81_FR_51493 81 FR 51343 - On-Time Performance Under Section 213 of the Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of 2008

81 FR 51343 - On-Time Performance Under Section 213 of the Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of 2008

SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 150 (August 4, 2016)

Page Range51343-51348
FR Document2016-18256

The Surface Transportation Board (STB or Board) is adopting a final rule to define ``on time'' and specify the formula for calculating ``on-time performance'' for purposes of Section 213 of the Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of 2008. The Board will use these regulations only for the purpose of determining whether the ``less than 80 percent'' threshold that Congress set for bringing an on-time performance complaint has been met. In light of comments received on the Board's notice of proposed rulemaking issued on December 28, 2015, the proposed rule has been modified to deem a train's arrival at, or departure from, a given station ``on time'' if it occurs no later than 15 minutes after its scheduled time and to adopt an ``all-stations'' calculation of ``on-time performance.''

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 150 (Thursday, August 4, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 150 (Thursday, August 4, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 51343-51348]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-18256]


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SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD

49 CFR Part 1040

[Docket No. EP 726]


On-Time Performance Under Section 213 of the Passenger Rail 
Investment and Improvement Act of 2008

AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: The Surface Transportation Board (STB or Board) is adopting a 
final rule to define ``on time'' and specify the formula for 
calculating ``on-time performance'' for purposes of Section 213 of the 
Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of 2008. The Board will 
use these regulations only for the purpose of determining whether the 
``less than 80 percent'' threshold that Congress set for bringing an 
on-time performance complaint has been met. In light of comments 
received on the Board's notice of proposed rulemaking issued on 
December 28, 2015, the proposed rule has been modified to deem a 
train's arrival at, or departure from, a given station ``on time'' if 
it occurs no later than 15 minutes after its scheduled time and to 
adopt an ``all-stations'' calculation of ``on-time performance.''

DATES: This rule is effective on August 27, 2016.

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

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The National Railroad Passenger Corporation 
(Amtrak) was established by Congress in 1970 to preserve passenger 
services and routes on the Nation's railroads. See Lebron v. Nat'l R.R. 
Passenger Corp., 513 U.S. 374, 383-384 (1995); Nat'l R.R. Passenger 
Corp. v. Atchison, Topeka, & Santa Fe R.R., 470 U.S. 451, 454 (1985); 
see also Rail Passenger Serv. Act of 1970, Public Law 91-518, 84 Stat. 
1328

[[Page 51344]]

(1970). As a condition of relieving the railroad companies of their 
common carrier obligation to provide passenger service, Congress 
required them to permit Amtrak to operate over their tracks and use 
their facilities. See 45 U.S.C. 561, 562 (1970 ed.). Since 1973, 
Congress has required railroads to give Amtrak trains preference over 
freight service when using their lines and facilities: ``Except in an 
emergency, intercity and commuter rail passenger transportation 
provided by or for Amtrak has preference over freight transportation in 
using a rail line, junction, or crossing . . . .'' 49 U.S.C. 24308(c); 
see Amtrak Improvement Act of 1973, Public Law 93-146, section 10(2), 
87 Stat. 552 (initial version).
    Prior to 2008, the Board was not involved in the adjudication of 
Amtrak's preference rights. The only way that Amtrak could enforce its 
preference rights was by asking the Attorney General to bring a civil 
action for equitable relief. 49 U.S.C. 24103. Further, the Secretary of 
Transportation had the authority under section 24308(c) to grant a host 
rail carrier relief from the preference obligation and to establish the 
usage rights between Amtrak and the host carrier if the Secretary found 
that Amtrak's preference materially lessened the quality of freight 
transportation provided to shippers. In 2008, Congress enacted Section 
213 of the Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of 2008 
(PRIIA), 49 U.S.C. 24308(f), to address, among other things, the 
concern that one cause of Amtrak's inability to achieve reliable on-
time performance was the failure of host railroads to honor Amtrak's 
right to preference. See Passenger Rail Inv. & Improvement Act, Public 
Law 110-432, Div. B, 122 Stat. 4907 (2008); S. Rep. No. 67, 110th 
Cong., 1st Sess. 25-26 (2007). Section 207 of PRIIA, 49 U.S.C. 24101 
note, charged Amtrak and the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA) with 
``jointly'' developing new, or improving existing, metrics and 
standards for measuring the performance of intercity passenger rail 
operations, including on-time performance and train delays incurred on 
host railroads.
    PRIIA also transferred from the Secretary of Transportation to the 
Board the administration and enforcement of Amtrak's preference rights. 
Thus, PRIIA amended 49 U.S.C. 24308(c) to provide that: ``Except in an 
emergency, intercity and commuter rail passenger transportation 
provided by or for Amtrak has preference over freight transportation in 
using a rail line, junction, or crossing unless the Board orders 
otherwise under this subsection'' (emphasis added). Congress likewise 
transferred to the Board the authority under section 24308(c) to 
determine if ``preference for intercity and commuter rail passenger 
transportation materially will lessen the quality of freight 
transportation provided to shippers'' on a freight carrier's line, and, 
if so, to ``establish the rights of the carrier and Amtrak on 
reasonable terms.''
    Under Section 213(a) of PRIIA, 49 U.S.C. 24308(f)(1), if the ``on-
time performance'' (OTP) of any intercity passenger train averages less 
than 80% for any two consecutive calendar quarters, the Board may 
initiate an investigation, or upon complaint by Amtrak or another 
eligible complainant, the Board ``shall'' do so. The purpose of such an 
investigation is to determine whether and to what extent delays are due 
to causes that could reasonably be addressed by the passenger rail 
operator or the host railroad. Following the investigation, should the 
Board determine that Amtrak's substandard performance is ``attributable 
to'' the rail carrier's ``failure to provide preference to Amtrak over 
freight transportation as required'' by 49 U.S.C. 24308(c), the Board 
may ``award damages'' or other appropriate relief from a host railroad 
to Amtrak. 49 U.S.C. 24308(f[hairsp])(2). If the Board finds it 
appropriate to award damages to Amtrak, Amtrak must use the award ``for 
capital or operating expenditures on the routes over which delays'' 
were the result of the host railroad's failure to grant the statutorily 
required preference to passenger transportation. 49 U.S.C. 
24308(f[hairsp])(4).
    Thus, 49 U.S.C. 24308(f) sets up a two-stage process involving, 
first, a ``less than 80 percent'' threshold to indicate whether a 
train's OTP allows for an investigation; and second, if this 
prerequisite is satisfied, the Board may investigate (or on complaint, 
shall investigate) the causes of the deficient OTP, which could lead to 
findings, recommendations, and other possible relief as detailed in the 
statute.
    On May 15, 2015, the Board instituted this rulemaking proceeding in 
response to a petition filed by the Association of American Railroads 
(AAR). See On-Time Performance Under Sec. 213 of the Passenger Rail 
Inv. & Improvement Act of 2008, EP 726 (STB served May 15, 2015). In 
that decision, the Board stated that a rulemaking would provide clarity 
regarding the ``less than 80 percent'' OTP threshold in all applicable 
cases and allow the Board to obtain the full range of stakeholder 
perspectives in one docket and avoid the potential relitigation of the 
issue in each case, thereby conserving party and agency resources.\1\
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    \1\ By that point Amtrak had filed two complaints (both pending, 
but in abeyance based on this rulemaking) requesting that the Board 
initiate an investigation pursuant to section 24308(f), and claiming 
that host Class I carriers have not given Amtrak preference as 
required under section 24308(c). See Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp.--
Sec. 213 Investigation of Substandard Performance on Rail Lines of 
Canadian Nat'l Ry., NOR 42134; Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp.--
Investigation of Substandard Performance of the Capitol Ltd., NOR 
42141.
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    On December 28, 2015, the Board issued a Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking (NPRM) that proposed a definition for OTP derived from a 
previous definition used by our predecessor, the Interstate Commerce 
Commission (ICC).\2\ The Board's proposed rule read: ``A train is `on 
time' if it arrives at its final terminus no more than five minutes 
after its scheduled arrival time per 100 miles of operation, or 30 
minutes after its scheduled arrival time, whichever is less.'' NPRM, 
slip op. at 4-9. The Board sought comments on this definition but also 
encouraged the public to propose other alternatives, including the 
alternative adopted here: factoring into the calculation a train's 
punctuality at intermediate stops rather than the final terminus only. 
See NPRM, slip op. at 6. The Board also established a procedural 
schedule providing for comments and replies.
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    \2\ The NPRM contains additional background on the court and 
agency litigation and controversies that led the Board to initiate 
the rulemaking.
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    The Board received 121 comments and replies on its proposed rule 
from the railroad industry (both passenger and freight), states, the 
U.S. Department of Transportation, elected officials at all levels of 
government, individual members of the traveling public, and various 
stakeholder groups.
    Shortly after the comment period in this docket closed, in 
Association of American Railroads v. Department of Transportation, 821 
F.3d 19 (D.C. Cir. 2016), the United States Court of Appeals for the 
District of Columbia Circuit held that the structure of Section 207 of 
PRIIA violates the Due Process Clause of the U.S. Constitution because, 
in the court's view, it authorized Amtrak, ``an economically self-
interested actor,'' to ``regulate its competitors''--that is, the 
railroads that host Amtrak passenger trains outside the Northeast 
Corridor. Accordingly, the FRA and Amtrak metrics are currently 
invalid.

Discussion of Issues Raised in Response to the NPRM.

    The Board's Authority. Several freight rail interests argue that--
even though section 24308(f)(1) allows, and in some

[[Page 51345]]

circumstances requires, the Board to investigate the causes of poor 
``on time performance,'' including whether a host rail carrier has 
failed to provide preference to Amtrak over its rail line as required 
by section 24308(c)--the Board lacks authority to give meaning to the 
term ``on-time performance.'' They argue this even though PRIIA 
provides that if the on-time performance of an Amtrak passenger train 
falls below 80% for two consecutive quarters, such performance may 
warrant an investigation by the Board.
    Although regulatory agencies like the Board typically have the 
authority to define the terms in provisions of the statutes that they 
administer, AAR and freight railroad commenters (Canadian National 
Railway Company (CN), CSX Transportation, Inc. (CSXT), and Norfolk 
Southern Railway Company (NS)) argue that the Board does not have the 
authority to define on-time performance because Congress gave that 
responsibility jointly to Amtrak and FRA in Section 207 of PRIIA. We 
disagree.
    In National Railroad Passenger Corp.--Section 213 Investigation of 
Substandard Performance on Rail Lines of Canadian National Railway 
(Illini/Saluki), NOR 42134, slip op. at 2 (STB served Dec. 19, 2014), 
the Board concluded that the unconstitutionality of Section 207 of 
PRIIA does not prevent the Board from initiating investigations of on-
time performance problems under section 24308(c). Indeed, the only way 
for the Board now to fulfill its responsibilities under 49 U.S.C. 
24308(f) is to define OTP as a threshold for such investigations.
    CN and AAR in their initial comments (see CN Feb. 8 Comment 4; AAR 
Feb. 8 Comment 6) raise concerns that host freight railroads may be 
faced with two inconsistent sets of regulations (i.e., issued by (1) 
FRA/Amtrak and (2) the Board) if section 24308(f) investigations are 
instituted using the OTP definition established in this final rule and 
the courts ultimately uphold the validity of the PRIIA Section 207 
metrics and standards. However, at present there are not two different 
operative standards, and there may never be. We will, therefore, 
address the issue of conflicting OTP definitions if and when the issue 
should arise.
    CN and AAR argue that the issue is not whether section 24308(f) 
survives if Section 207 of PRIIA is unconstitutional, but whether 
Congress delegated to the Board in section 24308(f)(1) the authority to 
define on-time performance. They contend that because Congress 
explicitly delegated the authority to define on-time performance to FRA 
and Amtrak in Section 207 of PRIIA, the Board lacks that authority even 
if FRA and Amtrak are found not to have the legal authority to meet the 
statutory command.\3\
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    \3\ In support, they cite National Railroad Passenger Corp. v. 
National Association of Railroad Passengers, 414 U.S. 453, 458 
(1974) (``When a statute limits a thing to be done in a particular 
mode, it includes the negative of any other mode.'') and Bayou Lawn 
& Landscape Services v. Secretary of Labor, 713 F.3d 1080 (11th Cir. 
2013). But neither case has any bearing on the Board's authority to 
fill the definitional gap exposed by the invalidation of a statutory 
provision. National Railroad Passenger Corp. did not involve agency 
delegation; that case addressed the question whether the predecessor 
to 49 U.S.C. 24103, which allows the Attorney General to bring suit 
against Amtrak or host freight railroads to enforce obligations 
related to Amtrak, created a private right of action to allow third 
parties to sue to prevent what they regarded as the unlawful 
discontinuance of certain passenger trains. In Bayou Lawn, the court 
held that the Department of Labor's general rulemaking authority did 
not give it delegated authority to issue legislative rules for visa 
applications for non-agricultural workers where Congress had 
expressly delegated that authority to the Department of Homeland 
Security. There was no suggestion there that the express delegation 
to Homeland Security had been invalidated, or that Homeland Security 
was otherwise incapable of carrying out the Congressional 
delegation.
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    An agency has implied authority to implement ``a particular 
statutory provision . . . when it appears that Congress delegated 
authority to the agency generally to make rules carrying the force of 
law, and that the agency interpretation claiming deference was 
promulgated in the exercise of that authority.'' United States v. Mead 
Corp., 533 U.S. 218, 226-27 (2001).\4\ ``Sometimes, the legislative 
delegation to an agency on a particular question is implicit rather 
than explicit.'' Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council, 
Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 844 (1984). Several federal courts of appeals have 
held that an administrative agency with rulemaking authority has 
implicit authority to fill a gap exposed by the Supreme Court's 
invalidation of a portion of a statute. See Pittston Co. v. United 
States, 368 F.3d 385, 403-04 (4th Cir. 2004); Sidney Coal Co. v. Social 
Security Admin., 427 F.3d 336, 346 (6th Cir. 2005).\5\
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    \4\ See ICC v. Am. Trucking Assns., 467 U.S. 354, 364-67 (1984) 
(agency may ``modify express remedies in order to achieve specific 
statutory purposes'' if the ``discretionary power . . . further[s] a 
specific statutory mandate [and] the exercise of that power [is] 
directly and closely tied to that mandate''); W. Coal Traffic League 
v. STB, 216 F.3d 1168 (D.C. Cir. 2000).
    \5\ CN argues that the Fifth Circuit held in Texas v. United 
States, 497 F.3d 491, 504 (5th Cir. 2007) that a later court 
decision cannot affect or create ambiguity for purposes of Chevron 
delegation. But Chief Judge Jones' opinion cited by CN is not the 
majority opinion on the issue of implicit delegation. Both Judge 
King, who concurred in the result, and Judge Denis, who dissented, 
agreed that a court decision invalidating a portion of a statute 
creates implicit authority to the agency administering the statute 
to engage in gap-filling. 497 F.3d at 511-12, 513-14. Judge King and 
Judge Denis disagreed over whether the agency's authority to fill 
gaps included overriding portions of the statute that remained in 
effect. There is no such problem here because the Board is simply 
defining the term ``on-time performance,'' which remains in effect.
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    Here, as in Pittston and Sidney Coal, the invalidation of Section 
207 of PRIIA leaves a gap that the Board has the delegated authority to 
fill by virtue of its authority to adjudicate complaints brought by 
Amtrak against host freight railroads for violations of Amtrak's 
statutory preference and to award damages where a preference violation 
is found. Any other result would gut the remedial scheme, a result that 
Congress clearly did not intend.
    All-Stations OTP. As summarized below, the Board's NPRM proposed to 
calculate OTP solely on the basis of train arrivals at endpoint termini 
(Endpoint OTP). The Board proposed Endpoint OTP as an appropriate 
threshold for bringing OTP cases under 49 U.S.C. 24308(f)(1) because it 
would be ``clear and relatively easy to apply,'' i.e., comprehensible 
to the traveling public and simple to describe and implement. In 
addition, Amtrak's public OTP data \6\ suggest that under either an 
Endpoint OTP or All-Stations OTP standard, the threshold for initiating 
a case could be triggered in a comparable number of cases, if long-
established trends continue. Nevertheless, many commenters perceived 
that in proposing an Endpoint OTP threshold, the Board was devoting 
insufficient attention to intermediate stations, their passengers, and 
even the states in which the intermediate stations are located. That 
was not the Board's intent; rather, the intent was solely to set a 
threshold for accepting cases.
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    \6\ See Amtrak's Monthly Performance Reports on Amtrak.com, as 
well as the quarterly OTP statistics published by the Federal 
Railroad Administration (http://www.fra.dot.gov/Page/P0532).
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    Except for the freight railroad industry, virtually all commenters 
urge the Board to define ``on time'' based on train punctuality at all 
stations, rather than just at the endpoints (as originally proposed), 
because the majority of the traveling public are destined for 
intermediate rather than endpoint stations. (See, e.g., Amtrak Feb. 8 
Comment 7.) Moreover, the examples provided by individual passengers--
e.g., of waiting for hours at unattended stations in remote or 
unsecured locations at night for late trains that would be deemed ``on 
time'' at their endpoints--convince us that an ``all-stations'' 
definition will more appropriately reflect the principle that rail 
passengers destined for every station along a line, regardless of its

[[Page 51346]]

size, should have the same expectation of punctuality. This principle 
underlies the Congressional aspiration that ``Amtrak shall . . . 
operate Amtrak trains, to the maximum extent feasible, to all station 
stops within 15 minutes of the time established in public timetables.'' 
49 U.S.C. 24101(c)(4) (emphasis added).\7\ We therefore will 
incorporate an all-stations calculation in the threshold for bringing 
cases to the Board under 49 U.S.C. 24308(f).
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    \7\ See also Adequacy of Intercity Rail Passenger Serv., 351 
I.C.C. 883 (1976).
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    As the freight railroads point out, and as FRA and Amtrak 
themselves acknowledged in their final metrics and standards under 
PRIIA Section 207 (in which they deferred application of an all-
stations test for OTP for two years to allow for schedule adjustments), 
some schedules, particularly for long-distance trains, may need to be 
modified to more realistically distribute recovery time in light of an 
all-stations threshold. (See CN Mar. 30 Reply 3-4; AAR Mar. 30 Reply 6-
7.) For example, as CSXT notes, considerable care must be exercised in 
distributing recovery time along a route, to avoid site-specific 
operational concerns. (See CSXT Mar. 30 Reply 10.) Moreover, a number 
of current passenger rail schedules insert a very large share of 
recovery time between the last stations on a route. To support all 
stations OTP on such a route could require a reevaluation and potential 
reallocation of recovery time across the entire route. We are 
confident, however, that following adoption of an all-stations approach 
to OTP in this rulemaking, rail operations planners from all affected 
parties will be able to devise appropriate, realistic, and up-to-date 
modifications to published schedules that are consistent both with all-
stations OTP and with Congress' explicit intent in PRIIA to improve 
intercity passenger rail service. Furthermore, considerations regarding 
the published schedules may enter into the investigation stage of the 
two-stage process contemplated in the statute.
    The 15-Minute Allowance. In the NPRM, the Board proposed that an 
Amtrak train would be considered on-time if it arrives at its final 
terminus no more than five minutes after its scheduled arrival time per 
100 miles of operation, or 30 minutes after its scheduled arrival time, 
whichever is less. Based on the comments received,\8\ the Board has 
decided to deem a train's arrival or departure ``on time'' if it occurs 
no later than 15 minutes after its scheduled time. In our view, this 
15-minute allowance has several advantages. First, it is consistent 
with the Congressional goal set forth in 49 U.S.C. 24101(c)(4).\9\ 
Second, in comparison with the tiered proposal, it is simple and easy 
to apply. Third, it treats all stations and all passengers equally. 
Finally, Amtrak has long been calculating All-Stations OTP with a 
constant 15-minute allowance at each station,\10\ so the data needed to 
apply this final rule are readily available to the public and 
stakeholders.
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    \8\ See, e.g., Capital Corridor Joint Powers Authority March 30 
Reply 4 n.3; Amtrak February 8 Comment 8; Virginia Rail Policy 
Institute February 8 Comment 1.
    \9\ ``Amtrak shall . . . operate Amtrak trains, to the maximum 
extent feasible, to all station stops within 15 minutes of the time 
established in public timetables.''
    \10\ The only exception is Amtrak's Acela service in the 
Northeast Corridor, to which Amtrak applies a 10-minute lateness 
allowance.
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    Contract On-Time Performance Versus Published Schedules. The 
freight railroads generally argue that OTP should be measured in 
accordance with the criteria contained in their private contracts with 
Amtrak (contract OTP) rather than the published Amtrak timetables. (See 
Union Pac. R.R. (UP) Feb. 8 Comment 3; AAR Feb. 8 Comment 10; CN Feb. 8 
Comment 5.) However, the Congressional goal at 49 U.S.C. 24101(c)(4) 
refers to the ``time established in public timetables.'' In addition to 
being consistent with the Congressional goal, a comparison of publicly 
scheduled train timings with actual train timings is also the simplest 
and most transparent way to compare a train's OTP, as experienced by 
the traveling public, with the ``less than 80 percent'' threshold 
mandated in 49 U.S.C. 24308(f)(1). Although the private contracts 
between Amtrak and its host carriers will not enter into the threshold 
stage of an OTP case, such contracts could be relevant in the 
investigation stage.
    Several freight railroads and AAR claim that if the Board does not 
account for the problems with the schedules and simply relies on the 
published schedules as they are, it could result in an avalanche of 
complaints and ``false positives''--trains that technically fall below 
the OTP threshold but are not necessarily poor performers because the 
schedules are allegedly ``unrealistic.'' (See AAR Mar. 30 Reply; CN 
Mar. 30 Reply; UP Mar. 30 Reply; NS Mar. 30 Reply; CSXT Mar. 30 Reply.) 
Because the complainant has the primary burden of proving its case and 
litigation is resource intensive, the adopted approach is not expected 
to result in an overwhelming number of claims.
    Finally, some commenters (e.g., Virginia DOT, Michigan DOT, States 
for Passenger Rail Coalition) argue that the Board should set standards 
for the development of route schedules or conduct further study of the 
schedules prior to adopting rules. However, while section 24308(f) 
permits the Board, in conducting a particular investigation, to review 
the extent to which scheduling may contribute to the delays being 
investigated and to identify reasonable measures to improve OTP, the 
statute does not include generalized authority, outside a particular 
investigation, for the Board to set standards for the development of 
schedules. Thus, what these commenters are asking the Board to do is 
beyond the scope of our authority and this rulemaking.
    Third-Party (State) Agreements. A number of states and others 
expressed concern that the Board's OTP rule could undermine or preempt 
separate agreements entered into between states, operators, hosts, and 
others for the improvement of passenger rail service in specific 
corridors--for example, service outcomes agreements under FRA's High-
Speed Intercity Passenger Rail (HSIPR) Program. (See States for 
Passenger Rail Coalition, Inc. Feb. 8 Comment 3; Cal. State Transp. 
Agency Feb. 8 Comment 3.) We reiterate, however, that the Board is 
defining ``on time'' and describing the calculation of OTP only for the 
purpose of determining whether the ``less than 80 percent'' threshold 
for bringing an OTP complaint has been met. The Board neither intends 
nor expects that its OTP definition here will have any applicability 
beyond that limited purpose.
    Multicarrier Routes. Several commenters, including freight railroad 
interests, argue that for routes where there are multiple host 
carriers, OTP should not be measured for the entire route, but for each 
host carrier's segment. The commenters argue that this would allow the 
Board to determine if the delays are occurring on one carrier's segment 
and, if so, to properly narrow the investigation solely to that 
carrier's conduct. The commenters argue that if the Board does not do 
so, a carrier that is meeting its statutory duty could be unfairly 
drawn into an investigation.
    Although the Board understands that concern, the attribution of 
delays to hosts and specific causes more properly pertains to--indeed, 
would likely be among the initial topics addressed in--the 
investigatory phase of a case. Moreover, the statutory mandate (49 
U.S.C. 24308(f)) specifically refers to the ``on-time performance of 
any intercity passenger train,'' irrespective of the number of host 
carriers involved in the

[[Page 51347]]

train's operation. Therefore, the adopted approach is consistent with 
the statute.
    Calculation of OTP. Two individuals take issue with the Board's 
proposal to exclude from the OTP analysis any train that does not 
operate ``from its scheduled origin to its scheduled destination.'' The 
commenters argue that these trains should be accounted for, because 
they might represent instances of the most severe service failures.
    The changes adopted in this final rule will lessen the potential 
impact of this issue. Endpoint OTP, as proposed in the NPRM, would not 
have included any train that does not serve both its scheduled 
endpoints. By contrast, under the all-stations calculation method, 
every departure from origin and every arrival at subsequent stations 
that actually occurs--regardless of whether the train originates at its 
scheduled origin or completes its run to its scheduled destination--
will enter into the denominator. The Board will exclude, from its 
prescribed calculation method, only trains that do not operate at all, 
or stations on a curtailed train's route that do not actually receive 
service. This is consistent with the statute, which provides that 
Congressionally-mandated investigations in 49 U.S.C. 24308(f)(1) should 
analyze ``delays'' (not cancellations). In addition, in a train 
operation that does not take place, there typically would be no 
practical way to determine whether preference (the focus of 49 U.S.C. 
24308(f)(2)) was granted or withheld. Finally, because Amtrak generally 
cancels or curtails its services only in the event of emergencies or 
extreme weather events (such as the severe flooding in South Carolina 
in the Fall of 2015), it is doubtful that inclusion of such incidents 
in the denominator of the calculation would shed light on what is 
taking place under typical operating conditions for a particular train. 
To clarify this point, language is being added to the final rule making 
clear that the OTP calculation includes only ``actual'' arrivals and 
departures.
    Additional issues, including the following, were raised by certain 
commenters, but the issues are beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
    Per-Train vs. Per-Route Calculation. Some railroad interests argue 
that the Board should not calculate OTP for all trains on the route, 
but rather, for each individual train that operates on that route. This 
argument goes to the question of what constitutes a ``train,'' an issue 
that this rulemaking does not address and was not intended to address.
    International Service. Some commenters note that the proposed OTP 
standard rule does not provide any guidance for cross-border routes 
(i.e., those that go into Canada). No such issue has arisen in a case 
brought to the Board, and this issue goes to the question of what 
constitutes a ``train,'' an issue that, again, this rulemaking does not 
address and was not intended to address.
    Eligible Complainants. The Michigan Association of Railroad 
Passengers argues that the Board should expand the pool of the parties 
that can file complaints to include passengers. However, the parties 
eligible to bring complaints under section 24308(f) are specified by 
that statute, and we are not at liberty to expand it in this 
rulemaking.
    Time Limits on Data. Some freight railroad commenters also state 
that without a time limit on the period during which the OTP deficiency 
at issue is alleged to have occurred (e.g., the most recent four 
quarters), outdated and unnecessary claims could be filed regarding a 
train that is currently performing well. (See CN Feb. 8 Comment 6; AAR 
Feb. 8 Comment 14.) This issue, too, is beyond the scope of this 
rulemaking, which was intended solely to define ``on time'' and specify 
the formula for calculating OTP for purposes of 49 U.S.C. 24308(f).

Summary of the Final Rule

    For the reasons discussed above, we are modifying the rule as 
initially proposed and adopting the all-stations approach. This 
approach will be codified at 49 CFR 1040. The final regulations are 
attached at the end of this decision.
    Section 1040.1 makes explicit the strictly limited purpose of the 
rulemaking, as discussed above: To define ``on time'' and specify the 
formula for calculating OTP so as to trigger implementation of 49 
U.S.C. 24308(f).
    Section 1040.2 states that a train's arrival at or departure from a 
particular station is ``on time'' if it occurs no later than 15 minutes 
after its scheduled time. This section embodies the 15-minute allowance 
contained in the longstanding Congressional goal for Amtrak at 49 
U.S.C. 24101(c)(4).
    Section 1040.3 implements the ``all-stations'' option that was 
suggested as an alternative to endpoint OTP in the NPRM. Pursuant to 49 
U.S.C. 24308(f)(1), which states that a train can be the subject of an 
OTP complaint if its OTP ``averages less than 80 percent for any two 
consecutive calendar quarters,'' Section 1040.3 describes the method 
for calculating a train's OTP in each quarter. Specifically, OTP is the 
percentage equivalent to the fraction (1) whose denominator is the 
total number of the train's actual (a) departures from its origin 
station, (b) arrivals at all intermediate stations, and (c) arrivals at 
its destination station, during that calendar quarter, and (2) whose 
numerator is the total number of such actual departures and arrivals 
that are ``on time'' under Sec.  1040.2--i.e., that occur no later than 
15 minutes after their scheduled time.

Regulatory Flexibility Act Statement

    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. 5 U.S.C. 601-604. Under 
section 605(b), an agency is not required to perform an initial or 
final regulatory flexibility analysis if it certifies that the proposed 
or final rules will not have a ``significant impact on a substantial 
number of small entities.''
    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 small entities ``whose conduct is 
circumscribed or mandated'' by the proposed rule. White Eagle Coop. 
Ass'n v. Conner, 553 F.3d 467, 478, 480 (7th Cir. 2009). An agency has 
no obligation to conduct a small entity impact analysis of effects on 
entities that it does not regulate. United Distrib. Cos. v. FERC, 88 
F.3d 1105, 1170 (D.C. Cir. 1996).
    In the NPRM, the Board already certified under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that 
the proposed rule would not have a significant economic impact on a 
substantial number of small entities within the meaning of the RFA. The 
Board explained that the proposed rule would not place any additional 
burden on small entities, but rather clarify an existing obligation. 
The Board further explained that, even assuming for the sake of 
argument that the proposed regulation were to create an impact on small 
entities, which it would not, the number of small entities so affected 
would not be substantial. A copy of the

[[Page 51348]]

NPRM was served on the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA).
    The final rule adopted here uses a different measure of ``on time'' 
and ``on-time performance'' for purposes of Section 213 of PRIIA than 
those proposed in the NPRM. However, the same basis for the Board's 
certification of the proposed rule applies to the final rule adopted 
here. The final rule would not create a significant impact on a 
substantial number of small entities. Host carriers have been required 
to allow Amtrak to operate over their rail lines since the 1970s. 
Moreover, an investigation concerning delays to intercity passenger 
traffic is a function of Section 213 of PRIIA rather than this 
rulemaking. The final rule only defines ``on-time performance'' for the 
purpose of implementing the rights and obligations already established 
in Section 213 of PRIIA. Thus, the rule does not place any additional 
burden on small entities, but rather clarifies an existing obligation. 
Moreover, even assuming, for the sake of argument, that the final rule 
were to create an impact on small entities, which it does not, the 
number of small entities so affected would not be substantial. The 
final rule applies in proceedings involving Amtrak, currently the only 
provider of intercity passenger rail transportation subject to PRIIA, 
and its host railroads. For almost all of its operations, Amtrak's host 
carriers are Class I rail carriers, which are not small businesses 
under the Board's new definition for RFA purposes.\11\ Currently, out 
of the several hundred Class III railroads (``small businesses'' under 
the Board's new definition) nationwide, only approximately 10 host 
Amtrak traffic.\12\ Therefore, the Board certifies under 5 U.S.C. 
605(b) that the final rule will not have a significant economic impact 
on a substantial number of small entities within the meaning of the 
RFA. A copy of this decision will be served upon the Chief Counsel for 
Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration, 
Washington, DC 20416.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ At the time the Board issued the NPRM, the Board used the 
SBA's size standard for rail transportation, which is based on 
number of employees. See 13 CFR 121.201 (industry subsector 482). 
Subsequently, however, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 601(3) and after 
consultation with SBA, the Board (with Commissioner Begeman 
dissenting) established a new definition of ``small business'' for 
the purpose of RFA analysis. Under that new definition, the Board 
defines a small business as a rail carrier classified as a Class III 
rail carrier under 49 CFR 1201.1-1. See Small Entity Size Standards 
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, EP 719 (STB served June 30, 
2016).
    \12\ This number is derived from Amtrak's Monthly Performance 
Report for May 2015, historical on-time performance records, and 
system timetable, all of which are available on Amtrak's Web site.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The final rule is categorically excluded from environmental review 
under 49 CFR 1105.6(c).

 List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 1040

    On-time performance of intercity passenger rail service.

    It is ordered:
    1. The final rule set forth below is adopted and will be effective 
on August 27, 2016. Notice of the rule adopted here will be published 
in the Federal Register.
    2. A copy of this decision will be served upon the Chief Counsel 
for Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration.
    3. This decision is effective on the date of service.

    Decided: July 28, 2016.

    By the Board, Chairman Elliott, Vice Chairman Miller, and 
Commissioner Begeman.
Kenyatta Clay,
Clearance Clerk.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Surface 
Transportation Board amends title 49, chapter X, subchapter A, of the 
Code of Federal Regulations by adding part 1040 as follows:

PART 1040: ON-TIME PERFORMANCE OF INTERCITY PASSENGER RAIL SERVICE

Sec.
1040.1 Purpose.
1040.2 Definition of ``on time''.
1040.3 Calculation of quarterly on-time performance.

    Authority: 49 U.S.C. 1321 and 24308(f).


Sec.  1040.1.  Purpose.

    This part defines ``on time'' and specifies the formula for 
calculating on-time performance for the purpose of implementing Section 
213 of the Passenger Rail Investment and Improvement Act of 2008, 49 
U.S.C. 24308(f).


Sec.  1040.2.  Definition of ``on time.''

    An intercity passenger train's arrival at, or departure from, a 
given station is on time if it occurs no later than 15 minutes after 
its scheduled time.


Sec.  1040.3.  Calculation of quarterly on-time performance.

    In any given calendar quarter, an intercity passenger train's on-
time performance shall be the percentage equivalent to the fraction 
calculated using the following formula:
    (a) The denominator shall be the total number of the train's 
actual: Departures from its origin station, arrivals at all 
intermediate stations, and arrivals at its destination station, during 
that calendar quarter; and
    (b) The numerator shall be the total number of the train's actual: 
Departures from its origin station, arrivals at all intermediate 
stations, and arrivals at its destination station, during that calendar 
quarter, that are on time as defined in Sec.  1040.2.

[FR Doc. 2016-18256 Filed 8-3-16; 8:45 am]
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                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 150 / Thursday, August 4, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                            51343

                                                                               EPA-APPROVED LOUISIANA REGULATIONS IN THE LOUISIANA SIP—Continued
                                                                                                                                State approval
                                                   State citation                             Title/subject                                               EPA approval date                        Comments
                                                                                                                                     date

                                           Section 502 .....................    Definitions .................................       5/20/2011     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                                                                                                                    ister citation].
                                           Section 503 .....................    Minor Source Permit Require-                        4/20/2011     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                                                  ments.                                                            ister citation].
                                           Section 504 .....................    Nonattainment New Source                           11/20/2012     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-           The SIP does not include LAC
                                                                                  Review (NNSR) Procedures.                                         ister citation].                        33:III.504.M.

                                                    *                            *                    *                                  *                       *                        *                   *
                                           Section 511 .....................    Emission Reductions ................               11/20/1993     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                                                                                                                    ister citation].
                                           Section 513 .....................    General Permits, Temporary                         10/20/2006     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-           The SIP does not include LAC
                                                                                  Sources, and Relocation of                                        ister citation].                        33:III.513.A.1.
                                                                                  Portable Facilities.
                                           Section 515 .....................    Oil and Gas Wells and Pipe-                        11/20/1993     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                                                  lines Permitting Provisions.                                      ister citation].
                                           Section 517 .....................    Permit Applications and Sub-                       12/20/1997     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                                                  mittal of Information.                                            ister citation].
                                           Section 519 .....................    Permit Issuance Procedures for                     11/20/1993     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-           The SIP does not include LAC
                                                                                  New Facilities, Initial Permits,                                  ister citation].                        33:III.519.C.
                                                                                  Renewals and Significant
                                                                                  Modifications.
                                           Section 521 .....................    Administrative Amendments .....                     5/20/2005     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                                                                                                                    ister citation].
                                           Section 523 .....................    Procedures for            Incorporating             4/20/2011     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                                                  Test Results.                                                     ister citation].

                                                                                       Chapter 6—Regulations on Control of Emissions Reduction Credits Banking

                                           Section 601 .....................    Purpose ....................................       11/20/2012     8/4/2016 [Insert     Federal Reg-
                                                                                                                                                    ister citation].
                                           Section 603 .....................    Applicability ...............................      11/20/2012     8/4/2016 [Insert     Federal Reg-
                                                                                                                                                    ister citation].
                                           Section 605 .....................    Definitions .................................      11/20/2012     8/4/2016 [Insert     Federal Reg-
                                                                                                                                                    ister citation].
                                           Section 607 .....................    Determination of Creditable                        11/20/2012     8/4/2016 [Insert     Federal Reg-
                                                                                 Emission Reductions.                                               ister citation].

                                                    *                             *                   *                                  *                       *                        *                   *
                                           Section 615 .....................    Schedule for Submitting Appli-                     11/20/2012     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                                                  cations.                                                          ister citation].

                                                    *                            *                              *                        *                       *                        *                   *
                                           Section 619 .....................    Emission         Reduction          Credit         11/20/2012     8/4/2016 [Insert Federal Reg-
                                                                                 Bank.                                                              ister citation].

                                                       *                           *                            *                        *                       *                        *                   *



                                           *       *       *       *       *                                 formula for calculating ‘‘on-time                          DATES: This rule is effective on August
                                           [FR Doc. 2016–18397 Filed 8–3–16; 8:45 am]                        performance’’ for purposes of Section                      27, 2016.
                                           BILLING CODE 6560–50–P                                            213 of the Passenger Rail Investment                       FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                                                                             and Improvement Act of 2008. The                           Scott M. Zimmerman at (202) 245–0386.
                                                                                                             Board will use these regulations only for                  Assistance for the hearing impaired is
                                           SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD                                      the purpose of determining whether the                     available through the Federal
                                                                                                             ‘‘less than 80 percent’’ threshold that                    Information Relay Service (FIRS) at
                                           49 CFR Part 1040                                                  Congress set for bringing an on-time                       (800) 877–8339.
                                           [Docket No. EP 726]                                               performance complaint has been met. In
                                                                                                             light of comments received on the                          SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:     The
                                                                                                             Board’s notice of proposed rulemaking                      National Railroad Passenger Corporation
                                           On-Time Performance Under Section
                                                                                                             issued on December 28, 2015, the                           (Amtrak) was established by Congress in
                                           213 of the Passenger Rail Investment
                                                                                                                                                                        1970 to preserve passenger services and
                                           and Improvement Act of 2008                                       proposed rule has been modified to
                                                                                                                                                                        routes on the Nation’s railroads. See
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                                                                                                             deem a train’s arrival at, or departure
                                           AGENCY:      Surface Transportation Board.                                                                                   Lebron v. Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp.,
                                                                                                             from, a given station ‘‘on time’’ if it                    513 U.S. 374, 383–384 (1995); Nat’l R.R.
                                           ACTION:     Final rule.                                           occurs no later than 15 minutes after its                  Passenger Corp. v. Atchison, Topeka, &
                                           SUMMARY:   The Surface Transportation                             scheduled time and to adopt an ‘‘all-                      Santa Fe R.R., 470 U.S. 451, 454 (1985);
                                           Board (STB or Board) is adopting a final                          stations’’ calculation of ‘‘on-time                        see also Rail Passenger Serv. Act of
                                           rule to define ‘‘on time’’ and specify the                        performance.’’                                             1970, Public Law 91–518, 84 Stat. 1328


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                                           51344             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 150 / Thursday, August 4, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           (1970). As a condition of relieving the                 orders otherwise under this subsection’’              thereby conserving party and agency
                                           railroad companies of their common                      (emphasis added). Congress likewise                   resources.1
                                           carrier obligation to provide passenger                 transferred to the Board the authority                   On December 28, 2015, the Board
                                           service, Congress required them to                      under section 24308(c) to determine if                issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
                                           permit Amtrak to operate over their                     ‘‘preference for intercity and commuter               (NPRM) that proposed a definition for
                                           tracks and use their facilities. See 45                 rail passenger transportation materially              OTP derived from a previous definition
                                           U.S.C. 561, 562 (1970 ed.). Since 1973,                 will lessen the quality of freight                    used by our predecessor, the Interstate
                                           Congress has required railroads to give                 transportation provided to shippers’’ on              Commerce Commission (ICC).2 The
                                           Amtrak trains preference over freight                   a freight carrier’s line, and, if so, to              Board’s proposed rule read: ‘‘A train is
                                           service when using their lines and                      ‘‘establish the rights of the carrier and             ‘on time’ if it arrives at its final terminus
                                           facilities: ‘‘Except in an emergency,                   Amtrak on reasonable terms.’’                         no more than five minutes after its
                                           intercity and commuter rail passenger                      Under Section 213(a) of PRIIA, 49                  scheduled arrival time per 100 miles of
                                           transportation provided by or for                       U.S.C. 24308(f)(1), if the ‘‘on-time                  operation, or 30 minutes after its
                                           Amtrak has preference over freight                      performance’’ (OTP) of any intercity                  scheduled arrival time, whichever is
                                           transportation in using a rail line,                    passenger train averages less than 80%                less.’’ NPRM, slip op. at 4–9. The Board
                                           junction, or crossing . . . .’’ 49 U.S.C.               for any two consecutive calendar                      sought comments on this definition but
                                           24308(c); see Amtrak Improvement Act                    quarters, the Board may initiate an                   also encouraged the public to propose
                                           of 1973, Public Law 93–146, section                     investigation, or upon complaint by                   other alternatives, including the
                                           10(2), 87 Stat. 552 (initial version).                  Amtrak or another eligible complainant,               alternative adopted here: factoring into
                                              Prior to 2008, the Board was not                     the Board ‘‘shall’’ do so. The purpose of             the calculation a train’s punctuality at
                                           involved in the adjudication of Amtrak’s                such an investigation is to determine                 intermediate stops rather than the final
                                           preference rights. The only way that                    whether and to what extent delays are                 terminus only. See NPRM, slip op. at 6.
                                           Amtrak could enforce its preference                     due to causes that could reasonably be                The Board also established a procedural
                                           rights was by asking the Attorney                       addressed by the passenger rail operator              schedule providing for comments and
                                           General to bring a civil action for                     or the host railroad. Following the                   replies.
                                           equitable relief. 49 U.S.C. 24103.                      investigation, should the Board                          The Board received 121 comments
                                           Further, the Secretary of Transportation                determine that Amtrak’s substandard                   and replies on its proposed rule from
                                           had the authority under section                         performance is ‘‘attributable to’’ the rail           the railroad industry (both passenger
                                           24308(c) to grant a host rail carrier relief            carrier’s ‘‘failure to provide preference             and freight), states, the U.S. Department
                                           from the preference obligation and to                   to Amtrak over freight transportation as              of Transportation, elected officials at all
                                           establish the usage rights between                      required’’ by 49 U.S.C. 24308(c), the                 levels of government, individual
                                           Amtrak and the host carrier if the                      Board may ‘‘award damages’’ or other                  members of the traveling public, and
                                           Secretary found that Amtrak’s                           appropriate relief from a host railroad to            various stakeholder groups.
                                           preference materially lessened the                      Amtrak. 49 U.S.C. 24308(f)(2). If the                    Shortly after the comment period in
                                           quality of freight transportation                       Board finds it appropriate to award                   this docket closed, in Association of
                                           provided to shippers. In 2008, Congress                 damages to Amtrak, Amtrak must use                    American Railroads v. Department of
                                           enacted Section 213 of the Passenger                    the award ‘‘for capital or operating                  Transportation, 821 F.3d 19 (D.C. Cir.
                                           Rail Investment and Improvement Act                     expenditures on the routes over which                 2016), the United States Court of
                                           of 2008 (PRIIA), 49 U.S.C. 24308(f), to                 delays’’ were the result of the host                  Appeals for the District of Columbia
                                           address, among other things, the                                                                              Circuit held that the structure of Section
                                                                                                   railroad’s failure to grant the statutorily
                                           concern that one cause of Amtrak’s                                                                            207 of PRIIA violates the Due Process
                                                                                                   required preference to passenger
                                           inability to achieve reliable on-time                                                                         Clause of the U.S. Constitution because,
                                                                                                   transportation. 49 U.S.C. 24308(f)(4).
                                           performance was the failure of host                                                                           in the court’s view, it authorized
                                                                                                      Thus, 49 U.S.C. 24308(f) sets up a
                                           railroads to honor Amtrak’s right to                                                                          Amtrak, ‘‘an economically self-
                                                                                                   two-stage process involving, first, a
                                           preference. See Passenger Rail Inv. &                                                                         interested actor,’’ to ‘‘regulate its
                                                                                                   ‘‘less than 80 percent’’ threshold to
                                           Improvement Act, Public Law 110–432,                                                                          competitors’’—that is, the railroads that
                                                                                                   indicate whether a train’s OTP allows
                                           Div. B, 122 Stat. 4907 (2008); S. Rep.                                                                        host Amtrak passenger trains outside
                                                                                                   for an investigation; and second, if this
                                           No. 67, 110th Cong., 1st Sess. 25–26                                                                          the Northeast Corridor. Accordingly, the
                                                                                                   prerequisite is satisfied, the Board may
                                           (2007). Section 207 of PRIIA, 49 U.S.C.                                                                       FRA and Amtrak metrics are currently
                                           24101 note, charged Amtrak and the                      investigate (or on complaint, shall
                                                                                                   investigate) the causes of the deficient              invalid.
                                           Federal Railroad Administration (FRA)
                                           with ‘‘jointly’’ developing new, or                     OTP, which could lead to findings,                    Discussion of Issues Raised in Response
                                           improving existing, metrics and                         recommendations, and other possible                   to the NPRM.
                                           standards for measuring the                             relief as detailed in the statute.
                                                                                                      On May 15, 2015, the Board instituted                The Board’s Authority. Several freight
                                           performance of intercity passenger rail                                                                       rail interests argue that—even though
                                           operations, including on-time                           this rulemaking proceeding in response
                                                                                                   to a petition filed by the Association of             section 24308(f)(1) allows, and in some
                                           performance and train delays incurred
                                           on host railroads.                                      American Railroads (AAR). See On-
                                                                                                                                                           1 By that point Amtrak had filed two complaints
                                              PRIIA also transferred from the                      Time Performance Under Sec. 213 of the
                                                                                                                                                         (both pending, but in abeyance based on this
                                           Secretary of Transportation to the Board                Passenger Rail Inv. & Improvement Act                 rulemaking) requesting that the Board initiate an
                                           the administration and enforcement of                   of 2008, EP 726 (STB served May 15,                   investigation pursuant to section 24308(f), and
                                           Amtrak’s preference rights. Thus, PRIIA                 2015). In that decision, the Board stated             claiming that host Class I carriers have not given
                                                                                                   that a rulemaking would provide clarity               Amtrak preference as required under section
                                           amended 49 U.S.C. 24308(c) to provide                                                                         24308(c). See Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp.—Sec. 213
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                                           that: ‘‘Except in an emergency, intercity               regarding the ‘‘less than 80 percent’’                Investigation of Substandard Performance on Rail
                                           and commuter rail passenger                             OTP threshold in all applicable cases                 Lines of Canadian Nat’l Ry., NOR 42134; Nat’l R.R.
                                           transportation provided by or for                       and allow the Board to obtain the full                Passenger Corp.—Investigation of Substandard
                                                                                                   range of stakeholder perspectives in one              Performance of the Capitol Ltd., NOR 42141.
                                           Amtrak has preference over freight                                                                              2 The NPRM contains additional background on
                                           transportation in using a rail line,                    docket and avoid the potential                        the court and agency litigation and controversies
                                           junction, or crossing unless the Board                  relitigation of the issue in each case,               that led the Board to initiate the rulemaking.



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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 150 / Thursday, August 4, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                                     51345

                                           circumstances requires, the Board to                    performance to FRA and Amtrak in                             Here, as in Pittston and Sidney Coal,
                                           investigate the causes of poor ‘‘on time                Section 207 of PRIIA, the Board lacks                     the invalidation of Section 207 of PRIIA
                                           performance,’’ including whether a host                 that authority even if FRA and Amtrak                     leaves a gap that the Board has the
                                           rail carrier has failed to provide                      are found not to have the legal authority                 delegated authority to fill by virtue of its
                                           preference to Amtrak over its rail line as              to meet the statutory command.3                           authority to adjudicate complaints
                                           required by section 24308(c)—the Board                     An agency has implied authority to                     brought by Amtrak against host freight
                                           lacks authority to give meaning to the                  implement ‘‘a particular statutory                        railroads for violations of Amtrak’s
                                           term ‘‘on-time performance.’’ They                      provision . . . when it appears that                      statutory preference and to award
                                           argue this even though PRIIA provides                   Congress delegated authority to the                       damages where a preference violation is
                                           that if the on-time performance of an                   agency generally to make rules carrying                   found. Any other result would gut the
                                           Amtrak passenger train falls below 80%                  the force of law, and that the agency                     remedial scheme, a result that Congress
                                           for two consecutive quarters, such                      interpretation claiming deference was                     clearly did not intend.
                                           performance may warrant an                              promulgated in the exercise of that                          All-Stations OTP. As summarized
                                           investigation by the Board.                             authority.’’ United States v. Mead Corp.,                 below, the Board’s NPRM proposed to
                                              Although regulatory agencies like the                533 U.S. 218, 226–27 (2001).4                             calculate OTP solely on the basis of
                                           Board typically have the authority to                   ‘‘Sometimes, the legislative delegation                   train arrivals at endpoint termini
                                           define the terms in provisions of the                   to an agency on a particular question is                  (Endpoint OTP). The Board proposed
                                           statutes that they administer, AAR and                  implicit rather than explicit.’’ Chevron                  Endpoint OTP as an appropriate
                                           freight railroad commenters (Canadian                   U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council,                threshold for bringing OTP cases under
                                           National Railway Company (CN), CSX                      Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 844 (1984). Several                   49 U.S.C. 24308(f)(1) because it would
                                           Transportation, Inc. (CSXT), and                        federal courts of appeals have held that                  be ‘‘clear and relatively easy to apply,’’
                                           Norfolk Southern Railway Company                        an administrative agency with                             i.e., comprehensible to the traveling
                                           (NS)) argue that the Board does not have                rulemaking authority has implicit                         public and simple to describe and
                                           the authority to define on-time                         authority to fill a gap exposed by the                    implement. In addition, Amtrak’s public
                                           performance because Congress gave that                  Supreme Court’s invalidation of a                         OTP data 6 suggest that under either an
                                           responsibility jointly to Amtrak and                    portion of a statute. See Pittston Co. v.                 Endpoint OTP or All-Stations OTP
                                           FRA in Section 207 of PRIIA. We                         United States, 368 F.3d 385, 403–04                       standard, the threshold for initiating a
                                           disagree.                                               (4th Cir. 2004); Sidney Coal Co. v.                       case could be triggered in a comparable
                                              In National Railroad Passenger                       Social Security Admin., 427 F.3d 336,                     number of cases, if long-established
                                           Corp.—Section 213 Investigation of                      346 (6th Cir. 2005).5                                     trends continue. Nevertheless, many
                                           Substandard Performance on Rail Lines                                                                             commenters perceived that in proposing
                                           of Canadian National Railway (Illini/                      3 In support, they cite National Railroad
                                                                                                                                                             an Endpoint OTP threshold, the Board
                                           Saluki), NOR 42134, slip op. at 2 (STB                  Passenger Corp. v. National Association of Railroad
                                                                                                   Passengers, 414 U.S. 453, 458 (1974) (‘‘When a            was devoting insufficient attention to
                                           served Dec. 19, 2014), the Board                        statute limits a thing to be done in a particular         intermediate stations, their passengers,
                                           concluded that the unconstitutionality                  mode, it includes the negative of any other mode.’’)      and even the states in which the
                                           of Section 207 of PRIIA does not prevent                and Bayou Lawn & Landscape Services v. Secretary
                                                                                                   of Labor, 713 F.3d 1080 (11th Cir. 2013). But neither     intermediate stations are located. That
                                           the Board from initiating investigations
                                                                                                   case has any bearing on the Board’s authority to fill     was not the Board’s intent; rather, the
                                           of on-time performance problems under                   the definitional gap exposed by the invalidation of       intent was solely to set a threshold for
                                           section 24308(c). Indeed, the only way                  a statutory provision. National Railroad Passenger        accepting cases.
                                           for the Board now to fulfill its                        Corp. did not involve agency delegation; that case
                                                                                                   addressed the question whether the predecessor to            Except for the freight railroad
                                           responsibilities under 49 U.S.C. 24308(f)
                                                                                                   49 U.S.C. 24103, which allows the Attorney General        industry, virtually all commenters urge
                                           is to define OTP as a threshold for such
                                           investigations.
                                                                                                   to bring suit against Amtrak or host freight railroads    the Board to define ‘‘on time’’ based on
                                                                                                   to enforce obligations related to Amtrak, created a
                                              CN and AAR in their initial comments                 private right of action to allow third parties to sue
                                                                                                                                                             train punctuality at all stations, rather
                                           (see CN Feb. 8 Comment 4; AAR Feb. 8                    to prevent what they regarded as the unlawful             than just at the endpoints (as originally
                                           Comment 6) raise concerns that host                     discontinuance of certain passenger trains. In Bayou      proposed), because the majority of the
                                                                                                   Lawn, the court held that the Department of Labor’s       traveling public are destined for
                                           freight railroads may be faced with two                 general rulemaking authority did not give it
                                           inconsistent sets of regulations (i.e.,                 delegated authority to issue legislative rules for visa
                                                                                                                                                             intermediate rather than endpoint
                                           issued by (1) FRA/Amtrak and (2) the                    applications for non-agricultural workers where           stations. (See, e.g., Amtrak Feb. 8
                                           Board) if section 24308(f) investigations               Congress had expressly delegated that authority to        Comment 7.) Moreover, the examples
                                                                                                   the Department of Homeland Security. There was            provided by individual passengers—
                                           are instituted using the OTP definition                 no suggestion there that the express delegation to
                                           established in this final rule and the                  Homeland Security had been invalidated, or that           e.g., of waiting for hours at unattended
                                           courts ultimately uphold the validity of                Homeland Security was otherwise incapable of              stations in remote or unsecured
                                           the PRIIA Section 207 metrics and                       carrying out the Congressional delegation.                locations at night for late trains that
                                                                                                      4 See ICC v. Am. Trucking Assns., 467 U.S. 354,
                                           standards. However, at present there are                                                                          would be deemed ‘‘on time’’ at their
                                                                                                   364–67 (1984) (agency may ‘‘modify express
                                           not two different operative standards,                  remedies in order to achieve specific statutory
                                                                                                                                                             endpoints—convince us that an ‘‘all-
                                           and there may never be. We will,                        purposes’’ if the ‘‘discretionary power . . .             stations’’ definition will more
                                           therefore, address the issue of                         further[s] a specific statutory mandate [and] the         appropriately reflect the principle that
                                                                                                   exercise of that power [is] directly and closely tied     rail passengers destined for every
                                           conflicting OTP definitions if and when                 to that mandate’’); W. Coal Traffic League v. STB,
                                           the issue should arise.                                 216 F.3d 1168 (D.C. Cir. 2000).                           station along a line, regardless of its
                                              CN and AAR argue that the issue is                      5 CN argues that the Fifth Circuit held in Texas

                                           not whether section 24308(f) survives if                v. United States, 497 F.3d 491, 504 (5th Cir. 2007)       513–14. Judge King and Judge Denis disagreed over
                                                                                                   that a later court decision cannot affect or create       whether the agency’s authority to fill gaps included
                                           Section 207 of PRIIA is                                                                                           overriding portions of the statute that remained in
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                                                                                                   ambiguity for purposes of Chevron delegation. But
                                           unconstitutional, but whether Congress                  Chief Judge Jones’ opinion cited by CN is not the         effect. There is no such problem here because the
                                           delegated to the Board in section                       majority opinion on the issue of implicit delegation.     Board is simply defining the term ‘‘on-time
                                           24308(f)(1) the authority to define on-                 Both Judge King, who concurred in the result, and         performance,’’ which remains in effect.
                                                                                                   Judge Denis, who dissented, agreed that a court              6 See Amtrak’s Monthly Performance Reports on
                                           time performance. They contend that                     decision invalidating a portion of a statute creates      Amtrak.com, as well as the quarterly OTP statistics
                                           because Congress explicitly delegated                   implicit authority to the agency administering the        published by the Federal Railroad Administration
                                           the authority to define on-time                         statute to engage in gap-filling. 497 F.3d at 511–12,     (http://www.fra.dot.gov/Page/P0532).



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                                           51346             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 150 / Thursday, August 4, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           size, should have the same expectation                  scheduled time. In our view, this 15-                    Board should set standards for the
                                           of punctuality. This principle underlies                minute allowance has several                             development of route schedules or
                                           the Congressional aspiration that                       advantages. First, it is consistent with                 conduct further study of the schedules
                                           ‘‘Amtrak shall . . . operate Amtrak                     the Congressional goal set forth in 49                   prior to adopting rules. However, while
                                           trains, to the maximum extent feasible,                 U.S.C. 24101(c)(4).9 Second, in                          section 24308(f) permits the Board, in
                                           to all station stops within 15 minutes of               comparison with the tiered proposal, it                  conducting a particular investigation, to
                                           the time established in public                          is simple and easy to apply. Third, it                   review the extent to which scheduling
                                           timetables.’’ 49 U.S.C. 24101(c)(4)                     treats all stations and all passengers                   may contribute to the delays being
                                           (emphasis added).7 We therefore will                    equally. Finally, Amtrak has long been                   investigated and to identify reasonable
                                           incorporate an all-stations calculation in              calculating All-Stations OTP with a                      measures to improve OTP, the statute
                                           the threshold for bringing cases to the                 constant 15-minute allowance at each                     does not include generalized authority,
                                           Board under 49 U.S.C. 24308(f).                         station,10 so the data needed to apply                   outside a particular investigation, for
                                              As the freight railroads point out, and              this final rule are readily available to the             the Board to set standards for the
                                           as FRA and Amtrak themselves                            public and stakeholders.                                 development of schedules. Thus, what
                                           acknowledged in their final metrics and                    Contract On-Time Performance                          these commenters are asking the Board
                                           standards under PRIIA Section 207 (in                   Versus Published Schedules. The freight                  to do is beyond the scope of our
                                           which they deferred application of an                   railroads generally argue that OTP                       authority and this rulemaking.
                                           all-stations test for OTP for two years to              should be measured in accordance with                       Third-Party (State) Agreements. A
                                           allow for schedule adjustments), some                   the criteria contained in their private                  number of states and others expressed
                                           schedules, particularly for long-distance               contracts with Amtrak (contract OTP)                     concern that the Board’s OTP rule could
                                           trains, may need to be modified to more                 rather than the published Amtrak                         undermine or preempt separate
                                           realistically distribute recovery time in               timetables. (See Union Pac. R.R. (UP)                    agreements entered into between states,
                                           light of an all-stations threshold. (See                Feb. 8 Comment 3; AAR Feb. 8                             operators, hosts, and others for the
                                           CN Mar. 30 Reply 3–4; AAR Mar. 30                       Comment 10; CN Feb. 8 Comment 5.)                        improvement of passenger rail service in
                                           Reply 6–7.) For example, as CSXT notes,                 However, the Congressional goal at 49                    specific corridors—for example, service
                                           considerable care must be exercised in                  U.S.C. 24101(c)(4) refers to the ‘‘time                  outcomes agreements under FRA’s
                                           distributing recovery time along a route,               established in public timetables.’’ In                   High-Speed Intercity Passenger Rail
                                           to avoid site-specific operational                      addition to being consistent with the                    (HSIPR) Program. (See States for
                                           concerns. (See CSXT Mar. 30 Reply 10.)                  Congressional goal, a comparison of                      Passenger Rail Coalition, Inc. Feb. 8
                                           Moreover, a number of current                           publicly scheduled train timings with                    Comment 3; Cal. State Transp. Agency
                                           passenger rail schedules insert a very                  actual train timings is also the simplest                Feb. 8 Comment 3.) We reiterate,
                                           large share of recovery time between the                and most transparent way to compare a                    however, that the Board is defining ‘‘on
                                           last stations on a route. To support all                train’s OTP, as experienced by the
                                                                                                                                                            time’’ and describing the calculation of
                                           stations OTP on such a route could                      traveling public, with the ‘‘less than 80
                                                                                                                                                            OTP only for the purpose of
                                           require a reevaluation and potential                    percent’’ threshold mandated in 49
                                                                                                                                                            determining whether the ‘‘less than 80
                                           reallocation of recovery time across the                U.S.C. 24308(f)(1). Although the private
                                                                                                                                                            percent’’ threshold for bringing an OTP
                                           entire route. We are confident, however,                contracts between Amtrak and its host
                                                                                                                                                            complaint has been met. The Board
                                           that following adoption of an all-                      carriers will not enter into the threshold
                                                                                                                                                            neither intends nor expects that its OTP
                                           stations approach to OTP in this                        stage of an OTP case, such contracts
                                                                                                                                                            definition here will have any
                                           rulemaking, rail operations planners                    could be relevant in the investigation
                                                                                                                                                            applicability beyond that limited
                                           from all affected parties will be able to               stage.
                                                                                                      Several freight railroads and AAR                     purpose.
                                           devise appropriate, realistic, and up-to-
                                           date modifications to published                         claim that if the Board does not account                    Multicarrier Routes. Several
                                           schedules that are consistent both with                 for the problems with the schedules and                  commenters, including freight railroad
                                           all-stations OTP and with Congress’                     simply relies on the published                           interests, argue that for routes where
                                           explicit intent in PRIIA to improve                     schedules as they are, it could result in                there are multiple host carriers, OTP
                                           intercity passenger rail service.                       an avalanche of complaints and ‘‘false                   should not be measured for the entire
                                           Furthermore, considerations regarding                   positives’’—trains that technically fall                 route, but for each host carrier’s
                                           the published schedules may enter into                  below the OTP threshold but are not                      segment. The commenters argue that
                                           the investigation stage of the two-stage                necessarily poor performers because the                  this would allow the Board to determine
                                           process contemplated in the statute.                    schedules are allegedly ‘‘unrealistic.’’                 if the delays are occurring on one
                                              The 15-Minute Allowance. In the                      (See AAR Mar. 30 Reply; CN Mar. 30                       carrier’s segment and, if so, to properly
                                           NPRM, the Board proposed that an                        Reply; UP Mar. 30 Reply; NS Mar. 30                      narrow the investigation solely to that
                                           Amtrak train would be considered on-                    Reply; CSXT Mar. 30 Reply.) Because                      carrier’s conduct. The commenters
                                           time if it arrives at its final terminus no             the complainant has the primary burden                   argue that if the Board does not do so,
                                           more than five minutes after its                        of proving its case and litigation is                    a carrier that is meeting its statutory
                                           scheduled arrival time per 100 miles of                 resource intensive, the adopted                          duty could be unfairly drawn into an
                                           operation, or 30 minutes after its                      approach is not expected to result in an                 investigation.
                                           scheduled arrival time, whichever is                    overwhelming number of claims.                              Although the Board understands that
                                           less. Based on the comments received,8                     Finally, some commenters (e.g.,                       concern, the attribution of delays to
                                           the Board has decided to deem a train’s                 Virginia DOT, Michigan DOT, States for                   hosts and specific causes more properly
                                           arrival or departure ‘‘on time’’ if it                  Passenger Rail Coalition) argue that the                 pertains to—indeed, would likely be
                                           occurs no later than 15 minutes after its                                                                        among the initial topics addressed in—
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                                                                                                     9 ‘‘Amtrak shall . . . operate Amtrak trains, to the   the investigatory phase of a case.
                                             7 See also Adequacy of Intercity Rail Passenger       maximum extent feasible, to all station stops within     Moreover, the statutory mandate (49
                                           Serv., 351 I.C.C. 883 (1976).                           15 minutes of the time established in public             U.S.C. 24308(f)) specifically refers to the
                                             8 See, e.g., Capital Corridor Joint Powers            timetables.’’
                                           Authority March 30 Reply 4 n.3; Amtrak February           10 The only exception is Amtrak’s Acela service        ‘‘on-time performance of any intercity
                                           8 Comment 8; Virginia Rail Policy Institute             in the Northeast Corridor, to which Amtrak applies       passenger train,’’ irrespective of the
                                           February 8 Comment 1.                                   a 10-minute lateness allowance.                          number of host carriers involved in the


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                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 150 / Thursday, August 4, 2016 / Rules and Regulations                                          51347

                                           train’s operation. Therefore, the adopted                  International Service. Some                        calculating a train’s OTP in each
                                           approach is consistent with the statute.                commenters note that the proposed OTP                 quarter. Specifically, OTP is the
                                              Calculation of OTP. Two individuals                  standard rule does not provide any                    percentage equivalent to the fraction (1)
                                           take issue with the Board’s proposal to                 guidance for cross-border routes (i.e.,               whose denominator is the total number
                                           exclude from the OTP analysis any train                 those that go into Canada). No such                   of the train’s actual (a) departures from
                                           that does not operate ‘‘from its                        issue has arisen in a case brought to the             its origin station, (b) arrivals at all
                                           scheduled origin to its scheduled                       Board, and this issue goes to the                     intermediate stations, and (c) arrivals at
                                           destination.’’ The commenters argue                     question of what constitutes a ‘‘train,’’             its destination station, during that
                                           that these trains should be accounted                   an issue that, again, this rulemaking                 calendar quarter, and (2) whose
                                           for, because they might represent                       does not address and was not intended                 numerator is the total number of such
                                           instances of the most severe service                    to address.                                           actual departures and arrivals that are
                                           failures.                                                  Eligible Complainants. The Michigan                ‘‘on time’’ under § 1040.2—i.e., that
                                              The changes adopted in this final rule               Association of Railroad Passengers                    occur no later than 15 minutes after
                                           will lessen the potential impact of this                argues that the Board should expand the               their scheduled time.
                                           issue. Endpoint OTP, as proposed in the                 pool of the parties that can file
                                           NPRM, would not have included any                       complaints to include passengers.                     Regulatory Flexibility Act Statement
                                           train that does not serve both its                      However, the parties eligible to bring                   The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
                                           scheduled endpoints. By contrast, under                 complaints under section 24308(f) are                 (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601–612, generally
                                           the all-stations calculation method,                    specified by that statute, and we are not             requires a description and analysis of
                                           every departure from origin and every                   at liberty to expand it in this                       new rules that would have a significant
                                           arrival at subsequent stations that                     rulemaking.                                           economic impact on a substantial
                                           actually occurs—regardless of whether                      Time Limits on Data. Some freight                  number of small entities. In drafting a
                                           the train originates at its scheduled                   railroad commenters also state that                   rule, an agency is required to: (1) Assess
                                           origin or completes its run to its                      without a time limit on the period                    the effect that its regulation will have on
                                           scheduled destination—will enter into                   during which the OTP deficiency at                    small entities; (2) analyze effective
                                           the denominator. The Board will                         issue is alleged to have occurred (e.g.,              alternatives that may minimize a
                                           exclude, from its prescribed calculation                the most recent four quarters), outdated              regulation’s impact; and (3) make the
                                           method, only trains that do not operate                 and unnecessary claims could be filed                 analysis available for public comment. 5
                                           at all, or stations on a curtailed train’s              regarding a train that is currently                   U.S.C. 601–604. Under section 605(b),
                                           route that do not actually receive                      performing well. (See CN Feb. 8                       an agency is not required to perform an
                                           service. This is consistent with the                    Comment 6; AAR Feb. 8 Comment 14.)                    initial or final regulatory flexibility
                                           statute, which provides that                            This issue, too, is beyond the scope of               analysis if it certifies that the proposed
                                           Congressionally-mandated                                this rulemaking, which was intended                   or final rules will not have a ‘‘significant
                                           investigations in 49 U.S.C. 24308(f)(1)                 solely to define ‘‘on time’’ and specify              impact on a substantial number of small
                                           should analyze ‘‘delays’’ (not                          the formula for calculating OTP for                   entities.’’
                                           cancellations). In addition, in a train                 purposes of 49 U.S.C. 24308(f).                          Because the goal of the RFA is to
                                           operation that does not take place, there                                                                     reduce the cost to small entities of
                                           typically would be no practical way to                  Summary of the Final Rule                             complying with federal regulations, the
                                           determine whether preference (the focus                    For the reasons discussed above, we                RFA requires an agency to perform a
                                           of 49 U.S.C. 24308(f)(2)) was granted or                are modifying the rule as initially                   regulatory flexibility analysis of small
                                           withheld. Finally, because Amtrak                       proposed and adopting the all-stations                entity impacts only when a rule directly
                                           generally cancels or curtails its services              approach. This approach will be                       regulates those entities. In other words,
                                           only in the event of emergencies or                     codified at 49 CFR 1040. The final                    the impact must be a direct impact on
                                           extreme weather events (such as the                     regulations are attached at the end of                small entities ‘‘whose conduct is
                                           severe flooding in South Carolina in the                this decision.                                        circumscribed or mandated’’ by the
                                           Fall of 2015), it is doubtful that                         Section 1040.1 makes explicit the                  proposed rule. White Eagle Coop. Ass’n
                                           inclusion of such incidents in the                      strictly limited purpose of the                       v. Conner, 553 F.3d 467, 478, 480 (7th
                                           denominator of the calculation would                    rulemaking, as discussed above: To                    Cir. 2009). An agency has no obligation
                                           shed light on what is taking place under                define ‘‘on time’’ and specify the                    to conduct a small entity impact
                                           typical operating conditions for a                      formula for calculating OTP so as to                  analysis of effects on entities that it does
                                           particular train. To clarify this point,                trigger implementation of 49 U.S.C.                   not regulate. United Distrib. Cos. v.
                                           language is being added to the final rule               24308(f).                                             FERC, 88 F.3d 1105, 1170 (D.C. Cir.
                                           making clear that the OTP calculation                      Section 1040.2 states that a train’s               1996).
                                           includes only ‘‘actual’’ arrivals and                   arrival at or departure from a particular                In the NPRM, the Board already
                                           departures.                                             station is ‘‘on time’’ if it occurs no later          certified under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that the
                                              Additional issues, including the                     than 15 minutes after its scheduled                   proposed rule would not have a
                                           following, were raised by certain                       time. This section embodies the 15-                   significant economic impact on a
                                           commenters, but the issues are beyond                   minute allowance contained in the                     substantial number of small entities
                                           the scope of this rulemaking.                           longstanding Congressional goal for                   within the meaning of the RFA. The
                                              Per-Train vs. Per-Route Calculation.                 Amtrak at 49 U.S.C. 24101(c)(4).                      Board explained that the proposed rule
                                           Some railroad interests argue that the                     Section 1040.3 implements the ‘‘all-               would not place any additional burden
                                           Board should not calculate OTP for all                  stations’’ option that was suggested as               on small entities, but rather clarify an
                                           trains on the route, but rather, for each               an alternative to endpoint OTP in the                 existing obligation. The Board further
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                                           individual train that operates on that                  NPRM. Pursuant to 49 U.S.C.                           explained that, even assuming for the
                                           route. This argument goes to the                        24308(f)(1), which states that a train can            sake of argument that the proposed
                                           question of what constitutes a ‘‘train,’’               be the subject of an OTP complaint if its             regulation were to create an impact on
                                           an issue that this rulemaking does not                  OTP ‘‘averages less than 80 percent for               small entities, which it would not, the
                                           address and was not intended to                         any two consecutive calendar quarters,’’              number of small entities so affected
                                           address.                                                Section 1040.3 describes the method for               would not be substantial. A copy of the


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                                           51348               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 150 / Thursday, August 4, 2016 / Rules and Regulations

                                           NPRM was served on the U.S. Small                           Advocacy, U.S. Small Business                       from its origin station, arrivals at all
                                           Business Administration (SBA).                              Administration, Washington, DC 20416.               intermediate stations, and arrivals at its
                                              The final rule adopted here uses a                         The final rule is categorically                   destination station, during that calendar
                                           different measure of ‘‘on time’’ and ‘‘on-                  excluded from environmental review                  quarter; and
                                           time performance’’ for purposes of                          under 49 CFR 1105.6(c).                                (b) The numerator shall be the total
                                           Section 213 of PRIIA than those                                                                                 number of the train’s actual: Departures
                                                                                                       List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 1040
                                                                                                                                                           from its origin station, arrivals at all
                                           proposed in the NPRM. However, the                            On-time performance of intercity                  intermediate stations, and arrivals at its
                                           same basis for the Board’s certification                    passenger rail service.                             destination station, during that calendar
                                           of the proposed rule applies to the final
                                                                                                         It is ordered:                                    quarter, that are on time as defined in
                                           rule adopted here. The final rule would                       1. The final rule set forth below is              § 1040.2.
                                           not create a significant impact on a                        adopted and will be effective on August             [FR Doc. 2016–18256 Filed 8–3–16; 8:45 am]
                                           substantial number of small entities.                       27, 2016. Notice of the rule adopted                BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
                                           Host carriers have been required to                         here will be published in the Federal
                                           allow Amtrak to operate over their rail                     Register.
                                           lines since the 1970s. Moreover, an                           2. A copy of this decision will be
                                           investigation concerning delays to                                                                              DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
                                                                                                       served upon the Chief Counsel for
                                           intercity passenger traffic is a function                   Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S.
                                           of Section 213 of PRIIA rather than this                                                                        Fish and Wildlife Service
                                                                                                       Small Business Administration.
                                           rulemaking. The final rule only defines                       3. This decision is effective on the              50 CFR Part 17
                                           ‘‘on-time performance’’ for the purpose                     date of service.
                                           of implementing the rights and                                Decided: July 28, 2016.                           [Docket No. FWS–R1–ES–2015–0070;
                                           obligations already established in                                                                              4500030114]
                                                                                                         By the Board, Chairman Elliott, Vice
                                           Section 213 of PRIIA. Thus, the rule                        Chairman Miller, and Commissioner                   RIN 1018–BA91
                                           does not place any additional burden on                     Begeman.
                                           small entities, but rather clarifies an                     Kenyatta Clay,                                      Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
                                           existing obligation. Moreover, even                         Clearance Clerk.                                    and Plants; Determination of Critical
                                           assuming, for the sake of argument, that                                                                        Habitat for the Marbled Murrelet
                                           the final rule were to create an impact                       For the reasons set forth in the
                                           on small entities, which it does not, the                   preamble, the Surface Transportation                AGENCY:   Fish and Wildlife Service,
                                           number of small entities so affected                        Board amends title 49, chapter X,                   Interior.
                                           would not be substantial. The final rule                    subchapter A, of the Code of Federal                ACTION: Final determination.
                                           applies in proceedings involving                            Regulations by adding part 1040 as
                                           Amtrak, currently the only provider of                      follows:                                            SUMMARY:   We, the U.S. Fish and
                                           intercity passenger rail transportation                                                                         Wildlife Service (Service), determine
                                                                                                       PART 1040: ON-TIME PERFORMANCE                      the critical habitat for the marbled
                                           subject to PRIIA, and its host railroads.                   OF INTERCITY PASSENGER RAIL                         murrelet (Brachyramphus marmoratus),
                                           For almost all of its operations,                           SERVICE                                             as designated in 1996 and revised in
                                           Amtrak’s host carriers are Class I rail
                                                                                                                                                           2011, meets the statutory definition of
                                           carriers, which are not small businesses                    Sec.
                                                                                                       1040.1 Purpose.                                     critical habitat under the Endangered
                                           under the Board’s new definition for
                                                                                                       1040.2 Definition of ‘‘on time’’.                   Species Act of 1973, as amended (Act).
                                           RFA purposes.11 Currently, out of the                                                                           The current designation includes
                                                                                                       1040.3 Calculation of quarterly on-time
                                           several hundred Class III railroads                                                                             approximately 3,698,100 acres
                                                                                                            performance.
                                           (‘‘small businesses’’ under the Board’s                                                                         (1,497,000 hectares) of critical habitat in
                                           new definition) nationwide, only                              Authority: 49 U.S.C. 1321 and 24308(f).
                                                                                                                                                           the States of Washington, Oregon, and
                                           approximately 10 host Amtrak traffic.12                     § 1040.1.   Purpose.                                California.
                                           Therefore, the Board certifies under 5
                                                                                                         This part defines ‘‘on time’’ and                 DATES:  This final determination
                                           U.S.C. 605(b) that the final rule will not
                                                                                                       specifies the formula for calculating on-           confirms the effective date of the final
                                           have a significant economic impact on                       time performance for the purpose of
                                           a substantial number of small entities                                                                          rule published at 61 FR 26256 and
                                                                                                       implementing Section 213 of the                     effective on June 24, 1996, as revised at
                                           within the meaning of the RFA. A copy                       Passenger Rail Investment and
                                           of this decision will be served upon the                                                                        76 FR 61599, and effective on November
                                                                                                       Improvement Act of 2008, 49 U.S.C.                  4, 2011.
                                           Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Office of                       24308(f).                                           ADDRESSES: This final rule is available
                                              11 At the time the Board issued the NPRM, the            § 1040.2.   Definition of ‘‘on time.’’              on the internet at http://
                                           Board used the SBA’s size standard for rail                    An intercity passenger train’s arrival           www.regulations.gov and http://
                                           transportation, which is based on number of
                                                                                                       at, or departure from, a given station is           www.fws.gov/wafwo. Comments and
                                           employees. See 13 CFR 121.201 (industry subsector                                                               materials we received, as well as some
                                           482). Subsequently, however, pursuant to 5 U.S.C.           on time if it occurs no later than 15
                                           601(3) and after consultation with SBA, the Board           minutes after its scheduled time.                   of the supporting documentation we
                                           (with Commissioner Begeman dissenting)                                                                          used in preparing this final rule, are
                                           established a new definition of ‘‘small business’’ for      § 1040.3. Calculation of quarterly on-time          available for public inspection at http://
                                           the purpose of RFA analysis. Under that new                 performance.                                        www.regulations.gov. All of the
                                           definition, the Board defines a small business as a
                                           rail carrier classified as a Class III rail carrier under     In any given calendar quarter, an                 comments, materials, and
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                                           49 CFR 1201.1–1. See Small Entity Size Standards            intercity passenger train’s on-time                 documentation that we considered in
                                           Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, EP 719 (STB           performance shall be the percentage                 this rulemaking are available by
                                           served June 30, 2016).                                      equivalent to the fraction calculated               appointment, during normal business
                                              12 This number is derived from Amtrak’s Monthly

                                           Performance Report for May 2015, historical on-
                                                                                                       using the following formula:                        hours at: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
                                           time performance records, and system timetable, all           (a) The denominator shall be the total            Washington Fish and Wildlife Office,
                                           of which are available on Amtrak’s Web site.                number of the train’s actual: Departures            510 Desmond Drive SE., Suite 102,


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Document Created: 2016-08-04 02:53:27
Document Modified: 2016-08-04 02:53:27
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionRules and Regulations
ActionFinal rule.
DatesThis rule is effective on August 27, 2016.
ContactScott M. Zimmerman at (202) 245-0386. Assistance for the hearing impaired is available through the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at (800) 877-8339.
FR Citation81 FR 51343 

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