CSX Transportation, Inc.-Joint Use-Louisville & Indiana Railroad Company, Inc., 46682-46686 [2013-18527]
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while improving the safety of the riding
public. As such, Amtrak believes that
relief from the application of fouling
protection required when manually
removing snow from a publicly
accessible station platform is ‘‘in the
public interest and consistent with
railroad safety.’’
To ensure that workers using the
alternate program to remove snow from
platforms are not exposed to undue risk,
the following conditions are proposed
by Amtrak in its alternate program:
1. Workers are not permitted to use
powered equipment, such as snow
blowers, to clear the tactile edge area of
snow without appropriate on-track
safety in accordance with the RWP rule.
2. Any need to breach the strip or to
come bodily within the 4-foot clearance
envelope to push snow from the
platform will require on-track safety in
accordance with the RWP rule.
3. Amtrak will train workers to be
constantly alert for the movement of
trains and to remain in areas of the
platform that are inaccessible to trains.
4. The Amtrak training program for
the alternate program details the
conditions under which on-track safety
is needed, in accordance with the RWP
rule, as well as the explicit conditions
under which workers may occupy the
station areas behind the tactile edge to
remove snow.
5. The training program explains the
purpose of a good-faith challenge as
well as how to execute a challenge if
work needs to be performed that
requires on-track safety in accordance
with the RWP rule or is otherwise
thought to be unsafe by the worker.
6. Workers must demonstrate an
understanding of the types of conditions
that would require protection above and
beyond that which would be permitted
under this proposal, as well as the
methods to execute a good-faith
challenge.
7. Workers must hold a job briefing
before any work starts.
8. Workers removing snow from
station platforms under the alternate
program will not be permitted to work
in single-man crews.
In addition, Amtrak’s alternate program
will incorporate all of the criteria that
FRA required Amtrak to adopt in the
pilot test program conducted in 2012
and 2013.
Under the alternate program
procedures, workgroups would be
required to appoint a safety monitor.
The safety monitor would be required to
conduct the job briefing and to maintain
a means to contact Amtrak personnel as
necessary. Safety monitors would
observe all work for compliance with
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the requirements of the protection
procedures and would ensure that all
work would stop in the presence of a
train.
Amtrak does not seek a waiver from
RWP requirements when a worker is
fouling the track in order to remove
snow from areas other than the
platform, such as clearing an inner-track
walkway or when a worker is required
to bodily breach the tactile edge. Many
of the prior incidents within the
industry occurred under precisely the
same conditions under which Amtrak’s
proposed procedures would still
mandate full RWP protection.
Interested parties are invited to
participate in these proceedings by
submitting written views, data, or
comments. FRA does not anticipate
scheduling a public hearing in
connection with these proceedings since
the facts do not appear to warrant a
hearing. If any interested party desires
an opportunity for oral comment, they
should notify FRA, in writing, before
the end of the comment period and
specify the basis for their request.
All communications concerning these
proceedings should identify the
appropriate docket number and may be
submitted by any of the following
methods:
• Web site: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
• Mail: Docket Operations Facility,
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., W12–140,
Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Room W12–140,
Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal Holidays.
Communications received by
September 16, 2013 will be considered
by FRA before final action is taken.
Comments received after that date will
be considered as far as practicable.
All written communications
concerning these proceedings are
available for examination during regular
business hours (9 a.m.–5 p.m.) at the
above facility. All documents in the
public docket are also available for
inspection and downloading on the
Internet at the docket facility’s Web site
at https://www.regulations.gov.
Anyone is able to search the
electronic form of any written
communications and comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the document, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). See https://
www.regulations.gov/#!privacyNotice
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for the privacy notice of regulations.gov
or interested parties may review the
U.S. Department of Transportation’s
complete Privacy Act Statement in the
Federal Register published on April 11,
2000 (65 FR 19477).
Robert C. Lauby,
Deputy Associate Administrator for
Regulatory and Legislative Operations.
[FR Doc. 2013–18500 Filed 7–31–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
[Docket No. FD 35523]
CSX Transportation, Inc.—Joint Use—
Louisville & Indiana Railroad
Company, Inc.
AGENCY:
Surface Transportation Board,
DOT.
Decision No. 3 in FD 35523;
Notice of Acceptance of Application
and Related Filings; Issuance of
Procedural Schedule.
ACTION:
The Surface Transportation
Board (Board) is accepting for
consideration the application submitted
on June 14, 2013, and supplemented on
July 2, 2013, by CSX Transportation,
Inc. (CSXT), and Louisville & Indiana
Railroad Company, Inc. (L&I). The
application seeks Board approval under
49 U.S.C. 11323 et seq., for joint use by
CSXT and L&I of L&I’s 106.5-mile
railroad line between its connection
with CSXT in Indianapolis, Ind.,
milepost 4.0±, and its connection with
CSXT in Louisville, Ky., milepost
110.5± (the Line). In order to jointly use
the Line with L&I, CSXT seeks to
acquire and use a perpetual, nonexclusive freight railroad operating
easement over the Line. This proposal is
referred to as the Transaction, and CSXT
and L&I are referred to collectively as
Applicants.
The Board finds that the Transaction
is a ‘‘minor transaction’’ under 49 CFR
1180.2(c), and that the application, as
supplemented on July 2, 2013, is
complete.1 The Board adopts a
procedural schedule for consideration of
the application, under which the
Board’s final decision would be issued
by December 6, 2013 (assuming the
environmental review process has been
completed), and would become effective
by December 26, 2013.
SUMMARY:
1 On July 2, 2013, Applicants filed public and
confidential versions of Section 4 of Attachment C
to the Joint Use Operating Agreement. For more
information, see Decision No. 2 in this docket.
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The effective date of this
decision is August 1, 2013. Any person
who wishes to participate in this
proceeding as a party of record (POR)
must file, no later than August 15, 2013,
a notice of intent to participate. All
comments, protests, requests for
conditions, and any other evidence and
argument in opposition to the
application, including filings by the
U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and the
U.S. Department of Transportation
(DOT), must be filed by September 30,
2013. Responses to comments, protests,
requests for conditions, and other
opposition on the transportation merits
of the Transaction, and rebuttal in
support of the application must be filed
by October 21, 2013.
The Board’s Office of Environmental
Analysis (OEA) will issue a Draft
Environmental Assessment (EA) on
August 30, 2013, for public review and
comment. Comments on the Draft EA
will be due by September 30, 2013. OEA
expects to issue a Final EA completing
the environmental review process on or
before November 6, 2013.
If a public hearing or oral argument is
held, it will be held on a date to be
determined by the Board. The Board
expects to issue its final decision by
December 6, 2013, unless more time is
needed to permit the completion of the
environmental review process, and to
make the decision effective by
December 26, 2013. For further
information respecting dates, see the
Appendix (Procedural Schedule).
ADDRESSES: Any filing submitted on the
transportation merits in this proceeding
must 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 found on
the Board’s Web site at www.stb.dot.gov
at the ‘‘E-FILING’’ link. Any person
submitting a filing in the traditional
paper format should send an original
and 10 paper copies of the filing (and
also an electronic version) to: Surface
Transportation Board, 395 E Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20423–0001. In
addition, one copy of each filing in this
proceeding must be sent (and may be
sent by email only if service by email is
acceptable to the recipient) to each of
the following: (1) Secretary of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590; (2)
Attorney General of the United States,
c/o Assistant Attorney General,
Antitrust Division, Room 3109,
Department of Justice, Washington, DC
20530; (3) Louis E. Gitomer
(representing CSXT), Law Offices of
Louis E. Gitomer, LLC, 600 Baltimore
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Avenue, Suite 301, Towson, MD 21204;
(4) Mark H. Sidman (representing L&I),
Anacostia Rail Holdings Company, 1701
Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Suite 300,
Washington, DC 20006; and (5) any
other person designated as a POR on the
service list notice (as explained below,
the service list notice will be issued as
soon after August 15, 2013, as
practicable).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jonathon Binet, (202) 245–0368.
[Assistance for the hearing impaired is
available through the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1–
800–877–8339.]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: CSXT is a
wholly owned subsidiary of CSX
Corporation and is a Class I railroad that
owns and operates approximately
21,000 miles of railroad lines in the
United States and Canada. As relevant
here, CSXT currently operates over the
Line pursuant to trackage rights.2
L&I, a Class III railroad, is a wholly
owned subsidiary of Anacostia Rail
Holdings. L&I owns and operates 106
miles of rail lines in Kentucky and
Indiana. Prior to L&I’s acquisition of the
Line, it was owned by Consolidated Rail
Corporation. Currently, the Line handles
two trains per day between Indianapolis
and Seymour, Ind. (L&I); four trains per
day between Seymour and Jeffersonville
Yard, Ind. (2 L&I and 2 CSXT); and
seven trains per day between
Jeffersonville Yard and Louisville, Ky.
(5 L&I and 2 CSXT).
Joint use of the Line would be made
possible through CSXT’s acquisition
and use of a perpetual, non-exclusive
freight railroad operating easement over
the Line. In order to accomplish this,
CSXT and L&I have entered into a
Transaction Agreement, Easement
Agreement, and Joint Use Operating
Agreement, as well as other agreements.
L&I has agreed to sell the easement to
CSXT for $10 million. As a result of the
Transaction, CSXT would fund an
upgrade of the Line, which would result
in the following improvements: upgrade
of the track from FRA Class 2 (up to 25
mph) to FRA Class 4 track (up to 60
mph), replacement of a bridge,
modernization of the current
dispatching system, and completion of
upgrades necessary to permit the
handling of 286,000 pound gross weight
on rail cars (GWOR). These upgrades are
estimated to cost between $70 million
and $90 million, and would be
CSX Transp.—Trackage Rights Exemption—
Louisville & Ind. R.R., FD 33744 (STB served June
21, 2001). Under the terms of the Joint Use
Operating Agreement, these trackage rights would
become dormant but would automatically reactivate
should the Easement Agreement terminate.
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2 See
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completed within seven years. L&I
would continue to provide overhead
service and exclusive local service,
while CSXT would continue to provide
overhead service on the Line.
Applicants claim that the upgrades to
the Line will increase the efficiency and
performance of both CSXT’s and L&I’s
operations. Once the upgrades are
completed, Applicants state that there
will be 17 trains (2 L&I and 15 CSXT)
per day operating between Indianapolis
and Jeffersonville Yard, Ind.; and 20
trains (5 L&I and 15 CSXT) per day
operating between Jeffersonville Yard,
Ind. and Louisville, Ky.3 Applicants
state that the Transaction would create
routing flexibility and performance
improvements for CSXT in the
Midwestern and South regions (areas
encompassing Ohio, Indiana, Illinois,
and Kentucky). Applicants state that
CSXT expects to save about 130.5 hours
of transit time per day, resulting in
savings of about $11.8 million per year.
Applicants state that L&I would benefit
from the upgraded Line without
incurring the capital cost and would
share the cost of maintaining the Line
with CSXT based on usage.
Under the Joint Use Operating
Agreement, the existing track would be
improved to allow the Line to handle
cars weighing 286,000 pounds GWOR,
rather than the current weight of
263,000 pounds GWOR. L&I would be
able to use the Line as it does today,
however, L&I would be required to pay
CSXT for use of the upgraded line for
cars weighing more than 263,000
pounds GWOR or taller than 18′6″ above
the top rail when CSXT is not involved
in the movement of the car (referred to
as ‘‘subject cars’’).4 Under Section 4 of
Attachment C to the Joint Use Operating
Agreement, L&I’s subject cars would be
charged a per unit-mile fee for overhead
movement between milepost 4.0 and
milepost 98.3. According to Applicants,
this compensation arrangement is
perpetual and is based on the
Transaction Agreement. L&I would also
be charged for originating or terminating
a certain number of subject cars at
customers served by CSXT or accessible
to CSXT by reciprocal switch within a
calendar year, subject to some
exclusions. Another provision of the
Joint Use Operating Agreement
precludes L&I’s ability to grant
operating rights to third party Class I
railroads and specifies that L&I shall not
3 These projections reflect increases in CSXT’s
number of trains. L&I present number of trains is
not projected to change as a result of the
transaction.
4 Under the Joint Use Operating Agreement, L&I
could opt out of the payments for cars taller than
18′6″, with a one-time payment to CSXT.
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grant operating rights to a Class I carrier
without prior written consent of CSXT.
Financial Arrangements. Under the
Transaction, L&I would sell the
easement to CSXT for $10 million. No
new securities would be issued by
CSXT or L&I. The upgrades would be
funded as part of CSXT’s annual capital
budget.
Passenger Service Impacts.
Applicants state that the Transaction
would not adversely impact commuter
or other passenger service. Pursuant to
terms of Applicants’ Joint Use Operating
Agreement, L&I would retain all rights
with respect to the conduct of passenger
operations on the Line.
Discontinuances/Abandonments. The
Transaction does not involve the
abandonment of, or discontinuance of
service over, any rail lines. Nor do
Applicants have any plans at this time
to discontinue service over or abandon
any lines as a result of the Transaction.
Public Interest Considerations.
Applicants assert that the Transaction
would not reduce the number of
railroads serving any shipper on the
Line. Rather, all shippers along the Line
would receive faster service and be able
to use taller and heavier cars. L&I would
continue to serve the same shippers it
serves today. Applicants state that the
competitive balance between CSXT and
L&I would not be altered because L&I
and CSXT would remain unaffiliated.
Applicants claim that L&I would benefit
by receiving an upgraded track, a new
bridge, and upgraded dispatching and
signaling systems without incurring the
capital cost.
Applicants state that CSXT currently
uses trackage rights over the Line to
relieve some of the congestion on its
Louisville Cincinnati Subdivision (LCL
Subdivision).5 After the upgrades are
complete, CSXT expects to reduce
inefficiencies caused by running shorter
and slower trains on the LCL
Subdivision. According to Applicants,
CSXT’s use of the Line would reduce
freight transit time in the Midwestern
and South regions, reduce fuel
consumption, upgrade car utilization,
and allow it to compete more effectively
with nearby railroads and short and
long-haul trucking companies.
Time Schedule for Consummation.
Applicants expect to consummate the
Transaction before the end of 2013.
Environmental Matters. The National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969, 42
U.S.C. 4321–4347 (NEPA), requires that
the Board take environmental
considerations into account in its
5 Expansion of the LCL Subdivision is not feasible
due to curvature and weight restrictions and short
sidings. Application, 11.
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decisionmaking. Environmental review
under NEPA will be required here
because the projected increases in train
traffic on the Line (between 13 and 15
trains per day) exceed the thresholds in
the Board’s environmental rules
(generally an increase in 3 or 8 trains
per day). Consistent with those rules,
OEA currently is preparing a Draft EA.
OEA anticipates issuing its Draft EA for
public comment on August 30, 2013.
Parties interested in commenting on the
Draft EA must submit comments by
September 30, 2013. The Draft EA will
provide instructions on how to submit
comments on the document. OEA
anticipates issuing a Final EA on or
before November 6, 2013.
Labor Impacts. Applicants state that
no employees of CSXT and L&I would
be adversely affected. According to
Applicants, CSXT trains that are
operated over the Line would continue
to be crewed by CSXT employees. L&I
trains would continue to be operated by
L&I employees. L&I would continue to
maintain and dispatch the Line.
Applicants request that the Board
impose the employee protective
conditions set forth in Norfolk and
Western Railway Co.—Trackage
Rights—Burlington Northern, Inc., 354
I.C.C. 605 (1978), as modified in
Mendocino Coast Railway, Inc.—Lease
and Operate—California Western
Railroad, 360 I.C.C. 653 (1980).
Application accepted. Under 49 CFR
1180.4(b)(2)(iv), the Board must
determine whether a proposed
transaction is ‘‘major,’’ ‘‘significant,’’ or
‘‘minor.’’ Here, we must determine
whether the Transaction is ‘‘significant’’
under § 1180.2(b) or ‘‘minor’’ under
§ 1180.2(c).6 A transaction that does not
involve the control or merger of two or
more Class I railroads is not of regional
or national transportation significance,
and therefore is classified as ‘‘minor’’ if:
(1) The transaction would clearly not
have anticompetitive effects, or (2) any
anticompetitive effects would clearly be
outweighed by the transaction’s
contribution to the public interest in
meeting significant transportation
needs. See 49 CFR 1180.2(b), (c).
Based on a review of the application
and supplement, the Board finds that
the Transaction does not appear to be of
regional or national transportation
significance and therefore qualifies as a
‘‘minor transaction’’ under the Board’s
regulatory scheme. The Board has
identified some provisions in the
6 See 49 CFR 1180.4(b)(2)(iv). This transaction is
not ‘‘major’’ because it does not involve the control
or merger of two or more Class I carriers. See 49
CFR 1180.2(a). It also is not ‘‘exempt’’ because it is
not within one of the eight class exemptions listed
in § 1180.2(d).
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parties’ agreements that may have
anticompetitive effects. Under Section 4
of Attachment C to the Joint Use
Operating Agreement, the fee L&I must
pay CSXT for overhead movement of
certain cars on the upgraded track
between milepost 4.0 and milepost 98.3
could be an anticompetitive effect
because it may create a disincentive for
L&I to interchange with carriers other
than CSXT. Furthermore, this provision
would continue in perpetuity. In
addition, the Transaction explicitly
precludes L&I from granting operating
rights to other Class I railroads without
the permission of CSXT. Because the
compensation arrangement only applies
to 286,000 pounds GWOR and cars
above a certain height—both of which
are car types that L&I does not presently
handle—the provisions do not appear to
affect L&I’s ability to continue its
current operations and serve the
shippers it serves today. In other
transactions involving a significant
capital investment by a railroad to
improve lines that it does not own or
fully control, the Board has permitted
certain restrictions similarly aimed at
protecting that investment. See Kansas
City S. Ry. and Meridian Speedway
LLC—Exemption for Transactions
Within a Corporate Family, FD 34822
(STB served Feb. 16, 2006) (authorizing
a transaction that involved a significant
investment by Norfolk Southern
Railway Company (NSR) in capital
improvements to a line of the Kansas
City Southern Railroad, but imposed
certain restrictions on other railroads
from operating over it); see also Norfolk
S. Ry., Pan Am Rys., et al.—Joint
Control and Operating/Pooling
Agreements—Pan Am S. LLC, FD 35147
(STB served Mar. 10, 2009) (authorizing
the control and ownership of Pan Am
Southern and substantial investment by
NSR in improvements to Pan Am
Southern’s lines and facilities).
Here, the Board finds the Transaction
to be a ‘‘minor transaction’’ because it
appears on the face of the application,
as supplemented, that any
anticompetitive effects of the
Transaction would clearly be
outweighed by the contribution to the
public interest. The proposed upgrades
to the Line would allow more efficient
operations by both L&I and CSXT. L&I
would receive an upgraded track, from
FRA Class 2 (up to 25 mph) to FRA
Class 4 track (up to 60 mph), a new
bridge, and upgraded dispatching and
signaling systems. Customers along the
Line would receive faster service and be
able to use heavier and taller cars.
The Board’s findings regarding
competitive impact and contributions to
the public interest are preliminary. The
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Board will give careful consideration to
any claims that the potential
anticompetitive effects of the
Transaction would not be outweighed
by its potential benefits. We also note
that the Board can condition the
Transaction to mitigate or eliminate
adverse effects.
The Board accepts the application for
consideration because it is in substantial
compliance with the applicable
regulations governing ‘‘minor
transactions.’’ See 49 CFR pt. 1180; 49
U.S.C. 11321–26. The Board reserves the
right to require the filing of
supplemental information as necessary
to complete the record.
Procedural schedule. The Board has
considered Applicants’ request for an
expedited procedural schedule, under
which the Board would issue its final
decision on November 25, 2013, 146
days after the application has been filed
(rather than 180 days), and have that
decision become effective 20 days after
it is issued (rather than 30 days). The
Board will adopt a procedural schedule,
based on the filing of the supplemental
information on July 2, 2013, that
attempts to accommodate the parties’
desire to close the Transaction by the
end of 2013. Under the procedural
schedule we are adopting in this case:
Any person who wishes to participate in
this proceeding as a party of record
(POR) must file a notice of intent to
participate no later than August 15,
2013; all comments, protests, requests
for conditions, and any other evidence
and argument in opposition to the
application, including filings by DOJ
and DOT, must be filed by September
30, 2013; comments on the Draft EA
must be submitted by September 30,
2013; and responses to comments,
protests, requests for conditions, and
other opposition on the transportation
merits of the Transaction, as well as
Applicants’ rebuttal in support of the
application, must be filed by October
21, 2013. The Board plans to issue its
Final EA on or before November 6,
2013, and its final decision by December
6, 2013, and to make any such approval
effective by December 26, 2013. The
Board reserves the right to adjust the
schedule as circumstances may warrant.
For further information regarding dates,
see the Appendix (Procedural
Schedule).
Notice of intent to participate. Any
person who wishes to participate in this
proceeding as a POR must file with the
Board, no later than August 15, 2013, a
notice of intent to participate,
accompanied by a certificate of service
indicating that the notice has been
properly served on the Secretary of
Transportation, the Attorney General of
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the United States, Mr. Sidman
(representing L&I), and Mr. Gitomer
(representing CSXT).
If a request is made in the notice of
intent to participate to have more than
one name added to the service list as a
POR representing a particular entity, the
extra name will be added to the service
list as a ‘‘Non-Party.’’ The list will
reflect the Board’s policy of allowing
only one official representative per
party to be placed on the service list, as
specified in Press Release No. 97–68
dated August 18, 1997, announcing the
implementation of the Board’s ‘‘One
Party-One Representative’’ policy for
service lists. Any person designated as
a Non-Party will receive copies of Board
decisions, orders, and notices but not
copies of official filings. Persons seeking
to change their status must accompany
that request with a written certification
that he or she has complied with the
service requirements set forth at 49 CFR
1180.4, and any other requirements set
forth in this decision.
Service list notice. The Board will
serve, as soon after August 15, 2013, as
practicable, a notice containing the
official service list (the service list
notice). Each POR will be required to
serve upon all other PORs, within 10
days of the service date of the service
list notice, copies of all filings
previously submitted by that party (to
the extent such filings have not
previously been served upon such other
parties). Each POR will also be required
to file with the Board, within 10 days of
the service date of the service list notice,
a certificate of service indicating that
the service required by the preceding
sentence has been accomplished. Every
filing made by a POR must have its own
certificate of service indicating that all
PORs on the service list have been
served with a copy of the filing.
Members of the United States Congress
(MOCs) and Governors (GOVs) are not
parties of record and need not be served
with copies of filings, unless any MOC
or GOV has requested to be, and is
designated as, a POR.
Service of decisions, orders, and
notices. The Board will serve copies of
its decisions, orders, and notices only
on those persons who are designated on
the official service list as either POR,
MOC, GOV, or Non-Party. All other
interested persons are encouraged to
secure copies of decisions, orders, and
notices via the Board’s Web site at
‘‘www.stb.dot.gov’’ under ‘‘E-LIBRARY/
Decisions & Notices.’’ It is not necessary
to become a POR in order to participate
in the environmental review process.
Nor must environmental comments be
served on other parties. The Draft EA
will be posted on the Board’s Web site.
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46685
In addition, OEA will distribute the
document to appropriate federal, state,
and local agencies and other interested
parties in the project area. OEA will also
provide copies of the Draft EA to public
libraries in the project area. Any person
or interested party may submit
comments on the Draft EA by following
the instructions in the document for
submitting comments.
Access to filings. Under the Board’s
rules, any document filed with the
Board (including applications,
pleadings, etc.) shall be promptly
furnished by the filer to interested
persons on request, unless subject to a
protective order. 49 CFR 1180.4(a)(3).
Such documents are available for
inspection in the Docket File Reading
Room (Room 131) at the offices of the
Surface Transportation Board, 395 E
Street SW., in Washington, DC. The
application and other filings in this
proceeding will also be available on the
Board’s Web site at ‘‘www.stb.dot.gov’’
under ‘‘E-LIBRARY/Filings.’’ In
addition, the application may be
obtained from Messrs. Sidman and
Gitomer at the addresses indicated
above.
This action will not significantly
affect either the quality of the human
environment or the conservation of
energy resources.
It is ordered:
1. The application in FD 35523, as
supplemented, is accepted for
consideration.
2. The parties to this proceeding must
comply with the procedural schedule
adopted by the Board in this proceeding
as shown in the Appendix.
3. The parties to this proceeding must
comply with the procedural
requirements described in this decision.
4. This decision is effective on August
1, 2013.
Decided: July 29, 2013.
By the Board, Chairman Elliott, Vice
Chairman Begeman, and Commissioner
Mulvey.
Derrick A. Gardner,
Clearance Clerk.
Appendix: Procedural Schedule
June 14, 2013 Motion for Protective
Order filed.
July 2, 2013 Application, as
supplemented, filed.
August 15, 2013 Notices of intent to
participate in this proceeding due.
Discovery requests due to
Applicants.
September 3, 2013 Applicants’
responses to discovery requests
due.
August 30, 2013 OEA issues Draft EA.
September 30, 2013 Comments due
from all parties, including the
E:\FR\FM\01AUN1.SGM
01AUN1
46686
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 148 / Thursday, August 1, 2013 / Notices
Attorney General and the Secretary
of Transportation, on the
transportation merits of the
Transaction.
September 30, 2013 Comments on
Draft EA due to OEA.
October 21, 2013 Responses to
comments on the transportation
merits of the Transaction due.
Applicants’ rebuttal in support of
the application due.
October 30, 2013 Close of record on
the transportation merits.
On or before November 6, 2013 OEA
issues Final EA.
December 6, 2013 Board serves final
decision.*
December 26, 2013 Effective date of
final decision.
* The Board reserves the right to modify
this schedule as circumstances may
warrant.
[FR Doc. 2013–18527 Filed 7–31–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Privacy Act of 1974; Treasury/United
States Mint .013—United States Mint
National Electronic Incident Reporting
System of Records
United States Mint, Treasury.
Notice of Proposed New System
of Records
AGENCY:
ACTION:
In accordance with the
requirements of the Privacy Act of 1974,
as amended, 5 U.S.C. 552a, the
Department of the Treasury
(‘‘Treasury’’) and the United States Mint
proposes to establish a new system of
records entitled, ‘‘Treasury/United
States Mint .013—United States Mint
National Electronic Incident Reporting
System of Records.’’
DATES: Comments must be received no
later than September 3, 2013. The
proposed new system of records will
become effective September 10, 2013
unless comments are received that
would result in a contrary
determination.
SUMMARY:
Comments should be sent to
the Disclosure Officer, United States
Mint, 801 9th Street NW., Washington,
DC 20220, Attention: Privacy Act
Systems of Record. Comments may be
faxed to (202) 756–6153, or emailed to
kmitchell@usmint.treas.gov. Comments
will be made available for public
inspection upon written request. The
United States Mint will make such
comments available for public
inspection and copying at the above
listed location, on official business days
between the hours of 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
ADDRESSES:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:02 Jul 31, 2013
Jkt 229001
Eastern Standard Time. Persons wishing
to inspect the comments submitted must
request an appointment by telephoning
(202) 354–7600. All comments received,
including attachments and other
supporting materials, are part of the
public record and subject to public
disclosure. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
general questions and privacy issues,
please contact Kathleen SaundersMitchell, Disclosure Officer, (202) 354–
7600, United States Mint, 801 9th Street
NW., Washington, DC 20220.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to the Privacy Act of 1974, as amended,
5 U.S.C. 552a, Treasury and the United
States Mint proposes to establish a new
system of records entitled, ‘‘Treasury/
United States Mint .013—United States
Mint National Electronic Incident
Reporting System of Records.’’
The United States Mint is establishing
the United States Mint National
Electronic Incident Reporting System of
Records to enhance the incident
management capabilities of the United
States Mint Police. The system will be
a centrally managed electronic database
and workflow system that will support
the collection, management, and sharing
of information regarding reported
incidents on or related to United States
Mint property; property for which the
United States Mint shares jurisdiction
through a Cooperative Agreement,
Memorandum of Understanding or other
arrangement; or property or assets under
United States Mint custody or control.
It is intended to be usable by all United
States Mint Police Officers in
accordance with applicable procedures,
improve data management and security,
and provide a tracking system to notify
supervisors of case status.
While the system is generally
organized by incident and not by
individual, it contains personal
information on individuals searchable
by individual name or other personal
identifier. Information in the system is
expected to include some or all of the
following: Individual names, addresses,
phone numbers, dates of birth, driver’s
license numbers, social security
numbers, license plate numbers,
medical information (typically in the
case of accidents or injuries),
investigation information, property
descriptions, vehicle identifying
information and physical descriptions.
Information collected is protected
throughout the life cycle of the system.
All information about an individual
provided to the United States Mint
Police that becomes part of this system
PO 00000
Frm 00122
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
of records in connection with incidents
on or related to the following will be
subject to the Privacy Act and to the
Privacy Act exceptions and routine uses
applicable to the data: United States
Mint property; property for which the
United States Mint Police share
jurisdiction (through a Cooperative
Agreement, Memorandum of
Understanding or other arrangement); or
property or assets under United States
Mint custody or control.
The individuals who will have access
to the system include authorized
employees and contractors working for
the United States Mint who have
undergone security background checks,
have Privacy Act clauses in their
contracts, and have signed
nondisclosure agreements with the
United States Mint. The program office
and system owner will be responsible
for assuring proper use of the data
contained in the system. Paper records
are stored in secured filing cabinets
with access only by authorized
personnel. Electronic records are stored
in secured systems subject to access
controls in accordance with Department
of the Treasury and United States Mint
policies and procedures. Access to
electronic records is restricted to
authorized personnel, and is subject to
multiple controls including an access
approval process, unique user identifier,
user authentication and account
management, and password
management.
Authority for this system derives from
40 U.S.C. 1315, 31 U.S.C. 321, 31 U.S.C.
5141 (note), and Treasury Order 101–33
(March 30, 2010). Below is the
description of the Treasury/United
States Mint .013—United States Mint
National Electronic Incident Reporting
System of Records. In accordance with
5 U.S.C. 552a(r), Treasury has provided
a report of this system of records to the
Office of Management and Budget and
to Congress.
Dated: July 15, 2013.
Helen Goff Foster
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Privacy,
Transparency and Records designee.
Treasury/United States Mint .013
SYSTEM NAME:
United States Mint National
Electronic Incident Reporting System of
Records.
SYSTEM LOCATION:
United States Mint, 801 9th Street
NW., Washington, DC 20220.
CATEGORIES OF INDIVIDUALS COVERED BY THE
SYSTEM:
Employees, contractors, visitors and
other members of the general public
E:\FR\FM\01AUN1.SGM
01AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 148 (Thursday, August 1, 2013)]
[Notices]
[Pages 46682-46686]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-18527]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Surface Transportation Board
[Docket No. FD 35523]
CSX Transportation, Inc.--Joint Use--Louisville & Indiana
Railroad Company, Inc.
AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board, DOT.
ACTION: Decision No. 3 in FD 35523; Notice of Acceptance of Application
and Related Filings; Issuance of Procedural Schedule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Surface Transportation Board (Board) is accepting for
consideration the application submitted on June 14, 2013, and
supplemented on July 2, 2013, by CSX Transportation, Inc. (CSXT), and
Louisville & Indiana Railroad Company, Inc. (L&I). The application
seeks Board approval under 49 U.S.C. 11323 et seq., for joint use by
CSXT and L&I of L&I's 106.5-mile railroad line between its connection
with CSXT in Indianapolis, Ind., milepost 4.0, and its
connection with CSXT in Louisville, Ky., milepost 110.5
(the Line). In order to jointly use the Line with L&I, CSXT seeks to
acquire and use a perpetual, non-exclusive freight railroad operating
easement over the Line. This proposal is referred to as the
Transaction, and CSXT and L&I are referred to collectively as
Applicants.
The Board finds that the Transaction is a ``minor transaction''
under 49 CFR 1180.2(c), and that the application, as supplemented on
July 2, 2013, is complete.\1\ The Board adopts a procedural schedule
for consideration of the application, under which the Board's final
decision would be issued by December 6, 2013 (assuming the
environmental review process has been completed), and would become
effective by December 26, 2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ On July 2, 2013, Applicants filed public and confidential
versions of Section 4 of Attachment C to the Joint Use Operating
Agreement. For more information, see Decision No. 2 in this docket.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 46683]]
DATES: The effective date of this decision is August 1, 2013. Any
person who wishes to participate in this proceeding as a party of
record (POR) must file, no later than August 15, 2013, a notice of
intent to participate. All comments, protests, requests for conditions,
and any other evidence and argument in opposition to the application,
including filings by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) and the U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT), must be filed by September 30,
2013. Responses to comments, protests, requests for conditions, and
other opposition on the transportation merits of the Transaction, and
rebuttal in support of the application must be filed by October 21,
2013.
The Board's Office of Environmental Analysis (OEA) will issue a
Draft Environmental Assessment (EA) on August 30, 2013, for public
review and comment. Comments on the Draft EA will be due by September
30, 2013. OEA expects to issue a Final EA completing the environmental
review process on or before November 6, 2013.
If a public hearing or oral argument is held, it will be held on a
date to be determined by the Board. The Board expects to issue its
final decision by December 6, 2013, unless more time is needed to
permit the completion of the environmental review process, and to make
the decision effective by December 26, 2013. For further information
respecting dates, see the Appendix (Procedural Schedule).
ADDRESSES: Any filing submitted on the transportation merits in this
proceeding must 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 found on
the Board's Web site at www.stb.dot.gov at the ``E-FILING'' link. Any
person submitting a filing in the traditional paper format should send
an original and 10 paper copies of the filing (and also an electronic
version) to: Surface Transportation Board, 395 E Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20423-0001. In addition, one copy of each filing in this
proceeding must be sent (and may be sent by email only if service by
email is acceptable to the recipient) to each of the following: (1)
Secretary of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC
20590; (2) Attorney General of the United States, c/o Assistant
Attorney General, Antitrust Division, Room 3109, Department of Justice,
Washington, DC 20530; (3) Louis E. Gitomer (representing CSXT), Law
Offices of Louis E. Gitomer, LLC, 600 Baltimore Avenue, Suite 301,
Towson, MD 21204; (4) Mark H. Sidman (representing L&I), Anacostia Rail
Holdings Company, 1701 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Suite 300, Washington,
DC 20006; and (5) any other person designated as a POR on the service
list notice (as explained below, the service list notice will be issued
as soon after August 15, 2013, as practicable).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jonathon Binet, (202) 245-0368.
[Assistance for the hearing impaired is available through the Federal
Information Relay Service (FIRS) at 1-800-877-8339.]
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: CSXT is a wholly owned subsidiary of CSX
Corporation and is a Class I railroad that owns and operates
approximately 21,000 miles of railroad lines in the United States and
Canada. As relevant here, CSXT currently operates over the Line
pursuant to trackage rights.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ See CSX Transp.--Trackage Rights Exemption--Louisville &
Ind. R.R., FD 33744 (STB served June 21, 2001). Under the terms of
the Joint Use Operating Agreement, these trackage rights would
become dormant but would automatically reactivate should the
Easement Agreement terminate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
L&I, a Class III railroad, is a wholly owned subsidiary of
Anacostia Rail Holdings. L&I owns and operates 106 miles of rail lines
in Kentucky and Indiana. Prior to L&I's acquisition of the Line, it was
owned by Consolidated Rail Corporation. Currently, the Line handles two
trains per day between Indianapolis and Seymour, Ind. (L&I); four
trains per day between Seymour and Jeffersonville Yard, Ind. (2 L&I and
2 CSXT); and seven trains per day between Jeffersonville Yard and
Louisville, Ky. (5 L&I and 2 CSXT).
Joint use of the Line would be made possible through CSXT's
acquisition and use of a perpetual, non-exclusive freight railroad
operating easement over the Line. In order to accomplish this, CSXT and
L&I have entered into a Transaction Agreement, Easement Agreement, and
Joint Use Operating Agreement, as well as other agreements. L&I has
agreed to sell the easement to CSXT for $10 million. As a result of the
Transaction, CSXT would fund an upgrade of the Line, which would result
in the following improvements: upgrade of the track from FRA Class 2
(up to 25 mph) to FRA Class 4 track (up to 60 mph), replacement of a
bridge, modernization of the current dispatching system, and completion
of upgrades necessary to permit the handling of 286,000 pound gross
weight on rail cars (GWOR). These upgrades are estimated to cost
between $70 million and $90 million, and would be completed within
seven years. L&I would continue to provide overhead service and
exclusive local service, while CSXT would continue to provide overhead
service on the Line.
Applicants claim that the upgrades to the Line will increase the
efficiency and performance of both CSXT's and L&I's operations. Once
the upgrades are completed, Applicants state that there will be 17
trains (2 L&I and 15 CSXT) per day operating between Indianapolis and
Jeffersonville Yard, Ind.; and 20 trains (5 L&I and 15 CSXT) per day
operating between Jeffersonville Yard, Ind. and Louisville, Ky.\3\
Applicants state that the Transaction would create routing flexibility
and performance improvements for CSXT in the Midwestern and South
regions (areas encompassing Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and Kentucky).
Applicants state that CSXT expects to save about 130.5 hours of transit
time per day, resulting in savings of about $11.8 million per year.
Applicants state that L&I would benefit from the upgraded Line without
incurring the capital cost and would share the cost of maintaining the
Line with CSXT based on usage.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ These projections reflect increases in CSXT's number of
trains. L&I present number of trains is not projected to change as a
result of the transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Joint Use Operating Agreement, the existing track would
be improved to allow the Line to handle cars weighing 286,000 pounds
GWOR, rather than the current weight of 263,000 pounds GWOR. L&I would
be able to use the Line as it does today, however, L&I would be
required to pay CSXT for use of the upgraded line for cars weighing
more than 263,000 pounds GWOR or taller than 18'6'' above the top rail
when CSXT is not involved in the movement of the car (referred to as
``subject cars'').\4\ Under Section 4 of Attachment C to the Joint Use
Operating Agreement, L&I's subject cars would be charged a per unit-
mile fee for overhead movement between milepost 4.0 and milepost 98.3.
According to Applicants, this compensation arrangement is perpetual and
is based on the Transaction Agreement. L&I would also be charged for
originating or terminating a certain number of subject cars at
customers served by CSXT or accessible to CSXT by reciprocal switch
within a calendar year, subject to some exclusions. Another provision
of the Joint Use Operating Agreement precludes L&I's ability to grant
operating rights to third party Class I railroads and specifies that
L&I shall not
[[Page 46684]]
grant operating rights to a Class I carrier without prior written
consent of CSXT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Under the Joint Use Operating Agreement, L&I could opt out
of the payments for cars taller than 18'6'', with a one-time payment
to CSXT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Financial Arrangements. Under the Transaction, L&I would sell the
easement to CSXT for $10 million. No new securities would be issued by
CSXT or L&I. The upgrades would be funded as part of CSXT's annual
capital budget.
Passenger Service Impacts. Applicants state that the Transaction
would not adversely impact commuter or other passenger service.
Pursuant to terms of Applicants' Joint Use Operating Agreement, L&I
would retain all rights with respect to the conduct of passenger
operations on the Line.
Discontinuances/Abandonments. The Transaction does not involve the
abandonment of, or discontinuance of service over, any rail lines. Nor
do Applicants have any plans at this time to discontinue service over
or abandon any lines as a result of the Transaction.
Public Interest Considerations. Applicants assert that the
Transaction would not reduce the number of railroads serving any
shipper on the Line. Rather, all shippers along the Line would receive
faster service and be able to use taller and heavier cars. L&I would
continue to serve the same shippers it serves today. Applicants state
that the competitive balance between CSXT and L&I would not be altered
because L&I and CSXT would remain unaffiliated. Applicants claim that
L&I would benefit by receiving an upgraded track, a new bridge, and
upgraded dispatching and signaling systems without incurring the
capital cost.
Applicants state that CSXT currently uses trackage rights over the
Line to relieve some of the congestion on its Louisville Cincinnati
Subdivision (LCL Subdivision).\5\ After the upgrades are complete, CSXT
expects to reduce inefficiencies caused by running shorter and slower
trains on the LCL Subdivision. According to Applicants, CSXT's use of
the Line would reduce freight transit time in the Midwestern and South
regions, reduce fuel consumption, upgrade car utilization, and allow it
to compete more effectively with nearby railroads and short and long-
haul trucking companies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Expansion of the LCL Subdivision is not feasible due to
curvature and weight restrictions and short sidings. Application,
11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Time Schedule for Consummation. Applicants expect to consummate the
Transaction before the end of 2013.
Environmental Matters. The National Environmental Policy Act of
1969, 42 U.S.C. 4321-4347 (NEPA), requires that the Board take
environmental considerations into account in its decisionmaking.
Environmental review under NEPA will be required here because the
projected increases in train traffic on the Line (between 13 and 15
trains per day) exceed the thresholds in the Board's environmental
rules (generally an increase in 3 or 8 trains per day). Consistent with
those rules, OEA currently is preparing a Draft EA. OEA anticipates
issuing its Draft EA for public comment on August 30, 2013. Parties
interested in commenting on the Draft EA must submit comments by
September 30, 2013. The Draft EA will provide instructions on how to
submit comments on the document. OEA anticipates issuing a Final EA on
or before November 6, 2013.
Labor Impacts. Applicants state that no employees of CSXT and L&I
would be adversely affected. According to Applicants, CSXT trains that
are operated over the Line would continue to be crewed by CSXT
employees. L&I trains would continue to be operated by L&I employees.
L&I would continue to maintain and dispatch the Line.
Applicants request that the Board impose the employee protective
conditions set forth in Norfolk and Western Railway Co.--Trackage
Rights--Burlington Northern, Inc., 354 I.C.C. 605 (1978), as modified
in Mendocino Coast Railway, Inc.--Lease and Operate--California Western
Railroad, 360 I.C.C. 653 (1980).
Application accepted. Under 49 CFR 1180.4(b)(2)(iv), the Board must
determine whether a proposed transaction is ``major,'' ``significant,''
or ``minor.'' Here, we must determine whether the Transaction is
``significant'' under Sec. 1180.2(b) or ``minor'' under Sec.
1180.2(c).\6\ A transaction that does not involve the control or merger
of two or more Class I railroads is not of regional or national
transportation significance, and therefore is classified as ``minor''
if: (1) The transaction would clearly not have anticompetitive effects,
or (2) any anticompetitive effects would clearly be outweighed by the
transaction's contribution to the public interest in meeting
significant transportation needs. See 49 CFR 1180.2(b), (c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See 49 CFR 1180.4(b)(2)(iv). This transaction is not
``major'' because it does not involve the control or merger of two
or more Class I carriers. See 49 CFR 1180.2(a). It also is not
``exempt'' because it is not within one of the eight class
exemptions listed in Sec. 1180.2(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on a review of the application and supplement, the Board
finds that the Transaction does not appear to be of regional or
national transportation significance and therefore qualifies as a
``minor transaction'' under the Board's regulatory scheme. The Board
has identified some provisions in the parties' agreements that may have
anticompetitive effects. Under Section 4 of Attachment C to the Joint
Use Operating Agreement, the fee L&I must pay CSXT for overhead
movement of certain cars on the upgraded track between milepost 4.0 and
milepost 98.3 could be an anticompetitive effect because it may create
a disincentive for L&I to interchange with carriers other than CSXT.
Furthermore, this provision would continue in perpetuity. In addition,
the Transaction explicitly precludes L&I from granting operating rights
to other Class I railroads without the permission of CSXT. Because the
compensation arrangement only applies to 286,000 pounds GWOR and cars
above a certain height--both of which are car types that L&I does not
presently handle--the provisions do not appear to affect L&I's ability
to continue its current operations and serve the shippers it serves
today. In other transactions involving a significant capital investment
by a railroad to improve lines that it does not own or fully control,
the Board has permitted certain restrictions similarly aimed at
protecting that investment. See Kansas City S. Ry. and Meridian
Speedway LLC--Exemption for Transactions Within a Corporate Family, FD
34822 (STB served Feb. 16, 2006) (authorizing a transaction that
involved a significant investment by Norfolk Southern Railway Company
(NSR) in capital improvements to a line of the Kansas City Southern
Railroad, but imposed certain restrictions on other railroads from
operating over it); see also Norfolk S. Ry., Pan Am Rys., et al.--Joint
Control and Operating/Pooling Agreements--Pan Am S. LLC, FD 35147 (STB
served Mar. 10, 2009) (authorizing the control and ownership of Pan Am
Southern and substantial investment by NSR in improvements to Pan Am
Southern's lines and facilities).
Here, the Board finds the Transaction to be a ``minor transaction''
because it appears on the face of the application, as supplemented,
that any anticompetitive effects of the Transaction would clearly be
outweighed by the contribution to the public interest. The proposed
upgrades to the Line would allow more efficient operations by both L&I
and CSXT. L&I would receive an upgraded track, from FRA Class 2 (up to
25 mph) to FRA Class 4 track (up to 60 mph), a new bridge, and upgraded
dispatching and signaling systems. Customers along the Line would
receive faster service and be able to use heavier and taller cars.
The Board's findings regarding competitive impact and contributions
to the public interest are preliminary. The
[[Page 46685]]
Board will give careful consideration to any claims that the potential
anticompetitive effects of the Transaction would not be outweighed by
its potential benefits. We also note that the Board can condition the
Transaction to mitigate or eliminate adverse effects.
The Board accepts the application for consideration because it is
in substantial compliance with the applicable regulations governing
``minor transactions.'' See 49 CFR pt. 1180; 49 U.S.C. 11321-26. The
Board reserves the right to require the filing of supplemental
information as necessary to complete the record.
Procedural schedule. The Board has considered Applicants' request
for an expedited procedural schedule, under which the Board would issue
its final decision on November 25, 2013, 146 days after the application
has been filed (rather than 180 days), and have that decision become
effective 20 days after it is issued (rather than 30 days). The Board
will adopt a procedural schedule, based on the filing of the
supplemental information on July 2, 2013, that attempts to accommodate
the parties' desire to close the Transaction by the end of 2013. Under
the procedural schedule we are adopting in this case: Any person who
wishes to participate in this proceeding as a party of record (POR)
must file a notice of intent to participate no later than August 15,
2013; all comments, protests, requests for conditions, and any other
evidence and argument in opposition to the application, including
filings by DOJ and DOT, must be filed by September 30, 2013; comments
on the Draft EA must be submitted by September 30, 2013; and responses
to comments, protests, requests for conditions, and other opposition on
the transportation merits of the Transaction, as well as Applicants'
rebuttal in support of the application, must be filed by October 21,
2013. The Board plans to issue its Final EA on or before November 6,
2013, and its final decision by December 6, 2013, and to make any such
approval effective by December 26, 2013. The Board reserves the right
to adjust the schedule as circumstances may warrant. For further
information regarding dates, see the Appendix (Procedural Schedule).
Notice of intent to participate. Any person who wishes to
participate in this proceeding as a POR must file with the Board, no
later than August 15, 2013, a notice of intent to participate,
accompanied by a certificate of service indicating that the notice has
been properly served on the Secretary of Transportation, the Attorney
General of the United States, Mr. Sidman (representing L&I), and Mr.
Gitomer (representing CSXT).
If a request is made in the notice of intent to participate to have
more than one name added to the service list as a POR representing a
particular entity, the extra name will be added to the service list as
a ``Non-Party.'' The list will reflect the Board's policy of allowing
only one official representative per party to be placed on the service
list, as specified in Press Release No. 97-68 dated August 18, 1997,
announcing the implementation of the Board's ``One Party-One
Representative'' policy for service lists. Any person designated as a
Non-Party will receive copies of Board decisions, orders, and notices
but not copies of official filings. Persons seeking to change their
status must accompany that request with a written certification that he
or she has complied with the service requirements set forth at 49 CFR
1180.4, and any other requirements set forth in this decision.
Service list notice. The Board will serve, as soon after August 15,
2013, as practicable, a notice containing the official service list
(the service list notice). Each POR will be required to serve upon all
other PORs, within 10 days of the service date of the service list
notice, copies of all filings previously submitted by that party (to
the extent such filings have not previously been served upon such other
parties). Each POR will also be required to file with the Board, within
10 days of the service date of the service list notice, a certificate
of service indicating that the service required by the preceding
sentence has been accomplished. Every filing made by a POR must have
its own certificate of service indicating that all PORs on the service
list have been served with a copy of the filing. Members of the United
States Congress (MOCs) and Governors (GOVs) are not parties of record
and need not be served with copies of filings, unless any MOC or GOV
has requested to be, and is designated as, a POR.
Service of decisions, orders, and notices. The Board will serve
copies of its decisions, orders, and notices only on those persons who
are designated on the official service list as either POR, MOC, GOV, or
Non-Party. All other interested persons are encouraged to secure copies
of decisions, orders, and notices via the Board's Web site at
``www.stb.dot.gov'' under ``E-LIBRARY/Decisions & Notices.'' It is not
necessary to become a POR in order to participate in the environmental
review process. Nor must environmental comments be served on other
parties. The Draft EA will be posted on the Board's Web site. In
addition, OEA will distribute the document to appropriate federal,
state, and local agencies and other interested parties in the project
area. OEA will also provide copies of the Draft EA to public libraries
in the project area. Any person or interested party may submit comments
on the Draft EA by following the instructions in the document for
submitting comments.
Access to filings. Under the Board's rules, any document filed with
the Board (including applications, pleadings, etc.) shall be promptly
furnished by the filer to interested persons on request, unless subject
to a protective order. 49 CFR 1180.4(a)(3). Such documents are
available for inspection in the Docket File Reading Room (Room 131) at
the offices of the Surface Transportation Board, 395 E Street SW., in
Washington, DC. The application and other filings in this proceeding
will also be available on the Board's Web site at ``www.stb.dot.gov''
under ``E-LIBRARY/Filings.'' In addition, the application may be
obtained from Messrs. Sidman and Gitomer at the addresses indicated
above.
This action will not significantly affect either the quality of the
human environment or the conservation of energy resources.
It is ordered:
1. The application in FD 35523, as supplemented, is accepted for
consideration.
2. The parties to this proceeding must comply with the procedural
schedule adopted by the Board in this proceeding as shown in the
Appendix.
3. The parties to this proceeding must comply with the procedural
requirements described in this decision.
4. This decision is effective on August 1, 2013.
Decided: July 29, 2013.
By the Board, Chairman Elliott, Vice Chairman Begeman, and
Commissioner Mulvey.
Derrick A. Gardner,
Clearance Clerk.
Appendix: Procedural Schedule
June 14, 2013 Motion for Protective Order filed.
July 2, 2013 Application, as supplemented, filed.
August 15, 2013 Notices of intent to participate in this proceeding
due. Discovery requests due to Applicants.
September 3, 2013 Applicants' responses to discovery requests due.
August 30, 2013 OEA issues Draft EA.
September 30, 2013 Comments due from all parties, including the
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Attorney General and the Secretary of Transportation, on the
transportation merits of the Transaction.
September 30, 2013 Comments on Draft EA due to OEA.
October 21, 2013 Responses to comments on the transportation merits of
the Transaction due. Applicants' rebuttal in support of the application
due.
October 30, 2013 Close of record on the transportation merits.
On or before November 6, 2013 OEA issues Final EA.
December 6, 2013 Board serves final decision.*
December 26, 2013 Effective date of final decision.
* The Board reserves the right to modify this schedule as circumstances
may warrant.
[FR Doc. 2013-18527 Filed 7-31-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915-01-P