Notice of Proposed Buy America Waiver To Allow Bidder To Certify Compliance, 40447-40448 [2011-17182]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 131 / Friday, July 8, 2011 / Notices
no crashes and no conviction for
moving violations in a CMV.
Request for Comments
In accordance with 49 U.S.C. 31136(e)
and 31315, FMCSA requests public
comment from all interested persons on
the exemption petitions described in
this notice. The Agency will consider all
comments received before the close of
business August 8, 2011. Comments will
be available for examination in the
docket at the location listed under the
ADDRESSES section of this notice. The
Agency will file comments received
after the comment closing date in the
public docket, and will consider them to
the extent practicable.
In addition to late comments, FMCSA
will also continue to file, in the public
docket, relevant information that
becomes available after the comment
closing date. Interested persons should
monitor the public docket for new
material.
Issued on: June 29, 2011.
Larry W. Minor,
Associate Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2011–17184 Filed 7–7–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
[Docket No. FTA–2011–0031]
Notice of Proposed Buy America
Waiver To Allow Bidder To Certify
Compliance
Federal Transit Administration
(FTA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed Buy America
waiver to allow bidder to certify
compliance; Request for comment.
AGENCY:
The New York Metropolitan
Transportation Authority (MTA) has
asked the Federal Transit
Administration (FTA) to waive its Buy
America requirements on the basis of
public interest to permit the low bidder
for a contract to construct the 86th
Street Station for the Second Avenue
Subway project to certify compliance
with Buy America. The bidder certified
non-compliance based on a
misunderstanding of how FTA would
apply its rules to certain construction
materials. In fact, the low bidder is
willing and able to comply with the Buy
America rules. Without a waiver, MTA
may spend an additional $32.9 million
on the 86th Street Station without
furthering the goals of Buy America.
FTA seeks public comment before
deciding whether to grant MTA’s
request. This Notice sets forth the
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:52 Jul 07, 2011
Jkt 223001
justification for a public interest waiver
in this instance.
DATES: Comments must be received by
July 15, 2011. Late-filed comments will
be considered to the extent practicable.
ADDRESSES: Please submit your
comments by only one of the following
means, identifying your submissions by
docket number FTA–2011–0031. All
electronic submissions must be made to
the U.S. Government electronic site at
https://www.regulations.gov.
Commenters should follow the
instructions below for mailed and handdelivered comments.
(1) Web site: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments
on the U.S. Government electronic
docket site;
(2) Fax: (202) 493–2251;
(3) Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Docket Operations, M–30,
Room W12–140, Washington, DC
20590–0001.
(4) Hand Delivery: Room W12–140 on
the first floor of the West Building, 1200
New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington,
DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays.
Instructions: All submissions must
make reference to the ‘‘Federal Transit
Administration’’ and include docket
number FTA–2011–0031. Due to
security procedures in effect since
October 2001, mail received through the
U.S. Postal Service may be subject to
delays. Parties making submissions
responsive to this notice should
consider using an express mail form to
ensure the prompt filing of any
submissions not filed electronically or
by hand. Note that all submissions
received, including any personal
information therein, will be posted
without change or alteration to https://
www.regulations.gov. For more
information, you may review DOT’s
complete Privacy Act Statement in the
Federal Register published on April 11,
2000 (65 FR 19477), or visit https://
www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jayme L. Blakesley at (202) 366–0304 or
jayme.blakesley@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The purpose of this notice is to seek
public comment on whether the Federal
Transit Administration should waive its
Buy America requirements of 49 CFR
Part 661 to permit a low bidder to resubmit its Buy America certificate in
connection with its bid to construct the
86th Street Station for the Second
Avenue Subway project. If granted, this
waiver would be limited to the
PO 00000
Frm 00126
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
40447
procedural aspects of the Buy America
rule. The low bidder will need to certify
compliance with Buy America and will
be required to comply will all of the
substantive Buy America requirements.
In February 2011, MTA received bids
for a contract to construct the 86th
Street Station for its Second Avenue
Subway project, a $4.8 billion project
for 2.3 miles of new subway on the East
Side of Manhattan. Five parties
submitted bids, ranging from
$301,860,000 to $460,443,000. The low
bid of $301,860,000, submitted by
Skanska/Traylor JV, is $32.9 million
lower than the next lowest bidder and
almost $100 million lower than MTA’s
budget for the contract.
Skanska/Traylor JV signed and
submitted a Certificate of NonCompliance with its bid, based on its
understanding that certain construction
materials—shotcrete steel fibers and
Polyvinyl Choride (PVC) membrane—
would need to be produced in the
United States in order to comply with
FTA’s Buy America requirements.
Except for items made primarily of
iron and steel, FTA treats the
procurement of construction projects as
the procurement of a manufactured end
product subject to the requirements of
49 CFR 661.5. The main elements
incorporated into the project at the job
site are the components. As with all
manufactured products, Buy America
requires all of the manufacturing
processes to take place in the United
States and all of the components of the
product to be of U.S. origin. A
component is considered of U.S. origin
if it is manufactured in the United
States, regardless of the origin of its
subcomponents. 49 CFR 661.5(d).
Skanska/Traylor JV certified noncompliance based on its understanding
that shotcrete was subject to the steel
and iron requirements of 49 CFR
661.5(b) and (c), not the manufactured
product requirements of § 661.5(d), and
PVC membrane would be considered a
component. As such, Skanska/Traylor
JV would have needed to obtain each
item from a domestic source. According
to Skanska/Traylor JV and MTA, neither
shotcrete nor the type of PVC membrane
called for in MTA’s specification is
produced in the United States.
FTA and MTA engineers examined
the materials in question and
determined that shotcrete is a
manufactured product and that
shotcrete steel fibers and PVC
membrane are subcomponents of the
waterproofing system that will be
constructed around the tunnel for the
86th Street Station. As such, FTA’s Buy
America rules do not require shotcrete
or PVC membrane to be produced in the
E:\FR\FM\08JYN1.SGM
08JYN1
40448
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 131 / Friday, July 8, 2011 / Notices
United States. This determination
indicates that Skanska/Traylor JV
certified non-compliance in error.
Notwithstanding the above
interpretation and Skanska/Traylor JV’s
willingness and ability to comply with
Buy America, the procedural portion of
FTA’s Buy America regulations prohibit
Skanska/Traylor JV from modifying its
Buy America certificate unless it
submitted an incorrect certificate based
on inadvertent or clerical error. 49 CFR
661.13(a)(1). In the case of a sealed bid
procurement, a bidder or offeror is
bound by its original certification. 49
CFR 661.13(c).
In this instance, FTA proposes to
waive the restrictions of 49 CFR 661.13
to allow Skanska/Traylor JV to certify
compliance with Buy America. Unlike
other requests for public interest
waivers, the granting of which enable an
otherwise non-compliant bidder to
purchase foreign products that the Buy
America provisions would otherwise
require to be produced in the United
States, in this circumstance a waiver
would allow MTA to award a contract
to a low bidder that will perform wholly
in compliance with the substantive Buy
America requirements. Without a
waiver, MTA may spend an additional
$32.9 million for the Second Avenue
Subway project without furthering the
goals of Buy America.
FTA may waive its rules if applying
the Buy America requirements ‘‘would
be inconsistent with the public
interest.’’ 49 U.S.C. 5323(j)(2)(A). Before
granting such waiver, FTA must issue a
detailed written statement justifying
why the waiver is in the public interest,
and must publish this justification in
the Federal Register, providing the
public with a reasonable time for notice
and comment of not more than seven
calendar days. 49 CFR 661.7(b). This
notice satisfies the aforementioned
requirement.
Before deciding whether to grant
MTA’s request, FTA seeks comment
from all interested parties. In the
interest of transparency, FTA has
published copies of MTA’s request to
the docket. Interested parties may access
these materials by visiting the docket
site at https://www.regulations.gov,
docket number FTA–2011–0031. Please
submit comments by July 15, 2011. Latefiled comments will be considered to
the extent practicable.
Issued this 1st day of July 2011.
Dorval R. Carter, Jr,
Chief Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2011–17182 Filed 7–7–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
[Docket No. EP 682 (Sub-No. 2)]
2010 Tax Information for Use in the
Revenue Shortfall Allocation Method
Surface Transportation Board.
Notice.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Board is publishing, and
providing the public an opportunity to
comment on, the 2010 weighted average
state tax rates for each Class I railroad,
as calculated by the Association of
American Railroads (AAR), for use in
the Revenue Shortfall Allocation
Method (RSAM).
DATES: Comments are due by August 8,
2011. If any comment opposing AAR’s
calculations is filed, AAR’s reply will be
due August 29, 2011. If no comments
are filed by the due date, AAR’s
calculation of the 2010 weighted
average state tax rates will be
automatically adopted by the Board,
effective August 9, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted either via the Board’s e-filing
format or in traditional paper format.
Any person using e-filing should attach
a document and otherwise comply with
the instructions at the E-FILING link on
the Board’s Web site at https://
www.stb.dot.gov. Any person submitting
a filing in the traditional paper format
should send an original and 10 copies
referring to Docket No. EP 682 (Sub-No.
2) to: Surface Transportation Board, 395
SUMMARY:
E Street, SW., Washington, DC 20423–
0001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Valerie O. Quinn (202) 245–0382.
Assistance for the hearing impaired is
available through the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at
(800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
RSAM figure is one of three benchmarks
that together are used to determine the
reasonableness of a challenged rate
under the Board’s Simplified Standards
for Rail Rate Cases, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1)
(STB served Sept. 5, 2007),1 as further
revised in Simplified Standards for Rail
Rate Cases—Taxes in Revenue Shortfall
Allocation Method, EP 646 (Sub-No. 2)
(STB served Nov. 21, 2008). RSAM is
intended to measure the average markup
that the railroad would need to collect
from all of its ‘‘potentially captive
traffic’’ (traffic with a revenue-tovariable-cost ratio above 180%) to earn
adequate revenues as measured by the
Board under 49 U.S.C. § 10704(a)(2)
(i.e., earn a return on investment equal
to the railroad industry cost of capital).
Simplified Standards—Taxes in RSAM,
slip op. at 1. In Simplified Standards—
Taxes in RSAM, slip op. at 3, 5, the
Board modified its RSAM formula to
account for taxes, as the prior formula
mistakenly compared pre-tax and aftertax revenues. In that decision, the Board
stated that it would institute a separate
proceeding in which Class I railroads
would be required to submit the annual
tax information necessary for the
Board’s annul RSAM calculation. Id. at
5–6.
In Annual Submission of Tax
Information for Use in the Revenue
Shortfall Allocation Method, EP 682
(STB served Feb. 26, 2010), the Board
adopted rules to require AAR—a
national trade association—to annually
calculate and submit to the Board the
weighted average state tax rate for each
Class I railroad. See 49 CFR 1135.2(a).
On May 27, 2011, AAR filed its
calculation of the weighted average state
tax rates for 2010, listed below for each
Class I railroad:
WEIGHTED AVERAGE STATE TAX RATES
[In percent]
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Railroad
2010
BNSF Railway Company .............................................................................................................
CSX Transportation, Inc. .............................................................................................................
Grand Trunk Corporation .............................................................................................................
The Kansas City Southern Railway .............................................................................................
Norfolk Southern Combined ........................................................................................................
Soo Line Corporation ...................................................................................................................
1 Aff’d sub nom. CSX Transp., Inc. v. STB, 568
F.3d 236 (DC Cir. 2009), and vacated in part on
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:52 Jul 07, 2011
Jkt 223001
5.572
5.575
7.634
6.070
5.819
7.305
reh’g, CSX Transp., Inc. v. STB, 584 F.3d 1076 (DC
Cir. 2009).
PO 00000
Frm 00127
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\08JYN1.SGM
08JYN1
2009
5.665
5.578
7.590
6.434
5.803
8.651
% Change
¥0.093
¥0.003
0.044
¥0.364
0.016
¥1.346
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 131 (Friday, July 8, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 40447-40448]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-17182]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
[Docket No. FTA-2011-0031]
Notice of Proposed Buy America Waiver To Allow Bidder To Certify
Compliance
AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration (FTA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed Buy America waiver to allow bidder to
certify compliance; Request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The New York Metropolitan Transportation Authority (MTA) has
asked the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) to waive its Buy America
requirements on the basis of public interest to permit the low bidder
for a contract to construct the 86th Street Station for the Second
Avenue Subway project to certify compliance with Buy America. The
bidder certified non-compliance based on a misunderstanding of how FTA
would apply its rules to certain construction materials. In fact, the
low bidder is willing and able to comply with the Buy America rules.
Without a waiver, MTA may spend an additional $32.9 million on the 86th
Street Station without furthering the goals of Buy America. FTA seeks
public comment before deciding whether to grant MTA's request. This
Notice sets forth the justification for a public interest waiver in
this instance.
DATES: Comments must be received by July 15, 2011. Late-filed comments
will be considered to the extent practicable.
ADDRESSES: Please submit your comments by only one of the following
means, identifying your submissions by docket number FTA-2011-0031. All
electronic submissions must be made to the U.S. Government electronic
site at https://www.regulations.gov. Commenters should follow the
instructions below for mailed and hand-delivered comments.
(1) Web site: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions
for submitting comments on the U.S. Government electronic docket site;
(2) Fax: (202) 493-2251;
(3) Mail: U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., Docket Operations, M-30, Room W12-140, Washington, DC
20590-0001.
(4) Hand Delivery: Room W12-140 on the first floor of the West
Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue, SE., Washington, DC 20590, between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Instructions: All submissions must make reference to the ``Federal
Transit Administration'' and include docket number FTA-2011-0031. Due
to security procedures in effect since October 2001, mail received
through the U.S. Postal Service may be subject to delays. Parties
making submissions responsive to this notice should consider using an
express mail form to ensure the prompt filing of any submissions not
filed electronically or by hand. Note that all submissions received,
including any personal information therein, will be posted without
change or alteration to https://www.regulations.gov. For more
information, you may review DOT's complete Privacy Act Statement in the
Federal Register published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477), or visit
https://www.regulations.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jayme L. Blakesley at (202) 366-0304
or jayme.blakesley@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The purpose of this notice is to seek public comment on whether the
Federal Transit Administration should waive its Buy America
requirements of 49 CFR Part 661 to permit a low bidder to re-submit its
Buy America certificate in connection with its bid to construct the
86th Street Station for the Second Avenue Subway project. If granted,
this waiver would be limited to the procedural aspects of the Buy
America rule. The low bidder will need to certify compliance with Buy
America and will be required to comply will all of the substantive Buy
America requirements.
In February 2011, MTA received bids for a contract to construct the
86th Street Station for its Second Avenue Subway project, a $4.8
billion project for 2.3 miles of new subway on the East Side of
Manhattan. Five parties submitted bids, ranging from $301,860,000 to
$460,443,000. The low bid of $301,860,000, submitted by Skanska/Traylor
JV, is $32.9 million lower than the next lowest bidder and almost $100
million lower than MTA's budget for the contract.
Skanska/Traylor JV signed and submitted a Certificate of Non-
Compliance with its bid, based on its understanding that certain
construction materials--shotcrete steel fibers and Polyvinyl Choride
(PVC) membrane--would need to be produced in the United States in order
to comply with FTA's Buy America requirements.
Except for items made primarily of iron and steel, FTA treats the
procurement of construction projects as the procurement of a
manufactured end product subject to the requirements of 49 CFR 661.5.
The main elements incorporated into the project at the job site are the
components. As with all manufactured products, Buy America requires all
of the manufacturing processes to take place in the United States and
all of the components of the product to be of U.S. origin. A component
is considered of U.S. origin if it is manufactured in the United
States, regardless of the origin of its subcomponents. 49 CFR 661.5(d).
Skanska/Traylor JV certified non-compliance based on its
understanding that shotcrete was subject to the steel and iron
requirements of 49 CFR 661.5(b) and (c), not the manufactured product
requirements of Sec. 661.5(d), and PVC membrane would be considered a
component. As such, Skanska/Traylor JV would have needed to obtain each
item from a domestic source. According to Skanska/Traylor JV and MTA,
neither shotcrete nor the type of PVC membrane called for in MTA's
specification is produced in the United States.
FTA and MTA engineers examined the materials in question and
determined that shotcrete is a manufactured product and that shotcrete
steel fibers and PVC membrane are subcomponents of the waterproofing
system that will be constructed around the tunnel for the 86th Street
Station. As such, FTA's Buy America rules do not require shotcrete or
PVC membrane to be produced in the
[[Page 40448]]
United States. This determination indicates that Skanska/Traylor JV
certified non-compliance in error.
Notwithstanding the above interpretation and Skanska/Traylor JV's
willingness and ability to comply with Buy America, the procedural
portion of FTA's Buy America regulations prohibit Skanska/Traylor JV
from modifying its Buy America certificate unless it submitted an
incorrect certificate based on inadvertent or clerical error. 49 CFR
661.13(a)(1). In the case of a sealed bid procurement, a bidder or
offeror is bound by its original certification. 49 CFR 661.13(c).
In this instance, FTA proposes to waive the restrictions of 49 CFR
661.13 to allow Skanska/Traylor JV to certify compliance with Buy
America. Unlike other requests for public interest waivers, the
granting of which enable an otherwise non-compliant bidder to purchase
foreign products that the Buy America provisions would otherwise
require to be produced in the United States, in this circumstance a
waiver would allow MTA to award a contract to a low bidder that will
perform wholly in compliance with the substantive Buy America
requirements. Without a waiver, MTA may spend an additional $32.9
million for the Second Avenue Subway project without furthering the
goals of Buy America.
FTA may waive its rules if applying the Buy America requirements
``would be inconsistent with the public interest.'' 49 U.S.C.
5323(j)(2)(A). Before granting such waiver, FTA must issue a detailed
written statement justifying why the waiver is in the public interest,
and must publish this justification in the Federal Register, providing
the public with a reasonable time for notice and comment of not more
than seven calendar days. 49 CFR 661.7(b). This notice satisfies the
aforementioned requirement.
Before deciding whether to grant MTA's request, FTA seeks comment
from all interested parties. In the interest of transparency, FTA has
published copies of MTA's request to the docket. Interested parties may
access these materials by visiting the docket site at https://www.regulations.gov, docket number FTA-2011-0031. Please submit
comments by July 15, 2011. Late-filed comments will be considered to
the extent practicable.
Issued this 1st day of July 2011.
Dorval R. Carter, Jr,
Chief Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2011-17182 Filed 7-7-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P