United States Department of Energy and United States Department of Defense v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, et al. and Aberdeen & Rockfish Railroad Company, et al., 62601-62602 [2012-25275]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 199 / Monday, October 15, 2012 / Notices
Issued in Washington, DC, on October 5,
2012.
Ray LaHood,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2012–25261 Filed 10–12–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
Sunshine Act Meetings; Unified Carrier
Registration Plan Board of Directors
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of Unified Carrier
Registration Plan Board of Directors
Meeting.
AGENCY:
The meeting will be held
on October 25, 2012, from 12:00 noon to
3:00 p.m., Eastern Standard Time.
PLACE: This meeting will be open to the
public via conference call. Any
interested person may call 1–877–820–
7831, passcode, 908048 to listen and
participate in this meeting.
STATUS: Open to the public.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED: The Unified
Carrier Registration Plan Board of
Directors (the Board) will continue its
work in developing and implementing
the Unified Carrier Registration Plan
and Agreement and to that end, may
consider matters properly before the
Board.
TIME AND DATE:
Mr.
Avelino Gutierrez, Chair, Unified
Carrier Registration Board of Directors at
(505) 827–4565.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Issued on: September 21, 2012.
Larry W. Minor,
Associate Administrator, Office of Policy,
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration.
[FR Doc. 2012–25350 Filed 10–11–12; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
[Docket Nos. NOR 38302S and NOR 38376S]
United States Department of Energy
and United States Department of
Defense v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
Company, et al. and Aberdeen &
Rockfish Railroad Company, et al.
erowe on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with
AGENCY:
Surface Transportation Board,
DOT.
Notice of Proposed Settlement
Agreement, Issuance of Procedural
Schedule.
ACTION:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
20:13 Oct 12, 2012
Jkt 229001
On September 4, 2012, United
States Department of Energy and the
United States Department of Defense
(the Government) and BNSF Railway
Company (BNSF) (collectively
Movants), filed a motion requesting
approval of an agreement that would
settle these rate reasonableness disputes
as between them only. The Board is
adopting a procedural schedule for
filing comments and replies addressing
their proposed settlement agreement.
(As detailed below, these proceedings
involve disputes among a number of
different entities, including other
railroad carriers besides BNSF. This
settlement applies only to the parties
submitting the instant agreement and
does not resolve these proceedings in
their entirety.)
DATES: Comments are due by November
29, 2012. Reply comments are due by
December 31, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Comments and replies may
be submitted either via the Board’s efiling format or in the traditional paper
format. Any person using e-filing should
attach a document and otherwise
comply with the instructions at the EFILING link on the Board’s Web site, at
https://www.stb.dot.gov. Any person
submitting a filing in the traditional
paper format should send an original
and 10 copies to: Surface Transportation
Board, Attn: Docket No. NOR 38302S, et
al., 395 E Street SW., Washington, DC
20423–0001. Copies of written
comments and replies will be available
for viewing and self-copying at the
Board’s Public Docket Room, Room 131,
and will be posted to the Board’s Web
site. In addition, send one copy of
comments to each of the following: (1)
Stephen C. Skubel, Room 6H087, U.S.
Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Ave. SW., Washington,
DC 20585; (2) Terrance A. Spann, U.S.
Department of Defense, 9275 Gunston
Road, Suite 1300, Fort Belvoir, VA
22060; and (3) Jill K. Mulligan, BNSF
Railway Company, 2500 Lou Menk
Drive, AOB–3, Fort Worth, TX 76131.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marc Lerner, (202) 245–0390.
[Assistance for the hearing impaired is
available through the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at: 1–
800–877–8339.]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In March
1981, the Government filed these
complaints against 21 major railroads
(the Railroad Defendants) under section
229 of the Staggers Rail Act of 1980,
Public Law 96–448, 94 Stat. 1895. The
Government sought reparations and a
rate prescription relating to the
nationwide movement of spent nuclear
fuel, other high level radioactive wastes,
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00112
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
62601
and the empty containers (casks) and
buffer and escort cars used for their
movement (radioactive materials). In
1986, the Board’s predecessor, the
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC),
found that the Railroad Defendants were
engaging in an unreasonable practice,
imposing substantial and unwarranted
cost additives—above and beyond the
regular train service rates—in an effort
to avoid transporting these radioactive
materials. The ICC canceled the existing
rates and cost additives, prescribed new
rates, and awarded reparations. See
Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Aberdeen
& Rockfish R.R., 2 I.C.C.2d 642 (1986).
The United States Court of Appeals for
the D.C. Circuit set aside and remanded
the decision. See Union Pacific R.R. v.
ICC, 867 F.2d 646 (D.C. Cir. 1989). On
remand, the ICC ruled that the
movement of these radioactive materials
for reprocessing was subject to the rate
cap on recyclables set out in former 49
U.S.C. 10731(e) and directed the parties
to file revenue-to-variable cost (R/VC)
evidence to resolve the remaining
reparations and rate prescription issues.
See United States Department of Energy
v. Baltimore & Ohio R.R., 10 I.C.C.2d
112 (1994). While judicial review was
pending, Congress enacted the ICC
Termination Act of 1995, Public Law
104–88, 109 Stat. 803, which repealed
§ 10731 in its entirety and directed that
all proceedings pending under the
repealed section be terminated.
The Railroad Defendants petitioned
the Board to dismiss the complaints in
1996, and, in 1997, they invited the
Government to explore the possibility of
settling the complaints. Discussions
commenced on a nationwide settlement
covering all of the Railroad Defendants
that might carry radioactive materials.
The Government subsequently chose to
negotiate only with Union Pacific
Railroad Company (UP), the destination
carrier for most of the movements of
radioactive materials that were to be
covered by the nationwide settlement,
after the parties concluded that there
were potential antitrust problems in
negotiating with the Railroad
Defendants as a group. On September
15, 2004, the Government and UP filed
a motion seeking approval under 49
U.S.C. 10704 of a settlement agreement
(the UP Agreement) they had negotiated
to resolve these complaints as between
them only. The Board, in a decision
served in these proceedings on August
2, 2005: (1) Approved the UP
Agreement; (2) dismissed UP as a party
to these proceedings; (3) relieved UP of
any obligation to participate in these or
related proceedings involving claims
against connecting railroad defendants
E:\FR\FM\15OCN1.SGM
15OCN1
62602
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 199 / Monday, October 15, 2012 / Notices
erowe on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with
(except that UP remained obligated to
respond to the Board’s subpoena
authority); (4) continued to hold these
proceedings in abeyance; and (5)
directed the Government to file
quarterly reports on the progress of
future settlement negotiations with the
remaining Railroad Defendants.
Movants jointly request that the Board
approve the proposed agreement they
have negotiated (the BNSF Agreement)
to settle these rate reasonableness
complaints as between them only and
that the requested approval be without
prejudice to the Governments’
complaints and other actions insofar as
they apply to the remaining Railroad
Defendants involved in these
proceedings. The UP Agreement,
according to Movants, served as a model
for their Agreement.
The BNSF Agreement, which Movants
describe as flexible, comprehensive,
long-term, and system-wide:
(1) Provides for a term of 25 years
commencing on the effective date of the
Board’s approval of the BNSF
Agreement and continues in effect for
additional 5-year periods, subject to a 1year termination notice requirement;
(2) Applies broadly to the nationwide
movement on BNSF’s rail lines of
irradiated spent fuel, parts, and
constituents; spent fuel moving from
foreign countries to the United States for
disposal; empty casks; radioactive
wastes; and buffer and escort cars.
Excluded from the BNSF Agreement are
local movements originating and
terminating in the East, which are
covered by the rate basis prescribed in
Trainload Rates on Radioactive
Materials, E. Railroads, 362 I.C.C. 756
(1980) and 364 I.C.C. 981 (1981)
(Eastern Prescription); 1
(3) Establishes that the movement of
these commodities constitutes common
carrier service; addresses the elements
of service required of BNSF; adopts
guidelines for safe handling and
security; obligates BNSF to provide, as
needed, ‘‘extra services’’ as described in
the BNSF Agreement, at the rates agreed
upon;
(4) Adopts a rate methodology to:
(a) apply to all future movements of
these radioactive materials in common
carrier service. The methodology adopts
maximum R/VC markups (not to exceed
to 1.80, 2.50, or 3.51 times the shipment
1 Maximum R/VC ratios were prescribed on a
commodity-by-commodity basis at various
minimum weights as local and proportional rate
factors. The prescription was applicable within the
East, but primarily was to be used for through
movements destined beyond the lines of the rail
carriers covered by the prescription. The ICC’s 1980
decision, 362 I.C.C. 756, was affirmed in
Consolidated Rail Corp. v. ICC, 646 F.2d 642 (D.C.
Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 1047 (1981).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:21 Oct 12, 2012
Jkt 229001
cost, depending on commodity type) of
BNSF’s most current system-average
variable unit costs computed under the
Board’s Uniform Rail Costing System.
Movants state that the proposed rate
methodology is consistent with, but
broadens, the rate prescription adopted
in Eastern Prescription; and
(b) compensate BNSF for ‘‘extra
services’’ and dedicated train service,
when requested by the Government, and
procedures to calculate ‘‘equitable
compensation’’ for emergency related
costs that BNSF may incur.
(5) Adopts a procedure to update rates
and ‘‘extra services’’ annually to reflect
changes in BNSF’s system-average unit
costs;
(6) Extinguishes BNSF’s liability (and
that of its predecessors and subsidiaries)
for reparations in all matters arising out
of these proceedings; and
(7) Adopts Alternative Dispute
Resolution procedures with final
recourse to the Board and mechanisms
to renegotiate portions of the BNSF
Agreement in a limited number of
circumstances or if changed
circumstances make further adherence
to the terms of the BNSF Agreement
‘‘grossly inequitable’’ to either party.
Movants request that the Board: (1)
Prescribe the rate methodology and
maximum R/VC ratios that have been
agreed to for the radioactive materials
and rail services that are the subject of
the BNSF Agreement; (2) dismiss BNSF
as a defendant in these proceedings,
preserve the liability of connecting
carriers for reparations as to their
portion of the charges assessed on
through routes that include(d) BNSF,
and not require BNSF to participate in
rate proceedings initiated by the
Government against remaining Railroad
Defendants (except that BNSF will
remain obligated to respond to the
Board’s subpoena authority); (3) retain
jurisdiction over these proceedings and
continue to hold them in abeyance
pending further settlement negotiations;
and (4) publish notice of their motion
and the proposed BNSF Agreement in
the Federal Register and adopt a
procedural schedule for the filing of
comments and replies.
The Board is granting Movants’
request in part. Notice of their motion
and the proposed BNSF Agreement is
being published in the Federal Register
and a procedural schedule is being
adopted for the filing of comments and
replies responsive to Movant’s
remaining requests.
Decided: October 10, 2012.
PO 00000
Frm 00113
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
By the Board, Rachel D. Campbell,
Director, Office of Proceedings.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2012–25275 Filed 10–12–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Fiscal Service
Privacy Act of 1974, as Amended;
System of Records Notice
Financial Management Service,
Fiscal Service, Treasury.
ACTION: Notice of systems of records.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
requirements of the Privacy Act of 1974,
as amended, 5 U.S.C. 552a, Financial
Management Service is publishing its
inventory of Privacy Act systems of
records.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to the Privacy Act of 1974 (5 U.S.C.
552a) and the Office of Management and
Budget Circular No. A–130, Financial
Management Service (FMS) has
completed a review of its Privacy Act
systems of records notices to identify
minor changes to those notices. The
systems of records were last published
in their entirety on May 15, 2009, at 74
FR 23006–23021.
The following system of records was
added to FMS’s inventory of Privacy Act
notices since May 9, 2000:
FMS .008—Mailing List Records—
Treasury/FMS, published on December
16, 2010, at 75 FR 78802.
On August 17, 2011, FMS published
a notice in the Federal Register that
amended the scope of the categories of
individuals covered by the system and
the categories of records in the system.
76 FR 51123.
On July 19, 2011, FMS published a
notice in the Federal Register that
amended system of record FMS .006
(Direct Deposit Enrollment Records) to
modify the scope of the categories of
records in the system, update one
routine use and update the record
source categories. 76 FR 42765. On
February 15, 2012, FMS published a
notice in the Federal Register that: (a)
Combined two pre-existing systems of
records (FMS .002–Payment Issue
Records for Regular Recurring Benefit
Payments and FMS .016–Payment
Records for Other Than Regular
Recurring Benefit Payments) into one
system of record. The resulting system
of record is FMS .002 (Payment
Records—Financial Management
Service). 77 FR 8947. The same Federal
Register notice also modified routine
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\15OCN1.SGM
15OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 199 (Monday, October 15, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 62601-62602]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-25275]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
[Docket Nos. NOR 38302S and NOR 38376S]
United States Department of Energy and United States Department
of Defense v. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company, et al. and Aberdeen &
Rockfish Railroad Company, et al.
AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board, DOT.
ACTION: Notice of Proposed Settlement Agreement, Issuance of Procedural
Schedule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On September 4, 2012, United States Department of Energy and
the United States Department of Defense (the Government) and BNSF
Railway Company (BNSF) (collectively Movants), filed a motion
requesting approval of an agreement that would settle these rate
reasonableness disputes as between them only. The Board is adopting a
procedural schedule for filing comments and replies addressing their
proposed settlement agreement. (As detailed below, these proceedings
involve disputes among a number of different entities, including other
railroad carriers besides BNSF. This settlement applies only to the
parties submitting the instant agreement and does not resolve these
proceedings in their entirety.)
DATES: Comments are due by November 29, 2012. Reply comments are due by
December 31, 2012.
ADDRESSES: Comments and replies may be submitted either via the Board's
e-filing format or in the traditional paper format. Any person using e-
filing should attach a document and otherwise comply with the
instructions at the E-FILING link on the Board's Web site, at https://www.stb.dot.gov. Any person submitting a filing in the traditional
paper format should send an original and 10 copies to: Surface
Transportation Board, Attn: Docket No. NOR 38302S, et al., 395 E Street
SW., Washington, DC 20423-0001. Copies of written comments and replies
will be available for viewing and self-copying at the Board's Public
Docket Room, Room 131, and will be posted to the Board's Web site. In
addition, send one copy of comments to each of the following: (1)
Stephen C. Skubel, Room 6H087, U.S. Department of Energy, 1000
Independence Ave. SW., Washington, DC 20585; (2) Terrance A. Spann,
U.S. Department of Defense, 9275 Gunston Road, Suite 1300, Fort
Belvoir, VA 22060; and (3) Jill K. Mulligan, BNSF Railway Company, 2500
Lou Menk Drive, AOB-3, Fort Worth, TX 76131.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Marc Lerner, (202) 245-0390.
[Assistance for the hearing impaired is available through the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at: 1-800-877-8339.]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In March 1981, the Government filed these
complaints against 21 major railroads (the Railroad Defendants) under
section 229 of the Staggers Rail Act of 1980, Public Law 96-448, 94
Stat. 1895. The Government sought reparations and a rate prescription
relating to the nationwide movement of spent nuclear fuel, other high
level radioactive wastes, and the empty containers (casks) and buffer
and escort cars used for their movement (radioactive materials). In
1986, the Board's predecessor, the Interstate Commerce Commission
(ICC), found that the Railroad Defendants were engaging in an
unreasonable practice, imposing substantial and unwarranted cost
additives--above and beyond the regular train service rates--in an
effort to avoid transporting these radioactive materials. The ICC
canceled the existing rates and cost additives, prescribed new rates,
and awarded reparations. See Commonwealth Edison Co. v. Aberdeen &
Rockfish R.R., 2 I.C.C.2d 642 (1986). The United States Court of
Appeals for the D.C. Circuit set aside and remanded the decision. See
Union Pacific R.R. v. ICC, 867 F.2d 646 (D.C. Cir. 1989). On remand,
the ICC ruled that the movement of these radioactive materials for
reprocessing was subject to the rate cap on recyclables set out in
former 49 U.S.C. 10731(e) and directed the parties to file revenue-to-
variable cost (R/VC) evidence to resolve the remaining reparations and
rate prescription issues. See United States Department of Energy v.
Baltimore & Ohio R.R., 10 I.C.C.2d 112 (1994). While judicial review
was pending, Congress enacted the ICC Termination Act of 1995, Public
Law 104-88, 109 Stat. 803, which repealed Sec. 10731 in its entirety
and directed that all proceedings pending under the repealed section be
terminated.
The Railroad Defendants petitioned the Board to dismiss the
complaints in 1996, and, in 1997, they invited the Government to
explore the possibility of settling the complaints. Discussions
commenced on a nationwide settlement covering all of the Railroad
Defendants that might carry radioactive materials. The Government
subsequently chose to negotiate only with Union Pacific Railroad
Company (UP), the destination carrier for most of the movements of
radioactive materials that were to be covered by the nationwide
settlement, after the parties concluded that there were potential
antitrust problems in negotiating with the Railroad Defendants as a
group. On September 15, 2004, the Government and UP filed a motion
seeking approval under 49 U.S.C. 10704 of a settlement agreement (the
UP Agreement) they had negotiated to resolve these complaints as
between them only. The Board, in a decision served in these proceedings
on August 2, 2005: (1) Approved the UP Agreement; (2) dismissed UP as a
party to these proceedings; (3) relieved UP of any obligation to
participate in these or related proceedings involving claims against
connecting railroad defendants
[[Page 62602]]
(except that UP remained obligated to respond to the Board's subpoena
authority); (4) continued to hold these proceedings in abeyance; and
(5) directed the Government to file quarterly reports on the progress
of future settlement negotiations with the remaining Railroad
Defendants.
Movants jointly request that the Board approve the proposed
agreement they have negotiated (the BNSF Agreement) to settle these
rate reasonableness complaints as between them only and that the
requested approval be without prejudice to the Governments' complaints
and other actions insofar as they apply to the remaining Railroad
Defendants involved in these proceedings. The UP Agreement, according
to Movants, served as a model for their Agreement.
The BNSF Agreement, which Movants describe as flexible,
comprehensive, long-term, and system-wide:
(1) Provides for a term of 25 years commencing on the effective
date of the Board's approval of the BNSF Agreement and continues in
effect for additional 5-year periods, subject to a 1-year termination
notice requirement;
(2) Applies broadly to the nationwide movement on BNSF's rail lines
of irradiated spent fuel, parts, and constituents; spent fuel moving
from foreign countries to the United States for disposal; empty casks;
radioactive wastes; and buffer and escort cars. Excluded from the BNSF
Agreement are local movements originating and terminating in the East,
which are covered by the rate basis prescribed in Trainload Rates on
Radioactive Materials, E. Railroads, 362 I.C.C. 756 (1980) and 364
I.C.C. 981 (1981) (Eastern Prescription); \1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Maximum R/VC ratios were prescribed on a commodity-by-
commodity basis at various minimum weights as local and proportional
rate factors. The prescription was applicable within the East, but
primarily was to be used for through movements destined beyond the
lines of the rail carriers covered by the prescription. The ICC's
1980 decision, 362 I.C.C. 756, was affirmed in Consolidated Rail
Corp. v. ICC, 646 F.2d 642 (D.C. Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 454 U.S.
1047 (1981).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) Establishes that the movement of these commodities constitutes
common carrier service; addresses the elements of service required of
BNSF; adopts guidelines for safe handling and security; obligates BNSF
to provide, as needed, ``extra services'' as described in the BNSF
Agreement, at the rates agreed upon;
(4) Adopts a rate methodology to:
(a) apply to all future movements of these radioactive materials in
common carrier service. The methodology adopts maximum R/VC markups
(not to exceed to 1.80, 2.50, or 3.51 times the shipment cost,
depending on commodity type) of BNSF's most current system-average
variable unit costs computed under the Board's Uniform Rail Costing
System. Movants state that the proposed rate methodology is consistent
with, but broadens, the rate prescription adopted in Eastern
Prescription; and
(b) compensate BNSF for ``extra services'' and dedicated train
service, when requested by the Government, and procedures to calculate
``equitable compensation'' for emergency related costs that BNSF may
incur.
(5) Adopts a procedure to update rates and ``extra services''
annually to reflect changes in BNSF's system-average unit costs;
(6) Extinguishes BNSF's liability (and that of its predecessors and
subsidiaries) for reparations in all matters arising out of these
proceedings; and
(7) Adopts Alternative Dispute Resolution procedures with final
recourse to the Board and mechanisms to renegotiate portions of the
BNSF Agreement in a limited number of circumstances or if changed
circumstances make further adherence to the terms of the BNSF Agreement
``grossly inequitable'' to either party.
Movants request that the Board: (1) Prescribe the rate methodology
and maximum R/VC ratios that have been agreed to for the radioactive
materials and rail services that are the subject of the BNSF Agreement;
(2) dismiss BNSF as a defendant in these proceedings, preserve the
liability of connecting carriers for reparations as to their portion of
the charges assessed on through routes that include(d) BNSF, and not
require BNSF to participate in rate proceedings initiated by the
Government against remaining Railroad Defendants (except that BNSF will
remain obligated to respond to the Board's subpoena authority); (3)
retain jurisdiction over these proceedings and continue to hold them in
abeyance pending further settlement negotiations; and (4) publish
notice of their motion and the proposed BNSF Agreement in the Federal
Register and adopt a procedural schedule for the filing of comments and
replies.
The Board is granting Movants' request in part. Notice of their
motion and the proposed BNSF Agreement is being published in the
Federal Register and a procedural schedule is being adopted for the
filing of comments and replies responsive to Movant's remaining
requests.
Decided: October 10, 2012.
By the Board, Rachel D. Campbell, Director, Office of
Proceedings.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2012-25275 Filed 10-12-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915-01-P