Amendment to Agency Rules of Practice, 24863-24872 [2012-10162]
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BILLING CODE 9110–12–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
49 CFR Part 386
[Docket No. FMCSA–2011–0259]
RIN 2126–AB38
Amendment to Agency Rules of
Practice
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Federal Motor Carrier
Safety Administration (FMCSA) amends
its Rules of Practice for Motor Carrier,
Intermodal Equipment Provider, Broker,
Freight Forwarder, and Hazardous
Materials proceedings. The Agency
clarifies that paying the full proposed
civil penalty in an enforcement
proceeding, either in response to a
Notice of Claim (NOC) or later in the
proceeding, does not allow respondents
to unilaterally avoid an admission of
liability for the violations charged.
Additionally, the Agency establishes
procedures for issuing out-of-service
orders to motor carriers, intermodal
equipment providers, brokers, and
freight forwarders it determines are
reincarnations of other entities with a
history of failing to comply with
statutory or regulatory requirements;
these procedures will provide for an
administrative review before the out-ofservice order takes effect. Finally, the
Agency establishes a process for
consolidating Agency records of
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SUMMARY:
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reincarnated companies with their
predecessor entities.
DATES: This rule is effective May 29,
2012.
For access to the docket to
read background documents, including
those referenced in this document, or to
read comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov at any time and
insert ‘‘FMCSA–2011–0259’’ in the
‘‘Keyword’’ box, and then click
‘‘Search.’’ You may also view the docket
online by visiting the Docket
Management Facility in Room W12–
140, DOT Building, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC, between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m., ET Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
Anyone is able to search the
electronic form for all comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review the U.S. Department of
Transportation’s (DOT) complete
Privacy Act Statement in the Federal
Register published on January 17, 2008
(73 FR 3316), or you may visit https://
edocket.acces.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8785.pdf.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sabrina Redd, Office of Chief Counsel,
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590–
0001, by telephone at (202) 366–6424 or
via email at sabrina.redd@dot.gov.
Office hours are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
ET, Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays. If you have questions
on viewing or submitting material to the
docket, contact Renee V. Wright,
Program Manager, Docket Operations,
telephone (202) 366–9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Preamble
I. Abbreviations
II. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
III. Background
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A. Section 386.18
B. Section 386.73
IV. Discussion of Comments
A. Comments to Section 386.18
B. Comments to Section 386.73
C. Small Business Impact
V. Discussion of Rule
VI. Regulatory Analyses
I. Abbreviations
Advocates Advocates for Highway and
Auto Safety
AMSA American Moving and Storage
Association
ATA American Trucking Associations, Inc.
HMSP Hazardous Materials Safety Permit
Program
IME Institute of Makers of Explosives
NATC North American Transportation
Consultants, Inc.
OOIDA Owner-Operator Independent
Drivers Association
TIA Transportation Intermediaries
Association
II. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
Congress has delegated certain powers
to regulate interstate commerce to DOT
in numerous pieces of legislation, most
notably in section 6 of the Department
of Transportation Act (DOT Act) (Pub.
L. 89–670, 80 Stat. 931 (1966)). Section
6(e)(6)(C) of the DOT Act transferred to
DOT the authority of the Interstate
Commerce Commission (ICC) to regulate
the qualifications and maximum hours
of service of motor carrier employees,
the safety of operations, and the
equipment of motor carriers in interstate
commerce. This authority, first granted
to the ICC in the Motor Carrier Act of
1935 (Pub. L. 74–255, 49 Stat. 543), now
appears in chapter 315 of title 49 of the
U.S. Code. The regulations issued under
this authority became known as the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Regulations (FMCSRs), appearing
generally at 49 CFR parts 350–399. The
administrative powers to enforce
chapter 315 were also transferred from
the ICC to the DOT in 1966 and appear
in chapter 5 of title 49 of the U.S. Code.
The Secretary of DOT (Secretary)
delegated oversight of these provisions
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to the FHWA, the predecessor agency to
FMCSA.
Between 1984 and 1999, a number of
statutes added to FHWA’s authority.
Various statutes authorize the
enforcement of the FMCSRs, the
Hazardous Materials Regulations
(HMRs), and the Federal Motor Carrier
Commercial Regulations (FMCCRs) and
provide both civil and criminal
penalties for violations. These statutes
include the Motor Carrier Safety Act of
1984 (Pub. L. 98–554, 98 Stat. 2832),
codified at 49 U.S.C. Chapter 311,
Subchapter III; the Commercial Motor
Vehicle Safety Act of 1986 (Pub. L. 99–
570, 100 Stat. 3207–170), codified at 49
U.S.C. Chapter 313; the Hazardous
Materials Transportation Uniform Safety
Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101–615, 104 Stat.
3244), codified at 49 U.S.C. Chapter 51;
and the ICC Termination Act of 1995
(Pub. L. 104–88, 109 Stat. 803), codified
at 49 U.S.C. Chapters 135–149.
Specifically, the Secretary is authorized
to prescribe regulations ensuring that
commercial motor vehicles (CMVs) are
operated safely under 49 U.S.C. 31136
(a)(1), and to determine whether an
owner or operator is fit to safely operate
CMVs under 49 U.S.C 31144. In order to
ensure that carriers are fit to safely
operate, it is necessary to monitor the
safety performance history of individual
carriers. FMCSA needs to monitor the
safety performance history of carriers
who ‘‘reincarnate’’ as a new carrier
when faced with enforcement action in
order to focus Agency enforcement
efforts. This rule will ensure that
carriers who have a proven history of
unsafe operations are not able to evade
regulation by simply forming a new
company or obtaining new registration.
III. Background
On December 13, 2011, FMCSA
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (76 FR 77458), with the
intent to amend its rules of practice for
motor carrier, intermodal equipment
provider, broker, freight forwarder, and
hazardous materials proceedings.
FMCSA received seven public comment
submissions regarding the NPRM. These
comments are discussed in part IV,
Discussion of Comments.
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A. Section 386.18
FMCSA published a comprehensive
revision of its Rules of Practice on May
18, 2005. This revision can be found in
49 CFR part 386 (70 FR 28467). The
revision was intended to increase the
efficiency of Agency administrative
enforcement procedures, enhance due
process, improve public understanding
of the Agency’s procedures, and
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accommodate recent programmatic
changes.
Under § 386.11(c) of the revised Rules
of Practice, civil penalty enforcement
proceedings are initiated through
service of an NOC, which is usually
issued by the FMCSA Division
Administrator for the State in which the
respondent maintains its principal place
of business. The NOC, which is usually
based on a compliance review or other
type of investigation or enforcement
intervention, sets forth the provisions of
law allegedly violated by the respondent
and the underlying facts pertinent to the
alleged violations; proposes a civil
penalty; and provides information
regarding the time, form, and manner
whereby the respondent could pay,
contest, or otherwise seek resolution of
the claim. Prior to 2005, the Rules of
Practice were silent on whether
payment of the proposed civil penalty
in response to the NOC, or at a
subsequent stage of the proceeding,
constituted an admission of the
violations alleged in the NOC.
The 2005 revision of the Rules of
Practice added a new § 386.18 titled
‘‘Payment of the claim.’’ That section
provided that payment of the full
amount claimed may be made at any
time before issuance of a Final Agency
Order. After the issuance of a Final
Agency Order, claims are subject to
interest, penalties, and administrative
charges in accordance with 31 U.S.C.
3717; 49 CFR part 89; and 31 CFR 901.9.
If respondent elects to pay the full
amount as its response to the Notice of
Claim, payment must be served upon
the Field Administrator at the Service
Center designated in the Notice of Claim
within 30 days following service of the
Notice of Claim. No written reply is
necessary if respondent elects the
payment option during the 30-day reply
period. Failure to serve full payment
within 30 days of service of the Notice
of Claim when this option has been
chosen may constitute a default and
may result in the Notice of Claim,
including the civil penalty assessed by
the Notice of Claim, becoming the Final
Agency Order in the proceeding
pursuant to § 386.14(c). Unless objected
to in writing, submitted at the time of
payment, payment of the full amount in
response to the Notice of Claim
constitutes an admission by the
respondent of all facts alleged in the
Notice of Claim. Payment waives
respondent’s opportunity to further
contest the claim, and will result in the
Notice of Claim becoming the Final
Agency Order.
In a small number of enforcement
proceedings, respondents paid the full
amount of the claim with written
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objection, either in their reply to the
NOC or at a later stage of the
proceeding. In such cases, the
respondents argued that payment with
written objection terminated the
proceeding without an admission of
liability. The FMCSA Field
Administrators, who were responsible
for prosecuting enforcement
proceedings before the Agency,
contended that respondents could not
unilaterally terminate an enforcement
proceeding by making full payment
without an admission of liability.
In a case decided on November 3,
2010, In the Matter of Homax Oil Sales,
Inc., Docket No. FMCSA–2006–26000,
Order Denying Petition for
Reconsideration (Homax), FMCSA’s
Assistant Administrator reasoned that
allowing respondents to unilaterally
terminate proceedings by paying the
proposed penalty in full and lodging an
objection under § 386.18(c) was
inconsistent with the Agency’s
enforcement policy and section 222 of
the Motor Carrier Safety Improvement
Act (MCSIA), which requires that the
Agency assess the maximum statutory
penalty for each violation of law by any
person ‘‘who is found to have
committed a pattern of violations of
critical or acute regulations issued to
carry out such a law or to have
previously committed the same or
related violation of critical or acute
regulations issued to carry out such a
law.’’ The Assistant Administrator
concluded that if a carrier was allowed
to unilaterally terminate an enforcement
proceeding without an admission, the
case could not count as prior history for
future civil penalty calculations under
section 222 of MCSIA or under 49
U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(D), which requires the
Agency to consider, among other things,
a respondent’s history of prior offenses.
Allowing unilateral termination of a
proceeding by a respondent without an
admission would permit carriers with
abundant financial resources to
repeatedly violate the Agency’s
regulations without facing escalating
civil penalties despite a history of
noncompliance with the regulations.
The Assistant Administrator
acknowledged that the regulatory text of
§ 386.18(c) was less than clear regarding
the consequences of full payment with
written objection and recommended
that the meaning of the paragraph be
clarified through rulemaking.
As was noted in Homax, in an April
1996 Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(NPRM), FHWA proposed the following
language with respect to the full
payment issue: ‘‘Unless otherwise
provided in writing by mutual consent
of the parties, payment and/or
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compliance with the order constitutes
an admission of all facts alleged in the
notice of violation [called a Notice of
Claim under the current Rules of
Practice] and a waiver of the
respondent’s opportunity to contest the
claim, and results in the notice of
violation becoming the final agency
order.’’ (61 FR 18865, Apr. 29, 1996)
FHWA’s reasoning for this language
was that ‘‘future agency enforcement
actions may be based on, and certain
consequences may flow from, prior and
continued violations of the safety
regulations.’’ (61 FR 18875–76, Apr. 29,
1996)
FMCSA revised this proposal,
renumbered as § 386.18(c), in an
October 2004 Supplemental Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (SNPRM) (69 FR
61628, Oct. 20, 2004) to read as follows:
‘‘Unless objected to in writing, payment
of the full amount in its reply
constitutes an admission by the
respondent of all facts alleged in the
notice of claim. Payment waives
respondent’s opportunity to further
contest the claim, and will result in the
notice of claim becoming the final
agency order.’’
This proposed change was intended
to make ‘‘it clear that, unless the parties
otherwise agree in writing, respondent’s
payment of the full claim amount as its
reply to the notice of claim constitutes
an admission.’’ (69 FR 61622)
The final rule published on May 18,
2005 (70 FR 28467), adopted that
provision with little change. In the 2010
Homax Order, the Assistant
Administrator concluded that,
notwithstanding the removal of the
language requiring mutual consent of
the parties from the regulatory text, the
preamble of the rule showed that the
Agency intended to adopt the mutual
consent requirement originally
proposed in 1996.
In a subsequent case, In the Matter of
Associated Pipe Contractors, Inc.,
Docket No. FMCSA–2008–0159, Order
Terminating Proceeding and Closing
Docket, January 10, 2011, the Agency
addressed the implications of full
payment of the proposed civil penalty at
any time before issuance of a Final
Agency Order, in accordance with 49
CFR 386.18(a). In Associated Pipe
Contractors, the carrier paid the full
penalty with written objection several
months after contesting the NOC and
requesting administrative adjudication.
Section 386.18(a), which applied to this
situation rather than Section 386.18(c),
was silent regarding whether a carrier
could unilaterally terminate an
enforcement proceeding without an
admission of liability under those
circumstances. The Agency concluded
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that the same concerns expressed in the
Homax decision apply to such a
payment and that § 386.18(a) should be
clarified to be consistent with that
decision.
To address these concerns, therefore,
FMCSA proposed to revise its Rules of
Practice by amending 49 CFR 386.18(a)
and (c) to clarify that payment of the full
amount of the proposed civil penalty
constitutes an admission of all facts
alleged in the NOC, unless otherwise
agreed by the parties.
B. Section 386.73
FMCSA discovered that a number of
motor carriers have submitted new
applications for registration, often under
a new name, in order to continue
operating after having been placed out
of service for safety-related reasons; to
avoid paying civil penalties; to
circumvent denial of applications for
operating authority based on a
determination that they were not fit,
willing, or able to comply with the
applicable statutes or regulations; or to
otherwise avoid a negative compliance
history. Other motor carriers attempt to
avoid enforcement or other
consequences associated with a negative
compliance history by creating or using
an affiliated company under common
operational control. They then shift
customers, vehicles, drivers, and other
operational activities to that affiliated
company when FMCSA places one of
the commonly controlled companies out
of service. The practice of
‘‘reincarnating’’ as a new carrier or of
operating affiliated companies to
circumvent Agency enforcement actions
and avoid a negative compliance history
or enforcement action has created an
unacceptable risk of harm to the public
because it results in the continued
operation of at-risk carriers and thwarts
FMCSA’s ability to carry out its safety
mission.
The danger posed by ‘‘reincarnation’’
became evident following a fatal bus
crash in Sherman, Texas in 2008.
Investigation revealed that the motor
carrier involved did not have operating
authority from FMCSA. Instead, it had
an application for authority pending
with the Agency, but was a
reincarnation of another bus company
that FMCSA had recently placed out of
service. Following the Sherman, Texas
bus crash, FMCSA began a vetting
process that involves a comprehensive
review of applications for passenger
carrier and household goods operating
authority to determine whether the
applicants are reincarnations or
affiliates of other motor carriers with
negative compliance histories or are
otherwise not fit, willing, and able to
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24865
comply with the applicable regulations.
Although the vetting program is a
significant improvement to the
operating authority review process, it is
not a complete solution to the
reincarnation problem. Accordingly, in
this rule FMCSA establishes new
procedures to prohibit reincarnated or
affiliated carriers from successfully
evading accountability for their
compliance history.
FMCSA is authorized to suspend,
amend, or revoke a motor carrier’s
registration for willful failure to comply
with applicable safety regulations, an
FMCSA order, or a condition of its
registration pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 13905.
Motor carriers that obtain registration by
creating a new company or an affiliate
company for the purpose of avoiding
FMCSA orders, regulations, or
enforcement actions procure the
registration by fraud—by knowingly
misrepresenting and/or withholding
material information. FMCSA has
authority to sanction these motor
carriers, which have already
demonstrated an unwillingness or
inability to comply with applicable
safety regulations, by suspending,
amending, or revoking their registration
and/or by imposing applicable civil
penalties.
To address these challenges, FMCSA
proposed to revise its Rules of Practice
by adding new section 386.73. This
section authorizes FMCSA to issue outof-service orders to motor carriers,
intermodal equipment providers,
brokers, and, freight forwarders
determined to be reincarnated or
operating as affiliates to avoid
enforcement action or a negative
compliance history, and it would
provide a mechanism for administrative
review of such orders. The rule would
also establish procedures to consolidate
the compliance records of reincarnated
or affiliated entities. These procedures
more fully implement the Agency’s
current authority to prohibit unsafe
entities from operating while, at the
same time, providing due process for
companies that seek to challenge a
finding that they are reincarnated.
IV. Discussion of Comments
FMCSA received seven comments in
response to the NPRM (76 FR 77458,
Dec. 13, 2011). The commenters
included a highway safety advocacy
organization, a transportation
consultant, and associations
representing third party logistics
professionals, moving and storage
companies, explosives manufacturers
and distributors, trucking companies,
and independent owner operators.
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Overall, most commenters supported
FMCSA’s objectives for changing its
rules of practice. Several commenters
expressed concerns with the Agency’s
proposal regarding the payment of
claims. A couple of commenters
strongly supported the proposed
provisions for ‘‘reincarnated carriers.’’
These comments are discussed in
greater detail below.
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A. Comments to Section 386.18
Comments
The Agency received three comments
in response to its proposal to amend 49
CFR 386.18(a) and (c) to clarify that full
payment of a proposed civil penalty at
any stage of an enforcement proceeding
will be considered an admission of
liability, unless the parties otherwise
agree in writing. The Owner-Operator
Independent Drivers Association
(OOIDA) supported this proposal,
stating that ‘‘[t]he proposed
modification shifts the focus back to
safety, and does so while affording full
due process to those responding to
claims.’’ OOIDA noted, however, that
the elimination of a ‘‘nolo contendre
plea option (payment without admitting
guilt)’’ would likely increase the
number of negotiated or litigated claims
and require additional Agency resources
to handle this increase.
The American Trucking Associations,
Inc. (ATA) had reservations about, and
the American Moving and Storage
Association (AMSA) opposed, the
proposed amendments to § 386.18.
Although ATA stated that it generally
agrees with the safety objectives
underlying the proposal, it believes that
the proposal would result in a ‘‘reversal
of the increased efficiency in
enforcement procedures that [the] Rules
of Practice were intended to achieve’’
and divert FMCSA enforcement
resources from high-risk carriers. ATA
also urges that FMCSA establish a clear
and reasonable policy directing Agency
officials to agree to settlements of
enforcement claims without admissions
of guilt in appropriate cases where there
is not likely to be a significantly
deleterious effect on public safety.
AMSA believes that the proposal, by
eliminating the nolo contendre plea
option, is unfair to innocent carriers that
make a business decision to pay the
penalty in order to resolve a case in the
most cost-efficient manner. AMSA also
believes that the proposal may result in
an increased burden on FMCSA
resources because carriers are less likely
to settle cases where an admission of
liability could result in civil litigation or
personal injury suits arising out of the
admitted violations.
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FMCSA Response
The FMCSA is committed to the
expeditious resolution of enforcement
proceedings, and continues to believe
that allowing unilateral termination of
such proceedings without an admission
of liability conflicts with important
Agency policies and statutory mandates
designed to hold carriers accountable
for regulatory violations when
calculating penalties in potential future
enforcement cases. This is particularly
important in the context of maximum
civil penalty cases subject to section 222
of MCSIA. The Agency’s policy
statements regarding implementation of
section 222 have stated that in order for
maximum penalties to be assessed
under that section based on previously
closed enforcement cases, the violations
in those cases must have been
adjudicated or admitted.1
Thus, allowing a respondent to
terminate a proceeding without either
an adjudication or admission would
permit a carrier with abundant financial
resources to repeatedly violate the
regulations without running the risk of
being penalized as a repeat offender,
either for purposes of applying section
222 of MCSIA or calculating the
appropriate penalty under 49 U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(D), which requires the Agency
to consider, among other things, the
respondent’s history of prior offenses.
This not only impedes the Agency’s
ability to implement important statutory
mandates, but also gives an unfair
advantage to those carriers with greater
financial resources, who may be
tempted to treat civil penalties as
merely a cost of doing business.
In 2011, the year following the Homax
decision, the number of cases resolved
through payment of the penalty in full
increased more than 85% over the
previous year.2 In contrast, carriers have
resisted admissions of liability by
making full payment of the civil penalty
with written objection in only a handful
of cases. Consequently, we do not
anticipate a significant increase in the
number of contested cases coming
before the Agency as a result of the
modifications to § 386.18 and believe
that ATA’s and AMSA’s concerns about
diversion of agency resources from highrisk carriers are unwarranted. Even if
these modifications result in a small
increase in the Agency’s enforcement
case backlog, enhancing motor carrier
1 See 69 FR 77828, 77829, Dec. 24, 2004; 74 FR
14184, 14185, Mar. 30, 2009.
2 Enforcement data show that 3,237 civil penalty
cases were resolved by payment in full without a
settlement agreement in 2011, compared to 1,741
such cases in 2010. Approximately 400 more
Notices of Claim were issued in 2011 than in 2010.
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safety by holding repeat offenders
accountable is more important than
maintaining a potentially slightly
reduced docket of administrative
adjudications.
The Agency disagrees with AMSA
that the proposal adopts a ‘‘bit of a
guilty-until-proven innocent approach
* * *.’’ Innocent carriers will continue
to have the opportunity to contest the
allegations in the NOC in accordance
with the procedures established in the
Agency’s Rules of Practice. The FMCSA
enforcement program and counsel will
continue to have the burden of proving
any contested allegations. Although in
some circumstances a motor carrier may
decide it is less expensive to settle a
case than to contest a NOC, that is a
business decision, and the carrier’s
desire to avoid future consequences of
the settlement should not take
precedence over the need to protect the
public against potentially unsafe
carriers and to comply with statutory
mandates.
In response to ATA’s request that
FMCSA establish clear and reasonable
policies governing the circumstances
under which the Agency will settle
enforcement claims without requiring
an admission of guilt, FMCSA may
establish internal policies that will
identify appropriate cases that may be
settled without including an admission
of liability in the Settlement Agreement.
B. Comments to Section 386.73 Carrier
Intent
Comment
Advocates for Highway and Auto
Safety (Advocates) disagrees with
proposed § 386.73(c)(1), which requires
FMCSA to consider whether the new or
affiliated entity was created for the
purpose of evading statutory, regulatory,
or other legal requirements. Advocates
propose that FMCSA consider only the
results of the carrier’s conduct without
regard to the carrier’s intent or
motivation behind the conduct.
Advocates believe that requiring
consideration of motivation and intent
could unreasonably burden the
Agency’s evaluation of the factors in
§ 386.73(c) because proving intent is
difficult and the same activity can be
ambiguous if intent must be considered.
Advocates suggests, therefore, that the
agency eliminate the wording ‘‘for the
purpose of’’ from the language proposed
for § 386.73(c)(1), and replace it with the
phrase ‘‘and has resulted in the evasion
of’’ in referencing the creation of an
affiliate that was involved in evading
the law.
ATA, on the other hand, supports
FMCSA’s inclusion of a motor carrier’s
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intent or motivation as a factor for
FMCSA to consider when determining
whether a motor carrier attempted to
avoid a statutory or regulatory
requirement. ATA requests, however,
that FMCSA weight the factors listed in
§ 386.73(c), with the first factor
concerning the motor carrier’s intent
being weighted the heaviest.
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FMCSA Response
A motor carrier’s intent behind a
particular course of conduct should be
relevant if it shows an attempt to avoid
compliance with applicable regulations
or the consequences of past violations.
A motor carrier would not, however, be
able to avoid liability merely by
asserting it had some legitimate
business purpose for the corporate
transaction or affiliate structure. Under
the final rule, FMCSA will evaluate the
motor carrier’s stated purpose in light of
all the available evidence and by
considering each of the 13 factors
identified in § 386.73(c). If the totality of
the available information demonstrates
that the carrier’s stated business
purpose is consistent with the evidence,
then the motor carrier would not be
subject to an out-of-service order and/or
record consolidation order. Conversely,
if the totality of the available
information demonstrates that the
carrier’s stated purpose is inconsistent
with the evidence, then the motor
carrier would be subject to an out-ofservice order and/or record
consolidation order.
FMCSA does not take lightly its
authority to place a motor carrier’s
operations out of service, and the
Agency recognizes that such orders pose
a significant penalty. Accordingly,
FMCSA intends to apply § 386.73 to
those motor carriers that engage in
egregious instances of noncompliance
and evasion. Advocates’ proposed
modification (removing consideration of
intent) is contrary to the intent of the
rule, that is, to ensure that carriers that
form a new company to purposely evade
regulation are identified and put out of
service. FMCSA is authorized to
establish such a standard but declines to
exert its regulatory authority in this
manner. ATA’s proposed modification
(weighting the factors, with intent being
weighted the heaviest) could result in a
rigid application of the rule and require
FMCSA to disregard relevant evidence
that a motor carrier attempted to avoid
a statutory or regulatory requirement.
For these reasons, FMCSA declines to
modify the § 386.73 as proposed by
either Advocates or ATA.
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Comment
IME expressed concerns over how the
factors listed in § 386.73(c) and (d) will
be applied. IME noted that some of its
members operate multiple fleets that
have common ownership, but are
considered to be separate entities. IME
further notes that these motor carriers
may engage in one or even all of the
activities described in § 386.73(c)(3)
through (13). IME requests that FMCSA
explain the circumstances under which
the factors contained in § 386.73(c) and
(d) will be applied.
FMCSA Response
A motor carrier would not be subject
to an out-of-service order under § 386.73
unless the motor carrier created or
attempted to create a new identity or
affiliate relationship for the purpose of
avoiding a statutory or regulatory
requirement or FMCSA enforcement
action. Motor carriers who change their
operational model for a legitimate
business purpose and not to avoid
FMCSA regulation or enforcement
would not be affected by this rule.
Section 386.73(c) describes the factors
FMCSA will evaluate to determine
whether a motor carrier created or
attempted to create a new identity or
affiliate relationship to avoid FMCSA
regulation or enforcement. Section
386.73(d) describes the potential
sources of information FMCSA may use
to make its determination. FMCSA’s
determination will be based on
consideration of all relevant
information, and one factor or potential
source of evidence is not necessarily
more significant than another. Where
the greater weight of the evidence shows
that a motor carrier created a new
identity or shifted its operations to
another, commonly owned and
controlled, entity to avoid FMCSA
authority or negative safety performance
history, the motor carrier will be placed
out of service and/or have its records
consolidated with the records of the
preexisting or affiliated entity.
FMCSA modified § 386.73(c)(13), now
386.73(c)(2), to clarify that the safety
performance history FMCSA will
consider to determine whether a motor
carrier created a new identity or affiliate
relationship to avoid FMCSA
enforcement is the past safety
performance history of the original
motor carrier. FMCSA also modified
§ 386.73(d) to clarify that FMCSA will
consider all information relevant to the
motor carrier operations and the factors
identified in § 386.73(c). The original
rule text provided that FMCSA would
consider information related to the
motor carrier’s operations, but did not
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24867
reference information that might be
relevant to the factors in § 386.73(c).
FMCSA corrected this by clarifying that
FMCSA will consider all information
relevant to the motor carrier’s
operations and the factors in § 386.73(c).
Comment
The Transportation Intermediaries
Association (TIA) supports FMCSA’s
efforts to target motor carriers who
attempt to avoid statutory or regulatory
requirements. TIA suggests, however,
that FMCSA implement a timely
administrative review process and place
carriers in a probation status pending
the administrative review.
FMCSA Response
Section 386.73(g) describes the
administrative review procedures
available to motor carriers served with
an operations-out-of service or record
consolidation order. In reviewing TIA’s
comment, FMCSA determined that
administrative review procedure should
be clarified by adding language to
explain when an out-of-service order or
record consolidation order is effective.
FMCSA modified the rule accordingly.
The administrative review procedure is
explained below.
Under § 386.73(g), an order is
effective 21 days after it is served,
unless the motor carrier requests
administrative review within 15 days of
service of the order. If the motor carrier
fails to request administrative review, or
requests administrative review after the
15-day period, the motor carrier must
cease operations and its records may be
consolidated. If the motor carrier
requests administrative review within
15 days, however, the order is
automatically stayed and the motor
carrier may continue operating and its
records will not be consolidated during
the period of administrative review. The
Agency Official may file a motion with
the Assistant Administrator to vacate
the automatic stay. The motion must be
served on the motor carrier who may
respond in opposition the motion
within 15 days. The Assistant
Administrator may grant the motion
only if he or she finds good cause to
vacate the stay.
The administrative review procedures
ensure motor carriers receive notice of
FMCSA’s intended action and have a
fair opportunity to be heard. The
procedures also ensure that FMCSA can
efficiently and expeditiously address
motor carriers that attempt to avoid
FMCSA authority or enforcement
action. Accordingly, FMCSA declines to
establish a ‘‘probation’’ status for motor
carriers who are permitted to operate
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during the administrative review
process.
Operating Authority
Comment
TIA recommends that every licensed
company (broker, forwarder, and
carrier) be required to re-register its
operating authority annually and that
failure to comply with this requirement
should result in cancellation of the
company’s authority. The commenter
asserts that Congress is considering
legislation supported by TIA, ATA, and
OOIDA that would tie continuation of
authority to an existing requirement,
either the Unified Carrier Registration
Agreement or the Unified Registration
System (URS).
FMCSA Response
TIA’s suggested annual registration
recommendation is beyond the scope of
this rulemaking, which does not involve
the DOT registration process. The
Agency has a rulemaking proceeding in
progress regarding the DOT registration
process, under Docket No. FMCSA–97–
2349, which proposes to replace certain
existing DOT registration systems with
a new URS. TIA submitted comments in
that proceeding on December 20, 2011,
in which it made similar
recommendations. TIA’s comments on
this issue, therefore, will be addressed
in the URS rulemaking proceeding.
Statutory Authority
Comment
ATA recommends that the Agency
wait for more specific statutory
authority before finalizing § 386.73.
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FMCSA Response
FMCSA does not require additional
statutory authority to establish this new
section. As stated in the ‘‘Legal Basis for
the Rulemaking’’ section of the rule,
FMCSA has statutory authority to
prescribe regulations ensuring that
CMVs are operated safely and to
determine whether an owner or operator
is fit to operate a CMV safely. Section
386.73 of the Agency’s Rules of Practice
is issued under that rulemaking
authority and lays out procedures for
placing out of service and/or
consolidating the safety records of
carriers that avoid FMCSA’s regulations.
Comment
Advocates suggests that FMCSA
impose criminal sanctions on
reincarnated motor carriers engaging in
fraud and evading regulation as part of
this regulatory initiative.
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FMCSA Response
Advocates note that criminal
sanctions against reincarnated carriers
cannot be sought as part of an
administrative proceeding. Because Part
386 applies only to administrative
proceedings, this comment is outside
the scope of this rulemaking. In any
event, FMCSA does not currently have
the statutory authority to independently
seek criminal sanctions, but will
continue to cooperate with both State
and Federal law enforcement partners in
seeking criminal penalties against
unsafe carriers where appropriate.
Out of Scope
Comment
OOIDA requested that a subsection (6)
be added to the proposed § 386.73(b),
which describes when record
consolidation is appropriate, to require
consolidation when new or affiliated
entities are registered primarily to
‘‘[a]void paying liabilities owed to
creditors, including but not limited to
the parties actually providing
transportation services.’’ OOIDA
requested that FMCSA add this
subsection to protect its members from
carriers that reincarnate to escape
financial obligations to drivers. This
change is outside the scope of the
current rulemaking, which is focused on
safety rather than financial regulation.
Our current legal authority does not
provide for determinations of the legal
rights between third parties in payment
disputes.
TIA suggests that FMCSA should
apply § 386.73 to ‘‘broker trust fund
providers’’ as well as motor carriers,
intermodal equipment providers,
brokers and freight forwarders. This
comment is outside the scope of the
current rulemaking, which is focused on
safety rather than financial regulation.
Moreover, FMCSA has no jurisdiction
over broker trust fund providers.
IME suggests that FMCSA focus its
efforts on correcting problems in
existing programs, rather than
proceeding with this rule. IME suggests
FMCSA address its petition regarding
the Hazardous Materials Safety Permit
Program (HMSP), which it states is
directly affected by the proposed
rulemaking. This comment is outside
the scope of the current rulemaking. But
FMCSA is planning to address the
HMSP in a future rulemaking, as stated
in FMCSA’s response to IME’s petition
in that matter.
OOIDA commented that FMCSA’s
DataQ dispute resolution process does
not afford due process to carriers and
drivers. DataQ’s is the process by which
carriers may challenge the accuracy of
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enforcement data uploaded into the
Agency’s information systems (e.g., does
the report accurately identify the carrier,
driver and vehicle and date and location
of the intervention). OOIDA’s comments
regarding the DataQ dispute resolution
process are outside the scope of this
section of the rulemaking, which is
limited to the notice of claim resolution
process.
C. Small Business Impact
Comment
North American Transportation
Consultants, Inc. (NATC) believes the
analysis presented in the NPRM
concerning the impact that all aspects of
the rule would have on small businesses
did not take into consideration the
difficulties small businesses encounter
in being able to afford legal counsel to
provide protection of their rights.
FMCSA Response
First, as mentioned in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act section, only six carriers
paid a civil penalty with a written
objection from 2008 thru 2011,
indicating a minimal economic impact
that would arise from changes to
§ 386.18 (a) and (c). Second, the
regulatory changes adopted here do not
significantly alter the position of small
businesses. This is a procedural rule
that would not affect entities already in
compliance, or those that are out of
compliance but do not attempt to avoid
the consequences of non-compliance by
reincarnating as a new or affiliated
entity.
Although small businesses are
entitled to retain legal representation
during enforcement proceedings
initiated under 49 CFR part 386, in most
cases they choose to represent
themselves. The changes do not increase
the burden on motor carriers with
respect to their options concerning legal
representation.
V. Discussion of Rule
This rule amends regulations in 49
CFR part 386 pertaining to
administrative practices and procedures
and civil penalties. FMCSA adopts the
language from the NPRM into the final
rule with additional clarifying language
to § 386.73(c) and (d).
FMCSA added language to § 386.73
(g)(8) to clarify the administrative
review procedure regarding the
Assistant Administrator’s authority to
vacate the automatic stay of any order
issued under § 386.73.
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VI. Regulatory Analyses
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Executive Order (E.O.) 12866
(Regulatory Planning and Review) and
DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
FMCSA has determined that this rule
is not a significant regulatory action
within the meaning of Executive Order
(E.O.) 12866, as supplemented by E.O.
13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011),
or within the meaning of DOT
regulatory policies and procedures. The
estimated cost of the rule is not
expected to exceed the $100 million
annual threshold for economic
significance; any costs associated with
the rule are expected to be minimal.
Moreover, the Agency does not expect
the rule to generate substantial
congressional or public interest. The
rule would not impose new
requirements upon carriers and thus
should result in minimal or no
economic burdens. The revisions clarify
existing rules and implement
procedures that would not require a
change in the business practices of
already compliant motor carriers.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(5 U.S.C. 601–612) requires Federal
agencies to consider the effects of the
regulatory action on small business and
other small entities and to minimize any
significant economic impact. The term
‘‘small entities’’ includes small
businesses and not-for-profit
organizations that are independently
owned and operated and are not
dominant in their fields, and
governmental jurisdictions with
populations of less than 50,000.3
Accordingly, the DOT policy titled,
‘‘Proper Consideration of Small Entities
in Agency Rulemaking’’ requires an
analysis of the impact of all regulations
on small entities and mandates that
agencies strive to lessen any adverse
effects on these businesses.
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act,
as amended by the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996 (Pub. L. 104–121, 110 Stat. 857),
this rule is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The rule’s clarification of how payment
of claims affects admissions of liability
reflects current FMCSA policy, as
discussed in the background section.
Even before the current policy was
enunciated through administrative
adjudication, this portion of the rule did
not have a significant impact. From
3 Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
see National Archives at https://www.archives.gov/
federal-register/laws/regulatory-flexibility/601.html.
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2008 through 2011, the Agency
adjudicated only six cases in which the
respondent motor carrier paid a civil
penalty with written objection, which
indicates the minimal impact the rule is
expected to have.
FMCSA estimates that fewer than 50
carriers annually will be affected and
placed out of service by the rule as it
pertains to reincarnated or affiliated
carriers, from data provided by the U.S.
General Accountability Office (GAO)
Engagement Report (June 2008–July
2011).4 Therefore, this rule would not
disproportionately impact small
entities. Consequently, I certify that a
regulatory flexibility analysis is not
necessary.
Assistance for Small Entities
In accordance with section 213(a) of
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,
FMCSA wants to assist small entities in
understanding this rule so that they can
better evaluate its effects on them. If the
rule affects your small business,
organization, or governmental
jurisdiction and you have questions
concerning its provisions or options for
compliance, please consult the FMCSA
point of contact, Sabrina Redd, listed in
the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section of this rule.
Small businesses may send comments
on the actions of Federal employees
who enforce or otherwise determine
compliance with Federal regulations to
the Small Business Administration’s
Small Business and Agriculture
Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman
and the Regional Small Business
Regulatory Fairness Boards. The
Ombudsman evaluates these actions
annually and rates each agency’s
responsiveness to small business. If you
wish to comment on actions by
employees of FMCSA, call 1–888–REG–
FAIR (1–888–734–3247). FMCSA will
not retaliate against small entities that
question or complain about this rule or
any policy or action of the Agency.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This rule will not impose an
unfunded Federal mandate, as defined
by the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1532 et seq.), that
would result in the expenditure by
State, local, and tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$141.3 million (which is the value of
$100 million in 2010 after adjusting for
inflation) or more in any 1 year.
4 FMCSA Eastern Service Center/Division Field
Enforcement Action—Reincarnated Carrier Cases—
GAO Engagement 541079 July 1, 2011.
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24869
E.O. 13132 (Federalism)
A rule has implications for
Federalism under Section 1(a) of E.O.
13132 if it has ‘‘substantial direct effects
on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.’’ FMCSA
has determined that this rule will not
have substantial direct effects on States,
nor would it limit the policymaking
discretion of States. Nothing in this
document preempts any State law or
regulation.
Indian Tribal Governments
This rule does not have tribal
implications under E.O. 13175,
Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments, because it
does not have a substantial direct effect
on one or more Indian tribes, on the
relationship between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), Federal
agencies must obtain approval from the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for each collection of
information they conduct, sponsor, or
require through regulations. FMCSA has
determined that there is no new
information collection requirement
associated with this rule.
National Environmental Policy Act
FMCSA analyzed this rule for the
purpose of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.) and determined this action is
categorically excluded from further
analysis and documentation in an
environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement under
FMCSA Order 5610.1 (69 FR 9680,
March 1, 2004), Appendix 2, paragraphs
(6)(u)(1), (6)(u)(2), and (6)(y)(7). The
Categorical Exclusion (CE) in paragraph
(6)(u)(1) addresses rules concerning
compliance with regulations; the CE in
paragraph (6)(u)(2) addresses
regulations concerning civil penalties;
and the CE in paragraph (6)(y)(7)
addresses rules for record keeping. The
various changes in this rule are covered
by one or a combination of these three
CEs. Therefore, this action does not
have any effect on the quality of the
environment. The Categorical Exclusion
determination is available for inspection
or copying in the Regulations.gov Web
site listed under ADDRESSES.
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FMCSA also analyzed this rule under
the Clean Air Act, as amended (CAA),
section 176(c) (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.),
and implementing regulations
promulgated by the Environmental
Protection Agency. Approval of this
action is exempt from the CAA’s general
conformity requirement since it does
not affect direct or indirect emissions of
criteria pollutants.
E.O. 13211 (Energy Effects)
FMCSA analyzed this rule under E.O.
13211, Actions Concerning Regulations
That Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use. The Agency has
determined that it is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ under that order because
it is not a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
under E.O. 12866 and is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution, or use of energy.
Therefore, no Statement of Energy
Effects is required.
E.O. 13045 (Protection of Children)
E.O. 13045, Protection of Children
from Environmental Health Risks and
Safety Risks (62 FR 19885, Apr. 23,
1997), requires agencies issuing
‘‘economically significant’’ rules, if the
regulation also concerns an
environmental health or safety risk that
an agency has reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, to
include an evaluation of the regulation’s
environmental health and safety effects
on children. As discussed previously,
this rule is not economically significant.
Therefore, no analysis of the impacts on
children is required. In any event, we do
not anticipate that this regulatory action
could in any respect present an
environmental or safety risk that could
disproportionately affect children.
Congress, through OMB, with an
explanation of why using these
standards would be inconsistent with
applicable law or otherwise impractical.
Voluntary consensus standards are
technical standards (e.g., specifications
of materials, performance, design, or
operation; test methods; sampling
procedures; and related management
systems practices) that are developed or
adopted by voluntary consensus
standards bodies.
FMCSA is not aware of any technical
standards used to address Agency rules
of practice by motor carriers, intermodal
equipment providers, brokers, freight
forwarders, and handlers of hazardous
materials and therefore, did not
consider any such standards.
Privacy Impact Assessment
FMCSA conducted a privacy impact
assessment of this rule as required by
section 522(a)(5) of the FY 2005
Omnibus Appropriations Act, Public
Law 108–447, 118 Stat. 3268 (Dec. 8,
2004) [set out as a note to 5 U.S.C.
552a]. The assessment considers any
impacts of the rule on the privacy of
information in an identifiable form and
related matters. FMCSA has determined
this rule would have no privacy
impacts.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 386
Administrative practice and
procedure, Brokers, Freight forwarders,
Hazardous materials transportation,
Highway safety, Motor carriers, Motor
vehicle safety penalties.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, FMCSA amends 49 CFR part
386 as follows:
PART 386—RULES OF PRACTICE FOR
MOTOR CARRIER, INTERMODAL
EQUIPMENT PROVIDER, BROKER,
FREIGHT FORWARDER, AND
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
PROCEEDINGS
■
E.O. 12630 (Taking of Private Property)
This rule would not effect a taking of
private property or otherwise have
taking implications under E.O. 12630,
Governmental Actions and Interference
with Constitutionally Protected Property
Rights.
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E.O. 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
This action meets applicable
standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of
E.O. 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to
minimize litigation, eliminate
ambiguity, and reduce burden.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 113, chapters 5, 51,
59, 131–141, 145–149, 311, 313, and 315;
Sec. 204, Pub. L. 104–88, 109 Stat. 803, 941
(49 U.S.C. 701 note); Sec. 217, Pub. L. 105–
159, 113 Stat. 1748, 1767; Sec. 206, Pub. L.
106–159, 113 Stat. 1763; subtitle B, title IV
of Pub. L. 109–59; and 49 CFR 1.45 and 1.73.
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (Technical
Standards)
The National Technology Transfer
and Advancement Act (15 U.S.C. 272
note) directs agencies to use voluntary
consensus standards in their regulatory
activities unless the agency provides
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1. The authority citation for part 386
continues to read as follows:
2. Amend § 386.18 by revising
paragraphs (a) and (c) to read as follows:
■
§ 386.18
Payment of the claim.
(a) Payment of the full amount
claimed may be made at any time before
issuance of a Final Agency Order and
will constitute an admission of liability
by the respondent of all facts alleged in
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
the Notice of Claim, unless the parties
agree in writing that payment shall not
be treated as an admission. After the
issuance of a Final Agency Order,
claims are subject to interest, penalties,
and administrative charges, in
accordance with 31 U.S.C. 3717; 49 CFR
part 89; and 31 CFR 901.9.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Unless otherwise agreed in writing
by the parties, payment of the full
amount in response to the Notice of
Claim constitutes an admission of
liability by the respondent of all facts
alleged in the Notice of Claim. Payment
waives respondent’s opportunity to
further contest the claim and will result
in the Notice of Claim becoming the
Final Agency Order.
■ 3. Add § 386.73 to subpart F to read
as follows:
§ 386.73 Operations out of service and
record consolidation proceedings
(reincarnated carriers).
(a) Out-of-service order. An FMCSA
Field Administrator or the Director of
FMCSA’s Office of Enforcement and
Compliance (Director) may issue an outof-service order to prohibit a motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder from
conducting operations subject to
FMCSA jurisdiction upon a
determination by the Field
Administrator or Director that the motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder or an officer,
employee, agent, or authorized
representative of such an entity,
operated or attempted to operate a
motor carrier, intermodal equipment
provider, broker, or freight forwarder
under a new identity or as an affiliated
entity to:
(1) Avoid complying with an FMCSA
order;
(2) Avoid complying with a statutory
or regulatory requirement;
(3) Avoid paying a civil penalty;
(4) Avoid responding to an
enforcement action; or
(5) Avoid being linked with a negative
compliance history.
(b) Record consolidation order. In
addition to, or in lieu of, an out-ofservice order issued under this section,
the Field Administrator or Director may
issue an order consolidating the records
maintained by FMCSA concerning the
current motor carrier, intermodal
equipment provider, broker, and freight
forwarder and its affiliated motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder or its
previous incarnation, for all purposes,
upon a determination that the motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, and freight forwarder or officer,
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employee, agent, or authorized
representative of the same, operated or
attempted to operate a motor carrier,
intermodal equipment provider, broker,
or freight forwarder under a new
identity or as an affiliated entity to:
(1) Avoid complying with an FMCSA
order;
(2) Avoid complying with a statutory
or regulatory requirement;
(3) Avoid paying a civil penalty;
(4) Avoid responding to an
enforcement action; or
(5) Avoid being linked with a negative
compliance history.
(c) Standard. The Field Administrator
or Director may determine that a motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder is
reincarnated if there is substantial
continuity between the entities such
that one is merely a continuation of the
other. The Field Administrator or
Director may determine that a motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder is an
affiliate if the business operations are
under common ownership and/or
common control. In making this
determination, the Field Administrator
or Director may consider, among other
things, the following factors:
(1) Whether the new or affiliated
entity was created for the purpose of
evading statutory or regulatory
requirements, an FMCSA order,
enforcement action, or negative
compliance history. In weighing this
factor, the Field Administrator or
Director may consider the stated
business purpose for the creation of the
new or affiliated entity.
(2) The previous entity’s safety
performance history, including, among
other things, safety violations and
enforcement actions of the Secretary, if
any;
(3) Consideration exchanged for assets
purchased or transferred;
(4) Dates of company creation and
dissolution or cessation of operations;
(5) Commonality of ownership
between the current and former
company or between current companies;
(6) Commonality of officers and
management personnel;
(7) Identity of physical or mailing
addresses, telephone, fax numbers, or
email addresses;
(8) Identity of motor vehicle
equipment;
(9) Continuity of liability insurance
policies or commonality of coverage
under such policies;
(10) Commonality of drivers and other
employees;
(11) Continuation of carrier facilities
and other physical assets;
(12) Continuity or commonality of
nature and scope of operations,
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including customers for whom
transportation is provided;
(13) Advertising, corporate name, or
other acts through which the company
holds itself out to the public;
(d) Evaluating factors. The Field
Administrator or Director may examine,
among other things, the company
management structures, financial
records, corporate filing records, asset
purchase or transfer and title history,
employee records, insurance records,
and any other information related to the
general operations of the entities
involved and factors in paragraph (c) of
this section.
(e) Effective dates. An order issued
under this section becomes the Final
Agency Order and is effective on the
21st day after it is served unless a
request for administrative review is
served and filed as set forth in
paragraph (g) of this section. Any motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder that fails to
comply with any prohibition or
requirement set forth in an order issued
under this section is subject to the
applicable penalty provisions for each
instance of noncompliance.
(f) Commencement of proceedings.
The Field Administrator or Director may
commence proceedings under this
section by issuing an order that:
(1) Provides notice of the factual and
legal basis of the order;
(2) In the case of an out-of-service
order, identifies the operations
prohibited by the order;
(3) In the case of an order that
consolidates records maintained by
FMCSA, identifies the previous entity
and current or affiliated motor carriers,
intermodal equipment providers,
brokers, or freight forwarders whose
records will be consolidated;
(4) Provides notice that the order is
effective upon the 21st day after service;
(5) Provides notice of the right to
petition for administrative review of the
order and that a timely petition will stay
the effective date of the order unless the
Assistant Administrator orders
otherwise for good cause; and
(6) Provides notice that failure to
timely request administrative review of
the order constitutes waiver of the right
to contest the order and will result in
the order becoming a Final Agency
Order 21 days after it is served.
(g) Administrative review. A motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder issued an
order under this section may petition for
administrative review of the order. A
petition for administrative review is
limited to contesting factual or
procedural errors in the issuance of the
order under review and may not be
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
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24871
submitted to demonstrate corrective
action. A petition for administrative
review that does not identify factual or
procedural errors in the issuance of the
order under review will be dismissed.
Petitioners seeking to demonstrate
corrective action may do so by
submitting a Petition for Rescission
under paragraph (h) of this section.
(1) A petition for administrative
review must be in writing and served on
the Assistant Administrator, Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration,
1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., Washington,
DC 20590–0001, Attention:
Adjudications Counsel, or by electronic
mail to FMCSA.Adjudication@dot.gov.
A copy of the petition for administrative
review must also be served on the Field
Administrator or Director who issued
the order, at the physical address or
electronic mail account identified in the
order.
(2) A petition for administrative
review must be served within 15 days
of the date the Field Administrator or
Director served the order issued under
this section. Failure to timely request
administrative review waives the right
to administrative review and constitutes
an admission of the facts alleged in the
order.
(3) A petition for administrative
review must include:
(i) A copy of the order in dispute; and
(ii) A statement of all factual and
procedural issues in dispute.
(4) If a petition for administrative
review is timely served and filed, the
petitioner may supplement the petition
by serving documentary evidence and/
or written argument that supports its
position regarding the procedural or
factual issues in dispute no later than 30
days from the date the disputed order
was served. The supplementary
documentary evidence or written
argument may not expand the issues on
review and need not address every issue
identified in the petition. Failure to
timely serve supplementary
documentary evidence and/or written
argument constitutes a waiver of the
right to do so.
(5) The Field Administrator or
Director must serve written argument
and supporting documentary evidence,
if any, in defense of the disputed order
no later than 15 days following the
period in which petitioner may serve
supplemental documentary evidence
and/or written argument in support of
the petition for administrative review.
(6) The Assistant Administrator may
ask the parties to submit additional
information or attend a conference to
facilitate administrative review.
(7) The Assistant Administrator will
issue a written decision on the request
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for administrative review within 30
days of the close of the time period for
the Field Administrator or the Director
to serve written argument and
supporting documentary evidence in
defense of the order, or the actual filing
of such written argument and
documentary evidence, whichever is
earlier.
(8) If a petition for administrative
review is timely served in accordance
with this subsection, the disputed order
is stayed, pending the Assistant
Administrator’s review. The Assistant
Administrator may enter an order
vacating the automatic stay in
accordance with the following
procedures:
(i) The Agency Official may file a
motion to vacate the automatic stay
demonstrating good cause why the order
should not be stayed. The Agency
Official’s motion must be in writing,
state the factual and legal basis for the
motion, be accompanied by affidavits or
other evidence relied on, and be served
on the petitioner and Assistant
Administrator.
(ii) The petitioner may file an answer
in opposition, accompanied by
affidavits or other evidence relied on.
The answer must be served within
10 days of service of the motion.
(iii) The Assistant Administrator will
issue a decision on the motion to vacate
the automatic stay within 10 days of the
close of the time period for serving the
answer to the motion. The 30-day
period for review of the petition for
administrative review in paragraph
(g)(5) of this section is tolled from the
time the Agency Official’s motion to lift
a stay is served until the Assistant
Administrator issues a decision on the
motion.
(9) The Assistant Administrator’s
decision on a petition for administrative
review of an order issued under this
section constitutes the Final Agency
Order.
(h) Petition for rescission. A motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
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broker, or freight forwarder may petition
to rescind an order issued under this
section if action has been taken to
correct the deficiencies that resulted in
the order.
(1) A petition for rescission must be
made in writing to the Field
Administrator or Director who issued
the order.
(2) A petition for rescission must
include a copy of the order requested to
be rescinded, a factual statement
identifying all corrective action taken,
and copies of supporting
documentation.
(3) Upon request and for good cause
shown, the Field Administrator or
Director may grant the petitioner
additional time, not to exceed 45 days,
to complete corrective action initiated at
the time the petition for rescission was
filed.
(4) The Field Administrator or
Director will issue a written decision on
the petition for rescission within 60
days of service of the petition. The
written decision will include the factual
and legal basis for the determination.
(5) If the Field Administrator or
Director grants the request for
rescission, the written decision is the
Final Agency Order.
(6) If the Field Administrator or
Director denies the request for
rescission, the petitioner may file a
petition for administrative review of the
denial with the Assistant Administrator,
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, 1200 New Jersey Ave.
SE., Washington, DC 20590–0001,
Attention: Adjudication Counsel or by
electronic mail to
FMCSA.Adjudication@dot.gov. The
petition for administrative review of the
denial must be served and filed within
15 days of the service of the decision
denying the request for recession. The
petition for administrative review must
identify the disputed factual or
procedural issues with respect to the
denial of the petition for rescission. The
petition may not, however, challenge
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
the underlying basis of the order for
which rescission was sought.
(7) The Assistant Administrator will
issue a written decision on the petition
for administrative review of the denial
of the petition for rescission within 60
days. The Assistant Administrator’s
decision constitutes the Final Agency
Order.
(i) Other orders unaffected. If a motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder subject to an
order issued under this section is or
becomes subject to any other order,
prohibition, or requirement of the
FMCSA, an order issued under this
section is in addition to, and does not
amend or supersede such other order,
prohibition, or requirement. A motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder subject to an
order issued under this section remains
subject to the suspension and revocation
provisions of 49 U.S.C. 13905 for
violations of regulations governing their
operations.
(j) Inapplicability of subparts.
Subparts B, C, D, and E of this part,
except § 386.67, do not apply to this
section.
■ 4. Amend Appendix A to part 386,
section IV, by redesignating paragraph
h. as paragraph i. and adding a new
paragraph h. to read as follows:
Appendix A to Part 386—Penalty
Schedule; Violations of Notices and
Orders
*
*
*
*
*
IV. * * *
h. Violation — Operating in violation of an
order issued under § 386.73. Penalty—Up to
$16,000 per day the operation continues after
the effective date and time of the out-ofservice order.
*
*
*
*
*
Issued on: April 18, 2012.
Anne S. Ferro,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2012–10162 Filed 4–25–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
E:\FR\FM\26APR1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 81 (Thursday, April 26, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 24863-24872]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-10162]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
49 CFR Part 386
[Docket No. FMCSA-2011-0259]
RIN 2126-AB38
Amendment to Agency Rules of Practice
AGENCY: Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) amends
its Rules of Practice for Motor Carrier, Intermodal Equipment Provider,
Broker, Freight Forwarder, and Hazardous Materials proceedings. The
Agency clarifies that paying the full proposed civil penalty in an
enforcement proceeding, either in response to a Notice of Claim (NOC)
or later in the proceeding, does not allow respondents to unilaterally
avoid an admission of liability for the violations charged.
Additionally, the Agency establishes procedures for issuing out-of-
service orders to motor carriers, intermodal equipment providers,
brokers, and freight forwarders it determines are reincarnations of
other entities with a history of failing to comply with statutory or
regulatory requirements; these procedures will provide for an
administrative review before the out-of-service order takes effect.
Finally, the Agency establishes a process for consolidating Agency
records of reincarnated companies with their predecessor entities.
DATES: This rule is effective May 29, 2012.
ADDRESSES: For access to the docket to read background documents,
including those referenced in this document, or to read comments
received, go to https://www.regulations.gov at any time and insert
``FMCSA-2011-0259'' in the ``Keyword'' box, and then click ``Search.''
You may also view the docket online by visiting the Docket Management
Facility in Room W12-140, DOT Building, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., ET Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
Anyone is able to search the electronic form for all comments
received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). You may review the
U.S. Department of Transportation's (DOT) complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register published on January 17, 2008 (73 FR
3316), or you may visit https://edocket.acces.gpo.gov/2008/pdf/E8-785.pdf.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sabrina Redd, Office of Chief Counsel,
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue
SE., Washington, DC 20590-0001, by telephone at (202) 366-6424 or via
email at sabrina.redd@dot.gov. Office hours are from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
ET, Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays. If you have
questions on viewing or submitting material to the docket, contact
Renee V. Wright, Program Manager, Docket Operations, telephone (202)
366-9826.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Preamble
I. Abbreviations
II. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
III. Background
A. Section 386.18
B. Section 386.73
IV. Discussion of Comments
A. Comments to Section 386.18
B. Comments to Section 386.73
C. Small Business Impact
V. Discussion of Rule
VI. Regulatory Analyses
I. Abbreviations
Advocates Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety
AMSA American Moving and Storage Association
ATA American Trucking Associations, Inc.
HMSP Hazardous Materials Safety Permit Program
IME Institute of Makers of Explosives
NATC North American Transportation Consultants, Inc.
OOIDA Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association
TIA Transportation Intermediaries Association
II. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
Congress has delegated certain powers to regulate interstate
commerce to DOT in numerous pieces of legislation, most notably in
section 6 of the Department of Transportation Act (DOT Act) (Pub. L.
89-670, 80 Stat. 931 (1966)). Section 6(e)(6)(C) of the DOT Act
transferred to DOT the authority of the Interstate Commerce Commission
(ICC) to regulate the qualifications and maximum hours of service of
motor carrier employees, the safety of operations, and the equipment of
motor carriers in interstate commerce. This authority, first granted to
the ICC in the Motor Carrier Act of 1935 (Pub. L. 74-255, 49 Stat.
543), now appears in chapter 315 of title 49 of the U.S. Code. The
regulations issued under this authority became known as the Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs), appearing generally at 49
CFR parts 350-399. The administrative powers to enforce chapter 315
were also transferred from the ICC to the DOT in 1966 and appear in
chapter 5 of title 49 of the U.S. Code. The Secretary of DOT
(Secretary) delegated oversight of these provisions
[[Page 24864]]
to the FHWA, the predecessor agency to FMCSA.
Between 1984 and 1999, a number of statutes added to FHWA's
authority. Various statutes authorize the enforcement of the FMCSRs,
the Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMRs), and the Federal Motor
Carrier Commercial Regulations (FMCCRs) and provide both civil and
criminal penalties for violations. These statutes include the Motor
Carrier Safety Act of 1984 (Pub. L. 98-554, 98 Stat. 2832), codified at
49 U.S.C. Chapter 311, Subchapter III; the Commercial Motor Vehicle
Safety Act of 1986 (Pub. L. 99-570, 100 Stat. 3207-170), codified at 49
U.S.C. Chapter 313; the Hazardous Materials Transportation Uniform
Safety Act of 1990 (Pub. L. 101-615, 104 Stat. 3244), codified at 49
U.S.C. Chapter 51; and the ICC Termination Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-88,
109 Stat. 803), codified at 49 U.S.C. Chapters 135-149. Specifically,
the Secretary is authorized to prescribe regulations ensuring that
commercial motor vehicles (CMVs) are operated safely under 49 U.S.C.
31136 (a)(1), and to determine whether an owner or operator is fit to
safely operate CMVs under 49 U.S.C 31144. In order to ensure that
carriers are fit to safely operate, it is necessary to monitor the
safety performance history of individual carriers. FMCSA needs to
monitor the safety performance history of carriers who ``reincarnate''
as a new carrier when faced with enforcement action in order to focus
Agency enforcement efforts. This rule will ensure that carriers who
have a proven history of unsafe operations are not able to evade
regulation by simply forming a new company or obtaining new
registration.
III. Background
On December 13, 2011, FMCSA published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (76 FR 77458), with the intent to amend its rules of
practice for motor carrier, intermodal equipment provider, broker,
freight forwarder, and hazardous materials proceedings. FMCSA received
seven public comment submissions regarding the NPRM. These comments are
discussed in part IV, Discussion of Comments.
A. Section 386.18
FMCSA published a comprehensive revision of its Rules of Practice
on May 18, 2005. This revision can be found in 49 CFR part 386 (70 FR
28467). The revision was intended to increase the efficiency of Agency
administrative enforcement procedures, enhance due process, improve
public understanding of the Agency's procedures, and accommodate recent
programmatic changes.
Under Sec. 386.11(c) of the revised Rules of Practice, civil
penalty enforcement proceedings are initiated through service of an
NOC, which is usually issued by the FMCSA Division Administrator for
the State in which the respondent maintains its principal place of
business. The NOC, which is usually based on a compliance review or
other type of investigation or enforcement intervention, sets forth the
provisions of law allegedly violated by the respondent and the
underlying facts pertinent to the alleged violations; proposes a civil
penalty; and provides information regarding the time, form, and manner
whereby the respondent could pay, contest, or otherwise seek resolution
of the claim. Prior to 2005, the Rules of Practice were silent on
whether payment of the proposed civil penalty in response to the NOC,
or at a subsequent stage of the proceeding, constituted an admission of
the violations alleged in the NOC.
The 2005 revision of the Rules of Practice added a new Sec. 386.18
titled ``Payment of the claim.'' That section provided that payment of
the full amount claimed may be made at any time before issuance of a
Final Agency Order. After the issuance of a Final Agency Order, claims
are subject to interest, penalties, and administrative charges in
accordance with 31 U.S.C. 3717; 49 CFR part 89; and 31 CFR 901.9. If
respondent elects to pay the full amount as its response to the Notice
of Claim, payment must be served upon the Field Administrator at the
Service Center designated in the Notice of Claim within 30 days
following service of the Notice of Claim. No written reply is necessary
if respondent elects the payment option during the 30-day reply period.
Failure to serve full payment within 30 days of service of the Notice
of Claim when this option has been chosen may constitute a default and
may result in the Notice of Claim, including the civil penalty assessed
by the Notice of Claim, becoming the Final Agency Order in the
proceeding pursuant to Sec. 386.14(c). Unless objected to in writing,
submitted at the time of payment, payment of the full amount in
response to the Notice of Claim constitutes an admission by the
respondent of all facts alleged in the Notice of Claim. Payment waives
respondent's opportunity to further contest the claim, and will result
in the Notice of Claim becoming the Final Agency Order.
In a small number of enforcement proceedings, respondents paid the
full amount of the claim with written objection, either in their reply
to the NOC or at a later stage of the proceeding. In such cases, the
respondents argued that payment with written objection terminated the
proceeding without an admission of liability. The FMCSA Field
Administrators, who were responsible for prosecuting enforcement
proceedings before the Agency, contended that respondents could not
unilaterally terminate an enforcement proceeding by making full payment
without an admission of liability.
In a case decided on November 3, 2010, In the Matter of Homax Oil
Sales, Inc., Docket No. FMCSA-2006-26000, Order Denying Petition for
Reconsideration (Homax), FMCSA's Assistant Administrator reasoned that
allowing respondents to unilaterally terminate proceedings by paying
the proposed penalty in full and lodging an objection under Sec.
386.18(c) was inconsistent with the Agency's enforcement policy and
section 222 of the Motor Carrier Safety Improvement Act (MCSIA), which
requires that the Agency assess the maximum statutory penalty for each
violation of law by any person ``who is found to have committed a
pattern of violations of critical or acute regulations issued to carry
out such a law or to have previously committed the same or related
violation of critical or acute regulations issued to carry out such a
law.'' The Assistant Administrator concluded that if a carrier was
allowed to unilaterally terminate an enforcement proceeding without an
admission, the case could not count as prior history for future civil
penalty calculations under section 222 of MCSIA or under 49 U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(D), which requires the Agency to consider, among other
things, a respondent's history of prior offenses. Allowing unilateral
termination of a proceeding by a respondent without an admission would
permit carriers with abundant financial resources to repeatedly violate
the Agency's regulations without facing escalating civil penalties
despite a history of noncompliance with the regulations. The Assistant
Administrator acknowledged that the regulatory text of Sec. 386.18(c)
was less than clear regarding the consequences of full payment with
written objection and recommended that the meaning of the paragraph be
clarified through rulemaking.
As was noted in Homax, in an April 1996 Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM), FHWA proposed the following language with respect to
the full payment issue: ``Unless otherwise provided in writing by
mutual consent of the parties, payment and/or
[[Page 24865]]
compliance with the order constitutes an admission of all facts alleged
in the notice of violation [called a Notice of Claim under the current
Rules of Practice] and a waiver of the respondent's opportunity to
contest the claim, and results in the notice of violation becoming the
final agency order.'' (61 FR 18865, Apr. 29, 1996)
FHWA's reasoning for this language was that ``future agency
enforcement actions may be based on, and certain consequences may flow
from, prior and continued violations of the safety regulations.'' (61
FR 18875-76, Apr. 29, 1996)
FMCSA revised this proposal, renumbered as Sec. 386.18(c), in an
October 2004 Supplemental Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (SNPRM) (69 FR
61628, Oct. 20, 2004) to read as follows: ``Unless objected to in
writing, payment of the full amount in its reply constitutes an
admission by the respondent of all facts alleged in the notice of
claim. Payment waives respondent's opportunity to further contest the
claim, and will result in the notice of claim becoming the final agency
order.''
This proposed change was intended to make ``it clear that, unless
the parties otherwise agree in writing, respondent's payment of the
full claim amount as its reply to the notice of claim constitutes an
admission.'' (69 FR 61622)
The final rule published on May 18, 2005 (70 FR 28467), adopted
that provision with little change. In the 2010 Homax Order, the
Assistant Administrator concluded that, notwithstanding the removal of
the language requiring mutual consent of the parties from the
regulatory text, the preamble of the rule showed that the Agency
intended to adopt the mutual consent requirement originally proposed in
1996.
In a subsequent case, In the Matter of Associated Pipe Contractors,
Inc., Docket No. FMCSA-2008-0159, Order Terminating Proceeding and
Closing Docket, January 10, 2011, the Agency addressed the implications
of full payment of the proposed civil penalty at any time before
issuance of a Final Agency Order, in accordance with 49 CFR 386.18(a).
In Associated Pipe Contractors, the carrier paid the full penalty with
written objection several months after contesting the NOC and
requesting administrative adjudication. Section 386.18(a), which
applied to this situation rather than Section 386.18(c), was silent
regarding whether a carrier could unilaterally terminate an enforcement
proceeding without an admission of liability under those circumstances.
The Agency concluded that the same concerns expressed in the Homax
decision apply to such a payment and that Sec. 386.18(a) should be
clarified to be consistent with that decision.
To address these concerns, therefore, FMCSA proposed to revise its
Rules of Practice by amending 49 CFR 386.18(a) and (c) to clarify that
payment of the full amount of the proposed civil penalty constitutes an
admission of all facts alleged in the NOC, unless otherwise agreed by
the parties.
B. Section 386.73
FMCSA discovered that a number of motor carriers have submitted new
applications for registration, often under a new name, in order to
continue operating after having been placed out of service for safety-
related reasons; to avoid paying civil penalties; to circumvent denial
of applications for operating authority based on a determination that
they were not fit, willing, or able to comply with the applicable
statutes or regulations; or to otherwise avoid a negative compliance
history. Other motor carriers attempt to avoid enforcement or other
consequences associated with a negative compliance history by creating
or using an affiliated company under common operational control. They
then shift customers, vehicles, drivers, and other operational
activities to that affiliated company when FMCSA places one of the
commonly controlled companies out of service. The practice of
``reincarnating'' as a new carrier or of operating affiliated companies
to circumvent Agency enforcement actions and avoid a negative
compliance history or enforcement action has created an unacceptable
risk of harm to the public because it results in the continued
operation of at-risk carriers and thwarts FMCSA's ability to carry out
its safety mission.
The danger posed by ``reincarnation'' became evident following a
fatal bus crash in Sherman, Texas in 2008. Investigation revealed that
the motor carrier involved did not have operating authority from FMCSA.
Instead, it had an application for authority pending with the Agency,
but was a reincarnation of another bus company that FMCSA had recently
placed out of service. Following the Sherman, Texas bus crash, FMCSA
began a vetting process that involves a comprehensive review of
applications for passenger carrier and household goods operating
authority to determine whether the applicants are reincarnations or
affiliates of other motor carriers with negative compliance histories
or are otherwise not fit, willing, and able to comply with the
applicable regulations. Although the vetting program is a significant
improvement to the operating authority review process, it is not a
complete solution to the reincarnation problem. Accordingly, in this
rule FMCSA establishes new procedures to prohibit reincarnated or
affiliated carriers from successfully evading accountability for their
compliance history.
FMCSA is authorized to suspend, amend, or revoke a motor carrier's
registration for willful failure to comply with applicable safety
regulations, an FMCSA order, or a condition of its registration
pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 13905. Motor carriers that obtain registration by
creating a new company or an affiliate company for the purpose of
avoiding FMCSA orders, regulations, or enforcement actions procure the
registration by fraud--by knowingly misrepresenting and/or withholding
material information. FMCSA has authority to sanction these motor
carriers, which have already demonstrated an unwillingness or inability
to comply with applicable safety regulations, by suspending, amending,
or revoking their registration and/or by imposing applicable civil
penalties.
To address these challenges, FMCSA proposed to revise its Rules of
Practice by adding new section 386.73. This section authorizes FMCSA to
issue out-of-service orders to motor carriers, intermodal equipment
providers, brokers, and, freight forwarders determined to be
reincarnated or operating as affiliates to avoid enforcement action or
a negative compliance history, and it would provide a mechanism for
administrative review of such orders. The rule would also establish
procedures to consolidate the compliance records of reincarnated or
affiliated entities. These procedures more fully implement the Agency's
current authority to prohibit unsafe entities from operating while, at
the same time, providing due process for companies that seek to
challenge a finding that they are reincarnated.
IV. Discussion of Comments
FMCSA received seven comments in response to the NPRM (76 FR 77458,
Dec. 13, 2011). The commenters included a highway safety advocacy
organization, a transportation consultant, and associations
representing third party logistics professionals, moving and storage
companies, explosives manufacturers and distributors, trucking
companies, and independent owner operators.
[[Page 24866]]
Overall, most commenters supported FMCSA's objectives for changing
its rules of practice. Several commenters expressed concerns with the
Agency's proposal regarding the payment of claims. A couple of
commenters strongly supported the proposed provisions for
``reincarnated carriers.'' These comments are discussed in greater
detail below.
A. Comments to Section 386.18
Comments
The Agency received three comments in response to its proposal to
amend 49 CFR 386.18(a) and (c) to clarify that full payment of a
proposed civil penalty at any stage of an enforcement proceeding will
be considered an admission of liability, unless the parties otherwise
agree in writing. The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association
(OOIDA) supported this proposal, stating that ``[t]he proposed
modification shifts the focus back to safety, and does so while
affording full due process to those responding to claims.'' OOIDA
noted, however, that the elimination of a ``nolo contendre plea option
(payment without admitting guilt)'' would likely increase the number of
negotiated or litigated claims and require additional Agency resources
to handle this increase.
The American Trucking Associations, Inc. (ATA) had reservations
about, and the American Moving and Storage Association (AMSA) opposed,
the proposed amendments to Sec. 386.18. Although ATA stated that it
generally agrees with the safety objectives underlying the proposal, it
believes that the proposal would result in a ``reversal of the
increased efficiency in enforcement procedures that [the] Rules of
Practice were intended to achieve'' and divert FMCSA enforcement
resources from high-risk carriers. ATA also urges that FMCSA establish
a clear and reasonable policy directing Agency officials to agree to
settlements of enforcement claims without admissions of guilt in
appropriate cases where there is not likely to be a significantly
deleterious effect on public safety. AMSA believes that the proposal,
by eliminating the nolo contendre plea option, is unfair to innocent
carriers that make a business decision to pay the penalty in order to
resolve a case in the most cost-efficient manner. AMSA also believes
that the proposal may result in an increased burden on FMCSA resources
because carriers are less likely to settle cases where an admission of
liability could result in civil litigation or personal injury suits
arising out of the admitted violations.
FMCSA Response
The FMCSA is committed to the expeditious resolution of enforcement
proceedings, and continues to believe that allowing unilateral
termination of such proceedings without an admission of liability
conflicts with important Agency policies and statutory mandates
designed to hold carriers accountable for regulatory violations when
calculating penalties in potential future enforcement cases. This is
particularly important in the context of maximum civil penalty cases
subject to section 222 of MCSIA. The Agency's policy statements
regarding implementation of section 222 have stated that in order for
maximum penalties to be assessed under that section based on previously
closed enforcement cases, the violations in those cases must have been
adjudicated or admitted.\1\
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\1\ See 69 FR 77828, 77829, Dec. 24, 2004; 74 FR 14184, 14185,
Mar. 30, 2009.
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Thus, allowing a respondent to terminate a proceeding without
either an adjudication or admission would permit a carrier with
abundant financial resources to repeatedly violate the regulations
without running the risk of being penalized as a repeat offender,
either for purposes of applying section 222 of MCSIA or calculating the
appropriate penalty under 49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(D), which requires the
Agency to consider, among other things, the respondent's history of
prior offenses. This not only impedes the Agency's ability to implement
important statutory mandates, but also gives an unfair advantage to
those carriers with greater financial resources, who may be tempted to
treat civil penalties as merely a cost of doing business.
In 2011, the year following the Homax decision, the number of cases
resolved through payment of the penalty in full increased more than 85%
over the previous year.\2\ In contrast, carriers have resisted
admissions of liability by making full payment of the civil penalty
with written objection in only a handful of cases. Consequently, we do
not anticipate a significant increase in the number of contested cases
coming before the Agency as a result of the modifications to Sec.
386.18 and believe that ATA's and AMSA's concerns about diversion of
agency resources from high-risk carriers are unwarranted. Even if these
modifications result in a small increase in the Agency's enforcement
case backlog, enhancing motor carrier safety by holding repeat
offenders accountable is more important than maintaining a potentially
slightly reduced docket of administrative adjudications.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Enforcement data show that 3,237 civil penalty cases were
resolved by payment in full without a settlement agreement in 2011,
compared to 1,741 such cases in 2010. Approximately 400 more Notices
of Claim were issued in 2011 than in 2010.
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The Agency disagrees with AMSA that the proposal adopts a ``bit of
a guilty-until-proven innocent approach * * *.'' Innocent carriers will
continue to have the opportunity to contest the allegations in the NOC
in accordance with the procedures established in the Agency's Rules of
Practice. The FMCSA enforcement program and counsel will continue to
have the burden of proving any contested allegations. Although in some
circumstances a motor carrier may decide it is less expensive to settle
a case than to contest a NOC, that is a business decision, and the
carrier's desire to avoid future consequences of the settlement should
not take precedence over the need to protect the public against
potentially unsafe carriers and to comply with statutory mandates.
In response to ATA's request that FMCSA establish clear and
reasonable policies governing the circumstances under which the Agency
will settle enforcement claims without requiring an admission of guilt,
FMCSA may establish internal policies that will identify appropriate
cases that may be settled without including an admission of liability
in the Settlement Agreement.
B. Comments to Section 386.73 Carrier Intent
Comment
Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety (Advocates) disagrees with
proposed Sec. 386.73(c)(1), which requires FMCSA to consider whether
the new or affiliated entity was created for the purpose of evading
statutory, regulatory, or other legal requirements. Advocates propose
that FMCSA consider only the results of the carrier's conduct without
regard to the carrier's intent or motivation behind the conduct.
Advocates believe that requiring consideration of motivation and intent
could unreasonably burden the Agency's evaluation of the factors in
Sec. 386.73(c) because proving intent is difficult and the same
activity can be ambiguous if intent must be considered. Advocates
suggests, therefore, that the agency eliminate the wording ``for the
purpose of'' from the language proposed for Sec. 386.73(c)(1), and
replace it with the phrase ``and has resulted in the evasion of'' in
referencing the creation of an affiliate that was involved in evading
the law.
ATA, on the other hand, supports FMCSA's inclusion of a motor
carrier's
[[Page 24867]]
intent or motivation as a factor for FMCSA to consider when determining
whether a motor carrier attempted to avoid a statutory or regulatory
requirement. ATA requests, however, that FMCSA weight the factors
listed in Sec. 386.73(c), with the first factor concerning the motor
carrier's intent being weighted the heaviest.
FMCSA Response
A motor carrier's intent behind a particular course of conduct
should be relevant if it shows an attempt to avoid compliance with
applicable regulations or the consequences of past violations. A motor
carrier would not, however, be able to avoid liability merely by
asserting it had some legitimate business purpose for the corporate
transaction or affiliate structure. Under the final rule, FMCSA will
evaluate the motor carrier's stated purpose in light of all the
available evidence and by considering each of the 13 factors identified
in Sec. 386.73(c). If the totality of the available information
demonstrates that the carrier's stated business purpose is consistent
with the evidence, then the motor carrier would not be subject to an
out-of-service order and/or record consolidation order. Conversely, if
the totality of the available information demonstrates that the
carrier's stated purpose is inconsistent with the evidence, then the
motor carrier would be subject to an out-of-service order and/or record
consolidation order.
FMCSA does not take lightly its authority to place a motor
carrier's operations out of service, and the Agency recognizes that
such orders pose a significant penalty. Accordingly, FMCSA intends to
apply Sec. 386.73 to those motor carriers that engage in egregious
instances of noncompliance and evasion. Advocates' proposed
modification (removing consideration of intent) is contrary to the
intent of the rule, that is, to ensure that carriers that form a new
company to purposely evade regulation are identified and put out of
service. FMCSA is authorized to establish such a standard but declines
to exert its regulatory authority in this manner. ATA's proposed
modification (weighting the factors, with intent being weighted the
heaviest) could result in a rigid application of the rule and require
FMCSA to disregard relevant evidence that a motor carrier attempted to
avoid a statutory or regulatory requirement. For these reasons, FMCSA
declines to modify the Sec. 386.73 as proposed by either Advocates or
ATA.
Comment
IME expressed concerns over how the factors listed in Sec.
386.73(c) and (d) will be applied. IME noted that some of its members
operate multiple fleets that have common ownership, but are considered
to be separate entities. IME further notes that these motor carriers
may engage in one or even all of the activities described in Sec.
386.73(c)(3) through (13). IME requests that FMCSA explain the
circumstances under which the factors contained in Sec. 386.73(c) and
(d) will be applied.
FMCSA Response
A motor carrier would not be subject to an out-of-service order
under Sec. 386.73 unless the motor carrier created or attempted to
create a new identity or affiliate relationship for the purpose of
avoiding a statutory or regulatory requirement or FMCSA enforcement
action. Motor carriers who change their operational model for a
legitimate business purpose and not to avoid FMCSA regulation or
enforcement would not be affected by this rule. Section 386.73(c)
describes the factors FMCSA will evaluate to determine whether a motor
carrier created or attempted to create a new identity or affiliate
relationship to avoid FMCSA regulation or enforcement. Section
386.73(d) describes the potential sources of information FMCSA may use
to make its determination. FMCSA's determination will be based on
consideration of all relevant information, and one factor or potential
source of evidence is not necessarily more significant than another.
Where the greater weight of the evidence shows that a motor carrier
created a new identity or shifted its operations to another, commonly
owned and controlled, entity to avoid FMCSA authority or negative
safety performance history, the motor carrier will be placed out of
service and/or have its records consolidated with the records of the
preexisting or affiliated entity.
FMCSA modified Sec. 386.73(c)(13), now 386.73(c)(2), to clarify
that the safety performance history FMCSA will consider to determine
whether a motor carrier created a new identity or affiliate
relationship to avoid FMCSA enforcement is the past safety performance
history of the original motor carrier. FMCSA also modified Sec.
386.73(d) to clarify that FMCSA will consider all information relevant
to the motor carrier operations and the factors identified in Sec.
386.73(c). The original rule text provided that FMCSA would consider
information related to the motor carrier's operations, but did not
reference information that might be relevant to the factors in Sec.
386.73(c). FMCSA corrected this by clarifying that FMCSA will consider
all information relevant to the motor carrier's operations and the
factors in Sec. 386.73(c).
Comment
The Transportation Intermediaries Association (TIA) supports
FMCSA's efforts to target motor carriers who attempt to avoid statutory
or regulatory requirements. TIA suggests, however, that FMCSA implement
a timely administrative review process and place carriers in a
probation status pending the administrative review.
FMCSA Response
Section 386.73(g) describes the administrative review procedures
available to motor carriers served with an operations-out-of service or
record consolidation order. In reviewing TIA's comment, FMCSA
determined that administrative review procedure should be clarified by
adding language to explain when an out-of-service order or record
consolidation order is effective. FMCSA modified the rule accordingly.
The administrative review procedure is explained below.
Under Sec. 386.73(g), an order is effective 21 days after it is
served, unless the motor carrier requests administrative review within
15 days of service of the order. If the motor carrier fails to request
administrative review, or requests administrative review after the 15-
day period, the motor carrier must cease operations and its records may
be consolidated. If the motor carrier requests administrative review
within 15 days, however, the order is automatically stayed and the
motor carrier may continue operating and its records will not be
consolidated during the period of administrative review. The Agency
Official may file a motion with the Assistant Administrator to vacate
the automatic stay. The motion must be served on the motor carrier who
may respond in opposition the motion within 15 days. The Assistant
Administrator may grant the motion only if he or she finds good cause
to vacate the stay.
The administrative review procedures ensure motor carriers receive
notice of FMCSA's intended action and have a fair opportunity to be
heard. The procedures also ensure that FMCSA can efficiently and
expeditiously address motor carriers that attempt to avoid FMCSA
authority or enforcement action. Accordingly, FMCSA declines to
establish a ``probation'' status for motor carriers who are permitted
to operate
[[Page 24868]]
during the administrative review process.
Operating Authority
Comment
TIA recommends that every licensed company (broker, forwarder, and
carrier) be required to re-register its operating authority annually
and that failure to comply with this requirement should result in
cancellation of the company's authority. The commenter asserts that
Congress is considering legislation supported by TIA, ATA, and OOIDA
that would tie continuation of authority to an existing requirement,
either the Unified Carrier Registration Agreement or the Unified
Registration System (URS).
FMCSA Response
TIA's suggested annual registration recommendation is beyond the
scope of this rulemaking, which does not involve the DOT registration
process. The Agency has a rulemaking proceeding in progress regarding
the DOT registration process, under Docket No. FMCSA-97-2349, which
proposes to replace certain existing DOT registration systems with a
new URS. TIA submitted comments in that proceeding on December 20,
2011, in which it made similar recommendations. TIA's comments on this
issue, therefore, will be addressed in the URS rulemaking proceeding.
Statutory Authority
Comment
ATA recommends that the Agency wait for more specific statutory
authority before finalizing Sec. 386.73.
FMCSA Response
FMCSA does not require additional statutory authority to establish
this new section. As stated in the ``Legal Basis for the Rulemaking''
section of the rule, FMCSA has statutory authority to prescribe
regulations ensuring that CMVs are operated safely and to determine
whether an owner or operator is fit to operate a CMV safely. Section
386.73 of the Agency's Rules of Practice is issued under that
rulemaking authority and lays out procedures for placing out of service
and/or consolidating the safety records of carriers that avoid FMCSA's
regulations.
Comment
Advocates suggests that FMCSA impose criminal sanctions on
reincarnated motor carriers engaging in fraud and evading regulation as
part of this regulatory initiative.
FMCSA Response
Advocates note that criminal sanctions against reincarnated
carriers cannot be sought as part of an administrative proceeding.
Because Part 386 applies only to administrative proceedings, this
comment is outside the scope of this rulemaking. In any event, FMCSA
does not currently have the statutory authority to independently seek
criminal sanctions, but will continue to cooperate with both State and
Federal law enforcement partners in seeking criminal penalties against
unsafe carriers where appropriate.
Out of Scope
Comment
OOIDA requested that a subsection (6) be added to the proposed
Sec. 386.73(b), which describes when record consolidation is
appropriate, to require consolidation when new or affiliated entities
are registered primarily to ``[a]void paying liabilities owed to
creditors, including but not limited to the parties actually providing
transportation services.'' OOIDA requested that FMCSA add this
subsection to protect its members from carriers that reincarnate to
escape financial obligations to drivers. This change is outside the
scope of the current rulemaking, which is focused on safety rather than
financial regulation. Our current legal authority does not provide for
determinations of the legal rights between third parties in payment
disputes.
TIA suggests that FMCSA should apply Sec. 386.73 to ``broker trust
fund providers'' as well as motor carriers, intermodal equipment
providers, brokers and freight forwarders. This comment is outside the
scope of the current rulemaking, which is focused on safety rather than
financial regulation. Moreover, FMCSA has no jurisdiction over broker
trust fund providers.
IME suggests that FMCSA focus its efforts on correcting problems in
existing programs, rather than proceeding with this rule. IME suggests
FMCSA address its petition regarding the Hazardous Materials Safety
Permit Program (HMSP), which it states is directly affected by the
proposed rulemaking. This comment is outside the scope of the current
rulemaking. But FMCSA is planning to address the HMSP in a future
rulemaking, as stated in FMCSA's response to IME's petition in that
matter.
OOIDA commented that FMCSA's DataQ dispute resolution process does
not afford due process to carriers and drivers. DataQ's is the process
by which carriers may challenge the accuracy of enforcement data
uploaded into the Agency's information systems (e.g., does the report
accurately identify the carrier, driver and vehicle and date and
location of the intervention). OOIDA's comments regarding the DataQ
dispute resolution process are outside the scope of this section of the
rulemaking, which is limited to the notice of claim resolution process.
C. Small Business Impact
Comment
North American Transportation Consultants, Inc. (NATC) believes the
analysis presented in the NPRM concerning the impact that all aspects
of the rule would have on small businesses did not take into
consideration the difficulties small businesses encounter in being able
to afford legal counsel to provide protection of their rights.
FMCSA Response
First, as mentioned in the Regulatory Flexibility Act section, only
six carriers paid a civil penalty with a written objection from 2008
thru 2011, indicating a minimal economic impact that would arise from
changes to Sec. 386.18 (a) and (c). Second, the regulatory changes
adopted here do not significantly alter the position of small
businesses. This is a procedural rule that would not affect entities
already in compliance, or those that are out of compliance but do not
attempt to avoid the consequences of non-compliance by reincarnating as
a new or affiliated entity.
Although small businesses are entitled to retain legal
representation during enforcement proceedings initiated under 49 CFR
part 386, in most cases they choose to represent themselves. The
changes do not increase the burden on motor carriers with respect to
their options concerning legal representation.
V. Discussion of Rule
This rule amends regulations in 49 CFR part 386 pertaining to
administrative practices and procedures and civil penalties. FMCSA
adopts the language from the NPRM into the final rule with additional
clarifying language to Sec. 386.73(c) and (d).
FMCSA added language to Sec. 386.73 (g)(8) to clarify the
administrative review procedure regarding the Assistant Administrator's
authority to vacate the automatic stay of any order issued under Sec.
386.73.
[[Page 24869]]
VI. Regulatory Analyses
Executive Order (E.O.) 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review) and DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures
FMCSA has determined that this rule is not a significant regulatory
action within the meaning of Executive Order (E.O.) 12866, as
supplemented by E.O. 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011), or within
the meaning of DOT regulatory policies and procedures. The estimated
cost of the rule is not expected to exceed the $100 million annual
threshold for economic significance; any costs associated with the rule
are expected to be minimal. Moreover, the Agency does not expect the
rule to generate substantial congressional or public interest. The rule
would not impose new requirements upon carriers and thus should result
in minimal or no economic burdens. The revisions clarify existing rules
and implement procedures that would not require a change in the
business practices of already compliant motor carriers.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (5 U.S.C. 601-612) requires
Federal agencies to consider the effects of the regulatory action on
small business and other small entities and to minimize any significant
economic impact. The term ``small entities'' includes small businesses
and not-for-profit organizations that are independently owned and
operated and are not dominant in their fields, and governmental
jurisdictions with populations of less than 50,000.\3\ Accordingly, the
DOT policy titled, ``Proper Consideration of Small Entities in Agency
Rulemaking'' requires an analysis of the impact of all regulations on
small entities and mandates that agencies strive to lessen any adverse
effects on these businesses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) see
National Archives at https://www.archives.gov/federal-register/laws/regulatory-flexibility/601.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, as amended by the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-121,
110 Stat. 857), this rule is not expected to have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. The rule's
clarification of how payment of claims affects admissions of liability
reflects current FMCSA policy, as discussed in the background section.
Even before the current policy was enunciated through administrative
adjudication, this portion of the rule did not have a significant
impact. From 2008 through 2011, the Agency adjudicated only six cases
in which the respondent motor carrier paid a civil penalty with written
objection, which indicates the minimal impact the rule is expected to
have.
FMCSA estimates that fewer than 50 carriers annually will be
affected and placed out of service by the rule as it pertains to
reincarnated or affiliated carriers, from data provided by the U.S.
General Accountability Office (GAO) Engagement Report (June 2008-July
2011).\4\ Therefore, this rule would not disproportionately impact
small entities. Consequently, I certify that a regulatory flexibility
analysis is not necessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ FMCSA Eastern Service Center/Division Field Enforcement
Action--Reincarnated Carrier Cases--GAO Engagement 541079 July 1,
2011.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assistance for Small Entities
In accordance with section 213(a) of the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, FMCSA wants to assist small entities
in understanding this rule so that they can better evaluate its effects
on them. If the rule affects your small business, organization, or
governmental jurisdiction and you have questions concerning its
provisions or options for compliance, please consult the FMCSA point of
contact, Sabrina Redd, listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
section of this rule.
Small businesses may send comments on the actions of Federal
employees who enforce or otherwise determine compliance with Federal
regulations to the Small Business Administration's Small Business and
Agriculture Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman and the Regional Small
Business Regulatory Fairness Boards. The Ombudsman evaluates these
actions annually and rates each agency's responsiveness to small
business. If you wish to comment on actions by employees of FMCSA, call
1-888-REG-FAIR (1-888-734-3247). FMCSA will not retaliate against small
entities that question or complain about this rule or any policy or
action of the Agency.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
This rule will not impose an unfunded Federal mandate, as defined
by the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1532 et seq.),
that would result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $141.3
million (which is the value of $100 million in 2010 after adjusting for
inflation) or more in any 1 year.
E.O. 13132 (Federalism)
A rule has implications for Federalism under Section 1(a) of E.O.
13132 if it has ``substantial direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the national government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels of
government.'' FMCSA has determined that this rule will not have
substantial direct effects on States, nor would it limit the
policymaking discretion of States. Nothing in this document preempts
any State law or regulation.
Indian Tribal Governments
This rule does not have tribal implications under E.O. 13175,
Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments, because
it does not have a substantial direct effect on one or more Indian
tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and Indian
tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities between
the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
Federal agencies must obtain approval from the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) for each collection of information they conduct, sponsor,
or require through regulations. FMCSA has determined that there is no
new information collection requirement associated with this rule.
National Environmental Policy Act
FMCSA analyzed this rule for the purpose of the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and
determined this action is categorically excluded from further analysis
and documentation in an environmental assessment or environmental
impact statement under FMCSA Order 5610.1 (69 FR 9680, March 1, 2004),
Appendix 2, paragraphs (6)(u)(1), (6)(u)(2), and (6)(y)(7). The
Categorical Exclusion (CE) in paragraph (6)(u)(1) addresses rules
concerning compliance with regulations; the CE in paragraph (6)(u)(2)
addresses regulations concerning civil penalties; and the CE in
paragraph (6)(y)(7) addresses rules for record keeping. The various
changes in this rule are covered by one or a combination of these three
CEs. Therefore, this action does not have any effect on the quality of
the environment. The Categorical Exclusion determination is available
for inspection or copying in the Regulations.gov Web site listed under
ADDRESSES.
[[Page 24870]]
FMCSA also analyzed this rule under the Clean Air Act, as amended
(CAA), section 176(c) (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.), and implementing
regulations promulgated by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Approval of this action is exempt from the CAA's general conformity
requirement since it does not affect direct or indirect emissions of
criteria pollutants.
E.O. 13211 (Energy Effects)
FMCSA analyzed this rule under E.O. 13211, Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or
Use. The Agency has determined that it is not a ``significant energy
action'' under that order because it is not a ``significant regulatory
action'' under E.O. 12866 and is not likely to have a significant
adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of energy.
Therefore, no Statement of Energy Effects is required.
E.O. 13045 (Protection of Children)
E.O. 13045, Protection of Children from Environmental Health Risks
and Safety Risks (62 FR 19885, Apr. 23, 1997), requires agencies
issuing ``economically significant'' rules, if the regulation also
concerns an environmental health or safety risk that an agency has
reason to believe may disproportionately affect children, to include an
evaluation of the regulation's environmental health and safety effects
on children. As discussed previously, this rule is not economically
significant. Therefore, no analysis of the impacts on children is
required. In any event, we do not anticipate that this regulatory
action could in any respect present an environmental or safety risk
that could disproportionately affect children.
E.O. 12988 (Civil Justice Reform)
This action meets applicable standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2)
of E.O. 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize litigation, eliminate
ambiguity, and reduce burden.
E.O. 12630 (Taking of Private Property)
This rule would not effect a taking of private property or
otherwise have taking implications under E.O. 12630, Governmental
Actions and Interference with Constitutionally Protected Property
Rights.
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (Technical Standards)
The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (15 U.S.C. 272
note) directs agencies to use voluntary consensus standards in their
regulatory activities unless the agency provides Congress, through OMB,
with an explanation of why using these standards would be inconsistent
with applicable law or otherwise impractical. Voluntary consensus
standards are technical standards (e.g., specifications of materials,
performance, design, or operation; test methods; sampling procedures;
and related management systems practices) that are developed or adopted
by voluntary consensus standards bodies.
FMCSA is not aware of any technical standards used to address
Agency rules of practice by motor carriers, intermodal equipment
providers, brokers, freight forwarders, and handlers of hazardous
materials and therefore, did not consider any such standards.
Privacy Impact Assessment
FMCSA conducted a privacy impact assessment of this rule as
required by section 522(a)(5) of the FY 2005 Omnibus Appropriations
Act, Public Law 108-447, 118 Stat. 3268 (Dec. 8, 2004) [set out as a
note to 5 U.S.C. 552a]. The assessment considers any impacts of the
rule on the privacy of information in an identifiable form and related
matters. FMCSA has determined this rule would have no privacy impacts.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 386
Administrative practice and procedure, Brokers, Freight forwarders,
Hazardous materials transportation, Highway safety, Motor carriers,
Motor vehicle safety penalties.
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, FMCSA amends 49 CFR part
386 as follows:
PART 386--RULES OF PRACTICE FOR MOTOR CARRIER, INTERMODAL EQUIPMENT
PROVIDER, BROKER, FREIGHT FORWARDER, AND HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
PROCEEDINGS
0
1. The authority citation for part 386 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 113, chapters 5, 51, 59, 131-141, 145-149,
311, 313, and 315; Sec. 204, Pub. L. 104-88, 109 Stat. 803, 941 (49
U.S.C. 701 note); Sec. 217, Pub. L. 105-159, 113 Stat. 1748, 1767;
Sec. 206, Pub. L. 106-159, 113 Stat. 1763; subtitle B, title IV of
Pub. L. 109-59; and 49 CFR 1.45 and 1.73.
0
2. Amend Sec. 386.18 by revising paragraphs (a) and (c) to read as
follows:
Sec. 386.18 Payment of the claim.
(a) Payment of the full amount claimed may be made at any time
before issuance of a Final Agency Order and will constitute an
admission of liability by the respondent of all facts alleged in the
Notice of Claim, unless the parties agree in writing that payment shall
not be treated as an admission. After the issuance of a Final Agency
Order, claims are subject to interest, penalties, and administrative
charges, in accordance with 31 U.S.C. 3717; 49 CFR part 89; and 31 CFR
901.9.
* * * * *
(c) Unless otherwise agreed in writing by the parties, payment of
the full amount in response to the Notice of Claim constitutes an
admission of liability by the respondent of all facts alleged in the
Notice of Claim. Payment waives respondent's opportunity to further
contest the claim and will result in the Notice of Claim becoming the
Final Agency Order.
0
3. Add Sec. 386.73 to subpart F to read as follows:
Sec. 386.73 Operations out of service and record consolidation
proceedings (reincarnated carriers).
(a) Out-of-service order. An FMCSA Field Administrator or the
Director of FMCSA's Office of Enforcement and Compliance (Director) may
issue an out-of-service order to prohibit a motor carrier, intermodal
equipment provider, broker, or freight forwarder from conducting
operations subject to FMCSA jurisdiction upon a determination by the
Field Administrator or Director that the motor carrier, intermodal
equipment provider, broker, or freight forwarder or an officer,
employee, agent, or authorized representative of such an entity,
operated or attempted to operate a motor carrier, intermodal equipment
provider, broker, or freight forwarder under a new identity or as an
affiliated entity to:
(1) Avoid complying with an FMCSA order;
(2) Avoid complying with a statutory or regulatory requirement;
(3) Avoid paying a civil penalty;
(4) Avoid responding to an enforcement action; or
(5) Avoid being linked with a negative compliance history.
(b) Record consolidation order. In addition to, or in lieu of, an
out-of-service order issued under this section, the Field Administrator
or Director may issue an order consolidating the records maintained by
FMCSA concerning the current motor carrier, intermodal equipment
provider, broker, and freight forwarder and its affiliated motor
carrier, intermodal equipment provider, broker, or freight forwarder or
its previous incarnation, for all purposes, upon a determination that
the motor carrier, intermodal equipment provider, broker, and freight
forwarder or officer,
[[Page 24871]]
employee, agent, or authorized representative of the same, operated or
attempted to operate a motor carrier, intermodal equipment provider,
broker, or freight forwarder under a new identity or as an affiliated
entity to:
(1) Avoid complying with an FMCSA order;
(2) Avoid complying with a statutory or regulatory requirement;
(3) Avoid paying a civil penalty;
(4) Avoid responding to an enforcement action; or
(5) Avoid being linked with a negative compliance history.
(c) Standard. The Field Administrator or Director may determine
that a motor carrier, intermodal equipment provider, broker, or freight
forwarder is reincarnated if there is substantial continuity between
the entities such that one is merely a continuation of the other. The
Field Administrator or Director may determine that a motor carrier,
intermodal equipment provider, broker, or freight forwarder is an
affiliate if the business operations are under common ownership and/or
common control. In making this determination, the Field Administrator
or Director may consider, among other things, the following factors:
(1) Whether the new or affiliated entity was created for the
purpose of evading statutory or regulatory requirements, an FMCSA
order, enforcement action, or negative compliance history. In weighing
this factor, the Field Administrator or Director may consider the
stated business purpose for the creation of the new or affiliated
entity.
(2) The previous entity's safety performance history, including,
among other things, safety violations and enforcement actions of the
Secretary, if any;
(3) Consideration exchanged for assets purchased or transferred;
(4) Dates of company creation and dissolution or cessation of
operations;
(5) Commonality of ownership between the current and former company
or between current companies;
(6) Commonality of officers and management personnel;
(7) Identity of physical or mailing addresses, telephone, fax
numbers, or email addresses;
(8) Identity of motor vehicle equipment;
(9) Continuity of liability insurance policies or commonality of
coverage under such policies;
(10) Commonality of drivers and other employees;
(11) Continuation of carrier facilities and other physical assets;
(12) Continuity or commonality of nature and scope of operations,
including customers for whom transportation is provided;
(13) Advertising, corporate name, or other acts through which the
company holds itself out to the public;
(d) Evaluating factors. The Field Administrator or Director may
examine, among other things, the company management structures,
financial records, corporate filing records, asset purchase or transfer
and title history, employee records, insurance records, and any other
information related to the general operations of the entities involved
and factors in paragraph (c) of this section.
(e) Effective dates. An order issued under this section becomes the
Final Agency Order and is effective on the 21st day after it is served
unless a request for administrative review is served and filed as set
forth in paragraph (g) of this section. Any motor carrier, intermodal
equipment provider, broker, or freight forwarder that fails to comply
with any prohibition or requirement set forth in an order issued under
this section is subject to the applicable penalty provisions for each
instance of noncompliance.
(f) Commencement of proceedings. The Field Administrator or
Director may commence proceedings under this section by issuing an
order that:
(1) Provides notice of the factual and legal basis of the order;
(2) In the case of an out-of-service order, identifies the
operations prohibited by the order;
(3) In the case of an order that consolidates records maintained by
FMCSA, identifies the previous entity and current or affiliated motor
carriers, intermodal equipment providers, brokers, or freight
forwarders whose records will be consolidated;
(4) Provides notice that the order is effective upon the 21st day
after service;
(5) Provides notice of the right to petition for administrative
review of the order and that a timely petition will stay the effective
date of the order unless the Assistant Administrator orders otherwise
for good cause; and
(6) Provides notice that failure to timely request administrative
review of the order constitutes waiver of the right to contest the
order and will result in the order becoming a Final Agency Order 21
days after it is served.
(g) Administrative review. A motor carrier, intermodal equipment
provider, broker, or freight forwarder issued an order under this
section may petition for administrative review of the order. A petition
for administrative review is limited to contesting factual or
procedural errors in the issuance of the order under review and may not
be submitted to demonstrate corrective action. A petition for
administrative review that does not identify factual or procedural
errors in the issuance of the order under review will be dismissed.
Petitioners seeking to demonstrate corrective action may do so by
submitting a Petition for Rescission under paragraph (h) of this
section.
(1) A petition for administrative review must be in writing and
served on the Assistant Administrator, Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., Washington, DC 20590-0001,
Attention: Adjudications Counsel, or by electronic mail to
FMCSA.Adjudication@dot.gov. A copy of the petition for administrative
review must also be served on the Field Administrator or Director who
issued the order, at the physical address or electronic mail account
identified in the order.
(2) A petition for administrative review must be served within 15
days of the date the Field Administrator or Director served the order
issued under this section. Failure to timely request administrative
review waives the right to administrative review and constitutes an
admission of the facts alleged in the order.
(3) A petition for administrative review must include:
(i) A copy of the order in dispute; and
(ii) A statement of all factual and procedural issues in dispute.
(4) If a petition for administrative review is timely served and
filed, the petitioner may supplement the petition by serving
documentary evidence and/or written argument that supports its position
regarding the procedural or factual issues in dispute no later than 30
days from the date the disputed order was served. The supplementary
documentary evidence or written argument may not expand the issues on
review and need not address every issue identified in the petition.
Failure to timely serve supplementary documentary evidence and/or
written argument constitutes a waiver of the right to do so.
(5) The Field Administrator or Director must serve written argument
and supporting documentary evidence, if any, in defense of the disputed
order no later than 15 days following the period in which petitioner
may serve supplemental documentary evidence and/or written argument in
support of the petition for administrative review.
(6) The Assistant Administrator may ask the parties to submit
additional information or attend a conference to facilitate
administrative review.
(7) The Assistant Administrator will issue a written decision on
the request
[[Page 24872]]
for administrative review within 30 days of the close of the time
period for the Field Administrator or the Director to serve written
argument and supporting documentary evidence in defense of the order,
or the actual filing of such written argument and documentary evidence,
whichever is earlier.
(8) If a petition for administrative review is timely served in
accordance with this subsection, the disputed order is stayed, pending
the Assistant Administrator's review. The Assistant Administrator may
enter an order vacating the automatic stay in accordance with the
following procedures:
(i) The Agency Official may file a motion to vacate the automatic
stay demonstrating good cause why the order should not be stayed. The
Agency Official's motion must be in writing, state the factual and
legal basis for the motion, be accompanied by affidavits or other
evidence relied on, and be served on the petitioner and Assistant
Administrator.
(ii) The petitioner may file an answer in opposition, accompanied
by affidavits or other evidence relied on. The answer must be served
within 10 days of service of the motion.
(iii) The Assistant Administrator will issue a decision on the
motion to vacate the automatic stay within 10 days of the close of the
time period for serving the answer to the motion. The 30-day period for
review of the petition for administrative review in paragraph (g)(5) of
this section is tolled from the time the Agency Official's motion to
lift a stay is served until the Assistant Administrator issues a
decision on the motion.
(9) The Assistant Administrator's decision on a petition for
administrative review of an order issued under this section constitutes
the Final Agency Order.
(h) Petition for rescission. A motor carrier, intermodal equipment
provider, broker, or freight forwarder may petition to rescind an order
issued under this section if action has been taken to correct the
deficiencies that resulted in the order.
(1) A petition for rescission must be made in writing to the Field
Administrator or Director who issued the order.
(2) A petition for rescission must include a copy of the order
requested to be rescinded, a factual statement identifying all
corrective action taken, and copies of supporting documentation.
(3) Upon request and for good cause shown, the Field Administrator
or Director may grant the petitioner additional time, not to exceed 45
days, to complete corrective action initiated at the time the petition
for rescission was filed.
(4) The Field Administrator or Director will issue a written
decision on the petition for rescission within 60 days of service of
the petition. The written decision will include the factual and legal
basis for the determination.
(5) If the Field Administrator or Director grants the request for
rescission, the written decision is the Final Agency Order.
(6) If the Field Administrator or Director denies the request for
rescission, the petitioner may file a petition for administrative
review of the denial with the Assistant Administrator, Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Administration, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., Washington, DC
20590-0001, Attention: Adjudication Counsel or by electronic mail to
FMCSA.Adjudication@dot.gov. The petition for administrative review of
the denial must be served and filed within 15 days of the service of
the decision denying the request for recession. The petition for
administrative review must identify the disputed factual or procedural
issues with respect to the denial of the petition for rescission. The
petition may not, however, challenge the underlying basis of the order
for which rescission was sought.
(7) The Assistant Administrator will issue a written decision on
the petition for administrative review of the denial of the petition
for rescission within 60 days. The Assistant Administrator's decision
constitutes the Final Agency Order.
(i) Other orders unaffected. If a motor carrier, intermodal
equipment provider, broker, or freight forwarder subject to an order
issued under this section is or becomes subject to any other order,
prohibition, or requirement of the FMCSA, an order issued under this
section is in addition to, and does not amend or supersede such other
order, prohibition, or requirement. A motor carrier, intermodal
equipment provider, broker, or freight forwarder subject to an order
issued under this section remains subject to the suspension and
revocation provisions of 49 U.S.C. 13905 for violations of regulations
governing their operations.
(j) Inapplicability of subparts. Subparts B, C, D, and E of this
part, except Sec. 386.67, do not apply to this section.
0
4. Amend Appendix A to part 386, section IV, by redesignating paragraph
h. as paragraph i. and adding a new paragraph h. to read as follows:
Appendix A to Part 386--Penalty Schedule; Violations of Notices and
Orders
* * * * *
IV. * * *
h. Violation -- Operating in violation of an order issued under
Sec. 386.73. Penalty--Up to $16,000 per day the operation continues
after the effective date and time of the out-of-service order.
* * * * *
Issued on: April 18, 2012.
Anne S. Ferro,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2012-10162 Filed 4-25-12; 8:45 am]
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