81_FR_61820 81 FR 61647 - Rail Transportation of Grain, Rate Regulation Review; Expanding Access to Rate Relief

81 FR 61647 - Rail Transportation of Grain, Rate Regulation Review; Expanding Access to Rate Relief

SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 173 (September 7, 2016)

Page Range61647-61658
FR Document2016-21305

The Surface Transportation Board (Board) is seeking comments and suggestions through this Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR) regarding the Board's effort to develop a new rate reasonableness methodology for use in very small disputes, which would be available to shippers of all commodities.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 173 (Wednesday, September 7, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 173 (Wednesday, September 7, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 61647-61658]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-21305]


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SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD

49 CFR Chapter X

[Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1); Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2)]


Rail Transportation of Grain, Rate Regulation Review; Expanding 
Access to Rate Relief

AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board.

ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.

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SUMMARY: The Surface Transportation Board (Board) is seeking comments 
and suggestions through this Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 
(ANPR) regarding the Board's effort to develop a new rate 
reasonableness methodology for use in very small disputes, which would 
be available to shippers of all commodities.

DATES: Comments are due by November 14, 2016. Reply comments are due by 
December 19, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Comments and replies may be submitted either via the Board's 
e-filing format or in the traditional paper format. Any person using e-
filing should attach a document and otherwise comply with the 
instructions at the ``E-FILING'' link on the Board's Web site, at 
``http://www.stb.dot.gov.'' Any person submitting a filing in the 
traditional paper format should send an original and 10 copies to: 
Surface Transportation Board, Attn: Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), 395 
E Street SW., Washington, DC 20423-0001.
    Copies of written comments and replies will be posted to the 
Board's Web site and will be available for viewing and self-copying at 
the Board's Public Docket Room, Room 131. Copies will also be available 
(for a fee) by contacting the Board's Chief Records Officer at (202) 
245-0238 or 395 E Street SW., Washington, DC 20423-0001.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Allison Davis at (202) 245-0378. 
Assistance for the hearing impaired is available through the Federal 
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at (800) 877-8339.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the Interstate Commerce Act, Congress 
charged the Board with protecting the public from unreasonable pricing 
by freight railroads, while fostering a sound, safe, and efficient rail 
transportation system by allowing carriers to earn adequate revenues. 
See 49 U.S.C. 10101. In the Staggers Rail Act of 1980, Public Law 96-
448, 94 Stat. 1895, and subsequent legislation, including the ICC 
Termination Act of 1995 (ICCTA), Public Law 104-88, 109 Stat. 803, 
Congress established a careful balance between these two important yet 
conflicting goals. On the one hand, Congress permitted differential 
pricing and removed regulatory controls over railroad pricing for 
traffic with effective competition so that carriers would have greater 
ability to earn the revenues necessary to attract capital and reinvest 
in the network. On the other hand, Congress made clear that railroad 
rates for traffic without effective competition must be reasonable (see 
49 U.S.C. 10702, 10707), and that shippers of grain, in particular, are 
entitled to some additional protections (see, e.g., 49 U.S.C. 10709(g) 
(providing that shippers may file a complaint with the Board asking it 
to review agricultural contracts on certain grounds)).
    By decision served in Rail Transportation of Grain, Rate Regulation 
Review, Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1) on December 12, 2013, the Board 
invited public comment on how to ensure that the Board's existing rate 
complaint procedures are accessible to grain shippers and provide 
effective protection against unreasonable freight rail transportation 
rates, including proposals for modifying existing procedures or new 
alternative rate relief methodologies. The Board received opening and 
reply comments from interested shipper, railroad, and government 
entities. The Board then held a public hearing on June 10, 2015, to 
further examine issues related to the accessibility of rate relief for 
grain shippers and to provide interested persons the opportunity to 
comment on the suggestions made during the public comment period. 
Following the hearing, the Board received supplemental comments from 
three parties.
    The Board has considered all of the written comments and oral 
testimony received in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1).\1\ A number of 
issues raised during the public comment period--related to the 
accessibility of the Board's existing rate review processes, 
modifications to those processes, and alternative rate review processes 
set forth by parties--merit further discussion, and the Board is 
seeking further comment on those issues.\2\ Based on the comments and 
testimony received, the Board believes that the existing rate review 
processes

[[Page 61648]]

present accessibility challenges for not only grain shippers, but also 
small shippers of any commodity. The Board also recognizes that for 
small rate disputes, regardless of commodity, the litigation costs 
required to bring a case under the Board's existing rate reasonableness 
methodologies can quickly exceed the value of the case. Therefore, the 
Board is opening a proceeding in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2) to 
develop a new rate review process that would be more affordable and 
accessible to shippers of all commodities with small disputes.
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    \1\ For a list of the numerous parties that have participated in 
Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1) at various stages, see Appendix A. To 
the extent this decision refers to parties by abbreviations, those 
abbreviations are listed in that appendix.
    \2\ We note that other significant issues have been raised in 
this proceeding, such as the Board's regulations concerning 
agricultural rate transparency and the standing required to bring a 
rate complaint. The Board will address these issues in a subsequent 
decision.
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    Before discussing ideas for use in a new rate reasonableness 
methodology, we will discuss the Board's existing rate reasonableness 
standards and the comments received in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1).

Current Rate Reasonableness Standards

Statutory Framework

    Where a railroad has market dominance--i.e., there is an absence of 
effective competition from other rail carriers or modes of 
transportation--its transportation rates for common carrier service 
must be reasonable. 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(1), 10702, 10707(a). The Board 
is precluded, however, from finding market dominance if the revenues 
produced by a challenged rate are less than 180% of the carrier's 
``variable costs'' \3\ of providing the service. 49 U.S.C. 
10707(d)(1)(A). If, upon complaint, the Board finds a challenged rate 
unreasonable, it will order the railroad to pay reparations to the 
complainant for past movements and may prescribe the maximum rate the 
carrier is permitted to charge. 49 U.S.C. 10704(a)(1), 11704(b).
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    \3\ Variable costs vary with the level of traffic and are 
developed in rate proceedings using the Board's Uniform Railroad 
Costing System (URCS). See Adoption of Unif. R.R. Costing Sys. as 
Gen. Purpose Costing Sys. for All Regulatory Costing Purposes, 5 
I.C.C.2d 894 (1989).
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    In carrying out its regulatory functions, the Board is guided by 
the rail transportation policy set forth at 49 U.S.C. 10101. And in 
assessing the reasonableness of rail rates, it must also give due 
consideration to the ``Long-Cannon'' factors contained in 49 U.S.C. 
10701(d)(2)(A)-(C). The Board must recognize that rail carriers should 
have an opportunity to earn ``adequate revenues,'' which are defined as 
those that are sufficient--under honest, economical, and efficient 
management--to cover operating expenses, support prudent capital 
outlays, repay a reasonable debt level, raise needed equity capital, 
and otherwise attract and retain capital in amounts adequate to provide 
a sound rail transportation system. 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(2), 10704(a)(2).
    As part of ICCTA, Congress added a new provision to the rail 
transportation policy calling for the ``expeditious handling and 
resolution of all proceedings.'' 49 U.S.C. 10101(15). Congress further 
instructed the Board to establish procedures for rail rate challenges 
in particular, including ``appropriate measures for avoiding delay in 
the discovery and evidentiary phases of such proceedings.'' 49 U.S.C. 
10704(d). Congress directed the Board to ``establish a simplified and 
expedited method for determining the reasonableness of challenged rail 
rates in those cases in which a full stand-alone cost presentation is 
too costly, given the value of the case.'' 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(3). In 
the Surface Transportation Board Reauthorization Act of 2015, Public 
Law 114-110, 129 Stat. 2228 (2015), Congress directed the Board to 
``initiate a proceeding to assess procedures that are available to 
parties in litigation before courts to expedite such litigation and the 
potential application of any such procedures to rate cases.'' 129 Stat. 
2228. That proceeding is currently pending before the Board. See 
Expediting Rate Cases, EP 733 (STB served June 15, 2016).

Regulatory Framework

    Under the theory of ``constrained market pricing'' (CMP), adopted 
by the agency in 1985 to judge the reasonableness of rail freight 
rates, a captive shipper should not be required to pay more than is 
necessary for the carrier involved to earn adequate revenues, nor 
should it pay more than is necessary for efficient service, and a 
captive shipper should not bear the costs of any facilities or services 
from which it derives no benefit. Coal Rate Guidelines, Nationwide 
(Guidelines), 1 I.C.C.2d 520, 523 (1985), aff'd sub nom. Consol. Rail 
Corp. v. United States, 812 F.2d 1444 (3d Cir. 1987). CMP contains 
three main limits on the extent to which a railroad may charge 
differentially higher rates on captive traffic: The revenue adequacy 
constraint, the management efficiency constraint, and the stand-alone 
cost constraint.\4\ Of these three limits under CMP, the stand-alone 
cost (SAC) constraint has been the most widely utilized before the 
agency.
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    \4\ A fourth constraint--phasing--is intended to limit the 
introduction of otherwise-permissible rate increases when necessary 
for the greater public good. Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d at 546-47. For a 
more detailed discussion of CMP, see Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d at 534-
547.
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    A SAC analysis seeks to determine whether a complainant is bearing 
costs resulting from inefficiencies or costs associated with facilities 
or services from which it derives no benefit. The SAC analysis does 
this by simulating the competitive rate that would exist in a 
``contestable market.'' \5\ Under the SAC constraint, the rate at issue 
cannot be higher than what a hypothesized stand-alone railroad (SARR) 
would need to charge to serve the complaining shipper while fully 
covering all of its costs, including a reasonable return on investment. 
The principal objective of the SAC approach is to restrain a railroad 
from exploiting market power over a captive shipper by charging more 
than it needs to earn a reasonable return on the cost of the 
infrastructure used to serve that shipper. A second objective of the 
SAC constraint is to detect and eliminate the costs of inefficiencies 
in a carrier's investments or operations. See id. at 542-46.
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    \5\ A contestable market is defined as one that is free from 
barriers to entry. See Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d at 528 (citing William 
J. Baumol, John C. Panzar & Robert D. Willig, Contestable Markets 
and the Theory of Industry Structure (1982)). The economic theory of 
contestable markets does not depend on a large number of competing 
firms in the marketplace to ensure a competitive outcome. 
Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d at 528. In a contestable market, even a 
monopolist must offer competitive rates or potentially lose its 
customers to a new entrant. Id.
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    The agency recognized that the SAC methodology adopted in 
Guidelines could be expensive and impractical for certain shippers. The 
agency therefore adopted in 1996 a simplified methodology, the Three-
Benchmark methodology, under which the reasonableness of a challenged 
rated is determined by examining that rate in relation to three 
benchmark figures. Rate Guidelines--Non-Coal Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. 1004 
(1996), pet. to reopen denied, 2 S.T.B. 619 (1997), appeal dismissed 
sub nom. Ass'n of Am. R.Rs. v. STB, 146 F.3d 942 (D.C. Cir. 1998). A 
decade passed, however, without any shipper bringing a case under that 
methodology. Accordingly, in 2007, the Board modified the Three-
Benchmark test and created Simplified-SAC--a simplified alternative 
under CMP where a full SAC analysis was too costly given the value of 
the case. See Simplified Standards for Rail Rate Cases, EP 646 (Sub-No. 
1) (STB served Sept. 5, 2007), aff'd sub nom. CSX Transp., Inc. v. STB, 
568 F.3d 236 (D.C. Cir.), vacated in part on reh'g, 584 F.3d 1076 (D.C. 
Cir. 2009).
    In Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 13, the 
Board acknowledged that it is the second objective--in which the 
complaint seeks to detect and eliminate the cost of inefficiencies in 
carrier's investments or

[[Page 61649]]

operations--that turns the case into an intricate, expensive 
undertaking. Accordingly, the Board limited the inquiry under the 
Simplified-SAC method to the first objective of SAC: whether a captive 
shipper is being forced to cross-subsidize other parts of the 
railroad's rail network. The Simplified-SAC test does so by comparing 
the costs and revenues of the actual operations and services provided 
under the assumption that all existing infrastructure along the 
predominant route used to haul the complainant's traffic is needed to 
serve the traffic on that route. Rate Regulation Reforms, EP 715, slip 
op. at 1 n.2 (STB served Mar. 13, 2015); see also Simplified Standards, 
EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 5. The core analysis in a Simplified-
SAC proceeding addresses the cost to build the existing facilities used 
to serve the captive shipper and the return on investment a 
hypothetical SARR would require to replicate those facilities. The 
Board then determines whether the traffic using those facilities is 
paying more than needed to cover operating expenses and a reasonable 
return on the cost of those facilities. To hold down the cost of a 
Simplified-SAC presentation, various simplifying assumptions and 
standardization measures were adopted.\6\ Such an approach is a less 
thorough application of CMP in that it would not identify 
inefficiencies in the current rail operation.
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    \6\ Simplifying assumptions are used in, for example, the issue 
traffic's route, the configuration of the SARR, the traffic group, 
operating expenses, the test year, and the discounted cash flow 
analysis.
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    Under the Three-Benchmark method, the reasonableness of a 
challenged rate is determined by examining that rate in relation to the 
following three benchmark figures, each of which is expressed as a 
revenue-to-variable cost (R/VC) ratio: (1) Revenue Shortfall Allocation 
Method (RSAM), which measures the average markup over variable cost 
that the defendant railroad would need to charge all of its 
``potentially captive'' traffic (traffic priced above the 180% R/VC 
level) in order for the railroad to earn adequate revenues as measured 
by the Board under 49 U.S.C. 10704(a)(2); (2) R/VC>180, 
which measures the average markup over variable cost currently earned 
by the defendant railroad on its potentially captive traffic; and (3) 
R/VCCOMP, which is used to compare the markup being paid by 
the challenged traffic to the average markup assessed on other 
comparable potentially captive traffic. Rate Regulation Reforms, EP 
715, slip op. at 11 (STB served July 25, 2012).
    In Three-Benchmark cases, each party simultaneously proposes an 
initial comparison group, and, after critiquing the other side's 
proposal, a ``final offer'' comparison group. After receiving 
simultaneous rebuttal filings, the Board selects without adjustment one 
of the two ``final offer'' comparison groups. Each movement in the 
comparison group is adjusted by a revenue need adjustment factor, which 
is the ratio of RSAM / R/VC>180 (each of which is a four-
year average calculation). The Board then calculates the mean and 
standard deviation of the resulting adjusted R/VC ratios (weighted in 
accordance with the proper sampling factors). If the challenged rate is 
above a reasonable confidence interval around the estimate of the mean 
for the adjusted comparison group, it is presumed unreasonable and, 
absent any ``other relevant factors,'' the maximum lawful rate is 
prescribed at that boundary level. See Simplified Standards, EP 646 
(Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 21.
    Since Simplified Standards, only a few Three-Benchmark cases have 
been decided by the Board, while no complaint has been litigated to 
completion under the Simplified-SAC alternative.
    There is no monetary limit on relief for a complainant that elects 
to use the SAC or Simplified-SAC methods, see Rate Regulation Reforms, 
EP 715, slip op. at 3 (STB served July 18, 2013) (removing relief limit 
on Simplified-SAC cases), though rate relief in SAC cases is limited to 
a 10 year period, see Major Issues in Rail Rate Cases, EP 657 (Sub-No. 
1), slip op. at 62-66 (STB served Oct. 30, 2006), and relief in 
Simplified-SAC cases is limited to a five-year period, Simplified 
Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 27-29. The maximum potential 
rate relief available to a complainant that elects to use the Three-
Benchmark method is limited to no more than $4 million per case over a 
five-year period. See Rate Regulation Reforms, EP 715, slip op. at 2 
(STB served Mar. 13, 2015); Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), 
slip op. at 27-29.

Comments Received in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1)

    The shipper community argues that the Board's current rate review 
processes are not useable to test the reasonableness of agriculture 
commodity rail rates. Shippers argue that the Board's existing 
methodologies are cost-prohibitive. (ARC Opening 21-22; NGFA Opening 
13-15; AAI Reply 2.) For example, NGFA argues that even the simplest of 
the Board's rate reasonableness methodologies, the Three-Benchmark 
approach, is ineffective because railroad defendants raise numerous 
expert-intensive ``other relevant factor'' arguments and arguments for 
the use of current waybill data in the possession of the defendant 
railroad, which greatly increase the complexity and costs of those 
cases. (NGFA Opening 15.)
    Even if the Three-Benchmark methodology were not cost prohibitive, 
shippers argue that a comparison group approach is ineffective for 
agricultural commodities because carriers have applied ``across-the-
board'' pricing. (ARC Opening 23; NGFA Opening 15; AAI Reply 2.) 
Specifically, shippers claim that carriers use their market power to 
impose a uniformly high rate across-the-board for certain commodities 
or groups of commodities. (ARC Opening 23; NGFA Opening 15.) As a 
result, shippers argue that the R/VCCOMP benchmark is 
inherently problematic for grain shippers and producers because 
railroad grain rates generally produce R/VCs that are uniform, or 
uniform in geographic areas, for states or regions. (ARC Opening 23, 
V.S. Whiteside 12.) According to NGFA, the fact that only defendant 
traffic may be included in a Three-Benchmark comparison group compounds 
this flaw. (NGFA Opening 15.)
    NGFA also argues that SAC and Simplified-SAC are inaccessible 
because many grain shippers are on low-density rural branch lines or 
secondary lines, and the Board's holding regarding cross-subsidies in 
PPL Montana, LLC v. Burlington Northern & Santa Fe Railway, NOR 42054 
(STB served Aug. 20, 2002) and Otter Tail Power Co. v. BNSF Railway, 
NOR 42058, slip op. at 11-13 (STB served Jan. 27, 2006) have 
essentially eliminated the ability for grain shippers to use SAC rules 
to test the reasonableness of rates for agricultural commodities. (NGFA 
Opening 13-14, 21.)
    Shippers propose both modifications to the existing methodologies 
and new processes for rate review. Regarding the existing 
methodologies, several shipper groups argue for changes to the Three-
Benchmark methodology. ARC argues that the comparison groups in the 
Three-Benchmark method should include non-defendant traffic for grain 
and grain products shippers because limiting comparison groups to 
defendant traffic eliminates a significant amount of traffic with 
similar demand characteristics. (ARC Opening 22-23,

[[Page 61650]]

V.S. Fauth 23.) \7\ NGFA and ARC both argue that expanding the 
comparable traffic group to include non-defendant traffic would also 
address ``across-the-board'' pricing practices. (ARC Opening 23; NGFA 
Opening 15, 28, V.S. Crowley 9-11.) As NGFA notes, the inclusion of 
non-defendant traffic in a comparison group approach would establish a 
``market'' rate, and thereby address, to some extent, the current 
practice of the Class I railroads to limit the ability of a captive 
shipper or a group of captive shippers to reach desired markets by 
setting rail rates that largely dictate where the shipper's commodity 
goes on that railroad's system. (NGFA Opening 28, V.S. Crowley 9-11.)
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    \7\ NGFA also includes non-defendant traffic in its proposed new 
methodology, which is discussed in more detail below.
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    Shippers also argue that comparison groups in the Three-Benchmark 
methodology should include non-captive traffic, i.e., traffic priced 
below the 180% R/VC level.\8\ (ARC Opening 23-24, V.S. Fauth 23-24; 
NGFA Opening 29.) According to NGFA, including movements with R/VC 
ratios below 180% is essential because captive agriculture commodity 
producers and elevators compete in the marketplace against other 
agriculture commodity shipments with rates both above and below the 
180% R/VC threshold. (NGFA Opening 29.) Likewise, ARC argues that 
restricting the comparison group to traffic moving at an R/VC ratio 
greater than 180% significantly reduces the amount of traffic available 
for the comparison group because the majority of grain and grain 
products move at R/VC levels below 180%. (ARC Opening 23, V.S. Fauth 
23-24.)
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    \8\ NGFA also incorporates traffic with R/VC ratios below 180% 
into its proposed new methodology, which is discussed in more detail 
below.
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    In addition, ARC proposes two adjustment factors that the Board 
could apply in rate challenges related to grain shipments. First, it 
proposes a Grain Cost Adjustment Factor (GCAF), which would be applied 
to the Board's URCS Phase III costing program for railroad movements of 
grain and grain products. ARC claims the GCAF would more accurately 
reflect the fact that these movements generally have certain lower 
costs than the system average costs, including switching, crew, 
locomotive, and car costs. (ARC Opening, V.S. Fauth 7.) ARC also 
proposes an export grain rate adjustment that takes into account the 
economic relationship between grain prices and grain exports. (ARC 
Opening, V.S. Fauth 30-31.)
    ARC and NGFA also each propose new rate review processes. ARC sets 
forth a ``Two-Benchmark'' approach for revenue adequate railroads, 
which would eliminate the R/VCCOMP benchmark (and rely only 
on the RSAM and R/VC>180 benchmarks by carrier).\9\ 
According to ARC's witness, the R/VCCOMP benchmark is 
designed to reflect demand-based differential pricing and is 
inappropriate under the revenue adequacy constraint announced many 
years ago in Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d at 520. (ARC Opening, V.S. Fauth 
25.) ARC, therefore, argues that the R/VCCOMP benchmark 
should have no application in assessing the rates of revenue adequate 
carriers because it provides a means of reflecting demand-based 
differential pricing principles and differential pricing should not 
affect rates on captive traffic to the extent those rates provide 
revenues above revenue adequacy levels. (ARC Opening 17-19.) Under 
ARC's proposed Two-Benchmark test, if grain shippers have rates which 
generate R/VC ratios in excess of the 180%, then the R/VC ratio could 
not exceed the RSAM level. (ARC Opening, V.S. Fauth 26.)
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    \9\ As indicated earlier, ARC also proposes to expand the 
comparison group in Three-Benchmark cases to include both non-
defendant traffic and traffic moving at an R/VC ratio below 180%. 
(ARC Opening 20-24.)
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    NGFA proposes an alternative method called the Ag Commodity Maximum 
Rate Methodology (ACMRM). (NGFA Opening 27-31, V.S. Crowley 6-17.) 
Under ACMRM, the issue traffic would be compared against all railroads 
(not just the defendant railroad) and movements with R/VC ratios less 
than 180% (although, the maximum reasonable rate produced by the 
analysis would be subject to the statutory 180% floor). (NGFA Opening 
28-29, V.S. Crowley 9-11.) Under NGFA's proposal, the comparison group 
would be based on certain default factors, including a mileage band, 
commodity type, railcar type, railcar ownership, and movement type. 
(NGFA Opening, V.S. Crowley 6-7.) ACMRM also would eliminate the 
confidence interval adjustment and the ``other relevant factors'' 
analysis so that captive agriculture commodity rate cases could be 
decided quickly and at reasonable cost. (NGFA Opening 31.) The rate 
prescription period would be 5 years, and there would be no limits on 
the amount of relief that the complaining shipper or group of shippers 
could receive if a rate challenge is successful. (NGFA Opening 31.) 
ACMRM also includes a commodity-specific Revenue Adequacy Adjustment 
Factor, which would be used to adjust the R/VC ratio of each movement 
in the comparison group to account for the revenue adequacy status of 
each railroad. (NGFA Opening 31.) \10\
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    \10\ The formula for determining the RAAF is set forth in 
Exhibit 5 of the verified statement of Crowley. (NGFA Opening, V.S. 
Crowley Exhibit 5.)
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    Carriers, on the other hand, argue that grain rates are not 
unreasonable and the Board's existing rules provide ample opportunity 
for grain shippers to pursue rate relief. (BNSF Opening 1, 26-29; UP 
Opening 19-20.) Carriers cite the lack of grain rate litigation as 
evidence that most grain rates are reasonable or not subject to the 
Board's jurisdiction (R/VC ratios below 180%, contract movements, or 
exempt commodities). (BNSF Opening 26-29; UP Opening 20; AAR Reply 9-
10; CSXT Reply 4; NSR Reply 24-25.) According to carriers, rail rates 
for grain are effectively constrained by competition from truck, barge, 
and other railroads, as well as by the competitive global market for 
grain sales. (BNSF Opening 17-23, 27-29; UP Opening 15-20; CSXT Reply 
2-3.)
    Carriers also argue that the Board has already sufficiently 
addressed shippers' concerns by limiting its market dominance inquiry 
to direct competition (i.e., not allowing product or geographic 
competition), creating two simplified rate reasonableness 
methodologies, and eliminating or increasing the relief caps for those 
methodologies. (AAR Opening 18-19; BNSF Opening 24-26; UP Opening 20; 
CSXT Reply 8.) CSXT notes that the Board also eliminated the use of 
movement-specific adjustments to URCS to reduce litigation costs. (CSXT 
Reply 6 (citing Major Issues, EP 657 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 59-60).) 
BNSF and CSXT also dispute the shippers' allegations that railroads 
impose uniformly high rates for certain commodities or groups of 
commodities. (BNSF Reply 14-15; CSXT Reply 8-9.) According to BNSF, 
shippers' concerns about broad, industry-wide rate increases are purely 
speculative and inconsistent with market realities. (BNSF Reply 14.)
    Generally, carriers advocate maintaining the Board's current rate 
review processes and ask the Board to reject the modifications and 
alternatives set forth by the shipper community. (See AAR Opening 18; 
BNSF Opening 24-26; NSR Opening 6; UP Opening 2.) Carriers argue that 
NGFA's proposal would result in a ``ratcheting effect,'' whereby, 
through repeated successful rate challenges, rates charged to captive 
shippers could be systematically lowered to the jurisdictional floor. 
(BNSF Reply 21, 24-25; NSR Reply 14-15; UP Reply 23-24.) Carriers also 
argue that the Board should reject NGFA's

[[Page 61651]]

proposal because the methodology is not supported by sound economics 
and is inherently biased for grain shippers. (CSXT Reply 2, 10; NSR 
Reply 13-14.) According to CSXT, NGFA's proposal would eliminate 
demand-based differential pricing for grain traffic, prevent the Board 
from determining appropriate contribution to fixed costs, and 
``adjust'' URCS in ways that would blatantly favor grain shippers over 
other shippers. (CSXT Reply 10-11.) Carriers also oppose the unlimited 
relief available under ACMRM. (BNSF Reply 29; UP Reply 34-35.)
    Carriers also find flaws in ARC's proposal. Specifically, they 
argue that ARC's proposal would create a disincentive for railroads to 
expand competitive traffic through good business practices and would 
result in an overall degradation of rail service, contrary to the 
public interest. (AAR Reply 21-22; BNSF Reply 31; UP Reply 21-22, 37.) 
UP further argues that ARC's proposal is inconsistent with the 
competitive market principles embodied in the Board's governing statute 
and with basic railroad economics because it disregards the railroad's 
need for differential pricing to recover their joint and common costs. 
(UP Reply 35; see also AAR Reply 16.)
    The carriers also argue that modifications to the Three-Benchmark 
approach, such as inclusion of non-defendant or non-captive traffic in 
the comparison group, lack sound economic support. Railroads dispute 
the idea of including non-defendant traffic in comparison groups, 
arguing that comparisons that include traffic moving on other railroads 
do not accurately establish the appropriate contribution to the 
defendant railroad's fixed costs. (AAR Reply 17-18; BNSF Reply 27.) 
BNSF further argues that including all traffic in the proposed 
comparison group eliminates a railroad's ability to engage in 
differential pricing, contrary to the basic economics of the railroad 
industry. (BNSF Reply 23.) NSR notes that expanding the comparison 
group would not simplify rate reasonableness determinations, but rather 
would increase the cost and complexity of the Three-Benchmark approach 
by requiring examination and evidence based on rates and costing from 
other railroads. (NSR Reply 29.)
    Likewise, carriers oppose the inclusion of non-captive traffic in 
the comparison group. According to NSR, there is no basis for comparing 
traffic over which the railroad is potentially market dominant to 
traffic over which the railroad is not market dominant by statute. (NSR 
Reply 17.) According to BNSF and UP, by seeking to include in the 
comparison group traffic with competitive alternatives, NGFA seeks to 
eliminate a railroad's ability to engage in differential pricing, 
contrary to the basic economics of the railroad industry. (BNSF Reply 
23; UP Reply 24-26.) According to BNSF and UP, including movements with 
R/VC ratios below 180% in the comparison group will also lead to a 
ratcheting down of R/VC ratios until the 180% R/VC ratio becomes the 
rate ceiling. (BNSF Reply 24-25; UP Reply 23-24.)
    USDA also provided comment, arguing that a new approach is 
necessary and warranted, and should be explored, and that agricultural 
shippers require specifically designed rail rate challenge procedures. 
(USDA Opening 2.) USDA argues that none of the current rail rate 
appeals procedures are suitable for agricultural shippers because they 
are much too costly, complex, and time consuming, and agricultural 
shippers do not move large enough quantities to justify the cost of 
these procedures. (Id. at 6.) USDA also argues that, by the time a 
decision could be rendered, the routes or rates may have changed to fit 
new agricultural market conditions, nullifying most of the benefits 
from winning the case. (Id.) USDA estimates that a rate reasonableness 
methodology must have costs no greater than $50,000 in order to be a 
viable option for agriculture shippers. (Id. at 7-8.)
    Based on the comments and testimony received in this proceeding, 
the Board is persuaded that the existing rate review processes present 
accessibility challenges not only for small shippers of grain, but also 
for small shippers of any commodity. The Board recognizes that, for 
small disputes, the litigation costs required to bring a case under the 
Board's existing rate reasonableness methodologies, even the Board's 
most simplified method, Three-Benchmark, can quickly exceed the value 
of the case. The Board appreciates receiving the alternative 
methodologies proposed by ARC and NGFA; however, we are not convinced 
that the alternative methodologies as proposed strike the proper 
balance between the Board's statutory goals of providing captive 
shippers meaningful access to regulatory remedies for unreasonable rail 
rates, while permitting railroads to earn a reasonable return on their 
investments so that they will have the resources to make the investment 
needed to continue to serve the transportation needs of their 
customers.
    Although the Board has concerns with the proposals set forth by ARC 
and NGFA, several of the ideas that parties have raised as part of 
these methodologies, or on how to modify the Three-Benchmark 
methodology, warrant further exploration. In particular, if the Board 
could develop a process that reduces the litigation burden on parties 
even more than the simplest existing rate reasonableness methodology, 
it could achieve the goal of creating more accessible rate review 
processes for small disputes where even a Three-Benchmark case would be 
too costly, given the value of the case. Accordingly, we are 
considering developing a set of procedures that could comprise a new 
comparison-based rate reasonableness methodology for use by shippers of 
all commodities in very small disputes. The Board is considering a new 
process that would entail the following key elements.
    First, the process would include a preliminary screen that would 
limit its application to shippers that are more likely to be considered 
captive and to have rates that are outliers. Such a screen might allow 
for the Board to make market dominance and rate reasonableness 
determinations based on an abbreviated evidentiary process. Second, the 
process would contain a comparison-based analysis in which the Board 
develops an initial comparison group and then allows parties to propose 
modifications. By having the Board set the initial comparison group, 
based on pre-determined criteria, the evidentiary process could be 
simplified, as parties would only have to present evidence on 
modifications rather than creating their own comparison groups (as is 
currently the case in Three-Benchmark cases). Third, the process would 
contain other procedural modifications that help expedite and 
streamline the comparison-based assessment. In particular, the Board is 
considering ideas such as limiting discovery, establishing mandatory 
disclosures, limiting the length of filings, and establishing an 
evidentiary hearing in lieu of rebuttal evidence. Finally, because the 
process would only be intended for small disputes, the Board would 
limit the amount of relief available.
    It is the Board's goal that procedures evolving from this ANPR 
would shorten the case timeline and reduce litigation costs, while 
achieving the same objectives as the existing rate methodologies and 
minimizing the loss of precision. The Board is guided by the concerns 
raised during the public comment period in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 
1), namely that the Board's current rate review processes are cost-
prohibitive for grain and other shippers with small disputes, and by 
the rail transportation policy set forth at 49 U.S.C. 10101. The Board 
must balance

[[Page 61652]]

the shippers' interest in being protected from unreasonable rates, see 
49 U.S.C. 10101(6), against the need to promote a safe and efficient 
rail transportation system by allowing rail carriers to earn adequate 
revenues, see 49 U.S.C. 10101(3), 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(2). We must also 
consider all parties' needs for expeditious handling of proceedings, 
see 49 U.S.C. 10101(15).
    We are seeking comment in a new docket, Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 
2), as we believe this methodology should be available to shippers of 
all commodities, not just grain, with small disputes. Many of the 
concerns raised about the accessibility of the Board's existing rate 
reasonableness procedures are general in nature. Indeed, some 
commenters expressly acknowledged that such concerns may be equally 
applicable to shippers of other commodities (see, e.g., ARC Opening 9-
10 (``Many of the deficiencies in the status quo may not be unique to 
grain'')), while others argued that limiting the availability of a 
methodology to a subset of shippers or commodities would be arbitrary 
(see, e.g., NSR Opening 6 (``nothing in the Board's governing statutes 
or prior considerations of rate regulation . . . suggests that the 
economic basis or soundness of a [rate] methodology . . . should vary 
based on the shipper or commodities at issue'')). Thus, we are 
exploring how best to develop a new methodology available to shippers 
of all commodities.
    The Board seeks comment on whether the procedures set forth in this 
decision--or variations on these procedures--would provide a reasonable 
yet accessible methodology for use in very small rate disputes. The 
Board also welcomes comments on other means the Board could implement 
to keep the costs of a new process low.

New Methodology in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2)

I. Availability of New Methodology

    Although the concerns expressed by the agricultural community in 
Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1) and elsewhere have been instrumental in 
informing the Board of the need for a new approach, we do not believe 
that a new methodology should be limited to small shippers of only 
agricultural products. Instead, as discussed above, we are exploring 
how best to develop a new methodology that would be available to 
shippers of all commodities with small disputes.
    We are considering limiting this methodology, however, to disputes 
involving only Class I rail carriers. The Board does not envision that 
the new process would apply to purely local movements of a Class II or 
Class III carrier, which would be consistent with the Three-Benchmark 
methodology. See Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 
102 (explaining limitations of methodology with respect to Class II and 
III carriers). However, we seek comment on whether this methodology, if 
adopted, should or should not be applicable to Class II and III rail 
carriers.

II. Comparison Group Approach

    The new methodology the Board is considering would utilize a 
comparison group approach to determine the reasonableness of the 
challenged traffic's rate. Under such an approach, the issue traffic 
would be compared against a comparison group of similar traffic drawn 
from the preceding four years of data in the Board's Waybill Sample. In 
order to reduce litigation costs, the Board would determine an initial 
comparison group based on default parameters established in a 
rulemaking, rather than having parties develop and tender a proposed 
comparison group, as is done in Three-Benchmark cases. See Simplified 
Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 18. As discussed in more 
detail below, both the complainant and the defendant would have the 
opportunity to present arguments regarding the appropriateness of the 
initial comparison group determined by the Board and propose 
modifications to the group. After considering the arguments proposed by 
the parties, the Board would determine which movements would comprise 
the final, adjusted comparison group, which the Board would use in its 
rate reasonableness analysis.
    The Board is considering the following default parameters for 
selecting the initial comparison group and seeks comment on each.
    Traffic at or Above 180% R/VC. The Board is considering including 
other potentially captive traffic, i.e., traffic priced at or above the 
180% R/VC level, in the comparison group, but not traffic priced below 
the 180% R/VC level. Excluding traffic with an R/VC level below 180% 
would be consistent with the Board's explanation that only captive 
traffic over which the carrier has market power should be included in 
the comparison group in the Three-Benchmark methodology. See Simplified 
Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 17 (``[t]he purpose of the 
R/VCCOMP benchmark is to use the R/VC ratios of other 
`potentially captive traffic' (i.e., traffic priced above the 180% R/VC 
level) as evidence of the reasonable R/VC levels for traffic of that 
sort. . . . The rates available to traffic with competitive 
alternatives would provide little evidence on the degree of permissible 
demand-based differential pricing needed to provide a reasonable return 
on the investment.''). Although the shipper community presented 
arguments in favor of including traffic below 180% R/VC in comparison 
groups, the Board is concerned that including shipments below 180% R/VC 
may be contrary to the principle of demand-based differential pricing. 
The Board invites comment on the advisability of including or excluding 
non-captive traffic in comparison groups.
    Traffic With Similar Shipping Characteristics. The comparison group 
would also include traffic that shares similar shipping characteristics 
as the issue traffic, as rail rates typically depend, at least in part, 
on the length of haul, shipment type, and the type of commodity being 
shipped. The Board, therefore, is considering limiting comparable 
movements to those movements that satisfy all of the following 
criteria:
    (a) The movement is within a +/- 15% mileage band around the actual 
miles travelled by the challenged traffic,
    (b) the movement is of the same shipment type (e.g., unit train 
traffic or non-unit train traffic), and
    (c) the movement is of a commodity classified under the same 
Standard Transportation Commodity Code (STCC).
    With respect to the last of these parameters, the Board believes 
that the most appropriate method of determining which commodities 
should be used in the comparison group is to use the same five-digit 
STCC as the issue traffic. Commodities listed at the five-digit STCC 
generally should be similar enough in characteristics for inclusion in 
the comparison group. However, certain other commodities differ at an 
even more granular level, such as chemicals (i.e., any commodity with a 
STCC starting with 28), and therefore may best be limited to 
comparisons to the seven-digit STCC. Chemicals are highly varied at the 
five-digit STCC designation and therefore may require a finer degree of 
distinction when selecting the initial comparison group.
    The Board invites comment on these comparison group procedures, and 
also on which commodities would be appropriately compared at the seven-
digit STCC. The Board also invites comment on whether the Board should 
consider expanding the comparison of commodities beyond the five- or 
seven-

[[Page 61653]]

digit STCC level in the event that this parameter would result in the 
initial comparison group containing insufficient observations. In order 
for any study to be statistically valid, the study sample must contain 
a minimum number of observations, and that minimum number varies 
depending on the type and complexity of the analysis to be undertaken. 
For the purposes of comparison-based rate reasonableness analyses, the 
Board is concerned that fewer than 20 observations would be 
insufficient. See e.g., E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. CSX Transp., 
Inc., NOR 42101, slip op. at 13 (STB served June 30, 2008) (deciding a 
Three-Benchmark rate case where the comparison group included 23 
observations and the sample size was uncontested). Therefore, the Board 
seeks comments on whether the Board should, in instances where there 
are insufficient observations, relax the default STCC limitation to the 
next most specific STCC level that yields sufficient observations for 
the comparison group. For example, if a comparison group based on a 
seven-digit STCC code contains too few observations, we could examine 
the corresponding five-digit STCC, then the four-digit STCC, and so on, 
until the comparison group includes greater than 20 observations.
    The Board invites comments on this possible approach of broadening 
the STCC limitation in this manner and on whether a 20-observation 
minimum would be an appropriate requirement.
    Contract and Tariff Traffic. The comparison group would include 
contract and tariff traffic from the defendant carrier, excluding the 
issue traffic. As the Board noted in Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-
No. 1), slip op. at 83, excluding contract movements from the 
comparison group may leave insufficient movements from the Waybill 
Sample to perform a statistically meaningful comparison analysis. The 
Board is considering applying a common carrier adjustment to the 
comparison group to account for the contract traffic similar to the one 
applied in U.S. Magnesium, L.L.C. v. Union Pacific Railroad, NOR 42114, 
slip op. at 18-19 (STB served Jan. 28, 2010), aff'd sub nom. Union 
Pacific Railroad v. STB, 628 F.3d 597 (D.C. Cir. 2010). The Board 
invites comment on the inclusion of contract traffic and a common 
carrier adjustment. Additionally, the Board invites parties to propose 
alternative means of calculating a common carrier adjustment.
    Non-Defendant Carrier Traffic. The Board seeks comment on whether 
to expand the comparison group in this new methodology to include 
traffic from non-defendant carriers \11\ operating in the same URCS 
region \12\ as the defendant carrier. The Board has, in the past, 
acknowledged that varying joint and common costs can lead to inevitable 
differences in R/VC ratios among different carriers. See Simplified 
Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 82-83. We are mindful of the 
concerns raised by the railroads, and previously acknowledged by the 
Board, about comparing R/VC ratios across carriers. However, shippers 
have also raised arguments as to why the Board should include non-
defendant traffic. (See, e.g., NGFA Opening 28-29; ARC Opening 23.) 
Notwithstanding the Board's previously stated concerns and the concerns 
raised by the railroads, the Board seeks comment on whether it should 
reconsider this issue. Additionally, the Board is considering whether, 
for the purposes of a new methodology, it may be appropriate to include 
non-defendant traffic in the comparison group to ensure that the Board 
can perform a statistically meaningful comparison analysis. Including 
non-defendant movements could help ensure that the initial comparison 
group includes sufficient movements from the Waybill Sample on which 
the Board can base its rate reasonableness determination.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ Because the Board is considering a new rate review process 
for use against Class I carriers, the comparison group would 
likewise include only rates charged by other non-defendant Class I 
carriers.
    \12\ In calculating regional data, URCS defines each of the 
reporting Class I carriers as being either in the Eastern Region or 
Western Region. The Eastern Region includes CN, CSXT, and NSR. The 
Western Region includes BNSF, CP, KCS, and UP.
    \13\ The Board intends to propose modifications to the Waybill 
sampling rate in a subsequent decision, which would also help ensure 
sufficient observations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Board notes, however, that, including non-defendant traffic in 
the comparison group likely would necessitate third-party discovery (as 
to whether cost structure differences between carriers make certain 
movements inappropriate for the comparison group) and would affect 
whether parties would be required to hire outside counsel to manage the 
receipt of confidential Waybill Sample data from other carriers. See 49 
CFR 1244.9. We recognize that these issues would add a layer of 
complexity to the process, potentially increasing the time and expense 
required to bring a case.\14\ We seek comment on the advisability of 
including non-defendant traffic in all or limited circumstances under 
this simplified methodology, and how such inclusion would affect the 
time and costs to bring a case.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ The necessity for third-party discovery, and what that 
might entail, is discussed in more detail in section III(2), Limits 
on Discovery, below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. Procedural Considerations

    The Board recognizes that it is essential that any procedures 
comprising a new rate reasonableness methodology be both more 
streamlined and less costly than the Board's existing rate review 
processes. As a result, the Board is considering the procedures set 
forth below with the goal of achieving a shortened procedural schedule 
and including measures addressing concerns that the existing procedures 
for challenging a rate are cost-prohibitive.
1. Preliminary Screen
    Given the abbreviated evidentiary presentation in a simplified, 
lower-cost process, the Board is considering requiring that challenged 
traffic meet certain threshold criteria in order to be eligible to be 
reviewed under the new methodology. This preliminary screen would seek 
to identify those movements for which truck transportation alternatives 
are unlikely and the rates are significant outliers, allowing the Board 
to make market dominance and rate reasonableness determinations based 
on the abbreviated evidentiary submissions described below. The issue 
traffic would, of course, have to be priced above the 180% R/VC level, 
which is the statutory floor for regulatory rail rate intervention. See 
49 U.S.C. 10707(d).
    Additionally, the Board is considering the following criteria for 
the issue traffic as a preliminary screen and seeks comment on each of 
the following potential criteria.
    Issue Traffic Length of Haul. The origin and destination of the 
issue traffic would be required to be located a certain minimum 
distance apart. As noted in Review of Commodity, Boxcar, and TOFC/COFC 
Exemptions, EP 704 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 7 n.12 (STB served Mar. 23, 
2016) (with Commissioner Begeman dissenting), trucking becomes less 
viable when the length of haul exceeds 500 miles because in many 
instances a transport over that threshold cannot be completed in one 
day. Thus, it may be appropriate to require that the origin and 
destination be more than 500 highway miles apart. Traffic moving fewer 
than 500 highway miles between origin and destination would not be 
eligible to be challenged under the new methodology because trucking 
alternatives for those movements are more likely. Such a criterion 
could allow the Board to consider making market dominance 
determinations on an abbreviated evidentiary presentation.

[[Page 61654]]

    Issue Traffic Revenue Per Ton Mile. As noted, part of the 
preliminary screen would be to determine if rates are significant 
outliers. The Board is considering using revenue per ton mile to make 
this determination. Specifically, the Board could require the revenue 
per ton mile of the challenged traffic to be in the top 10% or 20% of 
the initial, Board-determined comparison group. Another possibility 
would be to require the issue traffic to be at least one standard 
deviation above the mean revenue per ton mile of the comparison 
group.\15\ Analyzing how a movement's revenue per ton mile compares to 
the revenue per ton mile earned on similar movements would help 
identify movements with outlier rates. The Board would complete this 
revenue per ton mile analysis following the receipt of the defendant's 
answer, in which the defendant would provide the actual miles traveled 
by the challenged traffic. The Board invites parties to comment on 
these or other measures that would achieve the same objective of 
identifying movements in which rates are significant outliers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ A standard deviation is defined as a measure of spread, 
dispersion, or variability of a group of numbers equal to the square 
root of the variance of that group of numbers. The variance of the 
group of numbers is computed by subtracting the mean, or average, of 
all the numbers, squaring the resulting difference, and computing 
the mean of these squared differences.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Prior Litigation. Lastly, the Board is considering a requirement 
that the complainant must not have brought a case against the defendant 
under this methodology within a certain number of years. This 
limitation could correspond to the maximum rate prescription available 
under the new process, which is discussed in more detail in the section 
related to limits on relief below. By including this limitation, the 
Board intends to prevent attempts to divide a large dispute into 
multiple smaller disputes.
2. Limits on Discovery
    The Board also is considering limiting discovery in order to reduce 
litigation costs for very small disputes. In particular, the Board 
could require that parties file certain initial disclosures with their 
complaint and answer. Concurrent with the filing of its complaint, the 
complainant could be required to disclose the nine standard inputs for 
the URCS Phase III costing program.\16\ The complainant could also be 
required to provide a preliminary estimate of the variable cost of the 
challenged movements, using the unadjusted figures produced by the URCS 
Phase III costing program on the Board's Web site,\17\ to demonstrate 
that the Board's jurisdictional threshold has been met. The complainant 
could also be required to provide to the Board and the defendant all 
documents that it relied upon to determine the inputs to the URCS Phase 
III costing program. The Board invites parties to comment on whether 
the URCS Phase III costing program should be used as described, or 
whether the availability of this new process would be improved by some 
alternative, such as by creating a paper form for submitting URCS Phase 
III inputs to the Board.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ The nine inputs include: (1) The carrier; (2) the type of 
shipment (local, received-terminated, etc.); (3) the one-way 
distance of the shipment; (4) the type of car; (5) the number of 
cars; (6) the car ownership (private or railroad); (7) commodity 
type (by STCC); (8) the weight of the shipment (in tons per car); 
and (9) the type of movement (single-car, multi-car, or unit train). 
In the event that a complainant does not have access to the actual 
miles of the length of haul, a showing of highway miles between the 
origin and destination pair would be sufficient for the purposes of 
the complainant's initial disclosures.
    \17\ The current version of the URCS Phase III costing program 
is available at http://www.stb.dot.gov/stb/industry/urcs.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    With regard to qualitative market dominance, the complainant could 
also be required to make certain required disclosures. For example, in 
a verified statement by a company official, the complainant could be 
required to submit: (i) A statement that the issue traffic has not 
moved more than a de minimis amount on alternative transportation modes 
between the same origin and destination within a certain number of 
years, and (ii) a statement whether the complainant has made any 
inquiries to, or received any responses from, alternative 
transportation providers for the issue traffic within a certain number 
of years, including copies of any such communications (if available).
    The defendant could likewise be required to provide initial 
disclosures to the complainant concurrent with filing its answer. Like 
the complainant, the defendant could be required to produce its 
preliminary estimate of the variable cost of the challenged movement, 
using the unadjusted figures produced by the URCS Phase III costing 
program. To the extent that the defendant disagreed with any of the 
URCS inputs provided in the complaint, it could also be required to 
provide the inputs that it used. The defendant could also be required 
to provide to the Board and the complainant all documents that it 
relied upon to determine the inputs used in the URCS Phase III costing 
program. Finally, the defendant could be required to disclose the 
actual route miles for the issue traffic and provide supporting data to 
the Board and, upon request, to the complainant.
    Another limit on discovery could be to limit the amount or type of 
party-initiated discovery or eliminating such discovery altogether, 
given that the need for such information would be significantly reduced 
by the simplifications discussed here. For example, the fact that the 
initial comparison group would be set by the Board (based on defined 
criteria) and not the parties would eliminate one need for the parties 
to seek discovery. In terms of limiting discovery, in preparing its 
answer, the defendant could reply with information that is either 
disclosed by the complainant in its complaint or opening evidence, or 
developed independently by the defendant, but the defendant would not 
be permitted to seek additional discovery from the complainant. 
Likewise, the complainant would not be permitted to serve any discovery 
on the defendant in preparation of its evidentiary submissions.
    Additionally, as noted above, if the Board were to include non-
defendant traffic in the comparison group, the Board is concerned that 
it would be required to permit discovery from the non-defendant 
carriers whose traffic is included in the comparison group. In that 
case, the Board could consider limits, such as five interrogatories 
(including subparts) and five document requests (including subparts) 
per party for each non-defendant carrier, and could require that such 
discovery be completed by a specific number of days. Such third-party 
discovery would occur prior to the submission of each party's evidence.
    We therefore seek comment on whether to mandate certain initial 
disclosures and, if so, what those disclosures should be, and any other 
ways to limit or eliminate party-initiated discovery in a new, 
streamlined comparison group methodology for small disputes.
3. Submission of Evidence
    The Board seeks comment on the following procedures it is 
considering for use in a new simplified rate reasonableness 
methodology.
    Complaint. A party would initiate a case by filing a complaint with 
the Board. In its complaint, the complainant would be required to: (i) 
Allege that the rates for certain traffic are unreasonable, (ii) allege 
that the defendant has both quantitative market dominance (i.e., the 
issue traffic must move at rates above 180% R/VC) and qualitative 
market dominance (i.e., other modes of

[[Page 61655]]

transportation are not feasible); and (iii) submit the required initial 
disclosures, as described above in the section on limits on discovery. 
The complaint and initial disclosures would include information 
sufficient for the Board to determine that the issue traffic meets a 
preliminary screen, discussed in more detail above. Additionally, with 
its complaint, the complainant would submit a signed confidentiality 
agreement. The agreement would be standardized specifically for cases 
brought under the new process and available for download on the Board's 
Web site. By asking parties to submit the confidentiality agreement 
early in the process, the Board could expedite the distribution of the 
comparison group. The Board invites comment on the appropriate content 
or other issues related to the filing of the complaint.
    Answer. In its answer, the defendant would be required to admit or 
deny each of the allegations in the complaint and submit its initial 
disclosures, described above. The defendant would also file with its 
answer a signed copy of the standardized confidentiality agreement. The 
Board invites comment on the appropriate content or other issues 
related to the filing of the answer.
    Opening Evidence. Unlike in Three-Benchmark cases, the Board 
envisions sequential rather than simultaneous filings of each party's 
evidence. In its opening evidence, the complainant would address both 
qualitative market dominance \18\ and the appropriateness of the 
initial comparison group. With respect to qualitative market dominance, 
given the information derived from the preliminary screen and the 
initial disclosure requirements, the complainant would be permitted to 
present an abbreviated evidentiary submission, but must explain why the 
use of other transportation modes is not feasible. The complainant 
could also expand on its initial disclosures to the extent necessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ Under the procedures envisioned, quantitative market 
dominance would be decided by the Board prior to the filing of 
opening evidence based on the information provided in the complaint 
and answer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In its opening evidence, the complainant would also have the 
opportunity to state whether the initial, Board-determined comparison 
group is appropriate. The complainant may propose adjustments to the 
default initial comparison group and present ``other relevant factors'' 
evidence, such as a density adjustment or PTC adjustment, among others.
    Reply Evidence. The defendant's reply would likewise address both 
qualitative market dominance and the appropriateness of the default 
initial comparison group. Specifically, in its reply evidence, the 
defendant would have the opportunity to reply to the complainant's 
qualitative market dominance evidence. As noted above, we are 
considering limits on discovery as it relates to qualitative market 
dominance. For example, in formulating its response to the 
complainant's qualitative market dominance evidence, the defendant 
could be limited to information disclosed by the complainant with its 
complaint or opening evidence or developed independently by the 
defendant.
    The defendant would also have the opportunity to respond to the 
complainant's arguments regarding the appropriateness of any proposed 
adjustments to the default initial comparison group. The defendant 
could also propose its own adjustments to the default initial 
comparison group and set forth ``other relevant factors'' evidence.
    Limitations on Opening and Reply Evidence. In order to minimize the 
time and expense associated with litigating a small rate dispute, the 
Board is considering placing limitations on the opening and reply 
evidence, such as imposing word or page limits on the complainant's 
opening evidence and the defendant's reply evidence. The Board seeks 
comment on whether to include a word or page limitation and if so, what 
the appropriate limitation would be.
    We recognize that, even with a word limit and limits on or 
exclusion of discovery, allowing parties' presentations to include 
``other relevant factors'' evidence could substantially increase the 
cost and time required to prepare for submission of a case. For 
instance, we do not expect that the examples noted above--a density 
adjustment or PTC adjustment--could be easily calculated by a small 
entity without hiring outside consultants. Therefore, the Board invites 
comment on the advisability of allowing parties' presentations to 
include ``other relevant factors'' evidence. The Board also invites 
parties to comment on the appropriateness of sequential as opposed to 
simultaneous filings of each party's evidence, a reasonable time-frame 
for considering qualitative market dominance arguments, a reasonable 
word or page limit for opening and reply evidence, and any other issues 
related to the filing of opening and reply evidence.
    Evidentiary Hearing. In an effort to make the new process cost-
effective for small disputes, the Board is considering offering an 
evidentiary hearing following the submission of opening and reply 
evidence, in lieu of formal rebuttal filings and final briefs. The 
evidentiary hearing, which would take place before Board staff, would 
permit the Board to further examine and develop the evidentiary record 
without requiring the parties to take on the higher litigation costs 
associated with formal written submissions. At the evidentiary hearing, 
the complainant would have the opportunity to rebut the defendant's 
reply and respond to Board staff's questions. The defendant would also 
participate in the hearing and could respond to any questions from 
Board staff. Board staff would have the opportunity to further explore 
the parties' arguments regarding the appropriateness of the comparison 
group. A court reporter would be present, and the transcript would 
become part of the record. The evidentiary hearing could also take 
place by conference call. We invite parties to comment on whether an 
evidentiary hearing in lieu of rebuttal filings and final briefs would 
help minimize the time or expense associated with litigating a case 
under a new rate methodology for small disputes.
4. Board Determinations
    Under the procedures being considered as described in this 
decision, the Board would issue two decisions. First, following receipt 
of the defendant's answer, the Board would issue a preliminary decision 
in which the Board would (i) resolve any URCS Phase III input disputes, 
(ii) determine whether the challenged traffic meets the preliminary 
screen based on the initial comparison group, and (iii) make a final 
determination on whether the defendant carrier has quantitative market 
dominance over the movements at issue. In the event that the issue 
traffic fails to meet the preliminary screen based on the initial 
comparison group, the Board would dismiss the complaint without 
prejudice. For challenged traffic that satisfies the preliminary 
screen, the Board would provide the initial comparison group data 
pursuant to the standardized confidentiality agreements previously 
filed by the parties.
    Second, following the evidentiary hearing, the Board would issue a 
final decision addressing qualitative market dominance and rate 
reasonableness. With regard to qualitative market dominance, the Board 
expects that its qualitative market dominance analysis could be far 
more limited than in other rate reasonableness methodologies given the 
preliminary screen and initial disclosure requirements. In particular, 
because the screen would help identify movements that are more likely 
to be captive, the Board envisions

[[Page 61656]]

determining qualitative market dominance without as extensive an 
analysis as under the current methodologies. The Board seeks comments 
on specific qualitative market dominance factors it could consider for 
this type of new rate reasonableness methodology.
    If the Board finds that the defendant carrier has qualitative 
market dominance over the challenged traffic, the Board would address 
each of the parties' arguments regarding the appropriateness of the 
initial comparison group and adjustments thereto. If the comparison 
group is adjusted, the Board would reevaluate the challenged traffic to 
ensure that it continues to satisfy the preliminary screen based on the 
adjusted comparison group. In the event that the issue traffic fails to 
meet the preliminary screen based on the adjusted comparison group, the 
Board would dismiss the proceeding with prejudice to the complainant 
challenging the same movement under the new method for a certain 
period, but without prejudice to the complainant challenging the same 
movement under one of the Board's other rate review processes.
    For the rate reasonableness determination, the Board would compute 
the maximum R/VC ratio for the issue traffic in a manner similar to the 
Three-Benchmark analysis, although with a potential modification. 
Specifically, the Board would apply a revenue need adjustment--which is 
the ratio of RSAM / R/VC>180 (each of which is a four-year 
average calculation) \19\--to each movement in the final comparison 
group. The Board would then calculate the mean and standard deviation 
of the R/VC ratios for the adjusted comparison group (weighted in 
accordance with the proper sampling factors). If the challenged rate is 
above a reasonable confidence interval around the estimate of the mean 
for the adjusted comparison group, it would be determined unreasonable 
and the maximum lawful rate would be prescribed at that upper boundary 
level.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \19\ The jurisdictional threshold for rail rate regulation, R/
VC>180, also serves as the floor for regulatory relief 
because the Board cannot prescribe a rate below the jurisdictional 
threshold. See 49 U.S.C. 10707(d); W. Tex. Utils. Co. v. Burlington 
N. R.R., 1 S.T.B. 638, 677-78 (1996), aff'd sub nom., Burlington N. 
R.R. v. STB, 114 F.3d 206, 210 (D.C. Cir. 1997).
    \20\ The confidence interval would be a function of the number 
of movements in the comparison group and the standard deviation of 
those (potentially adjusted) R/VC ratios. A small standard deviation 
or large number of observations would produce a tighter confidence 
interval, so that we could have more ``confidence'' in the accuracy 
of our estimate of the mean of the comparison group. Using the mean 
(R/VCCOMP) and standard deviation (S) of the adjusted 
comparison group, along with the number of movements in the 
comparison group (n), the upper boundary of a reasonable confidence 
interval around the estimate of the mean would be derived as 
follows: Upper Boundary = R/VCCOMP + tn-1 x (S 
/ (n-1) \1/2\). The Student's t-distribution parameter, 
tn-1, will range from 3.078 to 1.28 depending on the 
number of movements in the comparison group. The precise number can 
be found in statistical tables for the Student's t-distributions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    However, the Board is considering departing from Three-Benchmark 
precedent with respect to the revenue need adjustment. As noted, in a 
Three-Benchmark case, each movement in the final comparison group is 
adjusted by a revenue need adjustment factor. During the public comment 
period in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1), NGFA proposed the creation of 
an alternative revenue need adjustment factor--a Revenue Adequacy 
Adjustment Factor (RAAF), which would be commodity-specific and would 
account for the revenue adequacy status of each railroad. NGFA argues 
that the RAAF is superior to the Board's current revenue need 
adjustment factor because it takes into consideration the amount of 
issue commodity traffic that is ostensibly captive to the railroad and 
allocates the burden of a revenue need adjustment factor to those 
commodities that provide the most revenue. (NGFA Opening, V.S. Crowley 
12.) There may be merit to NGFA's suggestion that our current revenue 
need adjustment factor could be adapted to reflect the differences in 
rates and revenues carriers obtain from various commodity groups. Thus, 
the Board is considering whether it could make the revenue need 
adjustment factor commodity specific. However, if the Board were to 
adopt a commodity specific revenue need adjustment factor, we must 
ensure that we establish the most appropriate formula.
    Therefore, we seek comment on whether the Board should modify its 
revenue need adjustment factor to be commodity-specific, and if so, how 
we can effectively disaggregate the existing RSAM on a commodity-by-
commodity basis. Because some commodities have a higher R/VC ratio than 
others, the adjusted revenue need adjustment factor should allocate the 
revenue shortfall in ways that reflect the different demand 
elasticities faced by different commodities. However, the weighted 
average of all commodities when totaled should equal the overall RSAM.
    We believe that, on average, differences in demand elasticities are 
reflected in R/VC ratios--those with higher R/VC ratios tend to enjoy 
less direct and indirect competition while those with lower R/VC ratios 
tend to enjoy somewhat more competition. In an individual proceeding, 
we would consider applying a commodity-specific RSAM where the 
resulting figure reflects this intuition. We believe such a mark-up 
could be done in a manner consistent with Ramsey pricing 
principles.\21\ If the Board were to adopt such a modified revenue need 
adjustment factor, we also seek comment on whether the reliance on a 
single year's data would be inappropriate. Because profits are pro-
cyclical, we believe an approach that considers a longer period of time 
may be more appropriate. Finally, we also seek comment on whether 
application of a modified revenue need adjustment factor, if adopted, 
should be limited to a new methodology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \21\ Ramsey pricing refers to the pricing principals first 
advocated by the British mathematician and economist Frank P. 
Ramsey, whose economic pricing model was published in A Contribution 
to the Theory of Taxation, 37 Econ. J. 47-61 (Mar. 1927). ``Ramsey 
pricing'' is a widely recognized method of differential pricing--
that is, pricing in accordance with demand. Under Ramsey pricing, 
each price or rate contains a mark-up above the long-run marginal 
cost of the product or service to cover a portion of the 
unattributable costs. The unattributable costs are allocated among 
the purchasers or users in inverse relation to their demand 
elasticity. Thus, in a market where shippers are very sensitive to 
price changes (a highly elastic market), the mark-up would be 
smaller than in a market where shippers are less price sensitive. 
The sum of the mark-ups equals the unattributable costs of an 
efficient producer. See Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d at 526-527.
    While Ramsey pricing represents the most efficient way to price 
above marginal cost, reliance on pure Ramsey pricing clashes with 
the Long-Cannon factors because it would not maximize the revenue 
contribution from traffic with more-elastic demand (competitive 
traffic) before calling on traffic with less-elastic demand (captive 
traffic) to make a differentially higher revenue contribution. For 
these reasons, the Board has not adopted pure Ramsey pricing theory. 
Rather, in SAC cases, the Board allocates stand-alone costs in 
accordance with Ramsey pricing principles, by which the SARR (and 
therefore the carrier) is permitted to engage in demand-based 
differential pricing to recover the total SAC costs. Major Issues, 
EP 657 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 12-13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

5. Limits on Relief
    Because of the abbreviated nature of the process described in this 
decision, the Board is considering limiting relief available under this 
process. The ideas presented in the ANPR describe a process that would 
be significantly more streamlined than the process required to bring a 
Three-Benchmark case. As such, the relief available under this method 
would likewise need to be significantly less than the relief available 
under the Three-Benchmark approach. The Board invites parties to 
comment on the amount of relief that should be available and why that 
amount of relief would be appropriate.

[[Page 61657]]

    The limit on relief would apply to the difference between the 
challenged rate and the maximum lawful rate, whether in the form of 
reparations, a rate prescription, or a combination of the two. Any rate 
prescription would automatically terminate once the complainant has 
exhausted the relief available. Thus, the actual length of the 
prescription may be less than the prescription period if the shipper 
ships a large enough volume of traffic so that the relief is used up in 
a shorter time. The complainant would be barred from bringing another 
complaint against the same rate for the remainder of the prescription 
period.
    Where the shipper exhausts all of its relief before the end of the 
prescription period, the carrier's rate making freedom would be 
restored with a regulatory safe harbor at the challenged rate for the 
remainder of the prescription period, with appropriate adjustments for 
inflation using the rail cost adjustment factor, adjusted for inflation 
and productivity (RCAF-A). See R.R. Cost Recovery Procedures--
Productivity Adjustment, 5 I.C.C.2d 434 (1989), aff'd sub nom. Edison 
Elec. Inst. v. ICC, 969 F.2d 1221 (D.C. Cir. 1992). If, however, a 
carrier establishes a new common carrier rate once the rate 
prescription expires, and the new rate exceeds the inflation-adjusted 
challenged rate, the shipper may bring a new complaint against the 
newly established common carrier rate.

The Regulatory Flexibility Act

    Because this ANPR does not impose or propose any requirements, and 
instead seeks comments and suggestions for the Board to consider in 
possibly developing a subsequent proposed rule, the requirements of the 
Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980, 5 U.S.C. 601-612 (RFA) do not apply 
to this action. Nevertheless, as part of any comments submitted in 
response to this ANPR, parties may include comments or information that 
could help the Board assess the potential impact of a subsequent 
regulatory action on small entities pursuant to the RFA.

Conclusion

    The Board seeks public input on how best to establish a new rate 
reasonableness process for use in small disputes, available to shippers 
of all commodities, to provide shippers with small disputes meaningful 
access to regulatory relief in those cases where even a Three-Benchmark 
case is too costly, given the value of the case. The Board welcomes 
comments from interested parties on the issues and considerations 
presented in this decision.
    It is ordered:
    1. Comments are due by November 14, 2016. Reply comments are due by 
December 19, 2016.
    2. A copy of this decision will be served upon the Chief Counsel 
for Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration.
    3. Notice of this decision will be published in the Federal 
Register.
    4. This decision is effective on its service date.

    Decided: August 30, 2016.

    By the Board, Chairman Elliott, Vice Chairman Miller, and 
Commissioner Begeman. Vice Chairman Miller commented with a separate 
expression.
Kenyatta Clay,
Clearance Clerk.

VICE CHAIRMAN MILLER, commenting:

    Today's decision is an important step forward for the Board. 
Despite the agency's well-intentioned efforts over the years to create 
simpler, timelier, and less costly rate dispute processes, I believe 
that they are still inaccessible to shippers with small disputes, 
denying them the opportunity to obtain rate relief. This decision 
focuses on filling that gap in our processes.
    While I applaud the Board for today's action, we still have work to 
do. Even if the Board is able to develop an abbreviated rate case 
methodology that can be used by shippers with small rate disputes, it 
will not resolve the concerns that have been raised about the SAC test. 
The methodology here is only intended to address small rate disputes 
for shippers that meet certain criteria. As such, the Board still needs 
to consider alternatives to the SAC test for shippers with larger 
disputes. A reasonable starting point to address this issue would be 
for the Board to publicly release the report prepared by our outside 
consultant on SAC alternatives and conduct a hearing to obtain feedback 
and reaction from our stakeholders on the report's conclusions.\22\ 
Hopefully the report will be issued soon and stakeholders given an 
opportunity to comment.

    \22\ Sunbelt Chlor Alkali P'ship v. Norfolk S. Ry., NOR 42130, 
slip op. 44 (STB served June 30, 2016) (Miller concurrence).

    Note: The following appendix will not appear in the Code of 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Regulations.

Appendix A--Participants in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1)

    The Board received written comment and testimony from the 
following parties in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 1).
    Opening comments were received from:

 Alliance for Rail Competition (ARC) (joined by Montana 
Wheat and Barley Committee, National Farmers Union, Colorado Wheat 
Administrative Committee, Idaho Barley Commission, Idaho Grain 
Producers Association, Idaho Wheat Commission, Montana Farmers 
Union, North Dakota Corn Growers Association, North Dakota Farmers 
Union, South Dakota Corn Growers Association, South Dakota Farmers 
Union, Minnesota Corn Growers Association, Minnesota Farmers Union, 
Wisconsin Farmers Union, Nebraska Wheat Board, Oklahoma Wheat 
Commission, Oregon Wheat Commission, South Dakota Wheat Commission, 
Texas Wheat Producers Board, Washington Grain Commission, Wyoming 
Wheat Marketing Commission, USA Dry Pea and Lentil Council, and 
National Corn Growers Association)
 Association of American Railroads (AAR)
 BNSF Railway Company (BNSF)
 CSX Transportation, Inc. (CSXT)
 National Grain and Feed Association (NGFA)
 Norfolk Southern Railway Company (NSR)
 Union Pacific Railroad Company (UP)
 U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)

    Reply comments were received from:

 AAR
 Agribusiness Association of Iowa, Agribusiness Council of 
Indiana, Agricultural Retailers Association, American Bakers 
Association, American Farm Bureau Federation, American Feed Industry 
Association, American Soybean Association, California Grain and Feed 
Association, Corn Refiners Association, Institute of Shortening and 
Edible Oils, Kansas Cooperative Council, Kansas Grain and Feed 
Association, Grain and Feed Association of Illinois, Michigan 
Agribusiness Association, Michigan Bean Shippers Association, 
Minnesota Grain And Feed Association, Missouri Agribusiness 
Association, Montana Grain Elevators Association, National Council 
of Farmer Cooperatives, National Farmers Union, National Oilseed 
Processors Association, Nebraska Grain and Feed Association, North 
American Millers' Association, North Dakota Grain Dealers 
Association, Northeast Agribusiness and Feed Alliance, Ohio 
Agribusiness Association, Oklahoma Grain and Feed Association, 
Pacific Northwest Grain and Feed Association, Pet Food Institute, 
South Dakota Grain and Feed Association, Texas Grain and Feed 
Association, USA Rice Federation, and Wisconsin Agribusiness 
Association (collectively, AAI)
 ARC (joined by the same parties that joined its opening 
comment as well as the Nebraska Corn Growers Association)
 BNSF
 CSXT
 Kansas City Southern Railway Company (KCS)
 NGFA
 NSR
 Jay L. Schollmeyer for and on behalf of SMART-TD General 
Committee of Adjustment (SMART-TD)

[[Page 61658]]

 Texas Trading and Transportation Services, LLC, dba TTMS 
Group, together with Montana Grain Growers Association (TTMS Group)
 UP
 USDA

    Testimony at the June 10, 2015 hearing was received from:

 AAR
 ARC
 BNSF
 Canadian National Railway Company (CN)
 Canadian Pacific Railway Company (CP)
 CSXT
 Michigan Agri-Business Association \23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \23\ Written testimony only.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Montana Department of Agriculture
 NGFA
 NSR
 SMART-TD
 Transportation Research Board of the National Academy of 
Sciences
 TTMS Group
 UP
 USDA

    Supplemental comments were received from:

 AAR
 ARC (joined by the same parties that joined its opening 
comment)
 NSR

[FR Doc. 2016-21305 Filed 9-6-16; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4915-01-P



                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                   61647

                                               Williams, OUSD(AT&L)DPAP/DARS,                          SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD                          Stat. 803, Congress established a careful
                                               Room 3B941, 3060 Defense Pentagon,                                                                            balance between these two important
                                               Washington, DC 20301–3060.                              49 CFR Chapter X                                      yet conflicting goals. On the one hand,
                                                  Comments received generally will be                  [Docket No. EP 665 (Sub–No. 1); Docket                Congress permitted differential pricing
                                                                                                       No. EP 665 (Sub–No. 2)]                               and removed regulatory controls over
                                               posted without change to http://
                                                                                                                                                             railroad pricing for traffic with effective
                                               www.regulations.gov, including any
                                                                                                       Rail Transportation of Grain, Rate                    competition so that carriers would have
                                               personal information provided. To                                                                             greater ability to earn the revenues
                                                                                                       Regulation Review; Expanding Access
                                               confirm receipt of your comment(s),                                                                           necessary to attract capital and reinvest
                                                                                                       to Rate Relief
                                               please check www.regulations.gov,                                                                             in the network. On the other hand,
                                               approximately two to three days after                   AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board.                 Congress made clear that railroad rates
                                               submission to verify posting (except                    ACTION:Advance notice of proposed                     for traffic without effective competition
                                               allow 30 days for posting of comments                   rulemaking.                                           must be reasonable (see 49 U.S.C.
                                               submitted by mail).                                                                                           10702, 10707), and that shippers of
                                                                                                       SUMMARY:   The Surface Transportation                 grain, in particular, are entitled to some
                                               FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.                    Board (Board) is seeking comments and                 additional protections (see, e.g., 49
                                               Amy G. Williams, telephone 571–372–                     suggestions through this Advance                      U.S.C. 10709(g) (providing that shippers
                                               6106.                                                   Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPR)                  may file a complaint with the Board
                                                                                                       regarding the Board’s effort to develop               asking it to review agricultural contracts
                                               SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                              a new rate reasonableness methodology                 on certain grounds)).
                                               I. Background                                           for use in very small disputes, which                    By decision served in Rail
                                                                                                       would be available to shippers of all                 Transportation of Grain, Rate
                                                  On June 16, 2016, DoD published a                    commodities.                                          Regulation Review, Docket No. EP 665
                                               proposed rule in the Federal Register at                DATES:   Comments are due by November                 (Sub–No. 1) on December 12, 2013, the
                                               81 FR 39481 to implement section 815                    14, 2016. Reply comments are due by                   Board invited public comment on how
                                               of the National Defense Authorization                   December 19, 2016.                                    to ensure that the Board’s existing rate
                                               Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year (FY) 2012,                   ADDRESSES: Comments and replies may                   complaint procedures are accessible to
                                               which—                                                  be submitted either via the Board’s e-                grain shippers and provide effective
                                                  • Adds special provisions for                        filing format or in the traditional paper             protection against unreasonable freight
                                               handling technical data that are                        format. Any person using e-filing should              rail transportation rates, including
                                               necessary for segregation and                           attach a document and otherwise                       proposals for modifying existing
                                               reintegration activities;                               comply with the instructions at the                   procedures or new alternative rate relief
                                                                                                       ‘‘E-FILING’’ link on the Board’s Web                  methodologies. The Board received
                                                  • Codifies and revises the policies                                                                        opening and reply comments from
                                                                                                       site, at ‘‘http://www.stb.dot.gov.’’ Any
                                               and procedures regarding deferred                                                                             interested shipper, railroad, and
                                                                                                       person submitting a filing in the
                                               ordering of technical data necessary to                                                                       government entities. The Board then
                                                                                                       traditional paper format should send an
                                               support DoD major systems or                                                                                  held a public hearing on June 10, 2015,
                                                                                                       original and 10 copies to: Surface
                                               subsystems, weapon systems, or                          Transportation Board, Attn: Docket No.                to further examine issues related to the
                                               noncommercial items or processes;                       EP 665 (Sub–No. 2), 395 E Street SW.,                 accessibility of rate relief for grain
                                                  • Expands the period in which DoD                    Washington, DC 20423–0001.                            shippers and to provide interested
                                               can challenge an asserted restriction on                   Copies of written comments and                     persons the opportunity to comment on
                                               technical data from 3 years to 6 years;                 replies will be posted to the Board’s                 the suggestions made during the public
                                                                                                       Web site and will be available for                    comment period. Following the hearing,
                                                  • Rescinds changes to 10 U.S.C. 2320                                                                       the Board received supplemental
                                               from the NDAA for FY 2011; and                          viewing and self-copying at the Board’s
                                                                                                       Public Docket Room, Room 131. Copies                  comments from three parties.
                                                  • Codifies Government purpose rights                 will also be available (for a fee) by
                                                                                                                                                                The Board has considered all of the
                                               as the default rights for technical data                                                                      written comments and oral testimony
                                                                                                       contacting the Board’s Chief Records
                                               related to technology developed with                                                                          received in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub–No.
                                                                                                       Officer at (202) 245–0238 or 395 E Street
                                               mixed funding.                                                                                                1).1 A number of issues raised during
                                                                                                       SW., Washington, DC 20423–0001.
                                                                                                                                                             the public comment period—related to
                                                  The comment period for the proposed                  FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                      the accessibility of the Board’s existing
                                               rule is extended 16 days, from                          Allison Davis at (202) 245–0378.                      rate review processes, modifications to
                                               September 14, 2016 to September 30,                     Assistance for the hearing impaired is                those processes, and alternative rate
                                               2016, to provide additional time for                    available through the Federal                         review processes set forth by parties—
                                               interested parties to comment on the                    Information Relay Service (FIRS) at                   merit further discussion, and the Board
                                               proposed DFARS changes.                                 (800) 877–8339.                                       is seeking further comment on those
                                                                                                       SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the                     issues.2 Based on the comments and
                                               List of Subjects in 48 CFR Parts 212,                   Interstate Commerce Act, Congress                     testimony received, the Board believes
                                               227, and 252                                            charged the Board with protecting the                 that the existing rate review processes
                                                  Government procurement.                              public from unreasonable pricing by
                                                                                                       freight railroads, while fostering a                     1 For a list of the numerous parties that have

                                                                                                       sound, safe, and efficient rail                       participated in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub–No. 1) at
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               Jennifer L. Hawes,
                                                                                                                                                             various stages, see Appendix A. To the extent this
                                               Editor, Defense Acquisition Regulations                 transportation system by allowing                     decision refers to parties by abbreviations, those
                                               System.                                                 carriers to earn adequate revenues. See               abbreviations are listed in that appendix.
                                               [FR Doc. 2016–21463 Filed 9–6–16; 8:45 am]              49 U.S.C. 10101. In the Staggers Rail Act                2 We note that other significant issues have been

                                                                                                       of 1980, Public Law 96–448, 94 Stat.                  raised in this proceeding, such as the Board’s
                                               BILLING CODE 5001–06–P                                                                                        regulations concerning agricultural rate
                                                                                                       1895, and subsequent legislation,                     transparency and the standing required to bring a
                                                                                                       including the ICC Termination Act of                  rate complaint. The Board will address these issues
                                                                                                       1995 (ICCTA), Public Law 104–88, 109                  in a subsequent decision.



                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:04 Sep 06, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00020   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\07SEP1.SGM   07SEP1


                                               61648               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               present accessibility challenges for not                 amounts adequate to provide a sound                    resulting from inefficiencies or costs
                                               only grain shippers, but also small                      rail transportation system. 49 U.S.C.                  associated with facilities or services
                                               shippers of any commodity. The Board                     10701(d)(2), 10704(a)(2).                              from which it derives no benefit. The
                                               also recognizes that for small rate                         As part of ICCTA, Congress added a                  SAC analysis does this by simulating
                                               disputes, regardless of commodity, the                   new provision to the rail transportation               the competitive rate that would exist in
                                               litigation costs required to bring a case                policy calling for the ‘‘expeditious                   a ‘‘contestable market.’’ 5 Under the SAC
                                               under the Board’s existing rate                          handling and resolution of all                         constraint, the rate at issue cannot be
                                               reasonableness methodologies can                         proceedings.’’ 49 U.S.C. 10101(15).                    higher than what a hypothesized stand-
                                               quickly exceed the value of the case.                    Congress further instructed the Board to               alone railroad (SARR) would need to
                                               Therefore, the Board is opening a                        establish procedures for rail rate                     charge to serve the complaining shipper
                                               proceeding in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub–                    challenges in particular, including                    while fully covering all of its costs,
                                               No. 2) to develop a new rate review                      ‘‘appropriate measures for avoiding                    including a reasonable return on
                                               process that would be more affordable                    delay in the discovery and evidentiary                 investment. The principal objective of
                                               and accessible to shippers of all                        phases of such proceedings.’’ 49 U.S.C.                the SAC approach is to restrain a
                                               commodities with small disputes.                         10704(d). Congress directed the Board to               railroad from exploiting market power
                                                  Before discussing ideas for use in a                  ‘‘establish a simplified and expedited                 over a captive shipper by charging more
                                               new rate reasonableness methodology,                     method for determining the                             than it needs to earn a reasonable return
                                               we will discuss the Board’s existing rate                reasonableness of challenged rail rates                on the cost of the infrastructure used to
                                               reasonableness standards and the                         in those cases in which a full stand-                  serve that shipper. A second objective of
                                               comments received in Docket No. EP                       alone cost presentation is too costly,                 the SAC constraint is to detect and
                                               665 (Sub–No. 1).                                         given the value of the case.’’ 49 U.S.C.               eliminate the costs of inefficiencies in a
                                                                                                        10701(d)(3). In the Surface                            carrier’s investments or operations. See
                                               Current Rate Reasonableness Standards                    Transportation Board Reauthorization                   id. at 542–46.
                                               Statutory Framework                                      Act of 2015, Public Law 114–110, 129                      The agency recognized that the SAC
                                                                                                        Stat. 2228 (2015), Congress directed the               methodology adopted in Guidelines
                                                  Where a railroad has market                           Board to ‘‘initiate a proceeding to assess             could be expensive and impractical for
                                               dominance—i.e., there is an absence of                   procedures that are available to parties               certain shippers. The agency therefore
                                               effective competition from other rail                    in litigation before courts to expedite                adopted in 1996 a simplified
                                               carriers or modes of transportation—its                  such litigation and the potential                      methodology, the Three-Benchmark
                                               transportation rates for common carrier                  application of any such procedures to                  methodology, under which the
                                               service must be reasonable. 49 U.S.C.                    rate cases.’’ 129 Stat. 2228. That                     reasonableness of a challenged rated is
                                               10701(d)(1), 10702, 10707(a). The Board                  proceeding is currently pending before                 determined by examining that rate in
                                               is precluded, however, from finding                      the Board. See Expediting Rate Cases,                  relation to three benchmark figures.
                                               market dominance if the revenues                         EP 733 (STB served June 15, 2016).                     Rate Guidelines—Non-Coal
                                               produced by a challenged rate are less                                                                          Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. 1004 (1996), pet.
                                               than 180% of the carrier’s ‘‘variable                    Regulatory Framework
                                                                                                                                                               to reopen denied, 2 S.T.B. 619 (1997),
                                               costs’’ 3 of providing the service. 49                      Under the theory of ‘‘constrained                   appeal dismissed sub nom. Ass’n of Am.
                                               U.S.C. 10707(d)(1)(A). If, upon                          market pricing’’ (CMP), adopted by the                 R.Rs. v. STB, 146 F.3d 942 (D.C. Cir.
                                               complaint, the Board finds a challenged                  agency in 1985 to judge the                            1998). A decade passed, however,
                                               rate unreasonable, it will order the                     reasonableness of rail freight rates, a                without any shipper bringing a case
                                               railroad to pay reparations to the                       captive shipper should not be required                 under that methodology. Accordingly,
                                               complainant for past movements and                       to pay more than is necessary for the                  in 2007, the Board modified the Three-
                                               may prescribe the maximum rate the                       carrier involved to earn adequate                      Benchmark test and created Simplified-
                                               carrier is permitted to charge. 49 U.S.C.                revenues, nor should it pay more than                  SAC—a simplified alternative under
                                               10704(a)(1), 11704(b).                                   is necessary for efficient service, and a              CMP where a full SAC analysis was too
                                                  In carrying out its regulatory                        captive shipper should not bear the                    costly given the value of the case. See
                                               functions, the Board is guided by the                    costs of any facilities or services from               Simplified Standards for Rail Rate
                                               rail transportation policy set forth at 49               which it derives no benefit. Coal Rate                 Cases, EP 646 (Sub–No. 1) (STB served
                                               U.S.C. 10101. And in assessing the                       Guidelines, Nationwide (Guidelines), 1                 Sept. 5, 2007), aff’d sub nom. CSX
                                               reasonableness of rail rates, it must also               I.C.C.2d 520, 523 (1985), aff’d sub nom.               Transp., Inc. v. STB, 568 F.3d 236 (D.C.
                                               give due consideration to the ‘‘Long-                    Consol. Rail Corp. v. United States, 812               Cir.), vacated in part on reh’g, 584 F.3d
                                               Cannon’’ factors contained in 49 U.S.C.                  F.2d 1444 (3d Cir. 1987). CMP contains                 1076 (D.C. Cir. 2009).
                                               10701(d)(2)(A)–(C). The Board must                       three main limits on the extent to which                  In Simplified Standards, EP 646
                                               recognize that rail carriers should have                 a railroad may charge differentially                   (Sub–No. 1), slip op. at 13, the Board
                                               an opportunity to earn ‘‘adequate                        higher rates on captive traffic: The                   acknowledged that it is the second
                                               revenues,’’ which are defined as those                   revenue adequacy constraint, the                       objective—in which the complaint seeks
                                               that are sufficient—under honest,                        management efficiency constraint, and                  to detect and eliminate the cost of
                                               economical, and efficient                                the stand-alone cost constraint.4 Of                   inefficiencies in carrier’s investments or
                                               management—to cover operating                            these three limits under CMP, the stand-
                                               expenses, support prudent capital                        alone cost (SAC) constraint has been the                  5 A contestable market is defined as one that is

                                               outlays, repay a reasonable debt level,                  most widely utilized before the agency.                free from barriers to entry. See Guidelines, 1
                                                                                                                                                               I.C.C.2d at 528 (citing William J. Baumol, John C.
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               raise needed equity capital, and                            A SAC analysis seeks to determine
                                                                                                                                                               Panzar & Robert D. Willig, Contestable Markets and
                                               otherwise attract and retain capital in                  whether a complainant is bearing costs                 the Theory of Industry Structure (1982)). The
                                                                                                                                                               economic theory of contestable markets does not
                                                  3 Variable costs vary with the level of traffic and      4 A fourth constraint—phasing—is intended to        depend on a large number of competing firms in the
                                               are developed in rate proceedings using the Board’s      limit the introduction of otherwise-permissible rate   marketplace to ensure a competitive outcome.
                                               Uniform Railroad Costing System (URCS). See              increases when necessary for the greater public        Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d at 528. In a contestable
                                               Adoption of Unif. R.R. Costing Sys. as Gen. Purpose      good. Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d at 546–47. For a more     market, even a monopolist must offer competitive
                                               Costing Sys. for All Regulatory Costing Purposes, 5      detailed discussion of CMP, see Guidelines, 1          rates or potentially lose its customers to a new
                                               I.C.C.2d 894 (1989).                                     I.C.C.2d at 534–547.                                   entrant. Id.



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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                          61649

                                               operations—that turns the case into an                  Regulation Reforms, EP 715, slip op. at               simplest of the Board’s rate
                                               intricate, expensive undertaking.                       11 (STB served July 25, 2012).                        reasonableness methodologies, the
                                               Accordingly, the Board limited the                         In Three-Benchmark cases, each party               Three-Benchmark approach, is
                                               inquiry under the Simplified-SAC                        simultaneously proposes an initial                    ineffective because railroad defendants
                                               method to the first objective of SAC:                   comparison group, and, after critiquing               raise numerous expert-intensive ‘‘other
                                               whether a captive shipper is being                      the other side’s proposal, a ‘‘final offer’’          relevant factor’’ arguments and
                                               forced to cross-subsidize other parts of                comparison group. After receiving                     arguments for the use of current waybill
                                               the railroad’s rail network. The                        simultaneous rebuttal filings, the Board              data in the possession of the defendant
                                               Simplified-SAC test does so by                          selects without adjustment one of the                 railroad, which greatly increase the
                                               comparing the costs and revenues of the                 two ‘‘final offer’’ comparison groups.                complexity and costs of those cases.
                                               actual operations and services provided                 Each movement in the comparison                       (NGFA Opening 15.)
                                               under the assumption that all existing                  group is adjusted by a revenue need
                                                                                                       adjustment factor, which is the ratio of                Even if the Three-Benchmark
                                               infrastructure along the predominant                                                                          methodology were not cost prohibitive,
                                               route used to haul the complainant’s                    RSAM ÷ R/VC>180 (each of which is a
                                                                                                       four-year average calculation). The                   shippers argue that a comparison group
                                               traffic is needed to serve the traffic on                                                                     approach is ineffective for agricultural
                                               that route. Rate Regulation Reforms, EP                 Board then calculates the mean and
                                                                                                       standard deviation of the resulting                   commodities because carriers have
                                               715, slip op. at 1 n.2 (STB served Mar.
                                                                                                       adjusted R/VC ratios (weighted in                     applied ‘‘across-the-board’’ pricing.
                                               13, 2015); see also Simplified
                                                                                                       accordance with the proper sampling                   (ARC Opening 23; NGFA Opening 15;
                                               Standards, EP 646 (Sub–No. 1), slip op.
                                                                                                       factors). If the challenged rate is above             AAI Reply 2.) Specifically, shippers
                                               at 5. The core analysis in a Simplified-
                                                                                                       a reasonable confidence interval around               claim that carriers use their market
                                               SAC proceeding addresses the cost to
                                                                                                       the estimate of the mean for the adjusted             power to impose a uniformly high rate
                                               build the existing facilities used to serve
                                                                                                       comparison group, it is presumed                      across-the-board for certain
                                               the captive shipper and the return on
                                                                                                       unreasonable and, absent any ‘‘other                  commodities or groups of commodities.
                                               investment a hypothetical SARR would
                                                                                                       relevant factors,’’ the maximum lawful                (ARC Opening 23; NGFA Opening 15.)
                                               require to replicate those facilities. The              rate is prescribed at that boundary level.            As a result, shippers argue that the
                                               Board then determines whether the                       See Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub–                R/VCCOMP benchmark is inherently
                                               traffic using those facilities is paying                No. 1), slip op. at 21.
                                               more than needed to cover operating                                                                           problematic for grain shippers and
                                                                                                          Since Simplified Standards, only a                 producers because railroad grain rates
                                               expenses and a reasonable return on the                 few Three-Benchmark cases have been
                                               cost of those facilities. To hold down                                                                        generally produce R/VCs that are
                                                                                                       decided by the Board, while no                        uniform, or uniform in geographic areas,
                                               the cost of a Simplified-SAC                            complaint has been litigated to
                                               presentation, various simplifying                                                                             for states or regions. (ARC Opening 23,
                                                                                                       completion under the Simplified-SAC                   V.S. Whiteside 12.) According to NGFA,
                                               assumptions and standardization                         alternative.
                                               measures were adopted.6 Such an                                                                               the fact that only defendant traffic may
                                                                                                          There is no monetary limit on relief
                                               approach is a less thorough application                                                                       be included in a Three-Benchmark
                                                                                                       for a complainant that elects to use the
                                               of CMP in that it would not identify                                                                          comparison group compounds this flaw.
                                                                                                       SAC or Simplified-SAC methods, see
                                               inefficiencies in the current rail                      Rate Regulation Reforms, EP 715, slip                 (NGFA Opening 15.)
                                               operation.                                              op. at 3 (STB served July 18, 2013)                     NGFA also argues that SAC and
                                                  Under the Three-Benchmark method,                    (removing relief limit on Simplified-                 Simplified-SAC are inaccessible because
                                               the reasonableness of a challenged rate                 SAC cases), though rate relief in SAC                 many grain shippers are on low-density
                                               is determined by examining that rate in                 cases is limited to a 10 year period, see             rural branch lines or secondary lines,
                                               relation to the following three                         Major Issues in Rail Rate Cases, EP 657               and the Board’s holding regarding cross-
                                               benchmark figures, each of which is                     (Sub–No. 1), slip op. at 62–66 (STB                   subsidies in PPL Montana, LLC v.
                                               expressed as a revenue-to-variable cost                 served Oct. 30, 2006), and relief in                  Burlington Northern & Santa Fe
                                               (R/VC) ratio: (1) Revenue Shortfall                     Simplified-SAC cases is limited to a                  Railway, NOR 42054 (STB served Aug.
                                               Allocation Method (RSAM), which                         five-year period, Simplified Standards,               20, 2002) and Otter Tail Power Co. v.
                                               measures the average markup over                        EP 646 (Sub–No. 1), slip op. at 27–29.                BNSF Railway, NOR 42058, slip op. at
                                               variable cost that the defendant railroad               The maximum potential rate relief                     11–13 (STB served Jan. 27, 2006) have
                                               would need to charge all of its                         available to a complainant that elects to             essentially eliminated the ability for
                                               ‘‘potentially captive’’ traffic (traffic                use the Three-Benchmark method is                     grain shippers to use SAC rules to test
                                               priced above the 180% R/VC level) in                    limited to no more than $4 million per                the reasonableness of rates for
                                               order for the railroad to earn adequate                 case over a five-year period. See Rate                agricultural commodities. (NGFA
                                               revenues as measured by the Board                       Regulation Reforms, EP 715, slip op. at               Opening 13–14, 21.)
                                               under 49 U.S.C. 10704(a)(2);                            2 (STB served Mar. 13, 2015); Simplified
                                                                                                                                                               Shippers propose both modifications
                                               (2) R/VC>180, which measures the                        Standards, EP 646 (Sub–No. 1), slip op.
                                                                                                                                                             to the existing methodologies and new
                                               average markup over variable cost                       at 27–29.
                                                                                                                                                             processes for rate review. Regarding the
                                               currently earned by the defendant                       Comments Received in Docket No. EP                    existing methodologies, several shipper
                                               railroad on its potentially captive traffic;            665 (Sub–No. 1)                                       groups argue for changes to the Three-
                                               and (3) R/VCCOMP, which is used to                                                                            Benchmark methodology. ARC argues
                                                                                                         The shipper community argues that
                                               compare the markup being paid by the                                                                          that the comparison groups in the
                                                                                                       the Board’s current rate review
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                                               challenged traffic to the average markup                                                                      Three-Benchmark method should
                                                                                                       processes are not useable to test the
                                               assessed on other comparable                                                                                  include non-defendant traffic for grain
                                                                                                       reasonableness of agriculture
                                               potentially captive traffic. Rate                                                                             and grain products shippers because
                                                                                                       commodity rail rates. Shippers argue
                                                                                                       that the Board’s existing methodologies               limiting comparison groups to
                                                 6 Simplifying assumptions are used in, for
                                                                                                       are cost-prohibitive. (ARC Opening 21–                defendant traffic eliminates a significant
                                               example, the issue traffic’s route, the configuration
                                               of the SARR, the traffic group, operating expenses,     22; NGFA Opening 13–15; AAI Reply 2.)                 amount of traffic with similar demand
                                               the test year, and the discounted cash flow analysis.   For example, NGFA argues that even the                characteristics. (ARC Opening 22–23,


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                                               61650              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               V.S. Fauth 23.) 7 NGFA and ARC both                     revenue adequate railroads, which                     account for the revenue adequacy status
                                               argue that expanding the comparable                     would eliminate the R/VCCOMP                          of each railroad. (NGFA Opening 31.) 10
                                               traffic group to include non-defendant                  benchmark (and rely only on the RSAM                     Carriers, on the other hand, argue that
                                               traffic would also address ‘‘across-the-                and R/VC>180 benchmarks by carrier).9                 grain rates are not unreasonable and the
                                               board’’ pricing practices. (ARC Opening                 According to ARC’s witness, the R/                    Board’s existing rules provide ample
                                               23; NGFA Opening 15, 28, V.S. Crowley                   VCCOMP benchmark is designed to                       opportunity for grain shippers to pursue
                                               9–11.) As NGFA notes, the inclusion of                  reflect demand-based differential                     rate relief. (BNSF Opening 1, 26–29; UP
                                               non-defendant traffic in a comparison                   pricing and is inappropriate under the                Opening 19–20.) Carriers cite the lack of
                                               group approach would establish a                        revenue adequacy constraint announced                 grain rate litigation as evidence that
                                               ‘‘market’’ rate, and thereby address, to                many years ago in Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d              most grain rates are reasonable or not
                                               some extent, the current practice of the                at 520. (ARC Opening, V.S. Fauth 25.)                 subject to the Board’s jurisdiction (R/VC
                                               Class I railroads to limit the ability of a             ARC, therefore, argues that the                       ratios below 180%, contract movements,
                                               captive shipper or a group of captive                   R/VCCOMP benchmark should have no                     or exempt commodities). (BNSF
                                               shippers to reach desired markets by                    application in assessing the rates of                 Opening 26–29; UP Opening 20; AAR
                                               setting rail rates that largely dictate                 revenue adequate carriers because it                  Reply 9–10; CSXT Reply 4; NSR Reply
                                               where the shipper’s commodity goes on                   provides a means of reflecting demand-                24–25.) According to carriers, rail rates
                                               that railroad’s system. (NGFA Opening                   based differential pricing principles and             for grain are effectively constrained by
                                               28, V.S. Crowley 9–11.)                                 differential pricing should not affect                competition from truck, barge, and other
                                                  Shippers also argue that comparison                  rates on captive traffic to the extent                railroads, as well as by the competitive
                                               groups in the Three-Benchmark                           those rates provide revenues above                    global market for grain sales. (BNSF
                                               methodology should include non-                                                                               Opening 17–23, 27–29; UP Opening 15–
                                                                                                       revenue adequacy levels. (ARC Opening
                                               captive traffic, i.e., traffic priced below                                                                   20; CSXT Reply 2–3.)
                                                                                                       17–19.) Under ARC’s proposed Two-
                                               the 180% R/VC level.8 (ARC Opening                                                                               Carriers also argue that the Board has
                                                                                                       Benchmark test, if grain shippers have
                                               23–24, V.S. Fauth 23–24; NGFA                                                                                 already sufficiently addressed shippers’
                                                                                                       rates which generate R/VC ratios in
                                               Opening 29.) According to NGFA,                                                                               concerns by limiting its market
                                               including movements with R/VC ratios                    excess of the 180%, then the R/VC ratio
                                                                                                                                                             dominance inquiry to direct
                                               below 180% is essential because captive                 could not exceed the RSAM level. (ARC
                                                                                                                                                             competition (i.e., not allowing product
                                               agriculture commodity producers and                     Opening, V.S. Fauth 26.)
                                                                                                                                                             or geographic competition), creating two
                                               elevators compete in the marketplace                       NGFA proposes an alternative method                simplified rate reasonableness
                                               against other agriculture commodity                     called the Ag Commodity Maximum                       methodologies, and eliminating or
                                               shipments with rates both above and                     Rate Methodology (ACMRM). (NGFA                       increasing the relief caps for those
                                               below the 180% R/VC threshold. (NGFA                    Opening 27–31, V.S. Crowley 6–17.)                    methodologies. (AAR Opening 18–19;
                                               Opening 29.) Likewise, ARC argues that                  Under ACMRM, the issue traffic would                  BNSF Opening 24–26; UP Opening 20;
                                               restricting the comparison group to                     be compared against all railroads (not                CSXT Reply 8.) CSXT notes that the
                                               traffic moving at an R/VC ratio greater                 just the defendant railroad) and                      Board also eliminated the use of
                                               than 180% significantly reduces the                     movements with R/VC ratios less than                  movement-specific adjustments to
                                               amount of traffic available for the                     180% (although, the maximum                           URCS to reduce litigation costs. (CSXT
                                               comparison group because the majority                   reasonable rate produced by the analysis              Reply 6 (citing Major Issues, EP 657
                                               of grain and grain products move at                     would be subject to the statutory 180%                (Sub–No. 1), slip op. at 59–60).) BNSF
                                               R/VC levels below 180%. (ARC Opening                    floor). (NGFA Opening 28–29, V.S.                     and CSXT also dispute the shippers’
                                               23, V.S. Fauth 23–24.)                                  Crowley 9–11.) Under NGFA’s proposal,                 allegations that railroads impose
                                                  In addition, ARC proposes two                        the comparison group would be based                   uniformly high rates for certain
                                               adjustment factors that the Board could                 on certain default factors, including a               commodities or groups of commodities.
                                               apply in rate challenges related to grain               mileage band, commodity type, railcar                 (BNSF Reply 14–15; CSXT Reply 8–9.)
                                               shipments. First, it proposes a Grain                   type, railcar ownership, and movement                 According to BNSF, shippers’ concerns
                                               Cost Adjustment Factor (GCAF), which                    type. (NGFA Opening, V.S. Crowley                     about broad, industry-wide rate
                                               would be applied to the Board’s URCS                    6–7.) ACMRM also would eliminate the                  increases are purely speculative and
                                               Phase III costing program for railroad                  confidence interval adjustment and the                inconsistent with market realities.
                                               movements of grain and grain products.                  ‘‘other relevant factors’’ analysis so that           (BNSF Reply 14.)
                                               ARC claims the GCAF would more                          captive agriculture commodity rate                       Generally, carriers advocate
                                               accurately reflect the fact that these                  cases could be decided quickly and at                 maintaining the Board’s current rate
                                               movements generally have certain lower                                                                        review processes and ask the Board to
                                                                                                       reasonable cost. (NGFA Opening 31.)
                                               costs than the system average costs,                                                                          reject the modifications and alternatives
                                                                                                       The rate prescription period would be 5
                                               including switching, crew, locomotive,                                                                        set forth by the shipper community.
                                                                                                       years, and there would be no limits on
                                               and car costs. (ARC Opening, V.S. Fauth                                                                       (See AAR Opening 18; BNSF Opening
                                                                                                       the amount of relief that the
                                               7.) ARC also proposes an export grain                                                                         24–26; NSR Opening 6; UP Opening 2.)
                                                                                                       complaining shipper or group of
                                               rate adjustment that takes into account                                                                       Carriers argue that NGFA’s proposal
                                               the economic relationship between                       shippers could receive if a rate
                                                                                                       challenge is successful. (NGFA Opening                would result in a ‘‘ratcheting effect,’’
                                               grain prices and grain exports. (ARC                                                                          whereby, through repeated successful
                                               Opening, V.S. Fauth 30–31.)                             31.) ACMRM also includes a
                                                                                                       commodity-specific Revenue Adequacy                   rate challenges, rates charged to captive
                                                  ARC and NGFA also each propose
                                                                                                       Adjustment Factor, which would be                     shippers could be systematically
                                               new rate review processes. ARC sets
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                                                                                                       used to adjust the R/VC ratio of each                 lowered to the jurisdictional floor.
                                               forth a ‘‘Two-Benchmark’’ approach for
                                                                                                       movement in the comparison group to                   (BNSF Reply 21, 24–25; NSR Reply 14–
                                                 7 NGFA also includes non-defendant traffic in its
                                                                                                                                                             15; UP Reply 23–24.) Carriers also argue
                                               proposed new methodology, which is discussed in            9 As indicated earlier, ARC also proposes to       that the Board should reject NGFA’s
                                               more detail below.                                      expand the comparison group in Three-Benchmark
                                                 8 NGFA also incorporates traffic with R/VC ratios     cases to include both non-defendant traffic and         10 The formula for determining the RAAF is set

                                               below 180% into its proposed new methodology,           traffic moving at an R/VC ratio below 180%. (ARC      forth in Exhibit 5 of the verified statement of
                                               which is discussed in more detail below.                Opening 20–24.)                                       Crowley. (NGFA Opening, V.S. Crowley Exhibit 5.)



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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                          61651

                                               proposal because the methodology is                     the comparison group traffic with                     Three-Benchmark methodology, warrant
                                               not supported by sound economics and                    competitive alternatives, NGFA seeks to               further exploration. In particular, if the
                                               is inherently biased for grain shippers.                eliminate a railroad’s ability to engage              Board could develop a process that
                                               (CSXT Reply 2, 10; NSR Reply 13–14.)                    in differential pricing, contrary to the              reduces the litigation burden on parties
                                               According to CSXT, NGFA’s proposal                      basic economics of the railroad                       even more than the simplest existing
                                               would eliminate demand-based                            industry. (BNSF Reply 23; UP Reply 24–                rate reasonableness methodology, it
                                               differential pricing for grain traffic,                 26.) According to BNSF and UP,                        could achieve the goal of creating more
                                               prevent the Board from determining                      including movements with R/VC ratios                  accessible rate review processes for
                                               appropriate contribution to fixed costs,                below 180% in the comparison group                    small disputes where even a Three-
                                               and ‘‘adjust’’ URCS in ways that would                  will also lead to a ratcheting down of                Benchmark case would be too costly,
                                               blatantly favor grain shippers over other               R/VC ratios until the 180% R/VC ratio                 given the value of the case. Accordingly,
                                               shippers. (CSXT Reply 10–11.) Carriers                  becomes the rate ceiling. (BNSF Reply                 we are considering developing a set of
                                               also oppose the unlimited relief                        24–25; UP Reply 23–24.)                               procedures that could comprise a new
                                               available under ACMRM. (BNSF Reply                         USDA also provided comment,                        comparison-based rate reasonableness
                                               29; UP Reply 34–35.)                                    arguing that a new approach is                        methodology for use by shippers of all
                                                  Carriers also find flaws in ARC’s                    necessary and warranted, and should be                commodities in very small disputes.
                                               proposal. Specifically, they argue that                 explored, and that agricultural shippers              The Board is considering a new process
                                               ARC’s proposal would create a                           require specifically designed rail rate               that would entail the following key
                                               disincentive for railroads to expand                    challenge procedures. (USDA Opening                   elements.
                                               competitive traffic through good                        2.) USDA argues that none of the current                 First, the process would include a
                                               business practices and would result in                  rail rate appeals procedures are suitable             preliminary screen that would limit its
                                               an overall degradation of rail service,                 for agricultural shippers because they                application to shippers that are more
                                               contrary to the public interest. (AAR                   are much too costly, complex, and time                likely to be considered captive and to
                                               Reply 21–22; BNSF Reply 31; UP Reply                    consuming, and agricultural shippers do               have rates that are outliers. Such a
                                               21–22, 37.) UP further argues that ARC’s                not move large enough quantities to                   screen might allow for the Board to
                                               proposal is inconsistent with the                       justify the cost of these procedures. (Id.            make market dominance and rate
                                               competitive market principles embodied                  at 6.) USDA also argues that, by the time             reasonableness determinations based on
                                               in the Board’s governing statute and                    a decision could be rendered, the routes              an abbreviated evidentiary process.
                                               with basic railroad economics because it                or rates may have changed to fit new                  Second, the process would contain a
                                               disregards the railroad’s need for                      agricultural market conditions,                       comparison-based analysis in which the
                                               differential pricing to recover their joint             nullifying most of the benefits from                  Board develops an initial comparison
                                               and common costs. (UP Reply 35; see                     winning the case. (Id.) USDA estimates                group and then allows parties to
                                               also AAR Reply 16.)                                     that a rate reasonableness methodology                propose modifications. By having the
                                                  The carriers also argue that                         must have costs no greater than $50,000               Board set the initial comparison group,
                                               modifications to the Three-Benchmark                    in order to be a viable option for                    based on pre-determined criteria, the
                                               approach, such as inclusion of non-                     agriculture shippers. (Id. at 7–8.)                   evidentiary process could be simplified,
                                               defendant or non-captive traffic in the                    Based on the comments and                          as parties would only have to present
                                               comparison group, lack sound economic                   testimony received in this proceeding,                evidence on modifications rather than
                                               support. Railroads dispute the idea of                  the Board is persuaded that the existing              creating their own comparison groups
                                               including non-defendant traffic in                      rate review processes present                         (as is currently the case in Three-
                                               comparison groups, arguing that                         accessibility challenges not only for                 Benchmark cases). Third, the process
                                               comparisons that include traffic moving                 small shippers of grain, but also for                 would contain other procedural
                                               on other railroads do not accurately                    small shippers of any commodity. The                  modifications that help expedite and
                                               establish the appropriate contribution to               Board recognizes that, for small                      streamline the comparison-based
                                               the defendant railroad’s fixed costs.                   disputes, the litigation costs required to            assessment. In particular, the Board is
                                               (AAR Reply 17–18; BNSF Reply 27.)                       bring a case under the Board’s existing               considering ideas such as limiting
                                               BNSF further argues that including all                  rate reasonableness methodologies, even               discovery, establishing mandatory
                                               traffic in the proposed comparison                      the Board’s most simplified method,                   disclosures, limiting the length of
                                               group eliminates a railroad’s ability to                Three-Benchmark, can quickly exceed                   filings, and establishing an evidentiary
                                               engage in differential pricing, contrary                the value of the case. The Board                      hearing in lieu of rebuttal evidence.
                                               to the basic economics of the railroad                  appreciates receiving the alternative                 Finally, because the process would only
                                               industry. (BNSF Reply 23.) NSR notes                    methodologies proposed by ARC and                     be intended for small disputes, the
                                               that expanding the comparison group                     NGFA; however, we are not convinced                   Board would limit the amount of relief
                                               would not simplify rate reasonableness                  that the alternative methodologies as                 available.
                                               determinations, but rather would                        proposed strike the proper balance                       It is the Board’s goal that procedures
                                               increase the cost and complexity of the                 between the Board’s statutory goals of                evolving from this ANPR would shorten
                                               Three-Benchmark approach by requiring                   providing captive shippers meaningful                 the case timeline and reduce litigation
                                               examination and evidence based on                       access to regulatory remedies for                     costs, while achieving the same
                                               rates and costing from other railroads.                 unreasonable rail rates, while permitting             objectives as the existing rate
                                               (NSR Reply 29.)                                         railroads to earn a reasonable return on              methodologies and minimizing the loss
                                                  Likewise, carriers oppose the                        their investments so that they will have              of precision. The Board is guided by the
                                               inclusion of non-captive traffic in the
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                                                                                                       the resources to make the investment                  concerns raised during the public
                                               comparison group. According to NSR,                     needed to continue to serve the                       comment period in Docket No. EP 665
                                               there is no basis for comparing traffic                 transportation needs of their customers.              (Sub–No. 1), namely that the Board’s
                                               over which the railroad is potentially                     Although the Board has concerns with               current rate review processes are cost-
                                               market dominant to traffic over which                   the proposals set forth by ARC and                    prohibitive for grain and other shippers
                                               the railroad is not market dominant by                  NGFA, several of the ideas that parties               with small disputes, and by the rail
                                               statute. (NSR Reply 17.) According to                   have raised as part of these                          transportation policy set forth at 49
                                               BNSF and UP, by seeking to include in                   methodologies, or on how to modify the                U.S.C. 10101. The Board must balance


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                                               61652              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               the shippers’ interest in being protected               Board does not envision that the new                  180% R/VC level) as evidence of the
                                               from unreasonable rates, see 49 U.S.C.                  process would apply to purely local                   reasonable R/VC levels for traffic of that
                                               10101(6), against the need to promote a                 movements of a Class II or Class III                  sort. . . . The rates available to traffic
                                               safe and efficient rail transportation                  carrier, which would be consistent with               with competitive alternatives would
                                               system by allowing rail carriers to earn                the Three-Benchmark methodology. See                  provide little evidence on the degree of
                                               adequate revenues, see 49 U.S.C.                        Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub–No.                 permissible demand-based differential
                                               10101(3), 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(2). We                     1), slip op. at 102 (explaining                       pricing needed to provide a reasonable
                                               must also consider all parties’ needs for               limitations of methodology with respect               return on the investment.’’). Although
                                               expeditious handling of proceedings,                    to Class II and III carriers). However, we            the shipper community presented
                                               see 49 U.S.C. 10101(15).                                seek comment on whether this                          arguments in favor of including traffic
                                                  We are seeking comment in a new                      methodology, if adopted, should or                    below 180% R/VC in comparison
                                               docket, Docket No. EP 665 (Sub–No. 2),                  should not be applicable to Class II and              groups, the Board is concerned that
                                               as we believe this methodology should                   III rail carriers.                                    including shipments below 180% R/VC
                                               be available to shippers of all                                                                               may be contrary to the principle of
                                                                                                       II. Comparison Group Approach
                                               commodities, not just grain, with small                                                                       demand-based differential pricing. The
                                               disputes. Many of the concerns raised                      The new methodology the Board is                   Board invites comment on the
                                               about the accessibility of the Board’s                  considering would utilize a comparison                advisability of including or excluding
                                               existing rate reasonableness procedures                 group approach to determine the                       non-captive traffic in comparison
                                               are general in nature. Indeed, some                     reasonableness of the challenged                      groups.
                                               commenters expressly acknowledged                       traffic’s rate. Under such an approach,                  Traffic With Similar Shipping
                                               that such concerns may be equally                       the issue traffic would be compared                   Characteristics. The comparison group
                                               applicable to shippers of other                         against a comparison group of similar                 would also include traffic that shares
                                               commodities (see, e.g., ARC Opening                     traffic drawn from the preceding four                 similar shipping characteristics as the
                                               9–10 (‘‘Many of the deficiencies in the                 years of data in the Board’s Waybill                  issue traffic, as rail rates typically
                                               status quo may not be unique to                         Sample. In order to reduce litigation                 depend, at least in part, on the length of
                                               grain’’)), while others argued that                     costs, the Board would determine an                   haul, shipment type, and the type of
                                               limiting the availability of a                          initial comparison group based on                     commodity being shipped. The Board,
                                               methodology to a subset of shippers or                  default parameters established in a                   therefore, is considering limiting
                                               commodities would be arbitrary (see,                    rulemaking, rather than having parties                comparable movements to those
                                               e.g., NSR Opening 6 (‘‘nothing in the                   develop and tender a proposed                         movements that satisfy all of the
                                               Board’s governing statutes or prior                     comparison group, as is done in Three-                following criteria:
                                               considerations of rate regulation . . .                 Benchmark cases. See Simplified                          (a) The movement is within a +/¥
                                               suggests that the economic basis or                     Standards, EP 646 (Sub–No. 1), slip op.               15% mileage band around the actual
                                                                                                       at 18. As discussed in more detail                    miles travelled by the challenged traffic,
                                               soundness of a [rate] methodology . . .
                                                                                                       below, both the complainant and the                      (b) the movement is of the same
                                               should vary based on the shipper or
                                                                                                       defendant would have the opportunity                  shipment type (e.g., unit train traffic or
                                               commodities at issue’’)). Thus, we are
                                                                                                       to present arguments regarding the                    non-unit train traffic), and
                                               exploring how best to develop a new                                                                              (c) the movement is of a commodity
                                                                                                       appropriateness of the initial
                                               methodology available to shippers of all                                                                      classified under the same Standard
                                                                                                       comparison group determined by the
                                               commodities.                                                                                                  Transportation Commodity Code
                                                                                                       Board and propose modifications to the
                                                  The Board seeks comment on whether
                                                                                                       group. After considering the arguments                (STCC).
                                               the procedures set forth in this                                                                                 With respect to the last of these
                                                                                                       proposed by the parties, the Board
                                               decision—or variations on these                                                                               parameters, the Board believes that the
                                                                                                       would determine which movements
                                               procedures—would provide a                                                                                    most appropriate method of determining
                                                                                                       would comprise the final, adjusted
                                               reasonable yet accessible methodology                                                                         which commodities should be used in
                                                                                                       comparison group, which the Board
                                               for use in very small rate disputes. The                                                                      the comparison group is to use the same
                                                                                                       would use in its rate reasonableness
                                               Board also welcomes comments on                                                                               five-digit STCC as the issue traffic.
                                                                                                       analysis.
                                               other means the Board could implement                      The Board is considering the                       Commodities listed at the five-digit
                                               to keep the costs of a new process low.                 following default parameters for                      STCC generally should be similar
                                               New Methodology in Docket No. EP 665                    selecting the initial comparison group                enough in characteristics for inclusion
                                               (Sub–No. 2)                                             and seeks comment on each.                            in the comparison group. However,
                                                                                                          Traffic at or Above 180% R/VC. The                 certain other commodities differ at an
                                               I. Availability of New Methodology                      Board is considering including other                  even more granular level, such as
                                                  Although the concerns expressed by                   potentially captive traffic, i.e., traffic            chemicals (i.e., any commodity with a
                                               the agricultural community in Docket                    priced at or above the 180% R/VC level,               STCC starting with 28), and therefore
                                               No. EP 665 (Sub–No. 1) and elsewhere                    in the comparison group, but not traffic              may best be limited to comparisons to
                                               have been instrumental in informing the                 priced below the 180% R/VC level.                     the seven-digit STCC. Chemicals are
                                               Board of the need for a new approach,                   Excluding traffic with an R/VC level                  highly varied at the five-digit STCC
                                               we do not believe that a new                            below 180% would be consistent with                   designation and therefore may require a
                                               methodology should be limited to small                  the Board’s explanation that only                     finer degree of distinction when
                                               shippers of only agricultural products.                 captive traffic over which the carrier has            selecting the initial comparison group.
                                                                                                       market power should be included in the                   The Board invites comment on these
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                                               Instead, as discussed above, we are
                                               exploring how best to develop a new                     comparison group in the Three-                        comparison group procedures, and also
                                               methodology that would be available to                  Benchmark methodology. See                            on which commodities would be
                                               shippers of all commodities with small                  Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub–No.                 appropriately compared at the seven-
                                               disputes.                                               1), slip op. at 17 (‘‘[t]he purpose of the            digit STCC. The Board also invites
                                                  We are considering limiting this                     R/VCCOMP benchmark is to use the R/VC                 comment on whether the Board should
                                               methodology, however, to disputes                       ratios of other ‘potentially captive                  consider expanding the comparison of
                                               involving only Class I rail carriers. The               traffic’ (i.e., traffic priced above the              commodities beyond the five- or seven-


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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                             61653

                                               digit STCC level in the event that this                 non-defendant carriers 11 operating in                 inclusion would affect the time and
                                               parameter would result in the initial                   the same URCS region 12 as the                         costs to bring a case.
                                               comparison group containing                             defendant carrier. The Board has, in the
                                                                                                                                                              III. Procedural Considerations
                                               insufficient observations. In order for                 past, acknowledged that varying joint
                                               any study to be statistically valid, the                and common costs can lead to inevitable                   The Board recognizes that it is
                                               study sample must contain a minimum                     differences in R/VC ratios among                       essential that any procedures
                                               number of observations, and that                        different carriers. See Simplified                     comprising a new rate reasonableness
                                               minimum number varies depending on                      Standards, EP 646 (Sub–No. 1), slip op.                methodology be both more streamlined
                                               the type and complexity of the analysis                 at 82–83. We are mindful of the                        and less costly than the Board’s existing
                                               to be undertaken. For the purposes of                   concerns raised by the railroads, and                  rate review processes. As a result, the
                                               comparison-based rate reasonableness                    previously acknowledged by the Board,                  Board is considering the procedures set
                                               analyses, the Board is concerned that                   about comparing R/VC ratios across                     forth below with the goal of achieving
                                               fewer than 20 observations would be                     carriers. However, shippers have also                  a shortened procedural schedule and
                                               insufficient. See e.g., E.I. du Pont de                 raised arguments as to why the Board                   including measures addressing concerns
                                               Nemours & Co. v. CSX Transp., Inc.,                     should include non-defendant traffic.                  that the existing procedures for
                                               NOR 42101, slip op. at 13 (STB served                   (See, e.g., NGFA Opening 28–29; ARC                    challenging a rate are cost-prohibitive.
                                               June 30, 2008) (deciding a Three-                       Opening 23.) Notwithstanding the                       1. Preliminary Screen
                                               Benchmark rate case where the                           Board’s previously stated concerns and
                                               comparison group included 23                            the concerns raised by the railroads, the                 Given the abbreviated evidentiary
                                               observations and the sample size was                    Board seeks comment on whether it                      presentation in a simplified, lower-cost
                                               uncontested). Therefore, the Board seeks                should reconsider this issue.                          process, the Board is considering
                                               comments on whether the Board should,                   Additionally, the Board is considering                 requiring that challenged traffic meet
                                               in instances where there are insufficient               whether, for the purposes of a new                     certain threshold criteria in order to be
                                               observations, relax the default STCC                    methodology, it may be appropriate to                  eligible to be reviewed under the new
                                               limitation to the next most specific                    include non-defendant traffic in the                   methodology. This preliminary screen
                                               STCC level that yields sufficient                       comparison group to ensure that the                    would seek to identify those movements
                                               observations for the comparison group.                  Board can perform a statistically                      for which truck transportation
                                               For example, if a comparison group                      meaningful comparison analysis.                        alternatives are unlikely and the rates
                                               based on a seven-digit STCC code                        Including non-defendant movements                      are significant outliers, allowing the
                                               contains too few observations, we could                 could help ensure that the initial                     Board to make market dominance and
                                               examine the corresponding five-digit                    comparison group includes sufficient                   rate reasonableness determinations
                                               STCC, then the four-digit STCC, and so                  movements from the Waybill Sample on                   based on the abbreviated evidentiary
                                               on, until the comparison group includes                 which the Board can base its rate                      submissions described below. The issue
                                               greater than 20 observations.                           reasonableness determination.13                        traffic would, of course, have to be
                                                  The Board invites comments on this                      The Board notes, however, that,                     priced above the 180% R/VC level,
                                               possible approach of broadening the                     including non-defendant traffic in the                 which is the statutory floor for
                                               STCC limitation in this manner and on                   comparison group likely would                          regulatory rail rate intervention. See 49
                                               whether a 20-observation minimum                        necessitate third-party discovery (as to               U.S.C. 10707(d).
                                               would be an appropriate requirement.                    whether cost structure differences                        Additionally, the Board is considering
                                                  Contract and Tariff Traffic. The                     between carriers make certain                          the following criteria for the issue traffic
                                               comparison group would include                          movements inappropriate for the                        as a preliminary screen and seeks
                                               contract and tariff traffic from the                    comparison group) and would affect                     comment on each of the following
                                               defendant carrier, excluding the issue                  whether parties would be required to                   potential criteria.
                                               traffic. As the Board noted in Simplified               hire outside counsel to manage the                        Issue Traffic Length of Haul. The
                                               Standards, EP 646 (Sub–No. 1), slip op.                 receipt of confidential Waybill Sample                 origin and destination of the issue traffic
                                               at 83, excluding contract movements                     data from other carriers. See 49 CFR                   would be required to be located a
                                               from the comparison group may leave                     1244.9. We recognize that these issues                 certain minimum distance apart. As
                                               insufficient movements from the                         would add a layer of complexity to the                 noted in Review of Commodity, Boxcar,
                                               Waybill Sample to perform a                             process, potentially increasing the time               and TOFC/COFC Exemptions, EP 704
                                               statistically meaningful comparison                     and expense required to bring a case.14                (Sub–No. 1), slip op. at 7 n.12 (STB
                                               analysis. The Board is considering                      We seek comment on the advisability of                 served Mar. 23, 2016) (with
                                               applying a common carrier adjustment                    including non-defendant traffic in all or              Commissioner Begeman dissenting),
                                               to the comparison group to account for                  limited circumstances under this                       trucking becomes less viable when the
                                               the contract traffic similar to the one                 simplified methodology, and how such                   length of haul exceeds 500 miles
                                               applied in U.S. Magnesium, L.L.C. v.                                                                           because in many instances a transport
                                               Union Pacific Railroad, NOR 42114, slip                   11 Because the Board is considering a new rate       over that threshold cannot be completed
                                               op. at 18–19 (STB served Jan. 28, 2010),                review process for use against Class I carriers, the   in one day. Thus, it may be appropriate
                                                                                                       comparison group would likewise include only           to require that the origin and destination
                                               aff’d sub nom. Union Pacific Railroad v.                rates charged by other non-defendant Class I
                                               STB, 628 F.3d 597 (D.C. Cir. 2010). The                 carriers.                                              be more than 500 highway miles apart.
                                               Board invites comment on the inclusion                    12 In calculating regional data, URCS defines each   Traffic moving fewer than 500 highway
                                               of contract traffic and a common carrier                of the reporting Class I carriers as being either in   miles between origin and destination
                                                                                                       the Eastern Region or Western Region. The Eastern      would not be eligible to be challenged
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                                               adjustment. Additionally, the Board                     Region includes CN, CSXT, and NSR. The Western
                                               invites parties to propose alternative                  Region includes BNSF, CP, KCS, and UP.                 under the new methodology because
                                               means of calculating a common carrier                     13 The Board intends to propose modifications to     trucking alternatives for those
                                               adjustment.                                             the Waybill sampling rate in a subsequent decision,    movements are more likely. Such a
                                                  Non-Defendant Carrier Traffic. The                   which would also help ensure sufficient                criterion could allow the Board to
                                                                                                       observations.
                                               Board seeks comment on whether to                         14 The necessity for third-party discovery, and
                                                                                                                                                              consider making market dominance
                                               expand the comparison group in this                     what that might entail, is discussed in more detail    determinations on an abbreviated
                                               new methodology to include traffic from                 in section III(2), Limits on Discovery, below.         evidentiary presentation.


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                                               61654               Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                  Issue Traffic Revenue Per Ton Mile.                   be required to provide a preliminary                  issue traffic and provide supporting data
                                               As noted, part of the preliminary screen                 estimate of the variable cost of the                  to the Board and, upon request, to the
                                               would be to determine if rates are                       challenged movements, using the                       complainant.
                                               significant outliers. The Board is                       unadjusted figures produced by the                       Another limit on discovery could be
                                               considering using revenue per ton mile                   URCS Phase III costing program on the                 to limit the amount or type of party-
                                               to make this determination. Specifically,                Board’s Web site,17 to demonstrate that               initiated discovery or eliminating such
                                               the Board could require the revenue per                  the Board’s jurisdictional threshold has              discovery altogether, given that the need
                                               ton mile of the challenged traffic to be                 been met. The complainant could also                  for such information would be
                                               in the top 10% or 20% of the initial,                    be required to provide to the Board and               significantly reduced by the
                                               Board-determined comparison group.                       the defendant all documents that it                   simplifications discussed here. For
                                               Another possibility would be to require                  relied upon to determine the inputs to                example, the fact that the initial
                                               the issue traffic to be at least one                     the URCS Phase III costing program. The               comparison group would be set by the
                                               standard deviation above the mean                        Board invites parties to comment on                   Board (based on defined criteria) and
                                               revenue per ton mile of the comparison                   whether the URCS Phase III costing                    not the parties would eliminate one
                                               group.15 Analyzing how a movement’s                      program should be used as described, or               need for the parties to seek discovery. In
                                               revenue per ton mile compares to the                     whether the availability of this new                  terms of limiting discovery, in preparing
                                               revenue per ton mile earned on similar                   process would be improved by some                     its answer, the defendant could reply
                                               movements would help identify                            alternative, such as by creating a paper              with information that is either disclosed
                                               movements with outlier rates. The                        form for submitting URCS Phase III                    by the complainant in its complaint or
                                               Board would complete this revenue per                    inputs to the Board.                                  opening evidence, or developed
                                               ton mile analysis following the receipt                     With regard to qualitative market                  independently by the defendant, but the
                                               of the defendant’s answer, in which the                  dominance, the complainant could also                 defendant would not be permitted to
                                               defendant would provide the actual                       be required to make certain required                  seek additional discovery from the
                                               miles traveled by the challenged traffic.                disclosures. For example, in a verified               complainant. Likewise, the complainant
                                               The Board invites parties to comment                     statement by a company official, the                  would not be permitted to serve any
                                               on these or other measures that would                    complainant could be required to                      discovery on the defendant in
                                               achieve the same objective of                            submit: (i) A statement that the issue                preparation of its evidentiary
                                               identifying movements in which rates                     traffic has not moved more than a de                  submissions.
                                               are significant outliers.                                minimis amount on alternative                            Additionally, as noted above, if the
                                                  Prior Litigation. Lastly, the Board is                transportation modes between the same                 Board were to include non-defendant
                                               considering a requirement that the                       origin and destination within a certain               traffic in the comparison group, the
                                               complainant must not have brought a                      number of years, and (ii) a statement                 Board is concerned that it would be
                                               case against the defendant under this                    whether the complainant has made any                  required to permit discovery from the
                                               methodology within a certain number of                   inquiries to, or received any responses               non-defendant carriers whose traffic is
                                               years. This limitation could correspond                  from, alternative transportation                      included in the comparison group. In
                                               to the maximum rate prescription                         providers for the issue traffic within a              that case, the Board could consider
                                               available under the new process, which                   certain number of years, including                    limits, such as five interrogatories
                                               is discussed in more detail in the                       copies of any such communications (if                 (including subparts) and five document
                                               section related to limits on relief below.               available).                                           requests (including subparts) per party
                                               By including this limitation, the Board                     The defendant could likewise be                    for each non-defendant carrier, and
                                               intends to prevent attempts to divide a                  required to provide initial disclosures to            could require that such discovery be
                                               large dispute into multiple smaller                      the complainant concurrent with filing                completed by a specific number of days.
                                               disputes.                                                its answer. Like the complainant, the                 Such third-party discovery would occur
                                                                                                        defendant could be required to produce                prior to the submission of each party’s
                                               2. Limits on Discovery                                                                                         evidence.
                                                                                                        its preliminary estimate of the variable
                                                  The Board also is considering limiting                                                                         We therefore seek comment on
                                                                                                        cost of the challenged movement, using
                                               discovery in order to reduce litigation                                                                        whether to mandate certain initial
                                                                                                        the unadjusted figures produced by the
                                               costs for very small disputes. In                                                                              disclosures and, if so, what those
                                                                                                        URCS Phase III costing program. To the
                                               particular, the Board could require that                                                                       disclosures should be, and any other
                                                                                                        extent that the defendant disagreed with
                                               parties file certain initial disclosures                                                                       ways to limit or eliminate party-
                                                                                                        any of the URCS inputs provided in the
                                               with their complaint and answer.                                                                               initiated discovery in a new,
                                                                                                        complaint, it could also be required to
                                               Concurrent with the filing of its                                                                              streamlined comparison group
                                                                                                        provide the inputs that it used. The
                                               complaint, the complainant could be                                                                            methodology for small disputes.
                                                                                                        defendant could also be required to
                                               required to disclose the nine standard                   provide to the Board and the                          3. Submission of Evidence
                                               inputs for the URCS Phase III costing                    complainant all documents that it relied                 The Board seeks comment on the
                                               program.16 The complainant could also                    upon to determine the inputs used in                  following procedures it is considering
                                                                                                        the URCS Phase III costing program.                   for use in a new simplified rate
                                                 15 A standard deviation is defined as a measure
                                                                                                        Finally, the defendant could be required              reasonableness methodology.
                                               of spread, dispersion, or variability of a group of
                                               numbers equal to the square root of the variance of      to disclose the actual route miles for the               Complaint. A party would initiate a
                                               that group of numbers. The variance of the group                                                               case by filing a complaint with the
                                               of numbers is computed by subtracting the mean,          per car); and (9) the type of movement (single-car,   Board. In its complaint, the complainant
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                                               or average, of all the numbers, squaring the             multi-car, or unit train). In the event that a
                                               resulting difference, and computing the mean of          complainant does not have access to the actual        would be required to: (i) Allege that the
                                               these squared differences.                               miles of the length of haul, a showing of highway     rates for certain traffic are unreasonable,
                                                 16 The nine inputs include: (1) The carrier; (2) the   miles between the origin and destination pair         (ii) allege that the defendant has both
                                               type of shipment (local, received-terminated, etc.);     would be sufficient for the purposes of the           quantitative market dominance (i.e., the
                                               (3) the one-way distance of the shipment; (4) the        complainant’s initial disclosures.
                                               type of car; (5) the number of cars; (6) the car           17 The current version of the URCS Phase III        issue traffic must move at rates above
                                               ownership (private or railroad); (7) commodity type      costing program is available at http://               180% R/VC) and qualitative market
                                               (by STCC); (8) the weight of the shipment (in tons       www.stb.dot.gov/stb/industry/urcs.html.               dominance (i.e., other modes of


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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                            61655

                                               transportation are not feasible); and (iii)             appropriateness of the default initial                rebuttal filings and final briefs. The
                                               submit the required initial disclosures,                comparison group. Specifically, in its                evidentiary hearing, which would take
                                               as described above in the section on                    reply evidence, the defendant would                   place before Board staff, would permit
                                               limits on discovery. The complaint and                  have the opportunity to reply to the                  the Board to further examine and
                                               initial disclosures would include                       complainant’s qualitative market                      develop the evidentiary record without
                                               information sufficient for the Board to                 dominance evidence. As noted above,                   requiring the parties to take on the
                                               determine that the issue traffic meets a                we are considering limits on discovery                higher litigation costs associated with
                                               preliminary screen, discussed in more                   as it relates to qualitative market                   formal written submissions. At the
                                               detail above. Additionally, with its                    dominance. For example, in formulating                evidentiary hearing, the complainant
                                               complaint, the complainant would                        its response to the complainant’s                     would have the opportunity to rebut the
                                               submit a signed confidentiality                         qualitative market dominance evidence,                defendant’s reply and respond to Board
                                               agreement. The agreement would be                       the defendant could be limited to                     staff’s questions. The defendant would
                                               standardized specifically for cases                     information disclosed by the                          also participate in the hearing and could
                                               brought under the new process and                       complainant with its complaint or                     respond to any questions from Board
                                               available for download on the Board’s                   opening evidence or developed                         staff. Board staff would have the
                                               Web site. By asking parties to submit the               independently by the defendant.                       opportunity to further explore the
                                               confidentiality agreement early in the                     The defendant would also have the                  parties’ arguments regarding the
                                               process, the Board could expedite the                   opportunity to respond to the                         appropriateness of the comparison
                                               distribution of the comparison group.                   complainant’s arguments regarding the                 group. A court reporter would be
                                               The Board invites comment on the                        appropriateness of any proposed                       present, and the transcript would
                                               appropriate content or other issues                     adjustments to the default initial                    become part of the record. The
                                               related to the filing of the complaint.                 comparison group. The defendant could                 evidentiary hearing could also take
                                                  Answer. In its answer, the defendant                 also propose its own adjustments to the               place by conference call. We invite
                                               would be required to admit or deny                      default initial comparison group and set              parties to comment on whether an
                                               each of the allegations in the complaint                forth ‘‘other relevant factors’’ evidence.            evidentiary hearing in lieu of rebuttal
                                               and submit its initial disclosures,                        Limitations on Opening and Reply                   filings and final briefs would help
                                               described above. The defendant would                    Evidence. In order to minimize the time               minimize the time or expense associated
                                               also file with its answer a signed copy                 and expense associated with litigating a              with litigating a case under a new rate
                                               of the standardized confidentiality                     small rate dispute, the Board is                      methodology for small disputes.
                                               agreement. The Board invites comment                    considering placing limitations on the
                                                                                                       opening and reply evidence, such as                   4. Board Determinations
                                               on the appropriate content or other
                                               issues related to the filing of the answer.             imposing word or page limits on the                      Under the procedures being
                                                  Opening Evidence. Unlike in Three-                   complainant’s opening evidence and the                considered as described in this decision,
                                               Benchmark cases, the Board envisions                    defendant’s reply evidence. The Board                 the Board would issue two decisions.
                                               sequential rather than simultaneous                     seeks comment on whether to include a                 First, following receipt of the
                                               filings of each party’s evidence. In its                word or page limitation and if so, what               defendant’s answer, the Board would
                                                                                                       the appropriate limitation would be.                  issue a preliminary decision in which
                                               opening evidence, the complainant
                                                                                                          We recognize that, even with a word                the Board would (i) resolve any URCS
                                               would address both qualitative market
                                                                                                       limit and limits on or exclusion of                   Phase III input disputes, (ii) determine
                                               dominance 18 and the appropriateness of
                                                                                                       discovery, allowing parties’                          whether the challenged traffic meets the
                                               the initial comparison group. With
                                                                                                       presentations to include ‘‘other relevant             preliminary screen based on the initial
                                               respect to qualitative market
                                                                                                       factors’’ evidence could substantially                comparison group, and (iii) make a final
                                               dominance, given the information                        increase the cost and time required to                determination on whether the defendant
                                               derived from the preliminary screen and                 prepare for submission of a case. For                 carrier has quantitative market
                                               the initial disclosure requirements, the                instance, we do not expect that the                   dominance over the movements at issue.
                                               complainant would be permitted to                       examples noted above—a density                        In the event that the issue traffic fails to
                                               present an abbreviated evidentiary                      adjustment or PTC adjustment—could                    meet the preliminary screen based on
                                               submission, but must explain why the                    be easily calculated by a small entity                the initial comparison group, the Board
                                               use of other transportation modes is not                without hiring outside consultants.                   would dismiss the complaint without
                                               feasible. The complainant could also                    Therefore, the Board invites comment                  prejudice. For challenged traffic that
                                               expand on its initial disclosures to the                on the advisability of allowing parties’              satisfies the preliminary screen, the
                                               extent necessary.                                       presentations to include ‘‘other relevant             Board would provide the initial
                                                  In its opening evidence, the                         factors’’ evidence. The Board also                    comparison group data pursuant to the
                                               complainant would also have the                         invites parties to comment on the                     standardized confidentiality agreements
                                               opportunity to state whether the initial,               appropriateness of sequential as                      previously filed by the parties.
                                               Board-determined comparison group is                    opposed to simultaneous filings of each                  Second, following the evidentiary
                                               appropriate. The complainant may                        party’s evidence, a reasonable time-                  hearing, the Board would issue a final
                                               propose adjustments to the default                      frame for considering qualitative market              decision addressing qualitative market
                                               initial comparison group and present                    dominance arguments, a reasonable                     dominance and rate reasonableness.
                                               ‘‘other relevant factors’’ evidence, such               word or page limit for opening and                    With regard to qualitative market
                                               as a density adjustment or PTC                          reply evidence, and any other issues                  dominance, the Board expects that its
                                               adjustment, among others.                                                                                     qualitative market dominance analysis
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                                                                                                       related to the filing of opening and reply
                                                  Reply Evidence. The defendant’s reply                evidence.                                             could be far more limited than in other
                                               would likewise address both qualitative                    Evidentiary Hearing. In an effort to               rate reasonableness methodologies given
                                               market dominance and the                                make the new process cost-effective for               the preliminary screen and initial
                                                 18 Under the procedures envisioned, quantitative
                                                                                                       small disputes, the Board is considering              disclosure requirements. In particular,
                                               market dominance would be decided by the Board
                                                                                                       offering an evidentiary hearing                       because the screen would help identify
                                               prior to the filing of opening evidence based on the    following the submission of opening                   movements that are more likely to be
                                               information provided in the complaint and answer.       and reply evidence, in lieu of formal                 captive, the Board envisions


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                                               61656              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               determining qualitative market                             However, the Board is considering                  those with lower R/VC ratios tend to
                                               dominance without as extensive an                       departing from Three-Benchmark                        enjoy somewhat more competition. In
                                               analysis as under the current                           precedent with respect to the revenue                 an individual proceeding, we would
                                               methodologies. The Board seeks                          need adjustment. As noted, in a Three-                consider applying a commodity-specific
                                               comments on specific qualitative market                 Benchmark case, each movement in the                  RSAM where the resulting figure
                                               dominance factors it could consider for                 final comparison group is adjusted by a               reflects this intuition. We believe such
                                               this type of new rate reasonableness                    revenue need adjustment factor. During                a mark-up could be done in a manner
                                               methodology.                                            the public comment period in Docket                   consistent with Ramsey pricing
                                                  If the Board finds that the defendant                No. EP 665 (Sub–No. 1), NGFA                          principles.21 If the Board were to adopt
                                               carrier has qualitative market                          proposed the creation of an alternative               such a modified revenue need
                                               dominance over the challenged traffic,                  revenue need adjustment factor—a                      adjustment factor, we also seek
                                               the Board would address each of the                     Revenue Adequacy Adjustment Factor                    comment on whether the reliance on a
                                               parties’ arguments regarding the                        (RAAF), which would be commodity-                     single year’s data would be
                                               appropriateness of the initial                          specific and would account for the                    inappropriate. Because profits are pro-
                                               comparison group and adjustments                        revenue adequacy status of each                       cyclical, we believe an approach that
                                               thereto. If the comparison group is                     railroad. NGFA argues that the RAAF is                considers a longer period of time may be
                                               adjusted, the Board would reevaluate                    superior to the Board’s current revenue               more appropriate. Finally, we also seek
                                               the challenged traffic to ensure that it                need adjustment factor because it takes               comment on whether application of a
                                               continues to satisfy the preliminary                    into consideration the amount of issue                modified revenue need adjustment
                                               screen based on the adjusted                            commodity traffic that is ostensibly                  factor, if adopted, should be limited to
                                               comparison group. In the event that the                 captive to the railroad and allocates the             a new methodology.
                                               issue traffic fails to meet the preliminary             burden of a revenue need adjustment
                                                                                                                                                             5. Limits on Relief
                                               screen based on the adjusted                            factor to those commodities that provide
                                               comparison group, the Board would                       the most revenue. (NGFA Opening, V.S.                    Because of the abbreviated nature of
                                               dismiss the proceeding with prejudice                   Crowley 12.) There may be merit to                    the process described in this decision,
                                               to the complainant challenging the same                 NGFA’s suggestion that our current                    the Board is considering limiting relief
                                               movement under the new method for a                     revenue need adjustment factor could be               available under this process. The ideas
                                               certain period, but without prejudice to                adapted to reflect the differences in                 presented in the ANPR describe a
                                               the complainant challenging the same                    rates and revenues carriers obtain from               process that would be significantly more
                                                                                                       various commodity groups. Thus, the                   streamlined than the process required to
                                               movement under one of the Board’s
                                                                                                       Board is considering whether it could                 bring a Three-Benchmark case. As such,
                                               other rate review processes.
                                                                                                       make the revenue need adjustment                      the relief available under this method
                                                  For the rate reasonableness
                                                                                                       factor commodity specific. However, if                would likewise need to be significantly
                                               determination, the Board would
                                                                                                       the Board were to adopt a commodity                   less than the relief available under the
                                               compute the maximum R/VC ratio for
                                                                                                       specific revenue need adjustment factor,              Three-Benchmark approach. The Board
                                               the issue traffic in a manner similar to
                                                                                                       we must ensure that we establish the                  invites parties to comment on the
                                               the Three-Benchmark analysis, although
                                                                                                       most appropriate formula.                             amount of relief that should be available
                                               with a potential modification.
                                                                                                          Therefore, we seek comment on                      and why that amount of relief would be
                                               Specifically, the Board would apply a
                                                                                                       whether the Board should modify its                   appropriate.
                                               revenue need adjustment—which is the
                                               ratio of RSAM ÷ R/VC>180 (each of                       revenue need adjustment factor to be
                                                                                                                                                                21 Ramsey pricing refers to the pricing principals
                                               which is a four-year average                            commodity-specific, and if so, how we
                                                                                                                                                             first advocated by the British mathematician and
                                               calculation) 19—to each movement in                     can effectively disaggregate the existing             economist Frank P. Ramsey, whose economic
                                               the final comparison group. The Board                   RSAM on a commodity-by-commodity                      pricing model was published in A Contribution to
                                                                                                       basis. Because some commodities have                  the Theory of Taxation, 37 Econ. J. 47–61 (Mar.
                                               would then calculate the mean and                                                                             1927). ‘‘Ramsey pricing’’ is a widely recognized
                                               standard deviation of the R/VC ratios for               a higher R/VC ratio than others, the                  method of differential pricing—that is, pricing in
                                               the adjusted comparison group                           adjusted revenue need adjustment factor               accordance with demand. Under Ramsey pricing,
                                               (weighted in accordance with the proper                 should allocate the revenue shortfall in              each price or rate contains a mark-up above the
                                                                                                       ways that reflect the different demand                long-run marginal cost of the product or service to
                                               sampling factors). If the challenged rate                                                                     cover a portion of the unattributable costs. The
                                               is above a reasonable confidence                        elasticities faced by different                       unattributable costs are allocated among the
                                               interval around the estimate of the mean                commodities. However, the weighted                    purchasers or users in inverse relation to their
                                               for the adjusted comparison group, it                   average of all commodities when totaled               demand elasticity. Thus, in a market where
                                                                                                       should equal the overall RSAM.                        shippers are very sensitive to price changes (a
                                               would be determined unreasonable and                                                                          highly elastic market), the mark-up would be
                                               the maximum lawful rate would be                           We believe that, on average,                       smaller than in a market where shippers are less
                                               prescribed at that upper boundary                       differences in demand elasticities are                price sensitive. The sum of the mark-ups equals the
                                               level.20                                                reflected in R/VC ratios—those with                   unattributable costs of an efficient producer. See
                                                                                                       higher R/VC ratios tend to enjoy less                 Guidelines, 1 I.C.C.2d at 526–527.
                                                                                                                                                                While Ramsey pricing represents the most
                                                  19 The jurisdictional threshold for rail rate        direct and indirect competition while                 efficient way to price above marginal cost, reliance
                                               regulation, R/VC>180, also serves as the floor for                                                            on pure Ramsey pricing clashes with the Long-
                                               regulatory relief because the Board cannot prescribe    of the mean of the comparison group. Using the        Cannon factors because it would not maximize the
                                               a rate below the jurisdictional threshold. See 49       mean (R/VCCOMP) and standard deviation (S) of the     revenue contribution from traffic with more-elastic
                                               U.S.C. 10707(d); W. Tex. Utils. Co. v. Burlington N.    adjusted comparison group, along with the number      demand (competitive traffic) before calling on
                                               R.R., 1 S.T.B. 638, 677–78 (1996), aff’d sub nom.,      of movements in the comparison group (n), the         traffic with less-elastic demand (captive traffic) to
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               Burlington N. R.R. v. STB, 114 F.3d 206, 210 (D.C.      upper boundary of a reasonable confidence interval    make a differentially higher revenue contribution.
                                               Cir. 1997).                                             around the estimate of the mean would be derived      For these reasons, the Board has not adopted pure
                                                  20 The confidence interval would be a function of    as follows: Upper Boundary = R/VCCOMP + tn¥1 ×        Ramsey pricing theory. Rather, in SAC cases, the
                                               the number of movements in the comparison group         (S ÷ (n¥1) 1⁄2). The Student’s t-distribution         Board allocates stand-alone costs in accordance
                                               and the standard deviation of those (potentially        parameter, tn¥1, will range from 3.078 to 1.28        with Ramsey pricing principles, by which the SARR
                                               adjusted) R/VC ratios. A small standard deviation       depending on the number of movements in the           (and therefore the carrier) is permitted to engage in
                                               or large number of observations would produce a         comparison group. The precise number can be           demand-based differential pricing to recover the
                                               tighter confidence interval, so that we could have      found in statistical tables for the Student’s t-      total SAC costs. Major Issues, EP 657 (Sub–No. 1),
                                               more ‘‘confidence’’ in the accuracy of our estimate     distributions.                                        slip op. at 12–13.



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                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                            61657

                                                  The limit on relief would apply to the               considerations presented in this                        Opening comments were received from:
                                               difference between the challenged rate                  decision.                                             • Alliance for Rail Competition (ARC)
                                               and the maximum lawful rate, whether                      It is ordered:                                        (joined by Montana Wheat and Barley
                                               in the form of reparations, a rate                        1. Comments are due by November                       Committee, National Farmers Union,
                                               prescription, or a combination of the                   14, 2016. Reply comments are due by                     Colorado Wheat Administrative
                                               two. Any rate prescription would                        December 19, 2016.                                      Committee, Idaho Barley Commission,
                                                                                                         2. A copy of this decision will be                    Idaho Grain Producers Association, Idaho
                                               automatically terminate once the
                                                                                                       served upon the Chief Counsel for                       Wheat Commission, Montana Farmers
                                               complainant has exhausted the relief                                                                            Union, North Dakota Corn Growers
                                               available. Thus, the actual length of the               Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S.
                                                                                                                                                               Association, North Dakota Farmers Union,
                                               prescription may be less than the                       Small Business Administration.                          South Dakota Corn Growers Association,
                                               prescription period if the shipper ships                  3. Notice of this decision will be                    South Dakota Farmers Union, Minnesota
                                               a large enough volume of traffic so that                published in the Federal Register.                      Corn Growers Association, Minnesota
                                               the relief is used up in a shorter time.                  4. This decision is effective on its                  Farmers Union, Wisconsin Farmers Union,
                                               The complainant would be barred from                    service date.                                           Nebraska Wheat Board, Oklahoma Wheat
                                               bringing another complaint against the                    Decided: August 30, 2016.                             Commission, Oregon Wheat Commission,
                                                                                                                                                               South Dakota Wheat Commission, Texas
                                               same rate for the remainder of the                        By the Board, Chairman Elliott, Vice
                                                                                                       Chairman Miller, and Commissioner                       Wheat Producers Board, Washington Grain
                                               prescription period.                                                                                            Commission, Wyoming Wheat Marketing
                                                                                                       Begeman. Vice Chairman Miller commented
                                                  Where the shipper exhausts all of its                                                                        Commission, USA Dry Pea and Lentil
                                                                                                       with a separate expression.
                                               relief before the end of the prescription                                                                       Council, and National Corn Growers
                                                                                                       Kenyatta Clay,
                                               period, the carrier’s rate making                                                                               Association)
                                               freedom would be restored with a                        Clearance Clerk.                                      • Association of American Railroads (AAR)
                                               regulatory safe harbor at the challenged                VICE CHAIRMAN MILLER,                                 • BNSF Railway Company (BNSF)
                                               rate for the remainder of the                           commenting:                                           • CSX Transportation, Inc. (CSXT)
                                                                                                                                                             • National Grain and Feed Association
                                               prescription period, with appropriate                      Today’s decision is an important step                (NGFA)
                                               adjustments for inflation using the rail                forward for the Board. Despite the                    • Norfolk Southern Railway Company (NSR)
                                               cost adjustment factor, adjusted for                    agency’s well-intentioned efforts over                • Union Pacific Railroad Company (UP)
                                               inflation and productivity (RCAF–A).                    the years to create simpler, timelier, and            • U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
                                               See R.R. Cost Recovery Procedures—                      less costly rate dispute processes, I                   Reply comments were received from:
                                               Productivity Adjustment, 5 I.C.C.2d 434                 believe that they are still inaccessible to           • AAR
                                               (1989), aff’d sub nom. Edison Elec. Inst.               shippers with small disputes, denying                 • Agribusiness Association of Iowa,
                                               v. ICC, 969 F.2d 1221 (D.C. Cir. 1992).                 them the opportunity to obtain rate                     Agribusiness Council of Indiana,
                                               If, however, a carrier establishes a new                relief. This decision focuses on filling                Agricultural Retailers Association,
                                               common carrier rate once the rate                       that gap in our processes.                              American Bakers Association, American
                                               prescription expires, and the new rate                                                                          Farm Bureau Federation, American Feed
                                                                                                          While I applaud the Board for today’s
                                               exceeds the inflation-adjusted                                                                                  Industry Association, American Soybean
                                                                                                       action, we still have work to do. Even                  Association, California Grain and Feed
                                               challenged rate, the shipper may bring                  if the Board is able to develop an                      Association, Corn Refiners Association,
                                               a new complaint against the newly                       abbreviated rate case methodology that                  Institute of Shortening and Edible Oils,
                                               established common carrier rate.                        can be used by shippers with small rate                 Kansas Cooperative Council, Kansas Grain
                                               The Regulatory Flexibility Act                          disputes, it will not resolve the concerns              and Feed Association, Grain and Feed
                                                                                                       that have been raised about the SAC                     Association of Illinois, Michigan
                                                 Because this ANPR does not impose                     test. The methodology here is only                      Agribusiness Association, Michigan Bean
                                               or propose any requirements, and                        intended to address small rate disputes                 Shippers Association, Minnesota Grain
                                               instead seeks comments and suggestions                                                                          And Feed Association, Missouri
                                                                                                       for shippers that meet certain criteria.
                                               for the Board to consider in possibly                                                                           Agribusiness Association, Montana Grain
                                                                                                       As such, the Board still needs to                       Elevators Association, National Council of
                                               developing a subsequent proposed rule,                  consider alternatives to the SAC test for               Farmer Cooperatives, National Farmers
                                               the requirements of the Regulatory                      shippers with larger disputes. A                        Union, National Oilseed Processors
                                               Flexibility Act of 1980, 5 U.S.C. 601–                  reasonable starting point to address this               Association, Nebraska Grain and Feed
                                               612 (RFA) do not apply to this action.                  issue would be for the Board to publicly                Association, North American Millers’
                                               Nevertheless, as part of any comments                   release the report prepared by our                      Association, North Dakota Grain Dealers
                                               submitted in response to this ANPR,                     outside consultant on SAC alternatives                  Association, Northeast Agribusiness and
                                               parties may include comments or                         and conduct a hearing to obtain                         Feed Alliance, Ohio Agribusiness
                                               information that could help the Board                                                                           Association, Oklahoma Grain and Feed
                                                                                                       feedback and reaction from our
                                               assess the potential impact of a                                                                                Association, Pacific Northwest Grain and
                                                                                                       stakeholders on the report’s                            Feed Association, Pet Food Institute, South
                                               subsequent regulatory action on small                   conclusions.22 Hopefully the report will                Dakota Grain and Feed Association, Texas
                                               entities pursuant to the RFA.                           be issued soon and stakeholders given                   Grain and Feed Association, USA Rice
                                               Conclusion                                              an opportunity to comment.                              Federation, and Wisconsin Agribusiness
                                                                                                         Note: The following appendix will not                 Association (collectively, AAI)
                                                 The Board seeks public input on how                   appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.            • ARC (joined by the same parties that joined
                                               best to establish a new rate                                                                                    its opening comment as well as the
                                               reasonableness process for use in small                 Appendix A—Participants in Docket                       Nebraska Corn Growers Association)
                                               disputes, available to shippers of all                                                                        • BNSF
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                                                                       No. EP 665 (Sub–No. 1)                                • CSXT
                                               commodities, to provide shippers with
                                                                                                         The Board received written comment and              • Kansas City Southern Railway Company
                                               small disputes meaningful access to
                                                                                                       testimony from the following parties in                 (KCS)
                                               regulatory relief in those cases where                                                                        • NGFA
                                                                                                       Docket No. EP 665 (Sub–No. 1).
                                               even a Three-Benchmark case is too                                                                            • NSR
                                               costly, given the value of the case. The                  22 Sunbelt Chlor Alkali P’ship v. Norfolk S. Ry.,   • Jay L. Schollmeyer for and on behalf of
                                               Board welcomes comments from                            NOR 42130, slip op. 44 (STB served June 30, 2016)       SMART–TD General Committee of
                                               interested parties on the issues and                    (Miller concurrence).                                   Adjustment (SMART–TD)



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                                               61658                Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 173 / Wednesday, September 7, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               • Texas Trading and Transportation                        regulations managing human-caused                     comment period and described below in
                                                  Services, LLC, dba TTMS Group, together                mortality of grizzly bears before we                  SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION at http://
                                                  with Montana Grain Growers Association                 would proceed with a final rule.                      www.regulations.gov under Docket No.
                                                  (TTMS Group)                                           Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho recently                  FWS–R6–ES–2016–0042, from the
                                               • UP
                                               • USDA
                                                                                                         finalized such mechanisms. We are also                Service’s Mountain Prairie Region
                                                                                                         announcing the receipt of five                        Grizzly Bear Web site https://
                                                  Testimony at the June 10, 2015 hearing was
                                               received from:
                                                                                                         independent peer reviews of the                       www.fws.gov/mountain-prairie/es/
                                                                                                         proposed rule. We are reopening the                   grizzlybear.php, or from the office listed
                                               • AAR
                                               • ARC
                                                                                                         comment period for the proposed rule to               in FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
                                               • BNSF                                                    allow all interested parties an additional            FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                               • Canadian National Railway Company (CN)                  opportunity to comment on the                         Wayne Kasworm, Acting Grizzly Bear
                                               • Canadian Pacific Railway Company (CP)                   proposed rule in light of these                       Recovery Coordinator, U.S. Fish and
                                               • CSXT                                                    documents. If you submitted comments                  Wildlife Service, Grizzly Bear Recovery
                                               • Michigan Agri-Business Association 23                   previously, you do not need to resubmit               Office, University Hall, Room #309,
                                               • Montana Department of Agriculture                       them because we have already                          University of Montana, Missoula, MT
                                               • NGFA                                                    incorporated them into the public
                                               • NSR
                                                                                                                                                               59812; telephone 406–243–4903. For
                                                                                                         record and will fully consider them in                Tribal inquiries, contact Ivy Allen,
                                               • SMART–TD
                                               • Transportation Research Board of the
                                                                                                         preparing the final rule.                             Native American Liaison, U.S. Fish and
                                                  National Academy of Sciences                           DATES: We will consider comments                      Wildlife Service; telephone: 303–236–
                                               • TTMS Group                                              received or postmarked on or before                   4575. Persons who use a
                                               • UP                                                      October 7, 2016. Comments submitted                   telecommunications device for the deaf
                                               • USDA                                                    electronically using the Federal                      (TDD) may call the Federal Information
                                                  Supplemental comments were received                    eRulemaking Portal (see ADDRESSES,                    Relay Service (FIRS) at 800–877–8339.
                                               from:                                                     below) must be received by 11:59 p.m.                 SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                               • AAR                                                     Eastern Time on the closing date.
                                               • ARC (joined by the same parties that joined                                                                   Public Comments
                                                                                                         ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
                                                  its opening comment)                                                                                            We will accept written comments and
                                                                                                         by one of the following methods:
                                               • NSR                                                                                                           information during this reopened
                                                                                                            (1) Electronically: Go to the Federal
                                               [FR Doc. 2016–21305 Filed 9–6–16; 8:45 am]                eRulemaking Portal: http://                           comment period on the March 11, 2016,
                                               BILLING CODE 4915–01–P                                    www.regulations.gov. In the search box,               proposed rule (81 FR 13174) to remove
                                                                                                         enter the docket number for the                       the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
                                                                                                         proposed rule, which is FWS–R6–ES–                    (GYE) population of grizzly bears (Ursus
                                               DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR                                2016–0042. Then click on the Search                   arctos horribilis) from the List of
                                                                                                         button. On the resulting page, you may                Endangered and Threatened Wildlife.
                                               Fish and Wildlife Service                                 submit a comment by clicking on                       We specifically seek comments on the
                                                                                                         ‘‘Comment Now!’’ Please ensure you                    proposed rule in light of five peer
                                               50 CFR Part 17                                            have found the correct document before                reviews and recently finalized State
                                               [Docket No. FWS–R6–ES–2016–0042;                          submitting your comments. If your                     regulatory mechanisms. The State
                                               FXES11130900000–167–FF09E42000]                           comments will fit in the provided                     regulations describe Wyoming,
                                                                                                         comment box, please use that feature of               Montana, and Idaho’s approach to
                                               RIN 1018–BA41                                             http://www.regulations.gov, as it is most             managing human-caused mortality
                                                                                                         compatible with our comment review                    should we delist the grizzly bear in the
                                               Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
                                                                                                         procedures. If you attach your                        GYE. The State regulatory mechanisms
                                               and Plants; Removing the Greater
                                                                                                         comments as a separate document, our                  include Montana’s Grizzly Bear Hunting
                                               Yellowstone Ecosystem Population of
                                                                                                         preferred file format is Microsoft Word.              Regulations, Chapter 67 of the Wyoming
                                               Grizzly Bears From the Federal List of
                                                                                                         If you attach multiple comments (such                 Game and Fish Commission regulations,
                                               Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
                                                                                                         as form letters or a petition), our                   Idaho’s Fish and Game Commission
                                               AGENCY:   Fish and Wildlife Service,                      preferred format is a spreadsheet in                  Proclamation, and the Memorandum of
                                               Interior.                                                 Microsoft Excel.                                      Agreement Regarding the Management
                                               ACTION: Proposed rule; reopening of                          (2) By hard copy: Submit by U.S. mail              and Allocation of Discretionary
                                               comment period; availability of peer                      or hand-delivery to: Public Comments                  Mortality of Grizzly Bears in the Greater
                                               review and supplementary documents.                       Processing, Attn: FWS–R6–ES–2016–                     Yellowstone Ecosystem (Tri-State
                                                                                                         0042; Division of Policy, Performance,                MOA). Copies of Grizzly Bear Montana
                                               SUMMARY:   We, the U.S. Fish and                          and Management Programs; U.S. Fish                    Hunting Regulations, Chapter 67 of the
                                               Wildlife Service (Service), announce the                  and Wildlife Service; MS: BPHC, 5275                  Wyoming Game and Fish Commission
                                               reopening of the public comment period                    Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041–                regulations, Idaho’s Fish and Game
                                               on our March 11, 2016, proposed rule to                   3803.                                                 Commission Proclamation, and the Tri-
                                               revise the List of Endangered and                            We request that you send comments                  State MOA are available on the Internet
                                               Threatened Wildlife, under the                            only by the methods described above.                  at http://www.regulations.gov under
                                               authority of the Endangered Species                       We will post all comments on http://                  Docket No. FWS–R6–ES–2016–0042 or
                                                                                                                                                               at https://www.fws.gov/mountain-
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               Act, by removing the Greater                              www.regulations.gov. This generally
                                               Yellowstone Ecosystem population of                       means that we will post any personal                  prairie/es/grizzlybear.php; or upon
                                               grizzly bears (Ursus arctos horribilis). In               information you provide us (see Public                request from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
                                               our proposed rule, we emphasized that                     Comments below in SUPPLEMENTARY                       Service, Grizzly Bear Recovery Office
                                               the governments of Montana, Wyoming,                      INFORMATION for more information).                    (see FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT).
                                               and Idaho needed to promulgate                               Document availability: You may                     We will consider information and
                                                                                                         obtain the information and documents                  recommendations from all interested
                                                 23 Written   testimony only.                            associated with this reopened public                  parties.


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Document Created: 2016-09-07 11:50:51
Document Modified: 2016-09-07 11:50:51
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionAdvance notice of proposed rulemaking.
DatesComments are due by November 14, 2016. Reply comments are due by December 19, 2016.
ContactAllison Davis at (202) 245-0378. Assistance for the hearing impaired is available through the Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) at (800) 877-8339.
FR Citation81 FR 61647 

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