83_FR_47947 83 FR 47764 - Lease and Interchange of Vehicles; Motor Carriers of Passengers

83 FR 47764 - Lease and Interchange of Vehicles; Motor Carriers of Passengers

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 183 (September 20, 2018)

Page Range47764-47788
FR Document2018-20162

FMCSA proposes to amend its May 27, 2015, Lease and Interchange of Vehicles; Motor Carriers of Passengers final rule in response to petitions for rulemaking and extend the January 1, 2019, compliance date to January 1, 2021. Today's proposal would narrow the applicability of the rule, by excluding from the definition of lease and the associated regulatory requirements, certain contracts and other agreements between motor carriers of passengers that have active passenger carrier operating authority registrations with FMCSA. For passenger carriers that would remain subject to the leasing and interchange requirements, FMCSA proposes to return the bus marking requirement to its July 1, 2015, state with slight modifications to add references to leased vehicles; revise the delayed writing of a lease during certain emergencies; and remove the 24-hour lease notification requirement. This proposal would be a deregulatory action as defined by Executive Order 13771, ``Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs.''

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 183 (Thursday, September 20, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 183 (Thursday, September 20, 2018)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 47764-47788]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-20162]



[[Page 47763]]

Vol. 83

Thursday,

No. 183

September 20, 2018

Part III





Department of Transportation





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 Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration





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49 CFR Part 390





 Lease and Interchange of Vehicles; Motor Carriers of Passengers; 
Proposed Rule

Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / 
Proposed Rules

[[Page 47764]]


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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration

49 CFR Part 390

[Docket No. FMCSA-2012-0103]
RIN 2126-AC07


Lease and Interchange of Vehicles; Motor Carriers of Passengers

AGENCY: Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), DOT.

ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM); request for comments.

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SUMMARY: FMCSA proposes to amend its May 27, 2015, Lease and 
Interchange of Vehicles; Motor Carriers of Passengers final rule in 
response to petitions for rulemaking and extend the January 1, 2019, 
compliance date to January 1, 2021. Today's proposal would narrow the 
applicability of the rule, by excluding from the definition of lease 
and the associated regulatory requirements, certain contracts and other 
agreements between motor carriers of passengers that have active 
passenger carrier operating authority registrations with FMCSA. For 
passenger carriers that would remain subject to the leasing and 
interchange requirements, FMCSA proposes to return the bus marking 
requirement to its July 1, 2015, state with slight modifications to add 
references to leased vehicles; revise the delayed writing of a lease 
during certain emergencies; and remove the 24-hour lease notification 
requirement. This proposal would be a deregulatory action as defined by 
Executive Order 13771, ``Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory 
Costs.''

DATES: Comments must be received by November 19, 2018.

ADDRESSES: You may submit comments identified by Docket Number FMCSA-
2012-0103 using any of the following methods:
     Website: http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the 
instructions for submitting comments on the Federal electronic docket 
site.
     Fax: 1-202-493-2251.
     Mail: Docket Services, U.S. Department of Transportation, 
Room W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590-0001.
     Hand Delivery: Ground Floor, Room W12-140, DOT Building, 
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. 
Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
    To avoid duplication, please use only one of these four methods. 
See the ``Public Participation and Request for Comments'' portion of 
the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below for instructions on 
submitting comments.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Loretta Bitner, (202) 366-2400, 
[email protected], Office of Enforcement and Compliance. FMCSA 
office hours are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except 
Federal holidays.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) is 
organized as follows:

I. Public Participation and Request for Comments
    A. Submitting Comments
    B. Viewing Comments and Documents
    C. Privacy Act
    D. Waiver of Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
    E. Comments on the Collection of Information
II. Acronyms and Abbreviations
III. Executive Summary
    A. Purpose of the Proposed Rule
    B. Summary of the Major Provisions
    C. Costs and Benefits
IV. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
V. Rulemaking History and Purpose
VI. Petitions for Reconsideration and Subsequent Events
    A. History of Petitions
    B. Discussion of Comments and Responses to the June 16, 2017 
Proposal in Response to Petitions for Reconsideration
VII. General Discussion of the Proposed Rule
    A. Discussion of the Proposed Rule
    B. Examples of Proposed Rule Implementation
    C. Alternatives
VIII. International Impacts
IX. Section-by-Section Description of the Proposed Rule
    A. Section 390.5 (Suspended) and 390.5T Definitions
    B. Section 390.21 (Suspended) and 390.21T Marking of Self-
Propelled CMVs and Intermodal Equipment
    C. Part 390, Subpart F Lease and Interchange of Passenger-
Carrying Commercial Motor Vehicles
    D. Part 390, Subpart G Lease and Interchange of Passenger-
Carrying Commercial Motor Vehicles
    E. Section 390.401 Applicability
    F. Section 390.403 Lease and Interchange Requirements
X. Regulatory Analyses
    A. E.O. 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review), E.O. 13563 
(Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review), and DOT Regulatory 
Policies and Procedures
    B. E.O. 13771 (Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory 
Costs)
    C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    D. Assistance for Small Entities
    E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
    F. Paperwork Reduction Act
    G. E.O. 13132 (Federalism)
    H. E.O. 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
    I. E.O. 13045 (Protection of Children)
    J. E.O. 12630 (Taking of Private Property)
    K. Privacy
    L. E.O. 12372 (Intergovernmental Review)
    M. E.O. 13211 (Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use)
    N. E.O. 13783 (Promoting Energy Independence and Economic 
Growth)
    O. E.O. 13175 (Indian Tribal Governments)
    P. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (Technical 
Standards)
    Q. Environment (NEPA, CAA, E.O. 12898 Environmental Justice)

I. Public Participation and Request for Comments

    FMCSA encourages you to participate in this rulemaking by 
submitting comments, reply comments, and related materials. All 
comments received will be posted without change to http://www.regulations.gov and will include any personal information you 
provide.

A. Submitting Comments

    If you submit a comment, please include the docket number for this 
NPRM (Docket No. FMCSA-2012-0103), indicate the specific section of 
this document to which each comment applies, and provide a reason for 
each recommendation. You may submit your comments and material online 
or by fax, mail, or hand delivery, but please use only one of these 
means. FMCSA recommends that you include your name and a mailing 
address, an email address, or a phone number in the body of your 
document so that the Agency can contact you if there are questions 
regarding your submission.
    To submit your comment online, go to http://www.regulations.gov, 
put the docket number, FMCSA-2012-0103, in the keyword box, and click 
``Search.'' When the new screen appears, click on the ``Comment Now!'' 
button and type your comment into the text box on the following screen. 
Choose whether you are submitting your comment as an individual or on 
behalf of a third party and then submit.
    If you submit your comments by mail or hand delivery, submit them 
in an unbound format, no larger than 8\1/2\ by 11 inches, suitable for 
copying and electronic filing. If you submit comments by mail and would 
like to know that they reached the facility, please enclose a stamped, 
self-addressed postcard or envelope.
    FMCSA will consider all comments and material received during the 
comment period and may change this proposed rule based on your 
comments. FMCSA may issue a final rule at any time after the close of 
the comment period.

B. Viewing Comments and Documents

    To view comments, as well as any documents mentioned in this 
preamble

[[Page 47765]]

as being available in the docket, go to http://www.regulations.gov. 
Insert the docket number, FMCSA-2012-0103, in the keyword box, and 
click ``Search.'' Next, click the ``Open Docket Folder'' button and 
choose the document to review. If you do not have access to the 
internet, you may view the docket online by visiting the Docket 
Management Facility in Room W12-140 on the ground floor of the DOT West 
Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590, between 9 
a.m. and 5 p.m., e.t., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.

C. Privacy Act

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

D. Waiver of Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking

    Under 49 U.S.C. 31136(g)(1), as amended by section 5202 of the 
Fixing America's Surface Transportation (FAST) Act, Public Law 114-94, 
for any regulatory proposal likely to lead to the publication of a 
major rule,. FMCSA is required to publish an advance notice of proposed 
rulemaking (ANPRM), unless the Agency finds good cause pursuant to sec. 
31136(g)(3) that an ANPRM is impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary to 
the public interest. For purposes of compliance with the FAST Act, the 
Agency has adopted the Congressional Review Act's definition of ``major 
rule'' (5 U.S.C. 804(2)), namely a rule that has an annual effect on 
the economy of $100 million or more. This final rule is not a major 
rule by that standard and 49 U.S.C. 31136(g)(1) therefore does not 
apply. Even if it were a major rule, however, FMCSA would find an ANPRM 
to be unnecessary.
    On August 31, 2016, FMCSA published a notice of intent (2016 NOI) 
announcing that four potential changes to the final rule were under 
consideration and its plan to issue a rulemaking notice to reconsider 
those four areas of concern (81 FR 59951). The four changes are 
discussed in more detail later in this proposal.
    FMCSA held a public roundtable on October 31, 2016 to discuss the 
four issues outlined in the 2016 NOI. The stakeholders represented 
spoke about those issues and provided information on how to address 
them. All public comments were placed in the docket of this rulemaking.
    On June 16, 2017, FMCSA published a proposal (2017 proposal) in the 
Federal Register (82 FR 27768). The 2017 proposal provided information 
about FMCSA's planned revisions to the 2015 final rule and requested 
public comment on the proposed revisions. The 2017 proposal and 
comments received are discussed in more detail below.
    The Agency's intent to issue this NPRM has been announced 
repeatedly, with opportunities for stakeholder comment available at 
each stage. Therefore, FMCSA believes a further opportunity to provide 
comments before issuance of this NPRM would be unnecessary.

E. Comments on the Collection of Information

    If you have comments on the collection of information discussed in 
this NPRM, you must also send those comments to the Office of 
Information and Regulatory Affairs at Office of Management and Budget 
(OMB). To ensure that your comments are received on time, the preferred 
methods of submission are by email to [email protected] 
(include docket number ``FMCSA-2012-0103'' and ``Attention: Desk 
Officer for FMCSA, DOT'' in the subject line of the email) or fax at 
202 395 6566. An alternative, though slower, method is by U.S. Mail to 
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management 
and Budget, 725 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20503, ATTN: Desk 
Officer, FMCSA, DOT.

II. Acronyms and Abbreviations

------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1935 Act..........................  Motor Carrier Act of 1935.
1984 Act..........................  Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984.
ABA...............................  American Bus Association.
BLS...............................  Bureau of Labor Statistics.
CMV...............................  Commercial Motor Vehicle.
DOT...............................  United States Department of
                                     Transportation.
E.O...............................  Executive Order.
FMCSA.............................  Federal Motor Carrier Safety
                                     Administration.
FMCSRs............................  Federal Motor Carrier Safety
                                     Regulations, 49 CFR parts 350
                                     through 399.
FR................................  Federal Register.
L&I...............................  Licensing and Insurance.
MAP-21............................  Moving Ahead for Progress in the
                                     21st Century Act.
MCMIS.............................  Motor Carrier Management Information
                                     System.
NOI...............................  Notice of Intent.
NPRM..............................  Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
NTSB..............................  National Transportation Safety
                                     Board.
OMB...............................  Office of Management and Budget.
PRA...............................  Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
RFA...............................  Regulatory Flexibility Act.
SBA...............................  Small Business Administration.
SOC...............................  Standard Occupational
                                     Classification.
STB...............................  Surface Transportation Board.
UMA...............................  United Motorcoach Association.
VIN...............................  Vehicle Identification Number.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. Executive Summary

A. Purpose of the Proposed Rule

    Based on a review of the petitions for reconsideration and 
stakeholder input, FMCSA proposes to revise its regulations governing 
the lease and interchange of passenger-carrying commercial motor 
vehicles (CMVs). This proposed rule would exclude motor carriers that 
operate CMVs and have active operating authority registration with 
FMCSA to transport passengers--hereafter called ``authorized carriers'' 
or ``carriers with operating authority'' for the sake of simplicity--
from the lease and interchange requirements. For leases between 
authorized carriers, because FMCSA believes their identity can be 
determined by other means, the assignment of responsibility for 
regulatory compliance would require no additional regulatory 
obligations.
    FMCSA also proposes to extend the compliance date for the 2015 
final rule to January 1, 2021, to give the Agency sufficient time to 
complete this rulemaking.

B. Summary of the Major Provisions

    The proposed rule would (1) revise the definition of lease to 
exclude authorized carriers that grant the use of their vehicles to 
each other; (2) retain the provisions adopted in 2015 to identify the 
party responsible for compliance with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety 
Regulations (FMCSRs) when at least one of the passenger carriers 
involved in the lease or interchange of CMVs is not an authorized 
carrier; (3) ensure that a lessor subject to the proposed rule, i.e., 
the entity providing the vehicle, surrenders control of the CMV for the 
full term of the lease or temporary exchange of CMVs; (4) remove the 
May 27, 2015 final rule's marking requirements and return the marking 
rule in 49 CFR 390.21(e), with slight modifications; (5) revise the 
provision allowing a delay in the completion of a lease during certain 
emergencies; and (6) remove the requirement that motor carriers that 
are hired to provide charter transportation and lease a CMV from 
another carrier notify the tour operator or group of passengers about 
the lease and the lessor. FMCSA requests comments to identify other 
methods to achieve the safety objectives of this rulemaking.

C. Costs and Benefits

    The Agency estimates that annually 8,215 motor carriers of 
passengers and

[[Page 47766]]

537,134 passenger-carrying CMV trips would experience regulatory relief 
under the proposed rule. The Agency estimates that approximately 75 
percent of these passenger carriers and CMV trips would experience full 
regulatory relief and would no longer be subject to the lease and 
interchange requirements of the 2015 final rule. The remaining 25 
percent of these passenger carriers and CMV trips would experience 
partial regulatory relief and remain subject to reduced lease and 
interchange requirements, compared to those of the 2015 final rule.
    As presented in Table 1, the Agency estimates that the proposed 
rule would result in a cost savings of $75.1 million on an undiscounted 
basis, $66.5 million discounted at 3 percent, and $57.5 million 
discounted at 7 percent over the 10-year analysis period. Expressed on 
an annualized basis, this equates to a 10-year cost savings of $7.8 
million at a 3 percent discount rate and $8.2 million at a 7 percent 
discount rate.

                                                 Table 1--Summary of the Total Cost of the Proposed Rule
                                                                 [In thousands of 2016$]
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                                                                   Passenger-carrying                Undiscounted                      Discounted
                                               Passenger carriers       CMV trips     ------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  experiencing        experiencing                      Charter
                     Year                       regulatory relief   regulatory relief    Lease and       party     Total costs   Discounted   Discounted
                                               under the proposed  under the proposed   interchange  notification     \(a)\        at 3%        at 7%
                                                      rule                rule          costs \(b)\      costs
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2019.........................................               7,906             516,952     ($25,298)      ($1,168)    ($26,467)    ($25,697)    ($24,736)
2020.........................................               7,973             521,337       (4,042)       (1,178)      (5,221)      (4,921)      (4,560)
2021.........................................               8,041             525,758       (4,077)       (1,188)      (5,265)      (4,819)      (4,298)
2022.........................................               8,109             530,217       (4,111)       (1,198)      (5,310)      (4,718)      (4,051)
2023.........................................               8,178             534,714       (4,146)       (1,208)      (5,355)      (4,619)      (3,818)
2024.........................................               8,247             539,249       (4,182)       (1,219)      (5,401)      (4,523)      (3,599)
2025.........................................               8,317             543,822       (4,217)       (1,229)      (5,446)      (4,428)      (3,392)
2026.........................................               8,387             548,434       (4,252)       (1,239)      (5,493)      (4,336)      (3,197)
2027.........................................               8,459             553,085       (4,289)       (1,250)      (5,539)      (4,245)      (3,013)
2028.........................................               8,530             557,776       (4,326)       (1,261)      (5,586)      (4,157)      (2,840)
                                              ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total....................................  ..................  ..................      (62,946)      (12,139)     (75,084)     (66,463)     (57,504)
Annualized...................................  ..................  ..................  ............  ............      (7,508)      (7,792)      (8,187)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
\(a)\ Total cost values may not equal the sum of the components due to rounding. (The totals shown in this column are the rounded sum of unrounded
  components.)
\(b)\ Values shown in parentheses are negative values (i.e., less than zero) and represent a decrease in cost or a cost savings.

    The regulatory evaluation for the 2015 final rule addressed the 
potential safety benefits of lease and interchange requirements for 
motor carriers of passengers.\1\ There were insufficient data and 
empirical evidence to demonstrate a measurable quantitative 
relationship between lease and interchange requirements for passenger-
carrying CMVs and improved safety outcomes such as reduced frequency 
and/or severity of crashes or reduced frequency of violations. 
Therefore, FMCSA performed a threshold analysis, also referred to as a 
break-even analysis, estimating the reduction in crashes that would 
need to occur as a consequence of the 2015 final rule in order for the 
benefits of the rule to exactly offset the estimated costs of the rule.
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    \1\ U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT), Federal Motor 
Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). ``Final Rule, Lease and 
Interchange of Vehicles; Motor Carriers of Passengers. Regulatory 
Evaluation.'' (Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor Carriers of 
Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation). May 2015. 
Available at: https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?documentId=FMCSA-2012-0103-0022&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf (accessed March 9, 2018).
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    In considering the potential impact to safety benefits from today's 
proposed rule, the Agency notes that there remains insufficient data 
and empirical evidence to clearly demonstrate a measurable quantitative 
relationship between lease and interchange requirements for passenger-
carrying CMVs and improved safety outcomes. Lease and interchange 
requirements for motor carriers of passengers improve the ability of 
the Agency and our State partners to attribute the inspection, 
compliance, enforcement, and safety data to the correct motor carrier 
and driver, allowing FMCSA and our State partners to more accurately 
identify unsafe carriers and initiate appropriate interventions. FMCSA 
believes that the lease and interchange requirements of the proposed 
rule are a less costly and burdensome regulatory approach than the 
requirements of the 2015 final rule, yet still enable safety officials 
and the general public to sufficiently identify the passenger carrier 
responsible for safety. Therefore, the Agency does not anticipate any 
change to safety benefits as a result of the proposed rule.

IV. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking

    This rule is based on the authority of the Motor Carrier Act of 
1935 (1935 Act) and the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984 (1984 Act), as 
amended.
    The 1935 Act authorizes DOT to ``prescribe requirements for--(1) 
qualifications and maximum hours of service of employees of, and safety 
of operation and equipment of, a motor carrier; and (2) qualifications 
and maximum hours of service of employees of, and standards of 
equipment of, a motor private carrier, when needed to promote safety of 
operation'' (49 U.S.C. 31502(b)).\2\
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    \2\ See https://www.thefederalregister.org/fdsys/pkg/USCODE-2015-title49/pdf/USCODE-2015-title49-subtitleVI-partB-chap315.pdf.
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    The 1984 Act confers on DOT authority to regulate drivers, motor 
carriers, and vehicle equipment. ``At a minimum, the regulations shall 
ensure that--(1) commercial motor vehicles are maintained, equipped, 
loaded, and operated safely; (2) the responsibilities imposed on 
operators of commercial motor vehicles do not impair their ability to 
operate the vehicles safely; (3) the physical condition of operators of 
commercial motor vehicles is adequate to enable them to operate the 
vehicles safely . . .; and (4) the operation of commercial motor 
vehicles does not have a deleterious effect on the physical condition 
of the operators'' (49 U.S.C. 31136(a)). Section 32911 of the Moving 
Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21) [Pub. L. 112-141, 
126 Stat. 405, 818, July 6, 2012] enacted a fifth requirement, i.e., to 
ensure that ``(5) an operator of a commercial motor vehicle is not 
coerced by a motor carrier, shipper, receiver, or transportation 
intermediary to operate a commercial motor vehicle in violation of a 
regulation promulgated under this

[[Page 47767]]

section, or chapter 51 or chapter 313 of this title'' [49 U.S.C. 
31136(a)(5)].\3\
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    \3\ See https://www.thefederalregister.org/fdsys/pkg/USCODE-2015-title49/pdf/USCODE-2015-title49-subtitleVI-partB-chap311-subchapIII-sec31136.pdf.
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    The 1984 Act also includes more general authority to ``(8) 
prescribe recordkeeping . . . requirements; . . . and (10) perform 
other acts the Secretary considers appropriate'' (49 U.S.C. 
31133(a)).\4\
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    \4\ See https://www.thefederalregister.org/fdsys/pkg/USCODE-2015-title49/pdf/USCODE-2015-title49-subtitleVI-partB-chap311-subchapIII-sec31133.pdf.
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    This rule imposes legal and recordkeeping requirements consistent 
with the 1935 and 1984 Acts on certain for-hire and private passenger 
carriers that operate CMVs, to enable safety officials and the general 
public to identify the passenger carrier responsible for safety. 
Currently, passenger-carrying CMVs and drivers are frequently rented, 
loaned, leased, interchanged, assigned, and reassigned with few records 
and little formality, thus obscuring the operational safety 
responsibility of many industry participants. Because this rule has 
only indirect and minimal application to drivers of passenger-carrying 
CMVs--at most, their employers might require them to pick up a lease 
document and place it on the vehicle, though that task could also be 
assigned to other employees--FMCSA believes that coercion of drivers to 
violate the rule will not occur.
    Before prescribing any regulations, FMCSA must also consider their 
``costs and benefits'' (49 U.S.C. 31136(c)(2)(A) and 31502(d)). Those 
factors are also discussed in this proposed rule.

V. Rulemaking History and Purpose

    On September 20, 2013, FMCSA published an NPRM that discussed the 
National Transportation Safety Board's (NTSB) recommendation that FMCSA 
regulate the leasing of passenger carriers in much the same way as it 
regulates the leasing of for-hire property carriers (78 FR 57822). This 
NTSB recommendation resulted from several investigations of bus crashes 
that occurred in 2008 (78 FR 57822, 57824-57826). Starting in 2011, 
FMCSA investigated bus companies operating unsafely along the I-95 
corridor. That investigation uncovered additional problems and serious 
safety violations with other carriers. As Agency investigators tried to 
understand the relationships and links between bus companies operating 
in complex networks, they encountered significant difficulties in 
identifying the motor carriers responsible for regulatory compliance on 
numerous trips. Vehicles and drivers were found to be frequently 
rented, loaned, leased, interchanged, assigned, and reassigned with few 
records and little formality, which obscured the operational safety 
responsibility of many industry participants. Multiple affiliated 
entities shared drivers and vehicles within their network intentionally 
to avoid identification of the motor carrier responsible for safety 
management, and to conceal excessive and illegal driver work hours that 
resulted in fatigue-related crashes in some cases.
    Investigators were eventually able to document multiple patterns of 
serious safety violations by three networks of businesses that 
deliberately structured their operations to evade Federal regulatory 
oversight. Each time FMCSA had shut them down in the past, the three 
networks re-created or reincarnated themselves. These companies, which 
together transported almost 2,000 passengers daily, showed flagrant 
disregard for public safety by using drivers without valid commercial 
driver's licenses or medical qualification certificates, failing to 
conduct required drug testing of drivers, allowing or requiring drivers 
to exceed the maximum number of driving hours, and operating buses that 
were mechanically unsafe and in disrepair. FMCSA shut down these three 
networks of bus operators after a time-consuming, complex and detailed 
review of their operations.
    In response to an NPRM intended to better ensure the correct 
identity of the motor carrier responsible for the operation of a 
passenger-carrying vehicle, 12 parties submitted comments. On May 27, 
2015, FMCSA published a final rule (2015 final rule) concerning the 
lease and interchange of passenger-carrying CMVs (80 FR 30164). 
Although several of the proposed regulations were revised in response 
to comments received in response to the NPRM, the motorcoach industry 
took exception to some of the requirements of the final rule. The 
Agency published several documents to respond to the industry 
objections. These documents are discussed in detail in the following 
section.

VI. Petitions for Reconsideration and Subsequent Events

A. History of Petitions

    The American Bus Association (ABA) and United Motorcoach 
Association (UMA) filed a joint request for an extension of the June 
26, 2015, deadline for the submission of petitions for reconsideration 
of the final rule. On July 1, 2015, FMCSA extended the deadline to 
August 25, 2015 (80 FR 37553).
    The Agency ultimately received 37 petitions for reconsideration 
which have been filed in the public docket referenced above. In 
addition, 11 informal comments were received. Upon review of these 
requests, FMCSA concluded that some have merit. FMCSA, therefore, 
extended the compliance date of the final rule from January 1, 2017, to 
January 1, 2018, to allow the Agency time to complete its analysis and 
amend the rule where necessary (82 FR 13998, Mar. 16, 2016).
    The petitioners argued and explained in more detail that FMCSA had 
taken a regulatory scheme from the trucking industry and applied it to 
the bus industry, which has a vastly different operating structure and 
liability regime. Moreover, the application of these truck regulations 
to the bus industry offered no additional protection to the public from 
illegal or unsafe bus operators.
    Petitioners further stated that the final rule created an economic 
and regulatory burden for passenger carriers that already operate 
safely and have a high degree of compliance. By imposing lease 
requirements, some of the petitioners argued, the rule did not affect 
carriers that choose to violate the regulations, but instead burdened 
those who already operate safely and are in compliance. Another 
petitioner stated that, while it supported efforts to identify and 
address chameleon carriers or carriers that may try to operate under 
the cloak of another carrier, the final rule did not accomplish this 
goal and, in fact, provided a roadmap for irresponsible carriers to 
operate legally under the authority of another carrier.
    One carrier stated that it had identified several instances where 
the final rule lacked sufficient clarity to enable it to comply, and 
that these issue areas affected all of its operations. The final rule 
also added administrative costs and reduced operational flexibility for 
charter and tour bus operations, which would, in the end, reduce 
connectivity and transportation options for the traveling public. 
Another carrier named two insurance companies that have restrictions in 
their policies that prohibit the use of non-owned equipment and non-
employed drivers, which were major concerns of the NPRM and final rule.
    On August 31, 2016, FMCSA published the 2016 NOI announcing that 
the following four potential changes to the final rule were under 
consideration:
    (1) Exclusion of ``chartering'' from the definition of lease in 49 
CFR 390.5. The 2015 rule merged the concepts of leasing with 
``chartering'' (subcontracting or reassigning

[[Page 47768]]

contracts). Authorized carriers routinely subcontract or reassign 
contracts to other authorized carriers to handle demand surges, 
emergencies, or events that require more than the available capacity. 
Subcontractors or assignees with their own operating authority have 
traditionally assumed responsibility for their own vehicles and 
drivers. Under the 2015 rule, however, a passenger carrier that 
subcontracted or reassigned work to another carrier would be 
responsible for that second carrier's compliance with the regulations. 
Petitioners claimed that making a carrier responsible for the 
subcontractor's or assignees' vehicles, drivers, and liability would 
make most short-term subcontracts impossible.
    (2) Amending the CMV requirements for the location of temporary 
markings for leased/interchanged vehicles (49 CFR 390.21(f), 
390.303(f)). The petitioners argued that the frequent marking changes 
needed during leases or interchanges would be impractical and 
unnecessary because the information required is recorded on the 
driver's records of duty status for safety inspectors and safety 
investigators to review; carriers would have to depend completely on 
drivers to properly change vehicle markings dozens of times per day in 
remote locations; and it would be unlikely that a member of the public 
would understand the significance of the markings in the event that he 
or she focused on the temporary ``operated by'' markings rather than 
the permanent markings on the bus representing the vehicle owner or 
long-term lessee.
    (3) Changing the requirement that carriers notify customers within 
24 hours when they subcontract service to other carriers (49 CFR 
390.305). Petitioners argued that a 24-hour deadline is impractical 
because if an emergency maintenance issue occurs, it may not be 
possible to notify the customer in a timely manner, particularly if the 
issue occurs on the weekend, when the customer's offices are closed, 
and the trip is scheduled to start before the customer's Monday opening 
time.
    (4) Expanding the 48-hour delay in preparing a lease to include 
emergencies when passengers are not actually on board a bus (49 CFR 
390.303(a)(2)). Sometimes events requiring a replacement vehicle might 
occur when there are no passengers on a vehicle, such as when Amtrak or 
airline service is suspended or disrupted and buses are needed to 
transport stranded passengers. A bus operator contracted to provide the 
emergency service might need to obtain additional drivers and vehicles 
from other carriers to meet the demand. There might be a last-minute 
maintenance or mechanical issue, or driver illness, that arises late in 
the evening or during the night (such as on a multi-day charter or tour 
trip), or just prior to picking up a group for a charter or scheduled 
service run.
    In the 2016 NOI, FMCSA announced its plan to issue a rulemaking 
notice to reconsider the four areas of concern listed above. The Agency 
expressed its belief that it might be possible to adopt less burdensome 
regulatory alternatives that would not adversely impact safety. FMCSA 
also explicitly denied other requested revisions because they would 
either have impaired the purpose of the final rule or did not represent 
practical alternatives.
Public Roundtable
    FMCSA held a public roundtable on October 31, 2016 to discuss the 
four issues outlined in the 2016 NOI. The stakeholders represented 
spoke about those issues and provided the Agency with information on 
how to address them. All public comments were placed in the docket of 
this rulemaking.
Second Extension of Compliance Date and the Proposal in Response to 
Petitions for Reconsideration
    On June 16, 2017, FMCSA published a final rule (2017 final rule) 
and a 2017 proposal in the Federal Register (82 FR 27766, and 27768). 
The 2017 final rule extended the compliance date of the 2015 final rule 
from January 1, 2018, to January 1, 2019. The 2017 proposal provided 
information about FMCSA's planned revisions to the 2015 final rule and 
requested public comment on the proposed revisions.

B. Discussion of Comments and Responses to the June 16, 2017 Proposal 
in Response to Petitions for Reconsideration

    FMCSA received 24 comments in response to the 2017 proposal 
regarding the petitions for reconsideration. Two submissions requested 
an extension of time to comment, one from Coach USA and another from 
Adirondack Trailways, Pine Hill Trailways and New York Trailways.
    The following commenters (hereafter the ``industry commenters''), 
submitted responses to the June 2017 proposal that were largely the 
same, both in wording and in format. The industry commenters include: 
AC Coach Operations, Inc. dba Anderson Coach and Travel, Adirondack 
Trailways, Pine Hill Trailways and New York Trailways (Responding 
together), ABA, Beeline Charters and Tours, Burlington Trailways, 
California Bus Association, Capitol Bus Lines Inc., Connecticut Bus 
Association, FTI Coach Lines, Georgia Motorcoach Operators Association, 
Indian Trails, Inc., Minnesota Charter Bus Operator's Association, 
Onondaga Coach Corp., Pennsylvania Bus Association, Shuttle Express, 
Inc., and Trans-Bridge Lines.
    FMCSA also received unique comments from Academy Bus LLC and 
Greyhound Lines, Inc.; Delainey Banks, an individual; Coach USA, a non-
carrier entity that controls numerous motor carriers of passengers; 
Reston Limousine; National Interstate Insurance; and the UMA.
Request for an NPRM
    Neither the 2016 NOI nor the 2017 proposal contained specific 
regulatory text. The 2016 NOI announced FMCSA's intent to revise the 
2015 final rule in response to petitions. As indicated above, the 2016 
NOI described four major changes that were under consideration for 
regulatory changes.
    In the 2017 proposal, the Agency identified its intention to revise 
the regulations to address ``chartering'' and the 48 hour delay in 
preparing a lease.
    Comments: Industry commenters, including Academy Bus LLC., 
Greyhound Lines, Inc., UMA, Coach USA, and DATTCO, Inc. asked FMCSA to 
publish a formal NPRM that included proposed regulatory text. Coach 
USA, among others, noted that the 2017 proposal limited its discussion 
to only two of the four issues addressed in the 2016 NOI; however, they 
believed that all four issues should be addressed in rulemaking.
    FMCSA Response: After publication of the 2016 NOI, FMCSA decided to 
publish an NPRM to continue the process of revising subpart F of 49 CFR 
part 390. FMCSA proposes to maintain and expand the emergency 48-hour 
delay in preparing a lease. FMCSA proposes to remove the 2015 final 
rule's CMV marking requirements when a passenger-carrying CMV is leased 
or interchanged. Furthermore, FMCSA proposes changes that would reduce 
the number of required leases because authorized carriers would not be 
subject to this proposed rule when using vehicles or acquiring 
transportation services from other authorized carriers.
Lease and Interchange
    The 2015 final rule merged the concepts of leasing and chartering 
(or subcontracting). Carriers routinely subcontract work to other 
registered carriers to handle demand surges, emergencies, or events 
that require more than their available capacity.

[[Page 47769]]

Subcontractors with their own operating authority have traditionally 
assumed responsibility for their own vehicles or drivers. Under the 
2015 rule, however, a passenger carrier that subcontracted work to 
another carrier would be responsible for that second carrier's 
compliance with the regulations. In the 2015 final rule, FMCSA used the 
following definition for ``Lease'' in Sec.  390.5: ``Lease, as used in 
Sec.  390.21(f) and subpart F of this part, means a contract or 
arrangement in which a motor carrier grants the use of a passenger-
carrying commercial motor vehicle to another motor carrier, with or 
without a driver, for a specified period for the transportation of 
passengers, in exchange for compensation. The term lease includes an 
interchange, as defined in this section, or other agreement granting 
the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle for a 
specified period, with or without a driver, whether or not compensation 
for such use is specified or required.'' The 2016 NOI indicated that 
the Agency would address, through rulemaking, this concern relating to 
the 2015 final rule's merger of the leasing and chartering concepts. In 
the 2017 proposal, FMCSA said that it intended to revise subpart F of 
49 CFR part 390 to exclude ``chartering'' from the leasing requirements 
of that rule.
    Comments: UMA, Greyhound, Academy Bus LLC, and others stated that 
the 2015 final rule is overly burdensome to motor carriers.
    According to Coach USA Inc. and other commenters, the rule broadens 
the term ``lease'' to capture charter and similar operations, thus 
placing unnecessary burdens on compliant motor coach operators, while 
doing little to target the safety concern associated with non-compliant 
carriers. Commenters believed FMCSA should exclude from the definition 
of ``Lease'' in Sec.  390.5 all passenger-carrying motor carriers that 
have FMCSA operating authority. Specifically, they asked the Agency to 
modify the definition of ``Lease'' by clarifying that it does not 
include a ``contract, subcontract, sublease, rental or charter 
arrangement between two or more passenger-carrying motor carriers where 
all parties have operating authority.''
    The Minnesota Charter Bus Operator's Association stated that the 
rule would prohibit the necessary collaboration among multiple 
operators to meet the needs of large events that occur in Minnesota. 
This commenter added that the nature of the business requires operators 
to assist one another in the event of a mechanical breakdown, so they 
have to act quickly to service and protect the traveling public without 
the burden of the lease and marking requirement. Capitol Bus Lines, 
Inc. reported that, as a result of its need to comply with the 2015 
final rule requirements, it lost the ability to provide shuttle service 
for a large fireworks display, which cost the company business. UMA 
believed the rule needlessly harms passenger groups and carriers in 
need of immediate assistance. Greyhound wrote the rule would severely 
curtail, if not eliminate, its leasing of buses to meet peak period 
demand.
    Industry commenters believed that the rule may exacerbate the 
problem of non-compliant carriers by creating safe havens and 
encouraging a switch from chartering to passenger broker operations 
that the Agency has no authority to regulate. UMA commented that the 
rule does not identify chameleon carriers, but instead provides a 
roadmap for carriers that may have compliance or operating authority 
issues. UMA thought the rule might compel special event organizers and 
community leaders to spend needless time engaging multiple carriers or 
to turn to brokers.
    While many commenters, including National Interstate Insurance, 
supported the exclusion of ``chartering'' from the leasing requirements 
of the rule, as stated in the 2017 proposal, some commenters, including 
Greyhound Lines, Inc., UMA, and Reston Limousine, wanted the Agency to 
clarify this term. In their joint request for an extension of time 
Adirondack Trailways, Pine Hill Trailways, and New York Trailways noted 
that the proposal equates ``chartering'' to ``subcontracting'' in one 
section, but then excludes the term ``chartering'' from the entire 
rule. Reston Limousine suggested defining ``lease'' to exclude 
contracts, subcontracts, or charter arrangements between two or more 
passenger-carrying motor carriers with valid individual USDOT operating 
authority.
    Coach USA commented that the administrative and paperwork burden 
associated with the full range of other regulatory obligations related 
to chartering/subcontracting arrangements would be prohibitive. 
Further, Coach USA did not believe that it would be possible for a 
primary contractor to obtain insurance for vehicles operated by 
subcontractor, as the final rule seems to require. Coach USA noted that 
it is not practicable for the primary carrier to ensure that the 
subcontracting carrier is in full compliance with many FMCSA 
regulations, particularly given that arrangements with secondary 
carriers must often be made at the last minute.
    Industry commenters added that the Agency should clarify that the 
current definition of the term ``interchange'' in Sec.  390.5, as used 
in Sec.  390.21(f) and subpart F of part 390, does not include the act 
of providing a passenger-carrying CMV by one motor carrier of 
passengers to another. The industry commenters suggested edits to the 
definition of ``interchange'' that they believed would resolve the 
issue.
    FMCSA Response: Under this NPRM, authorized carriers would not be 
subject to leasing requirements when they use vehicles or acquire 
transportation services from other authorized carriers. FMCSA believes 
this proposed regulatory change, as explained elsewhere in this NPRM, 
would resolve the objections and concerns of most commenters, without 
impacting safety.
Assignment of Responsibility
    The 2015 final rule governing the lease and interchange of 
passenger-carrying CMVs holds the lessee carrier directly responsible 
for violations of the FMCSRs.
    Comments: UMA consistently argued that FMCSA should not compel two 
or more carriers, all possessing the requisite Federal operating 
authority, to enter a lease they would not otherwise enter when 
engaging each other's services. UMA believed that forcing passenger-
carriers into a lease would compel the assignment of inspection 
violations and crashes to the lessee. The commenter wrote that 
inspections and crashes should be attributed to the chartered, 
contracted, or subcontracted carrier that possesses the sole, direct 
responsibility for compliance and control of vehicle maintenance and 
driver qualifications and behavior. UMA wrote that the burden of the 
2015 rule falls disproportionately on small-fleet passenger carriers 
and disadvantages them by creating untenable regulatory liability.
    FMCSA Response: Because Federal operating authority and the 
practices of the insurance industry both assign responsibility to the 
operating motor carrier, FMCSA agrees that there is no need to reassign 
responsibility through this rulemaking. As mentioned above, authorized 
carriers would not be subject to this proposed rule when they use 
vehicles or acquire transportation services from other authorized 
carriers. FMCSA believes that this proposed regulatory change would 
resolve the objections and concerns of most commenters, without 
impacting safety.

[[Page 47770]]

Marking Requirements
    The 2015 final rule added a new Sec.  390.21(f) to cover the 
marking of leased and interchanged passenger-carrying CMVs, as defined 
in Sec.  390.5 (80 FR 30178). Carriers operating such CMVs must meet 
certain standards for marking in Sec.  390.21. They must also display a 
placard, sign, or other permanent or removable device on the right 
(curb) side of the passenger-carrying CMV on or near the front 
passenger door. The device must show the name and USDOT number of the 
carrier operating the vehicle, preceded by the words ``operated by,'' 
e.g., ``Operated by ABC Motorcoach, Inc., USDOT 12345678.''
    Comments: Industry commenters generally argued that the 2015 final 
rule imposes burdensome marking requirements that are impractical, and 
that there are less burdensome ways to address the Agency's concerns. 
In their joint request for extension of time, Adirondack Trailways, 
Pine Hill Trailways, and New York Trailways commented that ``temporary 
markings'' is a matter of particular importance to them. They argued 
that the current final rules for temporary markings are unreasonable. 
They wrote that compliance would be impractical or unsafe, and arguably 
impossible, due to the design and construction of modern motor coaches.
    In its comments, Coach USA recommended that the Agency eliminate 
the requirement to change vehicle markings when vehicles are exchanged 
between commonly owned carriers. Coach USA wrote that changing markings 
on vehicles exchanged between commonly-owned Coach USA companies would 
be highly burdensome given the large number of such exchanges. Coach 
USA commented that magnetic marking placards and paper signs are not a 
practical option. Placing a sign on the inside of the bus could 
obstruct the driver's view and/or would not meet the legibility 
requirements due to window glare or window tinting.
    Coach USA also argued that requiring vehicles interchanged between 
commonly-owned companies to be marked in accordance with Sec.  390.21 
is likely to cause more confusion among passengers than it resolves. It 
reported that most of the vehicle exchanges between Coach USA carriers 
occur between companies that have ``Megabus.com'' written across their 
vehicles in huge letters. From the public's perspective, these 
motorcoaches are operated by Megabus. Coach USA did not believe that 
individuals would understand the temporary markings required by Sec.  
390.21 and thought they would result in confusion.
    Greyhound Lines Inc. urged FMCSA to exempt from the temporary 
marking or placarding requirements the operation of vehicles that are 
being leased or interchanged between carriers that have FMCSA operating 
authority.
    FMCSA Response: FMCSA proposes to remove the 2015 final rule's CMV 
marking requirements when a passenger-carrying CMV subject to the 
proposed rule is leased or interchanged. The Agency believes this 
proposed regulatory change would resolve the objections and concerns of 
the commenters. Under this NPRM, a motor carrier operating a passenger-
carrying CMV under a lease having a term of not more than 30 calendar 
days could mark the CMV with either (1) the name and USDOT 
identification number of the lessee, or (2) the name and USDOT 
identification number of the lessor if, in the latter case, a fully 
complete lease is carried on the leased CMV during the full term of the 
lease. These proposals would remove the cost of additional marking of 
the vehicles while maintaining all of the information necessary for 
enforcement officials to identify the carrier for regulatory 
compliance. FMCSA proposes to add paragraph (e)(2)(v) to allow a 
passenger-carrying CMV operating under the 48-hour emergency exception 
pursuant to Sec.  390.403(a)(2) to be excepted from paragraphs 
(e)(2)(iii) and (iv) regarding a lease document with required 
information being carried on the vehicle, provided the lessor and 
lessee comply with the requirements of the provision in Sec.  
390.403(a)(2).
Twenty-Four Hour Notice of Lease
    If a motor carrier was originally hired to provide charter 
transportation of passengers and subsequently subcontracted this work 
to another motor carrier of passengers, the 2015 final rule required 
the original motor carrier to notify the tour operator or group of 
passengers within 24 hours after hiring the subcontractor and advising 
that the transportation would be provided by the subcontractor. The 
2016 NOI said that FMCSA was reconsidering that requirement based on 
petitioners' arguments that the 24-hour deadline is impractical in an 
emergency.
    Comments: Industry commenters asked that the 24-hour requirement 
for notification be clarified in a proposed rule. They also believed 
that excluding passenger carriers that have operating authority from 
the definition of ``lease'' in Sec.  390.5 would mean the requirements 
of Sec.  390.305 Notification, would not apply.
    Academy Bus LLC noted that the 24-hour notice to customers was not 
addressed in the 2017 proposal and said the issue was still of concern. 
Academy Bus LLC added that the industry is required to be flexible and 
respond to the public demand on very short notice.
    Coach USA believed that excluding chartering and subcontracting 
arrangements would also eliminate the requirement to notify customers 
of subcontracting arrangements. Coach USA, however, supported a 
notification requirement for carriers that had been prohibited from 
operating by FMCSA or a State and intended to lease, interchange or 
otherwise convey use of a vehicle to another carrier. In fact, Coach 
USA argued that these carriers must provide written notice to FMCSA 
before taking such an action.
    FMCSA Response: FMCSA proposes to remove the lease notification 
requirement, and believes its removal at this time may alleviate 
unnecessary regulatory burdens that, based on available evidence, do 
not significantly aid travel groups in arranging trips or avoiding 
particular carriers. If this conclusion is inaccurate, please provide 
data or information in regard to this matter.
Expanding the 48-Hour Delay in Preparing a Lease
    When passengers are on a CMV and an emergency occurs that requires 
a replacement vehicle from another motor carrier, Sec.  390.303(a)(2) 
allows the two carriers to postpone writing a lease or other written 
agreement for up to 48 hours. The Agency believed the 48-hour window 
would provide ample time for the parties to document the transaction.
    One of the issues listed in the 2016 NOI was that FMCSA would 
reconsider expanding applicability of the 48-hour delay provision for 
preparing a lease to include emergencies when passengers are not 
actually on board a bus (81 FR 59952, Aug. 31, 2016). FMCSA provided 
examples of events that might require a motor carrier to obtain a 
replacement vehicle immediately:
     Buses might be needed to transport stranded passengers in 
the event that Amtrak or airline service was suspended or disrupted. A 
bus operator contracted to provide emergency service might need to 
obtain additional drivers and vehicles without delay;
     Last minute maintenance or mechanical issues, or driver 
illness, might arise late in the evening or during the night (such as 
on a multi-day charter or tour trip), or just prior to picking up

[[Page 47771]]

a group for a charter or scheduled service run.
    In the 2017 proposal, FMCSA explained that it intended to broaden 
the emergency 48-hour delay provision for preparing a lease authorized 
by 49 CFR 390.303(a)(2) and remove the requirement that passengers 
actually be on board a bus when the exception occurs.
    Comments: In response to the 2017 proposal, industry commenters 
indicated that the expansion of the 48-hour exemption could be 
addressed by changing the definitions in Sec.  390.5. First, it was 
recommended that operations conducted under revenue pooling 
arrangements or common ownership and control be excluded from the 
definition of ``interchange'' in Sec.  390.5. Second, FMCSA was asked 
to exclude passenger motor carriers from the definition of ``lease'' in 
Sec.  390.5 when all parties have operating authority. Academy Bus LLC 
was concerned about lease preparation issues, noting that ``Our 
industry, by its nature, is required to be flexible and respond to the 
public demand on very short notice.''
    An individual believed that the 48-hour time period for preparing 
leases might be a good idea for the trucking industry, but that is not 
the case for passenger carriers. This commenter stated that at peak 
times ``every worker is stretched thin and there is a need to bring in 
more operators to provide the same services,'' otherwise customers may 
be left stranded. In these instances, it is ``an emergency to both the 
busing companies and the customers to bring in another operator to 
provide the necessary backup to complete the job in an efficient 
manner. To combat this situation, companies need to work together 
before, during and after leasing passenger vehicles.'' This commenter 
also recommended that accountability be placed directly on the 
subcontractor and its driver.
    Coach USA wrote that the exception in 49 CFR 390.303(a)(2) would 
likely apply only in rare instances if FMCSA exempted chartering and 
subcontracting arrangements from the regulations. Coach USA supported 
extending the 48-hour delay to cases of emergencies where passengers 
are not yet on the bus. Because operators will likely not have time to 
mark vehicles in the event of an emergency that requires replacement of 
a vehicle on very short notice, Coach USA proposed eliminating the 
final sentence of Sec.  390.303(a)(2), ``The lessee must also mark the 
vehicle in accordance with Sec.  390.21(f) before operating it.''
    FMCSA Response: FMCSA adopts the petitioners' recommendation to 
expand the regulatory exception that permits the delayed writing of a 
lease during certain emergencies (e.g., a crash, the vehicle is 
disabled) including when no passengers are on the vehicle. Therefore, 
FMCSA proposes to move the exception in 49 CFR 390.303(a)(2) to 49 CFR 
390.403(a)(2). If a motor carrier obtains a replacement vehicle from, 
or subcontracts for service with, another motor carrier, the motor 
carriers may delay writing of a lease during these emergency 
situations. However, a summary document signed and dated by the 
lessee's driver or available company official must state: ``[Carrier A, 
USDOT number, telephone number] has leased this vehicle to [Carrier B, 
USDOT number, telephone number] pursuant to 49 CFR 390.403(a)(2)'' and 
the summary document must be carried on the replacement vehicle for the 
duration of the lease. Enforcement officials will be able to use this 
summary document to determine the identity of the carrier responsible 
for regulatory compliance.
Summary Document Requirements in Sec.  390.301(b)(2) and (3)
    In Sec.  390.301(b)(2), the 2015 rule allows passenger-carrying 
CMVs to be exchanged or interchanged without leases or receipts among 
commonly owned and controlled motor carriers, provided the driver 
carries and produces, upon demand of a Federal, State, or local law 
enforcement official, a summary document listing certain information 
[see 80 FR at 30179].
    Section 390.301(b)(3) provides that passenger-carrying CMVs may be 
exchanged or interchanged without leases or receipts among motor 
carriers that are party to a revenue pooling agreement approved by the 
Surface Transportation Board (STB) provided that the driver carries 
and, upon demand of a Federal, State, or local law enforcement 
official, displays other information, including a summary document [see 
80 FR at 30179].
    Neither the 2016 NOI nor the 2017 proposal addressed the summary 
document requirements.
    Comments: The industry commenters suggested removing the 
requirements in Sec.  390.301(b)(2) and (3) and instead including 
language about an abbreviated summary document in the definition of 
``interchange'' in Sec.  390.5. If the interchange occurred among 
commonly owned/controlled motor carriers, the summary document would 
identify the carriers in that ``family,'' including USDOT numbers and 
business addresses. If the interchange occurred pursuant to a revenue 
pooling agreement approved by the STB, the summary document would 
identify the parties to the agreement, including the USDOT numbers and 
business addresses. These summary documents would be produced upon the 
demand of a law enforcement official.
    In its request for an extension of time, Coach USA argued that the 
information required in Sec.  390.301(b)(2)(i) is trip specific, and 
would require the company to create a new summary document for each of 
more than 10,000 trips annually. Such a document would impose an 
unnecessary regulatory burden. Coach USA requested that the summary 
document required by this provision include only a ``listing of all 
members of the corporate family along with their USDOT numbers, 
business addresses and contact telephone numbers.'' The company also 
asked the Agency to clarify that any summary document may be maintained 
in electronic format and stored on an electronic logging device.
    In its response to the Agency's 2017, proposal, Coach USA, like 
other industry commenters, reiterated its previous comments.
    FMCSA Response: Since this proposed rule would not apply to 
transactions between or among authorized carriers under the proposed 
exception in Sec.  390.401(b)(1) Contracts and agreements between motor 
carriers of passengers with active passenger carrier operating 
authority registrations, FMCSA believes that regulatory exceptions for 
commonly owned and controlled carriers, and carriers participating in 
STB-approved revenue pooling agreements, are no longer necessary. The 
industry commenters suggested making the rule inapplicable to commonly 
owned and controlled carriers and carriers participating in STB-
approved revenue pooling agreements, and the Agency agrees with these 
comments. Therefore, FMCSA proposes to rescind the exceptions in 49 CFR 
390.303(b)(2) and (b)(3). All passenger carriers that are commonly 
owned and controlled or participate in STB-approved revenue pooling 
agreements operate in interstate commerce and have operating authority. 
An authorized carrier that obtains a vehicle from another commonly 
owned and controlled authorized carrier or another participant in an 
STB-approved pooling agreement, would not be subject to this proposed 
rule.

VII. General Discussion of the Proposed Rule

A. The Proposed Rule

    FMCSA proposes removing and reserving subpart F of part 390, moving 
it to subpart G with the same title,

[[Page 47772]]

``Lease and Interchange of Passenger-Carrying Commercial Motor 
Vehicles,'' and making some further regulatory changes discussed later 
in this document. FMCSA is planning to use subpart F in a future NPRM 
to be published under RIN 2126-AB56, Unified Registration System 
Enhancements and Updates.
Definitions
    The Agency proposes to revise the definition of lease in Sec.  
390.5 to include only contracts and agreements in which a motor carrier 
grants the use of a passenger-carrying CMV to another motor carrier 
when at least one of the motor carriers is not an authorized 
carrier.\5\ Authorized carriers routinely assist one another by 
providing transportation services during demand surges, emergencies, or 
events that require more than their available capacity. These common 
agreements, some of which amount to subcontracting, would not meet the 
regulatory definition of a lease in this proposed rule. Authorized 
carriers that are hired by another authorized carrier have 
traditionally assumed responsibility for their own regulatory 
compliance and liability. This practice has long been acceptable to the 
insurance industry. Furthermore, authorized carriers are readily 
identifiable to enforcement personnel, making a separate lease 
agreement assigning regulatory responsibility unnecessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ This rulemaking does not propose a change to the definition 
of lease in the context of property-carrying vehicles in 49 CFR 
376.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The definition of lease would become narrower by including only 
contracts and agreements to grant the use of a passenger-carrying CMV 
between motor carriers when one (or more) such carrier does not have 
operating authority. The term lease would also be revised with added 
language to include circumstances when no compensation is specified. 
The terms lessee and lessor would both be revised slightly to specify 
that the granting of passenger-carrying CMV usage is through a lease.
Marking of Self-Propelled CMVs and Intermodal Equipment
    Section 390.21 (suspended) and 390.21T would be returned nearly to 
the form before the March 27, 2015, final rule. FMCSA would remove the 
special marking regulations for leased and interchanged passenger-
carrying CMVs in paragraph (f). Section 390.21 (suspended) and 390.21T 
would be revised to treat leased passenger-carrying CMVs like all other 
rented CMVs. For a lease of 30 calendar days or less, the lessee can 
opt to mark the vehicle with either the lessee's information or the 
lessor's information. However, the latter would require a fully 
executed copy of the lease be carried on the vehicle.
    If the motor carrier is operating a passenger-carrying CMV under a 
lease or rental agreement for more than 30 calendar days, such CMV must 
be marked with the lessee's identification information. In a lease 
situation, the operating motor carrier is the lessee. These revised 
regulations would address petitioners' concerns that there is no easy 
way to display a temporary marking on certain passenger-carrying motor 
vehicles for short term leases. FMCSA specifically requests comments 
from State Agencies that participate in the Motor Carrier Safety 
Assistance Program about the effectiveness of these proposed marking 
regulations for leased passenger-carrying CMVs and any potential 
inspection or enforcement problems.
General Applicability and Exceptions
    The general applicability section would be revised slightly to 
reflect the removal of exceptions in paragraph (b). Section 390.401(b) 
would be modified in several ways. First, a new exception would appear 
in paragraph (b)(1) to exclude from the rule contracts and agreements 
between passenger carriers with active operating authority when one 
such carrier acquires transportation services from another such 
carrier. Second, the current exception for financial leases in 
paragraph Sec.  390.301(b)(1) would be moved to paragraph Sec.  
390.401(b)(2) as an exception with a revision. The provision that the 
financial organization, manufacturer, or dealer must not be a motor 
carrier to utilize the exception from the rule is proposed for removal 
because such entities are motor carriers when they move their vehicle 
inventory between business locations before purchases. Third, the 
limited exception in paragraph (b)(2) for passenger-carrying CMVs 
exchanged or interchanged between or among commonly owned and 
controlled motor carriers would be removed. Fourth, the limited 
exception in paragraph (b)(3) for passenger-carrying CMVs exchanged or 
interchanged between or among motor carriers that are a party to a 
revenue pooling agreement approved by the STB in accordance with 49 
U.S.C 14302 would also be removed.
Lease and Interchange Requirements
    Lease and interchange requirements would be revised by removing 
Sec.  390.303(a)(1)(iii), which covers written agreements governing the 
renting, borrowing, loaning, or similar transfer of a passenger-
carrying CMV from another party. The rule would be revised and moved to 
Sec.  390.403(a)(1) to include such transactions as either a lease or 
interchange, which makes paragraph (a)(1)(iii) unnecessary. FMCSA is 
proposing to expand the emergency-related exception in Sec.  
390.303(a)(2) (after transferring it to Sec.  390.403(a)(2)) that 
allows the postponement of the completion of a lease for up to 48 hours 
for situations, such as a crash or vehicle breakdown, when a 
replacement vehicle must be immediately obtained from another motor 
carrier. Industry commenters requested this expansion of the limited 
exception and FMCSA agrees with them. FMCSA proposes to allow the 
exception even when passengers are not on the bus.
    Section 390.403(b) specifies the contents of lease and interchange 
documents. This paragraph requires the lease, interchange agreement, or 
other agreement to contain: (1) The name of the vehicle manufacturer, 
the year of manufacture, and the last 6 digits of the Vehicle 
Identification Number; (2) the legal names, contact information, and 
signatures \6\ of both parties; (3) the time and date when the lease 
begins and ends; and (4) a statement that the lessee has exclusive 
possession and control of the leased vehicle and is responsible for 
regulatory compliance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ FMCSA allows the use of electronic signatures in accordance 
with the Government Paperwork Elimination Act (Pub. L. 105-277, 
Title XVII, Secs. 1701-1710, 44 U.S.C. 3504 note, 112 Stat. 2681-
749). See 76 FR 411, Jan. 4, 2011 and the Electronic Signature final 
rule's Sec. Sec.  390.5, 390.5T, and 390.32, April 16, 2018 (83 FR 
16226-7).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Current Sec.  390.303(b)(4)(i)-(iii) is a slightly revised version 
of 49 CFR 376.12(c)(1), (2) and (4). Paragraph (b)(4)(i) is essential 
because it sets forth the basic reason for a lease, from FMCSA's point 
of view, to assign full responsibility for regulatory compliance to the 
lessee. FMCSA proposes to make this paragraph more concise. Current 
paragraph (b)(4)(ii) would be moved to Sec.  390.403(b)(4)(ii) and 
would retain only the last sentence of that provision. Paragraph 
(b)(4)(iii) is a useful disclaimer, should the issue of status of the 
lessor (contractor or employee) arise in a tax context, but FMCSA does 
not believe it is essential. Therefore, FMCSA proposes to shorten 
paragraphs (b)(4)(i) and (b)(4)(ii) and remove paragraph (b)(4)(iii).
    FMCSA proposes to remove the requirement in Sec.  390.303(b)(5) 
that the lease contain a statement that the lessee is responsible for 
compliance with the

[[Page 47773]]

insurance requirements of 49 CFR part 387.
    Section 390.303(c) and (d) would be merged and made more concise. 
Revised Sec.  390.403(c) would state that a copy of the lease must be 
carried in the passenger-carrying CMV during the period of the lease or 
interchange agreement. Both the lessee and lessor would retain the 
lease or interchange agreement for 1 year afterwards.
    Section 390.303(e) would be removed. FMCSA has decided it does not 
need receipts when vehicles are surrendered to the lessee and returned 
to the lessor. If FMCSA or another government enforcement agency sought 
to assign a safety incident to the lessee or the lessor based on a 
lease or other agreement that had already been terminated, the former 
parties to the lease would have to decide how to document that 
premature termination.
    FMCSA proposes to remove the requirements in Sec.  390.303(f) for 
additional temporary markings of leased and interchanged passenger-
carrying CMVs, and to return to the text of the marking rule in Sec.  
390.21(e) \7\ that was effective on July 1, 2015, with slight 
modifications. The modifications would add references to leased CMVs in 
paragraph (e) to provide a similar option to rented CMVs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \7\ See e-CFR text in effect on July 1, 2015 at https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?SID=b9ddca68b462ed0f3d5758839de97752&pitd=20150701&node=pt49.5.390&rgn=div5#se49.5.390_121.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    FMCSA believes that this eliminates one of petitioners' major 
objections to the 2015 final rule. The proposed rule would require a 
leased passenger-carrying CMV be marked with the lessee's 
identification information if the lease is longer than 30 days. Leased 
passenger-carrying CMVs would be required to be marked with either the 
lessor's or lessee's identification information if the lease is 30 days 
or less.
    Finally, the proposed rule removes the requirement in Sec.  390.305 
to notify the passenger group or their representative within 24 hours 
after the primary contractor reassigns the transportation to a 
subcontractor.

B. Examples of Proposed Rule Implementation

    The following examples illustrate the proposed application of this 
rulemaking:
Complete Contract Transfer Example
    Authorized carrier A is contracted to transport a tour or travel 
group on a trip, but finds itself without the capacity to accommodate 
the group. Carrier A completely transfers the contract to authorized 
carrier B that has the necessary capacity. Carrier A may or may not pay 
a fee to carrier B for taking over the contract. A complete transfer 
would require carrier A to cancel its contract with the customer and 
carrier B to create a new contract with the customer. The proposed rule 
would not apply to these transactions because these transactions do not 
qualify as a ``lease'' (or interchange), as defined in Sec.  390.5, of 
a passenger-carrying CMV.
Complete Subcontracting Among Authorized Carriers
    Authorized carrier A lacks the capacity to execute a contracted 
trip and hires authorized carrier B to make the trip while maintaining 
its contract with the customer. This arrangement is documented by a 
charter contract between carriers A and B. Carrier A pays carrier B for 
the trip. This arrangement is not a lease, first because carrier B is 
not granting the use of a passenger-carrying CMV to carrier A, and 
second because both carriers are authorized carriers. Instead, carrier 
B is making the trip in its own name, on its own authority, with its 
own vehicles and is therefore responsible for compliance with the 
FMCSRs. The proposed rule therefore would not apply to this 
arrangement.
Partial Subcontracting Among Authorized Carriers
    Assuming the same facts as described above, except that authorized 
carrier A provides some of the transportation service while contracting 
with authorized carrier B for the remainder, this arrangement is not a 
lease, first because carrier B is not granting the use of a passenger-
carrying CMV to carrier A, and second because both carriers are 
authorized carriers. Carrier A pays carrier B for the transportation 
service as part of a charter contract. Carrier B is not surrendering 
control of a passenger-carrying CMV to carrier A for its own use. Both 
carriers are authorized carriers providing transportation in their own 
name, on their own authority, with their own vehicles, and each is 
independently responsible for compliance with the FMCSRs.
Subcontracting Among Regular Route Authorized Carriers
    Authorized carrier A, which provides regular route passenger 
transportation services according to a fixed schedule, finds itself 
without the capacity to execute a route. Carrier A hires authorized 
carrier B to continue this service. This arrangement is documented by a 
charter contract between carriers A and B. Carrier A pays carrier B for 
the transportation service. This arrangement is not a lease, first 
because carrier B is not granting the use of a passenger-carrying CMV 
to carrier A, and second because both carriers are authorized carriers. 
This arrangement is also not an interchange because carriers A and B 
are not conducting a through movement. The proposed rule would not 
apply to this arrangement. Carrier B will conduct the transportation in 
its own name, on its own authority, with its own vehicle(s), and is 
therefore responsible for compliance with the FMCSRs.
Other Business Arrangements Between Passenger Carriers
Example 1
    Carrier A is exempt under 49 U.S.C. 13506 from the requirement for 
operating authority--for example, because of the hotel exemption in 
section 13506(a)(3) \8\--but finds itself without the capacity to 
accommodate a group that it originally intended to transport. When this 
occurs, carrier A hires authorized carrier B to provide charter 
passenger transportation of the group in whole or in part. This 
arrangement is documented by a charter contract between carriers A and 
B. Carrier A pays carrier B for the transportation service, but is not 
a lessee of carrier B's vehicle. Therefore, this arrangement is not a 
lease. Carrier B does not claim the exemption in section 13506(a)(3) 
but conducts the transportation in its own name, on its own authority, 
with its own vehicle(s) and is therefore responsible for compliance 
with the FMCSRs. The proposed rule would not apply to this arrangement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ Section 13506 lists the miscellaneous motor carrier 
transportation exemptions. Under section 13506(a)(3), neither the 
Secretary nor the Board has jurisdiction over a motor vehicle owned 
or operated by or for hotel patrons between the hotel and the local 
station of a carrier.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Example 2
    Private motor carrier of passengers A finds itself without the 
capacity to transport the members of its organization. Carrier A 
therefore hires authorized carrier B to provide charter passenger 
transportation of the group in whole or in part. This arrangement is 
documented by a charter contract between carriers A and B. Carrier A 
pays carrier B for the transportation service. Carrier A is not a 
lessee and the arrangement is not a lease or interchange because 
carrier B conducts the transportation in its own name, on its own 
authority, with its own vehicle(s) and is therefore responsible for 
compliance with the FMCSRs. The

[[Page 47774]]

proposed rule would not apply to this arrangement.
Example 3
    Carrier A is an exempt for-hire motor carrier of passengers (under 
49 U.S.C. 13506) that finds itself without the capacity to accommodate 
a group it originally intended to transport. Carrier A uses a 
passenger-carrying CMV owned by authorized carrier B. This transaction 
is a lease under the proposed rule and would be subject to its 
requirements because carrier A is not authorized to operate for-hire in 
interstate commerce. In this case, carrier B is a lessor that is 
surrendering control of a passenger-carrying CMVs to carrier A for the 
use of that carrier. Carrier A will conduct the transportation in its 
own name under its own safety registration (i.e., USDOT number) with 
the CMV leased from carrier B, with or without drivers provided by 
carrier B, and is therefore responsible for compliance with the FMCSRs.
Example 4
    Private motor carrier of passengers A finds itself without the 
capacity to accommodate a group it originally intended to transport. 
Carrier A uses a passenger-carrying CMV owned by authorized carrier B. 
This transaction is a lease under the proposed rule and would be 
subject to its requirements because carrier A is not authorized to 
operate for-hire in interstate commerce. In this case, carrier B is a 
lessor that is surrendering control of a passenger-carrying CMVs to 
carrier A for the use of that carrier. Carrier A will conduct the 
transportation in its own name under its own safety registration (i.e., 
USDOT number) with the CMV leased from carrier B, with or without 
drivers provided by carrier B, and is therefore responsible for 
compliance with the applicable FMCSRs.
Example 5
    Authorized carrier A lacks the capacity to execute a contracted 
trip and uses a passenger-carrying CMV owned by private motor carrier 
of passengers, carrier B. This transaction is a lease under the 
proposed rule and would be subject to its requirements because private 
carrier B is not authorized to operate for-hire in interstate commerce 
and cannot be hired to provide transportation. In this case, carrier B 
is a lessor that is surrendering control of its passenger-carrying CMV 
to carrier A. Carrier A will conduct the transportation in its own 
name, under its own authority, with the CMV leased from the private 
motor carrier of passengers, with or without drivers provided by 
carrier B, and is therefore responsible for compliance with the FMCSRs.
Example 6
    Private motor carrier of passengers A finds itself without the 
capacity to transport the members of its organization and uses a 
passenger-carrying CMV owned by private motor carrier of passengers B. 
This transaction is a lease under the proposed rule and would be 
subject to the requirements of this rule because neither carrier has 
the authority to conduct for-hire operations in interstate commerce. In 
this case, carrier B is a lessor that is surrendering control of its 
passenger-carrying CMV to carrier A for the use of that carrier. 
Carrier A will conduct the transportation in its own name, under its 
own safety registration (i.e., USDOT number), with the CMV leased from 
carrier B, with or without drivers provided by carrier B, and is 
therefore responsible for compliance with the applicable FMCSRs.
Example 7
    For-hire passenger carrier A had its operating authority revoked 
for lack of adequate insurance coverage. Carrier A wishes to generate 
revenue from its otherwise idle CMVs. It therefore negotiates an 
arrangement with authorized carrier B to surrender control of its 
passenger-carrying CMVs to carrier B for a fee. This arrangement is a 
lease under the proposed rule and would be subject to its requirements 
because carrier A is not authorized to operate for-hire in interstate 
commerce. In this case, carrier A is simply a lessor. Carrier B would 
conduct the transportation in its own name, on its own authority, with 
the CMVs leased from carrier A, with or without drivers provided by 
carrier A, and is therefore responsible for compliance with the FMCSRs.

C. Alternatives

    FMCSA requests comments to identify other methods to achieve the 
safety objectives of this rulemaking.

VIII. International Impacts

    The FMCSRs, and any exceptions to the FMCSRs, apply only within the 
United States (and, in some cases, United States territories). Motor 
carriers and drivers are subject to the laws and regulations of the 
countries in which they operate, unless an international agreement 
states otherwise. Drivers and carriers should be aware of the 
regulatory differences among nations.

IX. Section-by-Section Description of the Proposed Rule

A. Section 390.5 (Suspended) and 390.5T Definitions

    Section 390.5 (suspended) and 390.5T would be amended to revise the 
definitions of lease, lessee, and lessor and all of these terms would 
apply specifically to motor carriers of passengers.

B. Section 390.21 (Suspended) and 390.21T Marking of Self-Propelled 
CMVs and Intermodal Equipment

    Section 390.21 (suspended) and 390.21T would be returned nearly to 
the form before the March 27, 2015, final rule. In the paragraph (e) 
header, FMCSA replaces ``Rented property-carrying commercial motor 
vehicles'' with the header phrase ``Rented CMVs and leased passenger-
carrying CMVs.'' Throughout paragraph (e), the Agency adds the phrase 
``or lease'' after the term ``rental agreement.'' When referring to a 
``renting motor carrier,'' the Agency adds the phrase ``or lessee'' 
immediately after it. In paragraph (e)(2)(iv), in addition to the cross 
reference to the property-carrying leasing regulations in 49 CFR part 
376, FMCSA adds a cross reference to the passenger-carrying leasing 
regulations in subpart G of part 390 so that the revised sentence reads 
``See the property-carrying leasing regulations at 49 CFR part 376 and 
the passenger-carrying leasing regulations at subpart G of this part 
for information that should be included in all leasing documents.'' 
FMCSA proposes to add paragraph (e)(2)(v) to allow the passenger-
carrying CMV operating under the 48-hour emergency exception pursuant 
to Sec.  390.403(a)(2) to be excepted from paragraphs (iii) and (iv) 
regarding a lease document with required information being carried on 
the vehicle, provided the lessor and lessee comply with the 
requirements of the provision in Sec.  390.403(a)(2).
    In paragraph (f), FMCSA would remove the special marking 
regulations for leased and interchanged passenger-carrying CMVs. This 
proposal would redesignate paragraphs (g) and (h) as paragraphs (f) and 
(g), respectively, as they were on July 1, 2015.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \9\ See https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?SID=b9ddca68b462ed0f3d5758839de97752&pitd=20150701&node=pt49.5.390&rgn=div5#se49.5.390_121.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Part 390, Subpart F Lease and Interchange of Passenger-Carrying 
Commercial Motor Vehicles

    Subpart F, including Sec. Sec.  390.301, 390.303, and 390.305, 
would be removed and reserved.

[[Page 47775]]

D. Part 390, Subpart G Lease and Interchange of Passenger-Carrying 
Commercial Motor Vehicles

    Subpart G, consisting of Sec. Sec.  390.401 and 390.403, would be 
added.

E. Section 390.401 Applicability

    Paragraph (a) would add the general applicability for passenger-
carrying CMV leases and interchanges as the terms ``lease'' and 
``interchange'' would be defined in this proposal's Sec. Sec.  390.5 
(suspended) and 390.5T.
    Paragraph (b) would provide the two proposed exceptions to the 
general rule. Paragraph (c) would provide that if the use of a 
passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle is conferred between motor 
carriers subject to this proposal and either carrier fails to meet all 
applicable requirements of subpart G, both motor carriers shall be 
subject to a civil penalty.

F. Section 390.403 Lease and Interchange Requirements

    In paragraph (a)(1), this proposal would set out the two instances 
in which a lease or other agreement is required (and the lease or 
agreement must then meet the conditions of paragraphs (b) and (c) of 
this section). In paragraph (a)(2), this proposal would allow the 
delayed writing of a lease after an emergency, such as a disabled 
vehicle, that disrupts or delays a trip, and would not limit the 
exception to times when passengers are on the bus.
    Paragraph (b) would specify the four minimum required items of any 
lease, sublease, or interchange document required under this proposal: 
(1) Vehicle identification information; (2) Parties; (3) Specific 
duration; and (4) Exclusive possession and responsibilities.
    Paragraph (c) would provide when a copy of the lease must be on the 
passenger-carrying CMV and how long both the lessor and lessee must 
retain copies of the lease, sublease, or agreement.

X. Regulatory Analyses

A. E.O. 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review), E.O. 13563 (Improving 
Regulation and Regulatory Review), and DOT Regulatory Policies and 
Procedures

    FMCSA performed an analysis of the impacts of the proposed rule and 
determined it is not a significant regulatory action under section 3(f) 
of E.O. 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), Regulatory Planning and 
Review, as supplemented by E.O. 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011), 
Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review. Accordingly, the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) has not reviewed it under that Order. It is 
also not significant within the meaning of DOT regulatory policies and 
procedures (DOT Order 2100.5 dated May 22, 1980; 44 FR 11034 (February 
26, 1979)).
    As described earlier, the proposed rule would reduce the scope of 
the lease and interchange requirements for motor carriers of 
passengers. Furthermore, those passenger carriers and passenger-
carrying CMV trips for which the proposed rule would remain applicable 
would be subject to lease and interchange requirements that are reduced 
in comparison to those of the 2015 final rule. At the same time, FMCSA 
believes that the lease and interchange requirements of the proposed 
rule would still enable safety officials and the general public to 
sufficiently identify the passenger carrier responsible for safety. As 
a consequence, FMCSA estimates that the proposed rule would result in a 
cost savings, but would not result in any change to safety benefits.
    The Agency estimates that the proposed rule would result in a cost 
savings of $75.1 million on an undiscounted basis, $66.5 million 
discounted at 3 percent, and $57.5 million discounted at 7 percent over 
the 10-year analysis period. Expressed on an annualized basis, this 
equates to a 10-year cost savings of $7.8 million at a 3 percent 
discount rate and $8.2 million at a 7 percent discount rate, again 
representing a decrease in cost or a cost savings.
Key Inputs to the Analysis
    The proposed rule revises regulations established in the 2015 final 
rule, therefore the 2015 final rule serves as the baseline against 
which the effects of the proposed rule are evaluated. Many of the key 
inputs to this analysis of the proposed rule are based on the same data 
sources and methods as those developed and used in the evaluation of 
the 2015 final rule, with various updates made as needed to reflect 
more recently available data and information. Therefore, a copy of the 
regulatory evaluation for the 2015 final rule is available in the 
docket for the proposed rule, and, where applicable, the Agency cites 
that document in the analysis below.\10\ A 10-year analysis period of 
2019 to 2028 is utilized for this analysis of the proposed rule, and 
all monetary values are expressed in 2016 dollars.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \10\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Number of Passenger Carriers Experiencing Regulatory Relief Under the 
Proposed Rule
    The Agency estimates that an annual average of 8,215 motor carriers 
of passengers would experience regulatory relief under the proposed 
rule, as discussed below. This represents the average over the 10-year 
analysis period of the individual annual estimates of the total number 
of passenger carriers experiencing regulatory relief under the proposed 
rule, which are presented in Table 2. As also shown in Table 2, the 
Agency estimates that approximately 75 percent of this total number of 
passenger carriers would experience full regulatory relief and would no 
longer be subject to the lease and interchange requirements for 
passenger-carrying CMVs as a consequence of the proposed rule. The 
remaining 25 percent of these passenger carriers would experience 
partial regulatory relief and remain subject to reduced lease and 
interchange requirements compared to those of the 2015 final rule.

                 Table 2--Estimated Number of Passenger Carriers Experiencing Regulatory Relief
                                             Under the Proposed Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                Passenger
                                                             Passenger           carriers       Total passenger
                                                              carriers         experiencing         carriers
                          Year                           experiencing full       partial          experiencing
                                                         regulatory relief  regulatory relief  regulatory relief
                                                             under the          under the          under the
                                                           proposed rule      proposed rule      proposed rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2019...................................................              5,929              1,977              7,906
2020...................................................              5,980              1,993              7,973

[[Page 47776]]

 
2021...................................................              6,031              2,010              8,041
2022...................................................              6,082              2,027              8,109
2023...................................................              6,134              2,044              8,178
2024...................................................              6,185              2,062              8,247
2025...................................................              6,238              2,079              8,317
2026...................................................              6,290              2,097              8,387
2027...................................................              6,344              2,115              8,459
2028...................................................              6,397              2,133              8,530
                                                        --------------------------------------------------------
    Annual average.....................................              6,161              2,054              8,215
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To derive the estimates presented in Table 2 of the number of 
passenger carriers experiencing regulatory relief under the proposed 
rule, FMCSA first estimated the number of passenger carriers that, in 
the absence of the proposed rule, would be affected by the lease and 
interchange requirements of the 2015 final rule. This estimate is based 
on the same data sources and methods as those developed and used in the 
evaluation of the 2015 final rule \11\ but updated to reflect more 
recently available data and information. Data from the FMCSA Motor 
Carrier Management Information System (MCMIS) and the FMCSA Licensing 
and Insurance (L&I) system were used to develop a new baseline value 
for the reported number of all active interstate passenger carriers 
operating in the U.S. as of the end of calendar year 2017, namely 
13,386 carriers.\12\ \13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ Further details regarding the specific data sources and 
methods can be found in DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of 
Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory 
Evaluation.'' Pages 9-12.
    \12\ U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT), Federal Motor 
Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA). Motor Carrier Management 
Information System (MCMIS), and Licensing and Insurance (L&I) 
system. Snapshots as of December 29, 2017 (DART request ID #38883).
    \13\ The total number of 13,386 passenger carriers as of the end 
of 2017 actually represents 11,705 unique carriers, because some 
carriers provide passenger service in more than one of the operation 
classifications shown. Consistent with the approach used in the 
regulatory evaluation for the May 2015 final rule, the larger number 
was used here so as to not risk underestimating the number of 
affected passenger carriers and the corresponding cost of the lease 
and interchange requirements of the May 2015 final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Of this total population, the Agency estimates that, in the absence 
of the proposed rule, 7,774 of these passenger carriers would be 
subject to the May 2015 final rule. This estimate is based on the same 
methods as those developed and used in the evaluation of the 2015 final 
rule, and assumes that under that rule 100 percent of authorized for-
hire carriers, 100 percent of exempt for-hire carriers, and 10 percent 
of private passenger carriers would be subject to the lease and 
interchange requirements for passenger-carrying CMVs.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Pages 9-12.

   Table 3--Reported Number of Active Interstate Passenger Carriers Operating in the U.S. (as of December 29,
2017), and Estimated Number That Would Be Subject to the May 2015 Final Rule in the Absence of the Proposed Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                Number (and percent) estimated to be subject to
     Type of passenger carrier operation        Total number     the May 2015 final rule in the absence of the
                                                 of carriers                     proposed rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Authorized For-Hire \(a)\....................           6,629  6,629 (100% of total).
Exempt For-Hire (9+) \(b)\...................             340  340 (100% of total).
Exempt For-Hire (16+) \(c)\..................             181  181 (100% of total).
Private (business) \(d)\.....................           2,599  260 (10% of total).
Private (non-business) \(e)\.................           3,637  364 (10% of total).
                                              ------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total \(f)\..............................          13,386  7,774.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
(a) A commercial entity whose primary business activity is the transportation of passengers by motor vehicle for
  compensation.
(b) A for-hire entity that is exempt under 49 U.S.C. 13506, and operates at least one passenger vehicle designed
  or used to accommodate 9 or more passengers including the driver.
(c) A for-hire entity that is exempt under 49 U.S.C. 13506, and operates at least one passenger vehicle designed
  or used to accommodate 16 or more passengers including the driver.
(d) A private entity engaged in the interstate transportation of passengers which is provided in the furtherance
  of a commercial enterprise and is not available to the public at large.
(e) A private entity involved in the interstate transportation of passengers that does not otherwise meet the
  definition of a ``private (business)'' motor carrier of passengers as noted above.

[[Page 47777]]

 
(f) The total number of 13,386 passenger carriers shown actually represents 11,705 unique carriers, because some
  carriers provide passenger service in more than one of the operation classifications shown. Consistent with
  the approach used in the regulatory evaluation for the May 2015 final rule, the larger number was used here so
  as to not risk underestimating the number of affected passenger carriers and the corresponding cost of the
  lease and interchange requirements of the May 2015 final rule.

    The 2017 value of 7,774 passenger carriers that would be subject to 
the 2015 final rule was then used as the basis to develop future 
projections over the 2019 to 2028 analysis period. These projections 
were developed by increasing the baseline 2017 value of 7,774 passenger 
carriers consistent with the occupation-specific employment growth 
projections for Standard Occupational Classification (SOC) Code 53-3021 
(Bus drivers, transit and intercity) obtained from the Bureau of Labor 
Statistics (BLS) Employment Projections Program which, from 2016 to 
2026, is forecast to grow by 0.85 percent annually.\15\ This results in 
a projection of the number of passenger carriers that, in the absence 
of the proposed rule, would be subject to the 2015 rule each year over 
the 2019 to 2028 analysis period. In the absence of the proposed rule, 
all of these passenger carriers would be subject to the 2015 rule. As 
discussed earlier, under the proposed rule a large portion of these 
passenger carriers would no longer be subject to lease and interchange 
requirements, and the remaining carriers would be subject to reduced 
requirements. In Table 2, the column on the far right shows the 
projected number of passenger carriers that would experience regulatory 
relief under the proposed rule over the 10-year analysis period of 2019 
to 2028, which equals an annual average of 8,215 passenger carriers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ U.S. DOLBLS. ``Occupational Employment Projections. Table 
1.2: Employment by detailed occupation, 2016 and projected 2026.'' 
Available at: https://www.bls.gov/emp/ep_data_occupational_data.htm 
(accessed December 29, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Table 2 also shows the subset of those 8,215 passenger carriers 
that under the proposed rule would experience full regulatory relief 
and would no longer be subject to lease and interchange requirements. 
Over the 10-year analysis period, the Agency estimates that an annual 
average of 6,161 passenger carriers, or approximately 75 percent of the 
total number of carriers that would experience regulatory relief, would 
experience full regulatory relief. This value was estimated by assuming 
that approximately 10 percent of authorized for-hire carriers would be 
subject to the lease and interchange requirements under the proposed 
rule, rather than 100 percent as assumed previously under the 2015 
final rule and as shown in Table 3.
    For exempt for-hire carriers and private passenger carriers, the 
analysis assumes that 100 percent and 10 percent, respectively, of 
these carriers would continue to be subject to the lease and 
interchange requirements under the proposed rule, the same percentages 
as under the 2015 final rule and also as shown in Table 3. Combined, 
these changes result in an estimated overall reduction of approximately 
75 percent in the number of passenger carriers subject to lease and 
interchange requirements under the proposed rule.\16\ This reduction is 
consistent with the comments and petitions for reconsideration that the 
Agency received, a number of which suggested that the scope of the 2015 
final rule likely encompassed a relatively large proportion of 
passenger-carrying CMV trips in which both the lessor and the lessee 
were authorized carriers. Petitioners generally argued that such 
carriers should not be subject to lease and interchange requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ As shown in Table 3, in 2017 an estimated 7,774 passenger 
carriers would be subject to the lease and interchange requirements 
of passenger-carrying CMVs under the May 2015 final rule. Under the 
proposed rule, as noted, the analysis assumed that only 10 percent 
of authorized for-hire carriers would be subject to the lease and 
interchange requirements of passenger-carrying CMVs, or 10 percent 
of 6,629, which equals 663 authorized for-hire passenger carriers. 
The analysis also assumed that 100 percent of exempt for-hire 
carriers and 10 percent of private passenger carriers would continue 
to be subject to the lease and interchange requirements for 
passenger-carrying CMVs under the proposed rule, which equals 100 
percent of 340 and 181 exempt for-hire carriers (totaling 521 exempt 
for-hire carriers), and 10 percent of 2,599 and 3,637 private 
carriers (totaling 624 private carriers). Therefore, the Agency 
estimates that 1,808 passenger carriers would be subject to the 
lease and interchange requirements of passenger-carrying CMVs in 
2017 under the proposed rule, or 23.3 percent of those subject to 
the requirements under the 2015 final rule, which is rounded to 25 
percent for purposes of developing the future projections of 
affected passenger carriers presented in Table 2. This is a 75 
percent reduction in the number of passenger carriers affected by 
the lease and interchange requirements of passenger-carrying CMVs as 
a consequence of the proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, Table 2 also presents an estimate of the remaining subset 
of the annual average of 8,215 passenger carriers that would experience 
partial regulatory relief and remain subject to reduced lease and 
interchange requirements compared to those of the 2015 rule. Over the 
10-year analysis period, the Agency estimates that an annual average of 
2,054 passenger carriers, or approximately 25 percent of the total, 
would experience partial regulatory relief. As noted earlier, however, 
these carriers would be subject to reduced requirements compared to 
those of the 2015 final rule.
    FMCSA requests comments and submission of quantitative or 
qualitative data addressing the potential number of passenger carriers 
that would experience regulatory relief under the proposed rule.
Number of CMV Trips Experiencing Regulatory Relief Under the Proposed 
Rule
    The Agency estimates that an annual average of 537,134 passenger-
carrying CMV trips would experience regulatory relief under the 
proposed rule over the 10-year analysis period, as presented in Table 4 
and discussed below. This estimate is based on the same methods as 
those developed and used in the evaluation of the 2015 final rule.\17\ 
The estimated number of passenger carriers that would experience 
regulatory relief under the proposed rule (see Table 2) serves as the 
primary basis for the estimate of the number of trips that would 
experience regulatory relief under the proposed rule. For each of the 
carriers in Table 2, we assumed an estimated average of 64 trips per 
year are operated with leased or interchanged vehicles. This is 
consistent with the assumptions used in the regulatory evaluation for 
the 2015 final rule.\18\ The estimated number of trips that would 
experience regulatory relief under the proposed rule (see Table 4) also 
incorporates a modest upward adjustment to reflect an annual average of 
11,400 trips operated by Greyhound, one of the largest U.S. interstate 
passenger carriers. This adjustment is consistent with the methods used 
in the evaluation of the 2015 final rule,\19\ and is based on data that 
was provided to FMCSA by Greyhound regarding trips with leased and 
interchanged vehicles in 2012.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Page 21, Table 6.
    \18\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Page 21, Table 6.
    \19\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Pages 12 to 13.
    \20\ ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles; Motor Carriers of 
Passengers. NPRM.'' September 20, 2013. Comments of Greyhound Lines, 
Inc.. Docket ID number FMCSA-2012-0103-0010. Page 2. November 12, 
2013. Available at: https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?documentId=FMCSA-2012-0103-0010&attachmentNumber=1&contentType=pdf (accessed March 12, 2018). 
Greyhound reported 10,263 passenger-carrying CMV trips performed in 
2012 by vehicles leased and interchanged. This 2012 value was then 
adjusted to reflect observed industry growth from 2012 to 2016 as 
represented by growth in employment for SOC Code 53-3021 (Bus 
drivers, transit and intercity), and then further adjusted to 
reflect employment growth projection for SOC Code 53-3021 (Bus 
drivers, transit and intercity).

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 47778]]

    The Agency estimates that approximately 75 percent of these 
passenger-carrying CMV trips would experience full regulatory relief 
and would no longer be subject to the lease and interchange 
requirements of the 2015 final rule. The remaining 25 percent of these 
trips would experience partial regulatory relief and remain subject to 
reduced lease and interchange requirements compared to those of the 
2015 final rule.
    FMCSA requests comments and submission of quantitative or 
qualitative data addressing the potential number of passenger-carrying 
CMV trips that would experience regulatory relief under the proposed 
rule.

            Table 4--Estimated Number of Passenger-Carrying CMV Trips Experiencing Regulatory Relief
                                             Under the Proposed Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                Passenger-
                                                             Passenger-        carrying CMV
                                                            carrying CMV          trips         Total CMV trips
                                                               trips           experiencing       experiencing
                          Year                           experiencing full       partial       regulatory relief
                                                         regulatory relief  regulatory relief      under the
                                                             under the          under the        proposed rule
                                                           proposed rule      proposed rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2019...................................................            387,714            129,238            516,952
2020...................................................            391,003            130,334            521,337
2021...................................................            394,318            131,440            525,758
2022...................................................            397,663            132,554            530,217
2023...................................................            401,036            133,678            534,714
2024...................................................            404,437            134,812            539,249
2025...................................................            407,866            135,956            543,822
2026...................................................            411,325            137,109            548,434
2027...................................................            414,814            138,271            553,085
2028...................................................            418,332            139,444            557,776
                                                        --------------------------------------------------------
    Annual average.....................................            402,851            134,284            537,134
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Other Key Inputs to the Analysis
    The opportunity cost of the time employees of passenger carriers 
spend complying with the lease and interchange requirements represents 
approximately 95 percent of the total cost of the 2015 final rule. The 
cost savings from the proposed rule are likewise heavily influenced by 
aggregate changes in the opportunity cost of employee time.
    The Agency evaluates changes in employee opportunity cost by using 
their labor costs. Labor costs comprise wages, fringe benefits, and 
overhead. Fringe benefits include paid leave, bonuses and overtime pay, 
health and other types of insurance, retirement plans, and legally 
required benefits (Social Security, Medicare, unemployment insurance, 
and workers' compensation insurance). Overhead includes any expenses to 
a firm associated with labor that are not part of employees' 
compensation, and typically includes many types of fixed costs of 
managing a body of employees, such as management and human resource 
staff salaries or payroll services. The economic costs of labor to a 
firm, in this case a passenger carrier, include all forms of 
compensation and labor related expenses. For this regulatory 
evaluation, the costs of labor to the firm are calculated to include 
base wages and fringe benefits, plus overhead.
    For the regulatory evaluation of both the 2015 final rule and this 
proposed rule, the median hourly base wage rate for the BLS SOC code 
53-1031, ``First-Line Supervisors of Transportation and Material-Moving 
Machine and Vehicle Operators,'' is used as the basis for calculating 
the relevant cost of labor. For 2016, BLS reports an hourly base wage 
rate of $27.54 for this occupation.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \21\ U.S. DOLBLS. ``Occupational Employment Statistics (OES). 
National.'' May 2016. March 31, 2017. Available at: https://www.bls.gov/oes/special.requests/oesm16nat.zip (accessed January 18, 
2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    BLS does not publish data on fringe benefits for specific 
occupations, but it does do so for broad industry groups in its 
Employer Costs for Employee Compensation (ECEC) publication. A fringe 
benefit rate of 57 percent (i.e., equal to 57 percent of the base wage 
rate) is used. This is based on information from the June 2016 BLS ECEC 
data, which for the ``Transportation and warehousing'' segment of 
private industry reports a benefits cost of $14.09 per hour worked, 
which represents 57 percent of wages and salaries in that industry 
segment of $24.73 per hour.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ U.S. DOLBLS . ``Table 10: Employer costs per hour worked 
for employee compensation and costs as a percent of total 
compensation: Private industry workers, by industry group, March 
2015.'' Available at: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/ecec_09082016.pdf (accessed March 5, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, for estimating overhead rates, the Agency used industry 
data gathered for the Truck Costing Model developed by the Upper Great 
Plains Transportation Institute, North Dakota State University.\23\ 
Research conducted for this model found an average cost of $0.107 per 
mile of CMV operation for management and overhead, and $0.39 per mile 
for labor, indicating an overhead rate of 27 percent (27% = $0.107 / 
$0.39 (rounded to the nearest whole percent)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \23\ Berwick, Farooq. Truck Costing Model for Transportation 
Managers. North Dakota State University. Upper Great Plains 
Transportation Institute. August 2003. Appendix A, pp. 42-47. 
Available at: http://www.mountain-plains.org/pubs/pdf/MPC03-152.pdf 
(accessed July 20, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Combined, the overall relevant cost of labor, including base wage 
rate, fringe benefits, and overhead, for passenger carriers that would 
experience regulatory relief under the proposed rule is $54.91 per 
hour.
Costs
    The proposed rule would not result in any increase in costs. It 
revises the 2015 final rule, which serves as the baseline against which 
the effects of the proposed rule are evaluated. Absent the proposed 
rule, the Agency estimates

[[Page 47779]]

that the baseline costs of the 2015 final rule over the 10-year 
analysis period of 2019 to 2028 would be $10.4 million on an annualized 
basis at a 7 percent discount rate.\24\ As noted earlier, the Agency 
estimates that the proposed rule would result in a cost savings of $8.2 
million at a 7 percent discount rate relative to the 2015 baseline, 
representing a 79 percent overall reduction in cost.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \24\ This annualized cost estimate of $10.4 million differs 
somewhat from the value of $8.0 million that was presented in the 
regulatory evaluation for the 2015 final rule primarily due to 
various real and nominal updates made to reflect more recently 
available data and information, as well as the different time frames 
covered by the 10-year analysis period for each respective analysis 
(previously 2017 to 2026, and now 2019 to 2028).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The estimated reduction of approximately 75 percent in the number 
of passenger carriers and CMV trips under the proposed rule is 
responsible for most of the annualized cost savings. The remaining cost 
savings are the result of reduced requirements for those approximately 
25 percent of passenger carriers and CMV trips that would remain 
subject to the lease and interchange rules.
    Under both the 2015 rule and the proposed rule, costs are organized 
into six major categories. Five are related to the requirements under 
Sec.  390.303 of the 2015 rule, and include: One-time costs of lease 
negotiation; lease documentation costs; lease copying costs; lease 
receipt costs; and vehicle marking costs. The sixth cost category is 
related to the charter party notification requirement under Sec.  
390.305 of the 2015 rule.
    One-time costs of lease negotiation under the proposed rule are 
calculated based on the number of CMV trips that would experience 
regulatory relief under the proposed rule for this cost category, the 
time expended by employees in negotiating the lease and developing the 
lease document, and the total labor cost of these employees. The number 
of trips that would experience regulatory relief under the proposed 
rule for this cost category are the trips that would no longer be 
subject to the lease and interchange requirements. As presented earlier 
in Table 4, the Agency estimates that an annual average of 402,851 
passenger-carrying CMV trips would no longer be subject to the lease 
and interchange requirements. Consistent with the approach used in the 
2015 regulatory evaluation, for each of these trips it is assumed that 
30 minutes of employee time is saved, for both the lessor and the 
lessee, for a total time savings of one hour for each such trip.\25\ 
This savings is valued at the total labor cost of $54.91 per hour, 
described earlier. The resulting savings in one-time costs of lease 
negotiation under the proposed rule would be $21.3 million on an 
undiscounted basis over the 10-year analysis period, and $2.8 million 
on an annualized basis at a 7 percent discount rate. As noted earlier, 
FMCSA proposes to remove the requirement in Sec.  390.303(b)(5) that 
the lease contain a statement that the lessee is responsible for 
compliance with the insurance requirements of 49 CFR part 387. Although 
in theory this proposed change may result in a modest incremental 
reduction in the amount of time passenger carrier employees expend in 
negotiating the lease and developing the lease document for carriers 
still subject to the leasing and interchange requirements, there is no 
empirical basis upon which to estimate such a possible impact. 
Therefore the Agency has chosen not to make any such incremental 
reduction in its analysis. Also, not quantifying such a potential 
impact is a conservative approach that helps to avoid overestimating 
the cost savings of the proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \25\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Pages 16 to 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Lease documentation costs under the proposed rule are calculated 
based on the number of CMV trips that would experience regulatory 
relief under the proposed rule for this cost category, the time spent 
by carrier employees verifying the information and signing the lease, 
and the total labor cost of these employees. The number of trips that 
would experience regulatory relief under the proposed rule for this 
cost category are the same as above, an annual average of 402,851 trips 
that would no longer be subject to the lease and interchange 
requirements. Consistent with the 2015 regulatory evaluation, for each 
trip that would experience regulatory relief under the proposed rule 
for this cost category this analysis assumes that both the lessor and 
the lessee save 5 minutes of employee time, for a total savings of 10 
minutes for each such trip.\26\ This is valued at the total labor cost 
of $54.91 per hour. The resulting savings in lease documentation costs 
under the proposed rule would be $36.9 million on an undiscounted basis 
over the 10-year analysis period, and $3.7 million on an annualized 
basis at a 7 percent discount rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Page 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Lease copying cost savings under the proposed rule are calculated 
based on the number of CMV trips that would experience regulatory 
relief under the proposed rule for this cost category, and an estimated 
cost per copy. The number of trips that would experience regulatory 
relief under the proposed rule for this cost category are the same as 
above, an annual average of 402,851 such trips. As in the 2015 
regulatory evaluation, it assumed that for each trip one copy of the 
lease is made for the lessor and another for the lessee, each at a cost 
of $0.15, for a total cost of $0.30 per trip.\27\ The resulting in 
lease copying cost savings under the proposed rule would be $1.2 
million on an undiscounted basis over the 10-year analysis period, and 
$0.12 million on an annualized basis at a 7 percent discount rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \27\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Page 17.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The remaining three cost categories (lease receipts, vehicle 
marking, and charter party notification) would be eliminated for all 
passenger carriers and passenger-carrying trips, including those that 
would still be subject to lease and interchange requirements under the 
proposed rule.
    Lease receipt cost savings under the 2015 rule are calculated based 
on the number of CMV trips that would experience regulatory relief 
under the proposed rule for this cost category, with two receipts 
assumed per trip (one for obtaining, the other for surrendering the 
vehicle), and both the lessor and lessee requiring copies of each, for 
a total of four receipts per trip. Because the proposed rule would 
remove the receipt provision in its entirety, the cost savings would 
apply to all trips listed in Table 4, an annual average of 537,134 
trips. Consistent with the 2015 regulatory evaluation, each receipt is 
assumed to cost $0.15, with four receipts required for a total of $0.60 
per trip.\28\ The resulting cost savings in lease receipt under the 
proposed rule would be $3.2 million on an undiscounted basis over the 
10-year analysis period, and $0.321 million on an annualized basis at a 
7 percent discount rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Page 17 to 18.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Vehicle marking cost savings under the 2015 rule are calculated 
based on the number of CMV trips that would experience regulatory 
relief under the proposed rule for this cost category, and marking 
costs per vehicle that include two sheets of letter size paper per trip 
at $0.014 per sheet, plus $0.04 for

[[Page 47780]]

adhesive tape. Because the proposed rule would remove the marking 
provision in its entirety, the cost savings would apply to all trips 
listed in Table 4, an annual average of 537,134 trips. The resulting 
cost savings in vehicle marking under the proposed rule would be $0.355 
million on an undiscounted basis over the 10-year analysis period, and 
$0.035 million on an annualized basis at a 7 percent discount rate.
    Charter party notification cost savings under the 2015 rule are 
calculated based on the number of CMV trips that would experience 
regulatory relief under the proposed rule for this cost category, and 
an estimated expenditure by passenger carrier employees of 5 minutes 
per notification.\29\ Because the proposed rule would remove the 
notification provision in its entirety, the resulting cost savings 
would apply to all trips in which notification would otherwise have 
been necessary, which are assumed to be 50 percent of the total annual 
average of 537,134 passenger-carrying CMV trips listed in Table 4.\30\ 
The resulting savings in charter party notification costs under the 
proposed rule would be $12.1 million on an undiscounted basis over the 
10-year analysis period, and $1.2 million on an annualized basis at a 7 
percent discount rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Page 24 to 26.
    \30\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.'' 
Page 24 to 26.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In summary, and as presented in Table 5, the Agency estimates that 
the proposed rule would result in a cost savings of $75.1 million on an 
undiscounted basis, $66.5 million discounted at 3 percent, and $57.5 
million discounted at 7 percent over the 10-year analysis period. 
Expressed on an annualized basis, this equates to a 10-year cost 
savings of $7.8 million at a 3 percent discount rate and $8.2 million 
at a 7 percent discount rate.

                                                        Table 5--Total Cost of the Proposed Rule
                                                                 [In thousands of 2016$]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                           Undiscounted                                             Discounted
                                        ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   Lease and interchange costs
                                        -------------------------------------------------
                  Year                                        Lease                        Charter party
                                              Lease       documentation,                   notification     Total cost     Discounted at   Discounted at
                                           negotiation     copying, and       Vehicle          costs           \(a)\            3%              7%
                                           costs \(b)\    lease receipt   marking  costs
                                                              costs
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2019...................................       ($21,290)         ($3,974)           ($34)        ($1,168)       ($26,467)       ($25,697)       ($24,736)
2020...................................               0          (4,008)            (34)         (1,178)         (5,221)         (4,921)         (4,560)
2021...................................               0          (4,042)            (35)         (1,188)         (5,265)         (4,819)         (4,298)
2022...................................               0          (4,076)            (35)         (1,198)         (5,310)         (4,718)         (4,051)
2023...................................               0          (4,111)            (35)         (1,208)         (5,355)         (4,619)         (3,818)
2024...................................               0          (4,146)            (36)         (1,219)         (5,401)         (4,523)         (3,599)
2025...................................               0          (4,181)            (36)         (1,229)         (5,446)         (4,428)         (3,392)
2026...................................               0          (4,216)            (36)         (1,239)         (5,493)         (4,336)         (3,197)
2027...................................               0          (4,252)            (37)         (1,250)         (5,539)         (4,245)         (3,013)
2028...................................               0          (4,289)            (37)         (1,261)         (5,586)         (4,157)         (2,840)
                                        ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Total..............................        (21,290)         (41,301)           (355)        (12,139)        (75,084)        (66,463)        (57,504)
Annualized.............................  ..............  ...............  ..............  ..............         (7,508)         (7,792)         (8,187)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
(a) Total cost values may not equal the sum of the components due to rounding. (The totals shown in this column are the rounded sum of unrounded
  components.)
(b) Values shown in parentheses are negative values (i.e., less than zero) and represent a decrease in cost or a cost savings.

Benefits
    The regulatory evaluation for the 2015 final rule attempted to 
estimate the potential safety benefits of lease and interchange 
requirements,\31\ but there were insufficient data and empirical 
evidence to demonstrate a measurable quantitative relationship between 
lease and interchange requirements and improved safety outcomes, such 
as reduced frequency and/or severity of crashes or reduced frequency of 
violations. Therefore, FMCSA followed the guidance of the Office of 
Management and Budget (OMB) in its Circular A-4 and performed a 
threshold analysis.\32\ Also referred to as a break-even analysis, a 
threshold analysis attempts to determine the amount of safety benefits 
(e.g., reduced crashes and corresponding reductions in fatalities, 
injuries, and property damage) that would need to occur as a 
consequence of a rule in order for the rule to yield zero net benefits 
(i.e., for the benefits of the rule to equal, or exactly to offset, the 
estimated costs of the rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \31\ DOT FMCSA, ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor 
Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory Evaluation.''
    \32\ OMB. ``Circular A-4. Regulatory Analysis.'' September 17, 
2003. Available at: https://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf (accessed March 9, 2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The problem of insufficient data and empirical evidence noted in 
2015 is still present today. Unlike regulations dealing with vehicle 
equipment or driver behaviors that can be clearly linked to reduced 
crashes and improved safety, both the 2015 final rule and this proposed 
rule affect safety less directly and immediately. Lease and interchange 
requirements for motor carriers of passengers improve the ability of 
the Agency to attribute the inspection, compliance, enforcement, and 
safety data collected by the Agency and its State partners to the 
correct motor carrier and driver, allowing FMCSA to more accurately 
identify unsafe carriers and initiate appropriate interventions. FMCSA 
believes that this proposed rule would be a less costly and burdensome 
regulatory approach than the 2015 final rule, yet would still enable 
safety officials and the general public to

[[Page 47781]]

sufficiently identify the passenger carrier responsible for safety. 
Therefore, the Agency does not anticipate any change to safety benefits 
as a result of the proposed rule.
    FMCSA requests comments and submission of quantitative or 
qualitative data addressing the potential impacts to safety benefits 
from the proposed rule.

B. E.O. 13771 (Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs)

    This rulemaking is expected to be an E.O. 13771 deregulatory 
action.\33\ Details on the estimated cost savings of this rulemaking 
can be found in the rule's economic analysis. The present value of the 
cost savings of this rulemaking, measured on an infinite time horizon 
at a 7 percent discount rate, is $83.6 million. Expressed on an 
annualized basis, the cost savings are $5.9 million. These values are 
expressed in 2016 dollars.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \33\ Executive Office of the President. Executive Order 13771 of 
January 30, 2017. Reducing Regulation and Controlling Regulatory 
Costs. 82 FR 9339-9341. Feb. 3, 2017.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et 
seq.), as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness 
Act of 1996 (SBREFA) (Pub. L. 104-121, 110 Stat. 857), requires Federal 
agencies to consider the impact of their regulatory proposals on small 
entities, analyze effective alternatives that minimize small entity 
impacts, and make their analyses available for public comment. The term 
``small entities'' means small businesses and not-for-profit 
organizations that are independently owned and operated and are not 
dominant in their fields, and governmental jurisdictions with 
populations under 50,000.\34\ Accordingly, DOT policy requires an 
analysis of the impact of all regulations on small entities, and 
mandates that agencies strive to lessen any adverse effects on these 
entities. Section 605 of the RFA allows an Agency to certify a rule, in 
lieu of preparing an analysis, if the rulemaking is not expected to 
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \34\ Regulatory Flexibility Act, Public Law 96-354, 94 Stat. 
1164 (codified at 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed rule would not result in any increase in costs or any 
increase in burden. The proposed rule would reduce the applicability of 
the lease and interchange requirements for motor carriers of 
passengers, resulting in a substantial reduction in the number of 
entities that would be subject to these requirements and a commensurate 
reduction in costs and burden experienced by these entities. 
Furthermore, for those motor carriers of passengers that would continue 
to be subject to the lease and interchange requirements under the 
proposed rule, the requirements would be reduced in comparison to the 
existing requirements. This would also result in a reduction in costs 
and burden experienced by these entities.
    The regulated entities that would experience regulatory relief 
under the proposed rule include all of the passenger carriers that are 
subject to the existing lease and interchange requirements. 
Approximately 75 percent of this total number of passenger carriers 
would experience full regulatory relief, and would no longer be subject 
to lease and interchange requirements for passenger-carrying CMVs. The 
remaining 25 percent of these passenger carriers would experience 
partial regulatory relief and remain subject to reduced lease and 
interchange requirements compared to those of the 2015 final rule.
    As presented earlier in Table 3 of the Regulatory Analyses section, 
as of 2017 there were an estimated 7,774 passenger carriers subject to 
the existing lease and interchange requirements, representing 
approximately 58 percent of all active interstate passenger carriers. 
As presented in Table 2, this population of passenger carriers is 
projected to increase slightly due to general baseline industry growth 
to 7,906 passenger carriers in 2019, the first year that the proposed 
rule is anticipated to be in effect. Therefore, it is estimated that 
7,906 passenger carriers would experience regulatory relief under the 
proposed rule. The number of these 7,906 passenger carriers that are 
small entities is not directly known by FMCSA, and is therefore 
estimated below.
    The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) defines the size 
standards used to classify entities as small. SBA establishes separate 
standards for each industry, as defined by the North American Industry 
Classification System (NAICS).\35\ It is estimated that the passenger 
carriers that would experience regulatory relief under the proposed 
rule would be in industries within Subsector 485 (Transit and Ground 
Passenger Transportation). All eleven 6-digit NAICS industries within 
Subsector 485 have an SBA size standard based on annual revenue of 
$15.0 million. Three of the eleven 6-digit NAICS industries within 
Subsector 485 are likely to encompass most of the passenger carriers 
that would experience regulatory relief under the proposed rule, and 
details regarding the SBA size standards for those three industries are 
presented in Table 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \35\ OMB. ``North American Industry Classification System.'' 
2017. Available at: https://www.census.gov/eos/www/naics/2017NAICS/2017_NAICS_Manual.pdf (accessed March 20, 2018).

                            Table 6--SBA Size Standards for Selected Industries \(a)\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                          SBA size
                                                                          standard
                                                                           (annual         SBA size  standard
              NAICS code                  NAICS industry description     revenue in      (number of  employees)
                                                                        millions  of
                                                                          dollars)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
485113................................  Bus and Other Motor Vehicle             $15.0  (none).
                                         Transit Systems.
485210................................  Interurban and Rural Bus                 15.0  (none).
                                         Transportation.
485510................................  Charter Bus Industry.........            15.0  (none).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Notes:
(a) U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA). ``Table of Small Business Size Standards.'' October 1, 2017.
  Available at: https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/Size_Standards_Table_2017.xlsx (accessed March 20,
  2018).

    Data regarding the annual revenue earned by the estimated 7,906 
passenger carriers that would experience regulatory relief under the 
proposed rule is not collected by FMCSA and is not otherwise available 
from other

[[Page 47782]]

sources. Therefore, the SBA size standard of $15.0 million in annual 
revenue cannot be directly applied in order to determine how many of 
the 7,906 passenger carriers that would experience regulatory relief 
under the proposed rule are small entities. FMCSA does, however, 
collect information regarding the number of passenger-carrying vehicles 
operated by these carriers. As of the end of 2017, of the active 
interstate passenger carriers operating in the U.S. as presented 
earlier in Table 3, approximately 81 percent operated six or fewer 
passenger vehicles, and approximately 93 percent operated 19 or fewer 
passenger vehicles.\36\ We estimate that in the passenger carrier 
industry, the average revenue earned per motorcoach is approximately 
$200,000.\37\ \38\ \39\ This would mean that the SBA size standard of 
$15.0 million in annual revenue would equate to a carrier size of 75 
passenger vehicles. Therefore, carriers operating 75 passenger vehicles 
or fewer would be classified as small, consistent with the SBA size 
standard of $15.0 million. As of the end of 2017, of the active 
interstate passenger carriers operating in the U.S. as presented 
earlier in Table 3, approximately 98 percent operated 75 or fewer 
passenger vehicles. The Agency does not believe that the proposed rule 
would disproportionately apply to either larger or smaller passenger 
carriers, and we therefore estimate that a similar 98 percent of the 
7,906 passenger carriers that would experience regulatory relief under 
the proposed rule, or approximately 7,750 passenger carriers, would be 
small entities. Therefore, FMCSA has determined that this proposed rule 
will have an impact on a substantial number of small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \36\ U.S. DOT, FMCSA. Motor Carrier Management Information 
System (MCMIS), and Licensing and Insurance (L&I) system. Snapshots 
as of December 29, 2017 (DART request ID #38883).
    \37\ The information available regarding revenue for the 
passenger carrier industry is limited. The American Bus Associated 
reported that for 2004, revenue per motorcoach was approximately 
$160,000. Inflated from 2004 dollars to 2016 dollars using either 
CPI-U or the Implicit Price Deflator for GDP, this value becomes 
approximately $200,000 per vehicle.
    \38\ American Bus Association (ABA). ``Motorcoach Census 2005.'' 
September 2006. Page 19, Table 3-5 (Carrier Revenue per Motorcoach, 
Averages, 2004). Available at: https://www.iru.org/apps/cms-filesystem-action?file=events_2007_busandcoach/Motorcoach%20Census%202005%2009-21-20061.pdf (accessed March 8, 
2018).
    \39\ Greyhound, one of the largest interstate passenger carriers 
operating in the U.S., reported total revenue for 2017 of $894 
million, with 78 percent of that total, or $697 million, being 
passenger revenue. With a fleet size reported to consist of 1,600 
buses for the same year, this equals an average passenger revenue 
per motorcoach of $435,000. We believe that substantially higher 
levels of per vehicle revenue such as this are not representative of 
the smaller passenger carriers that make up most of the industry, 
and therefore the lesser estimate of $200,000 revenue per motorcoach 
described above was used here so as not to risk underestimating the 
number of small entities in the passenger carrier industry when used 
to compare against the SBA size standard of $15.0 million in annual 
revenue. Greyhound data is from ``FirstGroup plc, Annual Report and 
Accounts, 2017'', pages 18-19, available at http://
www.firstgroupplc.com/~/media/Files/F/Firstgroup-Plc/indexed-pdfs/
2017%20ARA/
2017%20FirstGroup%20plc%20Annual%20Report%20and%20Accounts.pdf 
(accessed March 19, 2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Although FMCSA has determined that this proposed rule would have an 
impact on a substantial number of small entities, the Agency has 
determined that the impact on the small entities that would experience 
regulatory relief under the proposed rule would not be significant. The 
proposed rule would not result in any increase in costs or any increase 
in burden for passenger carriers that are small entities. The effect of 
the proposed rule would be a reduction in costs and burden, and would 
be entirely beneficial to the passenger carriers that are small 
entities. As discussed in the Regulatory Analyses section, the Agency 
estimates that the proposed rule would result in a total cost savings 
of $75.1 million on an undiscounted basis over the 10-year analysis 
period used for the regulatory evaluation, or $7.5 million on an 
annualized basis. As presented in Table 2, an annual average of 
approximately 8,215 passenger carriers would experience regulatory 
relief under the proposed rule over the same 10-year analysis period, 
98 percent of which are estimated to be small entities. The annual cost 
savings per small carrier would therefore be at most $914 on average 
(potentially even somewhat less, given that approximately 2 percent of 
passenger carriers that would experience regulatory relief under the 
proposed rule are not small entities and therefore may represent a 
disproportionately larger share of the overall absolute cost savings 
because of the larger scale of their operations). For even the smallest 
of the small entities, those operating only one passenger vehicle, this 
$914 in annual savings represents only about one half of one percent of 
the estimated total annual revenues of $200,000 for a carrier with just 
one vehicle. Therefore, although FMCSA has determined that this 
proposed rule would have an impact on a substantial number of small 
entities, the Agency has also determined that the impact on these small 
entities would not be significant, and furthermore will be entirely 
beneficial.
    Accordingly, pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory 
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), I hereby certify that the proposed 
rule would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
number of small entities. FMCSA requests comments on this certification 
and on the analysis presented in support of it.

D. Assistance for Small Entities

    In accordance with section 213(a) of the Small Business Regulatory 
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, FMCSA wants to assist small entities 
in understanding this proposed rule so that they can better evaluate 
its effects and participate in the rulemaking initiative. If the 
proposed rule would affect your small business, organization, or 
governmental jurisdiction, and you have questions concerning its 
provisions or options for compliance, please consult the FMCSA point of 
contact, Ms. Loretta Bitner, listed in the For Further Information 
Contact section of this proposed rule.
    Small businesses may send comments on the actions of Federal 
employees who enforce or otherwise determine compliance with Federal 
regulations to the Small Business Administration's Small Business and 
Agriculture Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman and the Regional Small 
Business Regulatory Fairness Boards. The Ombudsman evaluates these 
actions annually and rates each agency's responsiveness to small 
business. If you wish to comment on actions by employees of FMCSA, call 
1-888-REG-FAIR (1-888-734-3247). The DOT has a policy regarding the 
rights of small entities to regulatory enforcement fairness and an 
explicit policy against retaliation for exercising these rights.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \40\ U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT). ``The Rights of 
Small Entities To Enforcement Fairness and Policy Against 
Retaliation.'' Available at: https://www.transportation.gov/sites/dot.gov/files/docs/SBREFAnotice2.pdf (accessed January 17, 2018).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995

    The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531-1538) 
requires Federal agencies to assess the effects of their discretionary 
regulatory actions. In particular, the Act requires agencies to prepare 
a comprehensive written statement for any proposed or final rule that 
may result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, 
in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $156 million (which is 
the value equivalent of $100 million in 1995, adjusted for inflation to 
2015 levels) or more in any one year. Because this proposed rule would 
not result in such an expenditure, a written statement is not required. 
However, the Agency does discuss the costs and benefits of this

[[Page 47783]]

proposed rule elsewhere in this preamble.

F. Paperwork Reduction Act

    This proposed rule would amend two OMB-approved information 
collections titled ``Commercial Motor Vehicle Marking Requirements,'' 
OMB No. 2126-0054, and ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles,'' OMB No. 
2126-0056, under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-
3520). As defined in 5 CFR 1320.3(c), ``collection of information'' 
includes reporting, recordkeeping, monitoring, posting, labeling, and 
other, similar actions. The title and description of the information 
collections, a description of those who must collect the information, 
and an estimate of the total annual burden follow. The estimate covers 
the time for reviewing instructions, searching existing sources of 
data, gathering and maintaining the data needed, and completing and 
reviewing the collection.
    The Agency's CMV marking regulations require freight-carrying 
commercial motor carriers, passenger-carrying commercial motor 
carriers, and intermodal equipment providers to display the USDOT 
number and the legal name or a single trade name of the carrier or 
intermodal equipment provider on their vehicles. The USDOT number is 
used to identify all motor carriers in FMCSA's registration and 
information systems. It is also used by States as the key identifier in 
the Performance and Registration Information Systems Management (PRISM) 
system, a cooperative Federal/State program that makes motor carrier 
safety a requirement for obtaining and maintaining CMV registration and 
privileges. Vehicle marking requirements are intended to ensure that 
FMCSA, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), and State 
safety officials are able to identify motor carriers and correctly 
assign responsibility for regulatory violations during inspections, 
investigations, compliance reviews, and crash studies. These marking 
requirements also provide the public with beneficial information that 
could assist in identifying carriers for the purposes of commerce, 
complaints, or emergency notification.
    The proposed rule would eliminate the existing requirement under 49 
CFR 390.303(f) for the temporary marking of leased commercial passenger 
vehicles. The proposed rule would therefore amend the OMB-approved 
information collection titled ``Commercial Motor Vehicle Marking 
Requirements,'' OMB No. 2126-0054. In the currently approved 
information collection, the temporary marking of leased commercial 
passenger vehicles was assumed to have de minimis time burden, and 
therefore no separate time burden was estimated for that element of the 
passenger-carrying commercial motor carrier marking requirements. 
Because of this, in the proposed revision to this information 
collection, there is no change in time burden due to program change, 
and the estimated changes in time burden from the currently approved 
information collection are due to adjustments related to factors such 
as revised estimates of the population of passenger-carrying motor 
carriers and industry growth rate. There is a small reduction in the 
annual cost burden, however, related to the elimination of the cost of 
materials (paper and adhesive tape) estimated to be used for the 
temporary vehicle markings that are proposed to be eliminated.
    Title: Commercial Motor Vehicle Marking Requirements.
    OMB control number: 2126-0054.
    Summary of the collection of information: Under the information 
collection, freight-carrying commercial motor carriers, passenger-
carrying commercial motor carriers, and intermodal equipment providers 
mark their vehicles to display the USDOT number and the legal name or a 
single trade name of the carrier or intermodal equipment provider. This 
vehicle marking occurs when a new vehicle is purchased, when a used 
vehicle is purchased and requires re-marking, and when a vehicle is 
retained by the owner but the existing label reaches the end of its 
useful life.
    Need for information: Vehicle marking requirements are needed to 
ensure that FMCSA, the NTSB, and State safety officials are able to 
identify motor carriers and correctly assign responsibility for 
regulatory violations during inspections, investigations, compliance 
reviews, and crash studies. These marking requirements also provide the 
public with beneficial information that could assist in identifying 
carriers for the purposes of commerce, complaints, or emergency 
notification.
    Proposed use of information: The USDOT number is used to identify 
all motor carriers in FMCSA's registration and information systems, is 
used as the key identifier in the PRISM system, and is used by the 
public with beneficial information that could also assist in 
identifying carriers for the purposes of commerce, complaints, or 
emergency notification.
    Description of the respondents: Freight-carrying commercial motor 
carriers, passenger-carrying commercial motor carriers, and intermodal 
equipment providers.
    Number of respondents:

IC-1 (freight carriers) number of respondents: 204,390
IC-2 (passenger carriers) number of respondents: 5,007
IC-3 (intermodal equipment providers) number of respondents: 11
Total number of respondents: 209,408

    Frequency of response:

IC-1 (freight carriers) frequency of response: 7.9 responses per year, 
per respondent
IC-2 (passenger carriers) frequency of response: 20.4 responses per 
year, per respondent
IC-3 (intermodal equipment providers) frequency of response: 1,910 
responses per year, per respondent
Overall average frequency of response: 8.3 response per year, per 
respondent

    Burden of response:

IC-1 (freight carriers) burden of response: 0.43 hours
IC-2 (passenger carriers) burden of response: 0.43 hours
IC-3 (intermodal equipment providers) burden of response: 0.43 hours
Overall average burden of response: 0.43 hours

    Estimate of Total Annual Burden:

IC-1 (freight carriers) burden: 699,902 hours
IC-2 (passenger carriers) burden: 44,300 hours
IC-3 (intermodal equipment providers) burden: 9,108 hours

Total annual burden: 753,310 hours

    The Agency's lease and interchange of vehicles regulations ensure 
that truck and bus carriers are identified (and in some cases 
protected) when they agree to lease their equipment and drivers to 
other carriers. These regulations also ensure that the government and 
members of the public can determine who is responsible for a CMV. Prior 
to these regulations, some equipment was leased without written 
agreements, leading to disputes and confusion over which party to the 
lease was responsible for charges and actions and, at times, who was 
legally responsible for the vehicle. These recordkeeping requirements 
enable the general public and investigators to identify the passenger 
carrier responsible for safety, and ensure that FMCSA, our State 
partners, and the NTSB are better able to identify the responsible 
motor carrier and therefore correctly assign regulatory violations to 
the appropriate carrier during inspections, investigations, compliance 
reviews, and crash studies.

[[Page 47784]]

    The proposed rule would reduce the scope of the lease and 
interchange requirements for motor carriers of passengers. Furthermore, 
those passenger carriers and passenger-carrying CMV trips for which the 
proposed rule would remain applicable would be subject to lease and 
interchange requirements that are reduced from the current 
requirements. The applicability of the existing lease and interchange 
requirements for motor carriers of passengers under 49 CFR 390.301 
would be revised, resulting in a substantial reduction of approximately 
75% in the number of passenger carriers and passenger-carrying CMV 
trips that would be subject to the lease and interchange requirement 
for motor carriers of passengers. For those motor carriers of 
passengers that would remain subject to the lease and interchange 
requirements under the proposed rule, the existing requirements under 
49 CFR 390.303(e) for lease receipt copies would be eliminated, and the 
existing requirements under 49 CFR 390.305 for charter party 
notification would also be eliminated.
    The proposed rule would therefore amend the OMB-approved 
information collection titled ``Lease and Interchange of Vehicles,'' 
OMB No. 2126-0056. In the proposed revision to this information 
collection, there is substantial reduction in time burden due to 
program change from the currently approved information collection as a 
result of the proposed rule.
    Title: Lease and Interchange of Vehicles
    OMB control number: 2126-0056.
    Summary of the collection of information: Under the information 
collection, freight-carrying commercial motor carriers and passenger-
carrying commercial motor carriers negotiate leases, prepare and sign 
lease documents, and produce copies of lease documents.
    Need for information: The Agency's lease and interchange of 
vehicles regulations ensure that truck and bus carriers are identified 
(and in some cases protected) when they agree to lease their equipment 
and drivers to other carriers. These regulations also ensure that the 
government and members of the public can determine who is responsible 
for a CMV. These recordkeeping requirements enable the general public 
and investigators to identify the passenger carrier responsible for 
safety.
    Proposed use of information: The government generally collects 
little information with this ICR. The leases and other agreements are 
developed and held by the lessor (e.g., those granting use of 
equipment) and lessee (e.g., party acquiring equipment). They are used 
to assign duties and responsibilities. The information may also be used 
by law enforcement to determine legal responsibility in the event that 
a leased vehicle is in violation of the regulations or is involved in a 
crash.
    Description of the respondents: Freight-carrying commercial motor 
carriers, and passenger-carrying commercial motor carriers.
    Number of respondents:

IC-1 (property-carrying CMVs) number of respondents: 35,902
IC-2 (passenger-carrying CMVs) number of respondents: 3,987
Total number of respondents: 39,889

    Frequency of response:

IC-1 (property-carrying CMVs) frequency of response: 19.9 responses per 
year, per respondent
IC-2 (passenger-carrying CMVs) frequency of response: 152.4 responses 
per year, per respondent
Overall average frequency of response: 33.2 response per year, per 
respondent

    Burden of response:

IC-1 (property-carrying CMVs) burden of response: 0.11 hours
IC-2 (passenger-carrying CMVs) burden of response: 0.11 hours
Overall average burden of response: 0.11 hours

    Estimate of total annual burden:

IC-1 (property-carrying CMVs) burden: 77,554 hours
IC-2 (passenger-carrying CMVs) burden: 64,802 hours
Total annual burden: 142,356 hours

    As required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 
3507(d)), FMCSA will submit a copy of this proposed rule to OMB for its 
review of the collection of information.
    FMCSA asks for public comment on the proposed collection of 
information to help us determine how useful the information is; whether 
it can help the Agency perform our functions better; whether it is 
readily available elsewhere; how accurate our estimate of the burden of 
collection is; how valid our methods for determining burden are; how 
FMCSA can improve the quality, usefulness, and clarity of the 
information; and how FMCSA can minimize the burden of collection.

G. E.O. 13132 (Federalism)

    A rule has implications for Federalism under Section 1(a) of E.O. 
13132 if it has ``substantial direct effects on the States, on the 
relationship between the national government and the States, or on the 
distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of 
government.'' FMCSA determined that this proposal would not have 
substantial direct costs on or for States, nor would it limit the 
policymaking discretion of States. Nothing in this document preempts 
any State law or regulation. Therefore, this rule does not have 
sufficient Federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a 
Federalism Impact Statement.

H. E.O. 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)

    This proposed rule meets applicable standards in sections 3(a) and 
3(b)(2) of E.O. 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize litigation, 
eliminate ambiguity, and reduce burden.

I. E.O. 13045 (Protection of Children)

    Executive Order 13045, Protection of Children from Environmental 
Health Risks and Safety Risks (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997), requires 
agencies issuing ``economically significant'' rules, if the regulation 
also concerns an environmental health or safety risk that an agency has 
reason to believe may disproportionately affect children, to include an 
evaluation of the regulation's environmental health and safety effects 
on children. The Agency determined this proposed rule is not 
economically significant. Therefore, no analysis of the impacts on 
children is required. In any event, the Agency does not anticipate that 
this regulatory action could in any respect present an environmental or 
safety risk that could disproportionately affect children.

J. E.O. 12630 (Taking of Private Property)

    FMCSA reviewed this proposed rule in accordance with E.O. 12630, 
Governmental Actions and Interference with Constitutionally Protected 
Property Rights, and has determined it would not effect a taking of 
private property or otherwise have taking implications.

K. Privacy

    Section 522 of title I of division H of the Consolidated 
Appropriations Act, 2005, enacted December 8, 2004 (Pub. L. 108-447, 
118 Stat. 2809, 3268, 5 U.S.C. 552a note), requires the Agency to 
conduct a Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) of a regulation that will 
affect the privacy of individuals. This proposed rule does not require 
the collection of any personally identifiable information.
    The Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a) applies only to Federal agencies 
and any non-Federal agency that receives records contained in a system 
of records from a Federal agency for use in a matching program. FMCSA 
has

[[Page 47785]]

determined that this rule would not result in a new or revised Privacy 
Act System of Records for FMCSA.
    The E-Government Act of 2002, Public Law 107-347, sec. 208, 116 
Stat. 2899, 2921 (December 17, 2002), requires Federal agencies to 
conduct a PIA for new or substantially changed technology that 
collects, maintains, or disseminates information in an identifiable 
form. No new or substantially changed technology would collect, 
maintain, or disseminate information as a result of this rule. 
Accordingly, FMCSA has not conducted a privacy impact assessment.

L. E.O. 12372 (Intergovernmental Review)

    The regulations implementing E.O. 12372 regarding intergovernmental 
consultation on Federal programs and activities do not apply to this 
program.

M. E.O. 13211 (Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use)

    FMCSA has analyzed this proposed rule under E.O. 13211, Actions 
Concerning Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply, 
Distribution, or Use. The Agency has determined that it is not a 
``significant energy action'' under that order because it is not a 
``significant regulatory action'' likely to have a significant adverse 
effect on the supply, distribution, or use of energy. Therefore, it 
does not require a Statement of Energy Effects under E.O. 13211.

N. E.O. 13783 (Promoting Energy Independence and Economic Growth)

    Executive Order 13783 directs executive departments and agencies to 
review existing regulations that potentially burden the development or 
use of domestically produced energy resources, and to appropriately 
suspend, revise, or rescind those that unduly burden the development of 
domestic energy resources.\41\ In accordance with E.O. 13783, the DOT 
prepared and submitted a report to the Director of OMB providing 
specific recommendations that, to the extent permitted by law, could 
alleviate or eliminate aspects of agency action that burden domestic 
energy production. The DOT has not identified this proposed rule as 
potentially alleviating unnecessary burdens on domestic energy 
production under E.O. 13783.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \41\ Exec. Order No. 13783, 82 FR 16093 (March 31, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

O. E.O. 13175 (Indian Tribal Governments)

    This rule does not have tribal implications under E.O. 13175, 
Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments, because 
it does not have a substantial direct effect on one or more Indian 
tribes, on the relationship between the Federal government and Indian 
tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities between 
the Federal Government and Indian tribes.

P. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (Technical 
Standards)

    The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA) (15 
U.S.C. 272 note) directs agencies to use voluntary consensus standards 
in their regulatory activities unless the agency provides Congress, 
through OMB, with an explanation of why using these standards would be 
inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical. Voluntary 
consensus standards (e.g., specifications of materials, performance, 
design, or operation; test methods; sampling procedures; and related 
management systems practices) are standards developed or adopted by 
voluntary consensus standards bodies. This rule does not use technical 
standards. Therefore, FMCSA did not consider the use of voluntary 
consensus standards.

Q. Environment (NEPA and CAA)

    FMCSA analyzed this NPRM for the purpose of the National 
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and 
determined this action is categorically excluded from further analysis 
and documentation in an environmental assessment or environmental 
impact statement under FMCSA Order 5610.1 (69 FR 9680, March 1, 2004), 
Appendix 2, paragraphs (6)(y)(2) and (6)(y)(7). The Categorical 
Exclusion (CE) in paragraph (6)(y)(2) covers regulations implementing 
motor carrier identification and registration reports. The Categorical 
Exclusion (CE) in paragraph (6)(y)(7) covers regulations implementing 
prohibitions on motor carriers, agents, officers, representatives, and 
employees from making fraudulent or intentionally false statements on 
any application, certificate, report, or record required by FMCSA. The 
proposed requirements in this rule are covered by these CEs, and the 
proposed action does not have the potential to significantly affect the 
quality of the environment. The CE determination is available for 
inspection or copying in the regulations.gov website listed under 
ADDRESSES.
    FMCSA also analyzed this rule under section 176(c) of the Clean Air 
Act, as amended (CAA) (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.), and implementing 
regulations promulgated by the Environmental Protection Agency. 
Approval of this action is exempt from the CAA's general conformity 
requirement since it does not affect direct or indirect emissions of 
criteria pollutants.

List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 390

    Highway safety, Intermodal transportation, Motor carriers, Motor 
vehicle safety, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

    In consideration of the foregoing, FMCSA proposes to amend 49 CFR 
chapter III, subchapter B, part 390 to read as follows:

PART 390--FEDERAL MOTOR CARRIER SAFETY REGULATIONS; GENERAL

0
1. The authority citation for part 390 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  49 U.S.C. 504, 508, 31132, 31133, 31134, 31136, 
31137, 31144, 31149, 31151, 31502; sec. 114, Pub. L. 103-311, 108 
Stat. 1673, 1677; sec. 212 and 217, Pub. L. 106-159, 113 Stat. 1748, 
1766, 1767; sec. 229, Pub. L. 106-159 (as added and transferred by 
sec. 4115 and amended by secs. 4130-4132, Pub. L. 109-59, 119 Stat. 
1144, 1726, 1743; sec. 4136, Pub. L. 109-59, 119 Stat. 1144, 1745; 
secs. 32101(d) and 32934, Pub. L. 112-141, 126 Stat. 405, 778, 830; 
sec. 2, Pub. L. 113-125, 128 Stat. 1388; secs. 5403, 5518, and 5524, 
Pub. L. 114-94, 129 Stat. 1312, 1548, 1558, 1560; sec. 2, Pub. L. 
115-105, 131 Stat. 2263; and 49 CFR 1.81, 1.81a, 1.87.

0
2. Amend Sec.  390.5 as follows:
0
a. Lift the suspension of the section;
0
b. Revise the definition of ``Lease,'' ``Lessee,'' and ``Lessor'' in 
alphabetical order'';
0
c. Suspend Sec.  390.5 indefinitely.
    The revised text reads as follows:


Sec.  390.5   Definitions.

* * * * *
    Lease, as used in subpart G of this part, means a contract or 
agreement in which a motor carrier of passengers grants the use of a 
passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle to another motor carrier, 
with or without a driver, for a specified period for the transportation 
of passengers, whether or not compensation for such use is specified or 
required, when one of the motor carriers of passengers is not 
authorized to operate in interstate commerce pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 
13901-13902. The term lease includes an interchange, as defined in this 
section, or other agreement granting the use of

[[Page 47786]]

a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle for a specified period, 
with or without a driver, whether or not compensation for such use is 
specified or required. For a definition of lease in the context of 
property-carrying vehicles, see Sec.  376.2 of this subchapter.
    Lessee, as used in subpart G of this part, means the motor carrier 
obtaining the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle 
through a lease as defined in this section, with or without the driver, 
from another motor carrier. The term lessee includes a motor carrier 
obtaining the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle from 
another motor carrier under an interchange or other agreement, with or 
without a driver, whether or not compensation for such use is 
specified. For a definition of lessee in the context of property-
carrying vehicles, see Sec.  376.2 of this subchapter.
    Lessor, as used in subpart G of this part, means the motor carrier 
granting the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle 
through a lease as defined in this section, with or without a driver, 
to another motor carrier. The term lessor includes a motor carrier 
granting the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle to 
another motor carrier under an interchange or other agreement, with or 
without a driver, whether or not compensation for such use is 
specified. For a definition of lessor in the context of property-
carrying vehicles, see Sec.  376.2 of this subchapter.
* * * * *
0
3. Amend Sec.  390.5T by revising the definitions of ``Lease,'' 
``Lessee,'' and ``Lessor'' in alphabetical order to read as follows:


Sec.  390.5T   Definitions.

* * * * *
    Lease, as used in subpart G of this part, means a contract or 
agreement in which a motor carrier of passengers grants the use of a 
passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle to another motor carrier, 
with or without a driver, for a specified period for the transportation 
of passengers, whether or not compensation for such use is specified or 
required, when one of the motor carriers of passengers is not 
authorized to operate in interstate commerce pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 
13901-13902. The term lease includes an interchange, as defined in this 
section, or other agreement granting the use of a passenger-carrying 
commercial motor vehicle for a specified period, with or without a 
driver, whether or not compensation for such use is specified or 
required. For a definition of lease in the context of property-carrying 
vehicles, see Sec.  376.2 of this subchapter.
    Lessee, as used in subpart G of this part, means the motor carrier 
obtaining the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle 
through a lease as defined in this section, with or without the driver, 
from another motor carrier. The term lessee includes a motor carrier 
obtaining the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle from 
another motor carrier under an interchange or other agreement, with or 
without a driver, whether or not compensation for such use is 
specified. For a definition of lessee in the context of property-
carrying vehicles, see Sec.  376.2 of this subchapter.
    Lessor, as used in subpart G of this part, means the motor carrier 
granting the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle 
through a lease as defined in this section, with or without a driver, 
to another motor carrier. The term lessor includes a motor carrier 
granting the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle to 
another motor carrier under an interchange or other agreement, with or 
without a driver, whether or not compensation for such use is 
specified. For a definition of lessor in the context of property-
carrying vehicles, see Sec.  376.2 of this subchapter.
* * * * *
0
4. Amend Sec.  390.21 as follows:
0
a. Lift the suspension of the section;
0
b. Revise paragraph (e);
0
c. Remove paragraph (f);
0
d. Redesignate paragraphs (g) and (h) as paragraphs (f) and (g), 
respectively;
0
e. Suspend Sec.  390.21 indefinitely.
    The revised text reads as follows:


Sec.  390.21  Marking of self-propelled CMVs and intermodal equipment.

* * * * *
    (e) Rented CMVs and leased passenger-carrying CMVs. A motor carrier 
operating a self-propelled CMV under a rental agreement or a passenger-
carrying CMV under a lease, when the rental agreement or lease has a 
term not in excess of 30 calendar days, meets the requirements of this 
section if:
    (1) The CMV is marked in accordance with the provisions of 
paragraphs (b) through (d) of this section; or
    (2) Except as provided in paragraph (e)(2)(v), the CMV is marked as 
set forth in paragraph (e)(2)(i) through (iv) of this section:
    (i) The legal name or a single trade name of the lessor is 
displayed in accordance with paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
    (ii) The lessor's identification number preceded by the letters 
``USDOT'' is displayed in accordance with paragraphs (c) and (d) of 
this section; and
    (iii) The rental agreement or lease as applicable entered into by 
the lessor and the renting motor carrier or lessee conspicuously 
contains the following information:
    (A) The name and complete physical address of the principal place 
of business of the renting motor carrier or lessee;
    (B) The identification number issued to the renting motor carrier 
or lessee by FMCSA, preceded by the letters ``USDOT,'' if the motor 
carrier has been issued such a number. In lieu of the identification 
number required in this paragraph, the following information may be 
shown in a rental agreement:
    (1) Whether the motor carrier is engaged in ``interstate'' or 
``intrastate'' commerce; and
    (2) Whether the renting motor carrier is transporting hazardous 
materials in the rented CMV;
    (C) The sentence: ``This lessor cooperates with all Federal, State, 
and local law enforcement officials nationwide to provide the identity 
of customers who operate this rental CMV''; and
    (iv) The rental agreement or lease as applicable entered into by 
the lessor and the renting motor carrier or lessee is carried on the 
rental CMV or leased passenger-carrying CMV during the full term of the 
rental agreement or lease. See the property-carrying leasing 
regulations at 49 CFR part 376 and the passenger-carrying leasing 
regulations at subpart G of this part for information that should be 
included in all leasing documents.
    (v) Exception. The passenger-carrying CMV operating under the 48-
hour emergency exception pursuant to Sec.  390.403(a)(2) of this part 
does not need to comply with paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this section, 
provided the lessor and lessee comply with the requirements of Sec.  
390.403(a)(2).
* * * * *
0
5. Amend Sec.  390.21T by
0
a. Revising paragraph (e);
0
b. Removing paragraph (f);
0
c. Redesignating paragraphs (g) and (h) as paragraphs (f) and (g), 
respectively.
    The revision to read as follows:


Sec.  390.21T   Marking of self-propelled CMVs and intermodal 
equipment.

* * * * *
    (e) Rented CMVs and leased passenger-carrying CMVs. A motor carrier 
operating a self-propelled CMV under a rental agreement or a passenger-
carrying CMV under a lease, when the

[[Page 47787]]

rental agreement or lease has a term not in excess of 30 calendar days, 
meets the requirements of this section if:
    (1) The CMV is marked in accordance with the provisions of 
paragraphs (b) through (d) of this section; or
    (2) Except as provided in paragraph (e)(2)(v), the CMV is marked as 
set forth in paragraph (e)(2)(i) through (iv) of this section:
    (i) The legal name or a single trade name of the lessor is 
displayed in accordance with paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section.
    (ii) The lessor's identification number preceded by the letters 
``USDOT'' is displayed in accordance with paragraphs (c) and (d) of 
this section; and
    (iii) The rental agreement or lease as applicable entered into by 
the lessor and the renting motor carrier or lessee conspicuously 
contains the following information:
    (A) The name and complete physical address of the principal place 
of business of the renting motor carrier or lessee;
    (B) The identification number issued to the renting motor carrier 
or lessee by FMCSA, preceded by the letters ``USDOT,'' if the motor 
carrier has been issued such a number. In lieu of the identification 
number required in this paragraph, the following information may be 
shown in a rental agreement:
    (1) Whether the motor carrier is engaged in ``interstate'' or 
``intrastate'' commerce; and
    (2) Whether the renting motor carrier or lessee is transporting 
hazardous materials in the rented or leased CMV;
    (C) The sentence: ``This lessor cooperates with all Federal, State, 
and local law enforcement officials nationwide to provide the identity 
of customers who operate this rental or leased CMV''; and
    (iv) The rental agreement or lease as applicable entered into by 
the lessor and the renting motor carrier or lessee is carried on the 
rental CMV or leased passenger-carrying CMV during the full term of the 
rental agreement or lease. See the property-carrying leasing 
regulations at 49 CFR part 376 and the passenger-carrying leasing 
regulations at subpart G of this part for information that should be 
included in all leasing documents.
    (v) Exception. The passenger-carrying CMV operating under the 48-
hour emergency exception pursuant to Sec.  390.403(a)(2) of this part 
does not need to comply with paragraphs (iii) and (iv) of this section, 
provided the lessor and lessee comply with the requirements of Sec.  
390.403(a)(2).
* * * * *

Subpart F--[Removed and Reserved]

0
6. Remove and reserve subpart F of part 390., consisting of Sec. Sec.  
390.301 through 390.305, to read as follows:
0
7. Add subpart G, consisting of Sec. Sec.  390.401 and 390.403, to read 
as follows:



Subpart G--Lease and Interchange of Passenger-Carrying Commercial Motor 
Vehicles
Sec.
390.401 Applicability.
390.403 Lease and interchange requirements.

Subpart G--Lease and Interchange of Passenger-Carrying Commercial 
Motor Vehicles

Sec.  390.401 Applicability.
    (a) General. Except as provided in paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of 
this section, this subpart applies to the following actions, 
irrespective of duration, or the presence or absence of compensation, 
by motor carriers operating commercial motor vehicles to transport 
passengers:
    (1) The lease of passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicles; and
    (2) The interchange of passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicles 
between motor carriers.
    (b) Exceptions--(1) Contracts and agreements between motor carriers 
of passengers with active passenger carrier operating authority 
registrations. This subpart does not apply to contracts and agreements 
between motor carriers of passengers that have active passenger carrier 
operating authority registrations with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety 
Administration when one such motor carrier acquires transportation 
service(s) from another such motor carrier(s).
    (2) Financial leases. This subpart does not apply to a contract 
(however designated, e.g., lease, closed-end lease, hire purchase, 
lease purchase, purchase agreement, installment plan, etc.) between a 
motor carrier and a financial organization or a manufacturer or dealer 
of passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicles allowing the motor 
carrier to use the passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle.
    (c) Penalties. If the use of a passenger-carrying commercial motor 
vehicle is conferred on one motor carrier subject to this subpart by 
another such motor carrier without a lease or interchange agreement, or 
pursuant to a lease or interchange agreement that fails to meet all 
applicable requirements of subpart G, both motor carriers shall be 
subject to a civil penalty.


Sec.  390.403  Lease and interchange requirements.

    Except as provided in Sec.  390.401(b) of this section, a motor 
carrier may transport passengers in a leased or interchanged commercial 
motor vehicle only under the following conditions:
    (a) In general--(1) Lease or agreement required. There shall be in 
effect either:
    (i) A lease granting the use of the passenger-carrying commercial 
motor vehicle and meeting the conditions of paragraphs (b) and (c) of 
this section. The provisions of the lease shall be adhered to and 
performed by the lessee; or
    (ii) An agreement meeting the conditions of paragraphs (b) and (c) 
of this section and governing the interchange of passenger-carrying 
commercial motor vehicles between motor carriers of passengers 
conducting service on a route or series of routes. The provisions of 
the interchange agreement shall be adhered to and performed by the 
lessee.
    (2) Exception. When an event occurs (e.g., a crash, the vehicle is 
disabled) that requires a motor carrier of passengers immediately to 
obtain a replacement vehicle from another motor carrier of passengers, 
the two carriers may postpone the writing of the lease or written 
agreement for the replacement vehicle for up to 48 hours after the time 
the lessee takes exclusive possession and control of the replacement 
vehicle. However, during that 48-hour (or shorter) period, the driver 
of the vehicle must carry, and upon demand of an enforcement official 
produce, a document signed and dated by the lessee's driver or 
available company official stating: ``[Carrier A, USDOT number, 
telephone number] has leased this vehicle to [Carrier B, USDOT number, 
telephone number] pursuant to 49 CFR 390.403(a)(2).''
    (b) Contents of the lease. The lease or interchange agreement 
required by paragraph (a) of this section shall contain:
    (1) Vehicle identification information. The name of the vehicle 
manufacturer, the year of manufacture, and at least the last 6 digits 
of the Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) of each passenger-carrying 
commercial motor vehicle transferred between motor carriers pursuant to 
the lease or interchange agreement.
    (2) Parties. The legal name, USDOT number, and telephone number of 
the motor carrier providing passenger transportation in a commercial 
motor vehicle (lessee) and the legal name, USDOT number, and telephone 
number of the motor carrier providing the equipment (lessor), and 
signatures of

[[Page 47788]]

both parties or their authorized representatives.
    (3) Specific duration. The time and date when, and the location 
where, the lease or interchange agreement begins and ends.
    (4) Exclusive possession and responsibilities. (i) A clear 
statement that the motor carrier obtaining the passenger-carrying 
commercial motor vehicle (the lessee) has exclusive possession, 
control, and use of the passenger-carrying commercial motor vehicle for 
the duration of the agreement, and assumes complete responsibility for 
operation of the vehicle and compliance with all applicable Federal 
regulations for the duration of the agreement.
    (ii) In the event of a sublease between motor carriers, all of the 
requirements of this section shall apply to a sublease.
    (c) Copies of the lease. A copy shall be on the passenger-carrying 
commercial motor vehicle during the period of the lease or interchange 
agreement, and both the lessee and lessor shall retain a copy of the 
lease or interchange agreement for 1 year after the expiration date.

    Issued under the authority delegated in 49 CFR 1.87 on: 
September 11, 2018.
Raymond P. Martinez,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2018-20162 Filed 9-19-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 4910-EX-P



                                                47764              Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION                            Comments’’ portion of the                               K. Privacy
                                                                                                        SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION     section                   L. E.O. 12372 (Intergovernmental Review)
                                                Federal Motor Carrier Safety                            below for instructions on submitting                    M. E.O. 13211 (Energy Supply,
                                                Administration                                                                                                    Distribution, or Use)
                                                                                                        comments.                                               N. E.O. 13783 (Promoting Energy
                                                                                                        FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.                      Independence and Economic Growth)
                                                49 CFR Part 390                                         Loretta Bitner, (202) 366–2400,                         O. E.O. 13175 (Indian Tribal Governments)
                                                [Docket No. FMCSA–2012–0103]                            loretta.bitner@dot.gov, Office of                       P. National Technology Transfer and
                                                                                                                                                                  Advancement Act (Technical Standards)
                                                                                                        Enforcement and Compliance. FMCSA
                                                RIN 2126–AC07                                                                                                   Q. Environment (NEPA, CAA, E.O. 12898
                                                                                                        office hours are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.,                   Environmental Justice)
                                                Lease and Interchange of Vehicles;                      Monday through Friday, except Federal
                                                Motor Carriers of Passengers                            holidays.                                             I. Public Participation and Request for
                                                                                                        SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This                       Comments
                                                AGENCY: Federal Motor Carrier Safety                    notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)
                                                Administration (FMCSA), DOT.                                                                                     FMCSA encourages you to participate
                                                                                                        is organized as follows:                              in this rulemaking by submitting
                                                ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
                                                                                                        I. Public Participation and Request for               comments, reply comments, and related
                                                (NPRM); request for comments.                                 Comments                                        materials. All comments received will
                                                                                                           A. Submitting Comments                             be posted without change to http://
                                                SUMMARY:    FMCSA proposes to amend its                    B. Viewing Comments and Documents
                                                May 27, 2015, Lease and Interchange of                     C. Privacy Act
                                                                                                                                                              www.regulations.gov and will include
                                                Vehicles; Motor Carriers of Passengers                     D. Waiver of Advance Notice of Proposed            any personal information you provide.
                                                final rule in response to petitions for                       Rulemaking                                      A. Submitting Comments
                                                rulemaking and extend the January 1,                       E. Comments on the Collection of
                                                2019, compliance date to January 1,                           Information                                       If you submit a comment, please
                                                2021. Today’s proposal would narrow                     II. Acronyms and Abbreviations                        include the docket number for this
                                                the applicability of the rule, by                       III. Executive Summary                                NPRM (Docket No. FMCSA–2012–
                                                                                                           A. Purpose of the Proposed Rule                    0103), indicate the specific section of
                                                excluding from the definition of lease                     B. Summary of the Major Provisions
                                                and the associated regulatory                                                                                 this document to which each comment
                                                                                                           C. Costs and Benefits                              applies, and provide a reason for each
                                                requirements, certain contracts and                     IV. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
                                                other agreements between motor carriers                 V. Rulemaking History and Purpose                     recommendation. You may submit your
                                                of passengers that have active passenger                VI. Petitions for Reconsideration and                 comments and material online or by fax,
                                                carrier operating authority registrations                     Subsequent Events                               mail, or hand delivery, but please use
                                                with FMCSA. For passenger carriers that                    A. History of Petitions                            only one of these means. FMCSA
                                                would remain subject to the leasing and                    B. Discussion of Comments and Responses            recommends that you include your
                                                                                                              to the June 16, 2017 Proposal in                name and a mailing address, an email
                                                interchange requirements, FMCSA                               Response to Petitions for
                                                proposes to return the bus marking                                                                            address, or a phone number in the body
                                                                                                              Reconsideration                                 of your document so that the Agency
                                                requirement to its July 1, 2015, state                  VII. General Discussion of the Proposed Rule
                                                with slight modifications to add                           A. Discussion of the Proposed Rule
                                                                                                                                                              can contact you if there are questions
                                                references to leased vehicles; revise the                  B. Examples of Proposed Rule                       regarding your submission.
                                                delayed writing of a lease during certain                     Implementation                                    To submit your comment online, go to
                                                emergencies; and remove the 24-hour                        C. Alternatives                                    http://www.regulations.gov, put the
                                                lease notification requirement. This                    VIII. International Impacts                           docket number, FMCSA–2012–0103, in
                                                proposal would be a deregulatory action
                                                                                                        IX. Section-by-Section Description of the             the keyword box, and click ‘‘Search.’’
                                                                                                              Proposed Rule                                   When the new screen appears, click on
                                                as defined by Executive Order 13771,                       A. Section 390.5 (Suspended) and 390.5T
                                                ‘‘Reducing Regulation and Controlling                                                                         the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ button and type
                                                                                                              Definitions                                     your comment into the text box on the
                                                Regulatory Costs.’’                                        B. Section 390.21 (Suspended) and
                                                                                                              390.21T Marking of Self-Propelled CMVs          following screen. Choose whether you
                                                DATES: Comments must be received by
                                                                                                              and Intermodal Equipment                        are submitting your comment as an
                                                November 19, 2018.                                                                                            individual or on behalf of a third party
                                                                                                           C. Part 390, Subpart F Lease and
                                                ADDRESSES: You may submit comments                            Interchange of Passenger-Carrying               and then submit.
                                                identified by Docket Number FMCSA–                            Commercial Motor Vehicles                         If you submit your comments by mail
                                                2012–0103 using any of the following                       D. Part 390, Subpart G Lease and                   or hand delivery, submit them in an
                                                methods:                                                      Interchange of Passenger-Carrying               unbound format, no larger than 81⁄2 by
                                                   • Website: http://                                         Commercial Motor Vehicles                       11 inches, suitable for copying and
                                                www.regulations.gov. Follow the                            E. Section 390.401 Applicability
                                                                                                                                                              electronic filing. If you submit
                                                instructions for submitting comments                       F. Section 390.403 Lease and Interchange
                                                                                                              Requirements                                    comments by mail and would like to
                                                on the Federal electronic docket site.                  X. Regulatory Analyses                                know that they reached the facility,
                                                   • Fax: 1–202–493–2251.                                  A. E.O. 12866 (Regulatory Planning and             please enclose a stamped, self-addressed
                                                   • Mail: Docket Services, U.S.                              Review), E.O. 13563 (Improving                  postcard or envelope.
                                                Department of Transportation, Room                            Regulation and Regulatory Review), and            FMCSA will consider all comments
                                                W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,                          DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures          and material received during the
                                                Washington, DC 20590–0001.                                 B. E.O. 13771 (Reducing Regulation and             comment period and may change this
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS3




                                                   • Hand Delivery: Ground Floor, Room                        Controlling Regulatory Costs)                   proposed rule based on your comments.
                                                W12–140, DOT Building, 1200 New                            C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                                                                           D. Assistance for Small Entities
                                                                                                                                                              FMCSA may issue a final rule at any
                                                Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC,                                                                             time after the close of the comment
                                                                                                           E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
                                                between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. Monday                           F. Paperwork Reduction Act                         period.
                                                through Friday, except Federal holidays.                   G. E.O. 13132 (Federalism)
                                                   To avoid duplication, please use only                                                                      B. Viewing Comments and Documents
                                                                                                           H. E.O. 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
                                                one of these four methods. See the                         I. E.O. 13045 (Protection of Children)               To view comments, as well as any
                                                ‘‘Public Participation and Request for                     J. E.O. 12630 (Taking of Private Property)         documents mentioned in this preamble


                                           VerDate Sep<11>2014   18:54 Sep 19, 2018   Jkt 244001   PO 00000   Frm 00002   Fmt 4701   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\20SEP3.SGM   20SEP3


                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                            47765

                                                as being available in the docket, go to                 comments were placed in the docket of                      VIN ...........   Vehicle Identification Number.
                                                http://www.regulations.gov. Insert the                  this rulemaking.
                                                docket number, FMCSA–2012–0103, in                         On June 16, 2017, FMCSA published                       III. Executive Summary
                                                the keyword box, and click ‘‘Search.’’                  a proposal (2017 proposal) in the                          A. Purpose of the Proposed Rule
                                                Next, click the ‘‘Open Docket Folder’’                  Federal Register (82 FR 27768). The
                                                button and choose the document to                       2017 proposal provided information                            Based on a review of the petitions for
                                                review. If you do not have access to the                about FMCSA’s planned revisions to the                     reconsideration and stakeholder input,
                                                internet, you may view the docket                       2015 final rule and requested public                       FMCSA proposes to revise its
                                                online by visiting the Docket                           comment on the proposed revisions.                         regulations governing the lease and
                                                Management Facility in Room W12–140                     The 2017 proposal and comments                             interchange of passenger-carrying
                                                on the ground floor of the DOT West                     received are discussed in more detail                      commercial motor vehicles (CMVs).
                                                Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,                    below.                                                     This proposed rule would exclude
                                                Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.                       The Agency’s intent to issue this                       motor carriers that operate CMVs and
                                                and 5 p.m., e.t., Monday through Friday,                NPRM has been announced repeatedly,                        have active operating authority
                                                except Federal holidays.                                with opportunities for stakeholder                         registration with FMCSA to transport
                                                                                                        comment available at each stage.                           passengers—hereafter called
                                                C. Privacy Act                                          Therefore, FMCSA believes a further                        ‘‘authorized carriers’’ or ‘‘carriers with
                                                  In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c),                   opportunity to provide comments before                     operating authority’’ for the sake of
                                                DOT solicits comments from the public                   issuance of this NPRM would be                             simplicity—from the lease and
                                                to better inform its rulemaking process.                unnecessary.                                               interchange requirements. For leases
                                                DOT posts these comments, without                                                                                  between authorized carriers, because
                                                                                                        E. Comments on the Collection of                           FMCSA believes their identity can be
                                                edit, including any personal information                Information
                                                the commenter provides, to                                                                                         determined by other means, the
                                                www.regulations.gov, as described in                       If you have comments on the                             assignment of responsibility for
                                                the system of records notice (DOT/ALL–                  collection of information discussed in                     regulatory compliance would require no
                                                14 FDMS), which can be reviewed at                      this NPRM, you must also send those                        additional regulatory obligations.
                                                                                                        comments to the Office of Information                         FMCSA also proposes to extend the
                                                www.transportation.gov/privacy.
                                                                                                        and Regulatory Affairs at Office of                        compliance date for the 2015 final rule
                                                D. Waiver of Advance Notice of                          Management and Budget (OMB). To                            to January 1, 2021, to give the Agency
                                                Proposed Rulemaking                                     ensure that your comments are received                     sufficient time to complete this
                                                                                                        on time, the preferred methods of                          rulemaking.
                                                   Under 49 U.S.C. 31136(g)(1), as
                                                amended by section 5202 of the Fixing                   submission are by email to oira_                           B. Summary of the Major Provisions
                                                America’s Surface Transportation                        submissions@omb.eop.gov (include
                                                                                                        docket number ‘‘FMCSA–2012–0103’’                             The proposed rule would (1) revise
                                                (FAST) Act, Public Law 114–94, for any                                                                             the definition of lease to exclude
                                                regulatory proposal likely to lead to the               and ‘‘Attention: Desk Officer for
                                                                                                        FMCSA, DOT’’ in the subject line of the                    authorized carriers that grant the use of
                                                publication of a major rule,. FMCSA is                                                                             their vehicles to each other; (2) retain
                                                required to publish an advance notice of                email) or fax at 202 395 6566. An
                                                                                                        alternative, though slower, method is by                   the provisions adopted in 2015 to
                                                proposed rulemaking (ANPRM), unless                                                                                identify the party responsible for
                                                the Agency finds good cause pursuant to                 U.S. Mail to the Office of Information
                                                                                                        and Regulatory Affairs, Office of                          compliance with the Federal Motor
                                                sec. 31136(g)(3) that an ANPRM is                                                                                  Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs)
                                                impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary                 Management and Budget, 725 17th
                                                                                                        Street NW, Washington, DC 20503,                           when at least one of the passenger
                                                to the public interest. For purposes of                                                                            carriers involved in the lease or
                                                compliance with the FAST Act, the                       ATTN: Desk Officer, FMCSA, DOT.
                                                                                                                                                                   interchange of CMVs is not an
                                                Agency has adopted the Congressional                    II. Acronyms and Abbreviations                             authorized carrier; (3) ensure that a
                                                Review Act’s definition of ‘‘major rule’’                                                                          lessor subject to the proposed rule, i.e.,
                                                (5 U.S.C. 804(2)), namely a rule that has               1935 Act ...       Motor Carrier Act of 1935.
                                                                                                                                                                   the entity providing the vehicle,
                                                an annual effect on the economy of $100                 1984 Act ...       Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984.
                                                                                                        ABA ..........     American Bus Association.               surrenders control of the CMV for the
                                                million or more. This final rule is not a               BLS ..........     Bureau of Labor Statistics.             full term of the lease or temporary
                                                major rule by that standard and 49                      CMV .........      Commercial Motor Vehicle.               exchange of CMVs; (4) remove the May
                                                U.S.C. 31136(g)(1) therefore does not                   DOT ..........     United States Department of Transpor-
                                                                                                                                                                   27, 2015 final rule’s marking
                                                                                                                             tation.
                                                apply. Even if it were a major rule,                    E.O ...........    Executive Order.                        requirements and return the marking
                                                however, FMCSA would find an                            FMCSA .....        Federal Motor Carrier Safety Adminis-   rule in 49 CFR 390.21(e), with slight
                                                ANPRM to be unnecessary.                                                     tration.                              modifications; (5) revise the provision
                                                   On August 31, 2016, FMCSA                            FMCSRs ...         Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regula-
                                                                                                                             tions, 49 CFR parts 350 through       allowing a delay in the completion of a
                                                published a notice of intent (2016 NOI)                                      399.                                  lease during certain emergencies; and
                                                announcing that four potential changes                  FR ............    Federal Register.                       (6) remove the requirement that motor
                                                to the final rule were under                            L&I ............   Licensing and Insurance.
                                                                                                                                                                   carriers that are hired to provide charter
                                                consideration and its plan to issue a                   MAP–21 ...         Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st
                                                                                                                             Century Act.                          transportation and lease a CMV from
                                                rulemaking notice to reconsider those                   MCMIS .....        Motor Carrier Management Information    another carrier notify the tour operator
                                                four areas of concern (81 FR 59951). The                                     System.                               or group of passengers about the lease
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS3




                                                four changes are discussed in more                      NOI ...........    Notice of Intent.
                                                                                                                                                                   and the lessor. FMCSA requests
                                                detail later in this proposal.                          NPRM .......       Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
                                                                                                        NTSB ........      National Transportation Safety Board.   comments to identify other methods to
                                                   FMCSA held a public roundtable on                    OMB .........      Office of Management and Budget.        achieve the safety objectives of this
                                                October 31, 2016 to discuss the four                    PRA ..........     Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.        rulemaking.
                                                issues outlined in the 2016 NOI. The                    RFA ..........     Regulatory Flexibility Act.
                                                stakeholders represented spoke about                    SBA ..........     Small Business Administration.          C. Costs and Benefits
                                                                                                        SOC .........      Standard Occupational Classification.
                                                those issues and provided information                   STB ..........     Surface Transportation Board.             The Agency estimates that annually
                                                on how to address them. All public                      UMA .........      United Motorcoach Association.          8,215 motor carriers of passengers and


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                                                47766                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                537,134 passenger-carrying CMV trips                                                   percent of these passenger carriers and                                                 on an undiscounted basis, $66.5 million
                                                would experience regulatory relief                                                     CMV trips would experience partial                                                      discounted at 3 percent, and $57.5
                                                under the proposed rule. The Agency                                                    regulatory relief and remain subject to                                                 million discounted at 7 percent over the
                                                estimates that approximately 75 percent                                                reduced lease and interchange                                                           10-year analysis period. Expressed on
                                                of these passenger carriers and CMV                                                    requirements, compared to those of the                                                  an annualized basis, this equates to a
                                                trips would experience full regulatory                                                 2015 final rule.                                                                        10-year cost savings of $7.8 million at a
                                                relief and would no longer be subject to                                                 As presented in Table 1, the Agency                                                   3 percent discount rate and $8.2 million
                                                the lease and interchange requirements                                                 estimates that the proposed rule would                                                  at a 7 percent discount rate.
                                                of the 2015 final rule. The remaining 25                                               result in a cost savings of $75.1 million
                                                                                                         TABLE 1—SUMMARY OF THE TOTAL COST OF THE PROPOSED RULE
                                                                                                                                                            [In thousands of 2016$]

                                                                                                                                                            Passenger-carrying                                          Undiscounted                                Discounted
                                                                                                                         Passenger carriers                      CMV trips
                                                                                                                             experiencing                       experiencing
                                                                              Year                                         regulatory relief                                                     Lease and              Charter party
                                                                                                                                                              regulatory relief                                                                   Total       Discounted    Discounted
                                                                                                                         under the proposed                                                     interchange              notification
                                                                                                                                                            under the proposed                                                                   costs (a)       at 3%         at 7%
                                                                                                                                 rule                                                             costs (b)                costs
                                                                                                                                                                    rule

                                                2019    ..............................................................                          7,906                          516,952               ($25,298)                  ($1,168)         ($26,467)      ($25,697)     ($24,736)
                                                2020    ..............................................................                          7,973                          521,337                 (4,042)                   (1,178)           (5,221)        (4,921)       (4,560)
                                                2021    ..............................................................                          8,041                          525,758                 (4,077)                   (1,188)           (5,265)        (4,819)       (4,298)
                                                2022    ..............................................................                          8,109                          530,217                 (4,111)                   (1,198)           (5,310)        (4,718)       (4,051)
                                                2023    ..............................................................                          8,178                          534,714                 (4,146)                   (1,208)           (5,355)        (4,619)       (3,818)
                                                2024    ..............................................................                          8,247                          539,249                 (4,182)                   (1,219)           (5,401)        (4,523)       (3,599)
                                                2025    ..............................................................                          8,317                          543,822                 (4,217)                   (1,229)           (5,446)        (4,428)       (3,392)
                                                2026    ..............................................................                          8,387                          548,434                 (4,252)                   (1,239)           (5,493)        (4,336)       (3,197)
                                                2027    ..............................................................                          8,459                          553,085                 (4,289)                   (1,250)           (5,539)        (4,245)       (3,013)
                                                2028    ..............................................................                          8,530                          557,776                 (4,326)                   (1,261)           (5,586)        (4,157)       (2,840)

                                                   Total .......................................................         ................................   ................................            (62,946)                 (12,139)          (75,084)      (66,463)        (57,504)
                                                Annualized .....................................................         ................................   ................................   ......................   ......................      (7,508)       (7,792)         (8,187)
                                                   Notes:
                                                   (a) Total cost values may not equal the sum of the components due to rounding. (The totals shown in this column are the rounded sum of unrounded components.)
                                                   (b) Values shown in parentheses are negative values (i.e., less than zero) and represent a decrease in cost or a cost savings.




                                                   The regulatory evaluation for the 2015                                              between lease and interchange                                                           of, and standards of equipment of, a
                                                final rule addressed the potential safety                                              requirements for passenger-carrying                                                     motor private carrier, when needed to
                                                benefits of lease and interchange                                                      CMVs and improved safety outcomes.                                                      promote safety of operation’’ (49 U.S.C.
                                                requirements for motor carriers of                                                     Lease and interchange requirements for                                                  31502(b)).2
                                                passengers.1 There were insufficient                                                   motor carriers of passengers improve the                                                   The 1984 Act confers on DOT
                                                data and empirical evidence to                                                         ability of the Agency and our State                                                     authority to regulate drivers, motor
                                                demonstrate a measurable quantitative                                                  partners to attribute the inspection,                                                   carriers, and vehicle equipment. ‘‘At a
                                                relationship between lease and                                                         compliance, enforcement, and safety                                                     minimum, the regulations shall ensure
                                                interchange requirements for passenger-                                                data to the correct motor carrier and                                                   that—(1) commercial motor vehicles are
                                                carrying CMVs and improved safety                                                      driver, allowing FMCSA and our State                                                    maintained, equipped, loaded, and
                                                outcomes such as reduced frequency                                                     partners to more accurately identify                                                    operated safely; (2) the responsibilities
                                                and/or severity of crashes or reduced                                                  unsafe carriers and initiate appropriate                                                imposed on operators of commercial
                                                frequency of violations. Therefore,                                                    interventions. FMCSA believes that the                                                  motor vehicles do not impair their
                                                FMCSA performed a threshold analysis,                                                  lease and interchange requirements of                                                   ability to operate the vehicles safely; (3)
                                                also referred to as a break-even analysis,                                             the proposed rule are a less costly and                                                 the physical condition of operators of
                                                estimating the reduction in crashes that                                               burdensome regulatory approach than                                                     commercial motor vehicles is adequate
                                                would need to occur as a consequence                                                   the requirements of the 2015 final rule,                                                to enable them to operate the vehicles
                                                of the 2015 final rule in order for the                                                yet still enable safety officials and the                                               safely . . .; and (4) the operation of
                                                benefits of the rule to exactly offset the                                             general public to sufficiently identify                                                 commercial motor vehicles does not
                                                estimated costs of the rule.                                                           the passenger carrier responsible for                                                   have a deleterious effect on the physical
                                                   In considering the potential impact to                                              safety. Therefore, the Agency does not                                                  condition of the operators’’ (49 U.S.C.
                                                safety benefits from today’s proposed                                                  anticipate any change to safety benefits                                                31136(a)). Section 32911 of the Moving
                                                rule, the Agency notes that there                                                      as a result of the proposed rule.                                                       Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century
                                                remains insufficient data and empirical                                                                                                                                        Act (MAP–21) [Pub. L. 112–141, 126
                                                evidence to clearly demonstrate a                                                      IV. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Stat. 405, 818, July 6, 2012] enacted a
                                                measurable quantitative relationship                                                      This rule is based on the authority of                                               fifth requirement, i.e., to ensure that ‘‘(5)
                                                                                                                                       the Motor Carrier Act of 1935 (1935 Act)                                                an operator of a commercial motor
                                                   1 U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT),                                          and the Motor Carrier Safety Act of 1984                                                vehicle is not coerced by a motor
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                                                Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration                                            (1984 Act), as amended.
                                                (FMCSA). ‘‘Final Rule, Lease and Interchange of                                                                                                                                carrier, shipper, receiver, or
                                                Vehicles; Motor Carriers of Passengers. Regulatory
                                                                                                                                          The 1935 Act authorizes DOT to                                                       transportation intermediary to operate a
                                                Evaluation.’’ (Lease and Interchange of Vehicles,                                      ‘‘prescribe requirements for—(1)                                                        commercial motor vehicle in violation
                                                Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule                                          qualifications and maximum hours of                                                     of a regulation promulgated under this
                                                Regulatory Evaluation). May 2015. Available at:                                        service of employees of, and safety of
                                                https://www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer
                                                ?documentId=FMCSA-2012-0103-0022&attach
                                                                                                                                       operation and equipment of, a motor                                                       2 See https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/USCODE-

                                                mentNumber=1&contentType=pdf (accessed March                                           carrier; and (2) qualifications and                                                     2015-title49/pdf/USCODE-2015-title49-subtitleVI-
                                                9, 2018).                                                                              maximum hours of service of employees                                                   partB-chap315.pdf.



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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                            47767

                                                section, or chapter 51 or chapter 313 of                rented, loaned, leased, interchanged,                    The Agency ultimately received 37
                                                this title’’ [49 U.S.C. 31136(a)(5)].3                  assigned, and reassigned with few                     petitions for reconsideration which have
                                                  The 1984 Act also includes more                       records and little formality, which                   been filed in the public docket
                                                general authority to ‘‘(8) prescribe                    obscured the operational safety                       referenced above. In addition, 11
                                                recordkeeping . . . requirements; . . .                 responsibility of many industry                       informal comments were received.
                                                and (10) perform other acts the                         participants. Multiple affiliated entities            Upon review of these requests, FMCSA
                                                Secretary considers appropriate’’ (49                   shared drivers and vehicles within their              concluded that some have merit.
                                                U.S.C. 31133(a)).4                                      network intentionally to avoid                        FMCSA, therefore, extended the
                                                  This rule imposes legal and                           identification of the motor carrier                   compliance date of the final rule from
                                                recordkeeping requirements consistent                   responsible for safety management, and                January 1, 2017, to January 1, 2018, to
                                                with the 1935 and 1984 Acts on certain                  to conceal excessive and illegal driver               allow the Agency time to complete its
                                                for-hire and private passenger carriers                 work hours that resulted in fatigue-                  analysis and amend the rule where
                                                that operate CMVs, to enable safety                     related crashes in some cases.                        necessary (82 FR 13998, Mar. 16, 2016).
                                                officials and the general public to                        Investigators were eventually able to                 The petitioners argued and explained
                                                identify the passenger carrier                          document multiple patterns of serious                 in more detail that FMCSA had taken a
                                                responsible for safety. Currently,                      safety violations by three networks of                regulatory scheme from the trucking
                                                passenger-carrying CMVs and drivers                     businesses that deliberately structured               industry and applied it to the bus
                                                are frequently rented, loaned, leased,                  their operations to evade Federal                     industry, which has a vastly different
                                                interchanged, assigned, and reassigned                  regulatory oversight. Each time FMCSA                 operating structure and liability regime.
                                                with few records and little formality,                  had shut them down in the past, the                   Moreover, the application of these truck
                                                thus obscuring the operational safety                   three networks re-created or                          regulations to the bus industry offered
                                                responsibility of many industry                         reincarnated themselves. These                        no additional protection to the public
                                                participants. Because this rule has only                companies, which together transported                 from illegal or unsafe bus operators.
                                                indirect and minimal application to                     almost 2,000 passengers daily, showed                    Petitioners further stated that the final
                                                drivers of passenger-carrying CMVs—at                   flagrant disregard for public safety by               rule created an economic and regulatory
                                                most, their employers might require                     using drivers without valid commercial                burden for passenger carriers that
                                                them to pick up a lease document and                    driver’s licenses or medical                          already operate safely and have a high
                                                place it on the vehicle, though that task               qualification certificates, failing to                degree of compliance. By imposing lease
                                                could also be assigned to other                         conduct required drug testing of drivers,             requirements, some of the petitioners
                                                employees—FMCSA believes that                           allowing or requiring drivers to exceed               argued, the rule did not affect carriers
                                                coercion of drivers to violate the rule                 the maximum number of driving hours,                  that choose to violate the regulations,
                                                will not occur.                                         and operating buses that were                         but instead burdened those who already
                                                  Before prescribing any regulations,                                                                         operate safely and are in compliance.
                                                                                                        mechanically unsafe and in disrepair.
                                                FMCSA must also consider their ‘‘costs                                                                        Another petitioner stated that, while it
                                                                                                        FMCSA shut down these three networks
                                                and benefits’’ (49 U.S.C. 31136(c)(2)(A)                                                                      supported efforts to identify and address
                                                                                                        of bus operators after a time-consuming,
                                                and 31502(d)). Those factors are also                                                                         chameleon carriers or carriers that may
                                                                                                        complex and detailed review of their
                                                discussed in this proposed rule.                                                                              try to operate under the cloak of another
                                                                                                        operations.
                                                V. Rulemaking History and Purpose                          In response to an NPRM intended to                 carrier, the final rule did not accomplish
                                                                                                        better ensure the correct identity of the             this goal and, in fact, provided a
                                                  On September 20, 2013, FMCSA                                                                                roadmap for irresponsible carriers to
                                                published an NPRM that discussed the                    motor carrier responsible for the
                                                                                                        operation of a passenger-carrying                     operate legally under the authority of
                                                National Transportation Safety Board’s                                                                        another carrier.
                                                (NTSB) recommendation that FMCSA                        vehicle, 12 parties submitted comments.
                                                                                                                                                                 One carrier stated that it had
                                                regulate the leasing of passenger carriers              On May 27, 2015, FMCSA published a
                                                                                                                                                              identified several instances where the
                                                in much the same way as it regulates the                final rule (2015 final rule) concerning
                                                                                                                                                              final rule lacked sufficient clarity to
                                                leasing of for-hire property carriers (78               the lease and interchange of passenger-
                                                                                                                                                              enable it to comply, and that these issue
                                                FR 57822). This NTSB recommendation                     carrying CMVs (80 FR 30164). Although
                                                                                                                                                              areas affected all of its operations. The
                                                resulted from several investigations of                 several of the proposed regulations were
                                                                                                                                                              final rule also added administrative
                                                bus crashes that occurred in 2008 (78 FR                revised in response to comments
                                                                                                                                                              costs and reduced operational flexibility
                                                57822, 57824–57826). Starting in 2011,                  received in response to the NPRM, the
                                                                                                                                                              for charter and tour bus operations,
                                                FMCSA investigated bus companies                        motorcoach industry took exception to
                                                                                                                                                              which would, in the end, reduce
                                                operating unsafely along the I–95                       some of the requirements of the final
                                                                                                                                                              connectivity and transportation options
                                                corridor. That investigation uncovered                  rule. The Agency published several
                                                                                                                                                              for the traveling public. Another carrier
                                                additional problems and serious safety                  documents to respond to the industry
                                                                                                                                                              named two insurance companies that
                                                violations with other carriers. As                      objections. These documents are
                                                                                                                                                              have restrictions in their policies that
                                                Agency investigators tried to understand                discussed in detail in the following
                                                                                                                                                              prohibit the use of non-owned
                                                the relationships and links between bus                 section.
                                                                                                                                                              equipment and non-employed drivers,
                                                companies operating in complex                          VI. Petitions for Reconsideration and                 which were major concerns of the
                                                networks, they encountered significant                  Subsequent Events                                     NPRM and final rule.
                                                difficulties in identifying the motor                                                                            On August 31, 2016, FMCSA
                                                carriers responsible for regulatory                     A. History of Petitions                               published the 2016 NOI announcing
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                                                compliance on numerous trips. Vehicles                     The American Bus Association (ABA)                 that the following four potential changes
                                                and drivers were found to be frequently                 and United Motorcoach Association                     to the final rule were under
                                                                                                        (UMA) filed a joint request for an                    consideration:
                                                  3 See https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/USCODE-
                                                                                                        extension of the June 26, 2015, deadline                 (1) Exclusion of ‘‘chartering’’ from the
                                                2015-title49/pdf/USCODE-2015-title49-subtitleVI-        for the submission of petitions for                   definition of lease in 49 CFR 390.5. The
                                                partB-chap311-subchapIII-sec31136.pdf.
                                                  4 See https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/USCODE-           reconsideration of the final rule. On July            2015 rule merged the concepts of
                                                2015-title49/pdf/USCODE-2015-title49-subtitleVI-        1, 2015, FMCSA extended the deadline                  leasing with ‘‘chartering’’
                                                partB-chap311-subchapIII-sec31133.pdf.                  to August 25, 2015 (80 FR 37553).                     (subcontracting or reassigning


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                                                47768              Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                contracts). Authorized carriers routinely               vehicles from other carriers to meet the              Trailways, California Bus Association,
                                                subcontract or reassign contracts to                    demand. There might be a last-minute                  Capitol Bus Lines Inc., Connecticut Bus
                                                other authorized carriers to handle                     maintenance or mechanical issue, or                   Association, FTI Coach Lines, Georgia
                                                demand surges, emergencies, or events                   driver illness, that arises late in the               Motorcoach Operators Association,
                                                that require more than the available                    evening or during the night (such as on               Indian Trails, Inc., Minnesota Charter
                                                capacity. Subcontractors or assignees                   a multi-day charter or tour trip), or just            Bus Operator’s Association, Onondaga
                                                with their own operating authority have                 prior to picking up a group for a charter             Coach Corp., Pennsylvania Bus
                                                traditionally assumed responsibility for                or scheduled service run.                             Association, Shuttle Express, Inc., and
                                                their own vehicles and drivers. Under                      In the 2016 NOI, FMCSA announced                   Trans-Bridge Lines.
                                                the 2015 rule, however, a passenger                     its plan to issue a rulemaking notice to                FMCSA also received unique
                                                carrier that subcontracted or reassigned                reconsider the four areas of concern                  comments from Academy Bus LLC and
                                                work to another carrier would be                        listed above. The Agency expressed its                Greyhound Lines, Inc.; Delainey Banks,
                                                responsible for that second carrier’s                   belief that it might be possible to adopt             an individual; Coach USA, a non-carrier
                                                compliance with the regulations.                        less burdensome regulatory alternatives               entity that controls numerous motor
                                                Petitioners claimed that making a carrier               that would not adversely impact safety.               carriers of passengers; Reston
                                                responsible for the subcontractor’s or                  FMCSA also explicitly denied other                    Limousine; National Interstate
                                                assignees’ vehicles, drivers, and liability             requested revisions because they would                Insurance; and the UMA.
                                                would make most short-term                              either have impaired the purpose of the               Request for an NPRM
                                                subcontracts impossible.                                final rule or did not represent practical
                                                   (2) Amending the CMV requirements                    alternatives.                                            Neither the 2016 NOI nor the 2017
                                                for the location of temporary markings                                                                        proposal contained specific regulatory
                                                for leased/interchanged vehicles (49                    Public Roundtable                                     text. The 2016 NOI announced
                                                CFR 390.21(f), 390.303(f)). The                            FMCSA held a public roundtable on                  FMCSA’s intent to revise the 2015 final
                                                petitioners argued that the frequent                    October 31, 2016 to discuss the four                  rule in response to petitions. As
                                                marking changes needed during leases                    issues outlined in the 2016 NOI. The                  indicated above, the 2016 NOI described
                                                or interchanges would be impractical                    stakeholders represented spoke about                  four major changes that were under
                                                and unnecessary because the                             those issues and provided the Agency                  consideration for regulatory changes.
                                                information required is recorded on the                 with information on how to address                       In the 2017 proposal, the Agency
                                                driver’s records of duty status for safety              them. All public comments were placed                 identified its intention to revise the
                                                inspectors and safety investigators to                  in the docket of this rulemaking.                     regulations to address ‘‘chartering’’ and
                                                review; carriers would have to depend                                                                         the 48 hour delay in preparing a lease.
                                                                                                        Second Extension of Compliance Date                      Comments: Industry commenters,
                                                completely on drivers to properly
                                                                                                        and the Proposal in Response to                       including Academy Bus LLC.,
                                                change vehicle markings dozens of
                                                times per day in remote locations; and                  Petitions for Reconsideration                         Greyhound Lines, Inc., UMA, Coach
                                                it would be unlikely that a member of                      On June 16, 2017, FMCSA published                  USA, and DATTCO, Inc. asked FMCSA
                                                the public would understand the                         a final rule (2017 final rule) and a 2017             to publish a formal NPRM that included
                                                significance of the markings in the event               proposal in the Federal Register (82 FR               proposed regulatory text. Coach USA,
                                                that he or she focused on the temporary                 27766, and 27768). The 2017 final rule                among others, noted that the 2017
                                                ‘‘operated by’’ markings rather than the                extended the compliance date of the                   proposal limited its discussion to only
                                                permanent markings on the bus                           2015 final rule from January 1, 2018, to              two of the four issues addressed in the
                                                representing the vehicle owner or long-                 January 1, 2019. The 2017 proposal                    2016 NOI; however, they believed that
                                                term lessee.                                            provided information about FMCSA’s                    all four issues should be addressed in
                                                   (3) Changing the requirement that                    planned revisions to the 2015 final rule              rulemaking.
                                                carriers notify customers within 24                     and requested public comment on the                      FMCSA Response: After publication
                                                hours when they subcontract service to                  proposed revisions.                                   of the 2016 NOI, FMCSA decided to
                                                other carriers (49 CFR 390.305).                                                                              publish an NPRM to continue the
                                                Petitioners argued that a 24-hour                       B. Discussion of Comments and                         process of revising subpart F of 49 CFR
                                                deadline is impractical because if an                   Responses to the June 16, 2017 Proposal               part 390. FMCSA proposes to maintain
                                                emergency maintenance issue occurs, it                  in Response to Petitions for                          and expand the emergency 48-hour
                                                may not be possible to notify the                       Reconsideration                                       delay in preparing a lease. FMCSA
                                                customer in a timely manner,                              FMCSA received 24 comments in                       proposes to remove the 2015 final rule’s
                                                particularly if the issue occurs on the                 response to the 2017 proposal regarding               CMV marking requirements when a
                                                weekend, when the customer’s offices                    the petitions for reconsideration. Two                passenger-carrying CMV is leased or
                                                are closed, and the trip is scheduled to                submissions requested an extension of                 interchanged. Furthermore, FMCSA
                                                start before the customer’s Monday                      time to comment, one from Coach USA                   proposes changes that would reduce the
                                                opening time.                                           and another from Adirondack                           number of required leases because
                                                   (4) Expanding the 48-hour delay in                   Trailways, Pine Hill Trailways and New                authorized carriers would not be subject
                                                preparing a lease to include emergencies                York Trailways.                                       to this proposed rule when using
                                                when passengers are not actually on                       The following commenters (hereafter                 vehicles or acquiring transportation
                                                board a bus (49 CFR 390.303(a)(2)).                     the ‘‘industry commenters’’), submitted               services from other authorized carriers.
                                                Sometimes events requiring a                            responses to the June 2017 proposal that
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                                                replacement vehicle might occur when                    were largely the same, both in wording                Lease and Interchange
                                                there are no passengers on a vehicle,                   and in format. The industry commenters                  The 2015 final rule merged the
                                                such as when Amtrak or airline service                  include: AC Coach Operations, Inc. dba                concepts of leasing and chartering (or
                                                is suspended or disrupted and buses are                 Anderson Coach and Travel,                            subcontracting). Carriers routinely
                                                needed to transport stranded                            Adirondack Trailways, Pine Hill                       subcontract work to other registered
                                                passengers. A bus operator contracted to                Trailways and New York Trailways                      carriers to handle demand surges,
                                                provide the emergency service might                     (Responding together), ABA, Beeline                   emergencies, or events that require more
                                                need to obtain additional drivers and                   Charters and Tours, Burlington                        than their available capacity.


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                          47769

                                                Subcontractors with their own operating                 protect the traveling public without the              arrangements with secondary carriers
                                                authority have traditionally assumed                    burden of the lease and marking                       must often be made at the last minute.
                                                responsibility for their own vehicles or                requirement. Capitol Bus Lines, Inc.                     Industry commenters added that the
                                                drivers. Under the 2015 rule, however,                  reported that, as a result of its need to             Agency should clarify that the current
                                                a passenger carrier that subcontracted                  comply with the 2015 final rule                       definition of the term ‘‘interchange’’ in
                                                work to another carrier would be                        requirements, it lost the ability to                  § 390.5, as used in § 390.21(f) and
                                                responsible for that second carrier’s                   provide shuttle service for a large                   subpart F of part 390, does not include
                                                compliance with the regulations. In the                 fireworks display, which cost the                     the act of providing a passenger-carrying
                                                2015 final rule, FMCSA used the                         company business. UMA believed the                    CMV by one motor carrier of passengers
                                                following definition for ‘‘Lease’’ in                   rule needlessly harms passenger groups                to another. The industry commenters
                                                § 390.5: ‘‘Lease, as used in § 390.21(f)                and carriers in need of immediate                     suggested edits to the definition of
                                                and subpart F of this part, means a                     assistance. Greyhound wrote the rule                  ‘‘interchange’’ that they believed would
                                                contract or arrangement in which a                      would severely curtail, if not eliminate,             resolve the issue.
                                                motor carrier grants the use of a                       its leasing of buses to meet peak period
                                                passenger-carrying commercial motor                                                                              FMCSA Response: Under this NPRM,
                                                                                                        demand.
                                                vehicle to another motor carrier, with or                                                                     authorized carriers would not be subject
                                                                                                           Industry commenters believed that                  to leasing requirements when they use
                                                without a driver, for a specified period                the rule may exacerbate the problem of
                                                for the transportation of passengers, in                                                                      vehicles or acquire transportation
                                                                                                        non-compliant carriers by creating safe               services from other authorized carriers.
                                                exchange for compensation. The term                     havens and encouraging a switch from
                                                lease includes an interchange, as                                                                             FMCSA believes this proposed
                                                                                                        chartering to passenger broker                        regulatory change, as explained
                                                defined in this section, or other                       operations that the Agency has no
                                                agreement granting the use of a                                                                               elsewhere in this NPRM, would resolve
                                                                                                        authority to regulate. UMA commented                  the objections and concerns of most
                                                passenger-carrying commercial motor                     that the rule does not identify
                                                vehicle for a specified period, with or                                                                       commenters, without impacting safety.
                                                                                                        chameleon carriers, but instead provides
                                                without a driver, whether or not                        a roadmap for carriers that may have                  Assignment of Responsibility
                                                compensation for such use is specified                  compliance or operating authority
                                                or required.’’ The 2016 NOI indicated                   issues. UMA thought the rule might                       The 2015 final rule governing the
                                                that the Agency would address, through                  compel special event organizers and                   lease and interchange of passenger-
                                                rulemaking, this concern relating to the                community leaders to spend needless                   carrying CMVs holds the lessee carrier
                                                2015 final rule’s merger of the leasing                 time engaging multiple carriers or to                 directly responsible for violations of the
                                                and chartering concepts. In the 2017                    turn to brokers.                                      FMCSRs.
                                                proposal, FMCSA said that it intended                      While many commenters, including                      Comments: UMA consistently argued
                                                to revise subpart F of 49 CFR part 390                                                                        that FMCSA should not compel two or
                                                                                                        National Interstate Insurance, supported
                                                to exclude ‘‘chartering’’ from the leasing                                                                    more carriers, all possessing the
                                                                                                        the exclusion of ‘‘chartering’’ from the
                                                requirements of that rule.                                                                                    requisite Federal operating authority, to
                                                   Comments: UMA, Greyhound,                            leasing requirements of the rule, as
                                                                                                        stated in the 2017 proposal, some                     enter a lease they would not otherwise
                                                Academy Bus LLC, and others stated                                                                            enter when engaging each other’s
                                                that the 2015 final rule is overly                      commenters, including Greyhound
                                                                                                        Lines, Inc., UMA, and Reston                          services. UMA believed that forcing
                                                burdensome to motor carriers.                                                                                 passenger-carriers into a lease would
                                                   According to Coach USA Inc. and                      Limousine, wanted the Agency to clarify
                                                                                                        this term. In their joint request for an              compel the assignment of inspection
                                                other commenters, the rule broadens the
                                                                                                        extension of time Adirondack                          violations and crashes to the lessee. The
                                                term ‘‘lease’’ to capture charter and
                                                                                                        Trailways, Pine Hill Trailways, and                   commenter wrote that inspections and
                                                similar operations, thus placing
                                                                                                        New York Trailways noted that the                     crashes should be attributed to the
                                                unnecessary burdens on compliant
                                                                                                        proposal equates ‘‘chartering’’ to                    chartered, contracted, or subcontracted
                                                motor coach operators, while doing
                                                                                                        ‘‘subcontracting’’ in one section, but                carrier that possesses the sole, direct
                                                little to target the safety concern
                                                                                                        then excludes the term ‘‘chartering’’                 responsibility for compliance and
                                                associated with non-compliant carriers.
                                                                                                        from the entire rule. Reston Limousine                control of vehicle maintenance and
                                                Commenters believed FMCSA should
                                                                                                        suggested defining ‘‘lease’’ to exclude               driver qualifications and behavior. UMA
                                                exclude from the definition of ‘‘Lease’’
                                                in § 390.5 all passenger-carrying motor                 contracts, subcontracts, or charter                   wrote that the burden of the 2015 rule
                                                carriers that have FMCSA operating                      arrangements between two or more                      falls disproportionately on small-fleet
                                                authority. Specifically, they asked the                 passenger-carrying motor carriers with                passenger carriers and disadvantages
                                                Agency to modify the definition of                      valid individual USDOT operating                      them by creating untenable regulatory
                                                ‘‘Lease’’ by clarifying that it does not                authority.                                            liability.
                                                include a ‘‘contract, subcontract,                         Coach USA commented that the                          FMCSA Response: Because Federal
                                                sublease, rental or charter arrangement                 administrative and paperwork burden                   operating authority and the practices of
                                                between two or more passenger-carrying                  associated with the full range of other               the insurance industry both assign
                                                motor carriers where all parties have                   regulatory obligations related to                     responsibility to the operating motor
                                                operating authority.’’                                  chartering/subcontracting arrangements                carrier, FMCSA agrees that there is no
                                                   The Minnesota Charter Bus Operator’s                 would be prohibitive. Further, Coach                  need to reassign responsibility through
                                                Association stated that the rule would                  USA did not believe that it would be                  this rulemaking. As mentioned above,
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                                                prohibit the necessary collaboration                    possible for a primary contractor to                  authorized carriers would not be subject
                                                among multiple operators to meet the                    obtain insurance for vehicles operated                to this proposed rule when they use
                                                needs of large events that occur in                     by subcontractor, as the final rule seems             vehicles or acquire transportation
                                                Minnesota. This commenter added that                    to require. Coach USA noted that it is                services from other authorized carriers.
                                                the nature of the business requires                     not practicable for the primary carrier to            FMCSA believes that this proposed
                                                operators to assist one another in the                  ensure that the subcontracting carrier is             regulatory change would resolve the
                                                event of a mechanical breakdown, so                     in full compliance with many FMCSA                    objections and concerns of most
                                                they have to act quickly to service and                 regulations, particularly given that                  commenters, without impacting safety.


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                                                47770              Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                Marking Requirements                                    temporary markings required by                        of § 390.305 Notification, would not
                                                   The 2015 final rule added a new                      § 390.21 and thought they would result                apply.
                                                § 390.21(f) to cover the marking of                     in confusion.                                           Academy Bus LLC noted that the 24-
                                                leased and interchanged passenger-                         Greyhound Lines Inc. urged FMCSA                   hour notice to customers was not
                                                carrying CMVs, as defined in § 390.5 (80                to exempt from the temporary marking                  addressed in the 2017 proposal and said
                                                FR 30178). Carriers operating such                      or placarding requirements the                        the issue was still of concern. Academy
                                                CMVs must meet certain standards for                    operation of vehicles that are being                  Bus LLC added that the industry is
                                                marking in § 390.21. They must also                     leased or interchanged between carriers               required to be flexible and respond to
                                                display a placard, sign, or other                       that have FMCSA operating authority.                  the public demand on very short notice.
                                                permanent or removable device on the                       FMCSA Response: FMCSA proposes                       Coach USA believed that excluding
                                                right (curb) side of the passenger-                     to remove the 2015 final rule’s CMV                   chartering and subcontracting
                                                carrying CMV on or near the front                       marking requirements when a                           arrangements would also eliminate the
                                                passenger door. The device must show                    passenger-carrying CMV subject to the                 requirement to notify customers of
                                                the name and USDOT number of the                        proposed rule is leased or interchanged.              subcontracting arrangements. Coach
                                                carrier operating the vehicle, preceded                 The Agency believes this proposed                     USA, however, supported a notification
                                                by the words ‘‘operated by,’’ e.g.,                     regulatory change would resolve the                   requirement for carriers that had been
                                                ‘‘Operated by ABC Motorcoach, Inc.,                     objections and concerns of the                        prohibited from operating by FMCSA or
                                                USDOT 12345678.’’                                       commenters. Under this NPRM, a motor                  a State and intended to lease,
                                                   Comments: Industry commenters                        carrier operating a passenger-carrying                interchange or otherwise convey use of
                                                generally argued that the 2015 final rule               CMV under a lease having a term of not                a vehicle to another carrier. In fact,
                                                imposes burdensome marking                              more than 30 calendar days could mark                 Coach USA argued that these carriers
                                                requirements that are impractical, and                  the CMV with either (1) the name and                  must provide written notice to FMCSA
                                                that there are less burdensome ways to                  USDOT identification number of the                    before taking such an action.
                                                address the Agency’s concerns. In their                 lessee, or (2) the name and USDOT                       FMCSA Response: FMCSA proposes
                                                joint request for extension of time,                    identification number of the lessor if, in            to remove the lease notification
                                                Adirondack Trailways, Pine Hill                         the latter case, a fully complete lease is            requirement, and believes its removal at
                                                Trailways, and New York Trailways                       carried on the leased CMV during the                  this time may alleviate unnecessary
                                                commented that ‘‘temporary markings’’                   full term of the lease. These proposals               regulatory burdens that, based on
                                                is a matter of particular importance to                 would remove the cost of additional                   available evidence, do not significantly
                                                them. They argued that the current final                marking of the vehicles while                         aid travel groups in arranging trips or
                                                rules for temporary markings are                        maintaining all of the information                    avoiding particular carriers. If this
                                                unreasonable. They wrote that                           necessary for enforcement officials to                conclusion is inaccurate, please provide
                                                compliance would be impractical or                      identify the carrier for regulatory                   data or information in regard to this
                                                unsafe, and arguably impossible, due to                 compliance. FMCSA proposes to add                     matter.
                                                the design and construction of modern                   paragraph (e)(2)(v) to allow a passenger-
                                                                                                                                                              Expanding the 48-Hour Delay in
                                                motor coaches.                                          carrying CMV operating under the 48-
                                                                                                                                                              Preparing a Lease
                                                   In its comments, Coach USA                           hour emergency exception pursuant to
                                                recommended that the Agency eliminate                   § 390.403(a)(2) to be excepted from                      When passengers are on a CMV and
                                                the requirement to change vehicle                       paragraphs (e)(2)(iii) and (iv) regarding             an emergency occurs that requires a
                                                markings when vehicles are exchanged                    a lease document with required                        replacement vehicle from another motor
                                                between commonly owned carriers.                        information being carried on the                      carrier, § 390.303(a)(2) allows the two
                                                Coach USA wrote that changing                           vehicle, provided the lessor and lessee               carriers to postpone writing a lease or
                                                markings on vehicles exchanged                          comply with the requirements of the                   other written agreement for up to 48
                                                between commonly-owned Coach USA                        provision in § 390.403(a)(2).                         hours. The Agency believed the 48-hour
                                                companies would be highly burdensome                                                                          window would provide ample time for
                                                                                                        Twenty-Four Hour Notice of Lease                      the parties to document the transaction.
                                                given the large number of such
                                                exchanges. Coach USA commented that                        If a motor carrier was originally hired               One of the issues listed in the 2016
                                                magnetic marking placards and paper                     to provide charter transportation of                  NOI was that FMCSA would reconsider
                                                signs are not a practical option. Placing               passengers and subsequently                           expanding applicability of the 48-hour
                                                a sign on the inside of the bus could                   subcontracted this work to another                    delay provision for preparing a lease to
                                                obstruct the driver’s view and/or would                 motor carrier of passengers, the 2015                 include emergencies when passengers
                                                not meet the legibility requirements due                final rule required the original motor                are not actually on board a bus (81 FR
                                                to window glare or window tinting.                      carrier to notify the tour operator or                59952, Aug. 31, 2016). FMCSA provided
                                                   Coach USA also argued that requiring                 group of passengers within 24 hours                   examples of events that might require a
                                                vehicles interchanged between                           after hiring the subcontractor and                    motor carrier to obtain a replacement
                                                commonly-owned companies to be                          advising that the transportation would                vehicle immediately:
                                                marked in accordance with § 390.21 is                   be provided by the subcontractor. The                    • Buses might be needed to transport
                                                likely to cause more confusion among                    2016 NOI said that FMCSA was                          stranded passengers in the event that
                                                passengers than it resolves. It reported                reconsidering that requirement based on               Amtrak or airline service was
                                                that most of the vehicle exchanges                      petitioners’ arguments that the 24-hour               suspended or disrupted. A bus operator
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                                                between Coach USA carriers occur                        deadline is impractical in an emergency.              contracted to provide emergency service
                                                between companies that have                                Comments: Industry commenters                      might need to obtain additional drivers
                                                ‘‘Megabus.com’’ written across their                    asked that the 24-hour requirement for                and vehicles without delay;
                                                vehicles in huge letters. From the                      notification be clarified in a proposed                  • Last minute maintenance or
                                                public’s perspective, these                             rule. They also believed that excluding               mechanical issues, or driver illness,
                                                motorcoaches are operated by Megabus.                   passenger carriers that have operating                might arise late in the evening or during
                                                Coach USA did not believe that                          authority from the definition of ‘‘lease’’            the night (such as on a multi-day charter
                                                individuals would understand the                        in § 390.5 would mean the requirements                or tour trip), or just prior to picking up


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                           47771

                                                a group for a charter or scheduled                      the regulatory exception that permits                 parties to the agreement, including the
                                                service run.                                            the delayed writing of a lease during                 USDOT numbers and business
                                                   In the 2017 proposal, FMCSA                          certain emergencies (e.g., a crash, the               addresses. These summary documents
                                                explained that it intended to broaden                   vehicle is disabled) including when no                would be produced upon the demand of
                                                the emergency 48-hour delay provision                   passengers are on the vehicle. Therefore,             a law enforcement official.
                                                for preparing a lease authorized by 49                  FMCSA proposes to move the exception                     In its request for an extension of time,
                                                CFR 390.303(a)(2) and remove the                        in 49 CFR 390.303(a)(2) to 49 CFR                     Coach USA argued that the information
                                                requirement that passengers actually be                 390.403(a)(2). If a motor carrier obtains             required in § 390.301(b)(2)(i) is trip
                                                on board a bus when the exception                       a replacement vehicle from, or                        specific, and would require the
                                                occurs.                                                 subcontracts for service with, another                company to create a new summary
                                                   Comments: In response to the 2017                    motor carrier, the motor carriers may                 document for each of more than 10,000
                                                proposal, industry commenters                           delay writing of a lease during these                 trips annually. Such a document would
                                                indicated that the expansion of the 48-                 emergency situations. However, a                      impose an unnecessary regulatory
                                                hour exemption could be addressed by                    summary document signed and dated by                  burden. Coach USA requested that the
                                                changing the definitions in § 390.5.                    the lessee’s driver or available company              summary document required by this
                                                First, it was recommended that                          official must state: ‘‘[Carrier A, USDOT              provision include only a ‘‘listing of all
                                                operations conducted under revenue                      number, telephone number] has leased                  members of the corporate family along
                                                pooling arrangements or common                          this vehicle to [Carrier B, USDOT                     with their USDOT numbers, business
                                                ownership and control be excluded                       number, telephone number] pursuant to                 addresses and contact telephone
                                                from the definition of ‘‘interchange’’ in               49 CFR 390.403(a)(2)’’ and the summary                numbers.’’ The company also asked the
                                                § 390.5. Second, FMCSA was asked to                     document must be carried on the                       Agency to clarify that any summary
                                                exclude passenger motor carriers from                   replacement vehicle for the duration of               document may be maintained in
                                                the definition of ‘‘lease’’ in § 390.5 when             the lease. Enforcement officials will be              electronic format and stored on an
                                                all parties have operating authority.                   able to use this summary document to                  electronic logging device.
                                                Academy Bus LLC was concerned about                     determine the identity of the carrier                    In its response to the Agency’s 2017,
                                                lease preparation issues, noting that                   responsible for regulatory compliance.                proposal, Coach USA, like other
                                                ‘‘Our industry, by its nature, is required                                                                    industry commenters, reiterated its
                                                to be flexible and respond to the public                Summary Document Requirements in
                                                                                                        § 390.301(b)(2) and (3)                               previous comments.
                                                demand on very short notice.’’                                                                                   FMCSA Response: Since this
                                                   An individual believed that the 48-                     In § 390.301(b)(2), the 2015 rule                  proposed rule would not apply to
                                                hour time period for preparing leases                   allows passenger-carrying CMVs to be                  transactions between or among
                                                might be a good idea for the trucking                   exchanged or interchanged without                     authorized carriers under the proposed
                                                industry, but that is not the case for                  leases or receipts among commonly                     exception in § 390.401(b)(1) Contracts
                                                passenger carriers. This commenter                      owned and controlled motor carriers,                  and agreements between motor carriers
                                                stated that at peak times ‘‘every worker                provided the driver carries and                       of passengers with active passenger
                                                is stretched thin and there is a need to                produces, upon demand of a Federal,                   carrier operating authority registrations,
                                                bring in more operators to provide the                  State, or local law enforcement official,             FMCSA believes that regulatory
                                                same services,’’ otherwise customers                    a summary document listing certain                    exceptions for commonly owned and
                                                may be left stranded. In these instances,               information [see 80 FR at 30179].                     controlled carriers, and carriers
                                                it is ‘‘an emergency to both the busing                    Section 390.301(b)(3) provides that
                                                                                                                                                              participating in STB-approved revenue
                                                companies and the customers to bring in                 passenger-carrying CMVs may be
                                                                                                                                                              pooling agreements, are no longer
                                                another operator to provide the                         exchanged or interchanged without
                                                                                                                                                              necessary. The industry commenters
                                                necessary backup to complete the job in                 leases or receipts among motor carriers
                                                                                                                                                              suggested making the rule inapplicable
                                                an efficient manner. To combat this                     that are party to a revenue pooling
                                                                                                                                                              to commonly owned and controlled
                                                situation, companies need to work                       agreement approved by the Surface
                                                                                                                                                              carriers and carriers participating in
                                                together before, during and after leasing               Transportation Board (STB) provided
                                                                                                                                                              STB-approved revenue pooling
                                                passenger vehicles.’’ This commenter                    that the driver carries and, upon
                                                                                                                                                              agreements, and the Agency agrees with
                                                also recommended that accountability                    demand of a Federal, State, or local law
                                                                                                                                                              these comments. Therefore, FMCSA
                                                be placed directly on the subcontractor                 enforcement official, displays other
                                                                                                                                                              proposes to rescind the exceptions in 49
                                                and its driver.                                         information, including a summary
                                                   Coach USA wrote that the exception                                                                         CFR 390.303(b)(2) and (b)(3). All
                                                                                                        document [see 80 FR at 30179].
                                                in 49 CFR 390.303(a)(2) would likely                       Neither the 2016 NOI nor the 2017                  passenger carriers that are commonly
                                                apply only in rare instances if FMCSA                   proposal addressed the summary                        owned and controlled or participate in
                                                exempted chartering and subcontracting                  document requirements.                                STB-approved revenue pooling
                                                arrangements from the regulations.                         Comments: The industry commenters                  agreements operate in interstate
                                                Coach USA supported extending the 48-                   suggested removing the requirements in                commerce and have operating authority.
                                                hour delay to cases of emergencies                      § 390.301(b)(2) and (3) and instead                   An authorized carrier that obtains a
                                                where passengers are not yet on the bus.                including language about an abbreviated               vehicle from another commonly owned
                                                Because operators will likely not have                  summary document in the definition of                 and controlled authorized carrier or
                                                time to mark vehicles in the event of an                ‘‘interchange’’ in § 390.5. If the                    another participant in an STB-approved
                                                emergency that requires replacement of                  interchange occurred among commonly                   pooling agreement, would not be subject
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                                                a vehicle on very short notice, Coach                   owned/controlled motor carriers, the                  to this proposed rule.
                                                USA proposed eliminating the final                      summary document would identify the                   VII. General Discussion of the Proposed
                                                sentence of § 390.303(a)(2), ‘‘The lessee               carriers in that ‘‘family,’’ including                Rule
                                                must also mark the vehicle in                           USDOT numbers and business
                                                accordance with § 390.21(f) before                      addresses. If the interchange occurred                A. The Proposed Rule
                                                operating it.’’                                         pursuant to a revenue pooling                            FMCSA proposes removing and
                                                   FMCSA Response: FMCSA adopts the                     agreement approved by the STB, the                    reserving subpart F of part 390, moving
                                                petitioners’ recommendation to expand                   summary document would identify the                   it to subpart G with the same title,


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                                                47772               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                ‘‘Lease and Interchange of Passenger-                   CMVs. For a lease of 30 calendar days                 § 390.303(a)(1)(iii), which covers written
                                                Carrying Commercial Motor Vehicles,’’                   or less, the lessee can opt to mark the               agreements governing the renting,
                                                and making some further regulatory                      vehicle with either the lessee’s                      borrowing, loaning, or similar transfer of
                                                changes discussed later in this                         information or the lessor’s information.              a passenger-carrying CMV from another
                                                document. FMCSA is planning to use                      However, the latter would require a                   party. The rule would be revised and
                                                subpart F in a future NPRM to be                        fully executed copy of the lease be                   moved to § 390.403(a)(1) to include such
                                                published under RIN 2126–AB56,                          carried on the vehicle.                               transactions as either a lease or
                                                Unified Registration System                                If the motor carrier is operating a                interchange, which makes paragraph
                                                Enhancements and Updates.                               passenger-carrying CMV under a lease                  (a)(1)(iii) unnecessary. FMCSA is
                                                                                                        or rental agreement for more than 30                  proposing to expand the emergency-
                                                Definitions                                             calendar days, such CMV must be                       related exception in § 390.303(a)(2)
                                                   The Agency proposes to revise the                    marked with the lessee’s identification               (after transferring it to § 390.403(a)(2))
                                                definition of lease in § 390.5 to include               information. In a lease situation, the                that allows the postponement of the
                                                only contracts and agreements in which                  operating motor carrier is the lessee.                completion of a lease for up to 48 hours
                                                a motor carrier grants the use of a                     These revised regulations would                       for situations, such as a crash or vehicle
                                                passenger-carrying CMV to another                       address petitioners’ concerns that there              breakdown, when a replacement vehicle
                                                motor carrier when at least one of the                  is no easy way to display a temporary                 must be immediately obtained from
                                                motor carriers is not an authorized                     marking on certain passenger-carrying                 another motor carrier. Industry
                                                carrier.5 Authorized carriers routinely                 motor vehicles for short term leases.                 commenters requested this expansion of
                                                assist one another by providing                         FMCSA specifically requests comments                  the limited exception and FMCSA
                                                transportation services during demand                   from State Agencies that participate in               agrees with them. FMCSA proposes to
                                                surges, emergencies, or events that                     the Motor Carrier Safety Assistance                   allow the exception even when
                                                require more than their available                       Program about the effectiveness of these              passengers are not on the bus.
                                                capacity. These common agreements,                      proposed marking regulations for leased                  Section 390.403(b) specifies the
                                                some of which amount to                                 passenger-carrying CMVs and any                       contents of lease and interchange
                                                subcontracting, would not meet the                      potential inspection or enforcement                   documents. This paragraph requires the
                                                regulatory definition of a lease in this                problems.                                             lease, interchange agreement, or other
                                                proposed rule. Authorized carriers that                                                                       agreement to contain: (1) The name of
                                                                                                        General Applicability and Exceptions
                                                are hired by another authorized carrier                                                                       the vehicle manufacturer, the year of
                                                have traditionally assumed                                 The general applicability section                  manufacture, and the last 6 digits of the
                                                responsibility for their own regulatory                 would be revised slightly to reflect the              Vehicle Identification Number; (2) the
                                                compliance and liability. This practice                 removal of exceptions in paragraph (b).               legal names, contact information, and
                                                has long been acceptable to the                         Section 390.401(b) would be modified                  signatures 6 of both parties; (3) the time
                                                insurance industry. Furthermore,                        in several ways. First, a new exception               and date when the lease begins and
                                                authorized carriers are readily                         would appear in paragraph (b)(1) to                   ends; and (4) a statement that the lessee
                                                identifiable to enforcement personnel,                  exclude from the rule contracts and                   has exclusive possession and control of
                                                                                                        agreements between passenger carriers                 the leased vehicle and is responsible for
                                                making a separate lease agreement
                                                                                                        with active operating authority when                  regulatory compliance.
                                                assigning regulatory responsibility
                                                                                                        one such carrier acquires transportation                 Current § 390.303(b)(4)(i)–(iii) is a
                                                unnecessary.
                                                   The definition of lease would become                 services from another such carrier.                   slightly revised version of 49 CFR
                                                narrower by including only contracts                    Second, the current exception for                     376.12(c)(1), (2) and (4). Paragraph
                                                and agreements to grant the use of a                    financial leases in paragraph                         (b)(4)(i) is essential because it sets forth
                                                passenger-carrying CMV between motor                    § 390.301(b)(1) would be moved to                     the basic reason for a lease, from
                                                carriers when one (or more) such carrier                paragraph § 390.401(b)(2) as an                       FMCSA’s point of view, to assign full
                                                does not have operating authority. The                  exception with a revision. The provision              responsibility for regulatory compliance
                                                term lease would also be revised with                   that the financial organization,                      to the lessee. FMCSA proposes to make
                                                added language to include                               manufacturer, or dealer must not be a                 this paragraph more concise. Current
                                                circumstances when no compensation is                   motor carrier to utilize the exception                paragraph (b)(4)(ii) would be moved to
                                                specified. The terms lessee and lessor                  from the rule is proposed for removal                 § 390.403(b)(4)(ii) and would retain only
                                                would both be revised slightly to specify               because such entities are motor carriers              the last sentence of that provision.
                                                that the granting of passenger-carrying                 when they move their vehicle inventory                Paragraph (b)(4)(iii) is a useful
                                                CMV usage is through a lease.                           between business locations before                     disclaimer, should the issue of status of
                                                                                                        purchases. Third, the limited exception               the lessor (contractor or employee) arise
                                                Marking of Self-Propelled CMVs and                      in paragraph (b)(2) for passenger-                    in a tax context, but FMCSA does not
                                                Intermodal Equipment                                    carrying CMVs exchanged or                            believe it is essential. Therefore,
                                                  Section 390.21 (suspended) and                        interchanged between or among                         FMCSA proposes to shorten paragraphs
                                                390.21T would be returned nearly to the                 commonly owned and controlled motor                   (b)(4)(i) and (b)(4)(ii) and remove
                                                form before the March 27, 2015, final                   carriers would be removed. Fourth, the                paragraph (b)(4)(iii).
                                                rule. FMCSA would remove the special                    limited exception in paragraph (b)(3) for                FMCSA proposes to remove the
                                                marking regulations for leased and                      passenger-carrying CMVs exchanged or                  requirement in § 390.303(b)(5) that the
                                                interchanged passenger-carrying CMVs                    interchanged between or among motor                   lease contain a statement that the lessee
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                                                in paragraph (f). Section 390.21                        carriers that are a party to a revenue                is responsible for compliance with the
                                                (suspended) and 390.21T would be                        pooling agreement approved by the STB
                                                revised to treat leased passenger-                      in accordance with 49 U.S.C 14302                       6 FMCSA allows the use of electronic signatures

                                                                                                        would also be removed.                                in accordance with the Government Paperwork
                                                carrying CMVs like all other rented                                                                           Elimination Act (Pub. L. 105–277, Title XVII, Secs.
                                                                                                        Lease and Interchange Requirements                    1701–1710, 44 U.S.C. 3504 note, 112 Stat. 2681–
                                                  5 This rulemaking does not propose a change to                                                              749). See 76 FR 411, Jan. 4, 2011 and the Electronic
                                                the definition of lease in the context of property-       Lease and interchange requirements                  Signature final rule’s §§ 390.5, 390.5T, and 390.32,
                                                carrying vehicles in 49 CFR 376.2.                      would be revised by removing                          April 16, 2018 (83 FR 16226–7).



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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                  47773

                                                insurance requirements of 49 CFR part                   authorized carrier B that has the                     pays carrier B for the transportation
                                                387.                                                    necessary capacity. Carrier A may or                  service. This arrangement is not a lease,
                                                   Section 390.303(c) and (d) would be                  may not pay a fee to carrier B for taking             first because carrier B is not granting the
                                                merged and made more concise. Revised                   over the contract. A complete transfer                use of a passenger-carrying CMV to
                                                § 390.403(c) would state that a copy of                 would require carrier A to cancel its                 carrier A, and second because both
                                                the lease must be carried in the                        contract with the customer and carrier                carriers are authorized carriers. This
                                                passenger-carrying CMV during the                       B to create a new contract with the                   arrangement is also not an interchange
                                                period of the lease or interchange                      customer. The proposed rule would not                 because carriers A and B are not
                                                agreement. Both the lessee and lessor                   apply to these transactions because                   conducting a through movement. The
                                                would retain the lease or interchange                   these transactions do not qualify as a                proposed rule would not apply to this
                                                agreement for 1 year afterwards.                        ‘‘lease’’ (or interchange), as defined in             arrangement. Carrier B will conduct the
                                                   Section 390.303(e) would be removed.                 § 390.5, of a passenger-carrying CMV.                 transportation in its own name, on its
                                                FMCSA has decided it does not need                                                                            own authority, with its own vehicle(s),
                                                receipts when vehicles are surrendered                  Complete Subcontracting Among
                                                                                                                                                              and is therefore responsible for
                                                to the lessee and returned to the lessor.               Authorized Carriers
                                                                                                                                                              compliance with the FMCSRs.
                                                If FMCSA or another government                             Authorized carrier A lacks the
                                                enforcement agency sought to assign a                   capacity to execute a contracted trip and             Other Business Arrangements Between
                                                safety incident to the lessee or the lessor             hires authorized carrier B to make the                Passenger Carriers
                                                based on a lease or other agreement that                trip while maintaining its contract with              Example 1
                                                had already been terminated, the former                 the customer. This arrangement is                        Carrier A is exempt under 49 U.S.C.
                                                parties to the lease would have to                      documented by a charter contract                      13506 from the requirement for
                                                decide how to document that premature                   between carriers A and B. Carrier A                   operating authority—for example,
                                                termination.                                            pays carrier B for the trip. This                     because of the hotel exemption in
                                                   FMCSA proposes to remove the                         arrangement is not a lease, first because             section 13506(a)(3) 8—but finds itself
                                                requirements in § 390.303(f) for                        carrier B is not granting the use of a                without the capacity to accommodate a
                                                additional temporary markings of leased                 passenger-carrying CMV to carrier A,                  group that it originally intended to
                                                and interchanged passenger-carrying                     and second because both carriers are                  transport. When this occurs, carrier A
                                                CMVs, and to return to the text of the                  authorized carriers. Instead, carrier B is            hires authorized carrier B to provide
                                                marking rule in § 390.21(e) 7 that was                  making the trip in its own name, on its               charter passenger transportation of the
                                                effective on July 1, 2015, with slight                  own authority, with its own vehicles                  group in whole or in part. This
                                                modifications. The modifications would                  and is therefore responsible for                      arrangement is documented by a charter
                                                add references to leased CMVs in                        compliance with the FMCSRs. The                       contract between carriers A and B.
                                                paragraph (e) to provide a similar option               proposed rule therefore would not apply               Carrier A pays carrier B for the
                                                to rented CMVs.                                         to this arrangement.                                  transportation service, but is not a lessee
                                                   FMCSA believes that this eliminates
                                                                                                        Partial Subcontracting Among                          of carrier B’s vehicle. Therefore, this
                                                one of petitioners’ major objections to
                                                                                                        Authorized Carriers                                   arrangement is not a lease. Carrier B
                                                the 2015 final rule. The proposed rule
                                                                                                                                                              does not claim the exemption in section
                                                would require a leased passenger-                          Assuming the same facts as described
                                                                                                                                                              13506(a)(3) but conducts the
                                                carrying CMV be marked with the                         above, except that authorized carrier A               transportation in its own name, on its
                                                lessee’s identification information if the              provides some of the transportation                   own authority, with its own vehicle(s)
                                                lease is longer than 30 days. Leased                    service while contracting with                        and is therefore responsible for
                                                passenger-carrying CMVs would be                        authorized carrier B for the remainder,               compliance with the FMCSRs. The
                                                required to be marked with either the                   this arrangement is not a lease, first                proposed rule would not apply to this
                                                lessor’s or lessee’s identification                     because carrier B is not granting the use             arrangement.
                                                information if the lease is 30 days or                  of a passenger-carrying CMV to carrier
                                                less.                                                   A, and second because both carriers are               Example 2
                                                   Finally, the proposed rule removes                   authorized carriers. Carrier A pays                      Private motor carrier of passengers A
                                                the requirement in § 390.305 to notify                  carrier B for the transportation service              finds itself without the capacity to
                                                the passenger group or their                            as part of a charter contract. Carrier B              transport the members of its
                                                representative within 24 hours after the                is not surrendering control of a                      organization. Carrier A therefore hires
                                                primary contractor reassigns the                        passenger-carrying CMV to carrier A for               authorized carrier B to provide charter
                                                transportation to a subcontractor.                      its own use. Both carriers are authorized             passenger transportation of the group in
                                                B. Examples of Proposed Rule                            carriers providing transportation in their            whole or in part. This arrangement is
                                                Implementation                                          own name, on their own authority, with                documented by a charter contract
                                                                                                        their own vehicles, and each is                       between carriers A and B. Carrier A
                                                  The following examples illustrate the                 independently responsible for                         pays carrier B for the transportation
                                                proposed application of this                            compliance with the FMCSRs.                           service. Carrier A is not a lessee and the
                                                rulemaking:                                                                                                   arrangement is not a lease or
                                                                                                        Subcontracting Among Regular Route
                                                Complete Contract Transfer Example                      Authorized Carriers                                   interchange because carrier B conducts
                                                   Authorized carrier A is contracted to                                                                      the transportation in its own name, on
                                                                                                           Authorized carrier A, which provides               its own authority, with its own
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS3




                                                transport a tour or travel group on a trip,             regular route passenger transportation
                                                but finds itself without the capacity to                                                                      vehicle(s) and is therefore responsible
                                                                                                        services according to a fixed schedule,               for compliance with the FMCSRs. The
                                                accommodate the group. Carrier A                        finds itself without the capacity to
                                                completely transfers the contract to                    execute a route. Carrier A hires                        8 Section 13506 lists the miscellaneous motor


                                                  7 See e-CFR text in effect on July 1, 2015 at
                                                                                                        authorized carrier B to continue this                 carrier transportation exemptions. Under section
                                                                                                        service. This arrangement is                          13506(a)(3), neither the Secretary nor the Board has
                                                https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?SID=                                                                    jurisdiction over a motor vehicle owned or operated
                                                b9ddca68b462ed0f3d5758839de97752&pitd=20150             documented by a charter contract                      by or for hotel patrons between the hotel and the
                                                701&node=pt49.5.390&rgn=div5#se49.5.390_121.            between carriers A and B. Carrier A                   local station of a carrier.



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                                                47774              Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                proposed rule would not apply to this                   provided by carrier B, and is therefore               IX. Section-by-Section Description of
                                                arrangement.                                            responsible for compliance with the                   the Proposed Rule
                                                Example 3                                               FMCSRs.                                               A. Section 390.5 (Suspended) and
                                                   Carrier A is an exempt for-hire motor                Example 6                                             390.5T Definitions
                                                carrier of passengers (under 49 U.S.C.                                                                          Section 390.5 (suspended) and 390.5T
                                                13506) that finds itself without the                       Private motor carrier of passengers A
                                                                                                                                                              would be amended to revise the
                                                capacity to accommodate a group it                      finds itself without the capacity to
                                                                                                                                                              definitions of lease, lessee, and lessor
                                                originally intended to transport. Carrier               transport the members of its
                                                                                                                                                              and all of these terms would apply
                                                A uses a passenger-carrying CMV                         organization and uses a passenger-
                                                                                                                                                              specifically to motor carriers of
                                                owned by authorized carrier B. This                     carrying CMV owned by private motor
                                                                                                                                                              passengers.
                                                transaction is a lease under the                        carrier of passengers B. This transaction
                                                proposed rule and would be subject to                   is a lease under the proposed rule and                B. Section 390.21 (Suspended) and
                                                its requirements because carrier A is not               would be subject to the requirements of               390.21T Marking of Self-Propelled
                                                authorized to operate for-hire in                       this rule because neither carrier has the             CMVs and Intermodal Equipment
                                                interstate commerce. In this case, carrier              authority to conduct for-hire operations                 Section 390.21 (suspended) and
                                                B is a lessor that is surrendering control              in interstate commerce. In this case,                 390.21T would be returned nearly to the
                                                of a passenger-carrying CMVs to carrier                 carrier B is a lessor that is surrendering            form before the March 27, 2015, final
                                                A for the use of that carrier. Carrier A                control of its passenger-carrying CMV to              rule. In the paragraph (e) header,
                                                will conduct the transportation in its                  carrier A for the use of that carrier.                FMCSA replaces ‘‘Rented property-
                                                own name under its own safety                           Carrier A will conduct the                            carrying commercial motor vehicles’’
                                                registration (i.e., USDOT number) with                  transportation in its own name, under                 with the header phrase ‘‘Rented CMVs
                                                the CMV leased from carrier B, with or                  its own safety registration (i.e., USDOT              and leased passenger-carrying CMVs.’’
                                                without drivers provided by carrier B,                  number), with the CMV leased from                     Throughout paragraph (e), the Agency
                                                and is therefore responsible for                        carrier B, with or without drivers                    adds the phrase ‘‘or lease’’ after the term
                                                compliance with the FMCSRs.                             provided by carrier B, and is therefore               ‘‘rental agreement.’’ When referring to a
                                                Example 4                                               responsible for compliance with the                   ‘‘renting motor carrier,’’ the Agency
                                                                                                        applicable FMCSRs.                                    adds the phrase ‘‘or lessee’’ immediately
                                                   Private motor carrier of passengers A                                                                      after it. In paragraph (e)(2)(iv), in
                                                finds itself without the capacity to                    Example 7
                                                                                                                                                              addition to the cross reference to the
                                                accommodate a group it originally                                                                             property-carrying leasing regulations in
                                                intended to transport. Carrier A uses a                    For-hire passenger carrier A had its
                                                                                                        operating authority revoked for lack of               49 CFR part 376, FMCSA adds a cross
                                                passenger-carrying CMV owned by                                                                               reference to the passenger-carrying
                                                authorized carrier B. This transaction is               adequate insurance coverage. Carrier A
                                                                                                        wishes to generate revenue from its                   leasing regulations in subpart G of part
                                                a lease under the proposed rule and                                                                           390 so that the revised sentence reads
                                                would be subject to its requirements                    otherwise idle CMVs. It therefore
                                                                                                        negotiates an arrangement with                        ‘‘See the property-carrying leasing
                                                because carrier A is not authorized to                                                                        regulations at 49 CFR part 376 and the
                                                operate for-hire in interstate commerce.                authorized carrier B to surrender control
                                                                                                        of its passenger-carrying CMVs to carrier             passenger-carrying leasing regulations at
                                                In this case, carrier B is a lessor that is                                                                   subpart G of this part for information
                                                surrendering control of a passenger-                    B for a fee. This arrangement is a lease
                                                                                                        under the proposed rule and would be                  that should be included in all leasing
                                                carrying CMVs to carrier A for the use                                                                        documents.’’ FMCSA proposes to add
                                                of that carrier. Carrier A will conduct                 subject to its requirements because
                                                                                                                                                              paragraph (e)(2)(v) to allow the
                                                the transportation in its own name                      carrier A is not authorized to operate
                                                                                                                                                              passenger-carrying CMV operating
                                                under its own safety registration (i.e.,                for-hire in interstate commerce. In this
                                                                                                                                                              under the 48-hour emergency exception
                                                USDOT number) with the CMV leased                       case, carrier A is simply a lessor. Carrier
                                                                                                                                                              pursuant to § 390.403(a)(2) to be
                                                from carrier B, with or without drivers                 B would conduct the transportation in
                                                                                                                                                              excepted from paragraphs (iii) and (iv)
                                                provided by carrier B, and is therefore                 its own name, on its own authority,                   regarding a lease document with
                                                responsible for compliance with the                     with the CMVs leased from carrier A,                  required information being carried on
                                                applicable FMCSRs.                                      with or without drivers provided by                   the vehicle, provided the lessor and
                                                                                                        carrier A, and is therefore responsible               lessee comply with the requirements of
                                                Example 5
                                                                                                        for compliance with the FMCSRs.                       the provision in § 390.403(a)(2).
                                                   Authorized carrier A lacks the
                                                capacity to execute a contracted trip and               C. Alternatives                                          In paragraph (f), FMCSA would
                                                uses a passenger-carrying CMV owned                                                                           remove the special marking regulations
                                                                                                          FMCSA requests comments to                          for leased and interchanged passenger-
                                                by private motor carrier of passengers,
                                                                                                        identify other methods to achieve the                 carrying CMVs. This proposal would
                                                carrier B. This transaction is a lease
                                                under the proposed rule and would be                    safety objectives of this rulemaking.                 redesignate paragraphs (g) and (h) as
                                                subject to its requirements because                                                                           paragraphs (f) and (g), respectively, as
                                                                                                        VIII. International Impacts                           they were on July 1, 2015.9
                                                private carrier B is not authorized to
                                                operate for-hire in interstate commerce                   The FMCSRs, and any exceptions to                   C. Part 390, Subpart F Lease and
                                                and cannot be hired to provide                          the FMCSRs, apply only within the                     Interchange of Passenger-Carrying
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                                                transportation. In this case, carrier B is              United States (and, in some cases,                    Commercial Motor Vehicles
                                                a lessor that is surrendering control of                United States territories). Motor carriers
                                                                                                        and drivers are subject to the laws and                 Subpart F, including §§ 390.301,
                                                its passenger-carrying CMV to carrier A.
                                                                                                        regulations of the countries in which                 390.303, and 390.305, would be
                                                Carrier A will conduct the
                                                                                                                                                              removed and reserved.
                                                transportation in its own name, under                   they operate, unless an international
                                                its own authority, with the CMV leased                  agreement states otherwise. Drivers and                 9 See https://www.ecfr.gov/cgi-bin/text-idx?SID=
                                                from the private motor carrier of                       carriers should be aware of the                       b9ddca68b462ed0f3d5758839de97752&pitd=20150
                                                passengers, with or without drivers                     regulatory differences among nations.                 701&node=pt49.5.390&rgn=div5#se49.5.390_121.



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                                                                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                                        47775

                                                D. Part 390, Subpart G Lease and                                            X. Regulatory Analyses                                              representing a decrease in cost or a cost
                                                Interchange of Passenger-Carrying                                                                                                               savings.
                                                                                                                            A. E.O. 12866 (Regulatory Planning and
                                                Commercial Motor Vehicles
                                                                                                                            Review), E.O. 13563 (Improving                                      Key Inputs to the Analysis
                                                  Subpart G, consisting of §§ 390.401                                       Regulation and Regulatory Review), and
                                                                                                                            DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures                                 The proposed rule revises regulations
                                                and 390.403, would be added.                                                                                                                    established in the 2015 final rule,
                                                                                                                               FMCSA performed an analysis of the                               therefore the 2015 final rule serves as
                                                E. Section 390.401                  Applicability
                                                                                                                            impacts of the proposed rule and                                    the baseline against which the effects of
                                                  Paragraph (a) would add the general                                       determined it is not a significant                                  the proposed rule are evaluated. Many
                                                applicability for passenger-carrying                                        regulatory action under section 3(f) of                             of the key inputs to this analysis of the
                                                CMV leases and interchanges as the                                          E.O. 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4,                                 proposed rule are based on the same
                                                terms ‘‘lease’’ and ‘‘interchange’’ would                                   1993), Regulatory Planning and Review,                              data sources and methods as those
                                                be defined in this proposal’s §§ 390.5                                      as supplemented by E.O. 13563 (76 FR                                developed and used in the evaluation of
                                                (suspended) and 390.5T.                                                     3821, January 21, 2011), Improving                                  the 2015 final rule, with various updates
                                                                                                                            Regulation and Regulatory Review.                                   made as needed to reflect more recently
                                                  Paragraph (b) would provide the two                                       Accordingly, the Office of Management
                                                proposed exceptions to the general rule.                                                                                                        available data and information.
                                                                                                                            and Budget (OMB) has not reviewed it                                Therefore, a copy of the regulatory
                                                Paragraph (c) would provide that if the                                     under that Order. It is also not
                                                use of a passenger-carrying commercial                                                                                                          evaluation for the 2015 final rule is
                                                                                                                            significant within the meaning of DOT                               available in the docket for the proposed
                                                motor vehicle is conferred between                                          regulatory policies and procedures
                                                motor carriers subject to this proposal                                                                                                         rule, and, where applicable, the Agency
                                                                                                                            (DOT Order 2100.5 dated May 22, 1980;
                                                and either carrier fails to meet all                                                                                                            cites that document in the analysis
                                                                                                                            44 FR 11034 (February 26, 1979)).
                                                applicable requirements of subpart G,                                          As described earlier, the proposed                               below.10 A 10-year analysis period of
                                                both motor carriers shall be subject to a                                   rule would reduce the scope of the lease                            2019 to 2028 is utilized for this analysis
                                                civil penalty.                                                              and interchange requirements for motor                              of the proposed rule, and all monetary
                                                                                                                            carriers of passengers. Furthermore,                                values are expressed in 2016 dollars.
                                                F. Section 390.403 Lease and
                                                Interchange Requirements                                                    those passenger carriers and passenger-                             Number of Passenger Carriers
                                                                                                                            carrying CMV trips for which the                                    Experiencing Regulatory Relief Under
                                                   In paragraph (a)(1), this proposal                                       proposed rule would remain applicable                               the Proposed Rule
                                                would set out the two instances in                                          would be subject to lease and
                                                which a lease or other agreement is                                         interchange requirements that are                                     The Agency estimates that an annual
                                                required (and the lease or agreement                                        reduced in comparison to those of the                               average of 8,215 motor carriers of
                                                must then meet the conditions of                                            2015 final rule. At the same time,                                  passengers would experience regulatory
                                                paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section). In                                 FMCSA believes that the lease and                                   relief under the proposed rule, as
                                                paragraph (a)(2), this proposal would                                       interchange requirements of the                                     discussed below. This represents the
                                                allow the delayed writing of a lease after                                  proposed rule would still enable safety                             average over the 10-year analysis period
                                                an emergency, such as a disabled                                            officials and the general public to                                 of the individual annual estimates of the
                                                vehicle, that disrupts or delays a trip,                                    sufficiently identify the passenger                                 total number of passenger carriers
                                                and would not limit the exception to                                        carrier responsible for safety. As a                                experiencing regulatory relief under the
                                                times when passengers are on the bus.                                       consequence, FMCSA estimates that the                               proposed rule, which are presented in
                                                                                                                            proposed rule would result in a cost                                Table 2. As also shown in Table 2, the
                                                   Paragraph (b) would specify the four                                                                                                         Agency estimates that approximately 75
                                                                                                                            savings, but would not result in any
                                                minimum required items of any lease,                                                                                                            percent of this total number of
                                                                                                                            change to safety benefits.
                                                sublease, or interchange document                                              The Agency estimates that the                                    passenger carriers would experience full
                                                required under this proposal: (1) Vehicle                                   proposed rule would result in a cost                                regulatory relief and would no longer be
                                                identification information; (2) Parties;                                    savings of $75.1 million on an                                      subject to the lease and interchange
                                                (3) Specific duration; and (4) Exclusive                                    undiscounted basis, $66.5 million                                   requirements for passenger-carrying
                                                possession and responsibilities.                                            discounted at 3 percent, and $57.5                                  CMVs as a consequence of the proposed
                                                   Paragraph (c) would provide when a                                       million discounted at 7 percent over the                            rule. The remaining 25 percent of these
                                                copy of the lease must be on the                                            10-year analysis period. Expressed on                               passenger carriers would experience
                                                passenger-carrying CMV and how long                                         an annualized basis, this equates to a                              partial regulatory relief and remain
                                                both the lessor and lessee must retain                                      10-year cost savings of $7.8 million at a                           subject to reduced lease and interchange
                                                copies of the lease, sublease, or                                           3 percent discount rate and $8.2 million                            requirements compared to those of the
                                                agreement.                                                                  at a 7 percent discount rate, again                                 2015 final rule.

                                                                         TABLE 2—ESTIMATED NUMBER OF PASSENGER CARRIERS EXPERIENCING REGULATORY RELIEF
                                                                                                   UNDER THE PROPOSED RULE
                                                                                                                                                                                       Passenger            Passenger         Total passenger
                                                                                                                                                                                         carriers              carriers            carriers
                                                                                                                                                                                      experiencing         experiencing        experiencing
                                                                                                            Year                                                                     full regulatory     partial regulatory      regulatory
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                                                                                                                                                                                    relief under the      relief under the    relief under the
                                                                                                                                                                                     proposed rule         proposed rule       proposed rule

                                                2019 ...........................................................................................................................                5,929                 1,977              7,906
                                                2020 ...........................................................................................................................                5,980                 1,993              7,973



                                                  10 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of

                                                Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final
                                                Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’

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                                                47776                      Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                            TABLE 2—ESTIMATED NUMBER OF PASSENGER CARRIERS EXPERIENCING REGULATORY RELIEF—Continued
                                                                                           UNDER THE PROPOSED RULE
                                                                                                                                                                                          Passenger                     Passenger            Total passenger
                                                                                                                                                                                            carriers                       carriers               carriers
                                                                                                                                                                                         experiencing                  experiencing           experiencing
                                                                                                            Year                                                                        full regulatory              partial regulatory         regulatory
                                                                                                                                                                                       relief under the               relief under the       relief under the
                                                                                                                                                                                        proposed rule                  proposed rule          proposed rule

                                                2021    ...........................................................................................................................                      6,031                     2,010                  8,041
                                                2022    ...........................................................................................................................                      6,082                     2,027                  8,109
                                                2023    ...........................................................................................................................                      6,134                     2,044                  8,178
                                                2024    ...........................................................................................................................                      6,185                     2,062                  8,247
                                                2025    ...........................................................................................................................                      6,238                     2,079                  8,317
                                                2026    ...........................................................................................................................                      6,290                     2,097                  8,387
                                                2027    ...........................................................................................................................                      6,344                     2,115                  8,459
                                                2028    ...........................................................................................................................                      6,397                     2,133                  8,530

                                                      Annual average ..................................................................................................                                  6,161                     2,054                  8,215



                                                  To derive the estimates presented in                                       available data and information. Data                                            carriers would be subject to the May
                                                Table 2 of the number of passenger                                           from the FMCSA Motor Carrier                                                    2015 final rule. This estimate is based
                                                carriers experiencing regulatory relief                                      Management Information System                                                   on the same methods as those
                                                under the proposed rule, FMCSA first                                         (MCMIS) and the FMCSA Licensing and                                             developed and used in the evaluation of
                                                estimated the number of passenger                                            Insurance (L&I) system were used to                                             the 2015 final rule, and assumes that
                                                carriers that, in the absence of the                                         develop a new baseline value for the                                            under that rule 100 percent of
                                                proposed rule, would be affected by the                                      reported number of all active interstate                                        authorized for-hire carriers, 100 percent
                                                lease and interchange requirements of                                        passenger carriers operating in the U.S.                                        of exempt for-hire carriers, and 10
                                                the 2015 final rule. This estimate is                                        as of the end of calendar year 2017,                                            percent of private passenger carriers
                                                based on the same data sources and                                           namely 13,386 carriers.12 13                                                    would be subject to the lease and
                                                methods as those developed and used in                                         Of this total population, the Agency
                                                                                                                                                                                                             interchange requirements for passenger-
                                                the evaluation of the 2015 final rule 11                                     estimates that, in the absence of the
                                                                                                                                                                                                             carrying CMVs.14
                                                but updated to reflect more recently                                         proposed rule, 7,774 of these passenger

                                                 TABLE 3—REPORTED NUMBER OF ACTIVE INTERSTATE PASSENGER CARRIERS OPERATING IN THE U.S. (AS OF DECEMBER
                                                    29, 2017), AND ESTIMATED NUMBER THAT WOULD BE SUBJECT TO THE MAY 2015 FINAL RULE IN THE ABSENCE OF
                                                    THE PROPOSED RULE

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     Number (and percent)
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    estimated to be subject
                                                                                                                                                                                                               Total number
                                                                                                Type of passenger carrier operation                                                                                                to the May 2015 final rule
                                                                                                                                                                                                                of carriers          in the absence of the
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                          proposed rule

                                                Authorized For-Hire (a) ........................................................................................................................                         6,629   6,629 (100% of total).
                                                Exempt For-Hire (9+) (b) ......................................................................................................................                            340   340 (100% of total).
                                                Exempt For-Hire (16+) (c) ....................................................................................................................                             181   181 (100% of total).
                                                Private (business) (d) ...........................................................................................................................                       2,599   260 (10% of total).
                                                Private (non-business) (e) ....................................................................................................................                          3,637   364 (10% of total).

                                                      Total (f) ..........................................................................................................................................             13,386    7,774.
                                                   Notes:
                                                   (a) A commercial entity whose primary business activity is the transportation of passengers by motor vehicle for compensation.
                                                   (b) A for-hire entity that is exempt under 49 U.S.C. 13506, and operates at least one passenger vehicle designed or used to accommodate 9
                                                or more passengers including the driver.
                                                   (c) A for-hire entity that is exempt under 49 U.S.C. 13506, and operates at least one passenger vehicle designed or used to accommodate 16
                                                or more passengers including the driver.
                                                   (d) A private entity engaged in the interstate transportation of passengers which is provided in the furtherance of a commercial enterprise and
                                                is not available to the public at large.
                                                   (e) A private entity involved in the interstate transportation of passengers that does not otherwise meet the definition of a ‘‘private (business)’’
                                                motor carrier of passengers as noted above.
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                                                   11 Further details regarding the specific data                            (L&I) system. Snapshots as of December 29, 2017                                 to not risk underestimating the number of affected
                                                sources and methods can be found in DOT FMCSA,                               (DART request ID #38883).                                                       passenger carriers and the corresponding cost of the
                                                ‘‘Lease and Interchange of Vehicles, Motor Carriers                             13 The total number of 13,386 passenger carriers
                                                                                                                                                                                                             lease and interchange requirements of the May 2015
                                                of Passengers, 2015 Final Rule Regulatory                                    as of the end of 2017 actually represents 11,705                                final rule.
                                                Evaluation.’’ Pages 9–12.                                                    unique carriers, because some carriers provide                                     14 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of
                                                   12 U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT),                               passenger service in more than one of the operation
                                                Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration                                  classifications shown. Consistent with the approach                             Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final
                                                (FMCSA). Motor Carrier Management Information                                used in the regulatory evaluation for the May 2015                              Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Pages 9–12.
                                                System (MCMIS), and Licensing and Insurance                                  final rule, the larger number was used here so as



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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                  47777

                                                   (f) The total number of 13,386 passenger carriers shown actually represents 11,705 unique carriers, because some carriers provide passenger
                                                service in more than one of the operation classifications shown. Consistent with the approach used in the regulatory evaluation for the May 2015
                                                final rule, the larger number was used here so as to not risk underestimating the number of affected passenger carriers and the corresponding
                                                cost of the lease and interchange requirements of the May 2015 final rule.


                                                  The 2017 value of 7,774 passenger                        For exempt for-hire carriers and                     regulatory relief. As noted earlier,
                                                carriers that would be subject to the                   private passenger carriers, the analysis                however, these carriers would be subject
                                                2015 final rule was then used as the                    assumes that 100 percent and 10                         to reduced requirements compared to
                                                basis to develop future projections over                percent, respectively, of these carriers                those of the 2015 final rule.
                                                the 2019 to 2028 analysis period. These                 would continue to be subject to the                       FMCSA requests comments and
                                                projections were developed by                           lease and interchange requirements                      submission of quantitative or qualitative
                                                increasing the baseline 2017 value of                   under the proposed rule, the same                       data addressing the potential number of
                                                7,774 passenger carriers consistent with                percentages as under the 2015 final rule                passenger carriers that would
                                                the occupation-specific employment                      and also as shown in Table 3.                           experience regulatory relief under the
                                                growth projections for Standard                         Combined, these changes result in an                    proposed rule.
                                                Occupational Classification (SOC) Code                  estimated overall reduction of
                                                                                                        approximately 75 percent in the number                  Number of CMV Trips Experiencing
                                                53–3021 (Bus drivers, transit and
                                                                                                        of passenger carriers subject to lease and              Regulatory Relief Under the Proposed
                                                intercity) obtained from the Bureau of
                                                                                                        interchange requirements under the                      Rule
                                                Labor Statistics (BLS) Employment
                                                Projections Program which, from 2016                    proposed rule.16 This reduction is                         The Agency estimates that an annual
                                                to 2026, is forecast to grow by 0.85                    consistent with the comments and                        average of 537,134 passenger-carrying
                                                percent annually.15 This results in a                   petitions for reconsideration that the                  CMV trips would experience regulatory
                                                projection of the number of passenger                   Agency received, a number of which                      relief under the proposed rule over the
                                                carriers that, in the absence of the                    suggested that the scope of the 2015                    10-year analysis period, as presented in
                                                proposed rule, would be subject to the                  final rule likely encompassed a                         Table 4 and discussed below. This
                                                2015 rule each year over the 2019 to                    relatively large proportion of passenger-               estimate is based on the same methods
                                                2028 analysis period. In the absence of                 carrying CMV trips in which both the                    as those developed and used in the
                                                the proposed rule, all of these passenger               lessor and the lessee were authorized                   evaluation of the 2015 final rule.17 The
                                                carriers would be subject to the 2015                   carriers. Petitioners generally argued                  estimated number of passenger carriers
                                                rule. As discussed earlier, under the                   that such carriers should not be subject                that would experience regulatory relief
                                                proposed rule a large portion of these                  to lease and interchange requirements.                  under the proposed rule (see Table 2)
                                                passenger carriers would no longer be                      Finally, Table 2 also presents an                    serves as the primary basis for the
                                                subject to lease and interchange                        estimate of the remaining subset of the                 estimate of the number of trips that
                                                requirements, and the remaining                         annual average of 8,215 passenger                       would experience regulatory relief
                                                carriers would be subject to reduced                    carriers that would experience partial                  under the proposed rule. For each of the
                                                requirements. In Table 2, the column on                 regulatory relief and remain subject to                 carriers in Table 2, we assumed an
                                                the far right shows the projected number                reduced lease and interchange                           estimated average of 64 trips per year
                                                of passenger carriers that would                        requirements compared to those of the                   are operated with leased or
                                                experience regulatory relief under the                  2015 rule. Over the 10-year analysis                    interchanged vehicles. This is consistent
                                                proposed rule over the 10-year analysis                 period, the Agency estimates that an                    with the assumptions used in the
                                                period of 2019 to 2028, which equals an                 annual average of 2,054 passenger                       regulatory evaluation for the 2015 final
                                                annual average of 8,215 passenger                       carriers, or approximately 25 percent of                rule.18 The estimated number of trips
                                                carriers.                                               the total, would experience partial                     that would experience regulatory relief
                                                  Table 2 also shows the subset of those                                                                        under the proposed rule (see Table 4)
                                                                                                           16 As shown in Table 3, in 2017 an estimated
                                                8,215 passenger carriers that under the                                                                         also incorporates a modest upward
                                                                                                        7,774 passenger carriers would be subject to the
                                                proposed rule would experience full                     lease and interchange requirements of passenger-        adjustment to reflect an annual average
                                                regulatory relief and would no longer be                carrying CMVs under the May 2015 final rule.            of 11,400 trips operated by Greyhound,
                                                subject to lease and interchange                        Under the proposed rule, as noted, the analysis         one of the largest U.S. interstate
                                                                                                        assumed that only 10 percent of authorized for-hire
                                                requirements. Over the 10-year analysis                 carriers would be subject to the lease and
                                                                                                                                                                passenger carriers. This adjustment is
                                                period, the Agency estimates that an                    interchange requirements of passenger-carrying          consistent with the methods used in the
                                                annual average of 6,161 passenger                       CMVs, or 10 percent of 6,629, which equals 663          evaluation of the 2015 final rule,19 and
                                                                                                        authorized for-hire passenger carriers. The analysis    is based on data that was provided to
                                                carriers, or approximately 75 percent of                also assumed that 100 percent of exempt for-hire
                                                the total number of carriers that would                 carriers and 10 percent of private passenger carriers
                                                                                                                                                                FMCSA by Greyhound regarding trips
                                                experience regulatory relief, would                     would continue to be subject to the lease and           with leased and interchanged vehicles
                                                experience full regulatory relief. This                 interchange requirements for passenger-carrying         in 2012.20
                                                                                                        CMVs under the proposed rule, which equals 100
                                                value was estimated by assuming that                    percent of 340 and 181 exempt for-hire carriers           17 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of
                                                approximately 10 percent of authorized                  (totaling 521 exempt for-hire carriers), and 10
                                                                                                                                                                Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final
                                                for-hire carriers would be subject to the               percent of 2,599 and 3,637 private carriers (totaling
                                                                                                                                                                Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Page 21, Table 6.
                                                lease and interchange requirements                      624 private carriers). Therefore, the Agency              18 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of
                                                                                                        estimates that 1,808 passenger carriers would be
                                                under the proposed rule, rather than 100                subject to the lease and interchange requirements of    Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS3




                                                percent as assumed previously under                     passenger-carrying CMVs in 2017 under the               Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Page 21, Table 6.
                                                                                                                                                                  19 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of
                                                the 2015 final rule and as shown in                     proposed rule, or 23.3 percent of those subject to
                                                                                                        the requirements under the 2015 final rule, which       Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final
                                                Table 3.                                                                                                        Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Pages 12 to 13.
                                                                                                        is rounded to 25 percent for purposes of developing
                                                                                                                                                                  20 ‘‘Lease and Interchange of Vehicles; Motor
                                                                                                        the future projections of affected passenger carriers
                                                  15 U.S. DOLBLS. ‘‘Occupational Employment                                                                     Carriers of Passengers. NPRM.’’ September 20, 2013.
                                                                                                        presented in Table 2. This is a 75 percent reduction
                                                Projections. Table 1.2: Employment by detailed          in the number of passenger carriers affected by the     Comments of Greyhound Lines, Inc.. Docket ID
                                                occupation, 2016 and projected 2026.’’ Available at:    lease and interchange requirements of passenger-        number FMCSA–2012–0103–0010. Page 2.
                                                https://www.bls.gov/emp/ep_data_occupational_           carrying CMVs as a consequence of the proposed          November 12, 2013. Available at: https://
                                                data.htm (accessed December 29, 2017).                  rule.                                                                                             Continued




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                                                47778                     Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                  The Agency estimates that                                                 2015 final rule. The remaining 25                                       FMCSA requests comments and
                                                approximately 75 percent of these                                           percent of these trips would experience                               submission of quantitative or qualitative
                                                passenger-carrying CMV trips would                                          partial regulatory relief and remain                                  data addressing the potential number of
                                                experience full regulatory relief and                                       subject to reduced lease and interchange                              passenger-carrying CMV trips that
                                                would no longer be subject to the lease                                     requirements compared to those of the                                 would experience regulatory relief
                                                and interchange requirements of the                                         2015 final rule.                                                      under the proposed rule.

                                                           TABLE 4—ESTIMATED NUMBER OF PASSENGER-CARRYING CMV TRIPS EXPERIENCING REGULATORY RELIEF
                                                                                          UNDER THE PROPOSED RULE
                                                                                                                                                                                         Passenger-            Passenger-         Total CMV trips
                                                                                                                                                                                     carrying CMV trips    carrying CMV trips       experiencing
                                                                                                                                                                                      experiencing full       experiencing
                                                                                                           Year                                                                                                                   regulatory relief
                                                                                                                                                                                      regulatory relief     partial regulatory       under the
                                                                                                                                                                                          under the          relief under the      proposed rule
                                                                                                                                                                                       proposed rule          proposed rule

                                                2019   ...........................................................................................................................             387,714               129,238                516,952
                                                2020   ...........................................................................................................................             391,003               130,334                521,337
                                                2021   ...........................................................................................................................             394,318               131,440                525,758
                                                2022   ...........................................................................................................................             397,663               132,554                530,217
                                                2023   ...........................................................................................................................             401,036               133,678                534,714
                                                2024   ...........................................................................................................................             404,437               134,812                539,249
                                                2025   ...........................................................................................................................             407,866               135,956                543,822
                                                2026   ...........................................................................................................................             411,325               137,109                548,434
                                                2027   ...........................................................................................................................             414,814               138,271                553,085
                                                2028   ...........................................................................................................................             418,332               139,444                557,776

                                                     Annual average ..................................................................................................                         402,851               134,284                537,134



                                                Other Key Inputs to the Analysis                                            case a passenger carrier, include all                                 which represents 57 percent of wages
                                                   The opportunity cost of the time                                         forms of compensation and labor related                               and salaries in that industry segment of
                                                employees of passenger carriers spend                                       expenses. For this regulatory evaluation,                             $24.73 per hour.22
                                                complying with the lease and                                                the costs of labor to the firm are                                      Finally, for estimating overhead rates,
                                                interchange requirements represents                                         calculated to include base wages and                                  the Agency used industry data gathered
                                                approximately 95 percent of the total                                       fringe benefits, plus overhead.                                       for the Truck Costing Model developed
                                                cost of the 2015 final rule. The cost                                          For the regulatory evaluation of both                              by the Upper Great Plains
                                                savings from the proposed rule are                                          the 2015 final rule and this proposed                                 Transportation Institute, North Dakota
                                                likewise heavily influenced by aggregate                                    rule, the median hourly base wage rate                                State University.23 Research conducted
                                                changes in the opportunity cost of                                          for the BLS SOC code 53–1031, ‘‘First-                                for this model found an average cost of
                                                employee time.                                                              Line Supervisors of Transportation and                                $0.107 per mile of CMV operation for
                                                   The Agency evaluates changes in                                          Material-Moving Machine and Vehicle                                   management and overhead, and $0.39
                                                employee opportunity cost by using                                          Operators,’’ is used as the basis for                                 per mile for labor, indicating an
                                                their labor costs. Labor costs comprise                                     calculating the relevant cost of labor.                               overhead rate of 27 percent (27% =
                                                wages, fringe benefits, and overhead.                                       For 2016, BLS reports an hourly base                                  $0.107 ÷ $0.39 (rounded to the nearest
                                                Fringe benefits include paid leave,                                         wage rate of $27.54 for this                                          whole percent)).
                                                bonuses and overtime pay, health and                                        occupation.21                                                           Combined, the overall relevant cost of
                                                other types of insurance, retirement                                           BLS does not publish data on fringe                                labor, including base wage rate, fringe
                                                plans, and legally required benefits                                        benefits for specific occupations, but it                             benefits, and overhead, for passenger
                                                (Social Security, Medicare,                                                 does do so for broad industry groups in                               carriers that would experience
                                                unemployment insurance, and workers’                                        its Employer Costs for Employee                                       regulatory relief under the proposed
                                                compensation insurance). Overhead                                           Compensation (ECEC) publication. A                                    rule is $54.91 per hour.
                                                includes any expenses to a firm                                             fringe benefit rate of 57 percent (i.e.,
                                                                                                                                                                                                  Costs
                                                associated with labor that are not part of                                  equal to 57 percent of the base wage
                                                employees’ compensation, and typically                                      rate) is used. This is based on                                          The proposed rule would not result in
                                                includes many types of fixed costs of                                       information from the June 2016 BLS                                    any increase in costs. It revises the 2015
                                                managing a body of employees, such as                                       ECEC data, which for the                                              final rule, which serves as the baseline
                                                management and human resource staff                                         ‘‘Transportation and warehousing’’                                    against which the effects of the
                                                salaries or payroll services. The                                           segment of private industry reports a                                 proposed rule are evaluated. Absent the
                                                economic costs of labor to a firm, in this                                  benefits cost of $14.09 per hour worked,                              proposed rule, the Agency estimates
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS3




                                                www.regulations.gov/contentStreamer?document                                reflect employment growth projection for SOC Code                     workers, by industry group, March 2015.’’ Available
                                                Id=FMCSA-2012-0103-0010&attachmentNumber=1                                  53–3021 (Bus drivers, transit and intercity).                         at: https://www.bls.gov/news.release/archives/ecec_
                                                &contentType=pdf (accessed March 12, 2018).                                   21 U.S. DOLBLS. ‘‘Occupational Employment
                                                                                                                                                                                                  09082016.pdf (accessed March 5, 2017).
                                                Greyhound reported 10,263 passenger-carrying                                Statistics (OES). National.’’ May 2016. March 31,                        23 Berwick, Farooq. Truck Costing Model for
                                                CMV trips performed in 2012 by vehicles leased                              2017. Available at: https://www.bls.gov/oes/
                                                                                                                                                                                                  Transportation Managers. North Dakota State
                                                and interchanged. This 2012 value was then                                  special.requests/oesm16nat.zip (accessed January
                                                adjusted to reflect observed industry growth from                           18, 2018).                                                            University. Upper Great Plains Transportation
                                                2012 to 2016 as represented by growth in                                      22 U.S. DOLBLS . ‘‘Table 10: Employer costs per                     Institute. August 2003. Appendix A, pp. 42–47.
                                                employment for SOC Code 53–3021 (Bus drivers,                               hour worked for employee compensation and costs                       Available at: http://www.mountain-plains.org/pubs/
                                                transit and intercity), and then further adjusted to                        as a percent of total compensation: Private industry                  pdf/MPC03-152.pdf (accessed July 20, 2015).



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                                                                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                 47779

                                                that the baseline costs of the 2015 final               trip.25 This savings is valued at the total              Lease copying cost savings under the
                                                rule over the 10-year analysis period of                labor cost of $54.91 per hour, described              proposed rule are calculated based on
                                                2019 to 2028 would be $10.4 million on                  earlier. The resulting savings in one-                the number of CMV trips that would
                                                an annualized basis at a 7 percent                      time costs of lease negotiation under the             experience regulatory relief under the
                                                discount rate.24 As noted earlier, the                  proposed rule would be $21.3 million                  proposed rule for this cost category, and
                                                Agency estimates that the proposed rule                 on an undiscounted basis over the 10-                 an estimated cost per copy. The number
                                                would result in a cost savings of $8.2                  year analysis period, and $2.8 million                of trips that would experience
                                                million at a 7 percent discount rate                    on an annualized basis at a 7 percent                 regulatory relief under the proposed
                                                relative to the 2015 baseline,                          discount rate. As noted earlier, FMCSA                rule for this cost category are the same
                                                representing a 79 percent overall                       proposes to remove the requirement in                 as above, an annual average of 402,851
                                                reduction in cost.                                      § 390.303(b)(5) that the lease contain a              such trips. As in the 2015 regulatory
                                                  The estimated reduction of                            statement that the lessee is responsible              evaluation, it assumed that for each trip
                                                approximately 75 percent in the number                  for compliance with the insurance                     one copy of the lease is made for the
                                                of passenger carriers and CMV trips                     requirements of 49 CFR part 387.                      lessor and another for the lessee, each
                                                under the proposed rule is responsible                  Although in theory this proposed                      at a cost of $0.15, for a total cost of $0.30
                                                for most of the annualized cost savings.                change may result in a modest                         per trip.27 The resulting in lease copying
                                                The remaining cost savings are the                      incremental reduction in the amount of                cost savings under the proposed rule
                                                result of reduced requirements for those                time passenger carrier employees                      would be $1.2 million on an
                                                approximately 25 percent of passenger                   expend in negotiating the lease and                   undiscounted basis over the 10-year
                                                carriers and CMV trips that would                       developing the lease document for                     analysis period, and $0.12 million on an
                                                remain subject to the lease and                         carriers still subject to the leasing and             annualized basis at a 7 percent discount
                                                interchange rules.                                      interchange requirements, there is no                 rate.
                                                                                                        empirical basis upon which to estimate                   The remaining three cost categories
                                                  Under both the 2015 rule and the                                                                            (lease receipts, vehicle marking, and
                                                                                                        such a possible impact. Therefore the
                                                proposed rule, costs are organized into                                                                       charter party notification) would be
                                                                                                        Agency has chosen not to make any
                                                six major categories. Five are related to                                                                     eliminated for all passenger carriers and
                                                                                                        such incremental reduction in its
                                                the requirements under § 390.303 of the                                                                       passenger-carrying trips, including
                                                                                                        analysis. Also, not quantifying such a
                                                2015 rule, and include: One-time costs                                                                        those that would still be subject to lease
                                                                                                        potential impact is a conservative
                                                of lease negotiation; lease                                                                                   and interchange requirements under the
                                                                                                        approach that helps to avoid
                                                documentation costs; lease copying                                                                            proposed rule.
                                                                                                        overestimating the cost savings of the
                                                costs; lease receipt costs; and vehicle                                                                          Lease receipt cost savings under the
                                                                                                        proposed rule.
                                                marking costs. The sixth cost category is                                                                     2015 rule are calculated based on the
                                                                                                           Lease documentation costs under the
                                                related to the charter party notification                                                                     number of CMV trips that would
                                                                                                        proposed rule are calculated based on
                                                requirement under § 390.305 of the 2015                                                                       experience regulatory relief under the
                                                                                                        the number of CMV trips that would
                                                rule.                                                                                                         proposed rule for this cost category,
                                                                                                        experience regulatory relief under the
                                                  One-time costs of lease negotiation                                                                         with two receipts assumed per trip (one
                                                                                                        proposed rule for this cost category, the
                                                under the proposed rule are calculated                                                                        for obtaining, the other for surrendering
                                                                                                        time spent by carrier employees
                                                based on the number of CMV trips that                                                                         the vehicle), and both the lessor and
                                                                                                        verifying the information and signing
                                                would experience regulatory relief                                                                            lessee requiring copies of each, for a
                                                                                                        the lease, and the total labor cost of
                                                under the proposed rule for this cost                                                                         total of four receipts per trip. Because
                                                                                                        these employees. The number of trips
                                                category, the time expended by                                                                                the proposed rule would remove the
                                                                                                        that would experience regulatory relief
                                                employees in negotiating the lease and                                                                        receipt provision in its entirety, the cost
                                                                                                        under the proposed rule for this cost                 savings would apply to all trips listed in
                                                developing the lease document, and the                  category are the same as above, an
                                                total labor cost of these employees. The                                                                      Table 4, an annual average of 537,134
                                                                                                        annual average of 402,851 trips that                  trips. Consistent with the 2015
                                                number of trips that would experience                   would no longer be subject to the lease
                                                regulatory relief under the proposed                                                                          regulatory evaluation, each receipt is
                                                                                                        and interchange requirements.                         assumed to cost $0.15, with four
                                                rule for this cost category are the trips               Consistent with the 2015 regulatory
                                                that would no longer be subject to the                                                                        receipts required for a total of $0.60 per
                                                                                                        evaluation, for each trip that would                  trip.28 The resulting cost savings in
                                                lease and interchange requirements. As                  experience regulatory relief under the
                                                presented earlier in Table 4, the Agency                                                                      lease receipt under the proposed rule
                                                                                                        proposed rule for this cost category this             would be $3.2 million on an
                                                estimates that an annual average of                     analysis assumes that both the lessor
                                                402,851 passenger-carrying CMV trips                                                                          undiscounted basis over the 10-year
                                                                                                        and the lessee save 5 minutes of                      analysis period, and $0.321 million on
                                                would no longer be subject to the lease                 employee time, for a total savings of 10
                                                and interchange requirements.                                                                                 an annualized basis at a 7 percent
                                                                                                        minutes for each such trip.26 This is                 discount rate.
                                                Consistent with the approach used in                    valued at the total labor cost of $54.91                 Vehicle marking cost savings under
                                                the 2015 regulatory evaluation, for each                per hour. The resulting savings in lease              the 2015 rule are calculated based on
                                                of these trips it is assumed that 30                    documentation costs under the                         the number of CMV trips that would
                                                minutes of employee time is saved, for                  proposed rule would be $36.9 million                  experience regulatory relief under the
                                                both the lessor and the lessee, for a total             on an undiscounted basis over the 10-                 proposed rule for this cost category, and
                                                time savings of one hour for each such                  year analysis period, and $3.7 million                marking costs per vehicle that include
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS3




                                                                                                        on an annualized basis at a 7 percent                 two sheets of letter size paper per trip
                                                  24 This annualized cost estimate of $10.4 million
                                                                                                        discount rate.                                        at $0.014 per sheet, plus $0.04 for
                                                differs somewhat from the value of $8.0 million that
                                                was presented in the regulatory evaluation for the
                                                                                                          25 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of              27 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of
                                                2015 final rule primarily due to various real and
                                                nominal updates made to reflect more recently           Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final    Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final
                                                available data and information, as well as the          Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Pages 16 to 17.         Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Page 17.
                                                different time frames covered by the 10-year              26 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of              28 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of

                                                analysis period for each respective analysis            Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final    Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final
                                                (previously 2017 to 2026, and now 2019 to 2028).        Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Page 17.                Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Page 17 to 18.



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                                                47780                    Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                adhesive tape. Because the proposed                                       an estimated expenditure by passenger                                     analysis period, and $1.2 million on an
                                                rule would remove the marking                                             carrier employees of 5 minutes per                                        annualized basis at a 7 percent discount
                                                provision in its entirety, the cost savings                               notification.29 Because the proposed                                      rate.
                                                would apply to all trips listed in Table                                  rule would remove the notification                                           In summary, and as presented in
                                                4, an annual average of 537,134 trips.                                    provision in its entirety, the resulting                                  Table 5, the Agency estimates that the
                                                The resulting cost savings in vehicle                                     cost savings would apply to all trips in                                  proposed rule would result in a cost
                                                marking under the proposed rule would                                     which notification would otherwise
                                                be $0.355 million on an undiscounted                                                                                                                savings of $75.1 million on an
                                                                                                                          have been necessary, which are                                            undiscounted basis, $66.5 million
                                                basis over the 10-year analysis period,                                   assumed to be 50 percent of the total
                                                and $0.035 million on an annualized                                                                                                                 discounted at 3 percent, and $57.5
                                                                                                                          annual average of 537,134 passenger-                                      million discounted at 7 percent over the
                                                basis at a 7 percent discount rate.
                                                   Charter party notification cost savings                                carrying CMV trips listed in Table 4.30                                   10-year analysis period. Expressed on
                                                under the 2015 rule are calculated based                                  The resulting savings in charter party                                    an annualized basis, this equates to a
                                                on the number of CMV trips that would                                     notification costs under the proposed                                     10-year cost savings of $7.8 million at a
                                                experience regulatory relief under the                                    rule would be $12.1 million on an                                         3 percent discount rate and $8.2 million
                                                proposed rule for this cost category, and                                 undiscounted basis over the 10-year                                       at a 7 percent discount rate.
                                                                                                                 TABLE 5—TOTAL COST OF THE PROPOSED RULE
                                                                                                                                             [In thousands of 2016$]

                                                                                                                                             Undiscounted                                                                     Discounted

                                                                                                      Lease and interchange costs

                                                           Year                                                     Lease                                                Charter party                                Discounted        Discounted
                                                                                          Lease                 documentation,                    Vehicle                 notification             Total cost (a)        at 3%             at 7%
                                                                                        negotiation              copying, and                     marking                   costs
                                                                                         costs (b)               lease receipt                     costs
                                                                                                                     costs

                                                2019   ...........................           ($21,290)                      ($3,974)                        ($34)                 ($1,168)             ($26,467)         ($25,697)          ($24,736)
                                                2020   ...........................                   0                       (4,008)                         (34)                  (1,178)               (5,221)           (4,921)            (4,560)
                                                2021   ...........................                   0                       (4,042)                         (35)                  (1,188)               (5,265)           (4,819)            (4,298)
                                                2022   ...........................                   0                       (4,076)                         (35)                  (1,198)               (5,310)           (4,718)            (4,051)
                                                2023   ...........................                   0                       (4,111)                         (35)                  (1,208)               (5,355)           (4,619)            (3,818)
                                                2024   ...........................                   0                       (4,146)                         (36)                  (1,219)               (5,401)           (4,523)            (3,599)
                                                2025   ...........................                   0                       (4,181)                         (36)                  (1,229)               (5,446)           (4,428)            (3,392)
                                                2026   ...........................                   0                       (4,216)                         (36)                  (1,239)               (5,493)           (4,336)            (3,197)
                                                2027   ...........................                   0                       (4,252)                         (37)                  (1,250)               (5,539)           (4,245)            (3,013)
                                                2028   ...........................                   0                       (4,289)                         (37)                  (1,261)               (5,586)           (4,157)            (2,840)

                                                   Total ....................                   (21,290)                     (41,301)                        (355)                 (12,139)              (75,084)         (66,463)           (57,504)
                                                Annualized .................         ........................   ..........................   ........................   ........................          (7,508)          (7,792)            (8,187)
                                                  Notes:
                                                  (a) Total cost values may not equal the sum of the components due to rounding. (The totals shown in this column are the rounded sum of
                                                unrounded components.)
                                                  (b) Values shown in parentheses are negative values (i.e., less than zero) and represent a decrease in cost or a cost savings.


                                                Benefits                                                                  analysis.32 Also referred to as a break-                                  safety, both the 2015 final rule and this
                                                                                                                          even analysis, a threshold analysis                                       proposed rule affect safety less directly
                                                   The regulatory evaluation for the 2015                                 attempts to determine the amount of                                       and immediately. Lease and interchange
                                                final rule attempted to estimate the                                      safety benefits (e.g., reduced crashes and                                requirements for motor carriers of
                                                potential safety benefits of lease and                                    corresponding reductions in fatalities,                                   passengers improve the ability of the
                                                interchange requirements,31 but there                                     injuries, and property damage) that                                       Agency to attribute the inspection,
                                                were insufficient data and empirical                                      would need to occur as a consequence                                      compliance, enforcement, and safety
                                                evidence to demonstrate a measurable                                      of a rule in order for the rule to yield                                  data collected by the Agency and its
                                                quantitative relationship between lease                                   zero net benefits (i.e., for the benefits of                              State partners to the correct motor
                                                and interchange requirements and                                          the rule to equal, or exactly to offset, the                              carrier and driver, allowing FMCSA to
                                                improved safety outcomes, such as                                         estimated costs of the rule).                                             more accurately identify unsafe carriers
                                                reduced frequency and/or severity of                                         The problem of insufficient data and                                   and initiate appropriate interventions.
                                                crashes or reduced frequency of                                           empirical evidence noted in 2015 is still                                 FMCSA believes that this proposed rule
                                                violations. Therefore, FMCSA followed                                     present today. Unlike regulations                                         would be a less costly and burdensome
                                                the guidance of the Office of                                             dealing with vehicle equipment or                                         regulatory approach than the 2015 final
amozie on DSK3GDR082PROD with PROPOSALS3




                                                Management and Budget (OMB) in its                                        driver behaviors that can be clearly                                      rule, yet would still enable safety
                                                Circular A–4 and performed a threshold                                    linked to reduced crashes and improved                                    officials and the general public to
                                                  29 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of                                  31 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of                                www.whitehouse.gov/sites/whitehouse.gov/files/
                                                Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final                        Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final                        omb/circulars/A4/a-4.pdf (accessed March 9, 2018).
                                                Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Page 24 to 26.                              Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’
                                                  30 DOT FMCSA, ‘‘Lease and Interchange of
                                                                                                                            32 OMB. ‘‘Circular A–4. Regulatory Analysis.’’
                                                Vehicles, Motor Carriers of Passengers, 2015 Final
                                                                                                                          September 17, 2003. Available at: https://
                                                Rule Regulatory Evaluation.’’ Page 24 to 26.



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                                                                         Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                                                          47781

                                                sufficiently identify the passenger                                   on small entities, and mandates that                                     As presented earlier in Table 3 of the
                                                carrier responsible for safety. Therefore,                            agencies strive to lessen any adverse                                 Regulatory Analyses section, as of 2017
                                                the Agency does not anticipate any                                    effects on these entities. Section 605 of                             there were an estimated 7,774 passenger
                                                change to safety benefits as a result of                              the RFA allows an Agency to certify a                                 carriers subject to the existing lease and
                                                the proposed rule.                                                    rule, in lieu of preparing an analysis, if                            interchange requirements, representing
                                                  FMCSA requests comments and                                         the rulemaking is not expected to have                                approximately 58 percent of all active
                                                submission of quantitative or qualitative                             a significant economic impact on a                                    interstate passenger carriers. As
                                                data addressing the potential impacts to                              substantial number of small entities.                                 presented in Table 2, this population of
                                                safety benefits from the proposed rule.                                  The proposed rule would not result in                              passenger carriers is projected to
                                                B. E.O. 13771 (Reducing Regulation and                                any increase in costs or any increase in                              increase slightly due to general baseline
                                                Controlling Regulatory Costs)                                         burden. The proposed rule would                                       industry growth to 7,906 passenger
                                                                                                                      reduce the applicability of the lease and                             carriers in 2019, the first year that the
                                                  This rulemaking is expected to be an
                                                                                                                      interchange requirements for motor                                    proposed rule is anticipated to be in
                                                E.O. 13771 deregulatory action.33
                                                                                                                      carriers of passengers, resulting in a                                effect. Therefore, it is estimated that
                                                Details on the estimated cost savings of
                                                                                                                      substantial reduction in the number of                                7,906 passenger carriers would
                                                this rulemaking can be found in the
                                                                                                                      entities that would be subject to these                               experience regulatory relief under the
                                                rule’s economic analysis. The present
                                                                                                                      requirements and a commensurate                                       proposed rule. The number of these
                                                value of the cost savings of this
                                                                                                                      reduction in costs and burden                                         7,906 passenger carriers that are small
                                                rulemaking, measured on an infinite
                                                                                                                      experienced by these entities.                                        entities is not directly known by
                                                time horizon at a 7 percent discount
                                                rate, is $83.6 million. Expressed on an                               Furthermore, for those motor carriers of                              FMCSA, and is therefore estimated
                                                annualized basis, the cost savings are                                passengers that would continue to be                                  below.
                                                $5.9 million. These values are expressed                              subject to the lease and interchange
                                                                                                                      requirements under the proposed rule,                                    The U.S. Small Business
                                                in 2016 dollars.                                                                                                                            Administration (SBA) defines the size
                                                                                                                      the requirements would be reduced in
                                                C. Regulatory Flexibility Act                                         comparison to the existing                                            standards used to classify entities as
                                                                                                                      requirements. This would also result in                               small. SBA establishes separate
                                                   The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
                                                                                                                      a reduction in costs and burden                                       standards for each industry, as defined
                                                (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), as amended
                                                by the Small Business Regulatory                                      experienced by these entities.                                        by the North American Industry
                                                Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996                                         The regulated entities that would                                  Classification System (NAICS).35 It is
                                                (SBREFA) (Pub. L. 104–121, 110 Stat.                                  experience regulatory relief under the                                estimated that the passenger carriers
                                                857), requires Federal agencies to                                    proposed rule include all of the                                      that would experience regulatory relief
                                                consider the impact of their regulatory                               passenger carriers that are subject to the                            under the proposed rule would be in
                                                proposals on small entities, analyze                                  existing lease and interchange                                        industries within Subsector 485 (Transit
                                                effective alternatives that minimize                                  requirements. Approximately 75 percent                                and Ground Passenger Transportation).
                                                small entity impacts, and make their                                  of this total number of passenger                                     All eleven 6-digit NAICS industries
                                                analyses available for public comment.                                carriers would experience full                                        within Subsector 485 have an SBA size
                                                The term ‘‘small entities’’ means small                               regulatory relief, and would no longer                                standard based on annual revenue of
                                                businesses and not-for-profit                                         be subject to lease and interchange                                   $15.0 million. Three of the eleven 6-
                                                organizations that are independently                                  requirements for passenger-carrying                                   digit NAICS industries within Subsector
                                                owned and operated and are not                                        CMVs. The remaining 25 percent of                                     485 are likely to encompass most of the
                                                dominant in their fields, and                                         these passenger carriers would                                        passenger carriers that would
                                                governmental jurisdictions with                                       experience partial regulatory relief and                              experience regulatory relief under the
                                                populations under 50,000.34                                           remain subject to reduced lease and                                   proposed rule, and details regarding the
                                                Accordingly, DOT policy requires an                                   interchange requirements compared to                                  SBA size standards for those three
                                                analysis of the impact of all regulations                             those of the 2015 final rule.                                         industries are presented in Table 6.

                                                                                                 TABLE 6—SBA SIZE STANDARDS FOR SELECTED INDUSTRIES (a)
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   SBA size
                                                                                                                                                                                                                   standard        SBA size
                                                                                                                                                                                                                    (annual        standard
                                                                 NAICS code                                                             NAICS industry description                                                revenue in      (number of
                                                                                                                                                                                                                    millions      employees)
                                                                                                                                                                                                                  of dollars)

                                                485113 ..............................................   Bus and Other Motor Vehicle Transit Systems .........................................                            $15.0   (none).
                                                485210 ..............................................   Interurban and Rural Bus Transportation ..................................................                        15.0   (none).
                                                485510 ..............................................   Charter Bus Industry ..................................................................................           15.0   (none).
                                                   Notes:
                                                   (a) U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA). ‘‘Table of Small Business Size Standards.’’ October 1, 2017. Available at: https://www.sba.gov/
                                                sites/default/files/files/Size_Standards_Table_2017.xlsx (accessed March 20, 2018).
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                                                  Data regarding the annual revenue                                   carriers that would experience                                        rule is not collected by FMCSA and is
                                                earned by the estimated 7,906 passenger                               regulatory relief under the proposed                                  not otherwise available from other

                                                  33 Executive Office of the President. Executive                       34 Regulatory Flexibility Act, Public Law 96–354,                     35 OMB. ‘‘North American Industry Classification

                                                Order 13771 of January 30, 2017. Reducing                             94 Stat. 1164 (codified at 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.).                     System.’’ 2017. Available at: https://
                                                Regulation and Controlling Regulatory Costs. 82 FR                                                                                          www.census.gov/eos/www/naics/2017NAICS/2017_
                                                9339–9341. Feb. 3, 2017.                                                                                                                    NAICS_Manual.pdf (accessed March 20, 2018).



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                                                47782               Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                sources. Therefore, the SBA size                        that the proposed rule would                          significant economic impact on a
                                                standard of $15.0 million in annual                     disproportionately apply to either larger             substantial number of small entities.
                                                revenue cannot be directly applied in                   or smaller passenger carriers, and we                 FMCSA requests comments on this
                                                order to determine how many of the                      therefore estimate that a similar 98                  certification and on the analysis
                                                7,906 passenger carriers that would                     percent of the 7,906 passenger carriers               presented in support of it.
                                                experience regulatory relief under the                  that would experience regulatory relief
                                                                                                                                                              D. Assistance for Small Entities
                                                proposed rule are small entities. FMCSA                 under the proposed rule, or
                                                does, however, collect information                      approximately 7,750 passenger carriers,                  In accordance with section 213(a) of
                                                regarding the number of passenger-                      would be small entities. Therefore,                   the Small Business Regulatory
                                                carrying vehicles operated by these                     FMCSA has determined that this                        Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,
                                                carriers. As of the end of 2017, of the                 proposed rule will have an impact on a                FMCSA wants to assist small entities in
                                                active interstate passenger carriers                    substantial number of small entities.                 understanding this proposed rule so that
                                                operating in the U.S. as presented                         Although FMCSA has determined that                 they can better evaluate its effects and
                                                earlier in Table 3, approximately 81                    this proposed rule would have an                      participate in the rulemaking initiative.
                                                percent operated six or fewer passenger                 impact on a substantial number of small               If the proposed rule would affect your
                                                vehicles, and approximately 93 percent                  entities, the Agency has determined that              small business, organization, or
                                                operated 19 or fewer passenger                          the impact on the small entities that                 governmental jurisdiction, and you have
                                                vehicles.36 We estimate that in the                     would experience regulatory relief                    questions concerning its provisions or
                                                passenger carrier industry, the average                 under the proposed rule would not be                  options for compliance, please consult
                                                revenue earned per motorcoach is                        significant. The proposed rule would                  the FMCSA point of contact, Ms. Loretta
                                                approximately $200,000.37 38 39 This                    not result in any increase in costs or any            Bitner, listed in the FOR FURTHER
                                                would mean that the SBA size standard                   increase in burden for passenger carriers             INFORMATION CONTACT section of this
                                                of $15.0 million in annual revenue                      that are small entities. The effect of the            proposed rule.
                                                would equate to a carrier size of 75                    proposed rule would be a reduction in                    Small businesses may send comments
                                                passenger vehicles. Therefore, carriers                 costs and burden, and would be entirely               on the actions of Federal employees
                                                operating 75 passenger vehicles or fewer                beneficial to the passenger carriers that             who enforce or otherwise determine
                                                would be classified as small, consistent                are small entities. As discussed in the               compliance with Federal regulations to
                                                with the SBA size standard of $15.0                     Regulatory Analyses section, the Agency               the Small Business Administration’s
                                                million. As of the end of 2017, of the                  estimates that the proposed rule would                Small Business and Agriculture
                                                active interstate passenger carriers                    result in a total cost savings of $75.1               Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman
                                                operating in the U.S. as presented                      million on an undiscounted basis over                 and the Regional Small Business
                                                earlier in Table 3, approximately 98                    the 10-year analysis period used for the              Regulatory Fairness Boards. The
                                                percent operated 75 or fewer passenger                  regulatory evaluation, or $7.5 million on             Ombudsman evaluates these actions
                                                vehicles. The Agency does not believe                   an annualized basis. As presented in                  annually and rates each agency’s
                                                                                                        Table 2, an annual average of                         responsiveness to small business. If you
                                                   36 U.S. DOT, FMCSA. Motor Carrier Management         approximately 8,215 passenger carriers                wish to comment on actions by
                                                Information System (MCMIS), and Licensing and           would experience regulatory relief                    employees of FMCSA, call 1–888–REG–
                                                Insurance (L&I) system. Snapshots as of December                                                              FAIR (1–888–734–3247). The DOT has a
                                                29, 2017 (DART request ID #38883).
                                                                                                        under the proposed rule over the same
                                                   37 The information available regarding revenue       10-year analysis period, 98 percent of                policy regarding the rights of small
                                                for the passenger carrier industry is limited. The      which are estimated to be small entities.             entities to regulatory enforcement
                                                American Bus Associated reported that for 2004,         The annual cost savings per small                     fairness and an explicit policy against
                                                revenue per motorcoach was approximately                                                                      retaliation for exercising these rights.40
                                                $160,000. Inflated from 2004 dollars to 2016 dollars
                                                                                                        carrier would therefore be at most $914
                                                using either CPI–U or the Implicit Price Deflator for   on average (potentially even somewhat                 E. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
                                                GDP, this value becomes approximately $200,000          less, given that approximately 2 percent              1995
                                                per vehicle.                                            of passenger carriers that would
                                                   38 American Bus Association (ABA). ‘‘Motorcoach
                                                                                                        experience regulatory relief under the                  The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                Census 2005.’’ September 2006. Page 19, Table                                                                 of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1531–1538) requires
                                                3–5 (Carrier Revenue per Motorcoach, Averages,          proposed rule are not small entities and
                                                2004). Available at: https://www.iru.org/apps/cms-      therefore may represent a                             Federal agencies to assess the effects of
                                                filesystem-action?file=events_2007_busandcoach/         disproportionately larger share of the                their discretionary regulatory actions. In
                                                Motorcoach%20Census%202005%2009-21-                     overall absolute cost savings because of              particular, the Act requires agencies to
                                                20061.pdf (accessed March 8, 2018).                                                                           prepare a comprehensive written
                                                   39 Greyhound, one of the largest interstate          the larger scale of their operations). For
                                                passenger carriers operating in the U.S., reported      even the smallest of the small entities,              statement for any proposed or final rule
                                                total revenue for 2017 of $894 million, with 78         those operating only one passenger                    that may result in the expenditure by
                                                percent of that total, or $697 million, being           vehicle, this $914 in annual savings                  State, local, and tribal governments, in
                                                passenger revenue. With a fleet size reported to                                                              the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
                                                consist of 1,600 buses for the same year, this equals
                                                                                                        represents only about one half of one
                                                an average passenger revenue per motorcoach of          percent of the estimated total annual                 $156 million (which is the value
                                                $435,000. We believe that substantially higher          revenues of $200,000 for a carrier with               equivalent of $100 million in 1995,
                                                levels of per vehicle revenue such as this are not      just one vehicle. Therefore, although                 adjusted for inflation to 2015 levels) or
                                                representative of the smaller passenger carriers that                                                         more in any one year. Because this
                                                make up most of the industry, and therefore the
                                                                                                        FMCSA has determined that this
                                                lesser estimate of $200,000 revenue per motorcoach      proposed rule would have an impact on                 proposed rule would not result in such
                                                described above was used here so as not to risk         a substantial number of small entities,               an expenditure, a written statement is
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                                                underestimating the number of small entities in the     the Agency has also determined that the               not required. However, the Agency does
                                                passenger carrier industry when used to compare
                                                against the SBA size standard of $15.0 million in
                                                                                                        impact on these small entities would                  discuss the costs and benefits of this
                                                annual revenue. Greyhound data is from                  not be significant, and furthermore will
                                                ‘‘FirstGroup plc, Annual Report and Accounts,           be entirely beneficial.                                 40 U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT). ‘‘The

                                                2017’’, pages 18–19, available at http://www.first         Accordingly, pursuant to section                   Rights of Small Entities To Enforcement Fairness
                                                groupplc.com/∼/media/Files/F/Firstgroup-Plc/                                                                  and Policy Against Retaliation.’’ Available at:
                                                indexed-pdfs/2017%20ARA/2017%20FirstGroup
                                                                                                        605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act,             https://www.transportation.gov/sites/dot.gov/files/
                                                %20plc%20Annual%20Report%20and%20                       5 U.S.C. 605(b), I hereby certify that the            docs/SBREFAnotice2.pdf (accessed January 17,
                                                Accounts.pdf (accessed March 19, 2018).                 proposed rule would not have a                        2018).



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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                         47783

                                                proposed rule elsewhere in this                         approved information collection, the                    Description of the respondents:
                                                preamble.                                               temporary marking of leased                           Freight-carrying commercial motor
                                                                                                        commercial passenger vehicles was                     carriers, passenger-carrying commercial
                                                F. Paperwork Reduction Act
                                                                                                        assumed to have de minimis time                       motor carriers, and intermodal
                                                   This proposed rule would amend two                   burden, and therefore no separate time                equipment providers.
                                                OMB-approved information collections                    burden was estimated for that element                   Number of respondents:
                                                titled ‘‘Commercial Motor Vehicle                       of the passenger-carrying commercial                  IC–1 (freight carriers) number of
                                                Marking Requirements,’’ OMB No.                         motor carrier marking requirements.                     respondents: 204,390
                                                2126–0054, and ‘‘Lease and Interchange                  Because of this, in the proposed revision             IC–2 (passenger carriers) number of
                                                of Vehicles,’’ OMB No. 2126–0056,                       to this information collection, there is                respondents: 5,007
                                                under the Paperwork Reduction Act of                    no change in time burden due to                       IC–3 (intermodal equipment providers)
                                                1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–3520). As defined                  program change, and the estimated                       number of respondents: 11
                                                in 5 CFR 1320.3(c), ‘‘collection of                     changes in time burden from the                       Total number of respondents: 209,408
                                                information’’ includes reporting,                       currently approved information                          Frequency of response:
                                                recordkeeping, monitoring, posting,                     collection are due to adjustments related             IC–1 (freight carriers) frequency of
                                                labeling, and other, similar actions. The               to factors such as revised estimates of                 response: 7.9 responses per year, per
                                                title and description of the information                the population of passenger-carrying                    respondent
                                                collections, a description of those who                 motor carriers and industry growth rate.              IC–2 (passenger carriers) frequency of
                                                must collect the information, and an                    There is a small reduction in the annual                response: 20.4 responses per year, per
                                                estimate of the total annual burden                     cost burden, however, related to the                    respondent
                                                follow. The estimate covers the time for                elimination of the cost of materials                  IC–3 (intermodal equipment providers)
                                                reviewing instructions, searching                       (paper and adhesive tape) estimated to                  frequency of response: 1,910
                                                existing sources of data, gathering and                 be used for the temporary vehicle                       responses per year, per respondent
                                                maintaining the data needed, and                        markings that are proposed to be                      Overall average frequency of response:
                                                completing and reviewing the                            eliminated.                                             8.3 response per year, per respondent
                                                collection.                                                                                                     Burden of response:
                                                                                                           Title: Commercial Motor Vehicle
                                                   The Agency’s CMV marking
                                                                                                        Marking Requirements.                                 IC–1 (freight carriers) burden of
                                                regulations require freight-carrying
                                                                                                           OMB control number: 2126–0054.                       response: 0.43 hours
                                                commercial motor carriers, passenger-
                                                                                                           Summary of the collection of                       IC–2 (passenger carriers) burden of
                                                carrying commercial motor carriers, and
                                                                                                        information: Under the information                      response: 0.43 hours
                                                intermodal equipment providers to                                                                             IC–3 (intermodal equipment providers)
                                                display the USDOT number and the                        collection, freight-carrying commercial
                                                                                                        motor carriers, passenger-carrying                      burden of response: 0.43 hours
                                                legal name or a single trade name of the                                                                      Overall average burden of response: 0.43
                                                carrier or intermodal equipment                         commercial motor carriers, and
                                                                                                        intermodal equipment providers mark                     hours
                                                provider on their vehicles. The USDOT
                                                                                                        their vehicles to display the USDOT                     Estimate of Total Annual Burden:
                                                number is used to identify all motor
                                                carriers in FMCSA’s registration and                    number and the legal name or a single                 IC–1 (freight carriers) burden: 699,902
                                                information systems. It is also used by                 trade name of the carrier or intermodal                 hours
                                                States as the key identifier in the                     equipment provider. This vehicle                      IC–2 (passenger carriers) burden: 44,300
                                                Performance and Registration                            marking occurs when a new vehicle is                    hours
                                                Information Systems Management                          purchased, when a used vehicle is                     IC–3 (intermodal equipment providers)
                                                (PRISM) system, a cooperative Federal/                  purchased and requires re-marking, and                  burden: 9,108 hours
                                                State program that makes motor carrier                  when a vehicle is retained by the owner               Total annual burden: 753,310 hours
                                                safety a requirement for obtaining and                  but the existing label reaches the end of               The Agency’s lease and interchange of
                                                maintaining CMV registration and                        its useful life.                                      vehicles regulations ensure that truck
                                                privileges. Vehicle marking                                Need for information: Vehicle                      and bus carriers are identified (and in
                                                requirements are intended to ensure that                marking requirements are needed to                    some cases protected) when they agree
                                                FMCSA, the National Transportation                      ensure that FMCSA, the NTSB, and                      to lease their equipment and drivers to
                                                Safety Board (NTSB), and State safety                   State safety officials are able to identify           other carriers. These regulations also
                                                officials are able to identify motor                    motor carriers and correctly assign                   ensure that the government and
                                                carriers and correctly assign                           responsibility for regulatory violations              members of the public can determine
                                                responsibility for regulatory violations                during inspections, investigations,                   who is responsible for a CMV. Prior to
                                                during inspections, investigations,                     compliance reviews, and crash studies.                these regulations, some equipment was
                                                compliance reviews, and crash studies.                  These marking requirements also                       leased without written agreements,
                                                These marking requirements also                         provide the public with beneficial                    leading to disputes and confusion over
                                                provide the public with beneficial                      information that could assist in                      which party to the lease was responsible
                                                information that could assist in                        identifying carriers for the purposes of              for charges and actions and, at times,
                                                identifying carriers for the purposes of                commerce, complaints, or emergency                    who was legally responsible for the
                                                commerce, complaints, or emergency                      notification.                                         vehicle. These recordkeeping
                                                notification.                                              Proposed use of information: The                   requirements enable the general public
                                                   The proposed rule would eliminate                    USDOT number is used to identify all                  and investigators to identify the
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                                                the existing requirement under 49 CFR                   motor carriers in FMCSA’s registration                passenger carrier responsible for safety,
                                                390.303(f) for the temporary marking of                 and information systems, is used as the               and ensure that FMCSA, our State
                                                leased commercial passenger vehicles.                   key identifier in the PRISM system, and               partners, and the NTSB are better able
                                                The proposed rule would therefore                       is used by the public with beneficial                 to identify the responsible motor carrier
                                                amend the OMB-approved information                      information that could also assist in                 and therefore correctly assign regulatory
                                                collection titled ‘‘Commercial Motor                    identifying carriers for the purposes of              violations to the appropriate carrier
                                                Vehicle Marking Requirements,’’ OMB                     commerce, complaints, or emergency                    during inspections, investigations,
                                                No. 2126–0054. In the currently                         notification.                                         compliance reviews, and crash studies.


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                                                47784              Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                   The proposed rule would reduce the                   held by the lessor (e.g., those granting              the States, or on the distribution of
                                                scope of the lease and interchange                      use of equipment) and lessee (e.g., party             power and responsibilities among the
                                                requirements for motor carriers of                      acquiring equipment). They are used to                various levels of government.’’ FMCSA
                                                passengers. Furthermore, those                          assign duties and responsibilities. The               determined that this proposal would not
                                                passenger carriers and passenger-                       information may also be used by law                   have substantial direct costs on or for
                                                carrying CMV trips for which the                        enforcement to determine legal                        States, nor would it limit the
                                                proposed rule would remain applicable                   responsibility in the event that a leased             policymaking discretion of States.
                                                would be subject to lease and                           vehicle is in violation of the regulations            Nothing in this document preempts any
                                                interchange requirements that are                       or is involved in a crash.                            State law or regulation. Therefore, this
                                                reduced from the current requirements.                    Description of the respondents:                     rule does not have sufficient Federalism
                                                The applicability of the existing lease                 Freight-carrying commercial motor                     implications to warrant the preparation
                                                and interchange requirements for motor                  carriers, and passenger-carrying                      of a Federalism Impact Statement.
                                                carriers of passengers under 49 CFR                     commercial motor carriers.
                                                390.301 would be revised, resulting in                    Number of respondents:                              H. E.O. 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
                                                a substantial reduction of approximately                IC–1 (property-carrying CMVs) number                    This proposed rule meets applicable
                                                75% in the number of passenger carriers                   of respondents: 35,902                              standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of
                                                and passenger-carrying CMV trips that                   IC–2 (passenger-carrying CMVs) number                 E.O. 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to
                                                would be subject to the lease and                         of respondents: 3,987                               minimize litigation, eliminate
                                                interchange requirement for motor                       Total number of respondents: 39,889                   ambiguity, and reduce burden.
                                                carriers of passengers. For those motor                   Frequency of response:                              I. E.O. 13045 (Protection of Children)
                                                carriers of passengers that would remain
                                                subject to the lease and interchange                    IC–1 (property-carrying CMVs)                            Executive Order 13045, Protection of
                                                requirements under the proposed rule,                     frequency of response: 19.9 responses               Children from Environmental Health
                                                the existing requirements under 49 CFR                    per year, per respondent                            Risks and Safety Risks (62 FR 19885,
                                                390.303(e) for lease receipt copies                     IC–2 (passenger-carrying CMVs)                        April 23, 1997), requires agencies
                                                would be eliminated, and the existing                     frequency of response: 152.4                        issuing ‘‘economically significant’’
                                                requirements under 49 CFR 390.305 for                     responses per year, per respondent                  rules, if the regulation also concerns an
                                                charter party notification would also be                Overall average frequency of response:                environmental health or safety risk that
                                                eliminated.                                               33.2 response per year, per                         an agency has reason to believe may
                                                   The proposed rule would therefore                      respondent                                          disproportionately affect children, to
                                                amend the OMB-approved information                        Burden of response:                                 include an evaluation of the regulation’s
                                                collection titled ‘‘Lease and Interchange               IC–1 (property-carrying CMVs) burden                  environmental health and safety effects
                                                of Vehicles,’’ OMB No. 2126–0056. In                      of response: 0.11 hours                             on children. The Agency determined
                                                the proposed revision to this                           IC–2 (passenger-carrying CMVs) burden                 this proposed rule is not economically
                                                information collection, there is                          of response: 0.11 hours                             significant. Therefore, no analysis of the
                                                substantial reduction in time burden                    Overall average burden of response: 0.11              impacts on children is required. In any
                                                due to program change from the                            hours                                               event, the Agency does not anticipate
                                                currently approved information                            Estimate of total annual burden:                    that this regulatory action could in any
                                                collection as a result of the proposed                                                                        respect present an environmental or
                                                rule.                                                   IC–1 (property-carrying CMVs) burden:                 safety risk that could disproportionately
                                                   Title: Lease and Interchange of                        77,554 hours                                        affect children.
                                                Vehicles                                                IC–2 (passenger-carrying CMVs) burden:
                                                   OMB control number: 2126–0056.                         64,802 hours                                        J. E.O. 12630 (Taking of Private
                                                   Summary of the collection of                         Total annual burden: 142,356 hours                    Property)
                                                information: Under the information                        As required by the Paperwork                           FMCSA reviewed this proposed rule
                                                collection, freight-carrying commercial                 Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.                      in accordance with E.O. 12630,
                                                motor carriers and passenger-carrying                   3507(d)), FMCSA will submit a copy of                 Governmental Actions and Interference
                                                commercial motor carriers negotiate                     this proposed rule to OMB for its review              with Constitutionally Protected Property
                                                leases, prepare and sign lease                          of the collection of information.                     Rights, and has determined it would not
                                                documents, and produce copies of lease                    FMCSA asks for public comment on                    effect a taking of private property or
                                                documents.                                              the proposed collection of information                otherwise have taking implications.
                                                   Need for information: The Agency’s                   to help us determine how useful the
                                                lease and interchange of vehicles                       information is; whether it can help the               K. Privacy
                                                regulations ensure that truck and bus                   Agency perform our functions better;                     Section 522 of title I of division H of
                                                carriers are identified (and in some                    whether it is readily available                       the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
                                                cases protected) when they agree to                     elsewhere; how accurate our estimate of               2005, enacted December 8, 2004 (Pub. L.
                                                lease their equipment and drivers to                    the burden of collection is; how valid                108–447, 118 Stat. 2809, 3268, 5 U.S.C.
                                                other carriers. These regulations also                  our methods for determining burden                    552a note), requires the Agency to
                                                ensure that the government and                          are; how FMCSA can improve the                        conduct a Privacy Impact Assessment
                                                members of the public can determine                     quality, usefulness, and clarity of the               (PIA) of a regulation that will affect the
                                                who is responsible for a CMV. These                     information; and how FMCSA can                        privacy of individuals. This proposed
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                                                recordkeeping requirements enable the                   minimize the burden of collection.                    rule does not require the collection of
                                                general public and investigators to                                                                           any personally identifiable information.
                                                                                                        G. E.O. 13132 (Federalism)                               The Privacy Act (5 U.S.C. 552a)
                                                identify the passenger carrier
                                                responsible for safety.                                   A rule has implications for                         applies only to Federal agencies and any
                                                   Proposed use of information: The                     Federalism under Section 1(a) of E.O.                 non-Federal agency that receives
                                                government generally collects little                    13132 if it has ‘‘substantial direct effects          records contained in a system of records
                                                information with this ICR. The leases                   on the States, on the relationship                    from a Federal agency for use in a
                                                and other agreements are developed and                  between the national government and                   matching program. FMCSA has


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                             47785

                                                determined that this rule would not                     O. E.O. 13175 (Indian Tribal                          regulations.gov website listed under
                                                result in a new or revised Privacy Act                  Governments)                                          ADDRESSES.
                                                System of Records for FMCSA.                                                                                    FMCSA also analyzed this rule under
                                                                                                          This rule does not have tribal                      section 176(c) of the Clean Air Act, as
                                                  The E–Government Act of 2002,                         implications under E.O. 13175,                        amended (CAA) (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.),
                                                Public Law 107–347, sec. 208, 116 Stat.                 Consultation and Coordination with                    and implementing regulations
                                                2899, 2921 (December 17, 2002),                         Indian Tribal Governments, because it                 promulgated by the Environmental
                                                requires Federal agencies to conduct a                  does not have a substantial direct effect             Protection Agency. Approval of this
                                                PIA for new or substantially changed                    on one or more Indian tribes, on the                  action is exempt from the CAA’s general
                                                technology that collects, maintains, or                 relationship between the Federal                      conformity requirement since it does
                                                disseminates information in an                          government and Indian tribes, or on the               not affect direct or indirect emissions of
                                                identifiable form. No new or                            distribution of power and                             criteria pollutants.
                                                substantially changed technology would                  responsibilities between the Federal
                                                collect, maintain, or disseminate                       Government and Indian tribes.                         List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 390
                                                information as a result of this rule.                                                                            Highway safety, Intermodal
                                                                                                        P. National Technology Transfer and
                                                Accordingly, FMCSA has not conducted                                                                          transportation, Motor carriers, Motor
                                                                                                        Advancement Act (Technical
                                                a privacy impact assessment.                                                                                  vehicle safety, Reporting and
                                                                                                        Standards)
                                                                                                                                                              recordkeeping requirements.
                                                L. E.O. 12372 (Intergovernmental
                                                                                                          The National Technology Transfer                       In consideration of the foregoing,
                                                Review)                                                                                                       FMCSA proposes to amend 49 CFR
                                                                                                        and Advancement Act (NTTAA) (15
                                                  The regulations implementing E.O.                     U.S.C. 272 note) directs agencies to use              chapter III, subchapter B, part 390 to
                                                12372 regarding intergovernmental                       voluntary consensus standards in their                read as follows:
                                                consultation on Federal programs and                    regulatory activities unless the agency
                                                                                                        provides Congress, through OMB, with                  PART 390—FEDERAL MOTOR
                                                activities do not apply to this program.                                                                      CARRIER SAFETY REGULATIONS;
                                                                                                        an explanation of why using these
                                                M. E.O. 13211 (Energy Supply,                           standards would be inconsistent with                  GENERAL
                                                Distribution, or Use)                                   applicable law or otherwise impractical.
                                                                                                                                                              ■ 1. The authority citation for part 390
                                                                                                        Voluntary consensus standards (e.g.,
                                                   FMCSA has analyzed this proposed                                                                           continues to read as follows:
                                                                                                        specifications of materials, performance,
                                                rule under E.O. 13211, Actions                          design, or operation; test methods;                     Authority: 49 U.S.C. 504, 508, 31132,
                                                Concerning Regulations That                             sampling procedures; and related                      31133, 31134, 31136, 31137, 31144, 31149,
                                                Significantly Affect Energy Supply,                                                                           31151, 31502; sec. 114, Pub. L. 103–311, 108
                                                                                                        management systems practices) are
                                                Distribution, or Use. The Agency has                                                                          Stat. 1673, 1677; sec. 212 and 217, Pub. L.
                                                                                                        standards developed or adopted by                     106–159, 113 Stat. 1748, 1766, 1767; sec. 229,
                                                determined that it is not a ‘‘significant               voluntary consensus standards bodies.                 Pub. L. 106–159 (as added and transferred by
                                                energy action’’ under that order because                This rule does not use technical                      sec. 4115 and amended by secs. 4130–4132,
                                                it is not a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’           standards. Therefore, FMCSA did not                   Pub. L. 109–59, 119 Stat. 1144, 1726, 1743;
                                                likely to have a significant adverse effect             consider the use of voluntary consensus               sec. 4136, Pub. L. 109–59, 119 Stat. 1144,
                                                on the supply, distribution, or use of                  standards.                                            1745; secs. 32101(d) and 32934, Pub. L. 112–
                                                energy. Therefore, it does not require a                                                                      141, 126 Stat. 405, 778, 830; sec. 2, Pub. L.
                                                                                                        Q. Environment (NEPA and CAA)                         113–125, 128 Stat. 1388; secs. 5403, 5518,
                                                Statement of Energy Effects under E.O.                                                                        and 5524, Pub. L. 114–94, 129 Stat. 1312,
                                                13211.                                                     FMCSA analyzed this NPRM for the                   1548, 1558, 1560; sec. 2, Pub. L. 115–105,
                                                                                                        purpose of the National Environmental                 131 Stat. 2263; and 49 CFR 1.81, 1.81a, 1.87.
                                                N. E.O. 13783 (Promoting Energy                         Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
                                                Independence and Economic Growth)                                                                             ■  2. Amend § 390.5 as follows:
                                                                                                        seq.) and determined this action is                   ■  a. Lift the suspension of the section;
                                                   Executive Order 13783 directs                        categorically excluded from further                   ■  b. Revise the definition of ‘‘Lease,’’
                                                executive departments and agencies to                   analysis and documentation in an                      ‘‘Lessee,’’ and ‘‘Lessor’’ in alphabetical
                                                review existing regulations that                        environmental assessment or                           order’’;
                                                potentially burden the development or                   environmental impact statement under                  ■ c. Suspend § 390.5 indefinitely.
                                                                                                        FMCSA Order 5610.1 (69 FR 9680,                          The revised text reads as follows:
                                                use of domestically produced energy
                                                                                                        March 1, 2004), Appendix 2, paragraphs
                                                resources, and to appropriately suspend,                                                                      § 390.5    Definitions.
                                                                                                        (6)(y)(2) and (6)(y)(7). The Categorical
                                                revise, or rescind those that unduly                    Exclusion (CE) in paragraph (6)(y)(2)                 *     *     *    *     *
                                                burden the development of domestic                      covers regulations implementing motor                    Lease, as used in subpart G of this
                                                energy resources.41 In accordance with                  carrier identification and registration               part, means a contract or agreement in
                                                E.O. 13783, the DOT prepared and                        reports. The Categorical Exclusion (CE)               which a motor carrier of passengers
                                                submitted a report to the Director of                   in paragraph (6)(y)(7) covers regulations             grants the use of a passenger-carrying
                                                OMB providing specific                                  implementing prohibitions on motor                    commercial motor vehicle to another
                                                recommendations that, to the extent                     carriers, agents, officers, representatives,          motor carrier, with or without a driver,
                                                permitted by law, could alleviate or                    and employees from making fraudulent                  for a specified period for the
                                                eliminate aspects of agency action that                 or intentionally false statements on any              transportation of passengers, whether or
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                                                burden domestic energy production.                      application, certificate, report, or record           not compensation for such use is
                                                The DOT has not identified this                         required by FMCSA. The proposed                       specified or required, when one of the
                                                proposed rule as potentially alleviating                requirements in this rule are covered by              motor carriers of passengers is not
                                                unnecessary burdens on domestic                         these CEs, and the proposed action does               authorized to operate in interstate
                                                energy production under E.O. 13783.                     not have the potential to significantly               commerce pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 13901–
                                                                                                        affect the quality of the environment.                13902. The term lease includes an
                                                  41 Exec. Order No. 13783, 82 FR 16093 (March 31,      The CE determination is available for                 interchange, as defined in this section,
                                                2017).                                                  inspection or copying in the                          or other agreement granting the use of


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                                                47786              Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                a passenger-carrying commercial motor                   the context of property-carrying                      displayed in accordance with
                                                vehicle for a specified period, with or                 vehicles, see § 376.2 of this subchapter.             paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section;
                                                without a driver, whether or not                          Lessee, as used in subpart G of this                and
                                                compensation for such use is specified                  part, means the motor carrier obtaining                  (iii) The rental agreement or lease as
                                                or required. For a definition of lease in               the use of a passenger-carrying                       applicable entered into by the lessor and
                                                the context of property-carrying                        commercial motor vehicle through a                    the renting motor carrier or lessee
                                                vehicles, see § 376.2 of this subchapter.               lease as defined in this section, with or             conspicuously contains the following
                                                   Lessee, as used in subpart G of this                 without the driver, from another motor                information:
                                                part, means the motor carrier obtaining                 carrier. The term lessee includes a                      (A) The name and complete physical
                                                the use of a passenger-carrying                         motor carrier obtaining the use of a                  address of the principal place of
                                                commercial motor vehicle through a                      passenger-carrying commercial motor                   business of the renting motor carrier or
                                                lease as defined in this section, with or               vehicle from another motor carrier                    lessee;
                                                without the driver, from another motor                  under an interchange or other                            (B) The identification number issued
                                                carrier. The term lessee includes a                     agreement, with or without a driver,                  to the renting motor carrier or lessee by
                                                motor carrier obtaining the use of a                    whether or not compensation for such                  FMCSA, preceded by the letters
                                                passenger-carrying commercial motor                     use is specified. For a definition of                 ‘‘USDOT,’’ if the motor carrier has been
                                                vehicle from another motor carrier                      lessee in the context of property-                    issued such a number. In lieu of the
                                                under an interchange or other                           carrying vehicles, see § 376.2 of this                identification number required in this
                                                agreement, with or without a driver,                    subchapter.                                           paragraph, the following information
                                                whether or not compensation for such                      Lessor, as used in subpart G of this                may be shown in a rental agreement:
                                                use is specified. For a definition of                   part, means the motor carrier granting                   (1) Whether the motor carrier is
                                                lessee in the context of property-                      the use of a passenger-carrying                       engaged in ‘‘interstate’’ or ‘‘intrastate’’
                                                carrying vehicles, see § 376.2 of this                  commercial motor vehicle through a                    commerce; and
                                                subchapter.                                             lease as defined in this section, with or                (2) Whether the renting motor carrier
                                                   Lessor, as used in subpart G of this                 without a driver, to another motor                    is transporting hazardous materials in
                                                part, means the motor carrier granting                  carrier. The term lessor includes a motor             the rented CMV;
                                                the use of a passenger-carrying                         carrier granting the use of a passenger-                 (C) The sentence: ‘‘This lessor
                                                commercial motor vehicle through a                      carrying commercial motor vehicle to                  cooperates with all Federal, State, and
                                                lease as defined in this section, with or               another motor carrier under an                        local law enforcement officials
                                                without a driver, to another motor                      interchange or other agreement, with or               nationwide to provide the identity of
                                                carrier. The term lessor includes a motor               without a driver, whether or not                      customers who operate this rental
                                                carrier granting the use of a passenger-                compensation for such use is specified.               CMV’’; and
                                                carrying commercial motor vehicle to                    For a definition of lessor in the context                (iv) The rental agreement or lease as
                                                another motor carrier under an                          of property-carrying vehicles, see                    applicable entered into by the lessor and
                                                interchange or other agreement, with or                 § 376.2 of this subchapter.                           the renting motor carrier or lessee is
                                                without a driver, whether or not                                                                              carried on the rental CMV or leased
                                                compensation for such use is specified.                 *     *      *    *     *
                                                                                                        ■ 4. Amend § 390.21 as follows:
                                                                                                                                                              passenger-carrying CMV during the full
                                                For a definition of lessor in the context                                                                     term of the rental agreement or lease.
                                                                                                        ■ a. Lift the suspension of the section;
                                                of property-carrying vehicles, see                                                                            See the property-carrying leasing
                                                                                                        ■ b. Revise paragraph (e);
                                                § 376.2 of this subchapter.                             ■ c. Remove paragraph (f);                            regulations at 49 CFR part 376 and the
                                                *     *      *    *     *                               ■ d. Redesignate paragraphs (g) and (h)               passenger-carrying leasing regulations at
                                                ■ 3. Amend § 390.5T by revising the                     as paragraphs (f) and (g), respectively;              subpart G of this part for information
                                                definitions of ‘‘Lease,’’ ‘‘Lessee,’’ and               ■ e. Suspend § 390.21 indefinitely.                   that should be included in all leasing
                                                ‘‘Lessor’’ in alphabetical order to read as               The revised text reads as follows:                  documents.
                                                follows:                                                                                                         (v) Exception. The passenger-carrying
                                                                                                        § 390.21 Marking of self-propelled CMVs               CMV operating under the 48-hour
                                                § 390.5T   Definitions.                                 and intermodal equipment.                             emergency exception pursuant to
                                                *     *     *    *     *                                *       *    *     *     *                            § 390.403(a)(2) of this part does not need
                                                   Lease, as used in subpart G of this                     (e) Rented CMVs and leased                         to comply with paragraphs (iii) and (iv)
                                                part, means a contract or agreement in                  passenger-carrying CMVs. A motor                      of this section, provided the lessor and
                                                which a motor carrier of passengers                     carrier operating a self-propelled CMV                lessee comply with the requirements of
                                                grants the use of a passenger-carrying                  under a rental agreement or a passenger-              § 390.403(a)(2).
                                                commercial motor vehicle to another                     carrying CMV under a lease, when the
                                                motor carrier, with or without a driver,                                                                      *       *    *     *     *
                                                                                                        rental agreement or lease has a term not              ■ 5. Amend § 390.21T by
                                                for a specified period for the                          in excess of 30 calendar days, meets the              ■ a. Revising paragraph (e);
                                                transportation of passengers, whether or                requirements of this section if:                      ■ b. Removing paragraph (f);
                                                not compensation for such use is                           (1) The CMV is marked in accordance                ■ c. Redesignating paragraphs (g) and
                                                specified or required, when one of the                  with the provisions of paragraphs (b)                 (h) as paragraphs (f) and (g),
                                                motor carriers of passengers is not                     through (d) of this section; or                       respectively.
                                                authorized to operate in interstate                        (2) Except as provided in paragraph                   The revision to read as follows:
                                                commerce pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 13901–                   (e)(2)(v), the CMV is marked as set forth
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                                                13902. The term lease includes an                       in paragraph (e)(2)(i) through (iv) of this           § 390.21T Marking of self-propelled CMVs
                                                interchange, as defined in this section,                section:                                              and intermodal equipment.
                                                or other agreement granting the use of                     (i) The legal name or a single trade               *     *    *     *      *
                                                a passenger-carrying commercial motor                   name of the lessor is displayed in                      (e) Rented CMVs and leased
                                                vehicle for a specified period, with or                 accordance with paragraphs (c) and (d)                passenger-carrying CMVs. A motor
                                                without a driver, whether or not                        of this section.                                      carrier operating a self-propelled CMV
                                                compensation for such use is specified                     (ii) The lessor’s identification number            under a rental agreement or a passenger-
                                                or required. For a definition of lease in               preceded by the letters ‘‘USDOT’’ is                  carrying CMV under a lease, when the


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                                                                   Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules                                           47787

                                                rental agreement or lease has a term not                Subpart F—[Removed and Reserved]                      § 390.403 Lease and interchange
                                                in excess of 30 calendar days, meets the                                                                      requirements.
                                                requirements of this section if:                        ■ 6. Remove and reserve subpart F of                     Except as provided in § 390.401(b) of
                                                   (1) The CMV is marked in accordance                  part 390., consisting of §§ 390.301                   this section, a motor carrier may
                                                with the provisions of paragraphs (b)                   through 390.305, to read as follows:                  transport passengers in a leased or
                                                through (d) of this section; or                         ■ 7. Add subpart G, consisting of                     interchanged commercial motor vehicle
                                                   (2) Except as provided in paragraph                  §§ 390.401 and 390.403, to read as                    only under the following conditions:
                                                (e)(2)(v), the CMV is marked as set forth               follows:                                                 (a) In general—(1) Lease or agreement
                                                in paragraph (e)(2)(i) through (iv) of this                                                                   required. There shall be in effect either:
                                                section:                                                                                                         (i) A lease granting the use of the
                                                   (i) The legal name or a single trade                 Subpart G—Lease and Interchange of                    passenger-carrying commercial motor
                                                name of the lessor is displayed in                      Passenger-Carrying Commercial Motor                   vehicle and meeting the conditions of
                                                accordance with paragraphs (c) and (d)                  Vehicles                                              paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section.
                                                of this section.                                        Sec.                                                  The provisions of the lease shall be
                                                   (ii) The lessor’s identification number              390.401 Applicability.                                adhered to and performed by the lessee;
                                                preceded by the letters ‘‘USDOT’’ is                    390.403 Lease and interchange                         or
                                                displayed in accordance with                                 requirements.                                       (ii) An agreement meeting the
                                                paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section;                                                                       conditions of paragraphs (b) and (c) of
                                                and                                                     Subpart G—Lease and Interchange of                    this section and governing the
                                                   (iii) The rental agreement or lease as               Passenger-Carrying Commercial Motor                   interchange of passenger-carrying
                                                applicable entered into by the lessor and               Vehicles                                              commercial motor vehicles between
                                                the renting motor carrier or lessee                                                                           motor carriers of passengers conducting
                                                                                                        § 390.401    Applicability.
                                                conspicuously contains the following                                                                          service on a route or series of routes.
                                                information:                                              (a) General. Except as provided in                  The provisions of the interchange
                                                   (A) The name and complete physical                   paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) of this section,            agreement shall be adhered to and
                                                address of the principal place of                       this subpart applies to the following                 performed by the lessee.
                                                business of the renting motor carrier or                actions, irrespective of duration, or the                (2) Exception. When an event occurs
                                                lessee;                                                 presence or absence of compensation,                  (e.g., a crash, the vehicle is disabled)
                                                   (B) The identification number issued                 by motor carriers operating commercial                that requires a motor carrier of
                                                to the renting motor carrier or lessee by               motor vehicles to transport passengers:               passengers immediately to obtain a
                                                FMCSA, preceded by the letters                            (1) The lease of passenger-carrying                 replacement vehicle from another motor
                                                ‘‘USDOT,’’ if the motor carrier has been                commercial motor vehicles; and                        carrier of passengers, the two carriers
                                                issued such a number. In lieu of the                      (2) The interchange of passenger-                   may postpone the writing of the lease or
                                                identification number required in this                  carrying commercial motor vehicles                    written agreement for the replacement
                                                paragraph, the following information                    between motor carriers.                               vehicle for up to 48 hours after the time
                                                may be shown in a rental agreement:                       (b) Exceptions—(1) Contracts and                    the lessee takes exclusive possession
                                                   (1) Whether the motor carrier is                                                                           and control of the replacement vehicle.
                                                                                                        agreements between motor carriers of
                                                engaged in ‘‘interstate’’ or ‘‘intrastate’’                                                                   However, during that 48-hour (or
                                                                                                        passengers with active passenger carrier
                                                commerce; and                                                                                                 shorter) period, the driver of the vehicle
                                                                                                        operating authority registrations. This
                                                   (2) Whether the renting motor carrier                                                                      must carry, and upon demand of an
                                                                                                        subpart does not apply to contracts and
                                                or lessee is transporting hazardous                                                                           enforcement official produce, a
                                                                                                        agreements between motor carriers of
                                                materials in the rented or leased CMV;                                                                        document signed and dated by the
                                                   (C) The sentence: ‘‘This lessor                      passengers that have active passenger
                                                                                                        carrier operating authority registrations             lessee’s driver or available company
                                                cooperates with all Federal, State, and                                                                       official stating: ‘‘[Carrier A, USDOT
                                                local law enforcement officials                         with the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
                                                                                                        Administration when one such motor                    number, telephone number] has leased
                                                nationwide to provide the identity of                                                                         this vehicle to [Carrier B, USDOT
                                                customers who operate this rental or                    carrier acquires transportation service(s)
                                                                                                        from another such motor carrier(s).                   number, telephone number] pursuant to
                                                leased CMV’’; and                                                                                             49 CFR 390.403(a)(2).’’
                                                   (iv) The rental agreement or lease as                  (2) Financial leases. This subpart does                (b) Contents of the lease. The lease or
                                                applicable entered into by the lessor and               not apply to a contract (however                      interchange agreement required by
                                                the renting motor carrier or lessee is                  designated, e.g., lease, closed-end lease,            paragraph (a) of this section shall
                                                carried on the rental CMV or leased                     hire purchase, lease purchase, purchase               contain:
                                                passenger-carrying CMV during the full                  agreement, installment plan, etc.)                       (1) Vehicle identification information.
                                                term of the rental agreement or lease.                  between a motor carrier and a financial               The name of the vehicle manufacturer,
                                                See the property-carrying leasing                       organization or a manufacturer or dealer              the year of manufacture, and at least the
                                                regulations at 49 CFR part 376 and the                  of passenger-carrying commercial motor                last 6 digits of the Vehicle Identification
                                                passenger-carrying leasing regulations at               vehicles allowing the motor carrier to                Number (VIN) of each passenger-
                                                subpart G of this part for information                  use the passenger-carrying commercial                 carrying commercial motor vehicle
                                                that should be included in all leasing                  motor vehicle.                                        transferred between motor carriers
                                                documents.                                                 (c) Penalties. If the use of a passenger-          pursuant to the lease or interchange
                                                   (v) Exception. The passenger-carrying                carrying commercial motor vehicle is                  agreement.
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                                                CMV operating under the 48-hour                         conferred on one motor carrier subject                   (2) Parties. The legal name, USDOT
                                                emergency exception pursuant to                         to this subpart by another such motor                 number, and telephone number of the
                                                § 390.403(a)(2) of this part does not need              carrier without a lease or interchange                motor carrier providing passenger
                                                to comply with paragraphs (iii) and (iv)                agreement, or pursuant to a lease or                  transportation in a commercial motor
                                                of this section, provided the lessor and                interchange agreement that fails to meet              vehicle (lessee) and the legal name,
                                                lessee comply with the requirements of                  all applicable requirements of subpart                USDOT number, and telephone number
                                                § 390.403(a)(2).                                        G, both motor carriers shall be subject               of the motor carrier providing the
                                                *       *    *     *     *                              to a civil penalty.                                   equipment (lessor), and signatures of


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                                                47788              Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 183 / Thursday, September 20, 2018 / Proposed Rules

                                                both parties or their authorized                        passenger-carrying commercial motor                   commercial motor vehicle during the
                                                representatives.                                        vehicle for the duration of the                       period of the lease or interchange
                                                  (3) Specific duration. The time and                   agreement, and assumes complete                       agreement, and both the lessee and
                                                date when, and the location where, the                  responsibility for operation of the                   lessor shall retain a copy of the lease or
                                                lease or interchange agreement begins                   vehicle and compliance with all                       interchange agreement for 1 year after
                                                and ends.                                               applicable Federal regulations for the                the expiration date.
                                                                                                        duration of the agreement.                              Issued under the authority delegated in 49
                                                  (4) Exclusive possession and
                                                                                                          (ii) In the event of a sublease between             CFR 1.87 on: September 11, 2018.
                                                responsibilities. (i) A clear statement
                                                that the motor carrier obtaining the                    motor carriers, all of the requirements of            Raymond P. Martinez,
                                                passenger-carrying commercial motor                     this section shall apply to a sublease.               Administrator.
                                                vehicle (the lessee) has exclusive                        (c) Copies of the lease. A copy shall               [FR Doc. 2018–20162 Filed 9–19–18; 8:45 am]
                                                possession, control, and use of the                     be on the passenger-carrying                          BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
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Document Created: 2018-09-20 02:09:27
Document Modified: 2018-09-20 02:09:27
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionNotice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM); request for comments.
DatesComments must be received by November 19, 2018.
ContactMs. Loretta Bitner, (202) 366-2400, [email protected], Office of Enforcement and Compliance. FMCSA office hours are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
FR Citation83 FR 47764 
RIN Number2126-AC07
CFR AssociatedHighway Safety; Intermodal Transportation; Motor Carriers; Motor Vehicle Safety and Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements

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