30-Day Notice of Request for Approval: Statutory Authority To Preserve Rail Service, 47702-47704 [2012-19555]
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47702
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2012 / Notices
See, e.g. 49 CFR 571.206 S4.2.1.1(a),
S4.2.1.2(a) and S4.2.1.3(a) (discussing
testing when the door latch is in the
fully latched position).
Decision: In consideration of the
foregoing, NHTSA has decided that the
petitioner has not met its burden of
persuasion that the noncompliance
described is inconsequential to motor
vehicle safety. Accordingly,
Utilimaster’s petition is hereby denied,
and the petitioner must notify owners,
purchasers and dealers pursuant to 49
U.S.C. 30118 and provide a remedy in
accordance with 49 U.S.C. 30120.
If Utilimaster believes that vehicles it
will produce in the future should not be
subject to any currently applicable
FMVSS No. 206 requirements,
Utilimaster may consider petitioning the
Agency for rulemaking. The appropriate
type of petition to request a change in
a rule is one filed under 49 CFR part 552
Petitions for Rulemaking, Defect, and
Non-Compliance Orders.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30118, 30120:
delegations of authority at CFR 1.50 and
501.8.
Issued on: August 2, 2012.
Nancy Lummen Lewis,
Associate Administrator for Enforcement.
[FR Doc. 2012–19581 Filed 8–8–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
30-Day Notice of Request for Approval:
Statutory Authority To Preserve Rail
Service
AGENCY:
Surface Transportation Board,
DOT.
Notice and request for
comments.
ACTION:
As required by the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501–
3519 (PRA), the Surface Transportation
Board (STB or Board) gives notice of its
intent to seek from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
approval of the information collections
required under 49 U.S.C. 10904–05 and
10907, and 16 U.S.C. 1247(d). Under
these statutory provisions, the Board
administers programs designed to
preserve railroad service or rail rightsof-way. When a line is proposed for
abandonment, affected shippers,
communities, or other interested
persons may seek to preserve rail
service by filing with the Board: an offer
of financial assistance (OFA) to
subsidize or purchase a rail line for
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SUMMARY:
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which a railroad is seeking
abandonment (49 U.S.C. 10904),
including a request for the Board to set
terms and conditions of the financial
assistance; a request for a public use
condition (section 10905); or a trail-use
request (16 U.S.C. 1247(d)). Similarly,
when a line is placed on a system
diagram map identifying it as an
anticipated or potential candidate for
abandonment, affected shippers,
communities, or other interested
persons may seek to preserve rail
service by filing with the Board a feeder
line application to purchase the
identified rail line (section 10907).
Additionally, the railroad owning the
rail line subject to abandonment must,
in some circumstances, provide
information to the applicant or offeror.
The Board previously published a
notice about this collection in the
Federal Register on February 10, 2012,
at 77 FR 7236–37 (60-day notice). That
notice allowed for a 60-day public
review and comment period. No
comments were received. The
information collection for which
approval is sought is described in detail
below. Comments may now be
submitted to OMB concerning: (1) The
accuracy of the Board’s burden
estimates; (2) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information collected; (3) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents,
including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology, when
appropriate; and (4) whether this
collection of information is necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the Board, including
whether the collection has practical
utility.
Description of Collection
Title: Statutory Authority to Preserve
Rail Service.
OMB Control Number: 2140–00##.
STB Form Number: None.
Type of Review: Existing collection in
use without an OMB control number.
Respondents: Affected shippers,
communities, or other interested
persons seeking to preserve rail service
over rail lines that are proposed or
identified for abandonment, and
railroads that are required to provide
information to the offeror or applicant.
Number of Respondents: 40
(including informational filings required
of railroads).1
1 In Fiscal Year (FY) 2011, there were 56 filings
under 49 U.S.C. 10904–07 and the Trails Act. See
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Frequency. On occasion.
TABLE—NUMBER OF YEARLY
RESPONSES
Type of filing
Number of
filings
Offer of Financial Assistance ...
OFA—Railroad Reply to Request for Information .............
OFA—Request to Set Terms
and Conditions ......................
Request for Public Use Condition ........................................
Feeder Line Application ............
Trail-Use Request .....................
Trail-Use Request Extension 2
3
3
1
9
1
20
19
2 In the 60-day notice, the Board did not
separate trail use requests into initial trail-use
requests and extension requests, but it has
done so in this notice because the initial request has a capped filing fee and the extension request does not. The distinction is necessary to more accurately derive the cost to
the government of this collection and the total
non-hour burden cost, which increases from
$41,980 (in the 60-day notice) to $45,780.
Total Burden Hours (annually
including all respondents): 374 hours
(sum total of estimated hours per
response X number of responses for
each type of filing).
TABLE—ESTIMATED HOURS PER
RESPONSE
Type of filing
Offer of Financial Assistance ...
OFA—Railroad Reply to Request for Information .............
OFA—Request to Set Terms
and Conditions ......................
Request for Public Use Condition ........................................
Feeder Line Application ............
Trail-Use Request .....................
Trail-Use Request Extension ....
Number of
hours per
response
32
10
4
2
70
4
4
Total ‘‘Non-hour Burden’’ Cost (such
as filing fees): $45,780 (sum of estimated
‘‘non-hour burden’’ cost per response X
number of responses for each statutory
section and type of filing).
Table—Number of Yearly Responses. In the 60-day
notice, the Board indicated that there were
approximately 60 respondents. Although no
comments were filed, it has come to our attention
that approximately 30% of the filings were
additional filings submitted by railroads or trail
users that had already submitted filings during the
time period. Therefore, the number of respondents
has been revised to approximately 40, which is 30%
less than the number of filings.
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47703
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2012 / Notices
TABLE—ESTIMATED ‘‘NON-HOUR BURDEN’’ COST PER RESPONSE
Type of filing
Filing costs
tkelley on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Offer of Financial Assistance .......................................................................................................
OFA—Railroad Reply to Request for Information .......................................................................
OFA—Request to Set Terms and Conditions .............................................................................
Request for Public Use Condition ...............................................................................................
Feeder Line Application ...............................................................................................................
Trail-Use Request ........................................................................................................................
Trail-Use Request Extension .......................................................................................................
Needs and Uses: Under the Interstate
Commerce Act, as amended by the ICC
Termination Act of 1995, Public Law
No. 104–88, 109 Stat. 803 (1995), and
Section 8(d) of the National Trails
System Act, 16 U.S.C. 1247(d) (Trails
Act), persons seeking to preserve rail
service may file pleadings before the
Board to acquire or subsidize a rail line
for continued service, or to impose a
trail use or public use condition. Under
49 U.S.C. 10904, the filing of an OFA
starts a process of negotiations to define
the financial assistance needed to
purchase or subsidize the rail line
sought for abandonment. Once the OFA
is filed, the offeror may request
additional information from the
railroad, which the railroad must
provide. If the parties cannot agree to
the sale or subsidy, either party also
may file a request for the Board to set
the terms and conditions of the financial
assistance. Under section 10905, a
public use request allows the Board to
impose a 180-day public use condition
on the abandonment of a rail line,
permitting the parties to negotiate a
public use for the rail line. Under
section 10907, a feeder line application
provides the basis for authorizing an
involuntary sale of a rail line. Finally,
under 16 U.S.C. 1247(d), a trail-use
request, if agreed upon by the
abandoning carrier, requires the Board
to condition the abandonment by
issuing a Notice of Interim Trail Use
(NITU) or Certificate of Interim Trail
Use (CITU), permitting the parties to
negotiate an interim trail use/rail
banking agreement for the rail line.
The collection by the Board of these
offers, requests, and applications, and
the railroad’s replies (when required),
enables the Board to meet its statutory
duty to regulate the referenced rail
transactions.
Retention Period: Information in these
collections is maintained by the Board
for 10 years, after which it is transferred
to the National Archives as permanent
records.
Comments on this information
collection should be submitted by
September 10, 2012.
DATES:
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16:38 Aug 08, 2012
Jkt 226001
Written comments should
be identified as ‘‘Paperwork Reduction
Act Comments, Surface Transportation
Board, Statutory Authority to Preserve
Rail Service.’’ These comments should
be directed to the Office of Management
and Budget, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Attention: Patrick
Fuchs, Surface Transportation Board
Desk Officer, by fax at (202) 395–5167;
by mail at OMB, Room 10235, 725 17th
Street NW., Washington, DC 20500; or
by email at
OIRA_SUBMISSION@OMB.EOP.GOV.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Marilyn Levitt, (202) 245–0269. [Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) for the
hearing impaired: (800) 877–8339.]
Relevant STB regulations are referenced
below and may be viewed on the STB’s
Web site under E–Library > Reference:
STB Rules, https://www.stb.dot.gov/stb/
elibrary/ref_stbrules.html.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Respondents seeking authority from the
Board to preserve rail lines must submit
certain information required under the
Board’s related regulations and, in some
circumstances, railroads seeking to
abandon a line must disclose certain
information to the offeror or applicant.
Offer of Financial Assistance. When a
rail line would otherwise be approved
for abandonment (or discontinuance),
any financially responsible person may
seek to acquire the line for continued
rail service (after abandonment has been
approved), or may seek to temporarily
subsidize continued operations by the
incumbent railroad (after abandonment
or discontinuance has been approved),
by filing an OFA under 49 U.S.C. 10904
and 49 CFR 1152.27. An OFA may be
submitted to the Board as soon as the
railroad seeks abandonment (or
discontinuance) authority. Once an OFA
is submitted, the abandoning railroad
must, upon request, promptly provide to
any party considering an OFA and to
the Board an estimate of the annual
subsidy or minimum purchase price; a
report on the physical condition of line;
and data on traffic, revenues, net
liquidation value, and the cost to
rehabilitate to class I (minimum) track
PO 00000
Frm 00115
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
$1,500
0
23,100
0
2,600
250
450
Other costs
$90
30
30
30
200
30
30
Total costs
$1,590
30
23,130
30
2,800
280
480
standards. If the parties are not able to
agree upon the purchase price or
subsidy, then, to move forward, either
party may ask the Board to set the price
or subsidy, which will be binding upon
the parties if the offeror chooses to
accept the terms set by the Board and
proceed with the purchase.
Public Use Request. Any person may
request that the Board prohibit an
abandoning railroad from disposing of
the right-of-way—for up to 180 days—
without first offering the right-of-way
(on reasonable terms) for other suitable
public purposes (such as mass transit,
pipeline, transmission lines, recreation,
etc.). Such requests are governed by 49
U.S.C. 10905 and 49 CFR 1152.28.
Feeder Line Application. When a line
has been identified on a railroad’s
system diagram map as a potential
candidate for abandonment (or
discontinuance), but before
abandonment (or discontinuance)
authority has been sought, any
financially responsible person (other
than a Class I or II railroad) may, by
filing a feeder line application under 49
U.S.C. 10907 and 49 CFR part 1151,
seek to acquire the line for continued
rail service under the forced sale
provisions of the feeder railroad
development program.
Trail-Use Request. The Trails Act
provides a mechanism whereby any
interested person may seek to
‘‘railbank’’ a rail right-of-way that has
been approved for abandonment and
use the property in the interim as a
recreational trail. The Board has a
ministerial role in this process; under 49
CFR 1152.29, interested persons may
submit a request to the Board for a trail
use condition, and if the statutory
conditions are met, the Board must
authorize the parties to negotiate a trailuse agreement by issuing a CITU, or, in
an exemption proceeding, a NITU. The
CITU or NITU typically permit
negotiations for 180 days, but the
negotiations can be extended upon
request to the Board. Under the Trails
Act, trail-use agreements are
consensual, not forced. The abandoning
railroad is free to choose whether or not
to enter into or continue negotiations to
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09AUN1
47704
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 154 / Thursday, August 9, 2012 / Notices
transfer (all or part of) the right-of-way
to a trail sponsor.
Under the PRA, a Federal agency
conducting or sponsoring a collection of
information must display a currently
valid OMB control number. A collection
of information, which is defined in 44
U.S.C. 3502(3) and 5 CFR 1320.3(c),
includes agency requirements that
persons submit reports, keep records, or
provide information to the agency, third
parties, or the public. Under section
3506(b) of the PRA, Federal agencies are
required to provide, concurrent with an
agency’s submitting a collection to OMB
for approval, a 30-day notice and
comment period, through publication in
the Federal Register, concerning each
proposed collection of information,
including each proposed extension of an
existing collection of information.
Dated: August 6, 2012.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2012–19555 Filed 8–8–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request
Office of Investment Security,
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
The Department of the
Treasury, as part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, invites the general public and
other Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on continuing
information collections, as required by
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13 (44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(A)). Currently, the Office of
Investment Security within the
Department of the Treasury is soliciting
comments concerning the information
collection provisions of the Regulations
Pertaining to Mergers, Acquisitions and
Takeovers by Foreign Persons, 31 CFR
800.402.
DATES: Written comments should be
received on or before October 9, 2012 to
be assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to Aimen Mir, Director, Office of
Investment Security, Department of the
Treasury, 1500 Pennsylvania Avenue,
NW., Room 5221, Washington, DC
20220—(202) 622–1860.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information
should be directed to Amad Judeh,
Office of Investment Security,
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SUMMARY:
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16:38 Aug 08, 2012
Jkt 226001
Department of the Treasury, 1500
Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20220—(202) 622–1715; or Francine
McNulty Barber, Senior Counsel,
Department of the Treasury, Room 2014,
1500 Pennsylvania Ave. NW.,
Washington, DC 20220—(202) 622–
1947.
Title:
Regulations Pertaining to Mergers,
Acquisitions and Takeovers by Foreign
Persons.
OMB Number: 1505–0121.
Abstract: The information request in
this proposed collection is contained in
31 CFR 800.402. The information
collected under these regulations is
used by the Committee on Foreign
Investment in the United States
(CFIUS), an inter-agency committee
chaired by the Secretary of the Treasury
and comprised of the Secretaries of
State, Defense, Treasury, Commerce,
Homeland Security, Energy, and Labor;
the Attorney General; the U.S. Trade
Representative; and the Directors of
National Intelligence and the Office of
Science and Technology Policy. CFIUS,
on behalf of the President, is authorized
under section 721 of the Defense
Production Act of 1950 to conduct
reviews to determine the effects on the
national security of transactions
proposed or pending after the date of
enactment (August 23, 1988) by or with
foreign persons that could result in
foreign control of any person engaged in
interstate commerce in the United States
(‘‘covered transactions’’).
Current Actions: Extension.
Type of Review: Extension.
Affected Public: Foreign businesses
and foreign individuals.
Estimated Number of Responses: 105.
Estimated Time per Respondent: This
varies, depending on individual
circumstances, with an average of 100
hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden
Hours: 10,500 hours.
Requests For Comments: Comments
submitted in response to this notice will
be summarized and/or included in the
request for OMB approval. All
comments will become a matter of
public record. Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
agency, including whether the
information shall have practical utility;
(b) the accuracy of the agency’s estimate
of the burden of the collection of
information; (c) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected; (d) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on respondents, including
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Frm 00116
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
through use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information
technology; and (e) estimates of capital
or start-up costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services
to provide information.
Dated: August 6, 2012.
Dawn D. Wolfgang,
Treasury PRA Clearance Officer.
[FR Doc. 2012–19560 Filed 8–8–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
Proposed Information Collection;
Comment Request
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
The Department of the
Treasury, as part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork and respondent
burden, invites the general public and
other Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on proposed
and/or continuing information
collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13 (44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(A)).
DATES: Written comments should be
received on or before October 9, 2012 to
be assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to Yvette B. Lawrence, Internal Revenue
Service, Room 6129, 1111 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20224.
Please send separate comments for
each specific information collection
listed below. You must reference the
information collection’s title, form
number, reporting or record-keeping
requirement number, and OMB number
(if any) in your comment.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: To
obtain additional information, or copies
of the information collection and
instructions, or copies of any comments
received, contact Joel Goldberger at
(202) 927–9368 or at Internal Revenue
Service, room 6129, 1111 Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20224, or
through the Internet, at
Joel.P.Goldberger@irs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Request for Comments
The Department of the Treasury and
the Internal Revenue Service, as part of
their continuing effort to reduce
paperwork and respondent burden,
invite the general public and other
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 154 (Thursday, August 9, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 47702-47704]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-19555]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
30-Day Notice of Request for Approval: Statutory Authority To
Preserve Rail Service
AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board, DOT.
ACTION: Notice and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: As required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C.
3501-3519 (PRA), the Surface Transportation Board (STB or Board) gives
notice of its intent to seek from the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) approval of the information collections required under 49 U.S.C.
10904-05 and 10907, and 16 U.S.C. 1247(d). Under these statutory
provisions, the Board administers programs designed to preserve
railroad service or rail rights-of-way. When a line is proposed for
abandonment, affected shippers, communities, or other interested
persons may seek to preserve rail service by filing with the Board: an
offer of financial assistance (OFA) to subsidize or purchase a rail
line for which a railroad is seeking abandonment (49 U.S.C. 10904),
including a request for the Board to set terms and conditions of the
financial assistance; a request for a public use condition (section
10905); or a trail-use request (16 U.S.C. 1247(d)). Similarly, when a
line is placed on a system diagram map identifying it as an anticipated
or potential candidate for abandonment, affected shippers, communities,
or other interested persons may seek to preserve rail service by filing
with the Board a feeder line application to purchase the identified
rail line (section 10907). Additionally, the railroad owning the rail
line subject to abandonment must, in some circumstances, provide
information to the applicant or offeror. The Board previously published
a notice about this collection in the Federal Register on February 10,
2012, at 77 FR 7236-37 (60-day notice). That notice allowed for a 60-
day public review and comment period. No comments were received. The
information collection for which approval is sought is described in
detail below. Comments may now be submitted to OMB concerning: (1) The
accuracy of the Board's burden estimates; (2) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the information collected; (3) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of information on the
respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology, when appropriate; and (4)
whether this collection of information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the Board, including whether the
collection has practical utility.
Description of Collection
Title: Statutory Authority to Preserve Rail Service.
OMB Control Number: 2140-00.
STB Form Number: None.
Type of Review: Existing collection in use without an OMB control
number.
Respondents: Affected shippers, communities, or other interested
persons seeking to preserve rail service over rail lines that are
proposed or identified for abandonment, and railroads that are required
to provide information to the offeror or applicant.
Number of Respondents: 40 (including informational filings required
of railroads).\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In Fiscal Year (FY) 2011, there were 56 filings under 49
U.S.C. 10904-07 and the Trails Act. See Table--Number of Yearly
Responses. In the 60-day notice, the Board indicated that there were
approximately 60 respondents. Although no comments were filed, it
has come to our attention that approximately 30% of the filings were
additional filings submitted by railroads or trail users that had
already submitted filings during the time period. Therefore, the
number of respondents has been revised to approximately 40, which is
30% less than the number of filings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Frequency. On occasion.
Table--Number of Yearly Responses
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
Type of filing filings
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offer of Financial Assistance.............................. 3
OFA--Railroad Reply to Request for Information............. 3
OFA--Request to Set Terms and Conditions................... 1
Request for Public Use Condition........................... 9
Feeder Line Application.................................... 1
Trail-Use Request.......................................... 20
Trail-Use Request Extension \2\............................ 19
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ In the 60-day notice, the Board did not separate trail use requests
into initial trail-use requests and extension requests, but it has
done so in this notice because the initial request has a capped filing
fee and the extension request does not. The distinction is necessary
to more accurately derive the cost to the government of this
collection and the total non-hour burden cost, which increases from
$41,980 (in the 60-day notice) to $45,780.
Total Burden Hours (annually including all respondents): 374 hours
(sum total of estimated hours per response X number of responses for
each type of filing).
Table--Estimated Hours per Response
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
Type of filing hours per
response
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offer of Financial Assistance.............................. 32
OFA--Railroad Reply to Request for Information............. 10
OFA--Request to Set Terms and Conditions................... 4
Request for Public Use Condition........................... 2
Feeder Line Application.................................... 70
Trail-Use Request.......................................... 4
Trail-Use Request Extension................................ 4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total ``Non-hour Burden'' Cost (such as filing fees): $45,780 (sum
of estimated ``non-hour burden'' cost per response X number of
responses for each statutory section and type of filing).
[[Page 47703]]
Table--Estimated ``Non-Hour Burden'' Cost per Response
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of filing Filing costs Other costs Total costs
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Offer of Financial Assistance................................... $1,500 $90 $1,590
OFA--Railroad Reply to Request for Information.................. 0 30 30
OFA--Request to Set Terms and Conditions........................ 23,100 30 23,130
Request for Public Use Condition................................ 0 30 30
Feeder Line Application......................................... 2,600 200 2,800
Trail-Use Request............................................... 250 30 280
Trail-Use Request Extension..................................... 450 30 480
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Needs and Uses: Under the Interstate Commerce Act, as amended by
the ICC Termination Act of 1995, Public Law No. 104-88, 109 Stat. 803
(1995), and Section 8(d) of the National Trails System Act, 16 U.S.C.
1247(d) (Trails Act), persons seeking to preserve rail service may file
pleadings before the Board to acquire or subsidize a rail line for
continued service, or to impose a trail use or public use condition.
Under 49 U.S.C. 10904, the filing of an OFA starts a process of
negotiations to define the financial assistance needed to purchase or
subsidize the rail line sought for abandonment. Once the OFA is filed,
the offeror may request additional information from the railroad, which
the railroad must provide. If the parties cannot agree to the sale or
subsidy, either party also may file a request for the Board to set the
terms and conditions of the financial assistance. Under section 10905,
a public use request allows the Board to impose a 180-day public use
condition on the abandonment of a rail line, permitting the parties to
negotiate a public use for the rail line. Under section 10907, a feeder
line application provides the basis for authorizing an involuntary sale
of a rail line. Finally, under 16 U.S.C. 1247(d), a trail-use request,
if agreed upon by the abandoning carrier, requires the Board to
condition the abandonment by issuing a Notice of Interim Trail Use
(NITU) or Certificate of Interim Trail Use (CITU), permitting the
parties to negotiate an interim trail use/rail banking agreement for
the rail line.
The collection by the Board of these offers, requests, and
applications, and the railroad's replies (when required), enables the
Board to meet its statutory duty to regulate the referenced rail
transactions.
Retention Period: Information in these collections is maintained by
the Board for 10 years, after which it is transferred to the National
Archives as permanent records.
DATES: Comments on this information collection should be submitted by
September 10, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Written comments should be identified as ``Paperwork
Reduction Act Comments, Surface Transportation Board, Statutory
Authority to Preserve Rail Service.'' These comments should be directed
to the Office of Management and Budget, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Attention: Patrick Fuchs, Surface Transportation
Board Desk Officer, by fax at (202) 395-5167; by mail at OMB, Room
10235, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20500; or by email at OIRA_SUBMISSION@OMB.EOP.GOV.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION, CONTACT: Marilyn Levitt, (202) 245-0269.
[Federal Information Relay Service (FIRS) for the hearing impaired:
(800) 877-8339.] Relevant STB regulations are referenced below and may
be viewed on the STB's Web site under E-Library > Reference: STB Rules,
https://www.stb.dot.gov/stb/elibrary/ref_stbrules.html.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Respondents seeking authority from the Board
to preserve rail lines must submit certain information required under
the Board's related regulations and, in some circumstances, railroads
seeking to abandon a line must disclose certain information to the
offeror or applicant.
Offer of Financial Assistance. When a rail line would otherwise be
approved for abandonment (or discontinuance), any financially
responsible person may seek to acquire the line for continued rail
service (after abandonment has been approved), or may seek to
temporarily subsidize continued operations by the incumbent railroad
(after abandonment or discontinuance has been approved), by filing an
OFA under 49 U.S.C. 10904 and 49 CFR 1152.27. An OFA may be submitted
to the Board as soon as the railroad seeks abandonment (or
discontinuance) authority. Once an OFA is submitted, the abandoning
railroad must, upon request, promptly provide to any party considering
an OFA and to the Board an estimate of the annual subsidy or minimum
purchase price; a report on the physical condition of line; and data on
traffic, revenues, net liquidation value, and the cost to rehabilitate
to class I (minimum) track standards. If the parties are not able to
agree upon the purchase price or subsidy, then, to move forward, either
party may ask the Board to set the price or subsidy, which will be
binding upon the parties if the offeror chooses to accept the terms set
by the Board and proceed with the purchase.
Public Use Request. Any person may request that the Board prohibit
an abandoning railroad from disposing of the right-of-way--for up to
180 days--without first offering the right-of-way (on reasonable terms)
for other suitable public purposes (such as mass transit, pipeline,
transmission lines, recreation, etc.). Such requests are governed by 49
U.S.C. 10905 and 49 CFR 1152.28.
Feeder Line Application. When a line has been identified on a
railroad's system diagram map as a potential candidate for abandonment
(or discontinuance), but before abandonment (or discontinuance)
authority has been sought, any financially responsible person (other
than a Class I or II railroad) may, by filing a feeder line application
under 49 U.S.C. 10907 and 49 CFR part 1151, seek to acquire the line
for continued rail service under the forced sale provisions of the
feeder railroad development program.
Trail-Use Request. The Trails Act provides a mechanism whereby any
interested person may seek to ``railbank'' a rail right-of-way that has
been approved for abandonment and use the property in the interim as a
recreational trail. The Board has a ministerial role in this process;
under 49 CFR 1152.29, interested persons may submit a request to the
Board for a trail use condition, and if the statutory conditions are
met, the Board must authorize the parties to negotiate a trail-use
agreement by issuing a CITU, or, in an exemption proceeding, a NITU.
The CITU or NITU typically permit negotiations for 180 days, but the
negotiations can be extended upon request to the Board. Under the
Trails Act, trail-use agreements are consensual, not forced. The
abandoning railroad is free to choose whether or not to enter into or
continue negotiations to
[[Page 47704]]
transfer (all or part of) the right-of-way to a trail sponsor.
Under the PRA, a Federal agency conducting or sponsoring a
collection of information must display a currently valid OMB control
number. A collection of information, which is defined in 44 U.S.C.
3502(3) and 5 CFR 1320.3(c), includes agency requirements that persons
submit reports, keep records, or provide information to the agency,
third parties, or the public. Under section 3506(b) of the PRA, Federal
agencies are required to provide, concurrent with an agency's
submitting a collection to OMB for approval, a 30-day notice and
comment period, through publication in the Federal Register, concerning
each proposed collection of information, including each proposed
extension of an existing collection of information.
Dated: August 6, 2012.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2012-19555 Filed 8-8-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915-01-P