Value Pricing Pilot Program Participation, Fiscal Years 2007-2009, 77084-77090 [E6-21912]
Download as PDF
77084
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 246 / Friday, December 22, 2006 / Notices
from abroad for temporary exhibition
within the United States, are of cultural
significance. The objects are imported
pursuant to loan agreements with the
foreign owners or custodians. I also
determine that the exhibition or display
of the exhibit objects at The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,
New York, from on or about March 26,
2007, until on or about July 8, 2007, and
at possible additional venues yet to be
determined, is in the national interest.
Public Notice of these Determinations is
ordered to be published in the Federal
Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information, including a list of
the exhibit objects, contact Wolodymyr
Sulzynsky, Attorney-Adviser, Office of
the Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of
State (telephone: (202) 453–8050). The
address is U.S. Department of State, SA–
44, 301 4th Street, SW., Room 700,
Washington, DC 20547–0001.
Dated: December 15, 2006.
C. Miller Crouch,
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary for
Educational and Cultural Affairs, Department
of State.
[FR Doc. E6–21964 Filed 12–21–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–05–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Notice To Rescind a Notice of Intent To
Prepare an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS); Bannock County, ID
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), DOT.
ACTION: Rescind Notice of Intent to
prepare an EIS.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The FHWA is issuing this
notice to advise the public that the
Notice of Intent (NOI) published on May
3, 2006 to prepare an EIS for a proposed
highway project in Bannock County,
Idaho is being rescinded.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Edwin B. Johnson, Field Operations
Engineer, Federal Highway
Administration, 3050 Lakeharbor Lane,
Suite 126, Boise, Idaho 83703,
Telephone: (208) 334–9180, ext. 116, or
Mr. Dennis Clark, Environmental
Section Manager, Headquarters, Idaho
Transportation Department, P.O. Box
7129, Boise, Idaho 83703–1129,
Telephone: (208) 334–8203.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The FHWA, in cooperation with the
Idaho Transportation Department (ITD),
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:45 Dec 21, 2006
Jkt 211001
is rescinding the NOI to prepare an EIS
for a project that has been proposed to
provide a new access point along
Interstate 15 (I–15) in Bannock County,
Idaho. The NOI is being rescinded
because ITD and FHWA have
determined that the project will have no
significant impacts and an EIS is not
necessary or appropriate for the
environmental evaluation.
The I–15 Environmental Study began
in June 2004. Initial projects indicated
that an Environmental Assessment (EA)
would be an appropriate level of
documentation for project impacts.
Additional environmental scans and
screening did not reveal significant
impacts to support a change in the level
of documentation. Alternatives were
developed and advanced into further
screening where actual footprints were
evaluated for impacts within the project
limits. One of the alternatives showed
greater impacts than others being
evaluated during the continued
screening process. In response to that
finding it was thought that an EIS would
be the best method to discuss impacts
from this alternative. Consequently, an
NOI was published on May 3, 2006.
A public meeting was held on June
22, 2006 to solicit comments from the
public on alternatives being considered.
An additional screening analysis was
performed in conjunction with the
public meeting. Based upon the results
of that screening analysis and public
comments received on this analysis,
some of the alternatives were dropped
from further analysis due to potential
significant impacts to the built and
natural environment as well as to traffic
operations. At this point in the project
development process, no significant
human or natural environmental
impacts are evident in the I–15
Environmental Study project that would
require an EIS. If, at any point in the EA
process, it is determined that the action
is likely to have a significant impact on
the environment, the preparation of an
EIS will be required.
To ensure that the full range of issues
related to this proposed action and all
significant issues are identified,
comments and suggestions are invited
from all interested parties regarding this
action to rescind the NOI published
May 3, 2006 for the highway project in
Bannock County, Idaho. Comments or
questions concerning this proposed
action should be directed to the FHWA
or ITD at the addresses provided above.
[Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
Program Number 20.205, Highway Research,
Planning, and Construction. The regulations
implementing Executive Order 12372
regarding intergovernmental consultation on
PO 00000
Frm 00125
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Federal programs and activities apply to the
program.]
Issued on December 12, 2006.
Stephen A. Moreno,
Division Administrator, Boise, Idaho.
[FR Doc. 06–9779 Filed 12–21–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–22–M
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Value Pricing Pilot Program
Participation, Fiscal Years 2007–2009
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), DOT.
AGENCY:
Notice; solicitation for
participation.
ACTION:
SUMMARY: This notice invites State and
local governments and other public
authorities to apply to participate in the
Value Pricing Pilot (VPP) program and
presents guidelines for program
applications. This notice supersedes
two previous notices about the VPP
program under the Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity
Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA–LU)
published in the Federal Register on
January 6, 2006 (71 FR 970), and July
17, 2006 (71 FR 40578). The primary
purpose of superseding the previous
notices with this new notice is to shift
the focus on the types of VPP program
projects being solicited to achieve
consistency with the U.S. Department of
Transportation’s (DOT) National
Strategy to Reduce Congestion on
America’s Transportation Network
(DOT Congestion Initiative), announced
on May 16, 2006.1 This national strategy
contains a number of elements that
involve pricing, thus warranting a
reconsideration of the types of projects
solicited for VPP program participation.
This solicitation aligns the VPP program
with the DOT Congestion Initiative by
together seeking to support metropolitan
areas in systemically progressing toward
implementation of broad congestion
pricing strategies in the near term. This
notice also describes the statutory basis
for the VPP program and specifies all of
the steps necessary to apply for funding
and, where applicable, tolling authority
1 Speaking before the National Retail Federation’s
annual conference on May 16, 2006, in Washington,
DC, former U.S. Transportation Secretary Norman
Mineta unveiled a new plan to reduce congestion
plaguing America’s roads, rail, and airports. The
National Strategy to Reduce Congestion on
America’s Transportation Network includes a
number of initiatives designed to reduce
transportation congestion. The transcript of these
remarks is available at the follwoing URL: https://
www.dot.gov./affairs/minetasp051606.htm.
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
22DEN1
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 246 / Friday, December 22, 2006 / Notices
under the program. A new application
deadline is also provided.
A January 6, 2006, notice covering
non-grant tolling programs, which was a
companion to the original January 6,
2006, VPP program notice, remains in
effect. That notice was entitled ‘‘Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for
Users (SAFETEA–LU); Opportunities for
States and Other Qualifying Agencies to
Gain Authority to Toll Facilities
Constructed Using Federal Funds’’ (71
FR 965). Today’s new notice and the
previous companion notice are together
intended to cover all of the
opportunities for States and other
qualifying transportation agencies to
obtain approval to toll their respective
facilities and to secure funding to
implement tolling and pricing.
DATES: Applications for tolling authority
only may be submitted at any time prior
to September 30, 2009. Formal grant
applications must be submitted no later
than April 30, 2007, for FY 2007 funds.
Application Submission: Beginning in
FY 2007, all Federal agencies, including
FHWA, are required to use https://
www.grants.gov, an electronic format for
receiving applications. Grants.gov was
developed as part of the President’s
Management Agenda and related EGovernment Strategy, which charged
Federal grant-making agencies with
developing a single electronic system to
help prospective applicants find and
apply for Federal grant opportunities.
Therefore, applicants applying for
funding under the VPP program must
file their applications online at
www.grants.gov. The full
announcement for VPP program grants
is expected to be available on
www.grants.gov no later than January
15, 2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
questions about this notice, please
contact Mr. Wayne Berman, FHWA
Office of Operations, (202) 366–4069, or
via e-mail at wayne.berman@dot.gov.
For technical questions related to
project development, please contact Mr.
Patrick DeCorla-Souza, FHWA Office of
Operations, at (202) 366–4076, or via email at patrick.decorla-souza@dot.gov.
For legal questions, please contact Mr.
Michael Harkins, FHWA Office of the
Chief Counsel, (202) 366–4928, or via email at michael.harkins@dot.gov. Office
hours for the FHWA are from 7:45 a.m.
to 4:15 p.m., e.t., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
An electronic copy of this document
may be downloaded from the Federal
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:45 Dec 21, 2006
Jkt 211001
Register’s home page at: https://
www.archives.gov and the Government
Printing Office’s database at: https://
www.access.gpo.gov/nara.
Coordination With Other Congestion
Initiative Solicitations
This solicitation is one of three
associated solicitations being released
under the DOT’s Congestion Initiative:
1. Urban Partnership Agreement
(UPA)—One of the key elements of the
Congestion Initiative is the reduction of
urban congestion. On December 8, 2006
(71 FR 71231), the DOT issued a notice
in the Federal Register seeking
applications for the UPA. The UPA
solicitation seeks to identify
metropolitan areas interested in
partnering with the DOT to aggressively
implement congestion-reducing
strategies in the near-term. Based on the
responses to the UPA solicitation the
DOT expects to enter into partnership
agreements with a small number of
metropolitan areas. Identification as an
‘‘urban partner’’ will be one of the
selection factors considered in awarding
grants under the Value Pricing and
Intelligent Transportation System
programs.
2. Value Pricing Pilot (VPP)
program—This solicitation for the VPP
program as reauthorized in SAFETEA–
LU provides funding to support
implementation of a variety of pricingbased approaches for managing
congestion on highways. This
solicitation aligns the VPP program with
the Congestion Initiative and seeks to
support metropolitan areas in
systematically progressing toward
implementation of broad congestion
pricing strategies in the near term.
3. Intelligent Transportation System
(ITS) Operational Testing to Mitigate
Congestion (OTMC) program—The ITS
program as reauthorized in SAFETEA–
LU supports the research, development
and testing of ITS for a variety of
purposes, including the reduction of
metropolitan congestion. The ITS–
OTMC solicitation supports the
operational testing and evaluation of
advanced technologies to reduce
congestion in urban areas.
Applicants should submit pricingrelated proposals involving the use of
electronic systems for collection,
management and enforcement to both
the VPP program and ITS–OTMC
solicitations. Applicants should submit
identical proposals that address all the
requirements of both solicitations to
both programs. DOT will consider these
proposals for funding under both of
these programs. Applicants should
indicate, in their responses to this
solicitation and DOT’s solicitation for
PO 00000
Frm 00126
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
77085
ITS–OTMC, whether they have applied
to become Urban Partners in response to
DOT’s UPA solicitation.
Background
Section 1012(b) of the Intermodal
Surface Transportation Efficiency Act
(ISTEA) (Pub. L. 102–240; 105 Stat.
1914), as amended by section 1216(a) of
the Transportation Equity Act (TEA–21)
(Pub. L. 105–178; 112 Stat. 107), and
section 1604(a) of Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity
Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA–LU)
(Pub. L. 109–59; 119 Stat. 1144),
authorizes the Secretary of
Transportation (the Secretary) to create
a Value Pricing Pilot program. Value
pricing encompasses a variety of
strategies to manage congestion on
highways, including tolling of highway
facilities, as well as other strategies that
do not involve tolls, such as mileagebased vehicle taxes and leasing fees,
parking pricing, and car sharing. The
value pricing concept of assessing
relatively higher prices for travel during
peak periods is the same as that used in
many other sectors of the economy to
respond to peak-use demands. For
example, airlines, hotels, and theaters
often charge more at peak than at nonpeak times.
The FHWA is seeking applications for
the FY 2007 VPP program that are
consistent with the objectives of the
DOT’s National Strategy to Reduce
Congestion, announced on May 16,
2006, which seeks to dedicate
substantial departmental resources
toward addressing the growing problem
of urban congestion. This national
strategy, and its linkage to the VPP
program applications that are being
solicited by this notice, are discussed in
greater detail later in this notice.
Because of this new national strategy,
the primary objective of the VPP
program for fiscal years 2007, 2008, and
2009, will be to facilitate cities in
systematically progressing toward
implementation of broad congestion
(variable) pricing over a brief period of
time, preferably 3 years.
According to the statutory
requirements of the VPP program, the
FHWA may enter into cooperative
agreements with up to 15 State or local
governments or other public authorities
(henceforth referred to only as ‘‘States’’),
to establish, maintain, and monitor
value pricing pilot programs, each
including an unlimited number of
projects. The FHWA invites interested
States to apply to participate in the VPP
program for FY 2007. As of the date of
this notice, there are already 13 Stateled programs currently in the VPP
program: California, Colorado, Florida,
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
22DEN1
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
77086
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 246 / Friday, December 22, 2006 / Notices
Georgia, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota,
New Jersey, North Carolina, Oregon,
Texas, Virginia, and Washington.
Therefore, at this time, only two
additional States are eligible to
participate. Any value pricing project
included under these programs may
involve the use of tolls on the Interstate
system. This is an exception to the
general provisions prohibiting tolls on
the Interstate system as contained in 23
U.S.C. 129 and 301.
To comply with the statutory cap on
the number of partnering States in a
manner that maximizes program
participation, the FHWA will only
consider an active cooperative
agreement sufficient to hold one of the
15 available value pricing slots. An
agreement will be considered active by
the FHWA under the following two
circumstances: (1) During the period
encompassing the time between when a
cooperative funding agreement for a
project or projects has been signed and
when the project or projects has or have
been completed, and (2) if VPP program
tolling authority has been granted and is
still needed to toll a new or existing
highway. Absent one or both of these
conditions being met, an agreement will
not be considered active for the
purposes of the VPP program. A State
that does not maintain an active
agreement with FHWA risks being
denied the opportunity to participate in
the program in the future if no
participation slots are left.
A maximum of $12 million is
authorized for each of the fiscal years
2007 through 2009 to be made available
to carry out the VPP program
requirements. A set-aside of $3 million
per fiscal year is authorized only for
value pricing pilot projects that do not
involve highway tolls. The Federal
share payable under the program is 80
percent of the cost of the project. Funds
allocated by the Secretary to a State
under this section shall remain available
for obligation by the State for a period
of 3 years after the last day of the fiscal
year for which funds are authorized. If,
on September 30 of any year, the
amount of funds made available for the
VPP program, but not allocated, exceeds
$8 million, the excess amount will, to
comply with the statutory requirements
of the VPP program, be apportioned to
all States as Surface Transportation
Program funds.
Funds available for the VPP program
can be used to support preimplementation study activities as well
as to pay for pricing-specific
implementation costs of value pricing
projects. Section 1012(b)(6) of ISTEA
provides that a State may permit tollpaying vehicles with fewer than two
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:45 Dec 21, 2006
Jkt 211001
occupants to operate in high occupancy
vehicle (HOV) lanes if the vehicles are
part of a local value pricing pilot
program under this section. Section
1121 of SAFETEA -LU, ‘‘HOV
Facilities,’’ among other things, also
allows for the conversion of HOV lanes
to high occupancy toll (HOT) lanes.
Given that, as of the date of this notice,
the VPP program has only two slots
available under which new program
partners may participate and FHWA
would like to use a new slot only where
necessary, section 1121 authority will
generally be used, instead of VPP
program authority, for HOV-to-HOT
lane conversions if an application
comes from a State that is not already
in the VPP program. Additionally, since
value pricing projects are experimental
and section 1121 is not, the FHWA may
elect to also use section 1121 authority
instead of VPP program authority for
HOV-to-HOT lane conversions in
current VPP program States depending
on the type of project that is proposed.
Potential financial effects of value
pricing projects on low-income drivers
shall be considered and, where such
effects are expected to be significant,
possible mitigation measures should be
identified, such as providing new or
expanded transit service as an integral
part of the value pricing project, toll
discounts or credits for low-income
motorists who do not have viable transit
options, or fare or toll credits earned by
motorists on regular lanes which can be
used to pay for tolls on priced lanes.
Mitigation measures can be included as
part of the value pricing project
implementation costs.
Since the Secretary is required to
report to Congress every 2 years on the
effects of all value pricing pilot
programs, project partners will be
expected to assist the FHWA by
providing data on its programs for use
in these reports.
The VPP program is a continuation of
the Congestion Pricing Pilot Program
authorized by section 1012(b) of the
ISTEA and amended by section 1216 (a)
of TEA–21. To obtain up-to-date
information on the status of current
projects, please go to: https://
www.ops.fhwa.dot.gov/tolling_pricing/
index.htm.
In addition to the VPP program,
SAFETEA-LU offers States broader
authority to use tolling to finance
highway construction and
reconstruction, promote efficiency in
the use of highways, and support
congestion reduction by providing
expanded flexibility under the following
programs: HOV facilities; Interstate
System Reconstruction and
Rehabilitation Pilot; Interstate System
PO 00000
Frm 00127
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Construction Toll Pilot; Express Lanes
Demonstration Program; and Section
129 toll agreements. For more
information on these programs, please
refer to the companion notice in the
January 6, 2006, Federal Register
entitled, ‘‘Safe, Accountable, Flexible,
Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A
Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU);
Opportunities for State and Other
Qualifying Agencies to Gain Authority
to Toll Facilities Constructed Using
Federal Funds’’ (71 FR 965).
Applicable Terms
‘‘Value pricing,’’ ‘‘congestion
pricing,’’ ‘‘peak-period pricing,’’
‘‘variable pricing,’’ and ‘‘variable
tolling’’ are all terms used to refer to
direct non-constant charges for road use,
possibly varying by location, time of
day, severity of congestion, vehicle
occupancy, or type of facility. By
shifting some trips to off-peak periods,
to mass transit or other higheroccupancy vehicles, to non-motorized
modes, or to routes away from
congested facilities, or by encouraging
consolidation of trips, value pricing
charges are intended to promote
economic efficiency both generally and
within the commercial freight sector.
They also achieve congestion reduction,
improved air quality, energy
conservation, and transit productivity
goals.
A ‘‘value pricing project’’ means any
implementation of value pricing
concepts or techniques discussed in the
‘‘Potential Project Types’’ section of this
notice and included under a State or
local ‘‘value pricing pilot program.’’ A
State is considered to have a value
pricing pilot program if it has one or
more approved value pricing projects.
While the distinction between ‘‘project’’
and ‘‘program’’ may appear to be merely
a technical one, it is significant in that,
as described in the ‘‘Background’’
section of this notice, the number of
total VPP programs is statutorily limited
to 15, while there is no limit to the
number of VPP projects allowed under
each VPP program.
‘‘Cooperative agreement’’ means the
agreement signed between the FHWA
and a State to establish and implement
value pricing pilot programs. ‘‘Toll
agreement’’ means the agreement signed
between the FHWA and a State to grant
the authority to collect tolls.
Program Objective
The overall objective of the VPP
program is to support efforts by State
and local governments or other public
authorities to establish local value
pricing pilot programs, to provide for
the monitoring and evaluation of value
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
22DEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 246 / Friday, December 22, 2006 / Notices
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
pricing projects included in such
programs, and to report on these effects.
The VPP program’s primary focus is on
value pricing with road tolls, with a
secondary focus on other market-based
approaches for congestion relief that do
not involve road tolls, such as mileagebased vehicle taxes and leasing fees,
parking pricing, and car sharing.
The FHWA is seeking applications for
funding and/or tolling authority to use
value pricing to reduce congestion,
improve system performance, and
promote mobility in a manner
consistent with the DOT’s National
Strategy to Reduce Congestion on
America’s Transportation Network,
issued in May 2006. This strategy
consists of a six-point plan, designed to
both reduce congestion in the short-term
and to build the foundation for
successful longer-term congestion
reduction efforts. The six-point plan
consists of the following: (1) Establish a
‘‘Corridors of the Future’’ competition;
(2) Relieve urban congestion; (3)
Unleash private sector investment
resources; (4) Promote operational and
technological improvements; (5) Target
major freight bottlenecks and expand
freight policy outreach; and (6)
Accelerate major aviation capacity
projects and provide a future funding
framework for the aviation system. The
VPP program is part of the, ‘‘relieve
urban congestion’’ element under which
‘‘[t]he Department will seek to enter
Urban Partnership Agreements with
model cities, pursuant to which the
cities and Department will commit to
* * * implementing a broad congestion
pricing or variable toll demonstration
* * *’’ Consistent with this objective,
all proposals should incorporate
significant pricing mechanisms
intended to reduce the level of
congestion.
Potential Project Types
To help meet the objectives of DOT’s
National Strategy to Reduce Congestion
on America’s Transportation Network,
the FHWA is interested in projects that
have the greatest potential to lead to
significant, broad, and near-term
congestion relief. The FHWA will
consider applications that show that a
project seeking grant funds will achieve
at least one of the following: (1) Build
public support and a technical
foundation for near term congestion
pricing; (2) develop a pricing program
with detailed plans and specifications
leading to near-term implementation;
and/or (3) implement broad-based
pricing and evaluate its effectiveness.
Implementation projects should bring
about new pricing while preimplementation projects should
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:45 Dec 21, 2006
Jkt 211001
demonstrate that near-term
implementation is likely, most
preferably by January 2009, especially
for FY 2007 applications. For preimplementation projects, applicants
should demonstrate that there is already
sufficient political support for
implementation, or that the project is
well designed to bring about such
support. Additionally, projects should
rely wholly or at least primarily on
existing facilities and/or facilities that
will be completed in a very short time
frame (e.g., within 12 to 18 months),
since near-term implementation would
otherwise be impossible.
Value pricing charges need to be
targeted at a sizable number of vehicles
that are causing congestion, and prices
should be set at levels significant
enough to encourage drivers to use
alternative times, routes, modes, or trip
patterns or to telecommute during
congested periods. Value pricing
concepts that have become mainstream
and have been adopted as common
practice, such as HOV-to-HOT lane
conversions, will not be funded.
The FHWA is seeking VPP program
applications from public entities that
are willing to engage in discussions
about entering into comprehensive
Urban Partnership Agreements that
include substantial actions on their part
to advance broad congestion pricing
approaches, which should be specified
in their VPP project applications. Unlike
previous VPP program solicitation
notices which sought a wide variety of
project applications, the FHWA is now
only seeking projects to study or
implement pricing that is broad in
nature and will no longer entertain
applications for studying or
implementing single-facility projects.
Such applications should cover a
significantly-sized geographical area
and include multiple roadway facilities
that are priced, an interconnected
managed lane network, or cordon
pricing, where, as in London, cars are
charged a substantial fee to drive in a
congested area on weekdays. Variable
pricing of currently free and tolled
facilities, pricing of multiple facilities or
corridors, and/or combinations of road
pricing and parking pricing will
generally be required. Area-wide pricing
applications that use technologies that
provide travelers (including drivers and
transit riders) with pre-trip and realtime congestion and pricing information
on alternative travel modes and routes
are especially encouraged to assist
travelers in making efficient travel
destination, mode and route choices.
Tests of new, innovative value pricing
approaches are encouraged, but only
within the context of a broad, area-wide
PO 00000
Frm 00128
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
77087
application. Such auxiliary or
complementary elements to broad
pricing applications might include
pricing at key traffic bottlenecks,
shifting from fixed to variable toll
schedules on existing toll facilities (i.e.,
combinations of peak-period surcharges
and off-peak discounts), and pricing of
queue jumps, where paying motorists
can bypass motorists who choose not to
pay, typically by using special lanes
with priority signals at freeway entrance
ramps.
Projects should be designed to reflect
the needs of low-income or other
transportation-disadvantaged groups.
Mitigation strategies to address equity
concerns may include bus rapid transit
or other enhancements of transportation
alternatives for peak-period travelers,
‘‘life-line’’ toll rates aimed at lowincome travelers, limited monetary
credits to all or just to low-income
travelers that can be used to pay for tolls
or transit fares (thereby allowing a
limited amount of free travel before
having to pay full fees as with some
cellular phone service plans), and
credit-based tolling programs such as
toll credits earned by motorists in
regular lanes or by transit users in the
corridor which can later be used to pay
tolls on priced lanes or for free transit
trips.
The FHWA is also interested in grant
applications for projects that do not
involve highway tolls. As discussed
earlier, SAFETEA–LU sets aside at least
$3 million per fiscal year for such
projects. The FHWA encourages
applicants to design such projects, to
the extent possible, to complement or
offer the potential for ‘‘broad’’ pricing as
called for in the DOT’s National Strategy
to Reduce Congestion on America’s
Transportation Network. The FHWA
intends to be more flexible when
evaluating projects that do not involve
tolls than when evaluating projects that
do, given that many types of facilitybased toll projects have already been
funded by the VPP program in the past,
while the program has had less
experience using non-toll pricing
strategies to reduce congestion.
The FHWA seeks tests of innovative
parking pricing strategies, including
time-of-day pricing and charges
reflective of congested conditions,
provided the level and coverage of
proposed parking charges is sufficient to
reduce congestion. Among the strategies
that could be considered innovative
include: surcharges for entering or
exiting parking facilities during or near
peak periods; citywide, on-street
parking pricing that varies by demand;
and a range of parking cash-out policies,
where cash is offered to employees in
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
22DEN1
77088
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 246 / Friday, December 22, 2006 / Notices
lieu of subsidized parking, parking
operators reimburse monthly patrons for
unused parking days, or renters or
purchasers in multi-family housing
developments are provided direct
financial saving for not availing of car
parking spaces. The FHWA also seeks
tests of pay-as-you-drive pricing,
including innovative car ownership,
leasing, and usage arrangements that
reduce fixed costs and increase variable
usage costs. An example of such pricing
might be car leases with a reduced
fixed-priced monthly charge coupled
with a substantial per-mile charge.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
Pre-Implementation Studies
The VPP program funds may also be
used to assist States in carrying out preimplementation study activities
designed to lead to implementation of a
value pricing project in the near-term,
consistent with the objectives of the
DOT’s National Strategy to Reduce
Congestion on America’s Transportation
Network. The intent of the preimplementation study phase is to
support efforts to identify and evaluate
value pricing project alternatives, and to
prepare the necessary groundwork for
near-term implementation. So as to
focus VPP program resources in a
manner consistent with the DOT
Congestion Initiative, FHWA will not
fund purely academic studies of value
pricing or studies that involve major
expansions of existing facilities (not
designed to lead to near-term project
implementation) or area-wide planning
studies covering many topics besides
pricing and incorporating value pricing
only as one of a number of options.
Such studies may be funded with
regular Federal-aid highway or transit
planning funds. Applications for preimplementation studies will be
evaluated based on the likelihood that
they will lead to near-term
implementation of broad value pricing
conforming to the objectives described
in the previous section.
Project Costs Eligible for Grant Funding
The FHWA will provide up to the
statutorily allowable 80 percent share of
the estimated costs of an approved
project. Funds available for the VPP
program can be used to support preimplementation study activities and
also to pay for implementation costs of
value pricing projects. Costs of planning
for, setting up, managing, operating,
monitoring, evaluating, and reporting on
local value pricing pilot projects are
eligible for reimbursement, but neither
pre-implementation study costs nor
implementation costs may be
reimbursed for longer than three years.
The 3-year funding limitation will begin
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:45 Dec 21, 2006
Jkt 211001
on the date of the first disbursement of
Federal funds for project activities.
Examples of specific preimplementation and implementation
costs eligible for reimbursement include
the following:
1. Pre-Implementation Study Costs—
Covered activities include those
undertaken to advance two key priority
focus areas: foundation building and
program development.
a. Foundation building activities may
be reimbursed, such as public
participation, consensus building,
marketing, modeling, and technology
assessments; and
b. Program development activities are
also eligible for reimbursement,
including project and financial
planning, project design, creating
project specifications, and activities
required to meet Federal or State
environmental or other planning
requirements.
2. Implementation Costs—Allowable
costs for reimbursement under this
priority focus area include those for
setting up, managing, operating,
evaluating, and reporting on a value
pricing project, including:
a. Necessary salaries and expenses, or
other administrative and operational
costs, such as installation of equipment
for operation of a pilot project (e.g.,
Electronic Toll Collection (ETC)
technology, video equipment for traffic
monitoring, and other instrumentation),
enforcement costs, costs of monitoring
and evaluating project operations, and
costs of continuing public relations
activities during the period of
implementation;
b. ‘‘mitigation measures to deal with
any potential adverse financial effects
on low-income drivers[,]’’ per section
1012(b)(7) of ISTEA as amended,
including costs of providing
transportation alternatives, such as new
or expanded transit or ridesharing
services provided as an integral part of
the value pricing project. Funds are not
available to replace existing sources of
support for these services.
Project implementation costs can be
supported until such time that sufficient
revenues are being generated by the
project to fund such activities without
Federal support, but in no case for
longer than three years. Each
implementation project included in a
value pricing pilot program will be
considered separately for this purpose.
Funds may not be used to pay for
activities conducted prior to approval
for VPP program participation. Also,
funds made available through the VPP
program may not be used to construct
new highway lanes or bridges, even if
those facilities are to be priced, but toll
PO 00000
Frm 00129
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
ramps or minor pavement additions
needed to facilitate toll collection or
enforcement are eligible.
Complementary actions, such as lane
construction, the implementation of
traffic control systems, or transit
projects can be funded through other
highway and transit programs under
SAFETEA–LU and from new revenues
raised as a result of a pilot. VPP program
applicants are encouraged to explore
opportunities for combining VPP
program funds with other funds. Federal
funds may not, however, be used to
match VPP program funds unless there
is specific statutory authority to do so.
Eligible Uses of Revenues
Section 1012(b)(2) of ISTEA provides
that revenues generated by any value
pricing pilot project must be applied
first to pay for pilot project operating
costs. Any project revenues in excess of
pilot project operating costs may,
according to section 1012(b)(3) of
ISTEA, be used for any projects eligible
under Title 23, U.S. Code. A project’s
operating costs include any costs
necessary for a project’s execution;
mitigation measures to deal with
adverse financial effects on low-income
drivers; the proper maintenance of the
facility; any construction (including
reconstruction, rehabilitation,
restoration, or resurfacing) of the
facility; any debt service incurred in
implementing the project; and a
reasonable return on investment by any
private entity financing the project. Uses
of revenue are encouraged which will
support the goals of the VPP program,
particularly uses designed to provide
benefits to those traveling in the
corridor where the project is being
implemented.
For VPP toll projects, the FHWA and
the public authority (including the State
transportation department) having
jurisdiction over a facility must enter
into a toll agreement concerning the use
of toll revenue to be generated under a
value pricing project. The toll agreement
will provide that the public authority
use the revenues in accordance with the
applicable statutory requirements. The
execution of a toll agreement will
facilitate oversight of a State’s
compliance with revenue use
requirements of the VPP program.
Who is Eligible to Apply?
Qualified applicants for either tolling
authority or grants (or both) include
State or local governments or public
authorities, such as tolling agencies.
Although project agreements must be
with the aforementioned public entities,
and preferably with State Departments
of Transportation in order to preserve
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
22DEN1
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 246 / Friday, December 22, 2006 / Notices
participation slots, a VPP program
partnership may also include private
tolling authorities, for-profit companies,
and non-profit organizations.
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
The Value Pricing Pilot Program
Applications
Formal applications should be
submitted online directly by the State
Department of Transportation to https://
www.grants.gov.
There is no particular format that is
required for tolling authority
applications or grant applications,
although specific information is
requested. Applications should include
the following background information:
(a) The name, title, e-mail address,
and phone number of the person who
will act as the point of contact on behalf
of the requesting agency, authority, or
authorities;
(b) A description of the agency,
authority, or authorities requesting
funding and/or tolling authority;
(c) A statement as to whether only
funding, both funding and tolling
authority, or only tolling authority via
the VPP program is being sought to
support either pre-implementation or
implementation activities as permitted;
(d) A description of the public agency
or agencies that will be responsible for
operating, maintaining, and enforcing
the tolling program, if applicable; and
(e) A statement as to whether the
applicant has or intends to become an
Urban Partner and execute an Urban
Partnership Agreement with the DOT
that would commit the region to take
broad and aggressive action to reduce
congestion.
The core of the application should
include the following:
1. A description of the congestion
problem being addressed (current and
projected);
2. A description of the proposed
pricing program and its goals;
3. An identification of the facilities
that will be covered, including whether
any of the subject facilities is an
Interstate facility, whether any HOV
lanes currently exist on any of the
facilities, and whether any construction
related activities would be needed to
implement the project and, if so,
whether this is new construction,
expansion, rehabilitation,
reconstruction, or other;
4. Where applicable, a plan for
implementing or modifying tolls, and a
related timetable. Where known, the
range of anticipated tolls and the
strategies to vary toll rates (i.e., the
formulas for variable pricing), the
technology to be used, enforcement
programs, and operating details;
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:45 Dec 21, 2006
Jkt 211001
5. Anticipated effects of the pricing
program on reducing congestion,
altering travel behavior, and
encouraging the use of other
transportation modes;
6. Preliminary estimates of the social
and economic effects of the pricing
program, including potential equity
impacts, and a plan or methodology for
further refining such estimates;
7. The role of alternative
transportation modes in the project;
8. A description of the tasks to be
carried out as part of each phase of the
project;
9. A detailed project timeline broken
down by tasks and phases;
10. An itemized budget broken down
by task and funding year (i.e., Year 1,
Year 2, etc.), which is only required for
grant applications;
11. Plans for monitoring and
evaluating implementation projects,
including plans for collection and
analysis, before and after assessment,
and long term monitoring and
documenting of project effects;
12. A detailed finance and revenue
plan, including (for implementation
projects) a budget for capital and
operating costs; a description of all
funding sources, planned expenditures,
and proposed uses of revenues; and a
plan for projects to become financially
self-sustaining (without Federal
support) within 3 years of
implementation, all of which is only
required for grant applications.
13. A discussion of previous public
involvement, including public meetings,
in the development of the proposed
pricing program. Any expressions or
declarations of support from State or
local government officials or the public.
Future plans for involving key affected
parties, coalition building, and media
relations, and more broadly for ensuring
adequate public involvement prior to
implementation;
14. Plans for meeting all Federal, State
and local legal and administrative
requirements for project
implementation, including relevant
Federal-aid planning and environmental
requirements;
15. A description of how, if at all, any
private entities are involved in the
project either in the up-front costs to
enact tolling, or the cost sharing or debt
retirement associated with revenues;
and
16. An explanation about how
electronic toll collection (ETC) project
components will be compatible with
other ETC systems in the region.
If some of these items are not
available or fully developed at the time
the formal application is submitted,
applications will still be considered for
PO 00000
Frm 00130
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
77089
grant funding support or for tolling
authority if they meet the interests of
the FHWA, as described earlier in the
section entitled ‘‘Potential Project
Types,’’ (except for applicants for tolling
authority only), and if there is a strong
indication that these items will be
completed within a short time.
VPP Program Process
A. Requests for Funding
To ensure that all projects receive fair
and equal consideration for the limited
available funds, the FHWA requires
formal grant applications to be
submitted no later than April 30, 2007,
for FY 2007 funds to https://
www.grants.gov.
B. Projects for Which No Funds Are
Requested
Although most projects under the VPP
program involve requests for value
pricing funds, some projects do not, and
instead only seek tolling authority
under the program. In such cases, and
especially where a State is not already
part of the VPP program, the FHWA
recommends that the public authority
investigate the other opportunities to
gain authority to toll that are listed in
the companion notice in the January 6,
2006, Federal Register, entitled ‘‘Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for
Users (SAFETEA–LU); Opportunities for
State and Other Qualifying Agencies to
Gain Authority to Toll Facilities
Constructed Using Federal Funds’’ (71
FR 965).
Post-Selection Process
If approved, a formal cooperative
agreement will be prepared between the
FHWA and the State. The cooperative
agreement will include a refined scope
of work developed from the original
funding application and subsequent
discussions with FHWA. Federal
statutes will govern the cooperative
agreement. Regulations cited in the
agreement, and 49 CFR Part 18, Uniform
Administrative Requirements for Grants
and Cooperative Agreements to State
and Local Governments, will also apply.
As a practical matter, each VPP program
project should have a separate
cooperative agreement. Although, in the
past, the FHWA has allowed some
States to have a master cooperative
agreement that is subsequently amended
for each approved project, in the future
the FHWA will execute a separate
agreement for each project. For value
pricing projects that involve only toll
authority and that do not involve
requests for Federal funds, a cooperative
agreement must still be executed.
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
22DEN1
77090
Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 246 / Friday, December 22, 2006 / Notices
Subsequent to the signing of the
cooperative agreement for a tolling
project, and after all environmental
requirements have been met and the
project is ready to proceed to
construction and/or implementation, a
toll agreement will then be executed
with the FHWA that addresses the use
of revenues from the operation of the
toll facility. As discussed previously,
revenues must generally first be used to
cover debt service, provide reasonable
return on private party investments, and
operate and maintain the facility. Any
remaining revenues may then be used
for other title 23 U.S.C. eligible
purposes.
Other Requirements
Prior to the FHWA approval of pricing
project implementation, value-pricing
programs must be shown to be
consistent with Federal metropolitan
and statewide planning requirements
(23 U.S.C. 134 and 135; and, if
applicable, 49 U.S.C. 5303 and 5304).
Implementation projects involving
tolls outside metropolitan areas must be
included in the approved statewide
transportation improvement program
and be selected in accordance with the
requirements set forth in section
1204(f)(3) of the TEA–21.
Implementation projects involving
tolls in metropolitan areas must be: (a)
Included in, or consistent with, the
approved metropolitan transportation
plan (if the area is in nonattainment for
a transportation related pollutant, the
metropolitan plan must be in
conformance with the State air quality
implementation plan); (b) included in
the approved metropolitan and
statewide transportation improvement
programs (if the metropolitan area is in
a nonattainment area for a
transportation related pollutant, the
metropolitan transportation
improvement program must be in
conformance with the State air quality
implementation plan); (c) selected in
accordance with the requirements in
section 1203(h)(5) or (i)(2) of TEA–21;
and (d) consistent with any existing
congestion management system in
Transportation Management Areas,
developed pursuant to 23 U.S.C.
134(i)(3).
jlentini on PROD1PC65 with NOTICES
(Authority: 23 U.S.C. 315; sec. 1216(a), Pub.
L. 105–178, 112 Stat. 107; Pub. L. 109–59;
117 Stat. 1144 49 CFR 1.48)
Issued on: December 18, 2006.
J. Richard Capka,
Federal Highway Administrator.
[FR Doc. E6–21912 Filed 12–21–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–22–P
VerDate Aug<31>2005
17:45 Dec 21, 2006
Jkt 211001
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
[Docket No. FMCSA–2006–25756]
Commercial Driver’s License
Standards; Application for Exemption;
Volvo Trucks North America, Inc
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of application for
exemption; request for comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The FMCSA announces that
Volvo Trucks North America, Inc.
(Volvo) has applied for an exemption
from the Federal requirement that
drivers of commercial motor vehicles
(CMVs) have a commercial driver’s
license (CDL). Volvo requests that the
exemption cover three Swedish
engineers who will test-drive CMVs for
Volvo within the United States. Each of
the three Volvo employees currently
holds a Swedish CDL. Volvo states that
it requests the exemption to support
Volvo field tests on future air-quality
standards and to evaluate the
performance of Volvo vehicles in ‘‘real
world’’ environments.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before January 22, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Your comments may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
• Docket Management System (DMS)
Web site at https://dmses.dot.gov/submit,
under the last five digits of Docket No.
FMCSA–2006–25756, and following the
online instructions for submitting
comments;
• Fax: 1–202–493–2251;
• Mail: Docket Management Facility;
U.S. Department of Transportation, 400
Seventh Street, SW., Nassif Building,
Room PL–401,Washington, DC 20590–
0001;
• Hand Delivery: Room PL–401 on
the plaza level, 400 Seventh Street, SW.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays; or
• Federal eRulemaking Portal at
https://www.regulations.gov following
the online instructions for submitting
comments.
Docket: To read background
documents or comments received, go to
https://dms.dot.gov at any time or 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. The DMS is available
24 hours each day, 365 days each year.
If you want to be notified that we
PO 00000
Frm 00131
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
received your comments by mail or
hand delivery, please include a selfaddressed, stamped envelope or
postcard. If you submit comments on
line, you will be provided an
opportunity to print an
acknowledgement page.
Privacy Act: Anyone may view or
download comments submitted in any
of DOT’s dockets by searching under the
name of the commenter or name of the
person signing the comment (if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, or other entity).
You may view DOT’s complete Privacy
Act Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000, at 65 FR
19477. It is also available at https://
dms.dot.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Thomas Yager, Chief, Driver and Carrier
Operations Division, Office of Bus and
Truck Standards and Operations, MC–
PSD, Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, DOT, 400 Seventh
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590;
Telephone: 202–366–4009. E-mail:
MCPSD@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA) may grant
exemptions from its safety regulations
based on 49 U.S.C. Chapter 313 and
31136. The Agency has published
procedures for submission and handling
of requests for exemption (49 CFR Part
381). Upon receipt of a request, FMCSA
must publish a notice of it in the
Federal Register. This provides the
public an opportunity to inspect the
information relevant to the application,
including any safety analyses that have
been conducted, and to comment on the
request for exemption.
The Agency must review the safety
analyses and the public comments and
determine whether granting the
exemption would likely achieve a level
of safety equivalent to, or greater than,
the level that would be achieved by the
current regulation (49 CFR 381.305). If
this standard is not satisfied, we cannot
grant the request. The FMCSA must
publish the Agency’s decision in the
Federal Register (49 CFR 381.315(b)). If
the Agency denies the request, we must
state the reason for doing so. If the
Agency grants the exemption, we must
specify the person or class of persons
receiving the exemption, the regulatory
provision or provisions from which
exemption is being granted, the effective
period of the exemption (up to 2 years),
and the terms and conditions of the
exemption. An exemption may be
renewed (49 CFR 381.300(b)).
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
22DEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 246 (Friday, December 22, 2006)]
[Notices]
[Pages 77084-77090]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E6-21912]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Value Pricing Pilot Program Participation, Fiscal Years 2007-2009
AGENCY: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice; solicitation for participation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice invites State and local governments and other
public authorities to apply to participate in the Value Pricing Pilot
(VPP) program and presents guidelines for program applications. This
notice supersedes two previous notices about the VPP program under the
Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A
Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU) published in the Federal Register on
January 6, 2006 (71 FR 970), and July 17, 2006 (71 FR 40578). The
primary purpose of superseding the previous notices with this new
notice is to shift the focus on the types of VPP program projects being
solicited to achieve consistency with the U.S. Department of
Transportation's (DOT) National Strategy to Reduce Congestion on
America's Transportation Network (DOT Congestion Initiative), announced
on May 16, 2006.\1\ This national strategy contains a number of
elements that involve pricing, thus warranting a reconsideration of the
types of projects solicited for VPP program participation. This
solicitation aligns the VPP program with the DOT Congestion Initiative
by together seeking to support metropolitan areas in systemically
progressing toward implementation of broad congestion pricing
strategies in the near term. This notice also describes the statutory
basis for the VPP program and specifies all of the steps necessary to
apply for funding and, where applicable, tolling authority
[[Page 77085]]
under the program. A new application deadline is also provided.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Speaking before the National Retail Federation's annual
conference on May 16, 2006, in Washington, DC, former U.S.
Transportation Secretary Norman Mineta unveiled a new plan to reduce
congestion plaguing America's roads, rail, and airports. The
National Strategy to Reduce Congestion on America's Transportation
Network includes a number of initiatives designed to reduce
transportation congestion. The transcript of these remarks is
available at the follwoing URL: https://www.dot.gov./affairs/
minetasp051606.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A January 6, 2006, notice covering non-grant tolling programs,
which was a companion to the original January 6, 2006, VPP program
notice, remains in effect. That notice was entitled ``Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy
for Users (SAFETEA-LU); Opportunities for States and Other Qualifying
Agencies to Gain Authority to Toll Facilities Constructed Using Federal
Funds'' (71 FR 965). Today's new notice and the previous companion
notice are together intended to cover all of the opportunities for
States and other qualifying transportation agencies to obtain approval
to toll their respective facilities and to secure funding to implement
tolling and pricing.
DATES: Applications for tolling authority only may be submitted at any
time prior to September 30, 2009. Formal grant applications must be
submitted no later than April 30, 2007, for FY 2007 funds.
Application Submission: Beginning in FY 2007, all Federal agencies,
including FHWA, are required to use https://www.grants.gov, an
electronic format for receiving applications. Grants.gov was developed
as part of the President's Management Agenda and related E-Government
Strategy, which charged Federal grant-making agencies with developing a
single electronic system to help prospective applicants find and apply
for Federal grant opportunities. Therefore, applicants applying for
funding under the VPP program must file their applications online at
www.grants.gov. The full announcement for VPP program grants is
expected to be available on www.grants.gov no later than January 15,
2007.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions about this notice,
please contact Mr. Wayne Berman, FHWA Office of Operations, (202) 366-
4069, or via e-mail at wayne.berman@dot.gov. For technical questions
related to project development, please contact Mr. Patrick DeCorla-
Souza, FHWA Office of Operations, at (202) 366-4076, or via e-mail at
patrick.decorla-souza@dot.gov. For legal questions, please contact Mr.
Michael Harkins, FHWA Office of the Chief Counsel, (202) 366-4928, or
via e-mail at michael.harkins@dot.gov. Office hours for the FHWA are
from 7:45 a.m. to 4:15 p.m., e.t., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
An electronic copy of this document may be downloaded from the
Federal Register's home page at: https://www.archives.gov and the
Government Printing Office's database at: https://www.access.gpo.gov/
nara.
Coordination With Other Congestion Initiative Solicitations
This solicitation is one of three associated solicitations being
released under the DOT's Congestion Initiative:
1. Urban Partnership Agreement (UPA)--One of the key elements of
the Congestion Initiative is the reduction of urban congestion. On
December 8, 2006 (71 FR 71231), the DOT issued a notice in the Federal
Register seeking applications for the UPA. The UPA solicitation seeks
to identify metropolitan areas interested in partnering with the DOT to
aggressively implement congestion-reducing strategies in the near-term.
Based on the responses to the UPA solicitation the DOT expects to enter
into partnership agreements with a small number of metropolitan areas.
Identification as an ``urban partner'' will be one of the selection
factors considered in awarding grants under the Value Pricing and
Intelligent Transportation System programs.
2. Value Pricing Pilot (VPP) program--This solicitation for the VPP
program as reauthorized in SAFETEA-LU provides funding to support
implementation of a variety of pricing-based approaches for managing
congestion on highways. This solicitation aligns the VPP program with
the Congestion Initiative and seeks to support metropolitan areas in
systematically progressing toward implementation of broad congestion
pricing strategies in the near term.
3. Intelligent Transportation System (ITS) Operational Testing to
Mitigate Congestion (OTMC) program--The ITS program as reauthorized in
SAFETEA-LU supports the research, development and testing of ITS for a
variety of purposes, including the reduction of metropolitan
congestion. The ITS-OTMC solicitation supports the operational testing
and evaluation of advanced technologies to reduce congestion in urban
areas.
Applicants should submit pricing-related proposals involving the
use of electronic systems for collection, management and enforcement to
both the VPP program and ITS-OTMC solicitations. Applicants should
submit identical proposals that address all the requirements of both
solicitations to both programs. DOT will consider these proposals for
funding under both of these programs. Applicants should indicate, in
their responses to this solicitation and DOT's solicitation for ITS-
OTMC, whether they have applied to become Urban Partners in response to
DOT's UPA solicitation.
Background
Section 1012(b) of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency
Act (ISTEA) (Pub. L. 102-240; 105 Stat. 1914), as amended by section
1216(a) of the Transportation Equity Act (TEA-21) (Pub. L. 105-178; 112
Stat. 107), and section 1604(a) of Safe, Accountable, Flexible,
Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU)
(Pub. L. 109-59; 119 Stat. 1144), authorizes the Secretary of
Transportation (the Secretary) to create a Value Pricing Pilot program.
Value pricing encompasses a variety of strategies to manage congestion
on highways, including tolling of highway facilities, as well as other
strategies that do not involve tolls, such as mileage-based vehicle
taxes and leasing fees, parking pricing, and car sharing. The value
pricing concept of assessing relatively higher prices for travel during
peak periods is the same as that used in many other sectors of the
economy to respond to peak-use demands. For example, airlines, hotels,
and theaters often charge more at peak than at non-peak times.
The FHWA is seeking applications for the FY 2007 VPP program that
are consistent with the objectives of the DOT's National Strategy to
Reduce Congestion, announced on May 16, 2006, which seeks to dedicate
substantial departmental resources toward addressing the growing
problem of urban congestion. This national strategy, and its linkage to
the VPP program applications that are being solicited by this notice,
are discussed in greater detail later in this notice. Because of this
new national strategy, the primary objective of the VPP program for
fiscal years 2007, 2008, and 2009, will be to facilitate cities in
systematically progressing toward implementation of broad congestion
(variable) pricing over a brief period of time, preferably 3 years.
According to the statutory requirements of the VPP program, the
FHWA may enter into cooperative agreements with up to 15 State or local
governments or other public authorities (henceforth referred to only as
``States''), to establish, maintain, and monitor value pricing pilot
programs, each including an unlimited number of projects. The FHWA
invites interested States to apply to participate in the VPP program
for FY 2007. As of the date of this notice, there are already 13 State-
led programs currently in the VPP program: California, Colorado,
Florida,
[[Page 77086]]
Georgia, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New Jersey, North Carolina,
Oregon, Texas, Virginia, and Washington. Therefore, at this time, only
two additional States are eligible to participate. Any value pricing
project included under these programs may involve the use of tolls on
the Interstate system. This is an exception to the general provisions
prohibiting tolls on the Interstate system as contained in 23 U.S.C.
129 and 301.
To comply with the statutory cap on the number of partnering States
in a manner that maximizes program participation, the FHWA will only
consider an active cooperative agreement sufficient to hold one of the
15 available value pricing slots. An agreement will be considered
active by the FHWA under the following two circumstances: (1) During
the period encompassing the time between when a cooperative funding
agreement for a project or projects has been signed and when the
project or projects has or have been completed, and (2) if VPP program
tolling authority has been granted and is still needed to toll a new or
existing highway. Absent one or both of these conditions being met, an
agreement will not be considered active for the purposes of the VPP
program. A State that does not maintain an active agreement with FHWA
risks being denied the opportunity to participate in the program in the
future if no participation slots are left.
A maximum of $12 million is authorized for each of the fiscal years
2007 through 2009 to be made available to carry out the VPP program
requirements. A set-aside of $3 million per fiscal year is authorized
only for value pricing pilot projects that do not involve highway
tolls. The Federal share payable under the program is 80 percent of the
cost of the project. Funds allocated by the Secretary to a State under
this section shall remain available for obligation by the State for a
period of 3 years after the last day of the fiscal year for which funds
are authorized. If, on September 30 of any year, the amount of funds
made available for the VPP program, but not allocated, exceeds $8
million, the excess amount will, to comply with the statutory
requirements of the VPP program, be apportioned to all States as
Surface Transportation Program funds.
Funds available for the VPP program can be used to support pre-
implementation study activities as well as to pay for pricing-specific
implementation costs of value pricing projects. Section 1012(b)(6) of
ISTEA provides that a State may permit toll-paying vehicles with fewer
than two occupants to operate in high occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes if
the vehicles are part of a local value pricing pilot program under this
section. Section 1121 of SAFETEA -LU, ``HOV Facilities,'' among other
things, also allows for the conversion of HOV lanes to high occupancy
toll (HOT) lanes. Given that, as of the date of this notice, the VPP
program has only two slots available under which new program partners
may participate and FHWA would like to use a new slot only where
necessary, section 1121 authority will generally be used, instead of
VPP program authority, for HOV-to-HOT lane conversions if an
application comes from a State that is not already in the VPP program.
Additionally, since value pricing projects are experimental and section
1121 is not, the FHWA may elect to also use section 1121 authority
instead of VPP program authority for HOV-to-HOT lane conversions in
current VPP program States depending on the type of project that is
proposed.
Potential financial effects of value pricing projects on low-income
drivers shall be considered and, where such effects are expected to be
significant, possible mitigation measures should be identified, such as
providing new or expanded transit service as an integral part of the
value pricing project, toll discounts or credits for low-income
motorists who do not have viable transit options, or fare or toll
credits earned by motorists on regular lanes which can be used to pay
for tolls on priced lanes. Mitigation measures can be included as part
of the value pricing project implementation costs.
Since the Secretary is required to report to Congress every 2 years
on the effects of all value pricing pilot programs, project partners
will be expected to assist the FHWA by providing data on its programs
for use in these reports.
The VPP program is a continuation of the Congestion Pricing Pilot
Program authorized by section 1012(b) of the ISTEA and amended by
section 1216 (a) of TEA-21. To obtain up-to-date information on the
status of current projects, please go to: https://www.ops.fhwa.dot.gov/
tolling_pricing/index.htm.
In addition to the VPP program, SAFETEA-LU offers States broader
authority to use tolling to finance highway construction and
reconstruction, promote efficiency in the use of highways, and support
congestion reduction by providing expanded flexibility under the
following programs: HOV facilities; Interstate System Reconstruction
and Rehabilitation Pilot; Interstate System Construction Toll Pilot;
Express Lanes Demonstration Program; and Section 129 toll agreements.
For more information on these programs, please refer to the companion
notice in the January 6, 2006, Federal Register entitled, ``Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy
for Users (SAFETEA-LU); Opportunities for State and Other Qualifying
Agencies to Gain Authority to Toll Facilities Constructed Using Federal
Funds'' (71 FR 965).
Applicable Terms
``Value pricing,'' ``congestion pricing,'' ``peak-period pricing,''
``variable pricing,'' and ``variable tolling'' are all terms used to
refer to direct non-constant charges for road use, possibly varying by
location, time of day, severity of congestion, vehicle occupancy, or
type of facility. By shifting some trips to off-peak periods, to mass
transit or other higher-occupancy vehicles, to non-motorized modes, or
to routes away from congested facilities, or by encouraging
consolidation of trips, value pricing charges are intended to promote
economic efficiency both generally and within the commercial freight
sector. They also achieve congestion reduction, improved air quality,
energy conservation, and transit productivity goals.
A ``value pricing project'' means any implementation of value
pricing concepts or techniques discussed in the ``Potential Project
Types'' section of this notice and included under a State or local
``value pricing pilot program.'' A State is considered to have a value
pricing pilot program if it has one or more approved value pricing
projects. While the distinction between ``project'' and ``program'' may
appear to be merely a technical one, it is significant in that, as
described in the ``Background'' section of this notice, the number of
total VPP programs is statutorily limited to 15, while there is no
limit to the number of VPP projects allowed under each VPP program.
``Cooperative agreement'' means the agreement signed between the
FHWA and a State to establish and implement value pricing pilot
programs. ``Toll agreement'' means the agreement signed between the
FHWA and a State to grant the authority to collect tolls.
Program Objective
The overall objective of the VPP program is to support efforts by
State and local governments or other public authorities to establish
local value pricing pilot programs, to provide for the monitoring and
evaluation of value
[[Page 77087]]
pricing projects included in such programs, and to report on these
effects. The VPP program's primary focus is on value pricing with road
tolls, with a secondary focus on other market-based approaches for
congestion relief that do not involve road tolls, such as mileage-based
vehicle taxes and leasing fees, parking pricing, and car sharing.
The FHWA is seeking applications for funding and/or tolling
authority to use value pricing to reduce congestion, improve system
performance, and promote mobility in a manner consistent with the DOT's
National Strategy to Reduce Congestion on America's Transportation
Network, issued in May 2006. This strategy consists of a six-point
plan, designed to both reduce congestion in the short-term and to build
the foundation for successful longer-term congestion reduction efforts.
The six-point plan consists of the following: (1) Establish a
``Corridors of the Future'' competition; (2) Relieve urban congestion;
(3) Unleash private sector investment resources; (4) Promote
operational and technological improvements; (5) Target major freight
bottlenecks and expand freight policy outreach; and (6) Accelerate
major aviation capacity projects and provide a future funding framework
for the aviation system. The VPP program is part of the, ``relieve
urban congestion'' element under which ``[t]he Department will seek to
enter Urban Partnership Agreements with model cities, pursuant to which
the cities and Department will commit to * * * implementing a broad
congestion pricing or variable toll demonstration * * *'' Consistent
with this objective, all proposals should incorporate significant
pricing mechanisms intended to reduce the level of congestion.
Potential Project Types
To help meet the objectives of DOT's National Strategy to Reduce
Congestion on America's Transportation Network, the FHWA is interested
in projects that have the greatest potential to lead to significant,
broad, and near-term congestion relief. The FHWA will consider
applications that show that a project seeking grant funds will achieve
at least one of the following: (1) Build public support and a technical
foundation for near term congestion pricing; (2) develop a pricing
program with detailed plans and specifications leading to near-term
implementation; and/or (3) implement broad-based pricing and evaluate
its effectiveness. Implementation projects should bring about new
pricing while pre-implementation projects should demonstrate that near-
term implementation is likely, most preferably by January 2009,
especially for FY 2007 applications. For pre-implementation projects,
applicants should demonstrate that there is already sufficient
political support for implementation, or that the project is well
designed to bring about such support. Additionally, projects should
rely wholly or at least primarily on existing facilities and/or
facilities that will be completed in a very short time frame (e.g.,
within 12 to 18 months), since near-term implementation would otherwise
be impossible.
Value pricing charges need to be targeted at a sizable number of
vehicles that are causing congestion, and prices should be set at
levels significant enough to encourage drivers to use alternative
times, routes, modes, or trip patterns or to telecommute during
congested periods. Value pricing concepts that have become mainstream
and have been adopted as common practice, such as HOV-to-HOT lane
conversions, will not be funded.
The FHWA is seeking VPP program applications from public entities
that are willing to engage in discussions about entering into
comprehensive Urban Partnership Agreements that include substantial
actions on their part to advance broad congestion pricing approaches,
which should be specified in their VPP project applications. Unlike
previous VPP program solicitation notices which sought a wide variety
of project applications, the FHWA is now only seeking projects to study
or implement pricing that is broad in nature and will no longer
entertain applications for studying or implementing single-facility
projects. Such applications should cover a significantly-sized
geographical area and include multiple roadway facilities that are
priced, an interconnected managed lane network, or cordon pricing,
where, as in London, cars are charged a substantial fee to drive in a
congested area on weekdays. Variable pricing of currently free and
tolled facilities, pricing of multiple facilities or corridors, and/or
combinations of road pricing and parking pricing will generally be
required. Area-wide pricing applications that use technologies that
provide travelers (including drivers and transit riders) with pre-trip
and real-time congestion and pricing information on alternative travel
modes and routes are especially encouraged to assist travelers in
making efficient travel destination, mode and route choices.
Tests of new, innovative value pricing approaches are encouraged,
but only within the context of a broad, area-wide application. Such
auxiliary or complementary elements to broad pricing applications might
include pricing at key traffic bottlenecks, shifting from fixed to
variable toll schedules on existing toll facilities (i.e., combinations
of peak-period surcharges and off-peak discounts), and pricing of queue
jumps, where paying motorists can bypass motorists who choose not to
pay, typically by using special lanes with priority signals at freeway
entrance ramps.
Projects should be designed to reflect the needs of low-income or
other transportation-disadvantaged groups. Mitigation strategies to
address equity concerns may include bus rapid transit or other
enhancements of transportation alternatives for peak-period travelers,
``life-line'' toll rates aimed at low-income travelers, limited
monetary credits to all or just to low-income travelers that can be
used to pay for tolls or transit fares (thereby allowing a limited
amount of free travel before having to pay full fees as with some
cellular phone service plans), and credit-based tolling programs such
as toll credits earned by motorists in regular lanes or by transit
users in the corridor which can later be used to pay tolls on priced
lanes or for free transit trips.
The FHWA is also interested in grant applications for projects that
do not involve highway tolls. As discussed earlier, SAFETEA-LU sets
aside at least $3 million per fiscal year for such projects. The FHWA
encourages applicants to design such projects, to the extent possible,
to complement or offer the potential for ``broad'' pricing as called
for in the DOT's National Strategy to Reduce Congestion on America's
Transportation Network. The FHWA intends to be more flexible when
evaluating projects that do not involve tolls than when evaluating
projects that do, given that many types of facility-based toll projects
have already been funded by the VPP program in the past, while the
program has had less experience using non-toll pricing strategies to
reduce congestion.
The FHWA seeks tests of innovative parking pricing strategies,
including time-of-day pricing and charges reflective of congested
conditions, provided the level and coverage of proposed parking charges
is sufficient to reduce congestion. Among the strategies that could be
considered innovative include: surcharges for entering or exiting
parking facilities during or near peak periods; citywide, on-street
parking pricing that varies by demand; and a range of parking cash-out
policies, where cash is offered to employees in
[[Page 77088]]
lieu of subsidized parking, parking operators reimburse monthly patrons
for unused parking days, or renters or purchasers in multi-family
housing developments are provided direct financial saving for not
availing of car parking spaces. The FHWA also seeks tests of pay-as-
you-drive pricing, including innovative car ownership, leasing, and
usage arrangements that reduce fixed costs and increase variable usage
costs. An example of such pricing might be car leases with a reduced
fixed-priced monthly charge coupled with a substantial per-mile charge.
Pre-Implementation Studies
The VPP program funds may also be used to assist States in carrying
out pre-implementation study activities designed to lead to
implementation of a value pricing project in the near-term, consistent
with the objectives of the DOT's National Strategy to Reduce Congestion
on America's Transportation Network. The intent of the pre-
implementation study phase is to support efforts to identify and
evaluate value pricing project alternatives, and to prepare the
necessary groundwork for near-term implementation. So as to focus VPP
program resources in a manner consistent with the DOT Congestion
Initiative, FHWA will not fund purely academic studies of value pricing
or studies that involve major expansions of existing facilities (not
designed to lead to near-term project implementation) or area-wide
planning studies covering many topics besides pricing and incorporating
value pricing only as one of a number of options. Such studies may be
funded with regular Federal-aid highway or transit planning funds.
Applications for pre-implementation studies will be evaluated based on
the likelihood that they will lead to near-term implementation of broad
value pricing conforming to the objectives described in the previous
section.
Project Costs Eligible for Grant Funding
The FHWA will provide up to the statutorily allowable 80 percent
share of the estimated costs of an approved project. Funds available
for the VPP program can be used to support pre-implementation study
activities and also to pay for implementation costs of value pricing
projects. Costs of planning for, setting up, managing, operating,
monitoring, evaluating, and reporting on local value pricing pilot
projects are eligible for reimbursement, but neither pre-implementation
study costs nor implementation costs may be reimbursed for longer than
three years. The 3-year funding limitation will begin on the date of
the first disbursement of Federal funds for project activities.
Examples of specific pre-implementation and implementation costs
eligible for reimbursement include the following:
1. Pre-Implementation Study Costs--Covered activities include those
undertaken to advance two key priority focus areas: foundation building
and program development.
a. Foundation building activities may be reimbursed, such as public
participation, consensus building, marketing, modeling, and technology
assessments; and
b. Program development activities are also eligible for
reimbursement, including project and financial planning, project
design, creating project specifications, and activities required to
meet Federal or State environmental or other planning requirements.
2. Implementation Costs--Allowable costs for reimbursement under
this priority focus area include those for setting up, managing,
operating, evaluating, and reporting on a value pricing project,
including:
a. Necessary salaries and expenses, or other administrative and
operational costs, such as installation of equipment for operation of a
pilot project (e.g., Electronic Toll Collection (ETC) technology, video
equipment for traffic monitoring, and other instrumentation),
enforcement costs, costs of monitoring and evaluating project
operations, and costs of continuing public relations activities during
the period of implementation;
b. ``mitigation measures to deal with any potential adverse
financial effects on low-income drivers[,]'' per section 1012(b)(7) of
ISTEA as amended, including costs of providing transportation
alternatives, such as new or expanded transit or ridesharing services
provided as an integral part of the value pricing project. Funds are
not available to replace existing sources of support for these
services.
Project implementation costs can be supported until such time that
sufficient revenues are being generated by the project to fund such
activities without Federal support, but in no case for longer than
three years. Each implementation project included in a value pricing
pilot program will be considered separately for this purpose.
Funds may not be used to pay for activities conducted prior to
approval for VPP program participation. Also, funds made available
through the VPP program may not be used to construct new highway lanes
or bridges, even if those facilities are to be priced, but toll ramps
or minor pavement additions needed to facilitate toll collection or
enforcement are eligible. Complementary actions, such as lane
construction, the implementation of traffic control systems, or transit
projects can be funded through other highway and transit programs under
SAFETEA-LU and from new revenues raised as a result of a pilot. VPP
program applicants are encouraged to explore opportunities for
combining VPP program funds with other funds. Federal funds may not,
however, be used to match VPP program funds unless there is specific
statutory authority to do so.
Eligible Uses of Revenues
Section 1012(b)(2) of ISTEA provides that revenues generated by any
value pricing pilot project must be applied first to pay for pilot
project operating costs. Any project revenues in excess of pilot
project operating costs may, according to section 1012(b)(3) of ISTEA,
be used for any projects eligible under Title 23, U.S. Code. A
project's operating costs include any costs necessary for a project's
execution; mitigation measures to deal with adverse financial effects
on low-income drivers; the proper maintenance of the facility; any
construction (including reconstruction, rehabilitation, restoration, or
resurfacing) of the facility; any debt service incurred in implementing
the project; and a reasonable return on investment by any private
entity financing the project. Uses of revenue are encouraged which will
support the goals of the VPP program, particularly uses designed to
provide benefits to those traveling in the corridor where the project
is being implemented.
For VPP toll projects, the FHWA and the public authority (including
the State transportation department) having jurisdiction over a
facility must enter into a toll agreement concerning the use of toll
revenue to be generated under a value pricing project. The toll
agreement will provide that the public authority use the revenues in
accordance with the applicable statutory requirements. The execution of
a toll agreement will facilitate oversight of a State's compliance with
revenue use requirements of the VPP program.
Who is Eligible to Apply?
Qualified applicants for either tolling authority or grants (or
both) include State or local governments or public authorities, such as
tolling agencies. Although project agreements must be with the
aforementioned public entities, and preferably with State Departments
of Transportation in order to preserve
[[Page 77089]]
participation slots, a VPP program partnership may also include private
tolling authorities, for-profit companies, and non-profit
organizations.
The Value Pricing Pilot Program Applications
Formal applications should be submitted online directly by the
State Department of Transportation to https://www.grants.gov.
There is no particular format that is required for tolling
authority applications or grant applications, although specific
information is requested. Applications should include the following
background information:
(a) The name, title, e-mail address, and phone number of the person
who will act as the point of contact on behalf of the requesting
agency, authority, or authorities;
(b) A description of the agency, authority, or authorities
requesting funding and/or tolling authority;
(c) A statement as to whether only funding, both funding and
tolling authority, or only tolling authority via the VPP program is
being sought to support either pre-implementation or implementation
activities as permitted;
(d) A description of the public agency or agencies that will be
responsible for operating, maintaining, and enforcing the tolling
program, if applicable; and
(e) A statement as to whether the applicant has or intends to
become an Urban Partner and execute an Urban Partnership Agreement with
the DOT that would commit the region to take broad and aggressive
action to reduce congestion.
The core of the application should include the following:
1. A description of the congestion problem being addressed (current
and projected);
2. A description of the proposed pricing program and its goals;
3. An identification of the facilities that will be covered,
including whether any of the subject facilities is an Interstate
facility, whether any HOV lanes currently exist on any of the
facilities, and whether any construction related activities would be
needed to implement the project and, if so, whether this is new
construction, expansion, rehabilitation, reconstruction, or other;
4. Where applicable, a plan for implementing or modifying tolls,
and a related timetable. Where known, the range of anticipated tolls
and the strategies to vary toll rates (i.e., the formulas for variable
pricing), the technology to be used, enforcement programs, and
operating details;
5. Anticipated effects of the pricing program on reducing
congestion, altering travel behavior, and encouraging the use of other
transportation modes;
6. Preliminary estimates of the social and economic effects of the
pricing program, including potential equity impacts, and a plan or
methodology for further refining such estimates;
7. The role of alternative transportation modes in the project;
8. A description of the tasks to be carried out as part of each
phase of the project;
9. A detailed project timeline broken down by tasks and phases;
10. An itemized budget broken down by task and funding year (i.e.,
Year 1, Year 2, etc.), which is only required for grant applications;
11. Plans for monitoring and evaluating implementation projects,
including plans for collection and analysis, before and after
assessment, and long term monitoring and documenting of project
effects;
12. A detailed finance and revenue plan, including (for
implementation projects) a budget for capital and operating costs; a
description of all funding sources, planned expenditures, and proposed
uses of revenues; and a plan for projects to become financially self-
sustaining (without Federal support) within 3 years of implementation,
all of which is only required for grant applications.
13. A discussion of previous public involvement, including public
meetings, in the development of the proposed pricing program. Any
expressions or declarations of support from State or local government
officials or the public. Future plans for involving key affected
parties, coalition building, and media relations, and more broadly for
ensuring adequate public involvement prior to implementation;
14. Plans for meeting all Federal, State and local legal and
administrative requirements for project implementation, including
relevant Federal-aid planning and environmental requirements;
15. A description of how, if at all, any private entities are
involved in the project either in the up-front costs to enact tolling,
or the cost sharing or debt retirement associated with revenues; and
16. An explanation about how electronic toll collection (ETC)
project components will be compatible with other ETC systems in the
region.
If some of these items are not available or fully developed at the
time the formal application is submitted, applications will still be
considered for grant funding support or for tolling authority if they
meet the interests of the FHWA, as described earlier in the section
entitled ``Potential Project Types,'' (except for applicants for
tolling authority only), and if there is a strong indication that these
items will be completed within a short time.
VPP Program Process
A. Requests for Funding
To ensure that all projects receive fair and equal consideration
for the limited available funds, the FHWA requires formal grant
applications to be submitted no later than April 30, 2007, for FY 2007
funds to https://www.grants.gov.
B. Projects for Which No Funds Are Requested
Although most projects under the VPP program involve requests for
value pricing funds, some projects do not, and instead only seek
tolling authority under the program. In such cases, and especially
where a State is not already part of the VPP program, the FHWA
recommends that the public authority investigate the other
opportunities to gain authority to toll that are listed in the
companion notice in the January 6, 2006, Federal Register, entitled
``Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A
Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU); Opportunities for State and Other
Qualifying Agencies to Gain Authority to Toll Facilities Constructed
Using Federal Funds'' (71 FR 965).
Post-Selection Process
If approved, a formal cooperative agreement will be prepared
between the FHWA and the State. The cooperative agreement will include
a refined scope of work developed from the original funding application
and subsequent discussions with FHWA. Federal statutes will govern the
cooperative agreement. Regulations cited in the agreement, and 49 CFR
Part 18, Uniform Administrative Requirements for Grants and Cooperative
Agreements to State and Local Governments, will also apply. As a
practical matter, each VPP program project should have a separate
cooperative agreement. Although, in the past, the FHWA has allowed some
States to have a master cooperative agreement that is subsequently
amended for each approved project, in the future the FHWA will execute
a separate agreement for each project. For value pricing projects that
involve only toll authority and that do not involve requests for
Federal funds, a cooperative agreement must still be executed.
[[Page 77090]]
Subsequent to the signing of the cooperative agreement for a
tolling project, and after all environmental requirements have been met
and the project is ready to proceed to construction and/or
implementation, a toll agreement will then be executed with the FHWA
that addresses the use of revenues from the operation of the toll
facility. As discussed previously, revenues must generally first be
used to cover debt service, provide reasonable return on private party
investments, and operate and maintain the facility. Any remaining
revenues may then be used for other title 23 U.S.C. eligible purposes.
Other Requirements
Prior to the FHWA approval of pricing project implementation,
value-pricing programs must be shown to be consistent with Federal
metropolitan and statewide planning requirements (23 U.S.C. 134 and
135; and, if applicable, 49 U.S.C. 5303 and 5304).
Implementation projects involving tolls outside metropolitan areas
must be included in the approved statewide transportation improvement
program and be selected in accordance with the requirements set forth
in section 1204(f)(3) of the TEA-21.
Implementation projects involving tolls in metropolitan areas must
be: (a) Included in, or consistent with, the approved metropolitan
transportation plan (if the area is in nonattainment for a
transportation related pollutant, the metropolitan plan must be in
conformance with the State air quality implementation plan); (b)
included in the approved metropolitan and statewide transportation
improvement programs (if the metropolitan area is in a nonattainment
area for a transportation related pollutant, the metropolitan
transportation improvement program must be in conformance with the
State air quality implementation plan); (c) selected in accordance with
the requirements in section 1203(h)(5) or (i)(2) of TEA-21; and (d)
consistent with any existing congestion management system in
Transportation Management Areas, developed pursuant to 23 U.S.C.
134(i)(3).
(Authority: 23 U.S.C. 315; sec. 1216(a), Pub. L. 105-178, 112 Stat.
107; Pub. L. 109-59; 117 Stat. 1144 49 CFR 1.48)
Issued on: December 18, 2006.
J. Richard Capka,
Federal Highway Administrator.
[FR Doc. E6-21912 Filed 12-21-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-22-P