Value Pricing Pilot Program Participation, Fiscal Years 2009 and 2010, 39138-39143 [E9-18699]
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Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 149 / Wednesday, August 5, 2009 / Notices
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BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Value Pricing Pilot Program
Participation, Fiscal Years 2009 and
2010
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY: Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice; solicitation for
participation.
SUMMARY: This notice invites States,
along with their local government
partners and other public authorities, to
apply to participate in the Value Pricing
Pilot (VPP) program and presents
guidelines for program applications for
fiscal years 2009 and 2010. Unlike with
previous notices, the purpose of this
notice is to seek only applications for
statewide, regionwide, or areawide
transportation pricing studies and for
transportation pricing implementation
projects that do not entail tolling
roadways. This notice seeks
applications for fiscal year 2009
funding, and if Congress chooses to
extend Safe, Accountable, Flexible,
Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A
Legacy for Users (SAFETEA–LU) VPP
program funding, for such funds made
available in fiscal year 2010.
DATES: 1. Applications for tolling
authority only may be submitted at any
time.
2. Formal grant applications,
however, must be submitted no later
than November 3, 2009, to be assured
consideration.
3. Applicants may also submit an
optional ‘‘sketch’’ or draft proposal by
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September 21, 2009, which FHWA will
review and provide general feedback on
for the applicant to use in its formal
grant application. Sketch or draft
proposals received after this date may
still be reviewed by and commented
upon by FHWA at its discretion.
4. For applications that had been
submitted under the September 16, 2008
(73 FR 53478) solicitation that were not
funded (for a list of projects funded
from that solicitation, see: https://
www.fhwa.dot.gov/pressroom/
fhwa0913.htm), and where such
applications would still be eligible for
funding under the criteria provided by
this notice, applicants may submit a
letter to the Department by September 4,
2009, requesting comments on their
previous applications.
Application Submission: Applications
may be submitted through https://
www.grants.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
questions about or to provide
information to FHWA that responds to
this notice, such as to submit a letter or
sketch plan, please contact Ms. Angela
Jacobs, FHWA Office of Operations, at
(202) 366–0076, angela.jacobs@dot.gov.
For technical questions related to the
development of pricing projects not
involving tolls, please contact Mr. Allen
Greenberg, FHWA Office of Operations,
at (202) 366–2425,
allen.greenberg@dot.gov. For technical
questions related to the development of
regional pricing projects, please contact
Mr. Patrick DeCorla-Souza, FHWA
Office of Innovative Program Delivery,
at (202) 366–4076, patrick.decorlasouza@dot.gov. For legal questions,
please contact Mr. Michael Harkins,
FHWA Office of the Chief Counsel, at
(202) 366–4928,
michael.harkins@dot.gov.
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.
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 the Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity
Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA–LU)
(Pub. L. 109–59; 119 Stat. 1144),
authorizes the Secretary of
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Transportation (the Secretary) to create
a Value Pricing Pilot (VPP) program.
Congestion 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 car insurance and
parking pricing. The congestion pricing
concept of charging variable fees based
upon usage and 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 periods than at
non-peak periods.
According to the statutory
requirements of the VPP program,
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 VPP
programs, each including an unlimited
number of projects. The FHWA invites
interested States to apply to participate
in the VPP program for the remainder of
FY 2009 and also for FY 2010, if
SAFETEA–LU funding is extended.
While direct submissions by local
governments and public authorities are
allowable under SAFETEA–LU, FHWA
strongly prefers applications to be
submitted through State departments of
transportation, since that would allow
the potential for multiple VPP program
projects within a State counting as only
1 of the 15 allowable partnerships.
To comply with the statutory cap on
the number of partnering States and
other public authorities in a manner that
maximizes program participation,
FHWA will only consider an ‘‘active’’
cooperative agreement sufficient to hold
1 of the 15 available VPP program slots,
as also noted in the September 16, 2008,
notice for VPP program participation (73
FR 53478). An agreement will be
considered ‘‘active’’ by FHWA under
either of the following two conditions:
(1) During the period of 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. If
progress in moving forward to use its
VPP program funding or tolling
authority is unsatisfactory, FHWA may
withdraw its approval for inactive
agreements in favor of other applicants
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seeking to obtain VPP program funding
or tolling authority.
A maximum of $12 million is
authorized for FY 2009 to be made
available to carry out the VPP program,
and Congress may choose to authorize
additional funds for FY 2010. Of the $12
million, $3 million per fiscal year must
be set-aside for VPP projects that do not
involve highway tolls. FHWA
previously solicited for FY 2009
applications in a September 16, 2008,
Federal Register notice (73 FR 53478)
and on May 14, 2009, announced the
awarding of five grants totaling
$6,137,000, thereby leaving less than $6
million to fund additional grants in FY
2009 under this notice. Since none of
the five most recent grants are
supporting projects that do not involve
highway tolls, at least $3 million of the
remaining FY 2009 funds must be used
for such projects. If Congress does
provide additional VPP program funds
for FY 2010, it is FHWA’s intention to
subsequently award these funds based
upon responses to this solicitation, if
merited by the applications that are
received.
The Federal share payable under the
VPP program is up to 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 congestion
pricing projects. Pursuant to section
1012(b)(2) of ISTEA, FHWA may not
fund pre-implementation or
implementation costs for more than 3
years. Also, section 1012(b)(6) of ISTEA
provides that a State may permit
vehicles with fewer than two occupants
to operate in high occupancy vehicle
(HOV) lanes if the vehicles are part of
a local VPP program under this section.
In addition to this authority under the
VPP program, 23 U.S.C. 166 authorizes
States to convert HOV lanes into high
occupancy toll (HOT) lanes in which
vehicles without the number of
occupants required for HOV status are
permitted to use an HOV lane if such
vehicles are charged a toll. Since the
authority to establish and operate an
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HOT lane (including HOT lanes on the
Interstate System) is no longer
experimental and has been
mainstreamed in 23 U.S.C. 166, the
provisions of 23 U.S.C. 166 will
generally be used for HOT projects in
order to more effectively allocate VPP
funds and program slots.
Pursuant to section 1012(b)(7) of
ISTEA, the potential financial effects of
congestion pricing projects on lowincome drivers shall be considered.
Where such effects are expected to be
both negative and significant, possible
mitigation measures should be
identified, such as providing new or
expanded transit service as an integral
part of the congestion 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 by use of regular lanes which
can be used to pay for tolls on priced
lanes. Mitigation measures can be
included as part of the congestion
pricing project implementation costs.
Also, section 1012(b)(6) of ISTEA
requires the Secretary to monitor the
effect of value pricing programs for a
period of at least 10 years and report to
Congress every 2 years on the effects
such programs are having on driver
behavior, traffic volume, transit
ridership, air quality, and availability of
funds for transportation programs.
Project partners will be expected to
assist FHWA by providing data on their
programs for use in these reports
throughout the length of the monitoring
and reporting period.
In addition to the VPP program, other
authorities are available that permit
States to use tolling to finance highway
construction and reconstruction,
promote efficiency in the use of
highways, and support congestion
reduction. Expanded flexibility to toll is
provided 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
notice in the January 6, 2006, Federal
Register entitled, ‘‘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’’ and ‘‘congestion
pricing’’ refer to direct and transparent
charges for vehicle use and parking, as
well as variable charges for road use,
possibly fluctuating based upon
location, time of day, severity of
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congestion, vehicle occupancy, or type
of facility. By shifting some trips to offpeak periods, to mass transit or other
higher-occupancy vehicles, to nonmotorized modes, or to alternative
routes away from priced facilities, or by
encouraging consolidation of trips,
congestion pricing promotes economic
efficiency. It also helps achieve
congestion reduction, improved air
quality, energy conservation, transit
ridership, and revenue generation goals.
A ‘‘value pricing project’’ means any
pre-implementation activities or
implementation of congestion 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 VPP
program if it has one or more approved
congestion 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.
A ‘‘value pricing program’’ means the
combination of all congestion pricing
projects within a State or local
government or public authority. Any
State or local government or public
authority with a cooperative agreement
for a value pricing program is deemed
to have a value pricing program.
‘‘Cooperative agreement’’ means the
agreement signed between the FHWA
and a public agency to establish and
implement congestion pricing pilot
projects.
‘‘Toll agreement’’ means the
agreement signed between the FHWA
and a State and/or local government or
public authority to provide for the
statutorily authorized uses of toll
revenues.
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 VPP
programs, to provide for the monitoring
and evaluation of congestion pricing
projects included in such programs, and
to report on these effects. The effects of
interest include impacts on congestion,
travel behavior, traffic volumes, transit
ridership, air quality, and funding for
transportation improvements. For the
purpose of this solicitation, the VPP
program focuses both on market-based
approaches for congestion relief that do
not involve road tolls, such as mileagebased car insurance and parking pricing,
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and congestion pricing with road tolls,
such as pricing all lanes on limited
access highways or all roads within a
zone or network.
The FHWA is seeking applications for
funding and/or tolling authority to use
congestion pricing to reduce congestion,
improve system performance, and
advance the Department’s priorities of
growing the economy, enhancing
livability, and promoting environmental
sustainability. All proposals should
incorporate significant pricing
mechanisms, whether through non-toll
pricing strategies or toll pricing
applications, that are designed to
substantially advance these objectives.
With successful examples of facilityspecific pricing projects already in
operation in the U.S., this solicitation,
in addition to its focus on non-toll
pricing applications, focuses on
developing broader areawide
approaches to toll-based pricing. Some
metropolitan areas, such as Los Angeles,
San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington,
DC, have begun the process of
developing areawide or regionwide
congestion pricing scenarios and
modeling their effects on long-term
system performance and financing. An
objective of this solicitation is, as
described below, to provide incentive
grants to expand the number of
metropolitan areas that are developing
areawide or regionwide approaches to
congestion pricing.
Similar to the case with facilityspecific tolling applications, some nontoll pricing applications, such as
carsharing, have already proven their
success and do not require VPP program
funding for their success to be
sustained. Deployment of other
strategies, such as pricing of parking
meters to achieve a certain occupancy
level, are much newer in the U.S., but
the advancement of such strategies has
already secured substantial funding
under the VPP and other programs (e.g.,
in San Francisco), and thus other nontolling strategies, discussed below, will
instead receive priority consideration
under this solicitation.
Potential Project Types
The FHWA will consider applications
for funds that show that a project will
achieve at least one of the following: (1)
Perform a rigorous areawide or
regionwide congestion pricing scenario
study around one or more scenarios that
are comprehensive and potentially
acceptable to the public; or (2)
implement new and innovative non-toll
pricing strategies, as detailed below. For
pre-implementation projects, applicants
should demonstrate that there is already
sufficient political support for their
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implementation, or that the project is
designed to bring about such support.
Congestion 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 telework and avoid
commuting during congested periods.
The FHWA is particularly interested
in grant applications for projects that do
not involve highway tolls. As discussed
earlier, SAFETEA–LU sets aside a
minimum of $3 million per fiscal year
for such projects. The FHWA in
particular seeks tests of non-toll pricing
strategies that will substantially
improve livability in an area and
advance environmental sustainability in
a major way, either directly through the
benefits the project itself brings, or by
demonstrating especially promising
strategies such that their
implementation will likely be replicated
broadly.
Strategies that FHWA believes would
meet this test include: (1) Pay-per-mile
car insurance, where insurance
premiums are converted from an annual
or bi-annual charging scheme to one
that is instead based primarily on miles
or minutes of driving (with rates that
still reflect actuarial risks and the
coverages that are selected); and (2)
highly innovative parking pricing
strategies, provided the level and
coverage of parking charges is sufficient
to bring about substantial and
measurable reductions in congestion.
For parking pricing, FHWA seeks
applications for: (1) Citywide surcharges
for entering or exiting parking facilities
during or near peak travel periods; (2)
parking cash-out, where a city or State
passes, and then requests financial
support to implement, an ordinance
requiring employers to offer cash to
their employees in lieu of subsidized
parking, or provides substantial
incentives for employers to offer such
cash-out options; and (3) a city or State
seeking support to implement a law that
requires or provides sizable financial
incentives for housing developers to
build more livable communities with
reduced car parking, in part by offering
renters or purchasers in multifamily
housing developments direct and
substantial financial savings for not
using car parking spaces. Applications
are also encouraged that utilize
appropriate technologies and provide
sufficient participation incentives to
deploy dynamic ridesharing (flexible,
single-trip carpooling) with the
necessary critical mass of users to
succeed. To be considered eligible,
dynamic ridesharing applications must
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be coupled with some transportation
pricing, such as parking pricing, thereby
expanding affordable transportation
options while mitigating equity issues
associated with pricing.
The FHWA is also seeking VPP
program applications from public
entities to study one or more scenarios
for broad-scale areawide or regionwide
tolling and pricing that have a high
probability of getting public support.
Applications for areawide or regionwide
pricing studies should cover a
significantly-sized geographical area
and include multiple roadway facilities
that are priced, including zone-based
pricing, where, as implemented in
London and Stockholm, vehicles are
charged a substantial fee to drive in a
congested area on weekdays.
Consideration of variable pricing of
multiple facilities or corridors, or of an
entire area, will generally be required.
Area-wide pricing applications using
technologies that provide travelers
(including drivers and transit riders)
with pre-trip and real-time congestion
and pricing information for multiple
travel modes and a variety of routes, and
that facilitate dynamic ridesharing, are
especially encouraged to assist travelers
in making efficient travel destination,
mode and route choices. Cashless
tolling (i.e., no toll booths) is a required
element of these approaches in order to
be considered for VPP program funding.
As part of broad, areawide or
regionwide pricing scenario studies, the
inclusion of new, innovative congestion
pricing approaches is encouraged.
Examples of new ideas that FHWA
would like to have further explored are
included in an article on congestion
pricing published in the March/April
issue of Public Roads, available at:
https://www.tfhrc.gov/pubrds/09mar/
04.htm.
Areawide or regionwide
transportation pricing studies are
encouraged to include evaluation of
benefits, costs, revenues, environmental
impacts, distributional impacts, and
financial feasibility of each alternative
package of transportation
improvements, in comparison with the
region’s currently adopted long-range
transportation plan. Development of
alternative packages may involve
stakeholder groups, including (among
others) business groups, environmental
groups, and advocates for social equity.
An example of the sort of regional
transportation study that has already
been undertaken for which FHWA seeks
new applications is the Traffic Choices
Study conducted by the Puget Sound
Regional Council for the Seattle
Metropolitan Area, which led to the
Transportation 2040 Draft
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Environmental Impact Statement (May
2009), available at: https://psrc.org/
projects/trans2040/deis/index.htm.
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,
special reduced toll rates for lowincome travelers, limited monetary
credits to all travelers or just to lowincome 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), 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.
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Pre-Implementation Studies
Applicants are encouraged to carry
out pre-implementation study activities
designed to lead to implementation of
an areawide or regionwide congestion
pricing project in the relatively nearterm. The intent of the preimplementation study phase is to
support efforts to identify and evaluate
congestion pricing project alternatives,
and to prepare the necessary
groundwork for relatively near-term
implementation.
FHWA will not fund purely academic
studies of congestion pricing or studies
that involve major expansions of
existing facilities or area-wide or
regionwide planning studies covering
many topics besides pricing and
incorporating congestion 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 relatively near-term
implementation of broad congestion
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
congestion pricing projects. Costs of
planning for, setting up, managing,
operating, monitoring, evaluating, and
reporting on local congestion pricing
pilot projects are eligible for
reimbursement, but neither pre-
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implementation study costs nor
implementation costs may be
reimbursed for longer than 3 years. The
3-year funding limitation will begin 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
regional program development.
a. Foundation building activities may
be reimbursed, such as public
participation, consensus building,
marketing, modeling, and technology
assessments; and
b. Regional 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
congestion 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, costs of
monitoring and evaluating project
operations, and costs of continuing
public relations activities during the
period of implementation;
b. ‘‘[M]itigation 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 congestion 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 3 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.
Complementary actions, such as lane
construction, the implementation of
traffic control systems, or transit
projects, can be funded through other
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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
congestion 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, United States Code. A
project’s operating costs include, but are
not limited to, 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. States are
encouraged to consider using excess
revenue for projects designed to provide
benefits to those traveling in the
corridor where the project is being
implemented.
For VPP toll projects, FHWA and the
public authority (including the State
transportation department) having
jurisdiction over a facility must enter
into a cooperative agreement concerning
the use of toll revenue to be generated
under a congestion pricing project. The
cooperative agreement will provide that
the public authority use the revenues in
accordance with the applicable statutory
requirements. The execution of a
cooperative agreement is necessary to
the establishment of a project under the
VPP program, and 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 toll agencies.
Although project agreements must be
with the aforementioned public entities,
and preferably with State departments
of transportation in order to preserve
participation slots, a VPP program
partnership may also include private
tolling authorities, for-profit companies,
and non-profit organizations.
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The Value Pricing Pilot Program
Applications
Formal applications shall be
submitted through Grants.gov at https://
www.grants.gov by close of business
November 3, 2009.
No particular format 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 preimplementation or implementation
activities as permitted; and (d) A
description of the public agency or
agencies that will be responsible for
operating, maintaining, and enforcing
the tolling program, if applicable.
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 constructionrelated 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;
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18:54 Aug 04, 2009
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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 data 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 spending grant funds or
in cost sharing or debt retirement
associated with revenues; and
16. If tolling authority is sought, an
explanation about how electronic toll
collection project components will, if
applicable, be compatible with other
electronic toll collection systems in the
region.
If some of these items are not
available or fully developed at the time
a formal application for grant funding is
submitted, applications will still be
considered for funding support if they
meet the interests of FHWA, as
described earlier in the section entitled
‘‘Potential Project Types,’’ 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
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
available funds, FHWA requires formal
grant applications to be submitted to
https://www.grants.gov by close of
business November 3, 2009, to be
assured consideration for FY 2009 funds
and, if made available, FY 2010 funds,
as well. Applicants may also submit an
optional ‘‘sketch’’ or draft proposal, in
a format selected by the applicant, to
angela.jacobs@dot.gov by September 21,
2009, which FHWA will review and
provide feedback on for the applicant to
use in its formal grant application.
Sketch or draft proposals received after
this date may still be reviewed by and
formally commented upon by FHWA at
its discretion. For applications that had
been submitted under the September 16,
2008 (73 FR 53478) solicitation that
were not funded (for a list of projects
funded from that solicitation, see:
https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/pressroom/
fhwa0913.htm), and where such
applications would still be eligible for
funding under the criteria provided by
this notice, applicants may submit a
letter to angela.jacobs@dot.gov at
FHWA September 4, 2009, requesting
comments on their previous
applications.
B. Projects for Which No Funds Are
Requested
Although most projects under the VPP
program involve program 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,
FHWA recommends that the public
authority investigate the other
opportunities to gain authority to toll
that are listed in the notice in the
January 6, 2006, Federal Register,
entitled ‘‘SAFETEA–LU; Opportunities
for State and Other Qualifying Agencies
to Gain Authority to Toll Facilities
Constructed Using Federal Funds’’ (71
FR 965).
Proposal Evaluation Criteria
All proposals will be evaluated based
on:
(1) The degree to which they reduce
congestion, improve system
performance, and support economic
growth, enhance livability through
support of alternatives to driving, and
promote environmental sustainability
by reducing fuel consumption and
greenhouse gas emissions;
(2) The degree to which they
encourage drivers to use alternative
times, routes, modes, or trip patterns, or
to telework and avoid commuting
during congested periods;
(3) The degree to which new,
innovative congestion pricing
approaches are included; and
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srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
(4) The degree to which proposals are
designed to reflect the needs of lowincome or other transportationdisadvantaged groups.
In addition, area-wide and regionwide pricing proposals will be
evaluated based on:
(5) The degree to which proposals
include evaluation of benefits, costs,
revenues, environmental impacts,
distributional impacts, and financial
feasibility of each alternative package of
transportation improvements, in
comparison with the region’s currently
adopted long-range transportation plan;
(6) The degree to which further
development of alternative packages
will involve stakeholder groups,
including (among others) business
groups, environmental groups, and
advocates for social equity;
(7) The degree to which they are
likely to lead to relatively near-term
implementation;
(8) The scale of the congestion pricing
strategy, i.e., the extent of the
geographic area, or the number of
roadway facilities or corridors that are
to be priced;
(9) The degree to which the proposed
pricing scenarios are comprehensive
involving synergistic combinations of
multimodal investment strategies,
Intelligent Transportation System
technologies and travel demand
management strategies; and
(10) The degree to which proposed
pricing scenarios have a probability of
getting public support.
Further, non-toll pricing proposals
will be evaluated based on the degree to
which they demonstrate especially
promising strategies such that their
implementation will likely then be
replicated broadly.
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.
Each congestion pricing project must
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
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18:54 Aug 04, 2009
Jkt 217001
congestion pricing projects that involve
only toll authority and that do not
involve requests for Federal funds, a
cooperative agreement must still be
executed.
Where the implementation of tolling
is part of the VPP project, Federal
tolling authority is required. To secure
such authority for a VPP project, a
cooperative agreement will be executed,
regardless of whether VPP program
funding is being provided. The
cooperative agreement must include all
of the information normally required as
part of a tolling agreement (stipulating
the terms of the tolling, providing
details on the dispensation of revenues,
etc.). A separate tolling agreement will
not be required. As discussed
previously, revenues must generally
first be used to cover the project’s
operating costs, including debt service,
provide reasonable return on private
party investments, and be used for the
costs necessary to properly operate and
maintain the facility. Any remaining
revenues may then be used for other
Title 23, United States Code eligible
purposes.
Where tolling authority is secured
through a VPP program cooperative
agreement, such an agreement, like
tolling agreements providing the
authority to toll under other Federal
provisions and programs, will be signed
by the Executive Director of FHWA. If
tolling authority is not required, the
cooperative agreement will be signed by
the FHWA Division Administrator of
the State Division Office. All
cooperative agreements will be
administered jointly by FHWA’s Office
of Operations and FHWA’s State
Division Office.
Other Requirements
Prior to FHWA approval of pricing
project implementation, congestion
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 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
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
39143
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),
Public Law 105–178, 112 Stat. 107; Public
Law 109–59; 117 Stat. 1144)
Issued on: July 30, 2009.
´
Vıctor M. Mendez,
Federal Highway Administrator.
[FR Doc. E9–18699 Filed 8–4–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request for Form 8928
AGENCY: Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
SUMMARY: The Department of the
Treasury, as part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, invites the general public and
other Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on proposed
and/or continuing information
collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13 (44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(A)). Currently, the IRS is
soliciting comments concerning Form
8928, Return of Certain Excise Taxes
Under Chapter 43 of the Internal
Revenue Code.
DATES: Written comments should be
received on or before October 5, 2009 to
be assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to R. Joseph Durbala, Internal Revenue
Service, room 6129, 1111 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20224.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the form and instructions
should be directed to Dawn Bidne, (202)
622–3933, at Internal Revenue Service,
room 6129, 1111 Constitution Avenue
NW., Washington, DC 20224, or through
the Internet at Dawn.E.Bidne@irs.gov.
E:\FR\FM\05AUN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 149 (Wednesday, August 5, 2009)]
[Notices]
[Pages 39138-39143]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-18699]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Value Pricing Pilot Program Participation, Fiscal Years 2009 and
2010
AGENCY: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice; solicitation for participation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice invites States, along with their local government
partners and other public authorities, to apply to participate in the
Value Pricing Pilot (VPP) program and presents guidelines for program
applications for fiscal years 2009 and 2010. Unlike with previous
notices, the purpose of this notice is to seek only applications for
statewide, regionwide, or areawide transportation pricing studies and
for transportation pricing implementation projects that do not entail
tolling roadways. This notice seeks applications for fiscal year 2009
funding, and if Congress chooses to extend Safe, Accountable, Flexible,
Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU)
VPP program funding, for such funds made available in fiscal year 2010.
DATES: 1. Applications for tolling authority only may be submitted at
any time.
2. Formal grant applications, however, must be submitted no later
than November 3, 2009, to be assured consideration.
3. Applicants may also submit an optional ``sketch'' or draft
proposal by September 21, 2009, which FHWA will review and provide
general feedback on for the applicant to use in its formal grant
application. Sketch or draft proposals received after this date may
still be reviewed by and commented upon by FHWA at its discretion.
4. For applications that had been submitted under the September 16,
2008 (73 FR 53478) solicitation that were not funded (for a list of
projects funded from that solicitation, see: https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/pressroom/fhwa0913.htm), and where such applications would still be
eligible for funding under the criteria provided by this notice,
applicants may submit a letter to the Department by September 4, 2009,
requesting comments on their previous applications.
Application Submission: Applications may be submitted through
https://www.grants.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions about or to provide
information to FHWA that responds to this notice, such as to submit a
letter or sketch plan, please contact Ms. Angela Jacobs, FHWA Office of
Operations, at (202) 366-0076, angela.jacobs@dot.gov. For technical
questions related to the development of pricing projects not involving
tolls, please contact Mr. Allen Greenberg, FHWA Office of Operations,
at (202) 366-2425, allen.greenberg@dot.gov. For technical questions
related to the development of regional pricing projects, please contact
Mr. Patrick DeCorla-Souza, FHWA Office of Innovative Program Delivery,
at (202) 366-4076, patrick.decorla-souza@dot.gov. For legal questions,
please contact Mr. Michael Harkins, FHWA Office of the Chief Counsel,
at (202) 366-4928, michael.harkins@dot.gov.
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.
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 the 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 (VPP)
program. Congestion 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 car insurance and parking pricing. The congestion pricing concept
of charging variable fees based upon usage and 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
periods than at non-peak periods.
According to the statutory requirements of the VPP program, 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 VPP programs, each
including an unlimited number of projects. The FHWA invites interested
States to apply to participate in the VPP program for the remainder of
FY 2009 and also for FY 2010, if SAFETEA-LU funding is extended. While
direct submissions by local governments and public authorities are
allowable under SAFETEA-LU, FHWA strongly prefers applications to be
submitted through State departments of transportation, since that would
allow the potential for multiple VPP program projects within a State
counting as only 1 of the 15 allowable partnerships.
To comply with the statutory cap on the number of partnering States
and other public authorities in a manner that maximizes program
participation, FHWA will only consider an ``active'' cooperative
agreement sufficient to hold 1 of the 15 available VPP program slots,
as also noted in the September 16, 2008, notice for VPP program
participation (73 FR 53478). An agreement will be considered ``active''
by FHWA under either of the following two conditions: (1) During the
period of 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. If progress
in moving forward to use its VPP program funding or tolling authority
is unsatisfactory, FHWA may withdraw its approval for inactive
agreements in favor of other applicants
[[Page 39139]]
seeking to obtain VPP program funding or tolling authority.
A maximum of $12 million is authorized for FY 2009 to be made
available to carry out the VPP program, and Congress may choose to
authorize additional funds for FY 2010. Of the $12 million, $3 million
per fiscal year must be set-aside for VPP projects that do not involve
highway tolls. FHWA previously solicited for FY 2009 applications in a
September 16, 2008, Federal Register notice (73 FR 53478) and on May
14, 2009, announced the awarding of five grants totaling $6,137,000,
thereby leaving less than $6 million to fund additional grants in FY
2009 under this notice. Since none of the five most recent grants are
supporting projects that do not involve highway tolls, at least $3
million of the remaining FY 2009 funds must be used for such projects.
If Congress does provide additional VPP program funds for FY 2010, it
is FHWA's intention to subsequently award these funds based upon
responses to this solicitation, if merited by the applications that are
received.
The Federal share payable under the VPP program is up to 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 congestion pricing projects. Pursuant to
section 1012(b)(2) of ISTEA, FHWA may not fund pre-implementation or
implementation costs for more than 3 years. Also, section 1012(b)(6) of
ISTEA provides that a State may permit vehicles with fewer than two
occupants to operate in high occupancy vehicle (HOV) lanes if the
vehicles are part of a local VPP program under this section. In
addition to this authority under the VPP program, 23 U.S.C. 166
authorizes States to convert HOV lanes into high occupancy toll (HOT)
lanes in which vehicles without the number of occupants required for
HOV status are permitted to use an HOV lane if such vehicles are
charged a toll. Since the authority to establish and operate an HOT
lane (including HOT lanes on the Interstate System) is no longer
experimental and has been mainstreamed in 23 U.S.C. 166, the provisions
of 23 U.S.C. 166 will generally be used for HOT projects in order to
more effectively allocate VPP funds and program slots.
Pursuant to section 1012(b)(7) of ISTEA, the potential financial
effects of congestion pricing projects on low-income drivers shall be
considered. Where such effects are expected to be both negative and
significant, possible mitigation measures should be identified, such as
providing new or expanded transit service as an integral part of the
congestion 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 by use of regular lanes which can be used
to pay for tolls on priced lanes. Mitigation measures can be included
as part of the congestion pricing project implementation costs.
Also, section 1012(b)(6) of ISTEA requires the Secretary to monitor
the effect of value pricing programs for a period of at least 10 years
and report to Congress every 2 years on the effects such programs are
having on driver behavior, traffic volume, transit ridership, air
quality, and availability of funds for transportation programs. Project
partners will be expected to assist FHWA by providing data on their
programs for use in these reports throughout the length of the
monitoring and reporting period.
In addition to the VPP program, other authorities are available
that permit States to use tolling to finance highway construction and
reconstruction, promote efficiency in the use of highways, and support
congestion reduction. Expanded flexibility to toll is provided 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
notice in the January 6, 2006, Federal Register entitled, ``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'' and ``congestion pricing'' refer to direct and
transparent charges for vehicle use and parking, as well as variable
charges for road use, possibly fluctuating based upon 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 alternative
routes away from priced facilities, or by encouraging consolidation of
trips, congestion pricing promotes economic efficiency. It also helps
achieve congestion reduction, improved air quality, energy
conservation, transit ridership, and revenue generation goals.
A ``value pricing project'' means any pre-implementation activities
or implementation of congestion 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 VPP program if it has one or more
approved congestion 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.
A ``value pricing program'' means the combination of all congestion
pricing projects within a State or local government or public
authority. Any State or local government or public authority with a
cooperative agreement for a value pricing program is deemed to have a
value pricing program.
``Cooperative agreement'' means the agreement signed between the
FHWA and a public agency to establish and implement congestion pricing
pilot projects.
``Toll agreement'' means the agreement signed between the FHWA and
a State and/or local government or public authority to provide for the
statutorily authorized uses of toll revenues.
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 VPP programs, to provide for the monitoring and evaluation of
congestion pricing projects included in such programs, and to report on
these effects. The effects of interest include impacts on congestion,
travel behavior, traffic volumes, transit ridership, air quality, and
funding for transportation improvements. For the purpose of this
solicitation, the VPP program focuses both on market-based approaches
for congestion relief that do not involve road tolls, such as mileage-
based car insurance and parking pricing,
[[Page 39140]]
and congestion pricing with road tolls, such as pricing all lanes on
limited access highways or all roads within a zone or network.
The FHWA is seeking applications for funding and/or tolling
authority to use congestion pricing to reduce congestion, improve
system performance, and advance the Department's priorities of growing
the economy, enhancing livability, and promoting environmental
sustainability. All proposals should incorporate significant pricing
mechanisms, whether through non-toll pricing strategies or toll pricing
applications, that are designed to substantially advance these
objectives.
With successful examples of facility-specific pricing projects
already in operation in the U.S., this solicitation, in addition to its
focus on non-toll pricing applications, focuses on developing broader
areawide approaches to toll-based pricing. Some metropolitan areas,
such as Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, and Washington, DC, have
begun the process of developing areawide or regionwide congestion
pricing scenarios and modeling their effects on long-term system
performance and financing. An objective of this solicitation is, as
described below, to provide incentive grants to expand the number of
metropolitan areas that are developing areawide or regionwide
approaches to congestion pricing.
Similar to the case with facility-specific tolling applications,
some non-toll pricing applications, such as carsharing, have already
proven their success and do not require VPP program funding for their
success to be sustained. Deployment of other strategies, such as
pricing of parking meters to achieve a certain occupancy level, are
much newer in the U.S., but the advancement of such strategies has
already secured substantial funding under the VPP and other programs
(e.g., in San Francisco), and thus other non-tolling strategies,
discussed below, will instead receive priority consideration under this
solicitation.
Potential Project Types
The FHWA will consider applications for funds that show that a
project will achieve at least one of the following: (1) Perform a
rigorous areawide or regionwide congestion pricing scenario study
around one or more scenarios that are comprehensive and potentially
acceptable to the public; or (2) implement new and innovative non-toll
pricing strategies, as detailed below. For pre-implementation projects,
applicants should demonstrate that there is already sufficient
political support for their implementation, or that the project is
designed to bring about such support.
Congestion 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 telework and avoid
commuting during congested periods.
The FHWA is particularly interested in grant applications for
projects that do not involve highway tolls. As discussed earlier,
SAFETEA-LU sets aside a minimum of $3 million per fiscal year for such
projects. The FHWA in particular seeks tests of non-toll pricing
strategies that will substantially improve livability in an area and
advance environmental sustainability in a major way, either directly
through the benefits the project itself brings, or by demonstrating
especially promising strategies such that their implementation will
likely be replicated broadly.
Strategies that FHWA believes would meet this test include: (1)
Pay-per-mile car insurance, where insurance premiums are converted from
an annual or bi-annual charging scheme to one that is instead based
primarily on miles or minutes of driving (with rates that still reflect
actuarial risks and the coverages that are selected); and (2) highly
innovative parking pricing strategies, provided the level and coverage
of parking charges is sufficient to bring about substantial and
measurable reductions in congestion. For parking pricing, FHWA seeks
applications for: (1) Citywide surcharges for entering or exiting
parking facilities during or near peak travel periods; (2) parking
cash-out, where a city or State passes, and then requests financial
support to implement, an ordinance requiring employers to offer cash to
their employees in lieu of subsidized parking, or provides substantial
incentives for employers to offer such cash-out options; and (3) a city
or State seeking support to implement a law that requires or provides
sizable financial incentives for housing developers to build more
livable communities with reduced car parking, in part by offering
renters or purchasers in multifamily housing developments direct and
substantial financial savings for not using car parking spaces.
Applications are also encouraged that utilize appropriate technologies
and provide sufficient participation incentives to deploy dynamic
ridesharing (flexible, single-trip carpooling) with the necessary
critical mass of users to succeed. To be considered eligible, dynamic
ridesharing applications must be coupled with some transportation
pricing, such as parking pricing, thereby expanding affordable
transportation options while mitigating equity issues associated with
pricing.
The FHWA is also seeking VPP program applications from public
entities to study one or more scenarios for broad-scale areawide or
regionwide tolling and pricing that have a high probability of getting
public support. Applications for areawide or regionwide pricing studies
should cover a significantly-sized geographical area and include
multiple roadway facilities that are priced, including zone-based
pricing, where, as implemented in London and Stockholm, vehicles are
charged a substantial fee to drive in a congested area on weekdays.
Consideration of variable pricing of multiple facilities or corridors,
or of an entire area, will generally be required. Area-wide pricing
applications using technologies that provide travelers (including
drivers and transit riders) with pre-trip and real-time congestion and
pricing information for multiple travel modes and a variety of routes,
and that facilitate dynamic ridesharing, are especially encouraged to
assist travelers in making efficient travel destination, mode and route
choices. Cashless tolling (i.e., no toll booths) is a required element
of these approaches in order to be considered for VPP program funding.
As part of broad, areawide or regionwide pricing scenario studies,
the inclusion of new, innovative congestion pricing approaches is
encouraged. Examples of new ideas that FHWA would like to have further
explored are included in an article on congestion pricing published in
the March/April issue of Public Roads, available at: https://www.tfhrc.gov/pubrds/09mar/04.htm.
Areawide or regionwide transportation pricing studies are
encouraged to include evaluation of benefits, costs, revenues,
environmental impacts, distributional impacts, and financial
feasibility of each alternative package of transportation improvements,
in comparison with the region's currently adopted long-range
transportation plan. Development of alternative packages may involve
stakeholder groups, including (among others) business groups,
environmental groups, and advocates for social equity. An example of
the sort of regional transportation study that has already been
undertaken for which FHWA seeks new applications is the Traffic Choices
Study conducted by the Puget Sound Regional Council for the Seattle
Metropolitan Area, which led to the Transportation 2040 Draft
[[Page 39141]]
Environmental Impact Statement (May 2009), available at: https://psrc.org/projects/trans2040/deis/index.htm.
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,
special reduced toll rates for low-income travelers, limited monetary
credits to all travelers 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), 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.
Pre-Implementation Studies
Applicants are encouraged to carry out pre-implementation study
activities designed to lead to implementation of an areawide or
regionwide congestion pricing project in the relatively near-term. The
intent of the pre-implementation study phase is to support efforts to
identify and evaluate congestion pricing project alternatives, and to
prepare the necessary groundwork for relatively near-term
implementation.
FHWA will not fund purely academic studies of congestion pricing or
studies that involve major expansions of existing facilities or area-
wide or regionwide planning studies covering many topics besides
pricing and incorporating congestion 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
relatively near-term implementation of broad congestion 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 congestion
pricing projects. Costs of planning for, setting up, managing,
operating, monitoring, evaluating, and reporting on local congestion
pricing pilot projects are eligible for reimbursement, but neither pre-
implementation study costs nor implementation costs may be reimbursed
for longer than 3 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 regional program development.
a. Foundation building activities may be reimbursed, such as public
participation, consensus building, marketing, modeling, and technology
assessments; and
b. Regional 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 congestion 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, costs of monitoring and evaluating project operations,
and costs of continuing public relations activities during the period
of implementation;
b. ``[M]itigation 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 congestion 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 3
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. 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
congestion 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, United States Code. A
project's operating costs include, but are not limited to, 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. States are
encouraged to consider using excess revenue for projects designed to
provide benefits to those traveling in the corridor where the project
is being implemented.
For VPP toll projects, FHWA and the public authority (including the
State transportation department) having jurisdiction over a facility
must enter into a cooperative agreement concerning the use of toll
revenue to be generated under a congestion pricing project. The
cooperative agreement will provide that the public authority use the
revenues in accordance with the applicable statutory requirements. The
execution of a cooperative agreement is necessary to the establishment
of a project under the VPP program, and 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
toll agencies. Although project agreements must be with the
aforementioned public entities, and preferably with State departments
of transportation in order to preserve participation slots, a VPP
program partnership may also include private tolling authorities, for-
profit companies, and non-profit organizations.
[[Page 39142]]
The Value Pricing Pilot Program Applications
Formal applications shall be submitted through Grants.gov at https://www.grants.gov by close of business November 3, 2009.
No particular format 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; and (d) A description of the public agency or
agencies that will be responsible for operating, maintaining, and
enforcing the tolling program, if applicable.
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 data 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 spending grant funds or in cost
sharing or debt retirement associated with revenues; and
16. If tolling authority is sought, an explanation about how
electronic toll collection project components will, if applicable, be
compatible with other electronic toll collection systems in the region.
If some of these items are not available or fully developed at the
time a formal application for grant funding is submitted, applications
will still be considered for funding support if they meet the interests
of FHWA, as described earlier in the section entitled ``Potential
Project Types,'' 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, FHWA requires formal grant
applications to be submitted to https://www.grants.gov by close of
business November 3, 2009, to be assured consideration for FY 2009
funds and, if made available, FY 2010 funds, as well. Applicants may
also submit an optional ``sketch'' or draft proposal, in a format
selected by the applicant, to angela.jacobs@dot.gov by September 21,
2009, which FHWA will review and provide feedback on for the applicant
to use in its formal grant application. Sketch or draft proposals
received after this date may still be reviewed by and formally
commented upon by FHWA at its discretion. For applications that had
been submitted under the September 16, 2008 (73 FR 53478) solicitation
that were not funded (for a list of projects funded from that
solicitation, see: https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/pressroom/fhwa0913.htm), and
where such applications would still be eligible for funding under the
criteria provided by this notice, applicants may submit a letter to
angela.jacobs@dot.gov at FHWA September 4, 2009, requesting comments on
their previous applications.
B. Projects for Which No Funds Are Requested
Although most projects under the VPP program involve program 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, FHWA recommends that the public authority
investigate the other opportunities to gain authority to toll that are
listed in the notice in the January 6, 2006, Federal Register, entitled
``SAFETEA-LU; Opportunities for State and Other Qualifying Agencies to
Gain Authority to Toll Facilities Constructed Using Federal Funds'' (71
FR 965).
Proposal Evaluation Criteria
All proposals will be evaluated based on:
(1) The degree to which they reduce congestion, improve system
performance, and support economic growth, enhance livability through
support of alternatives to driving, and promote environmental
sustainability by reducing fuel consumption and greenhouse gas
emissions;
(2) The degree to which they encourage drivers to use alternative
times, routes, modes, or trip patterns, or to telework and avoid
commuting during congested periods;
(3) The degree to which new, innovative congestion pricing
approaches are included; and
[[Page 39143]]
(4) The degree to which proposals are designed to reflect the needs
of low-income or other transportation-disadvantaged groups.
In addition, area-wide and region-wide pricing proposals will be
evaluated based on:
(5) The degree to which proposals include evaluation of benefits,
costs, revenues, environmental impacts, distributional impacts, and
financial feasibility of each alternative package of transportation
improvements, in comparison with the region's currently adopted long-
range transportation plan;
(6) The degree to which further development of alternative packages
will involve stakeholder groups, including (among others) business
groups, environmental groups, and advocates for social equity;
(7) The degree to which they are likely to lead to relatively near-
term implementation;
(8) The scale of the congestion pricing strategy, i.e., the extent
of the geographic area, or the number of roadway facilities or
corridors that are to be priced;
(9) The degree to which the proposed pricing scenarios are
comprehensive involving synergistic combinations of multimodal
investment strategies, Intelligent Transportation System technologies
and travel demand management strategies; and
(10) The degree to which proposed pricing scenarios have a
probability of getting public support.
Further, non-toll pricing proposals will be evaluated based on the
degree to which they demonstrate especially promising strategies such
that their implementation will likely then be replicated broadly.
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. Each
congestion pricing project must 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 congestion pricing projects that
involve only toll authority and that do not involve requests for
Federal funds, a cooperative agreement must still be executed.
Where the implementation of tolling is part of the VPP project,
Federal tolling authority is required. To secure such authority for a
VPP project, a cooperative agreement will be executed, regardless of
whether VPP program funding is being provided. The cooperative
agreement must include all of the information normally required as part
of a tolling agreement (stipulating the terms of the tolling, providing
details on the dispensation of revenues, etc.). A separate tolling
agreement will not be required. As discussed previously, revenues must
generally first be used to cover the project's operating costs,
including debt service, provide reasonable return on private party
investments, and be used for the costs necessary to properly operate
and maintain the facility. Any remaining revenues may then be used for
other Title 23, United States Code eligible purposes.
Where tolling authority is secured through a VPP program
cooperative agreement, such an agreement, like tolling agreements
providing the authority to toll under other Federal provisions and
programs, will be signed by the Executive Director of FHWA. If tolling
authority is not required, the cooperative agreement will be signed by
the FHWA Division Administrator of the State Division Office. All
cooperative agreements will be administered jointly by FHWA's Office of
Operations and FHWA's State Division Office.
Other Requirements
Prior to FHWA approval of pricing project implementation,
congestion 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 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), Public Law 105-178, 112
Stat. 107; Public Law 109-59; 117 Stat. 1144)
Issued on: July 30, 2009.
V[iacute]ctor M. Mendez,
Federal Highway Administrator.
[FR Doc. E9-18699 Filed 8-4-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-22-P