changed significantly since then.
    Second, analysis of the Board's confidential waybill data further 
supports a conclusion that each of these commodity groups may be 
subject to increased market power from railroads. With regard to 
primary iron or steel products (STCC No. 33-12), from 1992 to 2013, the 
percentage of revenue that was potentially captive for primary iron or 
steel products doubled from 18.8% to 37.6%. Similarly, for iron and 
steel scrap (STCC No. 40-211), the percentage of revenue that was 
potentially captive doubled from 22.1% to 44.0% during this same time 
frame. Also, for primary iron or steel products, the average R/VC ratio 
for potentially captive traffic increased during the 22-year period, 
from 219.1% in 1992 to 236.6% in 2013. For the iron or steel scrap 
commodity group, the average R/VC ratio for potentially captive traffic 
increased by approximately four points, from 225.6% to 229.8%. Thus, 
the Board observes that the traffic for both primary iron or steel 
products and iron

[[Page 17128]]

or steel scrap appears to be increasingly potentially captive to 
railroads, and that this potentially captive traffic is being charged 
higher R/VC ratios over time. This data suggests that railroads may be 
exerting increased market power over shippers of these commodities.
    Likewise, the Board's confidential waybill data for coke produced 
from coal indicates that the percentage of revenue that was potentially 
captive almost tripled from 1992 to 2013. In 1992, 20.1% of revenue was 
potentially captive compared to 58.9% in 2013. During that same time 
period, the average R/VC ratio for potentially captive coke traffic 
increased by approximately 23 points from 225.0% to 248.2%. Thus, it 
appears that coke produced from coal is becoming increasingly captive 
to railroads, and that the captive traffic is being charged higher R/VC 
ratios over time. These findings are consistent with increased market 
power.
3. STCC No. 32-4, Hydraulic Cement
    In Rail General Exemption Authority--Exemption of Hydraulic Cement, 
EP 346 (Sub-No. 34) (ICC served July 26, 1995), the Commission exempted 
from its regulation the rail transportation of hydraulic cement. The 
ICC found that movements of hydraulic cement were predominantly short-
haul in nature, and that railroads therefore faced pervasive 
competition from other railroads, from barges, and especially from 
trucks. Id., slip op. at 4. The Commission, consequently, determined 
that regulation was not necessary to carry out the RTP and that an 
exemption would not permit railroads to abuse market power.
    Several shippers of exempted construction commodities and a shipper 
organization filed comments and/or testified at the Board's February 
2011 hearing.\14\ The Cement Shippers urged the Board to reexamine or 
revoke the exemptions that applied specifically to cement and 
construction materials. They asserted that the competitive landscape 
had changed significantly and that the railroad industry's financial 
situation had improved markedly since the adoption of the commodity 
exemptions. They also asserted that railroad consolidation had resulted 
in carriers having increased market power, enabling railroads to impose 
steep rate increases, and that the competitive situation was made worse 
by declining competition from the motor carrier industry, due to fuel 
prices, a shortage of drivers, and increased congestion on highways and 
roads.
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    \14\ These included CEMEX, Inc. (CEMEX); Holcim (US), Inc. 
(Holcim); and the Portland Cement Association (PCA). CEMEX requested 
that the Board revoke the exemption for construction materials. 
Similarly, Holcim requested revoking the exemption for hydraulic 
cement and the materials used in the manufacture of cement. PCA 
requested that the Board revoke the exemption for construction 
materials, and more specifically, cement and fly ash. These shippers 
are collectively referred to as ``Cement Shippers.''
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    When the ICC first exempted the rail transportation of hydraulic 
cement, the Commission found that railroads faced pervasive 
competition. The ICC concluded that intermodal and intramodal 
competition for hydraulic cement existed in many regions--trucking was 
dominant, and barges and other rail carriers also competed in the 
marketplace. See Rail Gen. Exemption Auth.--Exemption of Hydraulic 
Cement, EP 346 (Sub-No. 34), slip op. at 4. However, changes in the 
rail and cement industries appear to have significantly reduced the 
effectiveness of competitive transportation alternatives. According to 
PCA, over the course of 30 years, the number of cement manufacturing 
plants has fallen from 179 to fewer than 100, while plant capacity, on 
average, has doubled. (PCA Comments 10.) Consequently, cement shippers 
are shipping greater distances, where trucking is not economically 
feasible. (Id.) On average, according to PCA, cement shipments now 
range between 250 to 300 miles, yet truck transportation is not an 
economical mode of transport beyond 100 to 125 miles. (Id. at 2) The 
Cement Shippers state that over 80% of cement shipments in the United 
States are served by a single railroad. (Id.)
    The Board's analysis of waybill data for years 1992 through 2013 
reveals that R/VC ratios for hydraulic cement have trended upwards over 
the course of 22 years. In 1992, the R/VC ratio for potentially captive 
cement traffic was 208.3%, compared to 239.6% in 2013. Also, the 
percentage of potentially captive traffic by revenue increased from 
18.9% in 1992 to 54.6% in 2013. The Board finds that increases in both 
the R/VC ratio for potentially captive traffic and the percentage of 
potentially captive traffic by revenue are possible indicators of 
increased railroad market power sufficient to warrant regulatory 
oversight. This data further supports the Board's proposal to revoke 
the exemption for hydraulic cement.

Conclusion

    For the foregoing reasons, the Board proposes to revoke the 
exemptions, in whole, of STCC No. 14-2, crushed or broken stone or rip 
rap; STCC No. 29-914, coke produced from coal; STCC No. 33-12, primary 
iron or steel products (plates, pipes, and rods); STCC No. 40-211, iron 
or steel scrap, wastes or tailings; and STCC No. 32-4, hydraulic 
cement, because regulation of these commodities is necessary to carry 
out the RTP.
    The Board seeks public comment on whether the exemptions should be 
revoked.\15\ Commenters are invited to include any relevant data in 
support of their comments, including, but not limited to, the types of 
data (for example, modal market share, among other things), upon which 
the ICC relied in first promulgating the class exemptions now proposed 
to be revoked.\16\ The Board also invites parties to address how market 
conditions today differ from those that existed when the exemptions 
were granted and to reflect upon whether or how those changes should 
affect the Board's evaluation of those data sources upon which the ICC 
relied. Finally, as noted, the Board welcomes interested parties to 
file further comments regarding the possible revocation of other 
commodity class exemptions.
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    \15\ We note that additional commenters addressed certain of 
these commodity exemptions in the February 2011 hearing proceeding. 
In commenting in this proceeding, parties may incorporate and 
supplement prior comments as appropriate.
    \16\ See Rail Gen. Exemption Auth.--Pet. of AAR to Exempt Rail 
Transp. of Selected Commodity Groups, 9 I.C.C.2d 969 (1993); Rail 
Gen. Exemption Auth.--Exemption of Ferrous Recyclables, EP 346 (Sub-
No. 35) (ICC served May 16, 1995); and Rail Gen. Exemption Auth.--
Exemption of Hydraulic Cement, EP 346 (Sub-No. 34) (ICC served July 
26, 1995).
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Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-612, 
generally requires a description and analysis of new rules that would 
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities. In drafting a rule, an agency is required to: (1) Assess the 
effect that its regulation will have on small entities; (2) analyze 
effective alternatives that may minimize a regulation's impact; and (3) 
make the analysis available for public comment. Sections 601-604. In 
its notice of proposed rulemaking, the agency must either include an 
initial regulatory flexibility analysis, section 603(a), or certify 
that the proposed rule would not have a ``significant impact on a 
substantial number of small entities,'' section 605(b).
    Because the goal of the RFA is to reduce the cost to small entities 
of complying with federal regulations, the RFA requires an agency to 
perform a regulatory flexibility analysis of small entity impacts only 
when a rule directly regulates those entities. In other words, the 
impact must be a direct impact on

[[Page 17129]]

small entities ``whose conduct is circumscribed or mandated'' by the 
proposed rule. White Eagle Coop. Ass'n v. Conner, 553 F.3d 467, 480 
(7th Cir. 2009).
    The rules proposed here would potentially have a significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. Thus, we 
encourage comment on any information relevant to a significant burden, 
if any, the proposed rules would have on small rail carriers.

Description of the Reasons That Action by the Agency Is Being 
Considered

    The Board held a public hearing in February 2011 to explore the 
continued utility of, and the issues surrounding, exemptions under 
section 10502, specifically the various commodity exemptions under 49 
CFR 1039.10 and 1039.11, the boxcar exemption under 49 CFR 1039.14, and 
the TOFC/COFC exemption under 49 CFR pt. 1090. The Board held the 
hearing because it had been many years (and, in some cases, decades) 
since the agency promulgated many of these commodity exemptions, and 
the Board had received various informal inquiries questioning the 
relevance and/or necessity of some of the existing commodity 
exemptions, given the changes in the competitive landscape and the 
railroad industry that have occurred in the intervening years. A more 
detailed description of the agency's historical deregulation of the 
aforementioned commodities, and the Board's reasons for considering the 
proposed rules are set forth above in this NPRM.

Succinct Statement of the Objectives of, and Legal Basis for, the 
Proposed Rule

    The objective of the proposed rule is to restore shippers' access 
to the Board's regulatory oversight and processes--in particular, 
shippers of those commodities where evidence indicates that the 
competitive landscape has changed significantly enough to indicate that 
renewed regulation is needed to carry out the national RTP. 
Specifically, the Board has concluded, based on the record in this 
proceeding, that renewed regulation is needed with respect to the rail 
transportation of (1) crushed or broken stone or rip rap; (2) hydraulic 
cement; and (3) coke produced from coal, primary iron or steel 
products, and iron or steel scrap, wastes or tailings. The legal basis 
for the proposed rule is 49 U.S.C. 10502(d), which gives the Board 
authority to revoke an exemption, in whole or in part, when it finds 
that regulation is necessary to carry out the RTP of 49 U.S.C. 10101.

Description of and, Where Feasible, an Estimate of the Number of Small 
Entities to Which the Proposed Rule Will Apply

    In general, revoking the exemptions for the commodities listed 
above would impose on all of the nation's approximately 562 small rail 
carriers \17\ the obligation to, among other things, provide common 
carrier rail transportation of those commodities upon reasonable 
request.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ The Small Business Administration's Office of Size 
Standards has established a size standard for rail transportation, 
pursuant to which a ``line-haul railroad'' is considered small if 
its number of employees is 1,500 or less, and a ``short line 
railroad'' is considered small if its number of employees is 500 or 
less. 13 CFR 121.201 (industry subsector 482).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Description of the Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other 
Compliance Requirements of the Proposed Rule, Including an Estimate of 
the Classes of Small Entities That Will Be Subject to the Requirement 
and the Type of Professional Skills Necessary for Preparation of the 
Report or Record

    Under the Board's proposed rules, the revocation of exemption for 
STCC No. 14-2, crushed or broken stone or rip rap; STCC No. 29-914, 
coke produced from coal; STCC No. 33-12, primary iron or steel products 
(plates, pipes, and rods); STCC No. 32-4, hydraulic cement; and STCC 
No. 40-211, iron or steel scrap, wastes would now require a carrier to 
comply with the Board's statutes and regulations regarding the 
provision of common carrier service upon reasonable request, 
maintenance of reasonable practices and rates, and provision of 
adequate service. However, regulation would not impose new reporting 
requirements directly or indirectly on small entities--ICCTA removed 
regulatory paperwork burdens (with limited exceptions) on rail carriers 
to file tariffs or contract summary filings for rail shipments, exempt 
or non-exempt. Nevertheless, the Board seeks further comment on any 
recordkeeping or other compliance requirements, if any, needed to 
conform to the proposed rules.

Identification, to the Extent Practicable, of all Relevant Federal 
Rules That May Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With the Proposed Rule

    The Board is unaware of any duplicative, overlapping, or 
conflicting federal rules. The Board seeks comments and information 
about any such rules.

Description of any Significant Alternatives to the Proposed Rule That 
Accomplish the Stated Objectives of Applicable Statutes and That 
Minimize any Significant Economic Impact of the Proposed Rule on Small 
Entities, Including Alternatives Considered, Such as: (1) Establishment 
of Differing Compliance or Reporting Requirements or Timetables That 
Take Into Account the Resources Available to Small Entities; (2) 
Clarification, Consolidation, or Simplification of Compliance and 
Reporting Requirements Under the Rule for Such Small Entities; (3) use 
of Performance Rather Than Design Standards; (4) any Exemption From 
Coverage of the Rule, or any Part Thereof, for Such Small Entities

    Under the proposed rule, rail carriers would be required to comply 
with the Board's statutes and regulations regarding the provision of 
common carrier service upon reasonable request, maintenance of 
reasonable practices and rates, and provision of adequate service. One 
alternative to the proposed rule would be to exempt certain or all 
small carriers from coverage or compliance with the rule, in whole or 
in part (that is, to revoke the commodity class exemptions at issue for 
larger carriers but keep the exemptions in place for some or all small 
carriers). Another alternative would be to take no action--thereby 
implementing no changes to the current regulatory regime. However, 
neither alternative would accomplish the proposed rules' objective of 
restoring the rail transportation of the commodities at issue to the 
Board's statutory and regulatory regime. Commenters should, if they 
advance these or any other alternatives in their comments, address how 
such alternatives would be consistent or inconsistent with the goals 
envisioned by the proposed rules.

    Authority:  49 U.S.C. 10502 and 13301.

List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 1039

    Agricultural commodities, Intermodal transportation, Railroads.

    Decided: March 23, 2016.

    By the Board, Chairman Elliott, Vice Chairman Miller, and 
Commissioner Begeman. Vice Chairman Miller concurred with a separate 
expression. Commissioner Begeman dissented with a separate 
expression.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.

__________

VICE CHAIRMAN MILLER, concurring:
    I am pleased that the Board is taking action on this long delayed 
matter and, in general, I agree with the outcome to

[[Page 17130]]

institute a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) to revoke the 
commodity exemptions listed in the decision. However, I write 
separately to express my frustration at the lengthy delay by the Board 
to take any action on this matter, and the narrow analysis that was 
used to reach this result.
    It has been over five years since the Board first held a hearing to 
examine whether any commodity exemptions should be revoked. For these 
five years, our stakeholders have been left in the dark as to if or 
when the Board would act. My hope was that, given the long wait, the 
Board would at least conduct a thorough and wide-ranging analysis, but 
as today's decision makes clear, that was not the case.
    In order to demonstrate that the commodity exemptions here warrant 
revocation, the Board mainly relies on two pieces of data: the change 
in R/VC ratios over the last two decades and the percentage of traffic 
moved by rail that is ``potentially captive'' (i.e., above 180% R/VC). 
While not the strongest foundation on which to propose new rules, I 
believe it provides a sufficient basis to move forward, which is why I 
support today's decision. However, I would have liked the Board to go 
further and provide an analysis of all other commodities that are 
currently exempt from regulation. Instead, the scope of the decision 
here is limited to just those commodities that shippers identified at 
the 2010 hearing (and, even then, not all of them). I see no reason why 
the Board could not have analyzed other commodities, even if they were 
not presented at the 2010 hearing.
    By the same token, the Board--without explanation--provides no 
analysis regarding whether commodities that are currently regulated 
should now be exempted. Instead, the Board chooses to look only at 
commodities that are already exempt. In fact, the Board's decision 
ignores the request from Norfolk Southern Railway (NSR) for the Board 
to examine four commodities that NSR claims no longer require Board 
regulation. After keeping our stakeholders waiting for years, a broader 
analysis is the least I would expect.
    As I was unsatisfied with this limited analysis, I requested the 
Board's Office of Economics (OE) to conduct such analyses and provide 
me with the results. While I would have included such analyses as part 
of the decision today, they would not have led me to a different 
outcome. In particular, based on the conclusions I have drawn from the 
analyses, I believe that the railroads have likely not increased market 
power for any exempt commodities other than those addressed in this 
decision.
    In addition, I requested that OE look at available data to assess 
whether it appears that the railroads have lost market power over any 
commodities that are currently regulated, including the commodities 
that NSR identified in its comments as part of the 2010 hearing. Based 
on this analysis, only a handful of commodities showed a potential loss 
of market power by the railroads, but they all involved too minimal an 
amount of traffic to warrant revising the regulations.
    For reasons I do not understand, the Board has chosen not to 
include this analysis as part of the decision, though in my view its 
inclusion would strengthen it. Based on the results of the analysis, I 
would not have advocated for any further revocations of commodity 
exemptions other than the ones listed here, nor to exempt any 
commodities that are currently regulated. Without the analysis though, 
I would not have known that was the case and I would not have felt 
comfortable voting to approve this decision.
    That being said, I agree with Commissioner Begeman that the record 
on which we are basing this decision is less than robust and could 
benefit from additional information. Accordingly, I understand 
Commissioner Begeman's concern about proceeding directly to a NPRM. 
However, I believe that even without additional information, there is 
enough of a foundation on the record that we can move forward with an 
NPRM. Given that our stakeholders have waited for five years for the 
Board to take action, I am reluctant to proceed in a fashion that will 
add even more time to get to a final rule. As the Board will still 
receive comments from stakeholders, and because we can still make 
changes through a supplemental NPRM if the comments indicate our 
conclusions were wrong, I feel that this is a better course of action 
than the alternatives, such as starting with an Advanced Notice of 
Proposed Rulemaking. I will remain open to the idea of initiating an 
additional NPRM or a supplemental NPRM if we receive evidence that 
indicates that our conclusions with regard any commodities proposed for 
revocation are incorrect.
__________

COMMISSIONER BEGEMAN, dissenting:
    This record was created over half a decade ago, before two of the 
three current Board members were even appointed (and my five-year term 
since expired). For this Board to take informed action now, we should 
first ask interested stakeholders to update the docket, and then 
propose whatever changes are necessary. And, importantly, we should 
commit to completing final action by a timely date certain.
    Although I appreciate the Board staff's recent review of waybill 
rate data from 1992 through 2013, I am not convinced that analysis 
sufficiently supports altering the exemption landscape. The ``record'' 
the majority is relying on to support its proposed changes is a 
waybill-based hunch using limited information on these commodities. 
Today's decision also begs the question: if waybill data are sufficient 
basis for a proposed rule, then why didn't the Board act years ago? 
Nothing in this decision suggests that the case for action has markedly 
changed since 2011.
    The proposed rule also fails to account for the present. 
Considerable and important events have taken place since the February 
2011 hearing and the 2013 waybill cutoff, including the 2014 rail 
service crisis that impacted shippers and carriers across the country 
and the significant shifts in service demand for coal, oil, and other 
important commodities. Fuel prices have also changed dramatically. 
Unfortunately, today's proposed rule is completely uninformed by any of 
these or other current market considerations.
    The law directs the Board to exercise its exemption authority 
broadly, and that directive was unchanged with passage of the recent 
STB Reauthorization Act, P.L. 114-110. Therefore, we shouldn't narrow 
or revoke exemptions granted under that authority absent compelling 
circumstances. Instead, the majority is proposing changes without 
really knowing whether the revocations are justified.
    Even if a commodity is exempt, however, the Board is not 
uninterested. We still conduct broad oversight of exempt commodities 
and take action when we deem it necessary. For example, when the Board 
directed the carriers to provide weekly service reporting, we included 
reporting on intermodal and automobiles, which are exempt. The Board's 
Rail Shipper Transportation Advisory Council has included shippers of 
exempt commodities who also provide the Board with key rail service 
demand information. The Board's Rail Customer and Public Assistance 
Program also helps resolve the questions and problems of exempt 
commodity shippers whenever possible.
    Clearly, stakeholders have waited far too long for Board action on 
this docket. But we should be asking the parties to update the record 
so that the Board can

[[Page 17131]]

propose an informed rule based on up-to-date information. Instead, the 
majority appears to be taking the path of least resistance to close a 
languishing docket. I dissent.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Surface 
Transportation Board proposes to amend 49 CFR part 1039 as follows:

PART 1039--EXEMPTIONS

0
1. The authority citation for part 1039 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  49 U.S.C. 10502, 13301.

0
2. Section 1039.11 is revised to read as follows:


Sec.  1039.11  Miscellaneous commodities exemptions.

    (a) Commodities exempted. (1) Except as indicated in paragraph (b) 
of this section, the rail transportation of the commodities listed 
below is exempt from the provisions of 49 U.S.C. subtitle IV. The 
Standard Transportation Commodity Code (STCC) numbers that identify the 
exempted commodities are those in effect on the effective date of the 
tariff cited, and shall embrace all commodities assigned additional 
digits.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
            STCC No.                                 STCC Tariff                               Commodity
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
14 1...........................  6001-T, eff. 1-1-92................................  Dimension stone, quarry.
14 411.........................  ......do...........................................  Sand (aggregate or
                                                                                       ballast).
14 412.........................  ......do...........................................  Gravel (aggregate or
                                                                                       ballast).
20.............................  ......do...........................................  Food or kindred products
                                                                                       except:
                                                                                         20 143 Grease or
                                                                                          inedible tallow.
                                                                                         20 32 Canned
                                                                                          specialties.
                                                                                         20 33 Canned fruits,
                                                                                          jams, jellies,
                                                                                          preserves or
                                                                                          vegetables.
                                                                                         20 4 Grain mill
                                                                                          products.
                                                                                         20 6 Sugar, beet or
                                                                                          cane.
                                                                                         20 8 Beverages or
                                                                                          flavoring extracts.
                                                                                         20 911 Cottonseed oil,
                                                                                          crude or refined.
                                                                                         20 914 Cottonseed cake
                                                                                          or meal or by-
                                                                                          products.
                                                                                         20 92 Soybean oil or by-
                                                                                          products.
                                                                                         20 93 Nut or vegetable
                                                                                          oils or by-products.
22.............................  ......do...........................................  Textile mill products.
23.............................  ......do...........................................  Apparel or other finished
                                                                                       textile products or knit
                                                                                       apparel.
24.............................  ......do...........................................  Lumber or wood products.
25.............................  ......do...........................................  Furniture or fixtures.
26.............................  ......do...........................................  Pulp, paper or allied
                                                                                       products except:
                                                                                         26 1 Pulp or pulp mill
                                                                                          products.
                                                                                         26 211 Newsprint.
                                                                                         26 212 Ground wood
                                                                                          paper, uncoated.
                                                                                         26 213 Printing paper,
                                                                                          coated or uncoated,
                                                                                          etc.
                                                                                         26 214 Wrapping paper,
                                                                                          wrappers or coarse
                                                                                          paper.
                                                                                         26 218 Sanitary tissue
                                                                                          stock.
                                                                                         26 471 Sanitary tissues
                                                                                          or health products.
                                                                                         26 6 Building paper or
                                                                                          building board except:
                                                                                         26 613 Wallboard.
27.............................  ......do...........................................  Printed matter.
28 195 22-23...................  ......do...........................................  Iron chloride, liquid.
28 195 27-30...................  ......do...........................................  Iron sulphate.
28 195 68-69...................  ......do...........................................  Ferrous sulphate.
29 915.........................  ......do...........................................  Distillate or residual
                                                                                       fuel oil from coal
                                                                                       refining.
30.............................  ......do...........................................  Rubber or miscellaneous
                                                                                       plastics products except:
                                                                                         30 111 Rubber pneumatic
                                                                                          tires or parts.
31.............................  ......do...........................................  Leather or leather
                                                                                       products.
32.............................  ......do...........................................  Clay, concrete, glass or
                                                                                       stone products except:
                                                                                         32 4 Hydraulic cement.
                                                                                         32 741 Lime or lime
                                                                                          plaster.
                                                                                         32 95 Nonmetallic
                                                                                          earths or minerals,
                                                                                          ground or treated in
                                                                                          any other manner
                                                                                          except:
                                                                                         32 952 15 Cinders,
                                                                                          clay, shale expanded
                                                                                          shale), slate or
                                                                                          volcanic (not pumice
                                                                                          stone), or haydrite.
33.............................  ......do...........................................  Primary metal products,
                                                                                       including galvanized,
                                                                                       except:
                                                                                         33 12 Primary Iron or
                                                                                          Steel Products.
34.............................  ......do...........................................  Fabricated metal products
                                                                                       except:
                                                                                         34 6 Metal stampings.
                                                                                         34 919 40 Radioactive
                                                                                          material shipping
                                                                                          containers, etc.
35.............................  ......do...........................................  Machinery except:
                                                                                         35 11 Steam engines,
                                                                                          turbines, turbine
                                                                                          generator sets, or
                                                                                          parts.
                                                                                         35 85 Refrigerators or
                                                                                          refrigeration
                                                                                          machinery or complete
                                                                                          air-conditioning
                                                                                          units.
36.............................  ......do...........................................  Electrical machinery,
                                                                                       equipment or supplies
                                                                                       except:
                                                                                         36 12 Power,
                                                                                          distribution or
                                                                                          specialty
                                                                                          transformers.
                                                                                         36 21 Motors or
                                                                                          generators.
3711...........................  ......do...........................................  Motor vehicles.
3714...........................  ......do...........................................  Motor vehicle parts or
                                                                                       accessories.
38.............................  ......do...........................................  Instruments, photographic
                                                                                       goods, optical goods,
                                                                                       watches or clocks.
39.............................  ......do...........................................  Miscellaneous products of
                                                                                       manufacturing.
41 118.........................  6001-U, eff. 1-1-93................................  Used vehicles.
14 715.........................  6001-V, eff. 1-1-94................................  Rock salt.

[[Page 17132]]

 
20 143.........................  ......do...........................................  Grease or Inedible Tallow.
28 133.........................  ......do...........................................  Carbon dioxide.
28 991.........................  ......do...........................................  Salt.
34 912.........................  6001-W, eff. 1-1-95................................  Steel shipping containers.
33 119.........................  6001-X, eff. 1-11-96...............................  Blast furnace, open
                                                                                       hearth, rolling mill or
                                                                                       coke oven products, NEC.
20511..........................  6001-X, eff., 1-1-96...............................  Bread or other bakery
                                                                                       products exc. biscuits,
                                                                                       crackers, pretzels or
                                                                                       other dry bakery
                                                                                       products. See 20521-
                                                                                       20529.
22941..........................  ......do...........................................  Textile waste, garnetted,
                                                                                       processed, or recovered
                                                                                       or recovered fibres or
                                                                                       flock exc. packing or
                                                                                       wiping cloths or rags.
                                                                                       See 22994.
22973..........................  ......do...........................................  Textile fibres, laps,
                                                                                       noils, nubs, roving,
                                                                                       sliver or slubs, prepared
                                                                                       for spinning, combed or
                                                                                       converted.
22994..........................  ......do...........................................  Packing or wiping cloths
                                                                                       or rags (processed
                                                                                       textile wastes).
24293..........................  ......do...........................................  Shavings or sawdust.
30311..........................  ......do...........................................  Reclaimed rubber.
3229924........................  ......do...........................................  Cullet (broken glass).
33312..........................  ......do...........................................  Copper matte, speiss, flue
                                                                                       dust, or residues, etc.
33322..........................  ......do...........................................  Lead matte, speiss, flue
                                                                                       dust, dross, slag,
                                                                                       skimmings, etc.
33332..........................  ......do...........................................  Zinc dross, residues,
                                                                                       ashes, etc.
33342..........................  ......do...........................................  Aluminum residues, etc.
33398..........................  ......do...........................................  Misc. nonferrous metal
                                                                                       residues, including
                                                                                       solder babbitt or type
                                                                                       metal residues.
40112..........................  ......do...........................................  Ashes.
40212..........................  ......do...........................................  Brass, bronze, copper or
                                                                                       alloy scrap, tailings, or
                                                                                       wastes.
40213..........................  ......do...........................................  Lead, zinc, or alloy
                                                                                       scrap, tailings or
                                                                                       wastes.
40214..........................  ......do...........................................  Aluminum or alloy scrap,
                                                                                       tailings or wastes.
4021960........................  ......do...........................................  Tin scrap, consisting of
                                                                                       scraps or pieces of
                                                                                       metallic tin, clippings,
                                                                                       drippings, shavings,
                                                                                       turnings, or old worn-out
                                                                                       block tin pipe having
                                                                                       value for remelting
                                                                                       purposes only.
40221..........................  ......do...........................................  Textile waste, scrap or
                                                                                       sweepings.
40231..........................  ......do...........................................  Wood scrap or waste.
40241..........................  ......do...........................................  Paper waste or scrap.
40251..........................  ......do...........................................  Chemical or petroleum
                                                                                       waste, including spent.
40261..........................  ......do...........................................  Rubber or plastic scrap or
                                                                                       waste.
4029114........................  ......do...........................................  Municipal garbage waste,
                                                                                       solid, digested and
                                                                                       ground, other than sewage
                                                                                       waste or fertilizer.
4029176........................  ......do...........................................  Automobile shredder
                                                                                       residue.
4111434........................  ......do...........................................  Bags, old, burlap, gunny,
                                                                                       istle (ixtle), jute, or
                                                                                       sisal, NEC.
41115..........................  ......do...........................................  Articles, used, returned
                                                                                       for repair or
                                                                                       reconditioning.
42111..........................  ......do...........................................  Nonrevenue movement of
                                                                                       containers, bags,
                                                                                       barrels, bottles, boxes,
                                                                                       crates, cores, drums,
                                                                                       kegs, reels, tubes, or
                                                                                       carriers, NEC, empty,
                                                                                       returning in reverse of
                                                                                       route used in loaded
                                                                                       movement, and so
                                                                                       certified.
42112..........................  ......do...........................................  Nonrevenue movement of
                                                                                       shipping devices,
                                                                                       consisting of blocking,
                                                                                       bolsters, cradles,
                                                                                       pallets, racks, skids,
                                                                                       etc., empty, returning in
                                                                                       reverse of route used in
                                                                                       loaded movement, and so
                                                                                       certified.
42311..........................  ......do...........................................  Revenue movement of
                                                                                       containers, bags,
                                                                                       barrels, bottles, boxes,
                                                                                       crates, cores, drums,
                                                                                       kegs, reels, tubes, or
                                                                                       carriers, NEC, empty,
                                                                                       returning in reverse of
                                                                                       route used in loaded
                                                                                       movement and so
                                                                                       certified.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (2) Also excepted from this exemption are those recyclable products 
specifically identified by the Board at 356 I.C.C. 445-447, those 
commodities previously exempt, and any transportation service regarding 
which the Board has made a finding of market dominance. However, this 
exemption shall not be construed as affecting in any way the existing 
regulations, agreements, prescriptions, conditions, allowances or 
levels of compensation regarding the use of equipment, whether shipper 
or railroad owned or leased, including car hire, per diem and mileage 
allowances, and also including exemption from the anti-trust laws 
necessary to negotiate car service regulations or mandatory interchange 
of equipment or to maintain and execute such agreements. Nor shall this 
exemption be construed to affect existing Class III railroad 
``protections'' in the case of boxcars.
    (b) Conditions. Carriers must continue to comply with Board 
accounting and reporting requirements. All railroad tariffs pertaining 
to the transportation of these miscellaneous commodities will no longer 
apply. This exemption shall remain in effect, unless modified or 
revoked by a subsequent order of this Board.

[FR Doc. 2016-06956 Filed 3-25-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4915-01-P



                                                                        Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                   17125

                                               PART 1852—SOLICITATION                                  31, Congress gave the Board broad                     rail transportation of all commodities in
                                               PROVISIONS AND CONTRACT                                 authority to exempt rail carriers from                single-line boxcar service, at 49 CFR
                                               CLAUSES                                                 regulation when such regulation was                   1039.14.4
                                                                                                       not needed to protect against abuses of
                                               1852.210–70, 1852.212–70, and 1852.212–74                                                                     February 2011 Hearing
                                                                                                       market power. The Interstate Commerce
                                                 [Removed]                                             Commission (ICC or Commission) first                     The agency’s exemption decisions
                                               ■ 3. Remove sections 1852.210–70,                       exercised its exemption authority in                  were instrumental in the U.S. rail
                                               1852.212–70, and 1852.212–74.                           Rail General Exemption Authority—                     system’s transition from a heavily
                                               [FR Doc. 2016–06887 Filed 3–25–16; 8:45 am]             Fresh Fruits & Vegetables, 361 I.C.C. 211             regulated, financially weak component
                                                                                                       (1979), categorically exempting the                   of the economy into a mature, healthy
                                               BILLING CODE 7510–01–P
                                                                                                       transportation of certain fresh fruits and            industry that operates with limited
                                                                                                       vegetables from its regulations.                      oversight. However, more than 30 years
                                                                                                          Congress revised the statutory                     have passed since many of the
                                               SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD                                                                                  commodity exemptions were adopted,
                                                                                                       exemption standard in the Staggers Rail
                                               49 CFR Part 1039                                        Act of 1980, 94 Stat. 1895, to provide                and there have been many changes in
                                                                                                       that the agency shall exempt a person,                the railroad industry over that period. In
                                               [Docket No. EP 704 (Sub-No. 1)]                         class of persons, or a transaction or                 more recent years, the Board received
                                                                                                       service when it finds that the                        informal inquiries questioning the
                                               Review of Commodity, Boxcar, and                                                                              relevance or necessity of some of the
                                               Trailer-on-Flatcar/Container-on-Flatcar                 application of a provision of 49 U.S.C.
                                                                                                       subtitle IV (1) is not necessary to carry             existing commodity exemptions. The
                                               (TOFC/COFC) Exemptions                                                                                        Board, therefore, requested public
                                                                                                       out the transportation policy of section
                                               AGENCY:   Surface Transportation Board.                 10101a; and (2) either (a) the transaction            comment and held a public hearing in
                                               ACTION:   Notice of proposed rulemaking.                or service is of limited scope, or (b) the            February 2011 to explore the continued
                                                                                                       application of the statute is not                     utility of, and the issues surrounding,
                                               SUMMARY:    The Surface Transportation                  necessary to protect shippers from the                the various commodity exemptions
                                               Board (Board or STB) seeks public                       abuse of market power. The exemption                  under 49 CFR 1039.10 and 1039.11, the
                                               comment on its proposal to revoke the                   provision, which is now codified at 49                boxcar exemption under 49 CFR
                                               existing class exemptions for crushed or                U.S.C. 10502,1 also provides that the                 1039.14, and the TOFC/COFC
                                               broken stone or rip rap; hydraulic                      agency may revoke an exemption                        exemption under 49 CFR pt. 1090. The
                                               cement; and coke produced from coal,                    (partially or completely) if the agency               Board encouraged interested parties to
                                               primary iron or steel products, and iron                later determines that the application of              address the effectiveness of the
                                               or steel scrap, wastes or tailings. The                 the Interstate Commerce Act is                        exemptions in the marketplace, whether
                                               Board also invites interested parties to                necessary to carry out the Rail                       the rationale behind any of these
                                               file, during the comment period for                     Transportation Policy at 49 U.S.C.                    exemptions should be revisited, and
                                               these proposed rules, comments                          10101 (the RTP). See section 10502(d).                whether the exemptions should be
                                               regarding the possible revocation of                       Pursuant to its exemption authority,               subject to periodic review.
                                               other commodity class exemptions.                       the ICC, and later the Board, exempted                   The Board received written comment
                                               DATES: Comments on the proposed
                                                                                                                                                             from numerous parties representing a
                                                                                                       from regulation the transportation by
                                               rulemaking are due on or before May 27,                                                                       diverse group of stakeholders including
                                                                                                       rail of numerous other individual
                                               2016; replies are due June 27, 2016.                                                                          railroads, shippers, and the U.S.
                                                                                                       commodities, finding that traffic for
                                                                                                                                                             Department of Transportation. Twenty-
                                               ADDRESSES: Any filings submitted in                     these individual commodities was
                                                                                                                                                             one individuals testified at the hearing.
                                               this proceeding must be submitted                       sufficiently competitive and that
                                                                                                                                                             The Board has considered those written
                                               either via the Board’s e-filing format or               railroads lacked the ability to subject
                                                                                                                                                             comments and the oral testimony in
                                               in the traditional paper format. Any                    shippers to an abuse of market power.2
                                                                                                                                                             developing the proposal discussed
                                               person using e-filing should attach a                   These commodity exemptions are
                                                                                                                                                             below.
                                               document and otherwise comply with                      codified at 49 CFR 1039.10 and 1039.11.
                                               the instructions found at the E–FILING                  The Commission also exempted rail                     Proposed Rule
                                               link on the Board’s Web site at                         (and truck) operations provided in                       As discussed above, pursuant to 49
                                               www.stb.dot.gov. Any person submitting                  connection with trailer-on-flatcar/                   U.S.C. 10502(d), the Board may revoke
                                               a filing in the traditional paper format                container-on-flatcar (TOFC/COFC)                      an exemption, in whole or in part, when
                                               should send an original and 10 copies                   services, at 49 CFR pt. 1090,3 and the                it finds that regulation is necessary to
                                               and also an electronic version to:                                                                            carry out the RTP. After considering the
                                               Surface Transportation Board, Attn:                        1 There have been additional changes to the
                                                                                                                                                             oral testimony and written comments,
                                               Docket No. EP 704 (Sub-No. 1), 395 E                    exemption provision since the Staggers Act with
                                                                                                       regard to the process and timing of exemption         waybill rate data for years 1992 through
                                               Street SW., Washington, DC 20423–                       proceedings. The substantive standard, however,       2013,5 and other industry information,
                                               0001.                                                   has remained the same.                                the Board now proposes to revoke the
                                               FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                          2 See Rail Gen. Exemption Auth.—Nonferrous
                                                                                                                                                             commodity exemptions for the
                                                                                                       Recyclables, 3 S.T.B. 62 (1998); Rail Gen.            following Standard Transportation
                                               Scott Zimmerman at (202) 245–0386.                      Exemption Auth.—Pet. of AAR to Exempt Rail
                                               Assistance for the hearing impaired is                  Transp. of Selected Commodity Groups, 9 I.C.C.2d      Commodity Code (STCC) groups: STCC
                                               available through the Federal                           969 (1993); Exemption from Regulation—Rail
                                                                                                       Transp. Frozen Food, 367 I.C.C. 859 (1983); Liquid
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                                                                                                                                                               4 See Exemption from Regulation—Boxcar Traffic,
                                               Information Relay Services (FIRS) at 1–
                                                                                                       Iron Chloride, 367 I.C.C. 347 (1983); Rail Gen.       367 I.C.C. 425 (1983); Exemption from Regulation—
                                               800–877–8339.                                           Exemption Auth.—Miscellaneous Agric.                  Boxcar Traffic, 367 I.C.C. 747 (1983), Exemption
                                               SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                              Commodities, 367 I.C.C. 298 (1983).                   from Regulation—Boxcar Traffic, 3 I.C.C.2d 23
                                                                                                          3 See Improvement of TOFC/COFC Regulation,         (1986). See also Brae Corp. v. United States, 740
                                               Introduction                                            364 I.C.C. 731 (1981); Improvement of TOFC/COFC       F.2d 1023 (D.C. Cir. 1984).
                                                                                                       Regulations (R.R.-Affiliated Motor Carriers & Other     5 The Board reviewed a 22-year period of
                                                 In 1976, as part of the Railroad                      Motor Carriers), 3 I.C.C.2d 869 (1987); Improvement   confidential waybill data, beginning with
                                               Revitalization and Regulatory Reform                    of TOFC/COFC Regulations (Pickup & Delivery), 6       information filed in 1992 and ending with data filed
                                               Act of 1976, Public Law 94–210, 90 Stat.                I.C.C.2d 208 (1989).                                  in 2013, the most recent on file with the Board.



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                                               17126                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               No. 14–2, crushed or broken stone or rip                to file comments regarding the possible               for crushed stone so that TCS can seek
                                               rap; STCC No. 29–914, coke produced                     revocation of other commodity class                   regulatory relief from unfair rates and
                                               from coal; STCC No. 33–12, primary                      exemptions; such comments should                      unreasonable practices. (Id. at 6.)
                                               iron or steel products (plates, pipes, and              address any marketplace changes                         When the Commission first exempted
                                               rods); STCC No. 32–4, hydraulic                         comparable to the ones described below.               the rail transportation of this
                                               cement; and STCC No. 40–211, iron or                                                                          commodity group, testimony provided
                                                                                                       1. STCC Nos. 14–2, Crushed or Broken
                                               steel scrap, wastes or tailings.6                                                                             by witnesses on behalf of individual rail
                                                 With regard to each of these                          Stone or Rip Rap
                                                                                                                                                             carriers indicated that this commodity
                                               commodity groups, the dynamics of the                      In Rail General Exemption                          group was subject to motor carrier
                                               particular transportation markets appear                Authority—Petition of AAR to Exempt                   competition because movements were
                                               to have changed so significantly since                  Rail Transportation of Selected                       often short haul in nature. Petition of
                                               the exemptions were first promulgated                   Commodity Groups (Petition of AAR) 9                  AAR, 9 I.C.C.2d at 975. The Commission
                                               as to warrant the application of the                    I.C.C.2d 969 (1993), the Commission                   also found, based on data provided by
                                               Interstate Commerce Act in order to                     exempted from its regulation the                      AAR, that the rail market share of this
                                               carry out the Rail Transportation Policy.               railroad transportation of several                    commodity group was 5.4% in 1975,
                                               As discussed below, these changes point                 commodities, including crushed or                     4.8% in 1980, 4.0% in 1985, and 4.6%
                                               toward an increased likelihood of                       broken stone or rip rap (crushed stone).8             in 1990, evidencing a lack of railroad
                                               railroad market power for each of these                 After reviewing broad, market-share                   market dominance. Id. at 974. Recent
                                               specific commodity groups. This                         data, the Commission found that the rail              information suggests that certain market
                                               conclusion is also supported by the fact                transportation of crushed stone                       dynamics may have changed
                                               that railroad waybill rate data for these               consisted of short hauls and was                      significantly.
                                               commodities shows a substantial                         characterized by declining or stagnant                  While it appears that railroads still
                                               increase in revenue from potentially                    revenue per unit of service—market                    have a relatively small modal market
                                               captive traffic (i.e., traffic with a                   characteristics not consistent with a                 share of the overall commodity group,
                                               revenue-to-variable cost (R/VC) ratio of                finding of market power. Id. at 974.                  TCS’s testimony suggests that trucking
                                               more than 180%) over the last 22 years.7                Thus, the Commission concluded that                   does not effectively limit railroad
                                               Thus, with respect to these                             regulation of this commodity was not                  market power with respect to this
                                               commodities, the Board believes that                    necessary to carry out the transportation             commodity group. Moreover, waybill
                                               reestablishing regulatory oversight is                  policy of section 10101 because                       data analysis demonstrates that the
                                               necessary to foster sound economic                      transportation was competitive, and an                average R/VC ratio for potentially
                                               conditions in transportation, 49 U.S.C.                 exemption would, among other things,                  captive traffic for this commodity group
                                               10101(5), maintain reasonable rates                     minimize the need for federal regulatory              increased from 232.2% in 1992 to
                                               where there is an absence of effective                  control; increase competition between                 254.9% in 2013. Similarly, the
                                               competition, section 10101(6), and                      rail carriers and trucks by allowing                  percentage of potentially captive traffic
                                               prohibit predatory pricing and practices,               quick, selective rate changes in response             by revenue for this commodity group
                                               avoid undue concentrations of market                    to competition; and allow more efficient              during the 22-year review period
                                               power, and prohibit unlawful                            management by allowing pricing                        increased from 14.8% in 1992 to 62.0%
                                               discrimination, section 10101(12).                      changes in response to changing                       in 2013. These significant changes
                                                 The purpose of this proposal is to                    business conditions. Id. at 973.                      indicate that revocation of the
                                               restore shippers’ access to the Board’s                    In its February 2011 hearing                       exemption may be necessary to carry
                                               regulatory oversight and processes—in                   comments, Texas Crushed Stone (TCS),                  out the RTP provisions discussed above
                                               particular, shippers of those                           a limestone quarry operator, argued that              with regard to crushed or broken stone
                                               commodities where evidence indicates                    the Board should consider revoking the                or rip rap.
                                               that the competitive landscape has                      class exemption for crushed stone or
                                               changed significantly enough to indicate                aggregates. (TCS Comments 8.) TCS                     2. STCC Nos. 29–914, Coke Produced
                                               that renewed regulation is needed to                    stated that the business landscape of the             From Coal; 33–12, Primary Iron or Steel
                                               carry out the RTP. The Board is                         railroad industry had changed since the               Products (Plates, Pipes, and Rods); and
                                               committed to ensuring that stakeholders                 Staggers Rail Act of 1980 was enacted.                40–211, Iron or Steel Scrap, Wastes, or
                                               have an appropriate, meaningful path to                 (Id. at 4.) TCS also claimed that                     Tailings
                                               the Board, and the proposal here is an                  intramodal competition had been                         In Petition of AAR, 9 I.C.C.2d at 978,
                                               important step towards that goal. The                   reduced as a result of railroad                       the Commission also exempted from its
                                               Board also welcomes interested parties                  consolidation and asserted that some                  regulation the railroad transportation of
                                                                                                       railroads had abused their market power               coke produced from coal, as well as
                                                  6 The Standard Transportation Commodity Code         by aggressively increasing rail                       primary iron or steel products. With
                                               is a numerical code used to identify commodities        transportation rates. (Id. at 8.) TCS
                                               and groupings of commodities. The initial two
                                                                                                                                                             regard to coke produced from coal, the
                                               digits represent a broad commodity grouping;
                                                                                                       maintained that trucking was not a                    Commission observed that there was,
                                               subsequent numbers indicate smaller sub-groupings       practical check on railroad market                    overall, a significant railroad market
                                               or individual commodities. See Rail Gen.                power as there are not enough trucks or               share for this commodity.9 Id.
                                               Exemption Auth.—Pet. of AAR to Exempt Rail              drivers to handle the volumes it had
                                               Transp. of Selected Commodity Groups, 9 I.C.C.2d
                                                                                                                                                             Nevertheless, based on other evidence,
                                               969 n.2 (1993).
                                                                                                       shipped in the past. (Id. at 5.) TCS also             the ICC determined that there was
                                                                                                       asserted that the preponderance of its                product competition, intramodal
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                                                  7 R/VC ratios in excess of the market dominance

                                               threshold of 180% do not, standing alone, establish     shipments were captive, as most of its                competition, and depressed prices for
                                               market power or an abuse of such power. Thus, the       customers were served by one railroad.                coke. Id. For example, the ICC
                                               Board bases its proposal to revoke these commodity      (Id. at 5.) Accordingly, TCS requested
                                               class exemptions on a variety of marketplace                                                                  concluded that the average revenue per
                                               changes described in this notice of proposed            that the Board revoke the exemptions
                                               rulemaking. However, R/VC ratios have long been                                                                 9 The Board considered combined market share

                                               used by the Board as one indication of market             8 In that decision, the Commission exempted the     data for coke produced from coal and petroleum
                                               power, and it is appropriate to rely on this data as    railroad transportation of 16 other classes of        coke. AAR subsequently withdrew its request for
                                               supporting evidence.                                    commodities as well.                                  the exemption of petroleum coke.



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                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                17127

                                               ton-mile for coke had increased at rates                States has been generating more scrap                     commodity groups will be helpful in
                                               below inflation. Also, the American Iron                and requiring less traditional steel                      assessing the degree to which the
                                               and Steel Institute supported the                       production in general, which has led the                  geographic migration may have affected
                                               exemption and asserted, among other                     steelmaking industry to shift away from                   intermodal competition.
                                               things, that an exemption would reduce                  traditional blast furnaces towards                           Similar arguments with regard to
                                               the administrative burden associated                    electric arc furnaces (EAF) to convert                    EAFs are also applicable to coke
                                               with tariff and contract filing. Viewing                scrap into new steel.10 This trend                        produced from coal (STCC No. 29–914).
                                               the testimony from a trade association of               towards the utilization of EAFs has                       Years ago, blast furnaces in
                                               shippers to be especially probative, the                resulted in the movement of steel                         Pennsylvania, for instance, were not
                                               Commission exempted the rail                            production away from the Great Lakes                      located far from coke sources in that
                                               transportation for coke produced from                   region to the South.11 When steel                         same area. These short-haul distances
                                               coal. Id.                                               production was located primarily in the                   potentially allowed for a significant
                                                  In determining whether to exempt the                 Great Lakes region, water carriage was                    volume of coke to be shipped to blast
                                               rail transportation of primary iron or                  an option for transportation—e.g., over                   furnaces on trucks for use in the
                                               steel products, the Commission                          the Great Lakes themselves—but is now                     steelmaking process. However, a review
                                               reviewed modal market share data for                    less so after the migration to the South.                 of the Board’s confidential waybill rate
                                               this commodity group. 9 I.C.C.2d at 979.                With respect to trucking, a review of                     data indicates that the average length of
                                               The agency concluded that fluctuating                   confidential waybill data for 1992 and                    haul for non-intermodal, non-boxcar
                                               railroad market shares over the course of               2013 demonstrates that the average                        coke produced from coal has increased
                                               15 years (i.e., 40.4% (1975), 39.2%                     length of haul (weighted by tons) for                     by 39 miles, from 372 miles in 1992, to
                                               (1980), 29.7% (1985), and 37.8% (1990))                 primary iron or steel products and iron                   411 in 2013. A 39-mile increase in the
                                               was consistent with a lack of market                    or steel scrap has increased for non-                     average length of haul is consistent with
                                               power. The Commission also noted that                   intermodal and non-boxcar movements.                      more transportation movements
                                               much of this traffic moved under                        For primary iron or steel products, the                   exceeding 500 miles in 2013 than in
                                               contract. After considering the data,                   average length of haul has increased by                   1992, which supports the Board’s
                                               along with the testimony submitted                      74 miles, from 652 miles to 726.                          concern that there is less competition
                                               from witnesses of individual railroads                  Similarly, the average length of haul for                 from the trucking industry to transport
                                               and a statement from the American Iron                  iron or steel scrap has increased 114                     this commodity.
                                               and Steel Institute supporting the                      miles, from 306 miles in 1992, to 420                        We are aware that, in one rate
                                               exemption, the Commission exempted                      miles in 2013. Although it is unknown                     reasonableness case, the complaining
                                               this class of commodities.                              what specific factors have contributed to                 shipper requested that the exemption
                                                  A few years later, in Rail General                   such increases, this data is one                          for coke be partially revoked. See FMC
                                               Exemption Authority—Exemption of                        indication of trucking being less                         Wyo. Corp. v. Union Pac. R.R., NOR
                                               Ferrous Recyclables, Docket No. EP 346                  competitive in today’s marketplace.12                     42022 et al., slip op. at 13 n.17 (STB
                                               (Sub-No. 35) (ICC served May 16, 1995),                 For these reasons, railroads may be                       served May 12, 2000). Although the
                                               the Commission exempted from                            enjoying more market power now than                       Board found that there was not
                                               regulation the railroad transportation of               in the early 1990’s over shippers in the                  sufficient evidence to revoke the
                                               iron or steel scrap, wastes and tailings                iron and steel industry.13 We note that                   exemption for coke at that time, more
                                               (STCC No. 40–211). The Commission                       the submission of modal market share                      recent quantitative findings, discussed
                                               found the transportation of this                        data over time (between railroads,                        below, lend support to the idea that the
                                               commodity group to be extremely                         trucks and barge) with regard to these                    transportation market for that
                                               competitive. Specifically, the ICC found                                                                          commodity might have changed
                                               that intramodal competition with other                    10 John W. Miller, Times Have Changed: New              significantly since then.
                                               railroads and intermodal competition                    Plan for a Century-Old U.S. Steel Mill, Wall Street          Second, analysis of the Board’s
                                               with trucks and barges existed in many                  Journal (Jan. 28, 2014), http://blogs.wsj.com/            confidential waybill data further
                                                                                                       corporate-intelligence/2014/01/28/times-have-
                                               markets. Id. at 3. Also, the Commission                 changed-new-plan-for-a-century-old-u-s-steel-mill/.
                                                                                                                                                                 supports a conclusion that each of these
                                               determined that there was exceptionally                   11 AMM Staff, Electric Arc Furnace Production           commodity groups may be subject to
                                               strong geographic competition for this                  Keeps Moving South, American Metal Market (Aug.           increased market power from railroads.
                                               commodity group, which would further                    27, 2015, 4:12 p.m.), http://www.amm.com/Article/         With regard to primary iron or steel
                                                                                                       3483752/Electric-arc-furnace-production-keeps-            products (STCC No. 33–12), from 1992
                                               inhibit railroads from exercising market                moving-south.html.
                                               power. Id. Further, the Commission                        12 Trucking becomes less viable when the length         to 2013, the percentage of revenue that
                                               found the iron and steel scrap traffic                  of haul exceeds 500 miles because any transport           was potentially captive for primary iron
                                               average R/VC ratios of 139.5% in 1991                   over that threshold, in many instances, could not         or steel products doubled from 18.8% to
                                               and 138.6% in 1992, more than 40                        be completed in one day. Increases in the average         37.6%. Similarly, for iron and steel
                                                                                                       length of haul for the above mentioned
                                               percentage points less than the                         commodities is one possible indicator that there are      scrap (STCC No. 40–211), the
                                               Commission’s statutory 180% R/VC rate                   more movements exceeding the 500-mile                     percentage of revenue that was
                                               threshold. Id. at 4. Accordingly, the                   threshold—thereby contributing to less competitive        potentially captive doubled from 22.1%
                                               Commission concluded that it was                        pressure from trucking.                                   to 44.0% during this same time frame.
                                                                                                         13 During the Board’s February 2011 proceeding,
                                               reasonable to assume that the majority                  AK Steel Corporation (AK Steel), a steel producer
                                                                                                                                                                 Also, for primary iron or steel products,
                                               of the individual carload R/VC ratios                   with seven steelmaking and finishing plants in the        the average R/VC ratio for potentially
                                               were also below the jurisdictional                      United States, filed comments arguing that the            captive traffic increased during the 22-
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                                               threshold. Id.                                          rationale underlying many of the exemptions no            year period, from 219.1% in 1992 to
                                                                                                       longer exists or is otherwise inapplicable in today’s
                                                  Several changes relating to the                      market. According to AK Steel, due to the
                                                                                                                                                                 236.6% in 2013. For the iron or steel
                                               transportation of these commodity                       characteristics of its particular freight, it must ship   scrap commodity group, the average
                                               groups suggest that railroads have                      via rail because other modes, such as truck, are not      R/VC ratio for potentially captive traffic
                                               greater market power today than they                    viable options. (AK Steel Comments 3.) AK Steel           increased by approximately four points,
                                                                                                       further notes that, in many instances, its facilities
                                               did when the ICC issued its exemption                   are captive to a single railroad and are subject to
                                                                                                                                                                 from 225.6% to 229.8%. Thus, the
                                               decisions. First, as a general matter, in               monopoly railroad power and market dominant               Board observes that the traffic for both
                                               the last several decades, the United                    pricing. (Id. at 5.)                                      primary iron or steel products and iron


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                                               17128                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               or steel scrap appears to be increasingly               carriers having increased market power,               211, iron or steel scrap, wastes or
                                               potentially captive to railroads, and that              enabling railroads to impose steep rate               tailings; and STCC No. 32–4, hydraulic
                                               this potentially captive traffic is being               increases, and that the competitive                   cement, because regulation of these
                                               charged higher R/VC ratios over time.                   situation was made worse by declining                 commodities is necessary to carry out
                                               This data suggests that railroads may be                competition from the motor carrier                    the RTP.
                                               exerting increased market power over                    industry, due to fuel prices, a shortage                 The Board seeks public comment on
                                               shippers of these commodities.                          of drivers, and increased congestion on               whether the exemptions should be
                                                  Likewise, the Board’s confidential                   highways and roads.                                   revoked.15 Commenters are invited to
                                               waybill data for coke produced from                        When the ICC first exempted the rail               include any relevant data in support of
                                               coal indicates that the percentage of                   transportation of hydraulic cement, the               their comments, including, but not
                                               revenue that was potentially captive                    Commission found that railroads faced                 limited to, the types of data (for
                                               almost tripled from 1992 to 2013. In                    pervasive competition. The ICC                        example, modal market share, among
                                               1992, 20.1% of revenue was potentially                  concluded that intermodal and                         other things), upon which the ICC relied
                                               captive compared to 58.9% in 2013.                      intramodal competition for hydraulic                  in first promulgating the class
                                               During that same time period, the                       cement existed in many regions—                       exemptions now proposed to be
                                               average R/VC ratio for potentially                      trucking was dominant, and barges and                 revoked.16 The Board also invites
                                               captive coke traffic increased by                       other rail carriers also competed in the              parties to address how market
                                               approximately 23 points from 225.0% to                  marketplace. See Rail Gen. Exemption                  conditions today differ from those that
                                               248.2%. Thus, it appears that coke                      Auth.—Exemption of Hydraulic Cement,                  existed when the exemptions were
                                               produced from coal is becoming                          EP 346 (Sub-No. 34), slip op. at 4.                   granted and to reflect upon whether or
                                               increasingly captive to railroads, and                  However, changes in the rail and                      how those changes should affect the
                                               that the captive traffic is being charged               cement industries appear to have                      Board’s evaluation of those data sources
                                               higher R/VC ratios over time. These                     significantly reduced the effectiveness               upon which the ICC relied. Finally, as
                                               findings are consistent with increased                  of competitive transportation                         noted, the Board welcomes interested
                                               market power.                                           alternatives. According to PCA, over the              parties to file further comments
                                                                                                       course of 30 years, the number of                     regarding the possible revocation of
                                               3. STCC No. 32–4, Hydraulic Cement
                                                                                                       cement manufacturing plants has fallen                other commodity class exemptions.
                                                  In Rail General Exemption                            from 179 to fewer than 100, while plant
                                               Authority—Exemption of Hydraulic                        capacity, on average, has doubled. (PCA               Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                               Cement, EP 346 (Sub-No. 34) (ICC                        Comments 10.) Consequently, cement                       The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
                                               served July 26, 1995), the Commission                   shippers are shipping greater distances,              (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601–612, generally
                                               exempted from its regulation the rail                   where trucking is not economically                    requires a description and analysis of
                                               transportation of hydraulic cement. The                 feasible. (Id.) On average, according to              new rules that would have a significant
                                               ICC found that movements of hydraulic                   PCA, cement shipments now range                       economic impact on a substantial
                                               cement were predominantly short-haul                    between 250 to 300 miles, yet truck                   number of small entities. In drafting a
                                               in nature, and that railroads therefore                 transportation is not an economical                   rule, an agency is required to: (1) Assess
                                               faced pervasive competition from other                  mode of transport beyond 100 to 125                   the effect that its regulation will have on
                                               railroads, from barges, and especially                  miles. (Id. at 2) The Cement Shippers                 small entities; (2) analyze effective
                                               from trucks. Id., slip op. at 4. The                    state that over 80% of cement shipments               alternatives that may minimize a
                                               Commission, consequently, determined                    in the United States are served by a                  regulation’s impact; and (3) make the
                                               that regulation was not necessary to                    single railroad. (Id.)                                analysis available for public comment.
                                               carry out the RTP and that an exemption                    The Board’s analysis of waybill data               Sections 601–604. In its notice of
                                               would not permit railroads to abuse                     for years 1992 through 2013 reveals that              proposed rulemaking, the agency must
                                               market power.                                           R/VC ratios for hydraulic cement have                 either include an initial regulatory
                                                  Several shippers of exempted                         trended upwards over the course of 22                 flexibility analysis, section 603(a), or
                                               construction commodities and a shipper                  years. In 1992, the R/VC ratio for                    certify that the proposed rule would not
                                               organization filed comments and/or                      potentially captive cement traffic was                have a ‘‘significant impact on a
                                               testified at the Board’s February 2011                  208.3%, compared to 239.6% in 2013.                   substantial number of small entities,’’
                                               hearing.14 The Cement Shippers urged                    Also, the percentage of potentially                   section 605(b).
                                               the Board to reexamine or revoke the                    captive traffic by revenue increased                     Because the goal of the RFA is to
                                               exemptions that applied specifically to                 from 18.9% in 1992 to 54.6% in 2013.                  reduce the cost to small entities of
                                               cement and construction materials.                      The Board finds that increases in both                complying with federal regulations, the
                                               They asserted that the competitive                      the R/VC ratio for potentially captive                RFA requires an agency to perform a
                                               landscape had changed significantly                     traffic and the percentage of potentially             regulatory flexibility analysis of small
                                               and that the railroad industry’s financial              captive traffic by revenue are possible               entity impacts only when a rule directly
                                               situation had improved markedly since                   indicators of increased railroad market               regulates those entities. In other words,
                                               the adoption of the commodity                           power sufficient to warrant regulatory                the impact must be a direct impact on
                                               exemptions. They also asserted that                     oversight. This data further supports the
                                               railroad consolidation had resulted in                  Board’s proposal to revoke the                          15 We note that additional commenters addressed

                                                                                                       exemption for hydraulic cement.                       certain of these commodity exemptions in the
                                                 14 These included CEMEX, Inc. (CEMEX); Holcim                                                               February 2011 hearing proceeding. In commenting
                                                                                                       Conclusion                                            in this proceeding, parties may incorporate and
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                                               (US), Inc. (Holcim); and the Portland Cement
                                               Association (PCA). CEMEX requested that the Board                                                             supplement prior comments as appropriate.
                                               revoke the exemption for construction materials.
                                                                                                         For the foregoing reasons, the Board                  16 See Rail Gen. Exemption Auth.—Pet. of AAR to

                                               Similarly, Holcim requested revoking the                proposes to revoke the exemptions, in                 Exempt Rail Transp. of Selected Commodity
                                               exemption for hydraulic cement and the materials        whole, of STCC No. 14–2, crushed or                   Groups, 9 I.C.C.2d 969 (1993); Rail Gen. Exemption
                                               used in the manufacture of cement. PCA requested        broken stone or rip rap; STCC No. 29–                 Auth.—Exemption of Ferrous Recyclables, EP 346
                                               that the Board revoke the exemption for                                                                       (Sub-No. 35) (ICC served May 16, 1995); and Rail
                                               construction materials, and more specifically,
                                                                                                       914, coke produced from coal; STCC No.                Gen. Exemption Auth.—Exemption of Hydraulic
                                               cement and fly ash. These shippers are collectively     33–12, primary iron or steel products                 Cement, EP 346 (Sub-No. 34) (ICC served July 26,
                                               referred to as ‘‘Cement Shippers.’’                     (plates, pipes, and rods); STCC No. 40–               1995).



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                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                              17129

                                               small entities ‘‘whose conduct is                       Description of and, Where Feasible, an                 Description of any Significant
                                               circumscribed or mandated’’ by the                      Estimate of the Number of Small                        Alternatives to the Proposed Rule That
                                               proposed rule. White Eagle Coop. Ass’n                  Entities to Which the Proposed Rule                    Accomplish the Stated Objectives of
                                               v. Conner, 553 F.3d 467, 480 (7th Cir.                  Will Apply                                             Applicable Statutes and That Minimize
                                               2009).                                                                                                         any Significant Economic Impact of the
                                                                                                          In general, revoking the exemptions                 Proposed Rule on Small Entities,
                                                  The rules proposed here would
                                                                                                       for the commodities listed above would                 Including Alternatives Considered, Such
                                               potentially have a significant economic
                                                                                                       impose on all of the nation’s                          as: (1) Establishment of Differing
                                               impact on a substantial number of small
                                                                                                       approximately 562 small rail carriers 17               Compliance or Reporting Requirements
                                               entities. Thus, we encourage comment
                                                                                                       the obligation to, among other things,                 or Timetables That Take Into Account
                                               on any information relevant to a
                                               significant burden, if any, the proposed                provide common carrier rail                            the Resources Available to Small
                                               rules would have on small rail carriers.                transportation of those commodities                    Entities; (2) Clarification, Consolidation,
                                                                                                       upon reasonable request.                               or Simplification of Compliance and
                                               Description of the Reasons That Action                                                                         Reporting Requirements Under the Rule
                                               by the Agency Is Being Considered                       Description of the Projected Reporting,                for Such Small Entities; (3) use of
                                                                                                       Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance                    Performance Rather Than Design
                                                 The Board held a public hearing in                    Requirements of the Proposed Rule,                     Standards; (4) any Exemption From
                                               February 2011 to explore the continued                  Including an Estimate of the Classes of                Coverage of the Rule, or any Part
                                               utility of, and the issues surrounding,                 Small Entities That Will Be Subject to                 Thereof, for Such Small Entities
                                               exemptions under section 10502,                         the Requirement and the Type of
                                               specifically the various commodity                                                                                Under the proposed rule, rail carriers
                                                                                                       Professional Skills Necessary for
                                                                                                                                                              would be required to comply with the
                                               exemptions under 49 CFR 1039.10 and                     Preparation of the Report or Record
                                                                                                                                                              Board’s statutes and regulations
                                               1039.11, the boxcar exemption under 49
                                                                                                         Under the Board’s proposed rules, the                regarding the provision of common
                                               CFR 1039.14, and the TOFC/COFC
                                                                                                       revocation of exemption for STCC No.                   carrier service upon reasonable request,
                                               exemption under 49 CFR pt. 1090. The
                                                                                                       14–2, crushed or broken stone or rip                   maintenance of reasonable practices and
                                               Board held the hearing because it had
                                                                                                       rap; STCC No. 29–914, coke produced                    rates, and provision of adequate service.
                                               been many years (and, in some cases,
                                                                                                       from coal; STCC No. 33–12, primary                     One alternative to the proposed rule
                                               decades) since the agency promulgated
                                                                                                       iron or steel products (plates, pipes, and             would be to exempt certain or all small
                                               many of these commodity exemptions,
                                                                                                       rods); STCC No. 32–4, hydraulic                        carriers from coverage or compliance
                                               and the Board had received various
                                                                                                       cement; and STCC No. 40–211, iron or                   with the rule, in whole or in part (that
                                               informal inquiries questioning the
                                                                                                       steel scrap, wastes would now require a                is, to revoke the commodity class
                                               relevance and/or necessity of some of                                                                          exemptions at issue for larger carriers
                                               the existing commodity exemptions,                      carrier to comply with the Board’s
                                                                                                       statutes and regulations regarding the                 but keep the exemptions in place for
                                               given the changes in the competitive                                                                           some or all small carriers). Another
                                               landscape and the railroad industry that                provision of common carrier service
                                                                                                       upon reasonable request, maintenance                   alternative would be to take no action—
                                               have occurred in the intervening years.                                                                        thereby implementing no changes to the
                                               A more detailed description of the                      of reasonable practices and rates, and
                                                                                                                                                              current regulatory regime. However,
                                               agency’s historical deregulation of the                 provision of adequate service. However,
                                                                                                                                                              neither alternative would accomplish
                                               aforementioned commodities, and the                     regulation would not impose new
                                                                                                                                                              the proposed rules’ objective of
                                               Board’s reasons for considering the                     reporting requirements directly or
                                                                                                                                                              restoring the rail transportation of the
                                               proposed rules are set forth above in                   indirectly on small entities—ICCTA
                                                                                                                                                              commodities at issue to the Board’s
                                               this NPRM.                                              removed regulatory paperwork burdens                   statutory and regulatory regime.
                                                                                                       (with limited exceptions) on rail carriers             Commenters should, if they advance
                                               Succinct Statement of the Objectives of,
                                                                                                       to file tariffs or contract summary filings            these or any other alternatives in their
                                               and Legal Basis for, the Proposed Rule
                                                                                                       for rail shipments, exempt or non-                     comments, address how such
                                                  The objective of the proposed rule is                exempt. Nevertheless, the Board seeks                  alternatives would be consistent or
                                               to restore shippers’ access to the Board’s              further comment on any recordkeeping                   inconsistent with the goals envisioned
                                               regulatory oversight and processes—in                   or other compliance requirements, if                   by the proposed rules.
                                               particular, shippers of those                           any, needed to conform to the proposed
                                                                                                                                                                Authority: 49 U.S.C. 10502 and 13301.
                                               commodities where evidence indicates                    rules.
                                               that the competitive landscape has                                                                             List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 1039
                                                                                                       Identification, to the Extent Practicable,
                                               changed significantly enough to indicate                                                                          Agricultural commodities, Intermodal
                                                                                                       of all Relevant Federal Rules That May
                                               that renewed regulation is needed to                                                                           transportation, Railroads.
                                                                                                       Duplicate, Overlap, or Conflict With the
                                               carry out the national RTP. Specifically,
                                                                                                       Proposed Rule                                            Decided: March 23, 2016.
                                               the Board has concluded, based on the
                                               record in this proceeding, that renewed                                                                          By the Board, Chairman Elliott, Vice
                                                                                                         The Board is unaware of any                          Chairman Miller, and Commissioner
                                               regulation is needed with respect to the                duplicative, overlapping, or conflicting               Begeman. Vice Chairman Miller concurred
                                               rail transportation of (1) crushed or                   federal rules. The Board seeks                         with a separate expression. Commissioner
                                               broken stone or rip rap; (2) hydraulic                  comments and information about any                     Begeman dissented with a separate
                                               cement; and (3) coke produced from                      such rules.                                            expression.
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                                               coal, primary iron or steel products, and                                                                      Jeffrey Herzig,
                                               iron or steel scrap, wastes or tailings.                  17 The Small Business Administration’s Office of     Clearance Clerk.
                                               The legal basis for the proposed rule is                Size Standards has established a size standard for
                                               49 U.S.C. 10502(d), which gives the                     rail transportation, pursuant to which a ‘‘line-haul   llllllllll
                                               Board authority to revoke an exemption,                 railroad’’ is considered small if its number of        VICE CHAIRMAN MILLER, concurring:
                                                                                                       employees is 1,500 or less, and a ‘‘short line
                                               in whole or in part, when it finds that                 railroad’’ is considered small if its number of
                                                                                                                                                                I am pleased that the Board is taking
                                               regulation is necessary to carry out the                employees is 500 or less. 13 CFR 121.201 (industry     action on this long delayed matter and,
                                               RTP of 49 U.S.C. 10101.                                 subsector 482).                                        in general, I agree with the outcome to


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                                               17130                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               institute a Notice of Proposed                             In addition, I requested that OE look              the docket, and then propose whatever
                                               Rulemaking (NPRM) to revoke the                         at available data to assess whether it                changes are necessary. And,
                                               commodity exemptions listed in the                      appears that the railroads have lost                  importantly, we should commit to
                                               decision. However, I write separately to                market power over any commodities                     completing final action by a timely date
                                               express my frustration at the lengthy                   that are currently regulated, including               certain.
                                               delay by the Board to take any action on                the commodities that NSR identified in                   Although I appreciate the Board staff’s
                                               this matter, and the narrow analysis that               its comments as part of the 2010                      recent review of waybill rate data from
                                               was used to reach this result.                          hearing. Based on this analysis, only a               1992 through 2013, I am not convinced
                                                  It has been over five years since the                handful of commodities showed a                       that analysis sufficiently supports
                                               Board first held a hearing to examine                   potential loss of market power by the                 altering the exemption landscape. The
                                               whether any commodity exemptions                        railroads, but they all involved too                  ‘‘record’’ the majority is relying on to
                                               should be revoked. For these five years,                minimal an amount of traffic to warrant               support its proposed changes is a
                                               our stakeholders have been left in the                  revising the regulations.                             waybill-based hunch using limited
                                               dark as to if or when the Board would                      For reasons I do not understand, the               information on these commodities.
                                               act. My hope was that, given the long                   Board has chosen not to include this                  Today’s decision also begs the question:
                                               wait, the Board would at least conduct                  analysis as part of the decision, though              if waybill data are sufficient basis for a
                                               a thorough and wide-ranging analysis,                   in my view its inclusion would                        proposed rule, then why didn’t the
                                               but as today’s decision makes clear, that               strengthen it. Based on the results of the            Board act years ago? Nothing in this
                                               was not the case.                                       analysis, I would not have advocated for              decision suggests that the case for action
                                                  In order to demonstrate that the                     any further revocations of commodity                  has markedly changed since 2011.
                                               commodity exemptions here warrant                       exemptions other than the ones listed                    The proposed rule also fails to
                                               revocation, the Board mainly relies on                  here, nor to exempt any commodities                   account for the present. Considerable
                                               two pieces of data: the change in R/VC                  that are currently regulated. Without the             and important events have taken place
                                               ratios over the last two decades and the                analysis though, I would not have                     since the February 2011 hearing and the
                                               percentage of traffic moved by rail that                known that was the case and I would                   2013 waybill cutoff, including the 2014
                                               is ‘‘potentially captive’’ (i.e., above                 not have felt comfortable voting to                   rail service crisis that impacted shippers
                                               180% R/VC). While not the strongest                     approve this decision.                                and carriers across the country and the
                                               foundation on which to propose new                         That being said, I agree with                      significant shifts in service demand for
                                               rules, I believe it provides a sufficient               Commissioner Begeman that the record                  coal, oil, and other important
                                               basis to move forward, which is why I                   on which we are basing this decision is               commodities. Fuel prices have also
                                               support today’s decision. However, I                    less than robust and could benefit from               changed dramatically. Unfortunately,
                                               would have liked the Board to go further                additional information. Accordingly, I                today’s proposed rule is completely
                                               and provide an analysis of all other                    understand Commissioner Begeman’s                     uninformed by any of these or other
                                               commodities that are currently exempt                   concern about proceeding directly to a                current market considerations.
                                               from regulation. Instead, the scope of                                                                           The law directs the Board to exercise
                                                                                                       NPRM. However, I believe that even
                                               the decision here is limited to just those                                                                    its exemption authority broadly, and
                                                                                                       without additional information, there is
                                               commodities that shippers identified at                                                                       that directive was unchanged with
                                                                                                       enough of a foundation on the record
                                               the 2010 hearing (and, even then, not all                                                                     passage of the recent STB
                                                                                                       that we can move forward with an
                                               of them). I see no reason why the Board                                                                       Reauthorization Act, P.L. 114–110.
                                                                                                       NPRM. Given that our stakeholders have
                                               could not have analyzed other                                                                                 Therefore, we shouldn’t narrow or
                                                                                                       waited for five years for the Board to
                                               commodities, even if they were not                                                                            revoke exemptions granted under that
                                                                                                       take action, I am reluctant to proceed in
                                               presented at the 2010 hearing.                                                                                authority absent compelling
                                                                                                       a fashion that will add even more time                circumstances. Instead, the majority is
                                                  By the same token, the Board—
                                               without explanation—provides no                         to get to a final rule. As the Board will             proposing changes without really
                                               analysis regarding whether commodities                  still receive comments from                           knowing whether the revocations are
                                               that are currently regulated should now                 stakeholders, and because we can still                justified.
                                               be exempted. Instead, the Board chooses                 make changes through a supplemental                      Even if a commodity is exempt,
                                               to look only at commodities that are                    NPRM if the comments indicate our                     however, the Board is not uninterested.
                                               already exempt. In fact, the Board’s                    conclusions were wrong, I feel that this              We still conduct broad oversight of
                                               decision ignores the request from                       is a better course of action than the                 exempt commodities and take action
                                               Norfolk Southern Railway (NSR) for the                  alternatives, such as starting with an                when we deem it necessary. For
                                               Board to examine four commodities that                  Advanced Notice of Proposed                           example, when the Board directed the
                                               NSR claims no longer require Board                      Rulemaking. I will remain open to the                 carriers to provide weekly service
                                               regulation. After keeping our                           idea of initiating an additional NPRM or              reporting, we included reporting on
                                               stakeholders waiting for years, a broader               a supplemental NPRM if we receive                     intermodal and automobiles, which are
                                               analysis is the least I would expect.                   evidence that indicates that our                      exempt. The Board’s Rail Shipper
                                                  As I was unsatisfied with this limited               conclusions with regard any                           Transportation Advisory Council has
                                               analysis, I requested the Board’s Office                commodities proposed for revocation                   included shippers of exempt
                                               of Economics (OE) to conduct such                       are incorrect.                                        commodities who also provide the
                                               analyses and provide me with the                        llllllllll                                            Board with key rail service demand
                                               results. While I would have included                    COMMISSIONER BEGEMAN,                                 information. The Board’s Rail Customer
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                                               such analyses as part of the decision                   dissenting:                                           and Public Assistance Program also
                                               today, they would not have led me to a                    This record was created over half a                 helps resolve the questions and
                                               different outcome. In particular, based                 decade ago, before two of the three                   problems of exempt commodity
                                               on the conclusions I have drawn from                    current Board members were even                       shippers whenever possible.
                                               the analyses, I believe that the railroads              appointed (and my five-year term since                   Clearly, stakeholders have waited far
                                               have likely not increased market power                  expired). For this Board to take                      too long for Board action on this docket.
                                               for any exempt commodities other than                   informed action now, we should first                  But we should be asking the parties to
                                               those addressed in this decision.                       ask interested stakeholders to update                 update the record so that the Board can


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                                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                         17131

                                               propose an informed rule based on up-                                        PART 1039—EXEMPTIONS                                     section, the rail transportation of the
                                               to-date information. Instead, the                                                                                                     commodities listed below is exempt
                                               majority appears to be taking the path of                                    ■ 1. The authority citation for part 1039                from the provisions of 49 U.S.C. subtitle
                                               least resistance to close a languishing                                      continues to read as follows:                            IV. The Standard Transportation
                                               docket. I dissent.                                                               Authority: 49 U.S.C. 10502, 13301.                   Commodity Code (STCC) numbers that
                                                                                                                            ■ 2. Section 1039.11 is revised to read                  identify the exempted commodities are
                                                 For the reasons set forth in the
                                                                                                                            as follows:                                              those in effect on the effective date of
                                               preamble, the Surface Transportation
                                                                                                                                                                                     the tariff cited, and shall embrace all
                                               Board proposes to amend 49 CFR part                                          § 1039.11 Miscellaneous commodities
                                                                                                                            exemptions.                                              commodities assigned additional digits.
                                               1039 as follows:
                                                                                                                              (a) Commodities exempted. (1) Except
                                                                                                                            as indicated in paragraph (b) of this

                                                    STCC No.                                 STCC Tariff                                                                         Commodity

                                               14   1 ...................    6001–T, eff. 1–1–92 ....................                 Dimension stone, quarry.
                                               14   411 ...............      ......do ..........................................      Sand (aggregate or ballast).
                                               14   412 ...............      ......do ..........................................      Gravel (aggregate or ballast).
                                               20   ......................   ......do ..........................................      Food or kindred products except:
                                                                                                                                           20 143 Grease or inedible tallow.
                                                                                                                                           20 32 Canned specialties.
                                                                                                                                           20 33 Canned fruits, jams, jellies, preserves or vegetables.
                                                                                                                                           20 4 Grain mill products.
                                                                                                                                           20 6 Sugar, beet or cane.
                                                                                                                                           20 8 Beverages or flavoring extracts.
                                                                                                                                           20 911 Cottonseed oil, crude or refined.
                                                                                                                                           20 914 Cottonseed cake or meal or by-products.
                                                                                                                                           20 92 Soybean oil or by-products.
                                                                                                                                           20 93 Nut or vegetable oils or by-products.
                                               22   ......................   ......do   ..........................................    Textile mill products.
                                               23   ......................   ......do   ..........................................    Apparel or other finished textile products or knit apparel.
                                               24   ......................   ......do   ..........................................    Lumber or wood products.
                                               25   ......................   ......do   ..........................................    Furniture or fixtures.
                                               26   ......................   ......do   ..........................................    Pulp, paper or allied products except:
                                                                                                                                           26 1 Pulp or pulp mill products.
                                                                                                                                           26 211 Newsprint.
                                                                                                                                           26 212 Ground wood paper, uncoated.
                                                                                                                                           26 213 Printing paper, coated or uncoated, etc.
                                                                                                                                           26 214 Wrapping paper, wrappers or coarse paper.
                                                                                                                                           26 218 Sanitary tissue stock.
                                                                                                                                           26 471 Sanitary tissues or health products.
                                                                                                                                           26 6 Building paper or building board except:
                                                                                                                                           26 613 Wallboard.
                                               27   ......................   ......do   ..........................................    Printed matter.
                                               28   195 22–23 ...            ......do   ..........................................    Iron chloride, liquid.
                                               28   195 27–30 ...            ......do   ..........................................    Iron sulphate.
                                               28   195 68–69 ...            ......do   ..........................................    Ferrous sulphate.
                                               29   915 ...............      ......do   ..........................................    Distillate or residual fuel oil from coal refining.
                                               30   ......................   ......do   ..........................................    Rubber or miscellaneous plastics products except:
                                                                                                                                           30 111 Rubber pneumatic tires or parts.
                                               31 ......................     ......do ..........................................      Leather or leather products.
                                               32 ......................     ......do ..........................................      Clay, concrete, glass or stone products except:
                                                                                                                                           32 4 Hydraulic cement.
                                                                                                                                           32 741 Lime or lime plaster.
                                                                                                                                           32 95 Nonmetallic earths or minerals, ground or treated in any other manner ex-
                                                                                                                                              cept:
                                                                                                                                           32 952 15 Cinders, clay, shale expanded shale), slate or volcanic (not pumice
                                                                                                                                              stone), or haydrite.
                                               33 ......................     ......do ..........................................      Primary metal products, including galvanized, except:
                                                                                                                                           33 12 Primary Iron or Steel Products.
                                               34 ......................     ......do ..........................................      Fabricated metal products except:
                                                                                                                                           34 6 Metal stampings.
                                                                                                                                           34 919 40 Radioactive material shipping containers, etc.
                                               35 ......................     ......do ..........................................      Machinery except:
                                                                                                                                           35 11 Steam engines, turbines, turbine generator sets, or parts.
                                                                                                                                           35 85 Refrigerators or refrigeration machinery or complete air-conditioning units.
                                               36 ......................     ......do ..........................................      Electrical machinery, equipment or supplies except:
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                                                                                                                                           36 12 Power, distribution or specialty transformers.
                                                                                                                                           36 21 Motors or generators.
                                               3711 ..................       ......do ..........................................      Motor vehicles.
                                               3714 ..................       ......do ..........................................      Motor vehicle parts or accessories.
                                               38 ......................     ......do ..........................................      Instruments, photographic goods, optical goods, watches or clocks.
                                               39 ......................     ......do ..........................................      Miscellaneous products of manufacturing.
                                               41 118 ...............        6001–U, eff. 1–1–93 ...................                  Used vehicles.
                                               14 715 ...............        6001–V, eff. 1–1–94 ....................                 Rock salt.



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                                               17132                        Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 59 / Monday, March 28, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                   STCC No.                             STCC Tariff                                                                         Commodity

                                               20 143 ...............   ......do ..........................................      Grease or Inedible Tallow.
                                               28 133 ...............   ......do ..........................................      Carbon dioxide.
                                               28 991 ...............   ......do ..........................................      Salt.
                                               34 912 ...............   6001–W, eff. 1–1–95 ...................                  Steel shipping containers.
                                               33 119 ...............   6001–X, eff. 1–11–96 ..................                  Blast furnace, open hearth, rolling mill or coke oven products, NEC.
                                               20511 ................   6001–X, eff., 1–1–96 ...................                 Bread or other bakery products exc. biscuits, crackers, pretzels or other dry bakery prod-
                                                                                                                                   ucts. See 20521–20529.
                                               22941 ................   ......do ..........................................      Textile waste, garnetted, processed, or recovered or recovered fibres or flock exc. pack-
                                                                                                                                   ing or wiping cloths or rags. See 22994.
                                               22973 ................   ......do ..........................................      Textile fibres, laps, noils, nubs, roving, sliver or slubs, prepared for spinning, combed or
                                                                                                                                   converted.
                                               22994 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Packing or wiping cloths or rags (processed textile wastes).
                                               24293 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Shavings or sawdust.
                                               30311 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Reclaimed rubber.
                                               3229924 ............     ......do   ..........................................    Cullet (broken glass).
                                               33312 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Copper matte, speiss, flue dust, or residues, etc.
                                               33322 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Lead matte, speiss, flue dust, dross, slag, skimmings, etc.
                                               33332 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Zinc dross, residues, ashes, etc.
                                               33342 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Aluminum residues, etc.
                                               33398 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Misc. nonferrous metal residues, including solder babbitt or type metal residues.
                                               40112 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Ashes.
                                               40212 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Brass, bronze, copper or alloy scrap, tailings, or wastes.
                                               40213 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Lead, zinc, or alloy scrap, tailings or wastes.
                                               40214 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Aluminum or alloy scrap, tailings or wastes.
                                               4021960 ............     ......do   ..........................................    Tin scrap, consisting of scraps or pieces of metallic tin, clippings, drippings, shavings,
                                                                                                                                   turnings, or old worn-out block tin pipe having value for remelting purposes only.
                                               40221 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Textile waste, scrap or sweepings.
                                               40231 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Wood scrap or waste.
                                               40241 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Paper waste or scrap.
                                               40251 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Chemical or petroleum waste, including spent.
                                               40261 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Rubber or plastic scrap or waste.
                                               4029114 ............     ......do   ..........................................    Municipal garbage waste, solid, digested and ground, other than sewage waste or fer-
                                                                                                                                   tilizer.
                                               4029176 ............     ......do   ..........................................    Automobile shredder residue.
                                               4111434 ............     ......do   ..........................................    Bags, old, burlap, gunny, istle (ixtle), jute, or sisal, NEC.
                                               41115 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Articles, used, returned for repair or reconditioning.
                                               42111 ................   ......do   ..........................................    Nonrevenue movement of containers, bags, barrels, bottles, boxes, crates, cores, drums,
                                                                                                                                   kegs, reels, tubes, or carriers, NEC, empty, returning in reverse of route used in loaded
                                                                                                                                   movement, and so certified.
                                               42112 ................   ......do ..........................................      Nonrevenue movement of shipping devices, consisting of blocking, bolsters, cradles, pal-
                                                                                                                                   lets, racks, skids, etc., empty, returning in reverse of route used in loaded movement,
                                                                                                                                   and so certified.
                                               42311 ................   ......do ..........................................      Revenue movement of containers, bags, barrels, bottles, boxes, crates, cores, drums,
                                                                                                                                   kegs, reels, tubes, or carriers, NEC, empty, returning in reverse of route used in loaded
                                                                                                                                   movement and so certified.



                                                  (2) Also excepted from this exemption                                regarding the use of equipment, whether                    (b) Conditions. Carriers must continue
                                               are those recyclable products                                           shipper or railroad owned or leased,                     to comply with Board accounting and
                                               specifically identified by the Board at                                 including car hire, per diem and                         reporting requirements. All railroad
                                               356 I.C.C. 445–447, those commodities                                   mileage allowances, and also including                   tariffs pertaining to the transportation of
                                               previously exempt, and any                                              exemption from the anti-trust laws                       these miscellaneous commodities will
                                               transportation service regarding which                                  necessary to negotiate car service                       no longer apply. This exemption shall
                                               the Board has made a finding of market                                  regulations or mandatory interchange of                  remain in effect, unless modified or
                                               dominance. However, this exemption                                      equipment or to maintain and execute                     revoked by a subsequent order of this
                                               shall not be construed as affecting in                                  such agreements. Nor shall this                          Board.
                                               any way the existing regulations,                                       exemption be construed to affect
                                                                                                                                                                                [FR Doc. 2016–06956 Filed 3–25–16; 8:45 am]
                                               agreements, prescriptions, conditions,                                  existing Class III railroad ‘‘protections’’
                                               allowances or levels of compensation                                    in the case of boxcars.                                  BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
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Document Created: 2016-03-26 00:13:13
Document Modified: 2016-03-26 00:13:13
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionNotice of proposed rulemaking.
DatesComments on the proposed rulemaking are due on or before May 27, 2016; replies are due June 27, 2016.
ContactScott Zimmerman at (202) 245-0386. Assistance for the hearing impaired is available through the Federal Information Relay Services (FIRS) at 1-800-877-8339.
FR Citation81 FR 17125 
CFR AssociatedAgricultural Commodities; Intermodal Transportation and Railroads

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