FTA Transit Program Changes, Authorized Funding Levels and Implementation of the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users, 71950-72022 [05-23322]
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71950
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
FTA Transit Program Changes,
Authorized Funding Levels and
Implementation of the Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy
for Users
[Docket No. FTA–2005–23089]
Federal Transit Administration
(FTA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This notice announces
changes in the Federal Transit
Administration (FTA) programs in
accordance with SAFETEA–LU, which
authorizes funds for all of the surface
transportation programs of the
Department of Transportation for
Federal fiscal years 2005 through 2009.
This notice provides preliminary
implementation instructions and
guidance for grants under the new and
revised programs in FY 2006 and invites
public comment. The notice also
includes tables of unobligated (or
carryover) amounts for earmarks from
prior years under the discretionary
programs, and tables that list
discretionary program earmarks
authorized under SAFETEA–LU.
DATES: Comments on the content of this
notice will be received until December
30, 2005. Late filed comments will be
considered to the extent practicable.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
[identified by DOT DMS Docket Number
FTA–2005–23089] by any of the
following methods:
1. Web Site: https://dms.dot.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments on the DOT electronic docket
site. Fax: 202–493–2251.
2. Mail: Docket Management Facility;
U.S. Department of Transportation, 400
Seventh Street, SW., Nassif Building,
PL–401, Washington, DC 20590–0001.
3. Hand Delivery: Room PL–401 on
the plaza level of the Nassif Building,
400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington,
DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Instructions: You must include the
agency name (Federal Transit
Administration) and the docket number
(FTA–2005–23089). You should submit
two copies of your comments if you
submit them by mail. If you wish to
receive confirmation that FTA received
your comments, you must include a
self-addressed stamped postcard. Note
that all comments received will be
posted without change to the
Department’s Docket Management
System (DMS) Web site located at
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https://dms.dot.gov. This means that if
your comment includes any personal
identifying information, such
information will be made available to
users of DMS.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
general information about this notice
contact Mary Martha Churchman,
Director, Office of Resource
Management and State Programs, (202)
366–2053. Please contact the
appropriate FTA regional office, from
the list in Appendix A, for grantee
specific requests for information or
technical assistance.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Overview
II. FY 2006 Funding for FTA Programs
A. Authorized Funding for FY 2006
B. Status of FY 2006 Funding
C. Project Management Oversight
Takedown
III. SAFETEA–LU: FY 2006–2009 Authorized
Funding Levels and Project Authorizations
IV. SAFETEA–LU: Highlights of CrossCutting Changes
A. Definitional Changes
1. Mobility Management
2. Security Planning, Training, and Drills
3. Debt Service Reserve
4. Intercity Bus and Intercity Rail
5. Definition of Public Transportation
B. Cross-cutting Programmatic
Requirements and Changes
1. State Infrastructure Bank
2. Coordination
3. Public Participation Planning
Requirement
4. Public Hearings
5. Labor Protection
6. Buy America
7. Procurement
8. Pre-award/Post-Delivery Reviews
9. Charter Service and School Bus
10. Revenue Bonds as Local Match
11. Government’s Share of Cost of
Equipment and Facilities for ADA and
Clean Air Act Compliance
V. SAFETEA–LU: Summary of New Programs
and Formulas
A. New Freedom (49 U.S.C. 5317)
B. Alternative Transportation in the Parks
and Public Lands (49 U.S.C. 5320)
C. Small Starts (Component of the Section
5309 New Starts Program)
D. Alternative Analysis (49 U.S.C. 5339)
E. Public Transportation on Indian
Reservations (49 U.S.C. 5311(c)(1))
F. Growing States and High Density States
Formula Factors (49 U.S.C. 5340)
VI. Program Specific Information and
Requests for Comments
A. Metropolitan Planning Program (49
U.S.C. 5303)
B. Statewide Planning and Research
Program (49 U.S.C. 5304)
C. Urbanized Area Formula Program (49
U.S.C. 5307)
D. Clean Fuels Grant Program (49 U.S.C.
5308)
E. Capital Investment Program (49 U.S.C.
5309)—Fixed Guideway Modernization
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F. Capital Investment Program (49 U.S.C.
5309)—Bus and Bus-Related Facilities
G. Capital Investment Program (49 U.S.C.
5309)—New Starts
H. Special Needs of Elderly Individuals
and Individuals with Disabilities
Program (49 U.S.C. 5310)
I. Nonurbanized Area Formula Program (49
U.S.C. 5311)
J. Rural Transportation Assistance Program
(49 U.S.C. 5311(b)(2))
K. Public Transportation on Indian
Reservations Program (49 U.S.C.
5311(c)(1))
L. National Research Program (49 U.S.C.
5314)
M. Job Access and Reverse Commute
Program (49 U.S.C. 5316)
N. New Freedom Program (49 U.S.C. 5317)
O. Alternative Transportation in the Parks
and Public Lands Program (49 U.S.C.
5320)
P. Alternative Analysis Program (49 U.S.C.
5339)
Q. Growing States and High Density States
Formula Factors (49 U.S.C. 5340)
R. Over-the-Road Bus Accessibility
Program (Pub. L. 105–85, Section 3038)
VII. FTA National Planning Emphasis Areas
VIII. FTA Policy and Procedures for FY 2006
Grants
A. Automatic Pre-Award Authority To
Incur Project Costs
B. Letter of No Prejudice (LONP) Policy
C. FTA FY 2006 Annual List of
Certifications and Assurances
D. FHWA Funds Used for Transit Purposes
E. Consolidated Planning Grants
F. Grant Application Procedures
Tables
1. SAFETEA–LU Authorized Programs and
Funding Levels
2. SAFETEA–LU Authorized Section 5309
New Starts Projects
3. SAFETEA–LU Authorized Section 5339
Alternative Analysis Projects
4. SAFETEA–LU Authorized Section 5309
Bus and Bus-Related Facilities Projects
5. SAFETEA–LU Authorized Section 5308
Clean Fuels Projects
6. Prior Year Unobligated Section 5309 Bus
and Bus-Related Facilities Allocations
7. Prior Year Unobligated Section 5309
New Starts Allocations
8. SAFETEA–LU Authorized Section 5314
National Research Program Projects
9. Prior Year Unobligated Job Access and
Reverse Commute Allocations
Appendices
Appendix A—FTA Regional Offices
Appendix B—Specific Questions and
Issues for Comment
I. Overview
This document contains important
information about new FTA programs
authorized by the Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity
Act: A Legacy for Users, (SAFETEA–LU)
(Pub. L. 109–059), signed into law by
President Bush on August 10, 2005, and
changes to programs reauthorized by
that legislation. It also contains
information on how FTA plans to
administer the transit programs
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discussed in this document, in fiscal
year (FY) 2006. For each FTA program
included, we have provided information
on the SAFETEA–LU authorized
funding levels for fiscal years 2006–
2009, the basis for apportionment or
allocation for funds, requirements
specific to the program, period of
availability of funds, and other program
information. The document also
includes a section that introduces
planning emphasis areas for FY 2006. A
separate section of the document
provides information on pre-award
authority and other requirements and
guidance applicable to FTA program
administration. Finally, the notice
includes tables that show unobligated or
carryover funding available, in FY 2006,
from prior years under certain
discretionary programs, and tables that
list authorized project earmarks under
SAFTEA–LU.
Information in this document
includes references to the existing FTA
program guidance circulars. While some
information in the circulars has been
superseded by new provisions in
SAFETEA–LU, the circulars remain a
resource for program guidance in most
areas. FTA intends to revise the
circulars, with an opportunity for public
comment.
To supplement the guidance provided
in this document FTA is preparing
answers to frequently asked questions
(FAQs), on SAFETEA–LU changes and
impacts, from its grantees, stakeholders,
and other interested parties. These
FAQs will be posted on the FTA Web
site at https://www.fta.dot.gov when they
become available.
Throughout the document we have
included specific questions on which
we seek comment, and we invite your
comments to the docket on any
information provided in this notice. A
list of the specific questions or issues
can be found in Appendix B.
II. FY 2006 Funding for FTA Programs
A. Authorized Funding for FY 2006
SAFETEA–LU provides a
combination of trust and general funds
that total $8.6 billion for FTA programs
for FY 2006. Table 1 of this document
shows the authorized funding for the
FTA programs for the fiscal years 2006–
2009. This notice provides a narrative
explanation of the funding levels and
other factors affecting the
apportionments and allocations for each
program.
B. Status of FY 2006 Funding
When the FY 2006 appropriations bill
is passed and enacted into law, FTA
will publish another notice that will
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include a table for each program that
contains the apportionments or
allocations, based on the program
funding level in the FY 2006
appropriations act. At the time this
notice was prepared the agency was
operating under a Continuing
Resolution and only a small fraction of
the FY 2006 funds authorized in
SAFETEA–LU was available for FTA
programs and administrative expenses.
No FY 2006 program funds have been
apportioned at this time. Congress
recently took action on the FY 2006
Appropriations Act and we will publish
the FY 2006 apportionments and
allocations shortly.
C. Project Management Oversight
Takedown
FTA draws money from funds
appropriated to certain FTA programs
for program oversight activities
conducted by the agency. The funds are
used to provide necessary oversight
activities, including oversight of the
construction of any major project under
these statutory programs; to conduct
safety and security, civil rights,
procurement, management and financial
reviews and audits; and to provide
technical assistance to correct
deficiencies identified in compliance
reviews and audits.
49 U.S.C. 5327 authorizes the
takedown of funds from FTA programs
for project management oversight.
SAFETEA–LU increased the amount
that may be set-aide for such activities
above the levels established under TEA–
21 and identified additional programs to
which the oversight takedown applies.
SAFETEA–LU provides oversight
takedowns at the following levels: 0.5
percent of Planning funds, 0.75 percent
of Urbanized Area Formula funds, 1
percent of Capital Investment funds, 0.5
percent of Special Needs of Elderly
Individuals and Individuals with
Disabilities formula funds, 0.5 percent
of Nonurbanized Area Formula funds,
and 0.5 percent of Alternative
Transportation in the Parks and Public
Lands funds. Language in section 5327
also specifies the addition of ‘‘safety and
security management’’ to the list of
project management plan requirements.
III. SAFETEA–LU: FY 2006–2009
Authorized Funding Levels and Project
Authorizations
SAFETEA–LU provides a
combination of trust and general fund
authorizations that total $45.3 billion for
public transportation for fiscal years
2005–2009 ($52.6 billion over the six
year period 2004–2009). Just over 80
percent is derived from the Mass Transit
Account, with only New Starts,
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Research and FTA Administrative
funding coming from the General Fund.
All funds, including the General Fund
portion, are guaranteed, which means
that the guaranteed annual levels are
already ‘‘paid for’’ under Congressional
budgetary rules. This assures that in
each year’s appropriations process the
specified amount of authorized funding
will be available each year for transit
programs. See Table 1 for the
guaranteed funding levels by program.
Previously, under TEA–21, all the
FTA programs were funded with both
Mass Transit Account and General
Funds. Because of this change in the
structure of FTA’s accounts, except for
New Starts and Research program
grants, FTA will not be able to combine
FY 2006 funds in the same grant with
funds appropriated in prior years. See
section VIII F below for grant
application procedures.
SAFETEA–LU includes 405 New
Starts project designations for fiscal
years 2006–2009, many of which are
listed more than once. The total funding
authorized for these projects is $5.49
billion. Thirty-one (31) projects are
authorized for Full Funding Grant
Agreements (FFGAs); 38 projects are
authorized for Final Design (FD) and
Construction, and 264 projects are
authorized for Preliminary Engineering
(PE). Dollar amounts are specified by
fiscal year for each FFGA project. No
funding amounts are specified for the
FD and construction and PE projects.
Fifty-two New Starts project
designations listed have a total amount
specified but this amount is not
identified with any particular fiscal
year. In addition, 18 New Starts projects
for Alternative Analysis under section
5339 are designated and amounts
authorized for fiscal years 2006 and
2007 specified. The Alaska and Hawaii
Ferry Boat and Denali Commission
projects are also authorized. All New
Starts earmarks are listed in Table 2 and
Table 3 by State, including the dollar
amount if specified.
Also authorized are project specific
allocations for 646 Bus and Bus-Related
Facilities projects totaling
$1,819,662,341 for fiscal years 2006–
2009. These projects and amounts are
displayed in Table 4.
Under the Clean Fuels program, 16
projects totaling $78,385,000 are
earmarked for funding for FY 2006–
2009. These projects and amounts are
displayed in Table 5.
It should be noted that projects
earmarked in SAFETEA–LU are subject
to Congressional actions in later
appropriations bills and funding is not
available for immediate obligation.
Estimates of formula program funding
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levels for fiscal years 2006–2009, by
State and urbanized area (UZA), are
available on the FTA Web site. These
numbers are for planning purposes only
as they will be revised when each year’s
appropriation bill is enacted but may be
used for the purpose of programming
metropolitan transportation
improvement programs (TIPs) and
statewide transportation improvement
programs (STIPs).
In the estimates of formula funding
for UZAs, for the JARC and New
Freedom programs, FTA included the
amount of funding attributable to each
UZA less than 200,000 in population
(small UZA) low income individuals
and individuals with disabilities,
respectively. These amounts were
provided, for information purposes
only. Under these programs, funds for
the UZAs under 200,000 in population
will be apportioned to the state for
competitive selection of projects.
Similarly, we estimated the amount of
funding that might go to each State
under the Public Transportation on
Indian Reservations Program (49 U.S.C.
5311(c)(1) also referred to as the Tribal
Transit Program in this document),
based on tribal population. But these
funds will not be apportioned to the
States and the process for apportioning
them among the Tribes has not yet been
determined.
IV. SAFETEA–LU: Highlights of CrossCutting Changes
A. Definitional Changes
1. Mobility Management
SAFETEA–LU added ‘‘mobility
management’’ to the list of capital
projects at 5302(a)(1)(L). This allows
‘‘short-range planning and management
activities and projects for improving
coordination among public
transportation and other transportation
service providers carried out by a
recipient or subrecipient’’ to be funded
as a capital project. The definition
excludes the actual costs of operating
public transportation services, but
allows the costs of planning and
coordination with human service
transportation to be treated as capital
rather than operating costs.
2. Security Planning, Training, and
Drills
Four new eligible capital activities
were added at 5302(a)(1)(J). These
include projects ‘‘to refine and develop
security and emergency response plans,
projects aimed at detecting chemical
and biological agents in public
transportation, the conduct of
emergency response drills with public
transportation agencies and local first
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response agencies, and security training
for public transportation employees.’’
Expenses related to transit operations,
other than those incurred in conducting
emergency response drills or security
training, are excluded from this
definition and will continue to be
eligible only as operating in those areas
eligible to use FTA funds for operating
assistance.
service under the rural program (section
5311) or the over-the-road bus
accessibility program (TEA–21, section
3038). The definition now also
specifically excludes intercity passenger
rail transportation provided by
AMTRAK. The intercity bus and
intercity rail portion of intermodal
terminals, however, is an eligible capital
cost under 49 U.S.C. 5302(a)(1)(G).
3. Debt Service Reserve
SAFETEA–LU allows recipients to be
reimbursed from section 5309 funds for
deposits of bond proceeds in a debt
service reserve. The Act also allows up
to ten recipients to be reimbursed from
section 5307 funds for bond proceeds
deposited in a debt service reserve
established with a bondholders’ trustee.
These provisions will have the effect of
reducing grantees’ out of pocket bond
issuance costs due to the reimbursement
for the cost of the debt service reserve.
The new capital definition of debt
service reserve is found at 5302(a)(1)(K)
and the limitations on its use are at
sections 5323(e)(3) and (4).
B. Cross-cutting Programmatic
Requirements and Changes
4. Intercity Bus and Intercity Rail
The definition of an eligible joint
development capital project in section
5302(A)(1)(G) has been expanded to
include ‘‘construction, renovation, and
improvement of intercity bus and
intercity rail stations and terminals.’’
Further, the limitation that made
‘‘commercial revenue-producing
facilities’’ ineligible for FTA assistance
has been lifted with respect to intercity
bus stations or terminals. Intercity bus
stations and terminals are not required
to provide a fair share of revenue for
public transportation that will be used
for public transportation.
The result of these changes is that
FTA funds can now be used for all
aspects of intercity bus and rail facilities
in facilities (such as intermodal
terminals) which meet the criteria in
section 5302(a)(1)(G) for joint
development projects (physical and
functional relationship to public
transportation). Further, $35 million per
year is set aside in the section 5309 Bus
and Bus-Related Facilities program for
intermodal terminals, including the
intercity bus portions of those terminals.
5. Definition of Public Transportation
Throughout SAFETEA–LU, the term
public transportation is used wherever
the FTA statute previously referred to
mass transit or mass transportation. The
definition of public transportation at
5302(a)(10) was also modified to
specifically exclude intercity bus
transportation. This change does not
affect the eligibility of intercity bus
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1. State Infrastructure Bank
SAFETEA–LU establishes a new State
Infrastructure Bank (SIB) program under
which all States, Puerto Rico, the
District of Columbia, American Samoa,
Guam, the Virgin Islands, and the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands are authorized to enter into
cooperative agreements with the
Secretary of Transportation to establish
financial entities that provide various
types of transportation infrastructure
credit assistance for fiscal years 2005–
2009. The new program is a
continuation and expansion of similar
programs created by the National
Highway System (NHS) Act in 1995 and
the TEA–21 legislation of 1998. It gives
States the capacity to increase the
efficiency of their transportation
investment and significantly leverage
Federal resources by attracting nonFederal public and private investment.
The program provides greater flexibility
to the States by allowing other types of
project assistance in addition to grant
assistance.
2. Coordination
Under three FTA formula programs
[the Special Needs of Elderly
Individuals and Individuals with
Disabilities Program (section 5310), Job
Access and Reverse Commute (section
5316), and New Freedom (section
5317)], there is a requirement that the
designated recipient competitively
select projects and that the projects
must be derived from a locally
developed coordinated public transit/
human service transportation plan.
Public transit operators, including those
funded under both the urbanized and
non-urbanized formula programs
(sections 5307 and 5311) are expected to
be participants in the local planning
process for coordinated public transit/
human service transportation. See the
specific programs below for more
information about the planning
requirements as it relates to the three
programs. See also the metropolitan
planning public participation
requirement below.
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3. Public Participation Planning
Requirement
Metropolitan Planning Organizations
(MPOs) must develop and utilize a
‘‘participation plan’’ that provides
reasonable opportunities for the
interested parties to comment on the
content of the metropolitan
transportation plan and metropolitan
TIP. This requirement is intended to
afford parties who participate in the
metropolitan planning process a specific
opportunity to comment on the plan
prior to its approval, including
governmental agencies and nonprofit
organizations that receive Federal
assistance from a source other than the
Department of Transportation (DOT) to
provide non-emergency transportation
services and recipients of assistance
under section 204 of Title 23 U.S.C. The
participation plan must be in place prior
to MPO adoption of transportation plans
and TIPs addressing SAFETEA–LU
provisions.
4. Public Hearings
The public hearing requirement in 49
U.S.C. 5323(b) for capital projects was
changed by SAFETEA–LU. Formerly, an
opportunity for a public hearing was
required on a section 5309 grant
application if the grant would
substantially affect the community or its
mass transportation service. Many of the
notices published under this
requirement did not ultimately result in
a hearing being held.
SAFETEA–LU associates more clearly
the public involvement and hearing
requirements for capital projects with
the environmental review required by
the National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) and its implementing
regulations. It also broadens the
requirement to apply to all capital
projects (as defined in section 5302).
Now, the grant applicant must provide
an adequate opportunity for public
review and comment on a capital
project, and, after providing notice,
must hold a public hearing on the
project if the project affects significant
economic, social, or environmental
interests. These requirements will be
satisfied through compliance with the
NEPA requirements for a public scoping
process, public review and comment on
NEPA documents, and a public hearing
on every draft environmental impact
statement (EIS). FTA will also require a
public hearing on environmental
assessments (EAs) that have a high
probability of being elevated to EISs.
Section 5323(b) must be read in
concert with section 5324(b) which
states that FTA must review the public
comments and hearing transcript to
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ascertain that an adequate opportunity
to present views was given to all parties
having a significant economic, social, or
environmental interest in the project,
and that FTA must make a written
finding to this effect.
5. Labor Protection
SAFETEA–LU codified in 5333(b)
streamlined labor protection
arrangements already used by the
Department of Labor (DOL) in certifying
FTA grants for purchase of like-kind
equipment or facilities or non-material
grant amendments. It also codified
existing practice when a contractor is
changed through competitive bidding.
In section 5311, the use of a special
warranty is written into the law. Awards
under two new programs, New Freedom
and Alternative Transportation in Parks
and Public Lands, will not be required
to be certified by DOL.
6. Buy America
The Buy America stipulation is
intended to ensure that Federal grants
stimulate domestic economic activity.
FTA funds must be used for goods that
must be produced or manufactured in
the United States or with specific
products, and have a defined percent of
domestic content. Four changes from
the previous law are that SAFETEA–LU:
• Requires the Secretary of
Transportation to issue a written
justification for public interest waivers
on Buy America requirements. (Under
the law, he may waive the Buy America
requirements if they are deemed
inconsistent with the public interest).
The Secretary must publish the written
justification in the Federal Register and
provide the public with a reasonable
period of time for notice and comment.
• Clarifies that a party adversely
affected by a FTA decision under the
Buy America provisions has the right to
seek administrative review.
• Repeals the general waiver of subsections (b) and (c) of Appendix A of
section 661.7.
• Requires a rulemaking within 180
days clarifying or defining the following
Buy America requirements:
1. Microprocessors; Buy America
requirements have been waived for
microprocessors since few are
manufactured in the United States. The
Secretary is directed to apply the waiver
to a device that is solely for the purpose
of processing and storing data and not
extended to a product containing the
microprocessor.
2. Defining the term ‘‘end product’’
for non-rolling stock. Does the end
product serve a purpose by itself or with
other end products on an interoperative
basis? A product that does not work
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with products of other manufacturers is
part of that manufacturers system that is
the end product. A list of systems and
end products will be developed.
3. Defining the term ‘‘negotiated
procurement’’ and determine Buy
America compliance on the basis of the
certification with the final offer.
4. Defining the term ‘‘contractor’’.
5. Clarifying that a grant recipient
may request a non-availability waiver
after the contract award if the contractor
has made a certification of compliance
with the requirements in good faith. The
contractor must have certified that it can
meet the Buy America requirements
before being awarded a contract. If the
contractor later finds that parts are not
available to meet the requirement, the
grantee may now request a Buy America
waiver.
7. Procurement
SAFETEA–LU recodified FTA’s
procurement requirements in section
5325 of Title 49 U.S.C. Section 5325(a)
establishes full and open competition as
the basic requirement for FTA-funded
third party contracts. Section 5325(b),
which covers architectural, engineering,
and design contracts, has been modified
to match similar language in Title 23
U.S.C., on reciprocity of audited
indirect cost rates. Section 5325(c) on
use of other-than-low-bid procurement
has been reenacted. Language on
Turnkey Contracting, formerly in
section 5326, now appears as section
5325(d), and is re-titled ‘‘Design-Build’’,
reflecting more up-to-date terminology.
Provisions formerly in section 5326
governing rolling stock procurements
now appear in sections 5325(e) and (f).
Section 5325(g) now allows access by
DOT or the Government Accountability
Office (GAO) to any contract-related
record, not just those in sole-source
procurements. Section 5325(h)
continues the prohibition on
exclusionary or discriminatory
procurements. A new section 5325(i)
prohibits application of State laws
requiring bus purchases to go through
in-State bus dealers from applying to
projects assisted under the FTA
program. Finally, section 5325(j)
codifies in law the requirement that
contracts be awarded only to
‘‘responsible’’ contractors. Grantees are
required to assess the integrity of the
contractor, compliance with public
policy, the contractor’s financial and
technical resources, and the contractors
past performance, particularly as
reported in the Contractor Performance
Assessment Report required under
section 5309(l)(2).
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8. Pre-Award/Post-Delivery Reviews
Under the current Buy America
provisions, there is a requirement for a
resident factory inspector for rolling
stock procurements of greater than 10
buses. SAFETEA–LU eliminates the
requirement for a resident factory
inspector for rolling stock procurements
of 20 vehicles or less for use in rural
(other than urbanized) areas, or UZAs of
200,000 population or less.
9. Charter Service and School Bus
SAFETEA–LU section 3023(d)
amended 49 U.S.C., section 5323(d)(2)
and provided new remedies for
violations of charter service. The
amended provision states that the
Secretary shall bar a recipient or an
operator from receiving Federal transit
assistance in an amount the Secretary
considers appropriate if the Secretary
finds a pattern of violations of the
agreement. The previous provision
stated that the Secretary could bar a
recipient from receiving further
assistance when the Secretary found a
continuing pattern of violations of the
agreement. The new provision allows
for more flexibility. Under the prior law
the Secretary could totally bar a
recipient from receiving further
financial assistance, but this penalty
was so harsh that it was only rarely
invoked. Under SAFETEA–LU the
Secretary can determine a penalty less
than a complete bar of financial
assistance; the Secretary shall bar an
operator from receiving assistance in an
amount the Secretary considers
appropriate.
In addition, the Conference Report for
SAFETEA–LU stated that the conferees
directed FTA to initiate a negotiated
rulemaking seeking public comment on
the charter service regulation
implementing 49 U.S.C., 5323(d) and to
consider the following issues: (1)
Whether public transit agencies can
provide community-based charter
services directly to local governments
and private non-profit agencies that
would not otherwise be served in a cost
effective manner by private operators;
(2) how can the administration and
enforcement of charter bus provisions
be better communicated to the public,
including use of internet technology; (3)
improve the enforcement of violations;
and (4) improve the complaint and
administrative appeals process. FTA has
initiated the negotiated rulemaking
process.
SAFETEA–LU section 3023(f)
amended 49 U.S.C., 5323(f) and
provided new remedies for violations of
the school bus transportation provision.
The amended provision states that if the
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Secretary finds a violation, the Secretary
shall bar a recipient or operator from
receiving Federal transit assistance in an
amount the Secretary considers
appropriate. The previous provision
stated that in the case of a violation, an
applicant could not receive other mass
transportation financial assistance. The
new provision allows for more
flexibility. Under the prior law the
penalty was so severe that it was only
rarely invoked. Under SAFETEA–LU
the Secretary can determine a penalty
less than a complete bar of financial
assistance; the Secretary shall bar an
operator from receiving assistance in an
amount the Secretary considers
appropriate.
10. Revenue Bonds as Local Match
Originally allowed in TEA–21,
revenue bonds may now be used as
local match, provided that the grantee
maintains a greater level of local transit
investment in the subsequent three
years (as demonstrated in the TIP) than
as in the current and prior two years.
This provision in 5323(e) allows bond
proceeds, secured by the revenues of a
transit capital project, to be used as
local match for that project.
11. Government’s Share of Cost of
Equipment and Facilities for ADA and
Clean Air Act Compliance
The provision allowing a 90 percent
Federal share for the incremental cost of
compliance with the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) or Clean Air Act
(CAA) was expanded to include vehiclerelated facilities as well as equipment at
section 5323(i). Under the provision
allowing the Secretary ‘‘to determine
through practicable administrative
procedures, the costs of such equipment
or facilities attributable to compliance
with those Acts’’, FTA previously
computed an 83 percent composite
match for vehicle-related equipment.
Given changes in technology, FTA may
revisit that calculation, but for the time
being, grantees may use the 83 percent
share. FTA seeks public comment on
the continued use of the 83 percent
share. Also, the administratively
determined 83 percent Federal share
does not apply to facilities, for which
the costs are more variable. Grantees
may apply for the 90 percent share of
the actual incremental costs of vehiclerelated facility improvements related to
ADA or CAA compliance, but FTA
requests that grantees provide
supporting documentation for that
request. Until FTA develops guidance,
the eligibility of facility related costs at
the higher share will be reviewed on a
case-by-case basis as part of the grant
application process.
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V. SAFETEA–LU: Summary of New
Programs and Formulas
A. New Freedom (49 U.S.C. 5317)
The New Freedom program provides
formula funding for new public
transportation services and public
transportation alternatives beyond those
required by the Americans with
Disabilities Act of 1990 that assist
individuals with disabilities with
transportation, including transportation
to and from jobs and employment
support services. Details are provided in
section VI N below.
B. Alternative Transportation in the
Parks and Public Lands (49 U.S.C. 5320)
SAFETEA–LU provides $22 million
annually for alternative transportation
projects to enhance the protection of
national parks and public lands and
increase the enjoyment of those visiting
the parks and public lands by ensuring
access to all, including persons with
disabilities, improving conservation and
park and public land opportunities in
urban areas through partnering with
State and local governments, and
improving park and public land
transportation infrastructure. The
program is to be implemented by FTA
in consultation with the Department of
the Interior and other Federal land
management agencies.
The Secretary of Transportation will
develop cooperative arrangements with
the Secretary of the Interior that
provide: (1) Technical assistance; (2)
interagency and multidisciplinary teams
to develop alternative transportation
policy, procedures, and coordination;
and, (3) procedures and criteria relating
to the planning, selection, and funding
of qualified projects and the
implementation and oversight of
selected projects. The Secretary of the
Interior, after consultation with and in
cooperation with the Secretary of
Transportation, will determine the final
selection and funding levels of an
annual program of qualified projects.
C. Small Starts (Component of the
Section 5309 New Starts Program)
SAFETEA–LU specifies a new
category of projects to be funded
separately out of the section 5309 New
Starts program. This new category
encompasses smaller scale projects,
referred to as Small Starts, and has been
authorized at a funding level of $200
million per year, beginning in FY 2007.
Projects requesting less than $75
million in section 5309 New Starts
funds with a total project cost less than
$250 million will be eligible to receive
funds under the new Small Starts
provision. SAFETEA–LU lays out a
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As specified in law, 82.72 percent of
the amounts authorized for section 5305
are allocated to the Metropolitan
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E. Public Transportation on Indian
Reservations (49 U.S.C. 5311(c)(1))
SAFETEA–LU creates a new Tribal
Transit program as a takedown under
the section 5311 program. Forty-five
million dollars is authorized for fiscal
years 2006–2009, growing from $8
million annually to $15 million. The
funds are to be apportioned to the
Tribes, not to the States, for capital and
operating assistance for rural transit and
rural intercity bus service. FTA will
develop procedures for the Tribal
Transit program in consultation with
tribal leaders and other interested
stakeholders.
In addition to funding under the
Tribal Transit program, States must
continue to include the Tribes in the
equitable distribution of the section
5311 funds apportioned to the States.
Indian Tribes are established as direct
recipients under section 5311 for
funding from the States’ apportionment
as well as from the new Tribal Transit
program.
See section VI K for additional
information and for specific questions
on which FTA seeks comments from
Tribes and other interested
stakeholders.
the most recent Census. Amounts
apportioned for each State are then
distributed between UZAs and
nonurbanzied areas based on the ratio of
urbanized/nonurbanzied population
within each State. The High Density
States factors distribute the other half of
the funds to States with population
densities in excess of 370 persons per
square mile. These funds are
apportioned only to UZAs within those
States. Additional details on the
Growing States and High Density States
formula and factors are discussed in
section VI Q below.
VI. Program Specific Information and
Requests for Comments
A. Metropolitan Planning Program (49
U.S.C. 5303)
Section 5303 authorizes a cooperative,
continuous, and comprehensive
planning program for transportation
investment decision-making at the
metropolitan area level. State
Departments of Transportation and
MPOs may receive funds for planning
projects that support the economic
vitality of the metropolitan area,
especially by enabling global
competitiveness, productivity, and
efficiency; increasing the safety and
security of the transportation system for
motorized and non-motorized users;
increasing the accessibility and mobility
options available to people and for
freight; protecting and enhancing the
environment, promoting energy
conservation, and improving quality of
life; enhancing the integration and
connectivity of the transportation
system, across and between modes, for
people and freight; promoting efficient
system management and operation; and
emphasizing the preservation of the
existing transportation system.
F. Growing States and High Density
States Formula Factors (49 U.S.C. 5340)
SAFETEA–LU establishes new
Growing States and High Density States
formula factors to distribute funds to the
section 5307 and section 5311 programs.
One-half of the funds are made available
under the Growing States factors and are
apportioned by a formula based on State
population forecasts for 15 years beyond
SAFETEA–LU authorizes the
following amounts to carryout section
5305 Planning programs for fiscal years
2006–2009:
Planning program. The table below
shows the amount of funding authorized
under section 5305 to be allocated to the
Metropolitan Planning program.
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1. Authorized Amounts
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D. Alternatives Analysis (49 U.S.C.
5339)
Alternatives Analysis is no longer
included in the eight percent of the
section 5309 New Starts program that
can be used for projects prior to FD and
Construction. Instead, $25 million
annually is provided for Alternatives
Analysis grants under section 5339. As
before, Metropolitan Planning funds and
Urbanized Area Formula funds can also
be used to support alternatives analysis.
The procedures grantees should use to
apply for section 5339 funds are referred
to in section VI P below.
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simplified evaluation and rating process
that FTA will use to support funding
decisions for Small Starts projects. The
statute specifies both cost-based and
project-definition-based eligibility
requirements. The definition of fixed
guideway capital project to be applied
in Small Starts has been expanded to
include substantial corridor bus projects
that either operate in a separate right of
way during peak hours or contain
significant investment in corridor-based
bus improvements. Small Starts projects
must also be the result of planning and
alternatives analysis.
The transit program statute provides
for an evaluation process for proposed
Small Starts projects that include a
subset of the evaluation criteria
specified for traditional New Starts
projects. The Small Starts evaluation
criteria in the statute include:
• Transit supportive land use,
• Cost-effectiveness,
• Reliability of cost and ridership
estimates,
• Effect on economic development,
and
• Other factors that the Secretary
determines are appropriate.
Currently, projects requesting less
than $25 million in New Starts funding
are exempt from the annual evaluation
and rating process. Under the new
statute, this exemption no longer
applies once a regulation is issued for
Small Starts. All eligible projects that
meet the aforementioned Small Starts
cost criterion will be rated and
evaluated according to the Small Starts
process. SAFETEA–LU also calls for a
simplified project development process
to be applied to Small Starts projects.
SAFETEA–LU requires that FTA issue
regulations establishing an evaluation
and rating process for the Small Starts
process. The Small Starts Advance
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking will be
issued soon.
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2. Basis for Formula Apportionment
FTA allocates Metropolitan Planning
funds to the States according to a
statutory formula. Eighty percent of the
funds are distributed to the States as a
basic allocation based on each State’s
UZA population, based on the most
recent Census. The remaining 20
percent is provided to the States as a
supplemental allocation based on an
FTA administrative formula to address
planning needs in the larger, more
complex UZAs. The amount published
for each State is a combined total of
both the basic and supplemental
allocation.
3. Requirements
The State allocates Metropolitan
Planning funds to MPOs in UZAs or
portions thereof to provide funds for
projects included in an annual work
program (the Unified Planning Work
Program, or UPWP) that includes both
highway and transit planning projects.
Each State has either reaffirmed or
developed, in consultation with their
MPOs, a new allocation formula, as a
result of the 2000 Census. The State
allocation formula may be changed
annually, but any change requires
approval by the FTA regional office
before grant approval. Program guidance
for the Metropolitan Planning Program
is found in FTA Circular C8100.1B,
Program Guidance and Application
Instructions for Metropolitan Planning
Program Grants, dated October 25, 1996.
FTA is in the process of updating this
circular to incorporate changes resulting
from language in SAFETEA–LU.
4. Period of Availability
The funds apportioned under the
Metropolitan Planning program will
remain available to be obligated by FTA
to recipients for four fiscal years—
which includes the year of
apportionment plus three additional
years. Any apportioned funds that
remain unobligated at the end of this
period will revert to FTA for
reapportionment under the program.
information specific to FTA planning
programs, including the Metropolitan
Planning program. Please refer to those
sections for additional information
relevant to this program.
B. Statewide Planning and Research
Program (49 U.S.C. 5304)
This program provides financial
assistance to States for Statewide
planning and other technical assistance
activities (including supplementing the
technical assistance program provided
through the Metropolitan Planning
program), planning support for
nonurbanized areas, research,
development and demonstration
projects, fellowships for training in the
public transportation field, university
research, and human resource
development.
1. Authorized Amounts
As specified in law, 17.28 percent of
the amounts authorized for section 5305
are allocated to the Statewide Planning
and Research program. The table below
shows the amount of funding authorized
under section 5305 to be allocated to the
Statewide Planning and Research
program.
2. Basis for Apportionment Formula
Funds are apportioned to States by a
statutory formula that is based on
information received from the latest
decennial census, and the State’s UZA
population as compared to the UZA
population of all States. However, a
State must receive at least 0.5 percent of
the amount apportioned under this
program.
deems appropriate. Program guidance
for the Statewide Planning and Research
program is found in FTA Circular
C8200.1, Program Guidance and
Application Instructions for State
Planning and Research Program Grants,
dated December 27, 2001. FTA is in the
process of updating this circular to
incorporate changes resulting from
language in SAFETEA–LU.
C. Urbanized Area Formula Program (49
U.S.C. 5307)
3. Requirements
4. Period of Availability
Funds are provided to States for
statewide planning and research
programs. These funds may be used for
a variety of purposes such as planning,
technical studies and assistance,
demonstrations, management training,
and cooperative research. In addition, a
State may authorize a portion of these
funds to be used to supplement
Metropolitan Planning funds allocated
by the State to its UZAs, as the State
The funds apportioned under the
Statewide Planning and Research
program will remain available to be
obligated by FTA to recipients for four
fiscal years’which include the year of
apportionment plus three additional
fiscal years. Any apportioned funds that
remain unobligated at the end of this
period will revert to FTA for
reapportionment under the program.
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Section 5307 authorizes Federal
capital and operating assistance for
transit in UZAs. A UZA is an area with
a population of 50,000 or more that has
been defined and designated as such in
the most recent decennial census by the
U.S. Census Bureau. The Urbanized
Area Formula Program also supports
planning, in addition to that funded
under the Metropolitan Planning
program described above. Funding is
apportioned directly to each UZA with
a population of 200,000 or more, and to
the State Governors for UZAs with
populations between 50,000 and
200,000. Generally, operating assistance
is not an eligible expense for UZAs with
populations of 200,000 or more.
However, there are several exceptions to
this restriction. The exceptions are
described in section 2(e) below.
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EN30no05.003
SAFETA–LU authorizes the following
amounts to carryout section 5305
Planning programs for fiscal years 2006–
2009:
EN30no05.002
5. Other Program Information
Sections VII and VIII F of this
document provide guidance and
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Notices
1. Authorized Amounts
SAFETEA–LU authorizes the
following amounts under section 5307
71957
to provide financial assistance to UZAs
for fiscal years 2006–2009:
SAFETEA–LU directs that there be a
one percent takedown from the funds
made available under section 5307. This
takedown amount will be for
apportionment under the new Small
Transit Intensive Cities (STIC) formula.
Under the formula for STIC, funds are
apportioned to UZAs with a population
less than 200,000 that meet or exceed
the average level of service for all UZAs
with populations between 200,000 and
1,000,000.
In addition to the funds made
available to UZAs under section 5307,
approximately 84 percent of the funds
authorized for the new section 5340
Growing States and High Density States
formula factors will be apportioned to
UZAs. The portion of authorized section
5340 funds allocable to UZAs, based on
the section 5340 formulas, is shown in
the following table.
Language in the SAFETEA–LU
conference report indicates that FTA is
to show a single apportionment amount
for 5307, STIC and 5340. Accordingly,
the apportionment amount for a UZA
that will be displayed in the Urbanized
Area Formula apportionment table to be
published in the FTA FY 2006
apportionments and allocations Notice,
after FY 2006 funding is appropriated,
will include regular 5307 funds (that
amount remaining after the one percent
takedown for STIC), STIC funds, and
Growing States and High Density States
funding for the area. Although a single
UZA amount will be shown to comply
with conference report language (as
noted above), separate formula
calculations will be used to generate the
respective apportionment amounts for
the 5307, STIC and 5340.
(a) Urbanized Area Formula
Apportionments to Governors
For small UZAs, the funds are
apportioned to the Governor of each
State for distribution. A single total
Governor apportionment amount for the
Urbanized Area Formula, STIC, and
Growing States and High Density States
will be shown in the Urbanized Area
Formula Apportionment table to be
published in the FTA FY 2006
apportionments and allocations Notice,
after FY 2006 funding is appropriated.
The table will also show the
apportionment amount attributable to
each small UZA within the State. The
Governor may determine the
suballocation of funds among the small
UZAs except that funds attributed to a
small UZA that is located within the
planning boundaries of a Transportation
Management Area (TMA) must be
obligated to that small UZA, as
discussed in subsection (g) below.
traveled per vehicle revenue mile,
passenger miles traveled per vehicle
revenue hour, vehicle revenue miles per
capita, vehicle revenue hours per capita,
passenger miles traveled per capita, and
passengers per capita. The data for these
categories comes from the most current
National Transit Database (NTD)
reports. This data is used to determine
a UZA’s eligibility under the STIC
formula, and is also used in the STIC
apportionment calculations. Because
this performance data change with each
year’s NTD reports the eligible STIC
UZAs may vary each year. The
performance categories for providing
bonus grants to STIC were established
in the September 2000 FTA report to
Congress called ‘‘The Urbanized Area
Formula Program and the Needs of
Small Transit Intensive Cities.’’
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(b) STIC Apportionments
SAFETEA–LU establishes a one
percent set-aside program from section
5307 that provides funding to UZAs
under 200,000 in population that
operate at a level of service equal to or
above the industry average level of
service for all UZAs with a population
of at least 200,000 but not more than
999,999, in one or more of six
performance categories: Passenger miles
SAFETEA–LU requires that one
percent of section 5307 funds
apportioned to UZAs with populations
of 200,000 or more be spent on eligible
transit enhancement activities or
projects. This requirement is now
treated as a certification, rather than as
a set-aside as was the case under TEA–
21. Grantees in UZAs with populations
of 200,000 or more will be certifying
they are spending not less than one
percent of section 5307 funds for transit
enhancements and will be required to
EN30no05.005
Program guidance for the Urbanized
Area Formula Program is presently
found in FTA Circular C9030.1C,
Urbanized Area Formula Program: Grant
Application Instructions, dated October
1, 1998, and supplemented by
additional information or changes
provided in this document. FTA is in
the process of updating this circular to
incorporate changes resulting from
language in SAFETEA–LU. Several
important program requirements are
highlighted below.
(c) Transit Enhancements
EN30no05.004
2. Requirements
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submit an annual report on how they
spent the money. The report must be
submitted with the Federal fiscal year’s
final quarterly progress report in TEAMWeb. The report should include the
following elements: (a) Grantee name,
(b) UZA name and number, (c) FTA
project number, (d) transit enhancement
category, (e) brief description of
enhancement and progress towards
project implementation, (f) activity line
item code from the approved budget,
and (g) amount awarded by FTA for the
enhancement. The list of transit
enhancement categories and activity
line item (ALI) codes may be found in
FTA Circular 9030.1C, Urbanized Area
Formula Program: Grant Application
Instructions, dated October 1, 1998, and
in the table of Scope and ALI codes on
TEAM-Web, which can be accessed at
https://FTATEAMWeb.fta.dot.gov.
The term ‘‘transit enhancement’’
includes projects or project elements
that are designed to enhance mass
transportation service or use and are
physically or functionally related to
transit facilities. Eligible enhancements
include the following: (1) Historic
preservation, rehabilitation, and
operation of historic mass transportation
buildings, structures, and facilities
(including historic bus and railroad
facilities); (2) bus shelters; (3)
landscaping and other scenic
beautification, including tables,
benches, trash receptacles, and street
lights; (4) public art; (5) pedestrian
access and walkways; (6) bicycle access,
including bicycle storage facilities and
installing equipment for transporting
bicycles on mass transportation
vehicles; (7) transit connections to parks
within the recipient’s transit service
area; (8) signage; and (9) enhanced
access for persons with disabilities to
mass transportation.
It is the responsibility of the MPO to
determine how the one percent for
transit enhancements will be allotted to
transit projects. The one percent
minimum requirement does not
preclude more than one percent being
expended in a UZA for transit
enhancements. However, items that are
only eligible as enhancements—in
particular, operating costs for historic
facilities—may be assisted only within
the one-percent funding level.
(d) Transit Security Projects
Each recipient of Urbanized Area
Formula funds must certify that of the
amount received each fiscal year, it will
expend at least one percent on ‘‘public
transportation security projects’’ or must
certify that it has decided the
expenditure is not necessary. For
applicants not eligible to receive section
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5307 funds for operating assistance,
only capital security projects may be
funded with the one percent.
SAFETEA–LU, however, expanded the
definition of eligible ‘‘capital’’ projects
to include specific crime prevention and
security activities, including: (1)
Projects to refine and develop security
and emergency response plans; (2)
projects aimed at detecting chemical
and biological agents in public
transportation; (3) the conduct of
emergency response drills with public
transportation agencies and local firstresponse agencies; and (4) security
training for public transportation
employees but excluding all expenses
related to operations, other than such
expenses incurred in conducting
emergency drills and training. New ALI
codes have been established for these
four new capital activities. The one
percent may also include security
expenditures included within other
capital activities, and, where the
recipient is eligible, operating
assistance. The relevant ALI codes
would be used for those activities.
Given the importance of transit
security, FTA is often called upon to
report to Congress and others on how
grantees are expending Federal funds
for security enhancements. To facilitate
tracking of grantees’ security
expenditures, which are not always
evident when included within larger
capital or operating activity line items
in the grant budget, we have established
a new non-additive (‘‘non-add’’) scope
code for security expenditures—Scope
991. The non-add scope is to be used to
aggregate activities included in other
scopes, and it does not increase the
budget total. Section 5307 grantees
should include this non-add scope in
the project budget for each new section
5307 grant application or amendment.
Under this non-add scope, the applicant
should repeat the full amount of any of
the line items in the budget that are
exclusively for security and include the
portion of any other line item in the
project budget that is attributable to
security, using under the non-add scope
the same line item used in the project
budget. The grantee can modify the ALI
description or use the extended text
feature, if necessary, to describe the
security expenditures.
If the grantee has certified that it is
not necessary to expend one percent for
security, the section 5307 grant
application must include information to
support that certification.
To summarize, a grant application
requesting 5307 funds cannot be
considered complete until the applicant
has indicated whether it will or will not
expend one percent of the 5307 funds
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being requested for security purposes. If
the applicant has determined
expenditure for security purposes is not
necessary, an explanation must be
provided. FTA is implementing these
new grant application procedures in
response to requests for information
from the Inspector General.
(e) FY 2006 Operating Assistance
Several SAFETEA-LU provisions
allow FY 2006 Urbanized Area Formula
funds to be used for operating assistance
in a UZA with a population of 200,000
or more. They include: (1) Continuation
of the operating assistance flexibility
provisions of TEA–21 that allows transit
systems in UZAs that crossed over the
200,000 population threshold, as a
result of the 2000 Census, to use 5307
funds for operating assistance; (2) a
provision applicable to portions of the
UZAs between 200,000 and 225,000 in
population that meet certain criteria; (3)
a provision for certain local
governmental authorities that lie outside
the service area of the principal public
transportation agency that serves the
Houston, TX UZA; and (4) language that
stipulates that section 5307 funds made
available to the Anchorage UZA under
fixed guideway tiers of the section 5307
apportionment formula shall be made
available to the Alaska Railroad for any
costs related to passenger operations. In
addition, language in section 3027(c)(3)
of TEA–21, as amended, is still
applicable and allows the use of funds
for operating assistance by certain
recipients of section 5307 funds, in a
UZA at least 200,000 in population, that
provide service exclusively for elderly
persons and persons with disabilities
and operate 20 or fewer vehicles.
The requirements for each of the
above provisions are described below.
(1) Section 5307(b)(2) provides
exception to the use of operating
assistance in UZAs that grew in
population from under 200,000 to over
200,000, as a result of the 2000 Census.
This exception allows for the use of
funds for operating assistance in eligible
UZAs at 100% of the grandfathered
amount for FY 2005 funds, but this
amount ‘‘phases down and out’’ to 50
percent in FY 2006, 25 percent in FY
2007, and zero percent in FY 2008. FTA
has identified and listed all eligible
UZAs in previous years apportionment
notices (FY 2003–FY 2005), along with
the maximum amount of the area’s 5307
fund that could be used for operating. A
similar list will be included in the FY
2006 apportionment Notice.
(2) Section 5307(b)(1)(E) provides for
grants for the operating costs of
equipment and facilities for use in
public transportation in the Evansville,
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SAFETEA–LU expands the categories
of funds that can be used as local match
for section 5307 projects. The newly
eligible sources are advertising and
concessions revenue, social service
contract revenue, and revenue bonds
proceeds.
Pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 5307(e) the
Federal share of a grant under Section
5307 is 80 percent of net project cost for
a capital project and 50 percent of net
project cost for operating assistance. The
remainder of the net project cost (i.e., 20
percent and 50 percent, respectively)
shall be provided from the following
sources:
1. In cash from non-Government
sources other than revenues from
The MPO must notify the Associate
Administrator for Program Management,
Federal Transit Administration, 400
Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC
20590, in writing, no later than July 1
of each year, to identify any small UZA
within the planning boundaries of a
TMA.
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(f) Expansion of Local Match Eligibility
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providing public transportation
services;
2. From revenues derived from the
sale of advertising and concessions;
3. From an undistributed cash
surplus, a replacement or depreciation
cash fund or reserve, or new capital;
4. From amounts received under a
service agreement with a State or local
social service agency or private social
service organization; and
5. Proceeds from the issuance of
revenue bonds. In addition, funds from
section 403(a)(5)(C)(vii) of the Social
Security Act (42 U.S.C. 603(a)(5)(C)(vii))
can be used to match Urbanized Area
Formula funds.
(g) Designated Transportation
Management Areas (TMA)
Guidance for setting the boundaries of
TMAs is in the joint transportation
planning regulations codified at 23 CFR
part 450 and 49 CFR part 613. In some
cases, the TMA planning boundaries
established by the MPO for the
designated TMA includes one or more
small UZAs. In addition, one small UZA
(Santa Barbara, CA) has been designated
as a TMA. In either of these situations,
the Governor cannot allocate
‘‘Governor’s Apportionment’’ funds
attributed to the small UZAs to other
areas; that is, the Governor only has
discretion to allocate Governor’s
Apportionment funds attributable to
areas that are outside of designated
TMA planning boundaries.
The list of small UZAs included
within the planning boundaries of
designated TMAs is provided in the
table below.
(h) Urbanized Area Formula Funds
Used for Highway Purposes
Funds apportioned to a TMA are
eligible for transfer to FHWA for
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population of 200,000 or more, by
allowing transit providers/grantees that
provide service exclusively to elderly
persons and persons with disabilities
and that operate 20 or fewer vehicles to
use section 5307 funds apportioned to
the UZA for operating assistance. The
total amount of funding made available
for this purpose under section
3027(c)(3) of TEA–21, as amended, is
$1.4 million. Transit providers/grantees
eligible under this provision have
already been identified.
Unless one of the exceptions noted
above applies, the use of FY 2006
Urbanized Area Formula funds for
operating assistance is available only to
small UZAs. For small UZAs, there is no
limitation on the amount of the
Governor’s apportionment that may be
used for operating assistance, and the
Federal/local share ratio is 50/50.
IN-KY urbanized area, for a portion or
portions of the UZA if: The portion of
the UZA includes only one State; the
population of the portion is less than
30,000; and the grants will be not used
to provide public transportation outside
of the portion of the UZA.
(3) Section 5307(b)(1)(F) provides
operating costs of equipment and
facilities for use in public transportation
for local governmental authorities in
areas which adopted transit operating
and financing plans that became a part
of the Houston, Texas UZA as a result
of the 2000 decennial census of
population, but lie outside the service
area of the principal public
transportation agency that serves the
Houston UZA.
(4) Section 5336(a)(2) prescribes the
formula to be used to apportion section
5307 funds to UZAs with population of
200,000 or more. SAFETEA–LU
amended 5336(a)(2) to add language that
stated, ‘‘* * * except that the amount
apportioned to the Anchorage urbanized
area under subsection (b) shall be
available to the Alaska Railroad for any
costs related to its passenger
operations.’’ This language has the effect
of directing that funds apportioned to
the Anchorage urbanized area, under
the fixed guideway tiers of the section
5307 apportionment formula, be made
available to the Alaska Railroad, and
that these funds may be used for any
capital or operating costs related to its
passenger operations.
(5) Section 3027(c)(3) of TEA–21, as
previously amended, provides an
exception to the restriction on the use
of operating assistance in a UZA with a
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highway projects. However, before
funds can be transferred, the following
conditions must be met: (1) Such use
must be approved by the MPO in
writing, after appropriate notice and
opportunity for comment and appeal are
provided to affected transit providers;
(2) in the determination of the Secretary,
such funds are not needed for
investments required by the Americans
with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA); and
(3) the MPO determines that local
transit needs are being addressed.
The MPO should notify the
appropriate FTA Regional
Administrator of its intent to use FTA
funds for highway purposes, as
prescribed in section VIII D below.
Urbanized Area Formula funds that are
designated by the MPO for highway
projects will be transferred to and
administered by FHWA.
3. Basis for Formula Apportionment
Urbanized Area Formula Program
funds are apportioned based on
legislative formulas. Different formulas
are used for UZAs with populations of
200,000 or more and UZAs with
populations of less than 200,000. For
UZAs of 50,000 to 199,999 in
population, the formula is based simply
on population and population density.
For UZAs with populations of 200,000
2. Basis for Allocation of Funds
Under SAFETEA–LU, funding for the
Clean Fuels program is now
appropriated on a discretionary basis
rather than by formula. [Note: Congress
never appropriated funds for the
formula program authorized by TEA–
21.]
SAFETEA–LU includes 16 projects to
be funded through the Clean Fuels
program in section 3044, Projects for
Bus and Bus-Related Facilities and
Clean Fuels Buses. Table 5 displays the
SAFETEA–LU authorized Clean Fuels
earmarked projects.
It is important to note that these
allocations are subject to be changed by
subsequent appropriations acts and
additional projects may be earmarked
during the appropriations process. Final
Clean Fuels program allocations for FY
2006 will be published after enactment
of the FY 2006 Appropriations Act.
3. Requirements
Clean Fuels program funds may be
made available to any grantee in a UZA
that is designated as maintenance or
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and more, the formula is based on a
combination of bus revenue vehicle
miles, bus passenger miles, fixed
guideway revenue vehicle miles, and
fixed guideway route miles, as well as
population and population density.
To comply with language in the
SAFETEA–LU conference report, we
will combine a UZA’s section 5307,
STIC, and section 5340 apportionment
amounts and publish a single amount.
For technical assistance purposes we
will identify the UZAs that received
STIC funds each year and will make
available breakouts of the funding
allocated to each UZA under 5307, STIC
and 5340 formulas, upon request to the
regional office.
providers’ 2004 NTD Report Year will
be used to calculate a UZA’s FY 2006
Urbanized Area Formula apportionment
when FY 2006 funds are appropriated.
We will calculate dollar unit values
for the formula factors used in the
Urbanized Area Formula program
apportionment. These values represent
the amount of money each unit of a
factor is worth in the FY 2006
apportionment. The unit values change
each year as a result of changes in the
data used to calculate a particular year’s
apportionments. The FTA
apportionment amount for a UZA may
be replicated by multiplying the dollar
unit value by the appropriate formula
factor.
4. Period of Availability
Urbanized Area Formula funds will
remain available to be obligated by FTA
to recipients for four fiscal years—
which include the year of
apportionment plus three additional
years. Any apportioned funds that
remain unobligated after this period will
revert to FTA for reapportionment.
D. Clean Fuels Grant Program (49 U.S.C.
5308)
5. Other Program Information
Population and population density
statistics from the 2000 Census and
(when applicable) validated mileage and
transit service data from transit
nonattainment area for ozone or carbon
monoxide as defined in the Clean Air
Act. Eligible recipients include section
5307 designated recipients as well as
recipients in small UZAs. In the case of
a small UZA, the State in which the area
is located will act as the recipient.
Eligible projects include the purchase
or lease of clean fuel buses (including
buses that employ a lightweight
composite primary structure), the
construction or lease of clean fuel buses
or electrical recharging facilities and
related equipment for such buses, and
construction or improvement of public
transportation facilities to accommodate
clean fuel buses.
If a recipient wishes to use funds
designated under the program in
SAFETEA–LU for eligible project
activities outside the scope of a project
designation, the recipient must submit
its request for reprogramming to the
House and Senate Authorizing
Committees for resolution. Changes to
designations that are in statute, as
opposed to report language, can only be
made in law. If in the future, Congress
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SAFETEA–LU establishes the Clean
Fuels Grant Program—formerly the
Clean Fuels Formula Program under
TEA–21—to support the use of
alternative fuels in air quality
maintenance or nonattainment areas for
ozone or carbon monoxide.
1. Total Allocations
SAFETA–LU authorizes the following
amounts for the Clean Fuels Grant
Program for fiscal years 2006–2009.
designates projects in report language,
FTA will not reprogram the projects
without direction from the
Appropriations Committees.
Unless otherwise specified in law,
grants made under the Clean Fuels
program must meet all other eligibility
requirements as outlined in section
5308.
4. Period of Availability
Funds designated for specific Clean
Fuels Program projects will remain
available for obligation for three fiscal
years, which includes the year of
appropriation plus two additional fiscal
years. Clean Fuels funds not obligated
in a FTA grant for their original purpose
at the end of the period of availability
will generally be made available for
other projects.
E. Capital Investments Program (49
U.S.C. 5309)—Fixed Guideway
Modernization
This program provides capital
assistance for the modernization of
existing fixed guideway systems. Funds
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71961
are allocated by a statutory formula to
UZAs with fixed guideway systems that
have been in operation for at least seven
years. A ‘‘fixed guideway’’ refers to any
transit service that uses exclusive or
controlled rights-of-way or rails, entirely
or in part. The term includes heavy rail,
commuter rail, light rail, monorail,
trolleybus, aerial tramway, inclined
plane, cable car, automated guideway
transit, ferryboats, that portion of motor
bus service operated on exclusive or
controlled rights-of-way, and highoccupancy-vehicle (HOV) lanes.
SAFETEA–LU authorizes the
following amounts for the Fixed
Guideway Modernization for fiscal years
2006–2009:
2. Basis for Formula Apportionment
The formula for allocating the Fixed
Guideway Modernization funds
contains seven tiers. The apportionment
of funding under the first four tiers is
based on amounts specified in law and
NTD data used to apportion funds in FY
1997. Funding under the last three tiers
is apportioned based on the latest
available data on route miles and
revenue vehicle miles on segments at
least seven years old, as reported to the
NTD. Because the Fixed Guideway
Modernization apportionment formula
did not change from TEA–21 to
SAFETEA–LU, you may refer to Table 8
of the FTA Fiscal Year 2005
Apportionments, Allocations and
Program Information Notice for
additional information and details on
the formula.
funds. A threshold level of more than
one mile of fixed guideway is required
in order to receive Fixed Guideway
Modernization funds. Therefore, UZAs
reporting one mile or less of fixed
guideway mileage under the NTD are
not included. Program guidance for
Fixed Guideway Modernization is
presently found in FTA Circular
C9300.1A, Capital Program: Grant
Application Instructions, dated October
1, 1998. FTA is in the process of
updating this circular to incorporate
changes resulting from language in
SAFETEA–LU.
program in SAFETEA–LU from those
specified in TEA–21. However, sections
5337(f) (g) of SAFETEA–LU provides for
the inclusion of Morgantown, WV
(population 55,997) as an eligible UZA
for purposes of apportioning fixed
guideway modernization funds. Also,
language in section 5336(b) has the
impact of directing FTA to use 60
percent of the directional route miles
attributable to the Alaska Railroad
passenger operations system to calculate
apportionments for the Anchorage, AK
UZA under the 5307 and Fixed
Guideway Modernization formulas.
Funding is appropriated on a
discretionary basis. SAFETEA–LU
includes 646 earmarked projects to be
funded through the Bus Program in
section 3044, Projects for Bus and BusRelated Facilities and Clean Fuels
Buses. Table 4 displays the SAFETEA–
LU authorized earmarked projects.
It is important to note that these
allocations are subject to be changed by
subsequent appropriations acts and
additional projects may be earmarked
during the appropriations process. Final
Bus and Bus-Related Facilities program
allocations for FY 2006 will be
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5. Other Program Information
Generally, there were no changes to
the formula or eligibility criteria for the
published after enactment of the FY
2006 Appropriations Act.
3. Requirements
Eligible capital projects include the
acquisition of buses for fleet and service
expansion, bus maintenance and
administrative facilities, transfer
facilities, bus malls, transportation
centers, intermodal terminals, park-andride stations, acquisition of replacement
vehicles, bus rebuilds, bus preventive
maintenance, passenger amenities such
as passenger shelters and bus stop signs,
accessory and miscellaneous equipment
such as mobile radio units, supervisory
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F. Capital Investments (49 U.S.C.
5309)—Bus and Bus-Related Facilities
The Bus and Bus-Related Facilities
program provides capital assistance for
new and replacement buses and related
equipment and facilities.
1. Authorized Amounts
SAFETEA–LU authorizes the
following amounts for the Bus and BusRelated Facilities program for fiscal
years 2006–2009.
vehicles, fare boxes, computers, and
shop and garage equipment.
A general provision in the
appropriations acts of FY 2004 (section
547) and FY 2005 (section 125)
contained language making the
earmarked projects eligible under the
program ‘‘notwithstanding any other
provision of law.’’ SAFETEA–LU did
not include a similar ‘‘Notwithstanding’’
provision, but the wording of certain
bus program earmarks included
expanded eligibility. The FY 2006
Appropriations Act might modify some
of the authorized earmarks. Unless
stated in law to the contrary, projects
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2. Basis for Allocation of Funds
Funds apportioned under the Fixed
Guideway Modernization Program will
remain available to be obligated by FTA
to recipients for four fiscal years—
which include the year of
apportionment plus three additional
years. Any apportioned funds that
remain unobligated at the end of this
period will revert to FTA for
reapportionment under the program.
EN30NO05.009
3. Requirements
Fixed Guideway Modernization funds
must be used for capital projects to
maintain, modernize, or improve fixed
guideway systems. Eligible UZAs (those
with a population of 200,000 or more)
with fixed guideway systems that are at
least seven years old are entitled to
receive Fixed Guideway Modernization
4. Period of Availability
1. Authorized Amounts
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4. Period of Availability
Funds designated for specific Bus
Program projects remain available for
obligation for three fiscal years—which
includes the fiscal year in which the
amount is made available or
appropriated plus two additional years.
Bus and Bus-Related Facilities funds not
obligated in a FTA grant for their
original purpose by the end of this
period will generally be made available
for other projects.
2. Requirements
Because New Starts projects are
earmarked in law rather than report
language, reprogramming for a purpose
other than that specified must also
occur in law. New Starts projects are
subject to a complex set of approvals
related to planning and project
development set forth in 49 CFR part
611. Program guidance for New Starts is
found in FTA Circular C9300.1A,
Capital Program: Grant Application
Instructions, dated October 1, 1998; and
C5200.1A, Full Funding Grant
Agreement Guidance, dated December
5, 2002. FTA is in the process of
updating these circulars to incorporate
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Prior year unobligated balances for
Bus and Bus-Related Facilities
allocations in the amount of
$723,995,747 remain available for
obligation in FY 2006. The amounts that
remain unobligated as of September 30,
2005, can be found in Table 6. Projects
appropriated prior to FY 2004 and
extended in the FY 2006 Appropriations
Act or accompanying Conference Report
will be included in the FY 2006
Apportionments and Allocations Notice.
5. Other Program Information
The Bus Program remains largely
unchanged with the passage of
SAFETEA–LU; however, one significant
change is the inclusion of private
companies engaged in public
transportation and private non-profit
organizations as eligible subrecipients of
FTA grants. Prior to SAFETEA–LU,
private non-profit entities could only
receive FTA funds if they were selected
by a public authority through a
competitive process, and private
operators were not eligible
subrecipients. Private operators may
now receive FTA funds as a passthrough without competition if they are
included in a program of projects
submitted by the designated public
authority acting as the direct recipient
of a grant.
G. Capital Investment Program (49
U.S.C. 5309)—New Starts
SAFETEA–LU made several changes
in the way funding is allocated for New
Starts projects. Beginning in FY 2007,
$200,000,000 each year is designated for
‘‘Small Starts’’ (section 5309(e)) projects
with a New Starts share of less than
$75,000,000 and a net project cost of
changes resulting from language in
SAFETEA–LU.
3. Period of Availability
New Starts funds remain available for
three fiscal years—which includes the
fiscal year the funds are made available
or appropriated plus two additional
years. Funds may be extended by
Congress or made available for other
projects after the period of availability
has expired.
4. Other Program Information and
Highlights
Prior year unobligated allocations for
New Starts in the amount of
$557,727,154 remain available for
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less than $250,000,000. Major Capital
Investment grants of $75,000,000 or
more (section 5309 (d)) will receive $7.4
billion over the five years. In addition,
SAFETEA–LU authorizes 38 projects for
FD and 264 projects for PE. The total
amount of FY 2006–2009 funding for 31
existing FFGA projects is
$2,136,764,604. Fifty-two additional
New Starts projects are authorized for a
total of $3,237,700,000 during
SAFETEA–LU.
Congress allocated $10,500,000 to
Alaska and Hawaii for ferryboats each
year of TEA–21 and for FY 2005.
SAFETEA–LU allocates $15,000,000 to
Alaska and Hawaii for ferryboats for FY
2006–FY 2009. The allocation is split
equally between Alaska and Hawaii.
SAFETEA–LU also makes $5,000,000
available for each year, FY 2006–FY
2009, to the Denali Commission in
Anchorage, Alaska under the terms of
section 307(e) of the Denali Commission
Act of 1998 (42 U.S.C. 3121) for docks,
waterfront development projects and
related transportation infrastructure.
The Commission was established to (1)
deliver the services of the Federal
Government cost effectively, (2) provide
job training and other economic
development services in rural
communities, and (3) promote rural
development, provide power generation
and transmission facilities, modern
communication systems, water and
sewer systems and other infrastructure
needs.
1. Authorized Amounts
SAFETEA–LU authorizes the
following amounts for the New Starts
program for fiscal years 2006–2009.
obligation in FY 2006. This amount
includes $112,052,679 in FY 2004 and
$445,674,475 in FY 2005 unobligated
allocations. These unobligated amounts
are displayed in Table 7.
H. Special Needs of Elderly Individuals
and Individuals with Disabilities
Program (49 U.S.C. 5310)
This program provides formula
funding to States for capital projects to
assist in meeting the transportation
needs of the elderly and persons with
disabilities. The State (or Statedesignated agency) administers the
section 5310 program. The State’s
responsibilities include: notifying
eligible local entities of funding
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EN30NO05.011
earmarked prior to FY 2004 must
conform to the eligibility requirements
of the Bus and Bus-Related Facilities
program.
If a recipient wishes to apply for use
of funds designated under the Bus and
Bus-Related Facilities program in
SAFETEA–LU for project activities
outside the scope of the project
designation, the recipient must submit
its request for reprogramming to the
House and Senate Authorizing
Committees for resolution. Changes to
earmarks that are in statute, as opposed
to report language, can only be made in
law. FTA will not reprogram projects
earmarked by Congress in report
language without direction from the
Appropriations Committees.
Grants made under the Bus and BusRelated Facilities program must meet all
other eligibility requirements as
outlined in section 5309 unless
otherwise specified in law.
Program guidance for Bus and BusRelated Facilities is found in FTA
Circular C9300.1A, Capital Program:
Grant Application Instructions. FTA is
in the process of updating this circular
to incorporate changes resulting from
language in SAFETEA–LU.
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Notices
FTA invites comment regarding
technical assistance or training that
would be helpful to grantees in
implementing the Special Needs of
Elderly Individuals and Individuals
with Disabilities program. Additionally,
FTA seeks comment on strategies and
measures that could be employed to
evaluate the successes of this program.
2. Basis for Formula Apportionment
Funds are allocated according to a
formula based on the number of elderly
individuals and individuals with
disabilities in each State using Census
2000 data.
of section 5309 to the extent the
Secretary determined appropriate.
SAFETEA–LU changed the applicable
requirements to 5307, to the extent the
Secretary determines appropriate. FTA
is not applying any new requirements to
the section 5310 program as a result of
this technical change.
3. Requirements and Eligible Expenses
Funds are available to support the
capital costs of transportation services
for older adults and people with
disabilities. Uniquely under this
program, eligible capital costs include
the acquisition of service. Capital
assistance is provided on an 80 percent
Federal, 20 percent local matching basis
except that SAFETEA–LU allows states
eligible for the sliding scale match
under FHWA programs to use that
match ratio for section 5310 capital
projects. Funds provided under other
Federal programs (other than those of
the Department of Transportation, with
the exception of the Federal Lands
Highway Program established by section
204 of Title 23 U.S.C.) may be used as
match for capital funds provided under
section 5310. Revenue from service
contracts may also be used as local
match.
Those eligible to receive section 5310
funding include private nonprofit
agencies, public bodies approved by the
state to coordinate services for elderly
persons and persons with disabilities, or
public bodies which certify to the
Governor that no nonprofit corporations
or associations are readily available in
an area to provide the service.
States may use up to ten percent of
their annual apportionment to
administer, plan, and provide technical
assistance for a funded project.
Beginning in FY 2006, no local share is
required for these program
administrative funds. FTA previously
administratively allowed States to use
ten percent of the capital funds for
administration at the capital matching
share, but SAFETEA–LU specifically
allows ten percent for administration.
The section 5310 program was
previously subject to the requirements
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4. Planning and Consultation
Beginning in FY 2007, the State
recipient must certify that: the projects
selected were derived from a locally
developed, coordinated public transithuman services transportation plan;
and, the plan was developed through a
process that included representatives of
public, private, and nonprofit
transportation and human services
providers and participation by the
public. Projects in the locally
developed, coordinated public transithuman services transportation plan
must be integrated into and consistent
with the metropolitan and state
planning processes. Finally, each grant
recipient must certify that allocations of
the grant to subrecipients are distributed
on a fair and equitable basis.
The planning requirement is also a
requirement in two additional programs.
The Job Access Reverse Commute
program (in FY 2006) and the New
Freedom program (in FY 2007) will also
be required to have a coordinated
human service plan. It is anticipated
that most areas will develop one
consolidated plan for all the programs,
which may include separate elements
and other human service transportation
programs. FTA seeks comment on the
specific aspects of the collaborative
planning process (for example,
participants, elements, measures, etc.).
FTA also seeks comment on the
relationship between the public transithuman services plans and other
planning processes.
Program guidance is found in FTA C
9070.1E, dated October 1, 1998. FTA is
in the process of updating this circular
to incorporate changes resulting from
language in SAFETEA–LU.
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1. Authorized Amounts
SAFETEA–LU authorizes the
following amounts for the Special Needs
of Elderly Individuals and Individuals
with Disabilities program for fiscal years
2006–2009.
5. Period of Availability
There is no statutory period of
availability for section 5310. Given the
relatively simple nature of the state
administered program with many
subrecipients receiving small capital
grants, FTA previously allowed only
one year of availability. Given the new
common planning requirement with
JARC and New Freedom, beginning with
FY 2006 funding, FTA is extending the
period of availability for section 5310 to
three years, which includes the year
funds are apportioned plus two
additional years, consistent with the
other two programs.
6. Other Program Information
Under Title III of SAFETEA–LU
section 3012(b), the following states are
named as eligible to use up to 33
percent of their section 5310 funds
starting in FY 2006 for operating
expenses: Wisconsin, Alaska,
Minnesota, and Oregon. FTA is
authorized to select an additional three
states to participate in the pilot. FTA
issued a separate Federal Register
Notice on November 14, 2005,
specifying the guidelines for States
participation in the pilot and soliciting
proposals from states to participate. If
possible, given the timing of the FY
2006 appropriations act, we anticipate
announcing the participants with the FY
2006 apportionments.
7. Transfer of 5310 Funds to Other FTA
Programs
Section 5310 funds may be transferred
to the section 5311 or the section 5307
program, but only to implement projects
competitively selected under the section
5310 program. The purpose of the
transfer provision under SAFETEA–LU
is for administrative streamlining of
grant making, not to supplement the
resources available under the Urbanized
Area Formula or Non-urbanized Area
Formula programs, as was the case
under TEA–21. A State that transfers
section 5310 funds to section 5307 must
certify that each project for which the
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availability; developing project selection
criteria; determining applicant
eligibility; selecting projects for funding;
and ensuring that all subrecipients
comply with Federal requirements.
Eligible nonprofit organizations or
public bodies must apply directly to the
designated State agency for assistance
under this program.
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funds are transferred has been
coordinated with private nonprofit
providers of services. FTA has
established a new scope code (641) to
track 5310 projects included within a
section 5307 or 5311 grant. Transfer to
section 5307 or 5311 is permitted but
not required. FTA will also award
stand-alone section 5310 grants with the
section code 16 in the project number.
I. Nonurbanized Area Formula Program
(49 U.S.C. 5311)
In addition to the funds made
available to States under section 5311,
approximately 16 percent of the funds
authorized for the new section 5340
Growing States and High Density States
formula factors will be apportioned to
States for use in nonurbanized areas.
The portion of the section 5340
authorized funds allocable to States for
nonurbanized areas is shown in the
following table.
The States receive funding for
nonurbanized areas only from the
Growing States portion of the 5340
formulas. Fifty percent of the funds
authorized for section 5340 are allotted
to Growing States and the other 50
percent goes to High Density. The High
Density formula allocates all of its funds
to urbanized areas.
Funding for the Tribal Transit
Program, oversight, and the Rural
Transportation Assistance Program
(RTAP) will be taken off the top before
amounts are apportioned to the States.
Takedowns for Tribal Transit and RTAP
based on authorized funding levels are
shown below.
2. Basis for Formula Apportionment
scale match under FHWA programs to
use that match ratio for section 5311
capital projects and 62.5 percent of the
sliding scale capital match ratio for
operating projects.
Each State must spend no less than 15
percent of its FY 2005 Nonurbanized
Area Formula apportionment for the
development and support of intercity
bus transportation, unless the State
certifies, after consultation with affected
intercity bus service providers, that the
intercity bus service needs of the State
are being adequately met. SAFETEA–LU
added this requirement for consultation
with the industry to strengthen the
certification requirement. FTA also
encourages consultation with other
stakeholders, such as communities
affected by loss of intercity service.
Program guidance for the
Nonurbanized Area Formula Program is
found in FTA C 9040.1E, Nonurbanized
Area Formula Program Guidance and
Grant Application Instructions, dated
October 1, 1998. FTA is in the process
of updating this circular to incorporate
changes resulting from language in
SAFETEA–LU.
The Nonurbanized Area Formula
Program provides capital, operating and
administrative assistance for areas with
a population under 50,000. The Federal
share for capital assistance is 80 percent
and for operating assistance is 50
percent, except that SAFETEA–LU
allows states eligible for the sliding
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SAFETA–LU authorizes the following
amounts for the Nonurbanized Areas
Formula program.
4. Period of Availability
Funds apportioned to States under the
Nonurbanized Area Formula Program
will remain available for three fiscal
years—which includes the fiscal year
the funds were apportioned plus two
additional years. Any funds that remain
unobligated at the end of this period
will revert to FTA for allocation among
the States under the Nonurbanized Area
Formula Program.
5. Other Program Information
SAFETEA–LU added a requirement to
provide rural transit data to the NTD.
Each recipient under the section 5311
program shall submit an annual report
to the Secretary, containing information
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3. Requirements
1. Authorized Amounts
EN30NO05.013
SAFETEA–LU changed the formula
for section 5311. Starting in FY 2006,
twenty percent of the funds available
will be apportioned to the states based
on land area in nonurbanized areas with
no state receiving more than 5 percent
of the amount apportioned. The
remaining eighty percent will be
apportioned based on nonurbanized
population, as before. The effect of this
change is to provide additional
resources to low density States.
This program provides formula
funding to States and Indian Tribes for
the purpose of supporting public
transportation in areas with a
population of less than 50,000. Funding
may be used for capital, operating, State
administration, and project
administration expenses. Each State
prepares an annual program of projects,
which must provide for fair and
equitable distribution of funds within
the States, including Indian
reservations, and must provide for
maximum feasible coordination with
transportation services assisted by other
Federal sources. SAFETEA–LU
identifies Indian Tribes as direct
recipients under section 5311.
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Notices
on capital investments, operations, and
service provided with funds received
under the section 5311 program.
SAFETEA–LU specifies that the report
should include information on total
annual revenue, sources of revenue,
total annual operating costs, total
annual capital costs, fleet size and type,
and related facilities, revenue vehicle
miles, and ridership. In consultation
with State Departments of
Transportation, FTA previously
developed a voluntary state-based rural
data module for the NTD. The existing
NTD Rural Data Reporting Module
manual and reporting instructions can
be reviewed on the NTD Web site,
https://www.ntdprogram.com. For each
5311 subrecipient, the State Department
of Transportation will complete a onepage form of basic data. The existing
module will serve as a basis for
reporting requirements for the new,
mandatory Rural Reporting Module of
the NTD. Pursuant to SAFETEA–LU,
mandatory reporting will begin with the
FY 2006 NTD Report Year. The first
reports will be due on October 28, 2006,
for those States with fiscal years ending
between January 1 and June 30, 2006; on
January 28, 2007, for those States with
fiscal years ending between July 1 and
September 30, 2006; and April 30, 2007,
for those States with fiscal years ending
between October 1 and December 31,
2006. To enter data and receive
additional instructions, State
Departments of Transportation can go to
the NTD Web site. FTA requests public
comment on whether the State-based
rural data module should serve as the
basis for the new mandatory reporting
requirements.
Of the takedown, FTA may use up to
15 percent for projects of a national
scope. The remaining 85 percent is
allocated to the States.
4. Period of Availability
Funds apportioned to States under
RTAP will remain available for three
fiscal years—which includes the fiscal
year the funds were apportioned plus
two additional years. Any funds that
remain unobligated after the end of this
period will revert to FTA for allocation
among the States under the RTAP.
2. Basis for Formula Apportionment
For FY 2006, FTA will use the current
administrative formula. Funds are
allocated to the States by an
administrative formula consisting of a
$65,000 floor for each State ($10,000 for
territories), with the balance allocated
based on nonurbanized population in
the 2000 Census. The floor was raised
from $50,000 to $65,000 in FY 1999.
Comments are invited on whether the
floor should again be raised and
whether the low density portion of the
section 5311 formula should be used.
3. Program Requirements
J. Rural Transportation Assistance
Program (49 U.S.C. 5311(b)(2))
This program provides funding to
assist in the design and implementation
of training and technical assistance
projects, research, and other support
services tailored to meet the needs of
transit operators in nonurbanized areas.
1. Authorized Amounts
SAFETEA–LU changes the source of
funding for RTAP. Previously funded
under the National Planning and
Research Program, starting in FY 2006,
RTAP is funded as a two percent
takedown from the amount authorized
and appropriated for section 5311. The
takedown amount based on funds
authorized for section 5311 for fiscal
years 2006–2009 is as follows:
transit program. FTA invites comments
on use of the National RTAP resource.
K. Public Transportation on Indian
Reservations Program (49 U.S.C.
5311(c)(1))
SAFETEA–LU creates a new Tribal
Transit Program as a takedown under
the section 5311 program. Indian Tribes
are defined as eligible direct recipients.
The funds are to be apportioned for
grants to Indian Tribes for any purpose
eligible under section 5311, which
includes capital and operating
assistance for rural public transit
services. Support for rural intercity bus
service, including planning and
marketing, is eligible. Planning for rural
transit is not eligible. FTA will develop
procedures for the Tribal Transit
program in consultation with tribal
leaders and other interested
stakeholders and will provide an
opportunity for the public to comment
on its new methodology.
1. Authorized Funding
The takedown amount authorized for
Tribal Transit for fiscal years 2006–2009
is as follows:
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Funds are allocated to the States to
undertake research, training, technical
assistance, and other support services to
meet the needs of transit operators in
nonurbanized areas. These funds are to
be used in conjunction with a State’s
administration of the Nonurbanized
Area Formula Program.
5. Other Program Information
The National RTAP project is
administered by the American Public
Works Association in consortium with
the Community Transportation
Association of America, under a
cooperative agreement re-competed at
five-year intervals. The projects are
guided by a project review board of
managers of rural transit systems and
State Department of Transportation
rural transit programs. National RTAP
resources have also supported the
biennial TRB National Conference on
Rural Public and Intercity Bus
Transportation. The percentage
takedown for RTAP, combined with
rising funding levels for section 5311,
make additional resources available for
national projects such as providing
technical assistance for the new tribal
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2. Basis for Formula Apportionment
SAFETEA–LU does not specify a basis
for formula apportionment. FTA will
develop procedures for allocating the
funds in consultation with the Tribes
and with opportunity for public
comment. An interim measure would be
to allocate FY 2006 funds based on
responses to a request for letters of
interest. FTA requests comments on the
feasibility of allocating FY 2006 funds
based on this approach. Because
planning is not an eligible activity
under the program, FTA is considering
limiting transit participation to Tribes
which already have transit options or
which have already conducted planning
and are prepared to implement new
transit service. We seek comments on
what criteria should be considered in
selecting Tribes to receive funding and
what factors should be used in
allocating available funds among
successful applicants.
3. Requirements
Grants may be made to Indian Tribes
for any purpose eligible under section
5311. Eligibility under section 5311
includes capital and operating
assistance for local public transportation
service in other than urbanized areas.
Planning is not an eligible activity
except under section 5311(e), which
allows States to use 15 percent of a
States’ apportionment for
administration, planning, and technical
assistance, and 5311(f), which allows
planning for intercity bus
transportation. Support for rural
intercity bus service is eligible under
section 5311.
SAFETEA–LU project authorizations
under the National Research Program
are listed in Table 8.
All research and research and
development projects are subject to a
2.6% reduction for the Small Business
Innovative Research Program (SBIR).
FTA will make the determination as to
whether or not the SBIR reduction will
be applied to a particular project—based
on our review of the proposed scope of
work for the project.
2. Basis for Allocation of Funds
Funds not designated by Congress for
specific projects and activities will be
programmed by FTA based on FTA’s
Strategic Research Plan using
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FTA may establish the terms and
conditions for the program. FTA seeks
comments about appropriate terms and
conditions for the program. We
especially invite comments from Tribes
that previously received FTA funding
about which requirements we should
consider waiving for the Tribal Transit
program.
4. Period of Availability
Funds will remain available for three
fiscal years, which includes the fiscal
year the funds were apportioned or
appropriated plus two additional years.
Any funds that remain unobligated after
this period will revert to FTA for
reallocation among the Tribes.
5. Other Program Information
The funds set aside for Indian Tribes
are not meant to replace or reduce funds
that Indian Tribes receive from states
through the section 5311 program but
are to be used to enhance public
transportation on Indian reservations.
Funds allocated to Tribes by the States
may be included in the State’s section
5311 application or awarded by FTA in
a grant directly to the tribe. We
encourage Tribes intending to apply to
FTA as direct recipients to contact the
appropriate FTA regional office at the
earliest opportunity.
Planning for Tribal Transit projects
may be funded under the following
programs: FTA and FHWA Statewide
Planning programs; the State’s
apportionment under section 5311; and
the Indian Reservation Roads Program
(IRR). Technical assistance for Tribes
may be available from the State DOT
competitive procedures to the maximum
extent possible.
3. Requirements
Application Instructions and Program
Management Guidelines are set forth in
FTA Circular 6100.1C. FTA is in the
process of updating this circular to
incorporate changes resulting from
language in SAFETEA–LU. Research
projects must support FTA’s Strategic
Research Goals and meet the Office of
Management and Budget’s Research and
Development Investment Criteria. All
research recipients are required to work
with FTA to develop approved
Statements of Work. A plan to evaluate
research results must be in place before
award of a research grant.
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using the State’s allocation of RTAP or
funds available for State administration
under section 5311, from the Tribal
Transportation Assistance Program
(TTAP) Centers supported by FHWA,
and from the Community
Transportation Association of America
under a program funded by the United
States Department of Agriculture
(USDA). The National RTAP will also be
developing new resources for Tribal
Transit.
L. National Research Program (49 U.S.C.
5314)
FTA’s National Research Programs
include the National Research and
Technology Program (NRTP), Project
ACTION, the National Technical
Assistance Center for Senior
Transportation, and the Medical
transportation grants program.
Through funding under these
programs, FTA seeks to deliver
solutions that improve public
transportation. FTA’s Strategic Research
Goals are to provide transit research
leadership, increase transit ridership,
improve capital and operating
efficiencies, improve safety and
emergency preparedness, and to protect
the environment and promote energy
independence. For more information
contact Bruce Robinson, Office of
Research, Demonstration and
Innovation, at (202) 366–4209.
1. Authorized Funding
SAFETEA–LU authorizes the
following amounts for the National
Research Program for fiscal years 2006–
2009.
Eligible activities under the NRTP
include research, development,
demonstration and deployment projects
as defined by 49 U.S.C. 5312 (a); Joint
Partnership projects for deployment of
innovation as defined by 49 U.S.C.
5312(b); International Mass
Transportation Projects as defined by 49
U.S.C. 5312(c); and, human resource
programs as defined by 49 U.S.C. 5322.
4. Period of Availability
Funds are available until expended.
5. Other Related Information
Requests for research proposals will
be published in grants.gov under CFDA
20.514.
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The Job Access and Reverse Commute
(JARC) program provides formula
funding to States and Designated
Recipients to support the development
and maintenance of job access projects
designed to transport welfare recipients
2. Basis for Formula Apportionment
SAFETEA–LU establishes JARC as a
formula program and provides that 60%
of funds available be allocated to UZAs
with populations of 200,000 or more
persons (large UZAs); 20% to urbanized
areas with populations ranging from
50,000 to 200,000 persons (small UZAs),
and 20% to rural and small urban areas
with populations of less than 50,000
persons. Funds are allocated to the
States for small UZAs and rural and
small urban areas and to designated
recipients in large UZAs. A single
apportionment will be published for
each large UZAs.
Formula allocations are based upon
the number of persons with disabilities
residing in a state or metropolitan area.
These figures are drawn from Census
2000 figures. In cases where a large UZA
has more than one designated recipient,
they may agree upon a single
competitive selection process or suballocate funds to each designated
recipient, based upon a percentage split
agreed upon locally, and conduct
separate planning processes and
competitions.
States and designated recipients must
solicit grant applications and select
projects competitively, based on
application procedures and
requirements established by the
designated recipient, consistent with the
Federal JARC program objectives. In the
case of large UZAs, the area-wide
solicitation shall be conducted in
cooperation with the appropriate
MPO(s).
3. Eligible Expenses
Funds are available to support the
capital and operating costs of
transportation services that address the
needs of welfare recipients and eligible
low-income individuals that are not met
by other transportation services. Federal
JARC funds may be used for 80% of
capital expenses and 50% of operating
expenses. Funds provided under other
Federal programs (other than those of
the Department of Transportation) may
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and eligible low-income individuals to
and from jobs and activities related to
their employment, and for reverse
commute projects designed to transport
residents of UZAs and other than
urbanized to suburban employment
opportunities. FTA invites comment
regarding technical assistance or
training that would be helpful to
be used for local/state match for funds
provided under section 5316, and
revenue from service contracts may be
used as local match.
Funding is available for transportation
services provided by public, non-profit,
or private-for-profit operators.
Assistance may be provided for a variety
of transportation services and strategies
directed at assisting welfare recipients
and eligible low-income individuals
address unmet transportation needs.
Examples of projects and activities that
might be funded under the program
include, but are not limited to:
• Transportation projects to finance
planning, capital, and operating costs of
providing access to jobs;
• Promoting public transportation by
low-income workers, including the use
of public transportation by workers with
nontraditional work schedules;
• Promoting the use of transit
vouchers for welfare recipients and
eligible low-income individuals;
• Promoting the use of employerprovided transportation, including the
transit pass benefit program under
section 132 of the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986;
• Subsidizing the costs associated
with adding reverse commute bus, train,
carpool, van routes, or service from
urbanized areas and other than
urbanized areas to suburban
workplaces;
• Subsidizing the purchase or lease
by a nonprofit organization or public
agency of a van or bus dedicated to
shuttling employees from their
residences to workplaces;
• Facilitating the provision of public
transportation services to suburban
employment opportunities.
States and designated recipients may
use up to ten percent of their annual
apportionment to administer, plan, and
provide technical assistance for a
funded project. Beginning in FY 2006,
no local share is required for these
program administrative funds.
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grantees in implementing the JARC
program.
1. Authorized Funding
SAFETEA–LU authorizes the
following amounts for the Job Access
and Reverse Commute Program for fiscal
years 2006–2009:
4. Planning and Consultation
A recipient of JARC funds must
certify that projects selected were
derived from a locally developed,
coordinated public transit-human
services transportation plan; and, the
plan was developed through a process
that included representatives of public,
private and non-profit transportation
and human service providers;
participation by the public; and
included those representing the needs of
welfare recipients and eligible lowincome individuals. Projects in the
locally developed, coordinated public
transit-human services transportation
plan must be integrated into and
consistent with the metropolitan and
state planning processes. Finally,
recipients must certify that allocations
of the grant to subrecipients are
distributed on a fair and equitable basis.
The planning requirement applies not
only to JARC, but beginning in FY 2007
to the section 5310 and section 5317
(New Freedom) programs. It is
anticipated that most areas will develop
one consolidated plan for all the
programs, which may include separate
elements and other human service
transportation programs. In FY 2006, in
areas with no current JARC plan, the
planning partners should at a minimum
be consulted about projects and where
possible expressions of support should
be obtained and documented. For areas
that previously received JARC
discretionary funding, the previous
JARC plan may satisfy the requirement
in FY 2006. FTA seeks comment on the
specific aspects of the collaborative
planning process (for example,
participants, elements, measures, etc.).
FTA also seeks comment on the
relationship between the public transithuman services plans and other
planning processes.
5. Period of Availability
While there is no statutory period of
availability for JARC funds, FTA is
establishing a consistent three-year
period of availability for JARC, New
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Freedom, and the section 5310 program,
which includes the year of
apportionment plus two additional
years. Any funding that remains
unobligated at the end of this period
will revert to FTA for reapportionment
among the States and large UZAs under
the JARC program.
6. Program Requirements
Grants are subject to the requirements
of section 5307, including certification
of labor protection arrangements.
7. Transfer of JARC funding to Other
FTA Programs
Administrative Transfers
States may transfer funds to FTA’s
section 5307 or section 5311 programs.
Funds so transferred must be used for
the express purposes designated by the
JARC program and must meet all
associated requirements. The projects
for which the funds are transferred must
have been competitively selected and
derived from the locally coordinated
public transit—human services
transportation plan. The purpose of the
transfer provision under SAFETEA–LU
is for administrative streamlining of
grant making, not to supplement the
resources available under the Urbanized
Area Formula or Non-urbanized Area
Formula programs. This provision
allows the small UZAs to apply for
funding directly from FTA, rather than
through a statewide grant and allows
2. Basis for Formula Apportionment
SAFETEA–LU establishes a New
Freedom Program as a formula program
and provides that 60% of funds
available be allocated to urbanized areas
with populations of 200,000 or more
persons (large urbanized areas); 20% to
urbanized areas with populations
ranging from 50,000 to 200,000 persons
(small UZAs), and 20% to rural and
small urban areas with populations of
less than 50,000 persons (nonurbanized
areas). Funds are allocated to the States
for small UZAs and nonurbanized areas
and to designated recipients in
metropolitan areas with populations of
200,000 or more.
Formula allocations are based upon
the number of persons with disabilities
residing in a State or metropolitan area.
The data includes elderly persons with
disabilities. These figures are drawn
from Census 2000 figures. In cases
where a large UZA has more than one
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Tribes to be direct recipients. A State
that transfers funds to section 5307 must
certify that the JARC projects being
funded have been coordinated with
nonprofit providers of service.
FTA has established a new scope code
(646) to be used when JARC projects are
funded within a 5307 or 5311 grant.
Transfer to section 5307 or 5311 is
permitted but not required. FTA will
also award stand-alone JARC grants
with the section code 37 in the project
number.
Transfers Between Categories
States may move funds between the
small UZA and the nonurbanized parts
of the state apportionment, if the
Governor certifies that all of the
objectives of JARC are met in the
specified area. States may also transfer
funds in the small UZA and
nonurbanized areas for projects
anywhere in the State if the State has
established a statewide program for
meeting the objectives of JARC.
8. Prior Year Carryover
JARC earmarks carried over from
TEA–21 are subject to the terms and
conditions under which they were
originally appropriated. The local match
for both capital and operating assistance
remains consistent with the TEA–21
authorization as a 50/50 match. All
projects should be in the regional JARC
Plan as required under TEA–21. Prior
year carryover is shown in Table 9.
designated recipient, they may agree
upon a single competitive selection
process or sub-allocate funds to each
designated recipient, based upon a
percentage split agreed upon locally,
and conduct separate planning
processes and competitions.
States and designated recipients must
solicit grant applications and select
projects competitively, based on
application procedures and
requirements established by the
recipient. In the case of large urbanized
areas, the area-wide solicitation shall be
conducted in cooperation with the
appropriate MPO(s).
3. Eligible Expenses
Funds are available to support the
capital and operating costs of new
public transportation services and
public transportation alternatives that
are beyond those required by the
Americans with Disabilities Act. Federal
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9. Evaluation
SAFETEA–LU requires FTA to
conduct a study to evaluate the
effectiveness of the JARC program (49
U.S.C. 5316(i)(2)). FTA seeks comment
on strategies and measures that will
evaluate the successes of this program.
N. New Freedom Program (49 U.S.C.
5317)
The New Freedom Program (NFP) was
established in SAFETEA–LU. The
program purpose is to provide new
public transportation services and
public transportation alternatives
beyond those currently required by the
Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
(42 U.S.C. 12101 et seq.) that assist
individuals with disabilities with
transportation, including transportation
to and from jobs and employment
support services.
FTA invites comment regarding
technical assistance or training that
would be helpful to grantees in
implementing the New Freedom
program. Additionally, FTA seeks
comment on strategies and measures
that could be employed to evaluate the
successes of this program.
1. Authorized Funding
SAFETA–LU authorizes the following
amounts for the New Freedom program
for fiscal years 2006–2009.
New Freedom funds may be used for 80
percent of capital expenses and 50
percent of operating expenses. There is
no limitation on the amount of funds
that can be used for operating expenses.
Funds provided under other Federal
programs (other than those of the DOT)
may be used as match for capital funds
provided under section 5317, and
revenue from contract services may be
used as local match.
Funding is available for transportation
services provided by public, non-profit,
or private-for-profit operators.
Assistance may be provided for a variety
of transportation services and strategies
directed at assisting persons with
disabilities address unmet
transportation needs. The conference
report stated that examples of projects
and activities that might be funded
under the program include, but are not
limited to:
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4. Planning and Consultation
Beginning in FY 2007, a recipient of
New Freedom funds must certify that
projects selected are derived from a
locally developed, coordinated public
transit-human services transportation
plan; and, the plan was developed
through a process that included
representatives of public, private and
non-profit transportation and human
service providers; participation by the
In FY 2006 and FY 2007 there are 18
projects authorized for a total of
$18,900,000 each year, leaving
$6,100,000, which could be allocated to
other projects during those years. There
are no projects authorized in FY 2008 or
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public; and representatives addressing
the needs of persons with disabilities. In
FY 2006, the planning partners should
at a minimum be consulted about
projects and where possible expressions
of support should be obtained and
documented. Finally, each grant
recipient must certify that allocations of
the grant to subrecipients are distributed
on a fair and equitable basis.
The planning requirement is also a
requirement in two additional programs.
The Job Access Reverse Commute
program (in FY 2006) and the Capital
Program for Elderly and People with
Disabilities (in FY 2007) will also be
required to have a locally developed,
coordinated public transit-human
services transportation plan. It is
anticipated that most areas will develop
one consolidated plan for all the
programs, which may include separate
elements and other human service
transportation programs.
5. Period of Availability
While there is no statutory period of
availability for New Freedom, FTA is
establishing a consistent three-year
period of availability for JARC, New
Freedom, and the section 5310 program,
which includes the year of
apportionment plus two additional
years. Funds allocated to States under
the New Freedom program that remain
unobligated at the end of this period
will revert to FTA for reapportionment
among the States and large UZAs under
the New Freedom program.
6. Program Requirements
Grants are subject to the requirements
of section 5310 to the extent the
Secretary deems appropriate. FTA will
not require labor protective
arrangements for this program.
7. Transfer of New Freedom funding to
Other FTA Programs
States may transfer funds to FTA’s
section 5307 or section 5311 programs.
Funds so transferred must be used for
the express purposes designated by the
New Freedom Program and must meet
all associated requirements. The
projects for which the funds are
FY 2009. The projects authorized in
SAFETEA–LU are listed in Table 3. It is
important to note that these allocations
are subject to be changed by subsequent
appropriations acts and additional
projects may be earmarked during the
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transferred must have been
competitively selected and derived from
the locally developed, coordinated
public transit-human services
transportation plan. The purpose of the
transfer provision under SAFETEA–LU
is for administrative streamlining of
grant making, not to supplement the
resources available under the urbanized
or non-urbanized formula programs.
This provision allows the small UZAs to
apply for funding directly from FTA,
rather than through a statewide grant
and allows Tribes to be direct
recipients. A State that transfers funds
to section 5307 must certify that New
Freedom projects being funded have
been coordinated with nonprofit
providers of service.
FTA has established a new scope code
(647) to be used when New Freedom
Projects are funded within a 5307 or
5311 grant. Transfer of funds to section
5307 or 5311 is permitted but not
required. FTA will also award standalone New Freedom grants with the
section code 57 in the project number.
O. Alternative Transportation in the
Parks and Public Lands Program (49
U.S.C. 5320)
FTA will work with the Department
of Interior and other Federal land
management agencies to implement this
program during FY 2006. No procedures
for allocating the funds have yet been
established.
P. Alternative Analysis Program (49
U.S.C. 5339)
Alternative Analysis projects are
studies conducted as part of the
transportation planning process
required under sections 5303 and 5304.
Beginning in FY2006, funding is
provided under section 5339 instead of
within the eight percent allowed for
projects prior to FD and Construction
under TEA–21.
1. Total Allocation
SAFETEA–LU authorizes the
following amounts for the Alternative
Analysis program for fiscal years 2006–
2009.
appropriations process. Final
Alternative Analysis program
allocations for FY 2006 will be
published after enactment of the FY
2006 Appropriations Act.
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• Purchasing vehicles and supporting
accessible taxi, ride-sharing, and
vanpooling programs.
• Providing paratransit services
beyond minimum requirements (3⁄4 mile
to either side of a fixed route), including
for routes that run seasonally.
• Making accessibility improvements
to existing transit and intermodal
stations not designated as key stations.
• Supporting voucher programs for
transportation services offered by
human service providers.
• Supporting volunteer driver and
aide programs.
• Acquisition of transportation
services by a contract, lease, or other
arrangement.
• Supporting mobility management
and coordination programs among
public transportation providers and
other human service agencies providing
transportation.
We invite comment on the projects
and activities listed above and how they
relate to what is ‘‘beyond the ADA.’’ We
invite comment on activities related to
ADA complementary paratransit
services beyond the minimum
requirements outlined in 49 CFR part
37. Further, we invite comment
regarding the types of projects and
services that should be considered for
eligibility under New Freedom as they
relate to new public transportation
beyond the ADA and alternatives to
public transportation beyond the ADA.
States and designated recipients may
use up to ten percent of their annual
apportionment to administer, plan, and
provide technical assistance for a
funded project. No local share is
required for these program
administrative funds.
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2. Program Requirements
The transportation planning process
of Alternative Analysis includes (a) An
assessment of a wide range of public
transportation alternatives, which will
address transportation problems within
a corridor or subarea; (b) ample
information to enable the Secretary to
make the findings of project justification
and local financial commitment; (c) the
selection of a locally preferred
alternative; and (d) the adoption of the
locally preferred alternative, which will
be part of the long-range transportation
plan. The Government’s share of the
total cost of a project under this section
is 80 percent. The funds will be
awarded as separate section 5339 grants.
The grant requirements under this
program will be comparable to those for
section 5309 grants.
State factor to arrive at the State ratio or
percentage. This ratio is multiplied by
the available funding to arrive at the
State’s apportionment of High Density
funding. The allocation of a State’s High
Density apportionment among the UZAs
in each State is based on each UZA
receiving a proportional share of the
State’s apportionment according to a
UZA’s population within the State, as
related to the total UZA population for
the State. Population, population
density and land area data from the
most recent Decennial Census is used in
the High Density formula.
FTA will publish single urbanized
and rural apportionments that show the
total amount for 5307 and 5311
programs that includes apportionments
these programs formulas together with
5340.
Q. Growing States and High States
Density Formula Factors
A new section 5340 is added by
SAFETEA–LU to allocate funds to
Growing States and High Density States.
For this section, the term ‘State’ is
defined only to mean the 50 States. For
the Growing State portion of section
5340, funds are allocated based on the
population forecasts for fifteen years
after the date of that census. Forecasts
are based on the trend between the most
recent decennial census and Census
Bureau population estimates for the
most current year. Funds allocated to
the States are then sub-allocated to
urbanized and non-urbanized areas
based on forecast population, where
available. If forecasted population data
at the urbanized level is not available,
funds are allocated to current urbanized
and non-urbanized areas on the basis of
current population. Funds allocated to
urbanized areas are included in their
section 5307 apportionment. Funds
allocated for non-urbanized areas are
included in the states’ section 5311
apportionments.
Funding for the High Density States
portion of section 5340 is allocated to
the seven States with population
densities in excess of 370 persons per
square mile, based on 2000 Census
information. Each State receives a
prorated share of the available funds. To
arrive at a State’s prorated share the
formula requires that a series of
mathematical calculations be performed
using 2000 Census population, land
area, and UZA population data for each
State to produce the State’s
apportionment factor. The steps used to
compute a State’s apportionment factor
are as follows:
Step 1: State land area, in square
miles, is multiplied by 370.
Step 2: the product from step 1 is then
multiplied by the State’s UZA
population.
Step 3: the product from step 2 is
divided by the State total
population.
Step 4: the quotient derived from step
3 is the State apportionment factor.
The factors for the seven States are
summed and divided by the individual
Of the authorized amounts, the
following funding is allocable to
providers of intercity fixed-route service
(75 percent) and to other providers of
over-the-road bus services, including
local fixed-route service, commuter
service, and charter and tour service (25
percent).
2. Basis for Allocations
be published later this fall announcing
the competitive selection process for
funds appropriated in FY 2006.
FTA will screen all applications to
determine whether all required
eligibility elements are present. An FTA
evaluation team will evaluate each
application according to the criteria
described in the announcement. FTA
will notify all applicants, both those
selected for funding and those not
selected when the competitive selection
process is complete. Projects selected
for funding will be published in a
Federal Register notice. Applicants
selected for funding must apply to the
FTA regional office for the actual grant
award, sign Certifications and
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The Over-the-Road Bus Accessibility
(OTRB) Program authorizes FTA to
make grants to operators of over-theroad buses to help finance the
incremental capital and training costs of
complying with the DOT over-the-road
bus accessibility final rule, 49 CFR part
37, published on September 28, 1998
(63 FR 51670). FTA conducts a national
solicitation of applications, and grantees
are selected on a competitive basis.
1. Total Allocation
SAFETA–LU authorizes the following
amounts for the OTRB program for fiscal
years 2006–2009.
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FTA allocates the funds appropriated
annually among eligible private
operators of over-the-road buses that
apply in response to a request for
proposals published in the Federal
Register and announced on Grants.Gov.
A separate Federal Register notice will
R. Over-the-Road Bus Accessibility
Program (Pub. L. 105–85, Section 3038)
EN30NO05.022
3. Period of Availability
Funds shall remain available for three
fiscal years, which includes the fiscal
year the funds are made available or
appropriated plus two additional years.
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 / Notices
Assurances, and execute a grant contract
before funds can be drawn down.
3. Program Requirements
Projects are competitively selected.
The Federal share of the project is 90
percent of net project cost. Program
guidance is provided in the Federal
Register notice soliciting applications.
Assistance is available to operators of
buses used substantially or exclusively
in intercity, fixed route, over-the-road
bus service. Capital projects eligible for
funding include projects to add lifts and
other accessibility components to new
vehicle purchases and to purchase lifts
to retrofit existing vehicles. Eligible
training costs include developing
training materials or providing training
for local providers of over-the-road bus
services.
4. Period of Availability
Funds are available until expended.
VII. FTA National Planning Emphasis
Areas
The FTA has identified a series of
national Planning Emphasis Areas
(PEAs) to promote as priority themes for
consideration in developing the annual
work programs for Statewide Planning
(State Planning and Research, or SP&R)
and Metropolitan Planning (Unified
Planning Work Program, or UPWP). The
PEAs represent topics in statewide and
metropolitan planning that are of
strategic national importance and are
proposed for consideration by State and
local officials as they prepare UPWPs
and SP&R programs during the next
applicable annual planning program
cycle. This year’s PEAs broadly promote
improved person mobility, while
addressing Core Accountabilities of
FTA’s Strategic Business Plan. The
Strategic Business Plan may be viewed
at the FTA Web site, https://
www.fta.dot.gov. Because of the wide
range in fiscal years across the States, it
is understood that full consideration to
include the PEAs may not take place
until FY 2007. FTA invites comments
from all interested parties on the PEAs
outlined in the following pages—both
the planning topics that are listed, as
well as the specific themes under each
topic.
A dedicated program of technical
assistance and informational support is
being made available to States, MPOs,
and public transportation operators to
aid in carrying out work activities that
support the PEAs. The Transportation
Planning Capacity Building Program
(TPCB), accessible on-line at https://
www.planning.dot.gov, is an important
component of this support, with
additional resources also to be made
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available through the FTA Web site,
https://www.fta.dot.gov. The TPCB is an
on-line accessible portfolio of
informational reports and services
sponsored jointly by FTA and the
Federal Highway Administration
(FHWA) providing useful guidelines
and case studies of innovative practice
related to statewide and metropolitan
planning. A key element of the TPCB is
the Peer Exchange Program, which
provides support for sharing
experiences among planning
practitioners of innovative practices on
these PEAs, as well as other planning
topics, on request. Requests for
information and technical support
through the TPCB can be made by
accessing the Web site noted above, or
by contacting the FTA Region Office or
FHWA Division Office representatives
in your areas. In addition, training
courses that address these PEAs in a
variety of planning contexts are
available through the National Transit
Institute (NTI) and the National
Highway Institute (NHI). Please go to
the following Web sites: https://
www.ntionline.com and https://
www.nhi.fhwa.dot.gov.
Finally, FTA is interested in
identifying and showcasing examples of
effective and innovative practice in
Statewide and Metropolitan Planning
that support the PEAs. States, MPOs,
and public transportation operators are
encouraged to forward work scopes and
reports documenting their innovative
efforts to their respective FTA Region
Offices, so they may be reviewed and
forwarded to Headquarters for national
dissemination through a dedicated
webpage to be developed over the
coming year.
FTA has identified five key themes as
PEAs for the current and upcoming
fiscal year: (1) Incorporating Safety and
Security in Transportation Planning; (2)
Participation of Transit Operators in
Metropolitan and Statewide Planning;
(3) Coordination of Non-Emergency
Human Service Transportation; (4)
Planning for Transit Systems
Management/Operations to Increase
Ridership; and (5) Support Transit
Capital Investment Decisions through
Effective Systems Planning.
1. Incorporating Safety and Security in
Transportation Planning
Since passage of the Intermodal
Surface Transportation Efficiency Act
(ISTEA) in 1991, and in all subsequent
surface transportation authorizing
legislation, States and MPOs have been
encouraged to incorporate safety and
security in their plans, programs, and
ongoing planning activities. Most
recently, SAFETEA-LU has expanded
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71971
emphasis on safety and security by decoupling the two concepts and elevating
their status as individual factors in the
planning process. Communication and
collaboration among safety
professionals, emergency service
providers, the enforcement community,
and transportation planners is essential
to successfully integrate safety and
security into all stages of transportation
planning and decision-making.
Regarding transportation system
safety, information describing the tools
and strategies associated with the
implementation of transportation safety
planning within statewide and
metropolitan transportation planning
processes, including resources targeted
to the planning organizations, is
available at https://www.tfhrc.gov/
pubrds/pubrds.htm. A training course
titled ‘‘Safety Conscious Planning’’ is
available through NTI (see Web site
above) with additional information
available from TPCB Web site and
FHWA and FTA, as follows: https://
www.fhwa.dot.gov/planning/scp/
index.htm and https://transitsafety.volpe.dot.gov/.
The types of planning work activities
addressed under this emphasis area can
include, among others, education,
training, and development/application
of analytical processes related to
addressing safety and security in
planning on a systematic basis, and
development and use of approaches to
considering safety and security in
setting implementation priorities in
plans and programs. The ‘‘security’’
component of this emphasis area refers
to both maintaining the personal
security of transportation system
operators and users, as well as strategies
for system operations that support the
‘‘homeland’’ security of localities,
regions, States, and the nation.
Coordinated approaches to the training
of operators, deployment of
communications and control
technologies, and general coordination
of emergency preparedness are among
the types of planning activities that fall
under this category.
A high-profile theme that spans both
security and safety is disaster planning.
In particular, areas that are vulnerable to
disasters of either man-made or natural
origin are encouraged to consider
including disaster planning work
activities into their SP&Rs and UPWPs.
Examples of planning-related disaster
planning activities include all stages of
emergency preparedness planning—
ranging from preparing multimodal
evacuation plans before a possible
event, to strategies for bringing
emergency supplies and relief aid to
affected areas after the event. Additional
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information is available at the following
Web sites:
• https://www.planning.dot.gov/
Documents/Securitypaper.htm.
• https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/planning/
scp/index.htm.
• https://www.planning.dot.gov/Peer/
Michigan/detroitSafety.htm.
2. Participation of Transit Operators in
Metropolitan and Statewide Planning
SAFETEA–LU expands the mandate
and opportunities for transit operator
participation in multimodal
transportation decision-making through
Statewide and Metropolitan planning.
This PEA outlines a set of strategies for
realizing the full potential and benefits
of multimodal decision-making. A
recent FTA publication, Transit at the
Table: A Guide to Participation to
Metropolitan Decision Making, available
online and in hard-copy, provides
candid testimonials of the values and
strategies for full achievement of
‘‘transit-at-the-table’’ by transit and
MPO leaders from 25 metropolitan areas
across the U.S.
Among the planning activities that
support this emphasis area are (a)
establishing program, project, and
technical advisory committees that
include representation and active
participation by transit operators, (b)
developing and monitoring
transportation system performance
indicators that include measures that
involve public transportation, (c)
ensuring that travel forecasting methods
are sensitive to policies affecting the full
range of modal options and that transit
ridership forecasts have been validated
and are credible, and (d) using criteria
for setting project priorities for
inclusion in plans and programs that are
mode-neutral.
Training on ways to ensure that
planning processes are modallybalanced and the resulting decisions
mode-neutral are available through the
National Transit Institute (https://
www.ntionline.com) and the National
Highway Institute (https://
www.nhi.fhwa.dot.gov), with additional
information available through the
Transportation Planning Capacity
Building Web site (https://
planning.dot.gov) and the Travel Model
Improvement Program (https://
tmip.fhwa.dot.gov/). Over the past two
years, the TPCB has sponsored a
number of transit-at-the-table peer
exchange workshops, with the results
posted on that Web site. The ‘‘Transit at
the Table’’ report is available at https://
www.planning.dot.gov/Documents/
tat.htm.
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3. Coordination of Non-Emergency
Human Service Transportation
Following the theme of Executive
Order #13330, Human Service
Transportation Coordination,
SAFETEA–LU provides expanded
program authority and funding
opportunities to provide transit service
to individuals with job access and
specialized transportation needs.
However, these programs, 49 U.S.C.
5310 (Special Needs of Elderly
Individuals and Individuals with
Disabilities), 49 U.S.C. 5316 (Job Access
and Reverse Commute), and 49 U.S.C.
5317 (New Freedom) all require an
extensive coordination among DOT and
non-DOT-funded services, including
preparation of a locally-developed
coordinated human servicetransportation plan as the basis for
project-level funding decisions. The
plan has to be developed by local area
representatives of public, private, and
nonprofit transportation human services
providers, as well as involve
participation by the public, including
older adults, people with disabilities,
and individuals with lower incomes.
SAFETEA–LU further outlines that
project ‘‘competition’’ for funding
awards at the local level should be
coordinated with the MPO.
Support of the emphasis area could
involve a wide range of work activities
in Statewide and metropolitan planning,
including forming and hosting meetings
of a committee of non-emergency
service providers, assemblage of a baseyear ridership profile of service users
and forecasting future usage, and
incorporating these programs into the
public involvement programs of States
and MPOs. United We Ride, an
initiative of the Coordinating Council on
Access and Mobility has developed a
number of tools and strategies for
building coordinated human service
transportation systems across programs
and funding streams. Additional
information resources are available at
the following Web sites:
• https://www.fta.dot.gov/
16290_17544_ENG_HTML.htm.
• https://www.unitedweride.gov/.
• https://www.fta.dot.gov/
1139_ENG_HTML.htm.
• https://www.fta.dot.gov/
1266_ENG_HTML.htm.
• https://www.planning.dot.gov/Peer/
Austin/austin_peer.htm.
4. Planning for Transit Systems
Management/Operations to Increase
Ridership
A regionally coordinated, strategic
approach to managing and operating
transportation systems can yield
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dramatic improvements in systems
productivity and service cost
effectiveness. With regard to transit, a
key criterion of operational effectiveness
is the number of passenger miles
traveled. FTA’s Strategic Business Plan
has a goal calling for an annual increase
in passenger miles, discounted for
employment. The ability to accomplish
this is tied closely to the effective
management and operation of transit
systems—individually, as well as in
within a regional context of multimodal
systems management and operations. In
addition, transit operational strategies
such as fare policies, service
characteristics (e.g. headways, transfers,
frequency of stops), marketing and
public awareness/information, and
overall facilities maintenance on
services and schedules, have a major
impact on system ridership.
Work activities in Statewide and
Metropolitan planning to address this
emphasis area include such efforts as:
(a) Convene a system operators
coordinating committee to identify
issues, share solutions, and establish an
ongoing framework for coordination, (b)
develop analytical tools and expertise in
assessing the impacts of operational
strategies, both in conjunction with, and
as alternatives to, capital investments,
(c) facilitate improved understanding
and deployment of advanced
technologies to improve the operational
efficiency of systems, and (d) improve
the tracking, analysis, and use of
operational performance data in
transportation plan and program
development.
FTA has developed an extensive body
of information and guidance to assist
transit operators in developing strategies
that increase use of their systems. The
guidance includes technical assistance
such as training courses, research
studies, and proceedings from
conferences that transit operators can
use in developing their ridership growth
strategies. This guidance is summarized
in the report, ‘‘Ridership Guidance
Quick Study,’’ which is posted at
https://www.fta.dot.gov/
17525_ENG_HTML.htm).
Additional information on achieving
ridership growth is available at the
following Web sites:
• https://www.fta.dot.gov/
initiatives_tech_assistance/technology/
15791_ENG_HTML.htm.
• https://www.tcrponline.org.
• https://
www.plan4operations.dot.gov/.
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5. Support Transit Capital Investment
Decisions Through Effective Systems
Planning
The information, processes, and
decisions of metropolitan systems
planning lay the foundation for, and
have direct impacts upon, corridorfocused project planning and
subsequent stages of project
development. There is a strong
relationship between systems planning
activities, more refined corridor
analyses in Alternatives Analysis (or
‘‘AA.’’ an FTA requirement for
advancing New Starts projects), and
their impact on subsequent project
development—all within the context of
metropolitan planning and decisionmaking. In systems planning, regional
priorities among corridors of need are
identified, as well as causes of the
corridors’ problems and a reasonable
range of possible solutions. An AA
investigates the range of possible modal
solutions within individual corridors in
much greater detail, concluding with a
‘‘Locally Preferred Alternative’’ (LPA).
That LPA, in turn, goes to the
Metropolitan Planning Organization
(MPO) for adoption into the long-range
transportation plan and is, ultimately,
programmed in the Transportation
Improvement Program. And, as the work
of systems planning is carried forward
into more focused planning at the
corridor level, it becomes readily
apparent that the quality of work
performed in systems planning sets the
foundation—and the quality of that
foundation—for subsequent, more
detailed planning.
Within systems planning, three
planning activities have been found to
be the most challenging and, if not
performed effectively, to have the most
significant impact on the quality and
credibility of major transit investment
proposals as they advance into project
development. These three systems
planning topics are: (a) Data, Technical
Tools, & Analysis; (b) Regional Needs
Identification & Corridor Prioritization;
and (c) Financial Planning.
(a) Data, Technical Tools, & Analysis
There is a long and ever-expanding
list of planning activities to improve the
technical aspects of systems planning.
These include ongoing collection of
systems usage and performance to
understand current travel behavior (e.g.
onboard transit surveys and monitoring
travel—by mode—that crosses a
strategically picked network of screenlines), training for staff to improve their
technical skills and expertise. Frequent
validation checks should be performed
on the travel forecasting models to
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confirm their reliability for use in
assessing the travel implications of
policy and network alternatives. Also,
as improvements to MPOs’ models are
made during corridor-level AA studies,
those refinements should be cycled back
to the MPOs for use in their models.
FTA staff and contractors have
identified a wide range of problems
with MPO travel demand forecasting
models, particularly in locales with no
prior experience in conducting AA
studies. The ‘‘sponsors’’ of candidate
projects for New Starts funding (49
U.S.C. 5309) will want to work with
FTA staff before beginning the AA Study
to examine model inputs, policy
variables and assumptions, and model
outputs for reasonableness.
Informational resources available to
State/local planners include:
• National Highway Institute (https://
www.nhi.fhwa.dot.gov), which offers the
course Introduction to Travel Demand
Forecasting.
• National Transit Institute (https://
www.ntionline.com), which offers the
advanced course Multimodal Travel
Forecasting.
• Travel Model Improvement
Program (https://tmip.fhwa.dot.gov), a
joint FTA/FHWA/EPA program to
support local transportation planning
agencies and improve their forecasting
abilities.
(b) Regional Needs Identification &
Corridor Prioritization
Goals and objectives for the
transportation system are driven by
public input and set by local policy
makers and elected officials. These
should be based on needs and clearly
set forth in the long-range transportation
plan. Furthermore, the goals and
objectives should drive not only
performance measures for the existing
system, but also evaluation criteria for
any new projects and programs to assist
in decision making. If a major transit
investment is to be considered in a
corridor for study and Federal funding
assistance is anticipated for the
investment, then project sponsors may
want to include FTA’s New Starts
criteria among the locally developed
evaluation criteria.
Systems planning involves identifying
corridors with needs in accordance with
a set of performance measures and
establishing priorities among the
corridors for further analysis. Valid,
current, and comprehensive data are
crucial in understanding transportation
problems in the region; they also
support rational decision making in
formulating solutions. It is important
that the planning documents and
studies clearly articulate the problem(s)
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that are to be addressed. This will lead
to the discovery the root causes of the
problem(s). Knowledge of problems and
causes becomes the basis for a projectlevel ‘‘Purpose and Need’’ statement in
federal environmental review
documentation. The identification of
regional transportation problems and
their causes through data collection,
analysis, and forecasting is the basis for
‘‘telling the story’’ of the applicant’s
local conditions. Good systems planning
will help to ‘‘make the case’’ for funding
potential major transit investments.
Links to informational resources on
this topic include:
• https://www.fta.dot.gov/
16231_ENG_HTML.htm.
• https://www.fta.dot.gov/
16363_ENG_HTML.htm.
• https://www.fta.dot.gov/
grant_programs/
transportation_planning/
major_investment/
procedures_technical_methods/
9949_10244_ENG_HTML.htm.
(c) Financial Planning
Effective systems planning depends
upon sound, defensible financial
planning. Otherwise, the plans will
always remain just plans and what is
implemented will not reflect the vision
expressed by decision makers through
the metropolitan planning process.
Good financial planning, in turn,
depends upon credible assumptions, for
revenues, expenses, inflation, and
realistic project implementation
schedules. For transit service and
projects, in particular, the concept of
maintenance first must take precedence
in systems planning. Recapitalization
and the ongoing expenses of operating
and maintaining (O&M) the existing
system over the long-term must be
considered. The applicant or proposed
project sponsor should be able to
demonstrate that the existing transit
system can be maintained and operated
at current levels of service for the next
20 years. Development of a robust cost
model for transit O&M expenses can
prove invaluable in systems planning.
For new projects, careful estimation of
capital and operating costs should also
include risk management analysis to
challenge assumptions behind the
estimates and consider a range of cost
impacts should assumptions not hold
true.
Additional guidance is available, as
follows:
• Standard Cost Categories for Major
Capital Projects (https://www.fta.dot.gov;
Home b Grant Programs b New Starts
Project Planning & Development b
Technical Guidance).
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• Interim FHWA/FTA Guidance on
Fiscal Constraint for STIPs, TIPs, and
Metro Plans (https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/
planning/fcindex.htm).
VIII. FTA Policy and Procedures for FY
2006 Grants
A. Automatic Pre-Award Authority To
Incur Project Costs
This section includes some changes to
the automatic pre-award authority
published in previous Notices. Preaward authority for capital projects
beyond design and environmental work
is more limited than before. The
conditions under which pre-award
authority may be used for real property
acquisition are also clarified.
While we provide pre-award authority
for many projects, we do not
recommend that first-time grant
recipients utilize the automatic preaward authority to incur expenses
before the grant is actually awarded by
FTA. As a new grantee, it is easy to
misunderstand pre-award authority
conditions and not be aware of all of the
applicable FTA requirements that must
be met in order to be reimbursed for
project expenditures incurred in
advance of grant award. FTA programs
have specific statutory requirements
that are often different from those for
other Federal grant programs with
which new grantees may be familiar. If
funds are expended for an ineligible
project or activity, FTA will be unable
to reimburse the project sponsor.
1. Policy
FTA provides blanket, or automatic,
pre-award authority in certain program
areas described below. This pre-award
authority allows grantees to incur
certain project costs prior to grant
approval and retain their eligibility for
subsequent reimbursement after grant
approval. The grantee assumes all risk
and is responsible for ensuring that all
conditions are met to retain eligibility.
This automatic pre-award spending
authority, when triggered, permits a
grantee to incur costs on an eligible
transit capital or planning project
without prejudice to possible future
Federal participation in the cost of the
project or projects. Pre-award authority
for design and environmental work on
the project is triggered by the
authorization of formula funds or
appropriation of funds for discretionary
projects and publication of those
projects in FTA’s annual Federal
Register Notice of apportionments and
allocations. Following authorization of
formula funds or appropriation and
publication of discretionary projects,
pre-award authority for other capital
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projects including property acquisition,
demolition, construction, and
acquisition of vehicles, equipment, or
construction materials is triggered by
completion of the environmental review
process with FTA’s signing of an
environmental Record of Decision
(ROD), Finding of No Significant Impact
(FONSI), or categorical exclusion (CE)
determination. Prior to exercising preaward authority, grantees must comply
with the conditions and Federal
requirements outlined in paragraphs 2
and 3 below. Failure to do so will
render an otherwise eligible project
ineligible for FTA financial assistance.
In addition, prior to incurring costs,
grantees are strongly encouraged to
consult with the appropriate FTA
regional office regarding the eligibility
of the project for future FTA funds and
the applicability of the conditions and
Federal requirements.
FTA previously extended pre-award
authority to all formula funds and
flexible funds apportioned during from
Fiscal Years 1998 through 2006. In this
notice, FTA is extending this pre-award
authority for formula funds and flexible
funds that will be appropriated through
FY 2009 under SAFETEA–LU, but with
modifications. Pre-award authority for
operating and planning projects under
the formula grant programs is not
limited to the authorization period. In
addition, automatic pre-award authority
for section 5303 and 5304 is extended
through FY 2009.
Pre-award authority does not apply to
the section 5309 Capital Investment Bus
and Bus-Related Facilities and Clean
Fuels program high priority project
designations or any other transit
discretionary projects designated in
SAFETEA–LU and published in Tables
4 and 5 of this notice. These
authorizations are subject to change in
future appropriations acts. In fiscal
years 2006–2009, after Congress
appropriates funds for these and other
discretionary projects and the
allocations are published in an FTA
notice of apportionments and
allocations, pre-award authority will be
available for those projects and projects
for which funds were appropriated in
prior years and published in previous
notices, except that the triggers for preaward authority have been changed. For
such section 5309 Capital Investment
Bus and Bus-Related, Clean Fuels
Program, or other transit capital
discretionary projects, the date that
costs may be incurred is: (1) for design
and environmental review, the date that
the appropriation bill which funds the
project was enacted; and (2) for property
acquisition, demolition, construction,
and acquisition of vehicles, equipment,
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or construction materials, the date that
FTA signs the document (ROD, FONSI,
or CE determination) that completes the
environmental review process required
by the National Environmental Policy
Act (NEPA) and its implementing
regulations. The growing prevalence of
new grantees unfamiliar with Federal
and FTA requirements has necessitated
this change in the pre-award trigger to
ensure FTA’s continued ability to
comply with NEPA and related
environmental laws. Because FTA does
not sign a final NEPA document until
MPO and statewide planning
requirements have been satisfied, this
new trigger for pre-award will ensure
compliance with both planning and
environmental requirements prior to
irreversible action by the grantee. In
previous notices FTA extended preaward authority to section 330 projects
and those surface transportation projects
commonly referred to as section 115
projects administered by FTA, for which
amounts were provided in the
Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2004
and section 117 projects in the 2005
Appropriations Act. The same
conditions described for bus projects
apply to these projects. We strongly
encourage any prospective applicant
that does not have a relationship with
FTA to review Federal grant
requirements with the FTA regional
office before incurring costs.
Blanket pre-award authority does not
apply to section 5309 Capital
Investment New Starts funds. Specific
instances of pre-award authority for
Capital Investment New Starts projects
are described in paragraph 4 below. Preaward authority does not apply to
Capital Investment Bus and Bus-Related
or Clean Fuels projects for which
funding has been authorized but not yet
appropriated. Before an applicant may
incur costs for Capital Investment New
Starts projects, Bus and Bus-Related
projects, or any other projects not yet
published in a notice of apportionments
and allocations, it must first obtain a
written Letter of No Prejudice (LONP)
from FTA. To obtain an LONP, a grantee
must submit a written request
accompanied by adequate information
and justification to the appropriate FTA
regional office, as described below.
2. Conditions
The conditions under which preaward authority may be utilized are
specified below:
(a) Pre-award authority is not a legal
or implied commitment that the
project(s) will be approved for FTA
assistance or that FTA will obligate
Federal funds. Furthermore, it is not a
legal or implied commitment that all
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items undertaken by the applicant will
be eligible for inclusion in the project(s).
(b) All FTA statutory, procedural, and
contractual requirements must be met.
(c) No action will be taken by the
grantee that prejudices the legal and
administrative findings that the Federal
Transit Administrator must make in
order to approve a project.
(d) Local funds expended by the
grantee pursuant to and after the date of
the pre-award authority will be eligible
for credit toward local match or
reimbursement if FTA later makes a
grant for the project(s) or project
amendment(s). Local funds expended by
the grantee prior to the date of the preaward authority will not be eligible for
credit toward local match or
reimbursement. Furthermore, the
expenditure of local funds on activities
such as land acquisition, demolition, or
construction prior to the date of preaward authority for those activities (i.e.,
the completion of the NEPA process)
would compromise FTA’s ability to
comply with Federal environmental
laws and may render the project
ineligible for FTA funding.
(e) The Federal amount of any future
FTA assistance awarded to the grantee
for the project will be determined on the
basis of the overall scope of activities
and the prevailing statutory provisions
with respect to the Federal/local match
ratio at the time the funds are obligated.
(f) For funds to which the pre-award
authority applies, the authority expires
with the lapsing of the fiscal year funds.
(g) When a grant for the project is
subsequently awarded, the Financial
Status Report, in TEAM-Web, must
indicate the use of pre-award authority.
3. Environmental, Planning, and Other
Federal Requirements
All Federal grant requirements must
be met at the appropriate time for the
project to remain eligible for Federal
funding. The growth of the Federal
transit program has resulted in a
growing number of inexperienced
grantees who make compliance with
Federal planning and environmental
laws increasingly challenging. FTA has
therefore modified its approach to preaward authority to use the completion
of the NEPA process, which has as a
prerequisite the completion of planning
and air quality requirements, as the
trigger for pre-award authority for all
activities except design and
environmental review.
The requirement that a project be
included in a locally adopted
metropolitan transportation
improvement program and Federallyapproved statewide transportation
improvement program (23 CFR part 450)
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must be satisfied before the grantee may
advance the project beyond planning
and preliminary design with nonFederal funds under pre-award
authority. The conformity requirements
of the Clean Air Act, 40 CFR part 93, if
applicable, must also be fully met before
the project may be advanced into
implementation under pre-award
authority with non-Federal funds.
Compliance with NEPA and other
environmental laws and executive
orders (e.g., protection of parklands,
wetlands, and historic properties) must
be completed before State or local funds
are spent on implementation activities,
such as site preparation, construction,
and acquisition, for a project that is
expected to be subsequently funded
with FTA funds. The grantee may not
advance the project beyond planning
and preliminary design before FTA has
determined the project to be a
categorical exclusion, or has issued a
finding of no significant impact (FONSI)
or an environmental record of decision
(ROD), in accordance with FTA
environmental regulations, 23 CFR part
771. For planning projects, the project
must be included in a locally-approved
Planning Work Program that has been
coordinated with the State.
In addition, Federal procurement
procedures, as well as the whole range
of applicable Federal requirements (e.g.,
Buy America, Davis-Bacon Act,
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise),
must be followed for projects in which
Federal funding will be sought in the
future. Failure to follow any such
requirements could make the project
ineligible for Federal funding. In short,
this increased administrative flexibility
requires a grantee to make certain that
no Federal requirements are
circumvented through the use of preaward authority. If a grantee has
questions or concerns regarding the
environmental requirements, or any
other Federal requirements that must be
met before incurring costs, it should
contact the appropriate regional office.
4. Pre-Award Authority for New Starts
Projects
(a) Preliminary Engineering and Final
Design
Projects proposed for section 5309
New Starts funds are required to follow
a Federally defined New Starts project
development process. This New Starts
process includes, among other things,
FTA approval of the entry of the project
into PE and into FD. In accordance with
section 5309(d), FTA considers the
merits of the project, the strength of its
financial plan, and its readiness to enter
the next phase in deciding whether or
not to approve entry into PE or FD.
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Upon FTA approval to enter PE, FTA
extends pre-award authority to incur
costs for PE activities. Upon FTA
approval to enter FD, FTA extends preaward authority to incur costs for FD
activities. The pre-award authority for
each phase is automatic upon FTA’s
signing of a letter to the project sponsor
approving entry into that phase. PE and
FD are defined in the New Starts
regulation entitled Major Capital
Investment Projects, found at 49 CFR
part 611.
(b) Real Property Acquisition
Activities
FTA extends automatic pre-award
authority for the acquisition of real
property and real property rights for a
New Starts project upon completion of
the NEPA process for that project. The
NEPA process is completed when FTA
signs an environmental Record of
Decision (ROD) or Finding of No
Significant Impact (FONSI), or makes a
Categorical Exclusion (CE)
determination. With the limitations and
caveats described below, real estate
acquisition for a New Starts project may
commence, at the project sponsor’s risk,
upon completion of the NEPA process.
For FTA-assisted projects, any
acquisition of real property or real
property rights must be conducted in
accordance with the requirements of the
Uniform Relocation Assistance and Real
Property Acquisition Policies Act (URA)
and its implementing regulations, 49
CFR part 24. This pre-award authority is
strictly limited to costs incurred: (i) to
acquire real property and real property
rights in accordance with the URA
regulation, and (ii) to provide relocation
assistance in accordance with the URA
regulation. This pre-award authority is
limited to the acquisition of real
property and real property rights that
are explicitly identified in the final
environmental impact statement (FEIS),
environmental assessment (EA), or CE
document, as needed for the selected
alternative that is the subject of the
FTA-signed ROD or FONSI, or CE
determination. This pre-award authority
does not cover site preparation,
demolition, or any other activity that is
not strictly necessary to comply with
the URA, with one exception. That
exception is when a building that has
been acquired, has been emptied of its
occupants, and awaits demolition poses
a potential fire-safety hazard or other
hazard to the community in which it is
located, or is susceptible to
reoccupation by vagrants, demolition of
the building is also covered by this preaward authority upon FTA’s written
agreement that the adverse condition
exists.
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Pre-award authority for property
acquisition is also provided when FTA
makes a CE determination for a
protective buy or hardship acquisition
in accordance with 23 CFR
771.117(d)(12), and when FTA makes a
CE determination for the acquisition of
a pre-existing railroad right-of-way in
accordance with 49 U.S.C. 5324(c).
When a tiered environmental review in
accordance with 23 CFR 771.111(g) is
being used, pre-award authority is NOT
provided upon completion of the firsttier environmental document except
when the Tier-1 ROD or FONSI signed
by FTA explicitly provides such preaward authority for a particular
identified acquisition.
FTA’s rationale for providing this preaward authority was described in the FY
2003 Apportionments and Allocations
Notice published in the Federal
Register on March 12, 2003, (68 FR 1106
et seq.). The FY 2003 Notice may be
found on the FTA Web site at https://
www.fta.dot.gov/library/legal/
federalregister/2003/fr31203.pdf. Project
sponsors should use pre-award
authority for real property acquisition
and relocation assistance very carefully,
with a clear understanding that it does
not constitute a funding commitment by
FTA.
(c) National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) Activities
NEPA requires that major projects
proposed for FTA funding assistance be
subjected to a public and interagency
review of the need for the project, its
environmental and community impacts,
and alternatives to avoid and reduce
adverse impacts. Projects of more
limited scope also need a level of
environmental review, either to support
an FTA finding of no significant impact
(FONSI) or to demonstrate that the
action is categorically excluded from the
more rigorous level of NEPA review.
FTA’s regulation entitled
Environmental Impact and Related
Procedures at 23 CFR part 771 states
that the costs incurred by a grant
applicant for the preparation of
environmental documents requested by
FTA are eligible for FTA financial
assistance (23 CFR 771.105(e)).
Accordingly, FTA extends automatic
pre-award authority for costs incurred to
comply with NEPA regulations and to
conduct NEPA-related activities for a
proposed New Starts project, effective as
of the date of the Federal approval of the
relevant STIP or STIP amendment that
includes the project or any phase of the
project. NEPA-related activities include,
but are not limited to, public
involvement activities, historic
preservation reviews, section 4(f)
evaluations, wetlands evaluations,
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endangered species consultations, and
biological assessments. This pre-award
authority is strictly limited to costs
incurred to conduct the NEPA process,
and to prepare environmental, historic
preservation and related documents. It
does not cover PE activities beyond
those necessary for NEPA compliance.
As with any pre-award authority, FTA
reimbursement for costs incurred is not
guaranteed.
(d) Other New Starts Activities
Requiring Letter of No Prejudice (LONP)
Except as discussed in paragraphs (a)
through (c) above, a grant applicant
must obtain a written LONP from FTA
before incurring costs for any activity
expected to be funded by New Start
funds not yet granted. To obtain an
LONP, an applicant must submit a
written request accompanied by
adequate information and justification
to the appropriate FTA regional office,
as described in B below.
B. Letter of No Prejudice (LONP) Policy
1. Policy
LONP authority allows an applicant
to incur costs on a project utilizing nonFederal resources, with the
understanding that the costs incurred
subsequent to the issuance of the LONP
may be reimbursable as eligible
expenses or eligible for credit toward
the local match should FTA approve the
project at a later date. LONPs are
applicable to projects and project
activities not covered by automatic preaward authority. The majority of LONPs
will be for section 5309 New Starts
funds not covered under a full funding
grant agreement, or for section 5309 Bus
and Bus-Related funds not yet
appropriated by Congress. At the end of
an authorization period, LONPs may be
issued for formula funds beyond the life
of the current authorization or FTA’s
extension of automatic pre-award
authority.
2. Conditions and Federal Requirements
The conditions for pre-award
authority specified in section VIII A2
above apply to all LONPs. The
Environmental, Planning and Other
Federal Requirements described in
section VIII A3, also apply to all LONPs.
Because project implementation
activities may not be initiated prior to
NEPA completion, FTA will normally
not issue an LONP for such activities
until the NEPA process has been
completed with a ROD, FONSI, or
Categorical Exclusion determination.
3. Request for LONP
Before incurring costs for a project not
covered by automatic pre-award
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authority, the project sponsor must first
submit a written request for an LONP,
accompanied by adequate information
and justification, to the appropriate
regional office and obtain written
approval. As a prerequisite to FTA
approval of an LONP for a New Starts
project, FTA will require project
sponsors to demonstrate project
worthiness and readiness that establish
the project as a candidate for an FFGA.
Projects will be assessed based upon the
criteria considered in the New Start
evaluation process. Specifically, upon
the request for an LONP, the applicant
shall provide sufficient information to
allow FTA to consider the following
items:
(a) Description of the activities to be
covered by the LONP.
(b) Justification for advancing the
identified activities.
(c) Data that indicates that the project
will maintain its ability to receive a
rating of ‘‘medium’’, or better and that
its cost-effectiveness rating will be
‘‘medium’’ or better, unless such project
has been specifically exempt from such
a requirement.
(d) Allocated level of risk and
contingency for the activity requested.
(e) Status of procurement progress,
including, if appropriate, submittal of
bids for the activities covered by the
LONP.
(f) Strength of the capital and
operating financial plan for the New
Starts project and the future transit
system.
(g) Adequacy of the Project
Management Plan.
(h) Resolution of any readiness issues
that would affect the project, such as
land acquisition and technical capacity
to carry out the project.
C. FTA FY 2006 Annual List of
Certifications and Assurances
The FTA ‘‘Fiscal 2006 Annual List of
Certifications and Assurances’’ will
incorporate new or changed
requirements due to SAFETEA-LU. The
full text of the Fiscal Year 2006
Certifications and Assurances was
published in the Federal Register on
November 15, 2005, and is available on
the FTA Web site and in TEAM-WEB.
The FY 2006 Certifications and
Assurances must be used for all grants
made in FY 2006, including obligation
of carryover.
D. FHWA Funds Used for Transit
Purposes
SAFETEA-LU continues provisions in
the Intermodal Surface Transportation
Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA) and
TEA–21 that expanded modal choice in
transportation funding by including
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substantial flexibility to transfer funds
between FTA and FHWA program
funding categories.
1. Transfer Process
The process for transferring flexible
formula funds between FTA and FHWA
programs is described below. For
information on the process or the
transfer of funds between FTA and
FHWA planning programs refer to
section VIII E.
Transfer from FHWA to FTA. FHWA
funds designated for use in transit
capital projects must be derived from
the metropolitan and statewide
planning and programming process, and
must be included in an approved STIP
before the funds can be transferred. By
letter, the State DOT requests the FHWA
Division Office to transfer highway
funds for a transit project. The letter
should specify the project, amount to be
transferred, apportionment year, State,
urbanized area, Federal aid
apportionment category (i.e., Surface
Transportation Program (STP),
Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality
(CMAQ), Interstate Substitute, or
congressional earmark), indication of
the intended FTA formula program (i.e.,
section 5307, 5311 or 5310), and should
include a description of the project as
contained in the STIP.
The FHWA Division Office confirms
that the apportionment amount is
available for transfer and concurs in the
transfer, by letter to the State DOT and
FTA. The FHWA Office of Budget and
Finance then transfers obligation
authority and an equal amount of cash
to FTA. All FHWA CMAQ, STP, and
certain Congressionally earmarked
funds for transit projects in the
Appropriations Act or Conference
Report will be transferred to one of the
three FTA formula programs (i.e.
Urbanized Area Formula (section 5307),
Nonurbanized Area Formula (section
5311) or Elderly and Persons with
Disabilities (section 5310).
The FTA grantee’s application for the
project must specify which program the
funds will be used for, and the
application must be prepared in
accordance with the requirements and
procedures governing that program.
Upon review and approval of the
grantee’s application, FTA obligates
funds for the project.
Transferred funds are treated as FTA
formula funds, but are assigned a
distinct identifying code for tracking
purposes. The funds may be used for
any capital purpose eligible under the
FTA formula program to which they are
transferred and, in the case of CMAQ,
for certain operating costs. FTA and
FHWA have issued guidance on project
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eligibility under the CMAQ program in
a Notice at 65 FR 9040 et seq. (February
23, 2000). In accordance with 23 U.S.C.
104(k), all FTA requirements except
local share are applicable to transferred
funds; FHWA local share requirements
apply to funds transferred from FHWA
to FTA. Transferred funds should be
combined with regular FTA funds in a
single annual grant application.
In the event that transferred funds are
not obligated for the intended purpose
within the period of availability of the
program to which they were transferred,
they become available to the Governor
for any eligible capital transit project.
Transfers from FTA to FHWA. The
Metropolitan Planning Organization
(MPO) submits a written request to the
FTA regional office for a transfer of FTA
section 5307 formula funds
(apportioned to a UZA 200,000 and over
in population) to FHWA based on
approved use of the funds for highway
purposes, as contained in the
Governor’s approved State
Transportation Improvement Program.
The MPO must certify that: (1) The
funds are not needed for capital
investments required by the Americans
with Disabilities Act; (2) notice and
opportunity for comment and appeal
has been provided to affected transit
providers; and (3) local funds used for
non-Federal match are eligible to
provide assistance for either highway or
transit projects. The FTA Regional
Administrator reviews and concurs in
the request, then forwards the approval
in written format to FTA Headquarters,
where a reduction equal to the dollar
amount being transferred to FHWA is
made to the grantee’s Urbanized Area
Formula Program apportionment.
2. Matching Share for FHWA Transfers
The provisions of Title 23 U.S.C.
regarding the non-Federal share apply to
Title 23 funds used for transit projects.
Thus, FHWA funds transferred to FTA
retain the same matching share that the
funds would have if used for highway
purposes and administered by FHWA.
There are three instances in which a
Federal share higher than 80 percent
would be permitted. First, in States with
large areas of Indian and certain public
domain lands and national forests, parks
and monuments, the local share for
highway projects is determined by a
sliding scale rate, calculated based on
the percentage of public lands within
that State. This sliding scale, which
permits a greater Federal share, but not
to exceed 95 percent, is applicable to
transfers used to fund transit projects in
these public land States. FHWA
develops the sliding scale matching
ratios for the increased Federal share.
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Second, commuter carpooling and
vanpooling projects and transit safety
projects using FHWA transfers
administered by FTA may retain the
same 100 percent Federal share that
would be allowed for ride-sharing or
safety projects administered by FHWA.
The third instance is the 100 percent
Federally-funded safety projects;
however, these are subject to a
nationwide 10 percent program
limitation.
E. Consolidated Planning Grants
Since FY 1997, FTA and FHWA have
offered States the option of participating
in a pilot Consolidated Planning Grant
(CPG) program. This streamlined fund
drawdown process eliminates the need
to monitor individual fund sources, if
several have been used, and ensures that
the oldest funds will always be used
first.
Under a CPG administered by FTA,
States can report metropolitan planning
expenditures (to comply with the Single
Audit Act) for both FTA and FHWA
under the Catalogue of Federal Domestic
Assistance number for FTA’s
Metropolitan Planning Program.
Additionally, for States with an FHWA
Metropolitan Planning (PL) fundmatching ratio greater than 80 percent,
the State (through FTA) can request a
waiver of the 20 percent local share
requirement in order that all FTA funds
used for metropolitan planning in a CPG
can be granted at the higher FHWA rate.
For some States, this Federal match rate
can exceed 90 percent. In FY 2005, the
CPG program was expanded to allow the
transfer of FTA planning funds to
FHWA in addition to the current
process whereby FHWA funds for
planning are transferred to FTA. For
planning projects funded through a
CPG, the State DOT requests the transfer
of funds in a letter to the FHWA
Division Office (if transferring funds to
FTA) or to the FTA regional office (if
transferring funds to FHWA).
F. Grant Application Procedures
Grantees must provide a Dun and
Bradstreet (D&B) Data Universal
Numbering System (DUNS) number for
inclusion in all applications for a
Federal grant or cooperative agreement
submitted on or after October 1, 2003.
The DUNS number should be entered
into the grantee profile in TEAM-Web.
Additional information about this and
other Federal grant streamlining
initiatives mandated by the Federal
Financial Assistance Management
Improvement Act of 1999 (Pub. L. 106–
107) can be accessed on OMB’s Web site
at https://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/
grants/reform.html.
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All applications for FTA funds should
be submitted to the appropriate FTA
regional office. FTA utilizes TEAMWeb, an Internet-accessible electronic
grant application system, and all
applications are filed electronically.
FTA has provided limited exceptions to
the requirement for electronic filing of
applications.
In FY 2006, FTA is committed to
ensuring that the average number of
days to process an FTA grant is 36 days,
or fewer, after receipt of a completed
application by the appropriate regional
office. In order for an application to be
considered complete and for FTA to
assign a grant number, enabling
submission in TEAM-Web, the
following requirements must be met:
• The project is listed in a currently
approved Transportation Improvement
Program (TIP); Statewide Transportation
Improvement Program (STIP), or
Unified Planning Work Program
(UPWP).
• All eligibility issues have been
resolved.
• Required environmental findings
have been made.
• The project budget’s Activity Line
Items (ALI), scope, and project
description meet FTA requirements.
• Local share funding source(s) have
been identified.
• The grantee’s required Civil Rights
submissions are current.
• Certifications and assurances are
properly submitted.
• Funding is available, including any
flexible funds included in the budget.
• For projects involving new
construction (using at least $100 million
in New Starts or formula funds), FTA
engineering staff has reviewed the
project management plan and given
approval.
• When required for grants related to
New Starts projects, PE and/or FD has
been approved.
• Milestone information is complete,
or FTA determines that milestone
information can be finalized before the
grant is ready for award.
Before FTA can award grants for
discretionary projects and activities
designated by Congress, notification
must be given to members of Congress,
and in the case of awards greater than
$1 million, to the House and Senate
authorizing and appropriations
committees.
Other important issues that impact
FTA grant processing activities are
discussed below.
1. Change in Budget Structure
Because SAFETEA–LU restructured
FTA’s accounts from all general funded
accounts to one solely trust funded
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account and three general funded
accounts, we are not able to mix funds
from prior years in the same grant with
funds that will be appropriated in FY
2006 and beyond (except for New Starts
and research grants). Previously all
programs were funded approximately 80
percent trust funds from the Mass
Transit Account (MTA) of the Highway
Trust Fund and 20 percent General
Funds from the U.S. Treasury. The trust
funds were transferred into the general
funded accounts at the beginning of the
year. Under SAFETEA–LU most
programs are funded entirely from trust
funds derived from the Mass Transit
Account, while the New Starts and
Research programs are funded with
general funds. Carryover FY 2005 and
prior funds currently available for
obligation as well as FY 2006 funds,
when they become available, may be
included in an amendment to an
existing grant for New Starts and
research grants.
For formula programs funded solely
from trust funds beginning in FY 2006,
grantees must initiate a new grant to
obligate FY 2006 funds. Grant
amendments cannot be made to add FY
2006 and later year funds to a grant that
includes FY 2005 or prior funds.
Obligations of FY 2005 and prior year
carryover funds must be made in the
original program accounts established
under TEA–21 (either as an amendment
to an existing grant or as a new grant)
and cannot be combined with funds
appropriated in FY 2006 or later.
Grantees will, however, be able to
amend the new grants established with
FY 2006 funds to add funds made
available after FY 2006. We regret any
inconvenience this accounting change
may cause as we implement new
statutory requirements under
SAFETEA–LU. We encourage grantees
to spend down and close out old grants
as quickly as possible to minimize the
inconvenience.
2. Grant Budgets—SCOPE and ALI
Codes
FTA uses the SCOPE and Activity
Line Item (ALI) Codes in the grant
budgets to track program trends, to
report to Congress, and to respond to
requests from the Inspector General and
the Government Accountability Office
(GAO), as well as to manage grants. The
accuracy of the data is dependent on the
careful and correct use of codes. We
have revised the SCOPE and ALI table
to include new codes for the newly
eligible capital items, to better track
certain expenditures, and to
accommodate the new programs. We
encourage grantees to review the table
before selecting codes from the drop-
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down menus in TEAM–WEB while
creating a grant budget. Additional
information about how to use the
SCOPE and ALI codes to accurately
code budgets will be added to the
resources available through TEAM–
WEB.
3. Earmark Tracking
FTA is implementing new procedures
for relating grants to earmarks. Each
earmark published in the Federal
Register will have a unique identifier
associated with it. Tables of earmarks
will also be established in TEAM. When
applying for a grant using funding
designated by Congress, grantees will be
asked to identify the amount of funding
associated with specific earmarks used
in the grant. Further instructions will be
posted on the TEAM–WEB site and
training will be provided. The carryover
tables in this Notice include the new
identifiers.
4. New Freedom and JARC—
Administering Agency
Before the first grant application to
FTA is submitted, the Governor must
designate the state agency or agencies
charged with administering the New
Freedom and JARC formula programs.
In large urbanized areas with more than
one designated recipient or transit
operator, supplemental agreements may
be necessary.
5. Payments
Once a grant has been awarded and
executed, requests for payment can be
processed. To process payments FTA
uses ECHO–Web, an Internet accessible
system that provides grantees the
capability to submit payment requests
on-line, as well as receive user-IDs and
passwords via e-mail. New applicants
should contact the appropriate FTA
regional office to obtain and submit the
registration package necessary for set-up
under ECHO–Web.
6. Oversight
FTA conducts periodic oversight
reviews to assess grantee compliance
with Federal requirements. Each UZA
grantee is reviewed every three years (a
triennial review). States are reviewed
periodically for their management of the
section 5310 and 5311 programs. Other
more detailed reviews are scheduled
based on an annual grantee risk
assessment. FTA will develop
appropriate oversight procedures for the
new programs authorized by SAFETEA–
LU.
7. Technical Assistance
FTA headquarters and regional staff
will be pleased to answer your
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questions and provide any technical
assistance you may need to apply for
FTA program funds and manage the
grants you receive. This notice and the
program guidance circulars previously
identified in this document may be
accessed via the FTA Web site at
https://www.fta.dot.gov.
In addition, copies of the following
circulars and other useful information
are available on the FTA Website and
may be obtained from FTA regional
offices: 4220.1E, Third Party Contracting
Requirements, dated June 19, 2003; and
C5010.1C, Grant Management
Guidelines, dated October 1, 1998. The
FY 2006 Annual List of Certifications
and Assurances and Master Agreement
are also posted on the FTA Web site.
Other documents on the FTA Web site
of particular interest to public transit
providers and others include the annual
Statistical Summaries of FTA Grant
Assistance Programs and the NTD
Profiles. The DOT final rule on
‘‘Participation by Disadvantaged
Business Enterprises in Department of
Transportation Financial Assistance
Programs,’’ which was effective July 16,
2003, can be found on the Department’s
Web site at https://osdbu.dot.gov/
business/DBE/
49cfrpart26_final_rule.html.
Don Gismondi, Deputy Regional
Administrator, Region 5-Chicago, 200 West
Adams Street, Suite 320, Chicago, IL
60606, Tel. 312 353–2789. States served:
Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota,
Ohio, and Wisconsin.
Robert C. Patrick, Regional Administrator,
Region 6-Ft. Worth, 819 Taylor Street,
Room 8A36, Ft. Worth, TX 76102, Tel. 817
978–0550. States served: Arkansas,
Louisiana, Oklahoma, New Mexico and
Texas.
Mokhtee Ahmad, Regional Administrator,
Region 7-Kansas City, MO, 901 Locust
Street, Room 404, Kansas City, MO 64106,
Tel. 816 329–3920. States served: Iowa,
Kansas, Missouri, and Nebraska.
Lee O. Waddleton, Regional Administrator,
Region 8-Denver, 12300 West Dakota Ave.,
Suite 310, Lakewood, CO 80228–2583, Tel.
720–963–3300. States served: Colorado,
Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota,
Utah, and Wyoming.
Leslie T. Rogers, Regional Administrator,
Region 9-San Francisco, 201 Mission,
Street, Room 2210, San Francisco, CA
94105–1926, Tel. 415 744–3133. States
served: American Samoa, Arizona,
California, Guam, Hawaii, Nevada, and the
Northern Mariana Islands.
Rick Krochalis, Regional Administrator,
Region 10-Seattle, Jackson Federal
Building, 915 Second Avenue, Suite 3142,
Seattle, WA 98174–1002, Tel. 206 220–
7954. States served: Alaska, Idaho, Oregon,
and Washington.
Issued on: November 21, 2005.
David B. Horner,
Acting Deputy Administrator.
Specific Questions and Issues for Comment
1. FTA seeks public comment on the
continued use of the 83 percent Federal share
of cost of equipment and facilities for ADA
and CAA compliance. (See section IV.A.11).
2. FTA invites comment regarding
technical assistance or training that would be
helpful to grantees in implementing the
Special Needs of Elderly Individuals and
Individuals with Disabilities program.
Additionally, FTA seeks comment on
strategies and measures that could be
employed to evaluate the successes of this
program. (See section VI.H).
3. For the Special Needs of Elderly
Individuals and Individuals with Disabilities
program, FTA seeks comment on the specific
aspects of the collaborative planning process
(for example, participants, elements,
measures, etc.). FTA also seeks comment on
the relationship between the public transithuman services plans and other planning
processes. (See section VI.H).
4. FTA requests public comment on
whether the State-based rural data module
should serve as the basis for the new
mandatory reporting requirements. (See
section VI.I).
5. Concerning the basis for section RTAP
formula apportionments, comments are
invited on whether the floor should again be
raised and whether the low density portion
of the section 5311 formula should be used.
(See section VI.J).
Appendix A
FTA Regional Offices
Richard H. Doyle, Regional Administrator,
Region 1-Boston Kendall Square, 55
Broadway, Suite 920, Cambridge, MA
02142–1093, Tel. 617 494–2055. States
served: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and
Vermont.
Letitia Thompson, Regional Administrator,
Region 2-New York, One Bowling Green,
Room 429, New York, NY 10004–1415, Tel.
No. 212 668–2170. States served: New
Jersey, New York, and the Virgin Islands.
Susan Borinsky, Regional Administrator,
Region 3-Philadelphia, 1760 Market Street,
Suite 500, Philadelphia, PA 19103–4124,
Tel. 215 656–7100. States served:
Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania,
Virginia, West Virginia, and District of
Columbia.
Yvette Taylor, Regional Administrator,
Region 4-Atlanta, Atlanta Federal Center,
Suite 17T50, 61 Forsyth Street SW.,
Atlanta, GA 30303, Tel. 404 562–3500.
States served: Alabama, Florida, Georgia,
Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina,
Puerto Rico, South Carolina, and
Tennessee.
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6. FTA invites comments on use of the
National RTAP resource. (See section VI.J).
7. SAFETEA–LU does not specify a basis
for formula apportionment for the new Tribal
Transit program. FTA will develop
procedures for allocating the funds in
consultation with the Tribes and with
opportunity for public comment. An interim
measure would be to allocate FY 2006 funds
based on responses to a request for letters of
interest. FTA requests comments on the
feasibility of allocating FY 2006 funds based
on this approach. (See section VI.K).
8. We seek comments on what criteria
should be considered in selecting Tribes to
receive funding and what factors should be
used in allocating available funds among
successful applicants. (See section VI.K).
9. FTA may establish the terms and
conditions for the Tribal Transit program.
FTA seeks comments about appropriate
terms and conditions for the program. We
especially invite comments from Tribes that
previously received FTA funding about
which requirements we should consider
waiving for the program. (See section VI.K).
10. FTA invites comment regarding
technical assistance or training that would be
helpful to grantees in implementing the JARC
program. (See section VI.M).
11. For the JARC program, FTA seeks
comment on the specific aspects of the
collaborative planning process (for example,
participants, elements, measures, etc.). FTA
also seeks comment on the relationship
between the public transit-human services
plans and other planning processes. (See
section VI.M).
12. SAFETEA–LU requires FTA to conduct
a study to evaluate the effectiveness of the
JARC program (49 U.S.C. 5316(i)(2)). FTA
seeks comment on strategies and measures
that will evaluate the successes of this
program. (See section VI.M).
13. FTA invites comment regarding
technical assistance or training that would be
helpful to grantees in implementing the New
Freedom program. Additionally, FTA seeks
comment on strategies and measures that
could be employed to evaluate the successes
of this program. (See section VI.N).
14. We invite comment on the projects and
activities stated in the SAFETEA–LU that
might be funded under the New Freedom
program and how they relate to what is
‘‘beyond the ADA.’’ We invite comment on
activities related to ADA complementary
paratransit services beyond the minimum
requirements outlined in 49 CFR part 37.
Further, we invite comment regarding the
types of projects and services that should be
considered for eligibility under New
Freedom as they relate to new public
transportation beyond the ADA and
alternatives to public transportation beyond
the ADA. (See section VI.N).
15. FTA invites comments from all
interested parties on the Planning Emphasis
Areas (PEA) identified for FY 2006. (See
section VII).
BILLING CODE 4910–57–P
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BILLING CODE 4910–57–C
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 229 (Wednesday, November 30, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 71950-72022]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-23322]
[[Page 71949]]
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Part III
Department of Transportation
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Federal Transit Administration
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FTA Transit Program Changes, Authorized Funding Levels and
Implementation of the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users; Notice
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 229 / Wednesday, November 30, 2005 /
Notices
[[Page 71950]]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
FTA Transit Program Changes, Authorized Funding Levels and
Implementation of the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users
[Docket No. FTA-2005-23089]
AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration (FTA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: This notice announces changes in the Federal Transit
Administration (FTA) programs in accordance with SAFETEA-LU, which
authorizes funds for all of the surface transportation programs of the
Department of Transportation for Federal fiscal years 2005 through
2009. This notice provides preliminary implementation instructions and
guidance for grants under the new and revised programs in FY 2006 and
invites public comment. The notice also includes tables of unobligated
(or carryover) amounts for earmarks from prior years under the
discretionary programs, and tables that list discretionary program
earmarks authorized under SAFETEA-LU.
DATES: Comments on the content of this notice will be received until
December 30, 2005. Late filed comments will be considered to the extent
practicable.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments [identified by DOT DMS Docket Number
FTA-2005-23089] by any of the following methods:
1. Web Site: https://dms.dot.gov. Follow the instructions for
submitting comments on the DOT electronic docket site. Fax: 202-493-
2251.
2. Mail: Docket Management Facility; U.S. Department of
Transportation, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Nassif Building, PL-401,
Washington, DC 20590-0001.
3. Hand Delivery: Room PL-401 on the plaza level of the Nassif
Building, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Instructions: You must include the agency name (Federal Transit
Administration) and the docket number (FTA-2005-23089). You should
submit two copies of your comments if you submit them by mail. If you
wish to receive confirmation that FTA received your comments, you must
include a self-addressed stamped postcard. Note that all comments
received will be posted without change to the Department's Docket
Management System (DMS) Web site located at https://dms.dot.gov. This
means that if your comment includes any personal identifying
information, such information will be made available to users of DMS.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general information about this
notice contact Mary Martha Churchman, Director, Office of Resource
Management and State Programs, (202) 366-2053. Please contact the
appropriate FTA regional office, from the list in Appendix A, for
grantee specific requests for information or technical assistance.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Overview
II. FY 2006 Funding for FTA Programs
A. Authorized Funding for FY 2006
B. Status of FY 2006 Funding
C. Project Management Oversight Takedown
III. SAFETEA-LU: FY 2006-2009 Authorized Funding Levels and Project
Authorizations
IV. SAFETEA-LU: Highlights of Cross-Cutting Changes
A. Definitional Changes
1. Mobility Management
2. Security Planning, Training, and Drills
3. Debt Service Reserve
4. Intercity Bus and Intercity Rail
5. Definition of Public Transportation
B. Cross-cutting Programmatic Requirements and Changes
1. State Infrastructure Bank
2. Coordination
3. Public Participation Planning Requirement
4. Public Hearings
5. Labor Protection
6. Buy America
7. Procurement
8. Pre-award/Post-Delivery Reviews
9. Charter Service and School Bus
10. Revenue Bonds as Local Match
11. Government's Share of Cost of Equipment and Facilities for
ADA and Clean Air Act Compliance
V. SAFETEA-LU: Summary of New Programs and Formulas
A. New Freedom (49 U.S.C. 5317)
B. Alternative Transportation in the Parks and Public Lands (49
U.S.C. 5320)
C. Small Starts (Component of the Section 5309 New Starts
Program)
D. Alternative Analysis (49 U.S.C. 5339)
E. Public Transportation on Indian Reservations (49 U.S.C.
5311(c)(1))
F. Growing States and High Density States Formula Factors (49
U.S.C. 5340)
VI. Program Specific Information and Requests for Comments
A. Metropolitan Planning Program (49 U.S.C. 5303)
B. Statewide Planning and Research Program (49 U.S.C. 5304)
C. Urbanized Area Formula Program (49 U.S.C. 5307)
D. Clean Fuels Grant Program (49 U.S.C. 5308)
E. Capital Investment Program (49 U.S.C. 5309)--Fixed Guideway
Modernization
F. Capital Investment Program (49 U.S.C. 5309)--Bus and Bus-
Related Facilities
G. Capital Investment Program (49 U.S.C. 5309)--New Starts
H. Special Needs of Elderly Individuals and Individuals with
Disabilities Program (49 U.S.C. 5310)
I. Nonurbanized Area Formula Program (49 U.S.C. 5311)
J. Rural Transportation Assistance Program (49 U.S.C.
5311(b)(2))
K. Public Transportation on Indian Reservations Program (49
U.S.C. 5311(c)(1))
L. National Research Program (49 U.S.C. 5314)
M. Job Access and Reverse Commute Program (49 U.S.C. 5316)
N. New Freedom Program (49 U.S.C. 5317)
O. Alternative Transportation in the Parks and Public Lands
Program (49 U.S.C. 5320)
P. Alternative Analysis Program (49 U.S.C. 5339)
Q. Growing States and High Density States Formula Factors (49
U.S.C. 5340)
R. Over-the-Road Bus Accessibility Program (Pub. L. 105-85,
Section 3038)
VII. FTA National Planning Emphasis Areas
VIII. FTA Policy and Procedures for FY 2006 Grants
A. Automatic Pre-Award Authority To Incur Project Costs
B. Letter of No Prejudice (LONP) Policy
C. FTA FY 2006 Annual List of Certifications and Assurances
D. FHWA Funds Used for Transit Purposes
E. Consolidated Planning Grants
F. Grant Application Procedures
Tables
1. SAFETEA-LU Authorized Programs and Funding Levels
2. SAFETEA-LU Authorized Section 5309 New Starts Projects
3. SAFETEA-LU Authorized Section 5339 Alternative Analysis
Projects
4. SAFETEA-LU Authorized Section 5309 Bus and Bus-Related
Facilities Projects
5. SAFETEA-LU Authorized Section 5308 Clean Fuels Projects
6. Prior Year Unobligated Section 5309 Bus and Bus-Related
Facilities Allocations
7. Prior Year Unobligated Section 5309 New Starts Allocations
8. SAFETEA-LU Authorized Section 5314 National Research Program
Projects
9. Prior Year Unobligated Job Access and Reverse Commute
Allocations
Appendices
Appendix A--FTA Regional Offices
Appendix B--Specific Questions and Issues for Comment
I. Overview
This document contains important information about new FTA programs
authorized by the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation
Equity Act: A Legacy for Users, (SAFETEA-LU) (Pub. L. 109-059), signed
into law by President Bush on August 10, 2005, and changes to programs
reauthorized by that legislation. It also contains information on how
FTA plans to administer the transit programs
[[Page 71951]]
discussed in this document, in fiscal year (FY) 2006. For each FTA
program included, we have provided information on the SAFETEA-LU
authorized funding levels for fiscal years 2006-2009, the basis for
apportionment or allocation for funds, requirements specific to the
program, period of availability of funds, and other program
information. The document also includes a section that introduces
planning emphasis areas for FY 2006. A separate section of the document
provides information on pre-award authority and other requirements and
guidance applicable to FTA program administration. Finally, the notice
includes tables that show unobligated or carryover funding available,
in FY 2006, from prior years under certain discretionary programs, and
tables that list authorized project earmarks under SAFTEA-LU.
Information in this document includes references to the existing
FTA program guidance circulars. While some information in the circulars
has been superseded by new provisions in SAFETEA-LU, the circulars
remain a resource for program guidance in most areas. FTA intends to
revise the circulars, with an opportunity for public comment.
To supplement the guidance provided in this document FTA is
preparing answers to frequently asked questions (FAQs), on SAFETEA-LU
changes and impacts, from its grantees, stakeholders, and other
interested parties. These FAQs will be posted on the FTA Web site at
https://www.fta.dot.gov when they become available.
Throughout the document we have included specific questions on
which we seek comment, and we invite your comments to the docket on any
information provided in this notice. A list of the specific questions
or issues can be found in Appendix B.
II. FY 2006 Funding for FTA Programs
A. Authorized Funding for FY 2006
SAFETEA-LU provides a combination of trust and general funds that
total $8.6 billion for FTA programs for FY 2006. Table 1 of this
document shows the authorized funding for the FTA programs for the
fiscal years 2006-2009. This notice provides a narrative explanation of
the funding levels and other factors affecting the apportionments and
allocations for each program.
B. Status of FY 2006 Funding
When the FY 2006 appropriations bill is passed and enacted into
law, FTA will publish another notice that will include a table for each
program that contains the apportionments or allocations, based on the
program funding level in the FY 2006 appropriations act. At the time
this notice was prepared the agency was operating under a Continuing
Resolution and only a small fraction of the FY 2006 funds authorized in
SAFETEA-LU was available for FTA programs and administrative expenses.
No FY 2006 program funds have been apportioned at this time. Congress
recently took action on the FY 2006 Appropriations Act and we will
publish the FY 2006 apportionments and allocations shortly.
C. Project Management Oversight Takedown
FTA draws money from funds appropriated to certain FTA programs for
program oversight activities conducted by the agency. The funds are
used to provide necessary oversight activities, including oversight of
the construction of any major project under these statutory programs;
to conduct safety and security, civil rights, procurement, management
and financial reviews and audits; and to provide technical assistance
to correct deficiencies identified in compliance reviews and audits.
49 U.S.C. 5327 authorizes the takedown of funds from FTA programs
for project management oversight. SAFETEA-LU increased the amount that
may be set-aide for such activities above the levels established under
TEA-21 and identified additional programs to which the oversight
takedown applies. SAFETEA-LU provides oversight takedowns at the
following levels: 0.5 percent of Planning funds, 0.75 percent of
Urbanized Area Formula funds, 1 percent of Capital Investment funds,
0.5 percent of Special Needs of Elderly Individuals and Individuals
with Disabilities formula funds, 0.5 percent of Nonurbanized Area
Formula funds, and 0.5 percent of Alternative Transportation in the
Parks and Public Lands funds. Language in section 5327 also specifies
the addition of ``safety and security management'' to the list of
project management plan requirements.
III. SAFETEA-LU: FY 2006-2009 Authorized Funding Levels and Project
Authorizations
SAFETEA-LU provides a combination of trust and general fund
authorizations that total $45.3 billion for public transportation for
fiscal years 2005-2009 ($52.6 billion over the six year period 2004-
2009). Just over 80 percent is derived from the Mass Transit Account,
with only New Starts, Research and FTA Administrative funding coming
from the General Fund. All funds, including the General Fund portion,
are guaranteed, which means that the guaranteed annual levels are
already ``paid for'' under Congressional budgetary rules. This assures
that in each year's appropriations process the specified amount of
authorized funding will be available each year for transit programs.
See Table 1 for the guaranteed funding levels by program.
Previously, under TEA-21, all the FTA programs were funded with
both Mass Transit Account and General Funds. Because of this change in
the structure of FTA's accounts, except for New Starts and Research
program grants, FTA will not be able to combine FY 2006 funds in the
same grant with funds appropriated in prior years. See section VIII F
below for grant application procedures.
SAFETEA-LU includes 405 New Starts project designations for fiscal
years 2006-2009, many of which are listed more than once. The total
funding authorized for these projects is $5.49 billion. Thirty-one (31)
projects are authorized for Full Funding Grant Agreements (FFGAs); 38
projects are authorized for Final Design (FD) and Construction, and 264
projects are authorized for Preliminary Engineering (PE). Dollar
amounts are specified by fiscal year for each FFGA project. No funding
amounts are specified for the FD and construction and PE projects.
Fifty-two New Starts project designations listed have a total
amount specified but this amount is not identified with any particular
fiscal year. In addition, 18 New Starts projects for Alternative
Analysis under section 5339 are designated and amounts authorized for
fiscal years 2006 and 2007 specified. The Alaska and Hawaii Ferry Boat
and Denali Commission projects are also authorized. All New Starts
earmarks are listed in Table 2 and Table 3 by State, including the
dollar amount if specified.
Also authorized are project specific allocations for 646 Bus and
Bus-Related Facilities projects totaling $1,819,662,341 for fiscal
years 2006-2009. These projects and amounts are displayed in Table 4.
Under the Clean Fuels program, 16 projects totaling $78,385,000 are
earmarked for funding for FY 2006-2009. These projects and amounts are
displayed in Table 5.
It should be noted that projects earmarked in SAFETEA-LU are
subject to Congressional actions in later appropriations bills and
funding is not available for immediate obligation. Estimates of formula
program funding
[[Page 71952]]
levels for fiscal years 2006-2009, by State and urbanized area (UZA),
are available on the FTA Web site. These numbers are for planning
purposes only as they will be revised when each year's appropriation
bill is enacted but may be used for the purpose of programming
metropolitan transportation improvement programs (TIPs) and statewide
transportation improvement programs (STIPs).
In the estimates of formula funding for UZAs, for the JARC and New
Freedom programs, FTA included the amount of funding attributable to
each UZA less than 200,000 in population (small UZA) low income
individuals and individuals with disabilities, respectively. These
amounts were provided, for information purposes only. Under these
programs, funds for the UZAs under 200,000 in population will be
apportioned to the state for competitive selection of projects.
Similarly, we estimated the amount of funding that might go to each
State under the Public Transportation on Indian Reservations Program
(49 U.S.C. 5311(c)(1) also referred to as the Tribal Transit Program in
this document), based on tribal population. But these funds will not be
apportioned to the States and the process for apportioning them among
the Tribes has not yet been determined.
IV. SAFETEA-LU: Highlights of Cross-Cutting Changes
A. Definitional Changes
1. Mobility Management
SAFETEA-LU added ``mobility management'' to the list of capital
projects at 5302(a)(1)(L). This allows ``short-range planning and
management activities and projects for improving coordination among
public transportation and other transportation service providers
carried out by a recipient or subrecipient'' to be funded as a capital
project. The definition excludes the actual costs of operating public
transportation services, but allows the costs of planning and
coordination with human service transportation to be treated as capital
rather than operating costs.
2. Security Planning, Training, and Drills
Four new eligible capital activities were added at 5302(a)(1)(J).
These include projects ``to refine and develop security and emergency
response plans, projects aimed at detecting chemical and biological
agents in public transportation, the conduct of emergency response
drills with public transportation agencies and local first response
agencies, and security training for public transportation employees.''
Expenses related to transit operations, other than those incurred in
conducting emergency response drills or security training, are excluded
from this definition and will continue to be eligible only as operating
in those areas eligible to use FTA funds for operating assistance.
3. Debt Service Reserve
SAFETEA-LU allows recipients to be reimbursed from section 5309
funds for deposits of bond proceeds in a debt service reserve. The Act
also allows up to ten recipients to be reimbursed from section 5307
funds for bond proceeds deposited in a debt service reserve established
with a bondholders' trustee. These provisions will have the effect of
reducing grantees' out of pocket bond issuance costs due to the
reimbursement for the cost of the debt service reserve. The new capital
definition of debt service reserve is found at 5302(a)(1)(K) and the
limitations on its use are at sections 5323(e)(3) and (4).
4. Intercity Bus and Intercity Rail
The definition of an eligible joint development capital project in
section 5302(A)(1)(G) has been expanded to include ``construction,
renovation, and improvement of intercity bus and intercity rail
stations and terminals.'' Further, the limitation that made
``commercial revenue-producing facilities'' ineligible for FTA
assistance has been lifted with respect to intercity bus stations or
terminals. Intercity bus stations and terminals are not required to
provide a fair share of revenue for public transportation that will be
used for public transportation.
The result of these changes is that FTA funds can now be used for
all aspects of intercity bus and rail facilities in facilities (such as
intermodal terminals) which meet the criteria in section 5302(a)(1)(G)
for joint development projects (physical and functional relationship to
public transportation). Further, $35 million per year is set aside in
the section 5309 Bus and Bus-Related Facilities program for intermodal
terminals, including the intercity bus portions of those terminals.
5. Definition of Public Transportation
Throughout SAFETEA-LU, the term public transportation is used
wherever the FTA statute previously referred to mass transit or mass
transportation. The definition of public transportation at 5302(a)(10)
was also modified to specifically exclude intercity bus transportation.
This change does not affect the eligibility of intercity bus service
under the rural program (section 5311) or the over-the-road bus
accessibility program (TEA-21, section 3038). The definition now also
specifically excludes intercity passenger rail transportation provided
by AMTRAK. The intercity bus and intercity rail portion of intermodal
terminals, however, is an eligible capital cost under 49 U.S.C.
5302(a)(1)(G).
B. Cross-cutting Programmatic Requirements and Changes
1. State Infrastructure Bank
SAFETEA-LU establishes a new State Infrastructure Bank (SIB)
program under which all States, Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia,
American Samoa, Guam, the Virgin Islands, and the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands are authorized to enter into cooperative
agreements with the Secretary of Transportation to establish financial
entities that provide various types of transportation infrastructure
credit assistance for fiscal years 2005-2009. The new program is a
continuation and expansion of similar programs created by the National
Highway System (NHS) Act in 1995 and the TEA-21 legislation of 1998. It
gives States the capacity to increase the efficiency of their
transportation investment and significantly leverage Federal resources
by attracting non-Federal public and private investment. The program
provides greater flexibility to the States by allowing other types of
project assistance in addition to grant assistance.
2. Coordination
Under three FTA formula programs [the Special Needs of Elderly
Individuals and Individuals with Disabilities Program (section 5310),
Job Access and Reverse Commute (section 5316), and New Freedom (section
5317)], there is a requirement that the designated recipient
competitively select projects and that the projects must be derived
from a locally developed coordinated public transit/human service
transportation plan. Public transit operators, including those funded
under both the urbanized and non-urbanized formula programs (sections
5307 and 5311) are expected to be participants in the local planning
process for coordinated public transit/human service transportation.
See the specific programs below for more information about the planning
requirements as it relates to the three programs. See also the
metropolitan planning public participation requirement below.
[[Page 71953]]
3. Public Participation Planning Requirement
Metropolitan Planning Organizations (MPOs) must develop and utilize
a ``participation plan'' that provides reasonable opportunities for the
interested parties to comment on the content of the metropolitan
transportation plan and metropolitan TIP. This requirement is intended
to afford parties who participate in the metropolitan planning process
a specific opportunity to comment on the plan prior to its approval,
including governmental agencies and nonprofit organizations that
receive Federal assistance from a source other than the Department of
Transportation (DOT) to provide non-emergency transportation services
and recipients of assistance under section 204 of Title 23 U.S.C. The
participation plan must be in place prior to MPO adoption of
transportation plans and TIPs addressing SAFETEA-LU provisions.
4. Public Hearings
The public hearing requirement in 49 U.S.C. 5323(b) for capital
projects was changed by SAFETEA-LU. Formerly, an opportunity for a
public hearing was required on a section 5309 grant application if the
grant would substantially affect the community or its mass
transportation service. Many of the notices published under this
requirement did not ultimately result in a hearing being held.
SAFETEA-LU associates more clearly the public involvement and
hearing requirements for capital projects with the environmental review
required by the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and its
implementing regulations. It also broadens the requirement to apply to
all capital projects (as defined in section 5302). Now, the grant
applicant must provide an adequate opportunity for public review and
comment on a capital project, and, after providing notice, must hold a
public hearing on the project if the project affects significant
economic, social, or environmental interests. These requirements will
be satisfied through compliance with the NEPA requirements for a public
scoping process, public review and comment on NEPA documents, and a
public hearing on every draft environmental impact statement (EIS). FTA
will also require a public hearing on environmental assessments (EAs)
that have a high probability of being elevated to EISs.
Section 5323(b) must be read in concert with section 5324(b) which
states that FTA must review the public comments and hearing transcript
to ascertain that an adequate opportunity to present views was given to
all parties having a significant economic, social, or environmental
interest in the project, and that FTA must make a written finding to
this effect.
5. Labor Protection
SAFETEA-LU codified in 5333(b) streamlined labor protection
arrangements already used by the Department of Labor (DOL) in
certifying FTA grants for purchase of like-kind equipment or facilities
or non-material grant amendments. It also codified existing practice
when a contractor is changed through competitive bidding. In section
5311, the use of a special warranty is written into the law. Awards
under two new programs, New Freedom and Alternative Transportation in
Parks and Public Lands, will not be required to be certified by DOL.
6. Buy America
The Buy America stipulation is intended to ensure that Federal
grants stimulate domestic economic activity. FTA funds must be used for
goods that must be produced or manufactured in the United States or
with specific products, and have a defined percent of domestic content.
Four changes from the previous law are that SAFETEA-LU:
Requires the Secretary of Transportation to issue a
written justification for public interest waivers on Buy America
requirements. (Under the law, he may waive the Buy America requirements
if they are deemed inconsistent with the public interest). The
Secretary must publish the written justification in the Federal
Register and provide the public with a reasonable period of time for
notice and comment.
Clarifies that a party adversely affected by a FTA
decision under the Buy America provisions has the right to seek
administrative review.
Repeals the general waiver of sub-sections (b) and (c) of
Appendix A of section 661.7.
Requires a rulemaking within 180 days clarifying or
defining the following Buy America requirements:
1. Microprocessors; Buy America requirements have been waived for
microprocessors since few are manufactured in the United States. The
Secretary is directed to apply the waiver to a device that is solely
for the purpose of processing and storing data and not extended to a
product containing the microprocessor.
2. Defining the term ``end product'' for non-rolling stock. Does
the end product serve a purpose by itself or with other end products on
an interoperative basis? A product that does not work with products of
other manufacturers is part of that manufacturers system that is the
end product. A list of systems and end products will be developed.
3. Defining the term ``negotiated procurement'' and determine Buy
America compliance on the basis of the certification with the final
offer.
4. Defining the term ``contractor''.
5. Clarifying that a grant recipient may request a non-availability
waiver after the contract award if the contractor has made a
certification of compliance with the requirements in good faith. The
contractor must have certified that it can meet the Buy America
requirements before being awarded a contract. If the contractor later
finds that parts are not available to meet the requirement, the grantee
may now request a Buy America waiver.
7. Procurement
SAFETEA-LU recodified FTA's procurement requirements in section
5325 of Title 49 U.S.C. Section 5325(a) establishes full and open
competition as the basic requirement for FTA-funded third party
contracts. Section 5325(b), which covers architectural, engineering,
and design contracts, has been modified to match similar language in
Title 23 U.S.C., on reciprocity of audited indirect cost rates. Section
5325(c) on use of other-than-low-bid procurement has been reenacted.
Language on Turnkey Contracting, formerly in section 5326, now appears
as section 5325(d), and is re-titled ``Design-Build'', reflecting more
up-to-date terminology. Provisions formerly in section 5326 governing
rolling stock procurements now appear in sections 5325(e) and (f).
Section 5325(g) now allows access by DOT or the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) to any contract-related record, not just
those in sole-source procurements. Section 5325(h) continues the
prohibition on exclusionary or discriminatory procurements. A new
section 5325(i) prohibits application of State laws requiring bus
purchases to go through in-State bus dealers from applying to projects
assisted under the FTA program. Finally, section 5325(j) codifies in
law the requirement that contracts be awarded only to ``responsible''
contractors. Grantees are required to assess the integrity of the
contractor, compliance with public policy, the contractor's financial
and technical resources, and the contractors past performance,
particularly as reported in the Contractor Performance Assessment
Report required under section 5309(l)(2).
[[Page 71954]]
8. Pre-Award/Post-Delivery Reviews
Under the current Buy America provisions, there is a requirement
for a resident factory inspector for rolling stock procurements of
greater than 10 buses. SAFETEA-LU eliminates the requirement for a
resident factory inspector for rolling stock procurements of 20
vehicles or less for use in rural (other than urbanized) areas, or UZAs
of 200,000 population or less.
9. Charter Service and School Bus
SAFETEA-LU section 3023(d) amended 49 U.S.C., section 5323(d)(2)
and provided new remedies for violations of charter service. The
amended provision states that the Secretary shall bar a recipient or an
operator from receiving Federal transit assistance in an amount the
Secretary considers appropriate if the Secretary finds a pattern of
violations of the agreement. The previous provision stated that the
Secretary could bar a recipient from receiving further assistance when
the Secretary found a continuing pattern of violations of the
agreement. The new provision allows for more flexibility. Under the
prior law the Secretary could totally bar a recipient from receiving
further financial assistance, but this penalty was so harsh that it was
only rarely invoked. Under SAFETEA-LU the Secretary can determine a
penalty less than a complete bar of financial assistance; the Secretary
shall bar an operator from receiving assistance in an amount the
Secretary considers appropriate.
In addition, the Conference Report for SAFETEA-LU stated that the
conferees directed FTA to initiate a negotiated rulemaking seeking
public comment on the charter service regulation implementing 49
U.S.C., 5323(d) and to consider the following issues: (1) Whether
public transit agencies can provide community-based charter services
directly to local governments and private non-profit agencies that
would not otherwise be served in a cost effective manner by private
operators; (2) how can the administration and enforcement of charter
bus provisions be better communicated to the public, including use of
internet technology; (3) improve the enforcement of violations; and (4)
improve the complaint and administrative appeals process. FTA has
initiated the negotiated rulemaking process.
SAFETEA-LU section 3023(f) amended 49 U.S.C., 5323(f) and provided
new remedies for violations of the school bus transportation provision.
The amended provision states that if the Secretary finds a violation,
the Secretary shall bar a recipient or operator from receiving Federal
transit assistance in an amount the Secretary considers appropriate.
The previous provision stated that in the case of a violation, an
applicant could not receive other mass transportation financial
assistance. The new provision allows for more flexibility. Under the
prior law the penalty was so severe that it was only rarely invoked.
Under SAFETEA-LU the Secretary can determine a penalty less than a
complete bar of financial assistance; the Secretary shall bar an
operator from receiving assistance in an amount the Secretary considers
appropriate.
10. Revenue Bonds as Local Match
Originally allowed in TEA-21, revenue bonds may now be used as
local match, provided that the grantee maintains a greater level of
local transit investment in the subsequent three years (as demonstrated
in the TIP) than as in the current and prior two years. This provision
in 5323(e) allows bond proceeds, secured by the revenues of a transit
capital project, to be used as local match for that project.
11. Government's Share of Cost of Equipment and Facilities for ADA and
Clean Air Act Compliance
The provision allowing a 90 percent Federal share for the
incremental cost of compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA) or Clean Air Act (CAA) was expanded to include vehicle-related
facilities as well as equipment at section 5323(i). Under the provision
allowing the Secretary ``to determine through practicable
administrative procedures, the costs of such equipment or facilities
attributable to compliance with those Acts'', FTA previously computed
an 83 percent composite match for vehicle-related equipment. Given
changes in technology, FTA may revisit that calculation, but for the
time being, grantees may use the 83 percent share. FTA seeks public
comment on the continued use of the 83 percent share. Also, the
administratively determined 83 percent Federal share does not apply to
facilities, for which the costs are more variable. Grantees may apply
for the 90 percent share of the actual incremental costs of vehicle-
related facility improvements related to ADA or CAA compliance, but FTA
requests that grantees provide supporting documentation for that
request. Until FTA develops guidance, the eligibility of facility
related costs at the higher share will be reviewed on a case-by-case
basis as part of the grant application process.
V. SAFETEA-LU: Summary of New Programs and Formulas
A. New Freedom (49 U.S.C. 5317)
The New Freedom program provides formula funding for new public
transportation services and public transportation alternatives beyond
those required by the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 that
assist individuals with disabilities with transportation, including
transportation to and from jobs and employment support services.
Details are provided in section VI N below.
B. Alternative Transportation in the Parks and Public Lands (49 U.S.C.
5320)
SAFETEA-LU provides $22 million annually for alternative
transportation projects to enhance the protection of national parks and
public lands and increase the enjoyment of those visiting the parks and
public lands by ensuring access to all, including persons with
disabilities, improving conservation and park and public land
opportunities in urban areas through partnering with State and local
governments, and improving park and public land transportation
infrastructure. The program is to be implemented by FTA in consultation
with the Department of the Interior and other Federal land management
agencies.
The Secretary of Transportation will develop cooperative
arrangements with the Secretary of the Interior that provide: (1)
Technical assistance; (2) interagency and multidisciplinary teams to
develop alternative transportation policy, procedures, and
coordination; and, (3) procedures and criteria relating to the
planning, selection, and funding of qualified projects and the
implementation and oversight of selected projects. The Secretary of the
Interior, after consultation with and in cooperation with the Secretary
of Transportation, will determine the final selection and funding
levels of an annual program of qualified projects.
C. Small Starts (Component of the Section 5309 New Starts Program)
SAFETEA-LU specifies a new category of projects to be funded
separately out of the section 5309 New Starts program. This new
category encompasses smaller scale projects, referred to as Small
Starts, and has been authorized at a funding level of $200 million per
year, beginning in FY 2007.
Projects requesting less than $75 million in section 5309 New
Starts funds with a total project cost less than $250 million will be
eligible to receive funds under the new Small Starts provision.
SAFETEA-LU lays out a
[[Page 71955]]
simplified evaluation and rating process that FTA will use to support
funding decisions for Small Starts projects. The statute specifies both
cost-based and project-definition-based eligibility requirements. The
definition of fixed guideway capital project to be applied in Small
Starts has been expanded to include substantial corridor bus projects
that either operate in a separate right of way during peak hours or
contain significant investment in corridor-based bus improvements.
Small Starts projects must also be the result of planning and
alternatives analysis.
The transit program statute provides for an evaluation process for
proposed Small Starts projects that include a subset of the evaluation
criteria specified for traditional New Starts projects. The Small
Starts evaluation criteria in the statute include:
Transit supportive land use,
Cost-effectiveness,
Reliability of cost and ridership estimates,
Effect on economic development, and
Other factors that the Secretary determines are
appropriate.
Currently, projects requesting less than $25 million in New Starts
funding are exempt from the annual evaluation and rating process. Under
the new statute, this exemption no longer applies once a regulation is
issued for Small Starts. All eligible projects that meet the
aforementioned Small Starts cost criterion will be rated and evaluated
according to the Small Starts process. SAFETEA-LU also calls for a
simplified project development process to be applied to Small Starts
projects. SAFETEA-LU requires that FTA issue regulations establishing
an evaluation and rating process for the Small Starts process. The
Small Starts Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking will be issued soon.
D. Alternatives Analysis (49 U.S.C. 5339)
Alternatives Analysis is no longer included in the eight percent of
the section 5309 New Starts program that can be used for projects prior
to FD and Construction. Instead, $25 million annually is provided for
Alternatives Analysis grants under section 5339. As before,
Metropolitan Planning funds and Urbanized Area Formula funds can also
be used to support alternatives analysis. The procedures grantees
should use to apply for section 5339 funds are referred to in section
VI P below.
E. Public Transportation on Indian Reservations (49 U.S.C. 5311(c)(1))
SAFETEA-LU creates a new Tribal Transit program as a takedown under
the section 5311 program. Forty-five million dollars is authorized for
fiscal years 2006-2009, growing from $8 million annually to $15
million. The funds are to be apportioned to the Tribes, not to the
States, for capital and operating assistance for rural transit and
rural intercity bus service. FTA will develop procedures for the Tribal
Transit program in consultation with tribal leaders and other
interested stakeholders.
In addition to funding under the Tribal Transit program, States
must continue to include the Tribes in the equitable distribution of
the section 5311 funds apportioned to the States. Indian Tribes are
established as direct recipients under section 5311 for funding from
the States' apportionment as well as from the new Tribal Transit
program.
See section VI K for additional information and for specific
questions on which FTA seeks comments from Tribes and other interested
stakeholders.
F. Growing States and High Density States Formula Factors (49 U.S.C.
5340)
SAFETEA-LU establishes new Growing States and High Density States
formula factors to distribute funds to the section 5307 and section
5311 programs. One-half of the funds are made available under the
Growing States factors and are apportioned by a formula based on State
population forecasts for 15 years beyond the most recent Census.
Amounts apportioned for each State are then distributed between UZAs
and nonurbanzied areas based on the ratio of urbanized/nonurbanzied
population within each State. The High Density States factors
distribute the other half of the funds to States with population
densities in excess of 370 persons per square mile. These funds are
apportioned only to UZAs within those States. Additional details on the
Growing States and High Density States formula and factors are
discussed in section VI Q below.
VI. Program Specific Information and Requests for Comments
A. Metropolitan Planning Program (49 U.S.C. 5303)
Section 5303 authorizes a cooperative, continuous, and
comprehensive planning program for transportation investment decision-
making at the metropolitan area level. State Departments of
Transportation and MPOs may receive funds for planning projects that
support the economic vitality of the metropolitan area, especially by
enabling global competitiveness, productivity, and efficiency;
increasing the safety and security of the transportation system for
motorized and non-motorized users; increasing the accessibility and
mobility options available to people and for freight; protecting and
enhancing the environment, promoting energy conservation, and improving
quality of life; enhancing the integration and connectivity of the
transportation system, across and between modes, for people and
freight; promoting efficient system management and operation; and
emphasizing the preservation of the existing transportation system.
1. Authorized Amounts
SAFETEA-LU authorizes the following amounts to carryout section
5305 Planning programs for fiscal years 2006-2009:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN30NO05.001
As specified in law, 82.72 percent of the amounts authorized for
section 5305 are allocated to the Metropolitan Planning program. The
table below shows the amount of funding authorized under section 5305
to be allocated to the Metropolitan Planning program.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN30NO05.000
[[Page 71956]]
2. Basis for Formula Apportionment
FTA allocates Metropolitan Planning funds to the States according
to a statutory formula. Eighty percent of the funds are distributed to
the States as a basic allocation based on each State's UZA population,
based on the most recent Census. The remaining 20 percent is provided
to the States as a supplemental allocation based on an FTA
administrative formula to address planning needs in the larger, more
complex UZAs. The amount published for each State is a combined total
of both the basic and supplemental allocation.
3. Requirements
The State allocates Metropolitan Planning funds to MPOs in UZAs or
portions thereof to provide funds for projects included in an annual
work program (the Unified Planning Work Program, or UPWP) that includes
both highway and transit planning projects. Each State has either
reaffirmed or developed, in consultation with their MPOs, a new
allocation formula, as a result of the 2000 Census. The State
allocation formula may be changed annually, but any change requires
approval by the FTA regional office before grant approval. Program
guidance for the Metropolitan Planning Program is found in FTA Circular
C8100.1B, Program Guidance and Application Instructions for
Metropolitan Planning Program Grants, dated October 25, 1996. FTA is in
the process of updating this circular to incorporate changes resulting
from language in SAFETEA-LU.
4. Period of Availability
The funds apportioned under the Metropolitan Planning program will
remain available to be obligated by FTA to recipients for four fiscal
years--which includes the year of apportionment plus three additional
years. Any apportioned funds that remain unobligated at the end of this
period will revert to FTA for reapportionment under the program.
5. Other Program Information
Sections VII and VIII F of this document provide guidance and
information specific to FTA planning programs, including the
Metropolitan Planning program. Please refer to those sections for
additional information relevant to this program.
B. Statewide Planning and Research Program (49 U.S.C. 5304)
This program provides financial assistance to States for Statewide
planning and other technical assistance activities (including
supplementing the technical assistance program provided through the
Metropolitan Planning program), planning support for nonurbanized
areas, research, development and demonstration projects, fellowships
for training in the public transportation field, university research,
and human resource development.
1. Authorized Amounts
SAFETA-LU authorizes the following amounts to carryout section 5305
Planning programs for fiscal years 2006-2009:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN30NO05.002
As specified in law, 17.28 percent of the amounts authorized for
section 5305 are allocated to the Statewide Planning and Research
program. The table below shows the amount of funding authorized under
section 5305 to be allocated to the Statewide Planning and Research
program.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN30NO05.003
2. Basis for Apportionment Formula
Funds are apportioned to States by a statutory formula that is
based on information received from the latest decennial census, and the
State's UZA population as compared to the UZA population of all States.
However, a State must receive at least 0.5 percent of the amount
apportioned under this program.
3. Requirements
Funds are provided to States for statewide planning and research
programs. These funds may be used for a variety of purposes such as
planning, technical studies and assistance, demonstrations, management
training, and cooperative research. In addition, a State may authorize
a portion of these funds to be used to supplement Metropolitan Planning
funds allocated by the State to its UZAs, as the State deems
appropriate. Program guidance for the Statewide Planning and Research
program is found in FTA Circular C8200.1, Program Guidance and
Application Instructions for State Planning and Research Program
Grants, dated December 27, 2001. FTA is in the process of updating this
circular to incorporate changes resulting from language in SAFETEA-LU.
4. Period of Availability
The funds apportioned under the Statewide Planning and Research
program will remain available to be obligated by FTA to recipients for
four fiscal years'which include the year of apportionment plus three
additional fiscal years. Any apportioned funds that remain unobligated
at the end of this period will revert to FTA for reapportionment under
the program.
C. Urbanized Area Formula Program (49 U.S.C. 5307)
Section 5307 authorizes Federal capital and operating assistance
for transit in UZAs. A UZA is an area with a population of 50,000 or
more that has been defined and designated as such in the most recent
decennial census by the U.S. Census Bureau. The Urbanized Area Formula
Program also supports planning, in addition to that funded under the
Metropolitan Planning program described above. Funding is apportioned
directly to each UZA with a population of 200,000 or more, and to the
State Governors for UZAs with populations between 50,000 and 200,000.
Generally, operating assistance is not an eligible expense for UZAs
with populations of 200,000 or more. However, there are several
exceptions to this restriction. The exceptions are described in section
2(e) below.
[[Page 71957]]
1. Authorized Amounts
SAFETEA-LU authorizes the following amounts under section 5307 to
provide financial assistance to UZAs for fiscal years 2006-2009:
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN30NO05.004
SAFETEA-LU directs that there be a one percent takedown from the
funds made available under section 5307. This takedown amount will be
for apportionment under the new Small Transit Intensive Cities (STIC)
formula.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN30NO05.005
Under the formula for STIC, funds are apportioned to UZAs with a
population less than 200,000 that meet or exceed the average level of
service for all UZAs with populations between 200,000 and 1,000,000.
In addition to the funds made available to UZAs under section 5307,
approximately 84 percent of the funds authorized for the new section
5340 Growing States and High Density States formula factors will be
apportioned to UZAs. The portion of authorized section 5340 funds
allocable to UZAs, based on the section 5340 formulas, is shown in the
following table.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TN30NO05.006
Language in the SAFETEA-LU conference report indicates that FTA is
to show a single apportionment amount for 5307, STIC and 5340.
Accordingly, the apportionment amount for a UZA that will be displayed
in the Urbanized Area Formula apportionment table to be published in
the FTA FY 2006 apportionments and allocations Notice, after FY 2006
funding is appropriated, will include regular 5307 funds (that amount
remaining after the one percent takedown for STIC), STIC funds, and
Growing States and High Density States funding for the area. Although a
single UZA amount will be shown to comply with conference report
language (as noted above), separate formula calculations will be used
to generate the respective apportionment amounts for the 5307, STIC and
5340.
2. Requirements
Program guidance for the Urbanized Area Formula Program is
presently found in FTA Circular C9030.1C, Urbanized Area Formula
Program: Grant Application Instructions, dated October 1, 1998, and
supplemented by additional information or changes provided in this
document. FTA is in the process of updating this circular to
incorporate changes resulting from language in SAFETEA-LU. Several
important program requirements are highlighted below.
(a) Urbanized Area Formula Apportionments to Governors
For small UZAs, the funds are apportioned to the Governor of each
State for distribution. A single total Governor apportionment amount
for the Urbanized Area Formula, STIC, and Growing States and High
Density States will be shown in the Urbanized Area Formula
Apportionment table to be published in the FTA FY 2006 apportionments
and allocations Notice, after FY 2006 funding is appropriated. The
table will also show the apportionment amount attributable to each
small UZA within the State. The Governor may determine the
suballocation of funds among the small UZAs except that funds
attributed to a small UZA that is located within the planning
boundaries of a Transportation Management Area (TMA) must be obligated
to that small UZA, as discussed in subsection (g) below.
(b) STIC Apportionments
SAFETEA-LU establishes a one percent set-aside program from section
5307 that provides funding to UZAs under 200,000 in population that
operate at a level of service equal to or above the industry average
level of service for all UZAs with a population of at least 200,000 but
not more than 999,999, in one or more of six performance categories:
Passenger miles traveled per vehicle revenue mile, passenger miles
traveled per vehicle revenue hour, vehicle revenue miles per capita,
vehicle revenue hours per capita, passenger miles traveled per capita,
and passengers per capita. The data for these categories comes from the
most current National Transit Database (NTD) reports. This data is used
to determine a UZA's eligibility under the STIC formula, and is also
used in the STIC apportionment calculations. Because this performance
data change with each year's NTD reports the eligible STIC UZAs may
vary each year. The performance categories for providing bonus grants
to STIC were established in the September 2000 FTA report to Congress
called ``The Urbanized Area Formula Program and the Needs of Small
Transit Intensive Cities.''
(c) Transit Enhancements
SAFETEA-LU requires that one percent of section 5307 funds
apportioned to UZAs with populations of 200,000 or more be spent on
eligible transit enhancement activities or projects. This requirement
is now treated as a certification, rather than as a set-aside as was
the case under TEA-21. Grantees in UZAs with populations of 200,000 or
more will be certifying they are spending not less than one percent of
section 5307 funds for transit enhancements and will be required to
[[Page 71958]]
submit an annual report on how they spent the money. The report must be
submitted with the Federal fiscal year's final quarterly progress
report in TEAM-Web. The report should include the following elements:
(a) Grantee name, (b) UZA name and number, (c) FTA project number, (d)
transit enhancement category, (e) brief description of enhancement and
progress towards project implementation, (f) activity line item code
from the approved budget, and (g) amount awarded by FTA for the
enhancement. The list of transit enhancement categories and activity
line item (ALI) codes may be found in FTA Circular 9030.1C, Urbanized
Area Formula Program: Grant Application Instructions, dated October 1,
1998, and in the table of Scope and ALI codes on TEAM-Web, which can be
accessed at https://FTATEAMWeb.fta.dot.gov.
The term ``transit enhancement'' includes projects or project
elements that are designed to enhance mass transportation service or
use and are physically or functionally related to transit facilities.
Eligible enhancements include the following: (1) Historic preservation,
rehabilitation, and operation of historic mass transportation
buildings, structures, and facilities (including historic bus and
railroad facilities); (2) bus shelters; (3) landscaping and other
scenic beautification, including tables, benches, trash receptacles,
and street lights; (4) public art; (5) pedestrian access and walkways;
(6) bicycle access, including bicycle storage facilities and installing
equipment for transporting bicycles on mass transportation vehicles;
(7) transit connections to parks within the recipient's transit service
area; (8) signage; and (9) enhanced access for persons with
disabilities to mass transportation.
It is the responsibility of the MPO to determine how the one
percent for transit enhancements will be allotted to transit projects.
The one percent minimum requirement does not preclude more than one
percent being expended in a UZA for transit enhancements. However,
items that are only eligible as enhancements--in particular, operating
costs for historic facilities--may be assisted only within the one-
percent funding level.
(d) Transit Security Projects
Each recipient of Urbanized Area Formula funds must certify that of
the amount received each fiscal year, it will expend at least one
percent on ``public transportation security projects'' or must certify
that it has decided the expenditure is not necessary. For applicants
not eligible to receive section 5307 funds for operating assistance,
only capital security projects may be funded with the one percent.
SAFETEA-LU, however, expanded the definition of eligible ``capital''
projects to include specific crime prevention and security activities,
including: (1) Projects to refine and develop security and emergency
response plans; (2) projects aimed at detecting chemical and biological
agents in public transportation; (3) the conduct of emergency response
drills with public transportation agencies and local first-response
agencies; and (4) security training for public transportation employees
but excluding all expenses related to operations, other than such
expenses incurred in conducting emergency drills and training. New ALI
codes have been established for these four new capital activities. The
one percent may also include security expenditures included within
other capital activities, and, where the recipient is eligible,
operating assistance. The relevant ALI codes would be used for those
activities.
Given the importance of transit security, FTA is often called upon
to report to Congress and others on how grantees are expending Federal
funds for security enhancements. To facilitate tracking of grantees'
security expenditures, which are not always evident when included
within larger capital or operating activity line items in the grant
budget, we have established a new non-additive (``non-add'') scope code
for security expenditures--Scope 991. The non-add scope is to be used
to aggregate activities included in other scopes, and it does not
increase the budget total. Section 5307 grantees should include this
non-add scope in the project budget for each new section 5307 grant
application or amendment. Under this non-add scope, the applicant
should repeat the full amount of any of the line items in the budget
that are exclusively for security and include the portion of any other
line item in the project budget that is attributable to security, using
under the non-add scope the same line item used in the project budget.
The grantee can modify the ALI description or use the extended text
feature, if necessary, to describe the security expenditures.
If the grantee has certified that it is not necessary to expend one
percent for security, the section 5307 grant application must include
information to support that certification.
To summarize, a grant application requesting 5307 funds cannot be
considered complete until the applicant has indicated whether it will
or will not expend one percent of the 5307 funds being requested for
security purposes. If the applicant has determined expenditure for
security purposes is not necessary, an explanation must be provided.
FTA is implementing these new grant application procedures in response
to requests for information from the Inspector General.
(e) FY 2006 Operating Assistance
Several SAFETEA-LU provisions allow FY 2006 Urbanized Area Formula
funds to be used for operating assistance in a UZA with a population of
200,000 or more. They include: (1) Continuation of the operating
assistance flexibility provisions of TEA-21 that allows transit systems
in UZAs that crossed over the 200,000 population threshold, as a result
of the 2000 Census, to use 5307 funds for operating assistance; (2) a
provision applicable to portions of the UZAs between 200,000 and
225,000 in population that meet certain criteria; (3) a provision for
certain local governmental authorities that lie outside the service
area of the principal public transportation agency that serves the
Houston, TX UZA; and (4) language that stipulates that section 5307
funds made available to the Anchorage UZA under fixed guideway tiers of
the section 5307 apportionment formula shall be made available to the
Alaska Railroad for any costs related to passenger operations. In
addition, language in section 3027(c)(3) of TEA-21, as amended, is
still applicable and allows the use of funds for operating assistance
by certain recipients of section 5307 funds, in a UZA at least 200,000
in population, that provide service exclusively for elderly persons and
persons with disabilities and operate 20 or fewer vehicles.
The requirements for each of the above provisions are described
below.
(1) Section 5307(b)(2) provides exception to the use of operating
assistance in UZAs that grew in population from under 200,000 to over
200,000, as a result of the 2000 Census. This exception allows for the
use of funds for operating assistance in eligible UZAs at 100% of the
grandfathered amount for FY 2005 funds, but this amount ``phases down
and out'' to 50 percent in FY 2006, 25 percent in FY 2007, and zero
percent in FY 2008. FTA has identified and listed all eligible UZAs in
previous years apportionment notices (FY 2003-FY 2005), along with the
maximum amount of the area's 5307 fund that could be used for
operating. A similar list will be included in the FY 2006 apportionment
Notice.
(2) Section 5307(b)(1)(E) provides for grants for the operating
costs of equipment and facilities for use in public transportation in
the Evansville,
[[Page 71959]]
IN-KY urbanized area, for a portion or portions of the UZA if: The
portion of the UZA includes only one State; the population of the
portion is less than 30,000; and the grants will be not used to provide
public transportation outside of the portion of the UZA.
(3) Section 5307(b)(1)(F) provides operating costs of equipment and
facilities for use in public transportation for local governmental
authorities in areas which adopted transit operating and financing
plans that became a part of the Houston, Texas UZA as a result of the
2000 decennial census of population, but lie outside the service area
of the principal public transportation agency that serves the Houston
UZA.
(4) Section 5336(a)(2) prescribes the formula to be used to
apportion section 5307 funds to UZAs with population of 200,000 or
more. SAFETEA-LU amended 5336(a)(2) to add language that stated, ``* *
* except that the amount apportioned to the Anchorage urbanized area
under subsection (b) shall be available to the Alaska Railroad for any
costs related to its passenger operations.'' This language has the
effect of directing that funds apportioned to the Anchorage urbanized
area, under the fixed guideway tiers of the section 5307 apportionment
formula, be made available to the Alaska Railroad, and that these funds
may be used for any capital or operating costs related to its passenger
operations.
(5) Section 3027(c)(3) of TEA-21, as previously amended, provides
an exception to the restriction on the use of operating assistance in a
UZA with a population of 200,000 or more, by allowing transit
providers/grantees that provide service exclusively to elderly persons
and persons with disabilities and that operate 20 or fewer vehicles to
use section 5307 funds apportioned to the UZA for operating assistance.
The total amount of funding made available for this purpose under
section 3027(c)(3) of TEA-21, as amended, is $1.4 million. Transit
providers/grantees eligible under this provision have already been
identified.
Unless one of the exceptions noted above applies, the use of FY
2006 Urbanized Area Formula funds for operating assistance is available
only to small UZAs. For small UZAs, there is no limitation on the
amount of the Governor's apportionment that may be used for operating
assistance, and the Federal/local share ratio is 50/50.
(f) Expansion of Local Match Eligibility
SAFETEA-LU expands the categories of funds that can be used as
local match for section 5307 projects. The newly eligible sources are
advertising and concessions revenue, social service contract revenue,
and revenue bonds proceeds.
Pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 5307(e) the Federal share of a grant under
Section 5307 is 80 percent of net project cost for a capital project
and 50 percent of net project cost for operating assistance. The
remainder of the net project cost (i.e., 20 percent and 50 percent,
respectively) shall be provided from the following sources:
1. In cash from non-Government sources other than revenues from
providing public transportation services;
2. From revenues derived from the sale of advertising and
concessions;
3. From an undistributed cash surplus, a replacement or
depreciation cash fund or reserve, or new capital;
4. From amounts received under a service agreement with a State or
local social service agency or private social service organization; and
5. Proceeds from the issuance of revenue bonds. In addition, funds
from section 403(a)(5)(C)(vii) of the Social Security Act (42 U.S.C.
603(a)(5)(C)(vii)) can be used to match Urbanized Area Formula funds.
(g) Designated Transportation Management Areas (TMA)
Guidance for setting the boundaries of TMAs is in the joint
transportation planning regulations codified at 23 CFR part 450 and 49
CFR part 613. In some cases, the TMA planning boundaries established by
the MPO for the designated TMA includes one or more small UZAs. In
addition, one small UZA (Santa Barbara, CA) has been designated as a
TMA. In either of these situations, the Governor cannot allocate
``Governor's Apportionment'' funds attributed to the small UZAs to
ot