Requirements for the DOT Data Innovation Challenge, 13370-13373 [2014-04399]
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imported from abroad for temporary
exhibition within the United States, are
of cultural significance. The objects are
imported pursuant to a loan agreement
with the foreign owner or custodian. I
also determine that the exhibition or
display of the exhibit objects at the
Museo de Arte de Ponce, Ponce, PR,
from on or about March 21, 2014, until
on or about July 28, 2014, and at
possible additional exhibitions or
venues yet to be determined, is in the
national interest. I have ordered that
Public Notice of these Determinations
be published in the Federal Register.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information, including a list of
the exhibit objects, contact Julie
Simpson, Attorney-Adviser, Office of
the Legal Adviser, U.S. Department of
State (telephone: 202–632–6467). The
mailing address is U.S. Department of
State, SA–5, L/PD, Fifth Floor (Suite
5H03), Washington, DC 20522–0505.
Dated: March 4, 2014.
Evan M. Ryan,
Assistant Secretary, Bureau of Educational
and Cultural Affairs, Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2014–05129 Filed 3–7–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–05–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice 8651]
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U.S. Department of State Advisory
Committee on Private International
Law (ACPIL)—Online Dispute
Resolution (ODR) Study Group
The Office of the Assistant Legal
Adviser for Private International Law,
Department of State, hereby gives notice
that the ACPIL ODR Study Group will
hold a public meeting. The ACPIL ODR
Study Group will meet to discuss the
next session of the UNCITRAL ODR
Working Group, scheduled for March
24–28, 2014 in New York. This is not a
meeting of the full Advisory Committee.
The UNCITRAL ODR Working Group
is charged with the development of legal
instruments for resolving both business
to business and business to consumer
cross-border electronic commerce
disputes. The Working Group is in the
process of developing generic ODR
procedural rules for resolution of crossborder electronic commerce disputes,
along with separate legal instruments
that may take the form of annexes on
guidelines and minimum requirements
for online dispute resolution providers
and arbitrators, substantive legal
principles for resolving disputes, and a
cross-border enforcement mechanism.
For the reports of the first seven
sessions of the UNCITRAL ODR
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Working Group—December 13–17,
2010, in Vienna (A/CN.9/716); May 23–
27, 2011, in New York (A/CN.9/721);
Nov. 14–18, 2011, in Vienna (A/CN.9/
739); May 21–25, 2012, in New York
(A/CN.9/744); November 5–9, 2012, in
Vienna (A/CN.9/762): May 20–24, 2013,
in New York (A/CN.9/769); and
November 18–22, 2014, in Vienna
(A/CN.9/795)—please follow the
following link: https://www.uncitral.org/
uncitral/commission/working_groups/
3Online_Dispute_Resolution.html.
Documents relating to the upcoming
session of the Working Group are
available on the same link.
Time and Place: The meeting of the
ACPIL ODR Study Group will take place
on Friday March 14 from 12:30 p.m. to
2:00 p.m. EST at 2430 E Street NW.,
South Building (SA 4) (Navy Hill),
Room 240. Participants should arrive at
Navy Hill before 12:15 p.m. for visitor
screening. Participants will be met at
the Navy Hill gate at 23rd and D Streets,
NW., and will be escorted to the South
Building. Persons arriving later will
need to make arrangements for entry
using the contact information provided
below. If you are unable to attend the
public meeting and would like to
participate from a remote location,
teleconferencing will be available.
Public Participation: This meeting is
open to the public, subject to the
capacity of the meeting room. Access to
Navy Hill is strictly controlled. For preclearance purposes, those planning to
attend in person are requested to email
at PIL@state.gov providing full name,
address, date of birth, citizenship,
driver’s license or passport number,
affiliation, and email address. This will
greatly facilitate entry.
A member of the public needing
reasonable accommodation should
provide an email requesting such
accommodation to pil@state.gov no later
than a week before the meeting.
Requests made after that date will be
considered, but might not be able to be
fulfilled. If you would like to participate
by telephone, please email pil@state.gov
to obtain the call-in number and other
information.
Data from the public is requested
pursuant to Public Law 99–399
(Omnibus Diplomatic Security and
Antiterrorism Act of 1986), as amended;
Public Law 107–56 (USA PATRIOT
Act); and Executive Order 13356. The
purpose of the collection is to validate
the identity of individuals who enter
Department facilities. The data will be
entered into the Visitor Access Control
System (VACS–D) database. Please see
the Security Records System of Records
Notice (State-36) at https://
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www.state.gov/documents/organization/
103419.pdf for additional information.
Dated: February 24, 2014.
Michael Dennis,
Attorney-Adviser, Office of Private
International Law. Office of the Legal Adviser
Department of State
[FR Doc. 2014–05128 Filed 3–7–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–08–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary of
Transportation
Requirements for the DOT Data
Innovation Challenge
U.S. Department of
Transportation, Office of the Secretary
of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice .
AGENCY:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719 (America
COMPETES Act).
Award Approving Official: Anthony
Foxx, Secretary of Transportation.
SUMMARY: Informed decision making,
based on sound data and analysis is a
cornerstone of crafting effective
transportation policies and guiding
efficient investment decisions with
scarce public resources. Web-based
tools, visualizations, and mobile
applications can help uncover
actionable information for making better
informed decisions—both by the public
and policy makers. This challenge will
focus on developing tools to address
three areas: (1) Safety, (2)
Transportation Access, and (3) Traffic
Management and Congestion.
Do you have what it takes to create
innovative tools to address our Nation’s
transportation challenges or
revolutionize the way Americans see
and understand the transportation
system they use every day? The United
States Department of Transportation
(U.S. DOT) wants to see what you can
do!
DATES: Entries must be submitted by
5:00 p.m. on April 30, 2014
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stephanie Gidigbi, 202–366–6837,
stephanie.gidigbi@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Subject of Challenge Competition:
Your challenge is to create a web-based
tool, data visualization, mobile app, or
other innovative use of technology to
address systemic challenges by
accessing publicly-available Federal
and/or local DOT datasets. The
application/tool will help the public
and policy makers understand
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transportation challenges in three main
areas:
• Safety—develop tools to address
and/or identify safety concerns and
challenges
• Transportation Access—develop
tools to show how transportation
connects people to jobs, school,
housing, and community resources
• Traffic Management and
Congestion—develop tools to
understand and reduce traffic and
congestion
Eligibility: The Challenge is open only
to: (1) Persons who are at least eighteen
(18) years old at the time of entry who
are either citizens or legal residents of
the United States; (2) teams of eligible
individuals; and (3) corporations or
organizations, including nonprofit
organizations, that are incorporated in
the United States (including the District
of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S.
Virgin Islands, Guam, and American
Samoa). Individuals submitting entries
on behalf of corporations, nonprofit or
groups of individuals (such as an
academic class or other team) must meet
the eligibility requirements for
individual contestants. An individual
may join more than one team,
corporation or nonprofit organization.
Candidates may not be a Federal entity
or Federal employee acting within the
scope of employment. Employees of the
U.S. Department of Transportation are
not eligible. The Challenge is subject to
all applicable federal laws and
regulations. Participation constitutes
Contestant’s full and unconditional
agreement to these Official Rules and
administrative decisions, which are
final and binding in all matters related
to the Challenge. Eligibility for a prize
award is contingent upon fulfilling all
requirements set forth herein.
The following additional rules apply:
1. All decisions by the U.S. DOT are
final and binding in all matters related
to the challenge. Potential winners must
continue to comply with all terms and
conditions of these Official Rules and
winning is contingent upon fulfilling all
requirements. The potential winners
will be notified by email, telephone, or
mail after the date of the judging. The
potential winner(s) will be required to
sign and return to U.S. DOT, within ten
(10) days of the date notice is sent, an
Affidavit of Eligibility and Liability/
Publicity Release (except where
prohibited) in order to claim any
recognition. In the event that a potential
winner of a Challenge recognition is
disqualified for any reason, U.S. DOT
may award the applicable recognition to
an alternate winner. Submission Rights.
Each Contestant grants to the U.S. DOT
and others acting on behalf of the U.S.
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DOT, a royalty-free non-exclusive
worldwide license to use, copy for use,
distribute, perform publicly, and
display publicly all parts of the
Submission for the purposes of the
Challenge until one year after the
announcement of winners. This license
includes posting or linking to the
Submission on the official U.S. DOT
Web site and making it available for use
by the public.
2. Entry Conditions and Release. By
entering, each Contestant agrees to: (a)
Comply with and be bound by these
Official Rules and the decisions of the
U.S. DOT and/or the Challenge judges
which are binding and final in all
matters relating to this Challenge; (b)
release and hold harmless the U.S. DOT
and the Federal Government and its
related entities, including any other
organizations responsible for
sponsoring, fulfilling, administering,
advertising or promoting the Challenge,
and all of their respective past and
present officers, directors, employees,
agents and representatives (collectively,
the ‘‘Released Parties’’) from and against
any and all claims, expenses, and
liability, whether direct or indirect,
including but not limited to negligence
and damages of any kind to persons and
property, including but not limited to
invasion of privacy (under
appropriation, intrusion, public
disclosure of private facts, false light in
the public eye or other legal theory),
defamation, slander, libel, violation of
right of publicity, infringement of
trademark, copyright or other
intellectual property rights, property
damage, a third party’s unauthorized
use of the Submission beyond the oneyear license granted in the Submission
rights, loss of profits, or death or
personal injury arising out of or relating
to a Contestant’s entry, creation of an
entry or submission of an entry,
participation in the Challenge,
acceptance or use or misuse of prize
(including any travel or activity related
thereto) and/or the broadcast,
transmission, performance, exploitation
or use of entry; and, (c) indemnify,
defend and hold harmless the U.S. DOT
against any and all claims, expenses,
and liabilities (including reasonable
attorney’s fees) arising out of or relating
to a Contestant’s participation in the
Challenge and/or Contestant’s
acceptance, use or misuse of a prize or
recognition.
3. Publicity. Except where prohibited,
participation in the Challenge
constitutes Contestant’s consent to U.S.
DOT’s and its agents’ use of Contestant’s
name, likeness, photograph, voice,
opinions, and/or hometown and state
for promotional purposes in any media,
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worldwide, without further payment or
consideration.
4. General Conditions. The U.S. DOT
reserves the right to cancel, suspend
and/or modify the Challenge, or any
part of it for any reason, including if any
fraud, technical failures or any other
factor beyond the U.S. DOT’s reasonable
control impairs the integrity or proper
functioning of the Challenge, as
determined by the U.S. DOT in its sole
discretion. The U.S. DOT reserves the
right, in its sole discretion, to disqualify
any individual or Contestant it finds to
be tampering with the entry process or
the operation of the Challenge or to be
acting in violation of these Official
Rules or any other promotion or in a
disruptive manner. Any attempt by any
person to deliberately undermine the
legitimate operation of the Challenge
may be in violation of criminal and civil
law, and, should such an attempt be
made, the U.S. DOT reserves the right to
seek damages from any such person to
the fullest extent permitted by law. The
U.S. DOT’s failure to enforce any term
of these Official Rules shall not
constitute a waiver of that provision.
The U.S. DOT is not responsible for, nor
are they required to count, incomplete,
late, misdirected, damaged, unlawful or
illicit votes, including those secured
through payment, votes achieved
through automated means or by
registering more than one email account
and name, using another Contestant’s
email account and name, as well as
those lost for technical reasons or
otherwise.
5. Limitations of Liability. The
Released Parties are not responsible for:
(1) Any incorrect or inaccurate
information, whether caused by
Contestants, printing errors or by any of
the equipment or programming
associated with or utilized in the
Challenge; (2) technical failures of any
kind, including, but not limited to
malfunctions, interruptions, or
disconnections in phone lines or
network hardware or software; (3)
unauthorized human intervention in
any part of the entry process or the
Challenge; (4) technical or human error
which may occur in the administration
of the Challenge or the processing of
entries; or, (5) any injury or damage to
persons or property which may be
caused, directly or indirectly, in whole
or in part, from Contestant’s
participation in the Challenge or receipt
or use or misuse of any prize. If for any
reason a Contestant’s entry is confirmed
to have been erroneously deleted, lost,
or otherwise destroyed or corrupted,
Contestant’s sole remedy is another
entry in the Challenge. No more than
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the stated number of prizes will be
awarded.
6. Original Work, Plagiarism, and
Copyright. Contestant(s) warrants that
he or she or they is/are the sole author
and owner of the Submission, and that
the Submission is wholly original with
the Contestant, and that it does not
infringe any copyright or any other
rights of any third party of which
Contestant is aware.
7. PRIVACY. Any personal
information provided to the U.S. DOT
and ChallengePost by registering or
submitting through the U.S. DOT
electronic mail system is used only to
communicate on matters regarding the
submission and/or the Challenge.
Information is not collected for
commercial marketing. Candidates may
not be a Federal entity or Federal
employee acting within the scope of
employment.
At least one individual from each
team may travel to Washington, DC, to
accept the award. Only the individual
who makes the submission on behalf of
an organization may receive the award.
The submitting individual may
designate, within 10 business days
following notification of award, another
person to whom to re-direct the award.
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Submission Requirements
Your submission is due by 5:00 p.m.
ET, on Wednesday, April 30, 2014. Your
submission must use publicly available
data. You must not provide any
information that is a trade secret or
confidential business information.
Federal DOT datasets are available at
https://www.dot.gov/data and other
Federal data can be found at https://
catalog.data.gov. In addition, some state
and local data can be found at https://
states.data.gov, https://counties.data.gov,
or https://cities.data.gov. You may use
any other publically available data sets
as well.
A submission package will consist of
the following:
A full description of the application,
device, product, or visualization tool
(the ‘‘Concept’’) that addresses at least
one of the three challenges outlined
above for this specific challenge (Safety,
Transportation Access, Traffic
Management and Congestion) with
elements outlined in the Submission
Content Below (not to exceed 6000
words):
i. Description of the user or users;
ii. Explanation of the Concept’s value
to the user and society as a whole;
iii. Description of the conditions
under which the Concept is useful;
iv. Description of the ways in which
the Concept is innovative: how it differs
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from past and current practices,
technologies, tools and applications;
v. Explanation of the process by
which the application or visualization
tool would be implemented and widely
adopted. Discuss any other risks, costs
or challenges in making the utilization
and/or adoption of the tools or
applications widespread, and how they
could be overcome;
vi. Submissions must include a link to
a working tool (via the web with a URL
or mobile app store) or a video of the
tool in action; and should illustrate or
otherwise support the Concept
described in the Submission
Description.
The Submission should also include a
summary (not to exceed 650 words, in
12-point Arial normal font, doublespaced, in PDF format) of the solution
submitted that discusses:
i. How it meets the judging criteria;
ii. Data sets used to develop the
solution; and,
iii. Intended audience/users.
Note: Submissions that do not conform to
these requirements may be considered
ineligible. This eligibility decision is at the
sole discretion of the U.S. DOT. Contestants
waive the right to protest. The U.S. DOT
makes no warranties to protect proprietary
information or trade secrets if they are
featured in the submission. It is
recommended that entrants consider the
content of their submissions prior to making
their submittal.
Any elements of the Challenge
described in the ‘‘details’’ section of this
Challenge and posted on dot.gov are
wholly incorporated as part of the rules
of this contest.
The Submission must be written in
English, and be no longer than 6000
words. Some or all of the submission
must be sent to datachallenge@dot.gov
with the subject line ‘‘Innovation
Challenge.’’ The Submission Summary
should be included in the body of the
email and must not exceed 650 words.
• Must be in PDF or Microsoft Word
format
• Use a font size of no less than 12
points
• Have margins no smaller than 1
inch all around
Submissions may be updated by the
submitter until the Challenge
Submission Period ends.
Award
Winners will have their innovation
featured on the Secretary’s FastLane
Blog and will receive a letter of
recognition from the Secretary.
Following the announcement of the
award, awardees will be honored by
Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx
in a special session where awardees will
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present their Concept for senior officials
from across the U.S. Department of
Transportation, Challenge judges, and
other members of DOT staff. Outside
guests will also be invited to attend.
Furthermore, depending upon the
quality of submissions and subject to
the Federal Acquisitions Regulations,
the Department may negotiate licensing
for the use of intellectual property
developed by selected submission
winner(s) beyond the one year royaltyfree nonexclusive worldwide license
provided under Submission Rights.
Basis Upon Which the Winner Will Be
Selected:
Submission Judging
Submissions will be scored in each of
four criteria, as listed below.
1. Technical and Operational Feasibility
The successful operation of the
proposed application or visualization
tool will depend both upon the
soundness of the application and tool
itself and its relationship to the rest of
the transportation system, and the data
that is used during its development.
How plausible is it that this Concept
could be implemented? What risks or
challenges exist, and how could they be
overcome?
2. Potential for Widespread Adoption
Widespread adoption of the
application and/or visualization tool
will depend upon a system of
interrelated decisions made by various
stakeholders in the transportation
network. Stakeholders’ incentives
toward action must be aligned with
their capabilities for adoption to occur.
How likely is it that this application or
visualization tool would be widely
adopted or go viral, if it were
developed? What are the challenges
facing broad adoption, and how could
they be overcome?
3. Innovation
To what degree does the tool present
a novel idea or approach?
4. Social Benefit
How much would this idea benefit
transportation users or society at large?
Emphasis is on improvements to
transportation safety, mobility,
reliability, accessibility and/or
environmental impact.
The Submissions will be judged by a
qualified panel selected by the U.S.
DOT at its sole discretion. The panel
will judge the entire Submission on the
judging criteria identified above in order
to select five winners. Judges reserve the
right to withdraw without advance
notice.
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Additional Information:
Federal grantees may not use Federal
funds to develop COMPETES Act
challenge applications.
Federal contractors may not use
Federal funds from a contract to develop
COMPETES Act challenge applications
or to fund efforts in support of a
COMPETES Act challenge submission.
Issued On: February 21, 2014
Anthony Foxx,
Secretary of Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2014–04399 Filed 3–7–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary
[Docket No. DOT–OST—2014–0011]
National Freight Advisory Committee:
Notice of Public Meeting
ACTION:
Notice of Public Meeting.
The U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT) announces a
public meeting of its National Freight
Advisory Committee (NFAC) to provide
recommendations to the Department as
it continues to develop the National
Freight Strategic Plan (Plan). Meetings
are open to the public and there will be
a period of time at the end of the second
day of the meeting for public comment.
DATES: Dates and Times: The meeting
will be held on Tuesday, March 25,
2014, from 2:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m.,
Eastern Standard Time and March 26,
2014 from 10:00 a.m. to 3:15 p.m.,
Eastern Standard Time.
Location: The meeting will be held at
the U.S. Department of Transportation,
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Tretha Chromey, Designated Federal
Officer at (202) 366–1999 or freight@
dot.gov or visit the NFAC Web site at
www.dot.gov/nfac.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background: The NFAC was established
to provide advice and recommendations
to the Secretary on matters related to
freight transportation in the United
States, including (1) implementation of
the freight transportation requirements
of the Moving Ahead for Progress in the
21st Century Act (MAP–21; Pub. L. 112–
141); (2) establishment of the National
Freight Network; (3) development of the
Plan; (4) development of strategies to
help States implement State Freight
Advisory Committees and State Freight
Plans; (5) development of measures of
conditions and performance in freight
transportation; (6) development of
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SUMMARY:
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freight transportation investment, data,
and planning tools; and (7) legislative
recommendations. The NFAC operates
as a discretionary committee under the
authority of the DOT, established in
accordance with the provisions of the
Federal Advisory Committee Act
(FACA), as amended, 5 U.S.C. App. 2.
See DOT’s NFAC Web site for additional
information about the committee’s
activities at www.dot.gov/nfac.
MAP–21 directs the DOT to develop
the Plan in consultation with State
department of transportations and other
appropriate stakeholders. The Plan must
include:
(A) An assessment of the condition
and performance of the national freight
network.
(B) An identification of highway
bottlenecks on the national freight
network that create significant freight
congestion problems, based on a
quantitative methodology developed by
the Secretary, which shall, at a
minimum, include—
(i) information from the Freight
Analysis Network of the Federal
Highway Administration; and
(ii) to the maximum extent
practicable, an estimate of the cost of
addressing each bottleneck and any
operational improvements that could be
implemented.
(C) Forecasts of freight volumes for
the 20-year period beginning in the year
during which the Plan is issued.
(D) An identification of major trade
gateways and national freight corridors
that connect major population centers,
trade gateways, and other major freight
generators for current and forecasted
traffic and freight volumes, the
identification of which shall be revised,
as appropriate, in subsequent plans.
(E) An assessment of statutory,
regulatory, technological, institutional,
financial, and other barriers to improved
freight transportation performance
(including opportunities for overcoming
the barriers).
(F) An identification of routes
providing access to energy exploration,
development, installation, or production
areas.
(G) Best practices for improving the
performance of the national freight
network.
(H) Best practices to mitigate the
impacts of freight movement on
communities.
(I) A process for addressing multistate
projects and encouraging jurisdictions
to collaborate.
(J) Strategies to improve freight
intermodal connectivity.
The Plan serves as a document to
outline a long-term strategy to
implement the National freight policy.
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The goals of the National freight policy
are related to economic competitiveness
and efficiency; congestion; productivity;
safety, security, and resilience of freight
movement; infrastructure condition; use
of advanced technology; performance,
innovation, competition, and
accountability in the operation and
maintenance of the network; and
environmental impacts. [23 U.S.C. 167]
Agenda: The two day agenda will
include:
(1) Welcome, opening remarks, and
introductions;
(2) Update of the Department’s
National Freight Strategic Plan;
(3) Discussion on proposed
recommendations to the DOT on the
following elements of the Plan:
• An assessment of statutory,
regulatory, technological, institutional,
financial, and other barriers to improved
freight transportation performance
(including opportunities for overcoming
the barriers);
• Best practices for improving the
performance of the national freight
network; and
• Best practices to mitigate the
impacts of freight movement on
communities.
(4) Public comment, which will occur
at the end of day 2.
The meeting agenda will be posted on
the NFAC Web site at www.dot.gov/nfac
in advance of the meeting.
Public Participation: This meeting
will be open to the public. Members of
the public who wish to attend in person
are asked to RSVP to freight@dot.gov
with your name and affiliation no later
than March 18, 2014, in order to
facilitate entry and guarantee seating.
Services for Individuals with
Disabilities: The public meeting is
physically accessible to people with
disabilities. Individuals requiring
accommodations, such as sign language
interpretation or other ancillary aids, are
asked to notify Ms. Tretha Chromey, at
(202) 366–1999 or freight@dot.gov five
(5) business days before the meeting.
Written comments: Persons who wish
to submit written comments for
consideration by the Committee must
email freight@dot.gov or send them to
Ms. Tretha Chromey, Designated
Federal Officer, National Freight
Advisory Committee, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., W82–320, Washington, DC
20590 by March 18, 2014 to provide
sufficient time for review. All other
comments may be received at any time
before or after the meeting.
Dated: March 4, 2014.
Tretha Chromey,
Designated Federal Officer.
[FR Doc. 2014–05138 Filed 3–7–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 46 (Monday, March 10, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 13370-13373]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-04399]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary of Transportation
Requirements for the DOT Data Innovation Challenge
AGENCY: U.S. Department of Transportation, Office of the Secretary of
Transportation.
ACTION: Notice .
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Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719 (America COMPETES Act).
Award Approving Official: Anthony Foxx, Secretary of
Transportation.
SUMMARY: Informed decision making, based on sound data and analysis is
a cornerstone of crafting effective transportation policies and guiding
efficient investment decisions with scarce public resources. Web-based
tools, visualizations, and mobile applications can help uncover
actionable information for making better informed decisions--both by
the public and policy makers. This challenge will focus on developing
tools to address three areas: (1) Safety, (2) Transportation Access,
and (3) Traffic Management and Congestion.
Do you have what it takes to create innovative tools to address our
Nation's transportation challenges or revolutionize the way Americans
see and understand the transportation system they use every day? The
United States Department of Transportation (U.S. DOT) wants to see what
you can do!
DATES: Entries must be submitted by 5:00 p.m. on April 30, 2014
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephanie Gidigbi, 202-366-6837,
dot.gov">stephanie.gidigbi@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Subject of Challenge Competition: Your challenge is to create a
web-based tool, data visualization, mobile app, or other innovative use
of technology to address systemic challenges by accessing publicly-
available Federal and/or local DOT datasets. The application/tool will
help the public and policy makers understand
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transportation challenges in three main areas:
Safety--develop tools to address and/or identify safety
concerns and challenges
Transportation Access--develop tools to show how
transportation connects people to jobs, school, housing, and community
resources
Traffic Management and Congestion--develop tools to
understand and reduce traffic and congestion
Eligibility: The Challenge is open only to: (1) Persons who are at
least eighteen (18) years old at the time of entry who are either
citizens or legal residents of the United States; (2) teams of eligible
individuals; and (3) corporations or organizations, including nonprofit
organizations, that are incorporated in the United States (including
the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam,
and American Samoa). Individuals submitting entries on behalf of
corporations, nonprofit or groups of individuals (such as an academic
class or other team) must meet the eligibility requirements for
individual contestants. An individual may join more than one team,
corporation or nonprofit organization. Candidates may not be a Federal
entity or Federal employee acting within the scope of employment.
Employees of the U.S. Department of Transportation are not eligible.
The Challenge is subject to all applicable federal laws and
regulations. Participation constitutes Contestant's full and
unconditional agreement to these Official Rules and administrative
decisions, which are final and binding in all matters related to the
Challenge. Eligibility for a prize award is contingent upon fulfilling
all requirements set forth herein.
The following additional rules apply:
1. All decisions by the U.S. DOT are final and binding in all
matters related to the challenge. Potential winners must continue to
comply with all terms and conditions of these Official Rules and
winning is contingent upon fulfilling all requirements. The potential
winners will be notified by email, telephone, or mail after the date of
the judging. The potential winner(s) will be required to sign and
return to U.S. DOT, within ten (10) days of the date notice is sent, an
Affidavit of Eligibility and Liability/Publicity Release (except where
prohibited) in order to claim any recognition. In the event that a
potential winner of a Challenge recognition is disqualified for any
reason, U.S. DOT may award the applicable recognition to an alternate
winner. Submission Rights. Each Contestant grants to the U.S. DOT and
others acting on behalf of the U.S. DOT, a royalty-free non-exclusive
worldwide license to use, copy for use, distribute, perform publicly,
and display publicly all parts of the Submission for the purposes of
the Challenge until one year after the announcement of winners. This
license includes posting or linking to the Submission on the official
U.S. DOT Web site and making it available for use by the public.
2. Entry Conditions and Release. By entering, each Contestant
agrees to: (a) Comply with and be bound by these Official Rules and the
decisions of the U.S. DOT and/or the Challenge judges which are binding
and final in all matters relating to this Challenge; (b) release and
hold harmless the U.S. DOT and the Federal Government and its related
entities, including any other organizations responsible for sponsoring,
fulfilling, administering, advertising or promoting the Challenge, and
all of their respective past and present officers, directors,
employees, agents and representatives (collectively, the ``Released
Parties'') from and against any and all claims, expenses, and
liability, whether direct or indirect, including but not limited to
negligence and damages of any kind to persons and property, including
but not limited to invasion of privacy (under appropriation, intrusion,
public disclosure of private facts, false light in the public eye or
other legal theory), defamation, slander, libel, violation of right of
publicity, infringement of trademark, copyright or other intellectual
property rights, property damage, a third party's unauthorized use of
the Submission beyond the one-year license granted in the Submission
rights, loss of profits, or death or personal injury arising out of or
relating to a Contestant's entry, creation of an entry or submission of
an entry, participation in the Challenge, acceptance or use or misuse
of prize (including any travel or activity related thereto) and/or the
broadcast, transmission, performance, exploitation or use of entry;
and, (c) indemnify, defend and hold harmless the U.S. DOT against any
and all claims, expenses, and liabilities (including reasonable
attorney's fees) arising out of or relating to a Contestant's
participation in the Challenge and/or Contestant's acceptance, use or
misuse of a prize or recognition.
3. Publicity. Except where prohibited, participation in the
Challenge constitutes Contestant's consent to U.S. DOT's and its
agents' use of Contestant's name, likeness, photograph, voice,
opinions, and/or hometown and state for promotional purposes in any
media, worldwide, without further payment or consideration.
4. General Conditions. The U.S. DOT reserves the right to cancel,
suspend and/or modify the Challenge, or any part of it for any reason,
including if any fraud, technical failures or any other factor beyond
the U.S. DOT's reasonable control impairs the integrity or proper
functioning of the Challenge, as determined by the U.S. DOT in its sole
discretion. The U.S. DOT reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to
disqualify any individual or Contestant it finds to be tampering with
the entry process or the operation of the Challenge or to be acting in
violation of these Official Rules or any other promotion or in a
disruptive manner. Any attempt by any person to deliberately undermine
the legitimate operation of the Challenge may be in violation of
criminal and civil law, and, should such an attempt be made, the U.S.
DOT reserves the right to seek damages from any such person to the
fullest extent permitted by law. The U.S. DOT's failure to enforce any
term of these Official Rules shall not constitute a waiver of that
provision. The U.S. DOT is not responsible for, nor are they required
to count, incomplete, late, misdirected, damaged, unlawful or illicit
votes, including those secured through payment, votes achieved through
automated means or by registering more than one email account and name,
using another Contestant's email account and name, as well as those
lost for technical reasons or otherwise.
5. Limitations of Liability. The Released Parties are not
responsible for: (1) Any incorrect or inaccurate information, whether
caused by Contestants, printing errors or by any of the equipment or
programming associated with or utilized in the Challenge; (2) technical
failures of any kind, including, but not limited to malfunctions,
interruptions, or disconnections in phone lines or network hardware or
software; (3) unauthorized human intervention in any part of the entry
process or the Challenge; (4) technical or human error which may occur
in the administration of the Challenge or the processing of entries;
or, (5) any injury or damage to persons or property which may be
caused, directly or indirectly, in whole or in part, from Contestant's
participation in the Challenge or receipt or use or misuse of any
prize. If for any reason a Contestant's entry is confirmed to have been
erroneously deleted, lost, or otherwise destroyed or corrupted,
Contestant's sole remedy is another entry in the Challenge. No more
than
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the stated number of prizes will be awarded.
6. Original Work, Plagiarism, and Copyright. Contestant(s) warrants
that he or she or they is/are the sole author and owner of the
Submission, and that the Submission is wholly original with the
Contestant, and that it does not infringe any copyright or any other
rights of any third party of which Contestant is aware.
7. PRIVACY. Any personal information provided to the U.S. DOT and
ChallengePost by registering or submitting through the U.S. DOT
electronic mail system is used only to communicate on matters regarding
the submission and/or the Challenge. Information is not collected for
commercial marketing. Candidates may not be a Federal entity or Federal
employee acting within the scope of employment.
At least one individual from each team may travel to Washington,
DC, to accept the award. Only the individual who makes the submission
on behalf of an organization may receive the award. The submitting
individual may designate, within 10 business days following
notification of award, another person to whom to re-direct the award.
Submission Requirements
Your submission is due by 5:00 p.m. ET, on Wednesday, April 30,
2014. Your submission must use publicly available data. You must not
provide any information that is a trade secret or confidential business
information. Federal DOT datasets are available at https://www.dot.gov/data and other Federal data can be found at https://catalog.data.gov. In
addition, some state and local data can be found at https://states.data.gov, https://counties.data.gov, or https://cities.data.gov.
You may use any other publically available data sets as well.
A submission package will consist of the following:
A full description of the application, device, product, or
visualization tool (the ``Concept'') that addresses at least one of the
three challenges outlined above for this specific challenge (Safety,
Transportation Access, Traffic Management and Congestion) with elements
outlined in the Submission Content Below (not to exceed 6000 words):
i. Description of the user or users;
ii. Explanation of the Concept's value to the user and society as a
whole;
iii. Description of the conditions under which the Concept is
useful;
iv. Description of the ways in which the Concept is innovative: how
it differs from past and current practices, technologies, tools and
applications;
v. Explanation of the process by which the application or
visualization tool would be implemented and widely adopted. Discuss any
other risks, costs or challenges in making the utilization and/or
adoption of the tools or applications widespread, and how they could be
overcome;
vi. Submissions must include a link to a working tool (via the web
with a URL or mobile app store) or a video of the tool in action; and
should illustrate or otherwise support the Concept described in the
Submission Description.
The Submission should also include a summary (not to exceed 650 words,
in 12-point Arial normal font, double-spaced, in PDF format) of the
solution submitted that discusses:
i. How it meets the judging criteria;
ii. Data sets used to develop the solution; and,
iii. Intended audience/users.
Note: Submissions that do not conform to these requirements may
be considered ineligible. This eligibility decision is at the sole
discretion of the U.S. DOT. Contestants waive the right to protest.
The U.S. DOT makes no warranties to protect proprietary information
or trade secrets if they are featured in the submission. It is
recommended that entrants consider the content of their submissions
prior to making their submittal.
Any elements of the Challenge described in the ``details'' section
of this Challenge and posted on dot.gov are wholly incorporated as part
of the rules of this contest.
The Submission must be written in English, and be no longer than
6000 words. Some or all of the submission must be sent to
dot.gov">datachallenge@dot.gov with the subject line ``Innovation Challenge.''
The Submission Summary should be included in the body of the email and
must not exceed 650 words.
Must be in PDF or Microsoft Word format
Use a font size of no less than 12 points
Have margins no smaller than 1 inch all around
Submissions may be updated by the submitter until the Challenge
Submission Period ends.
Award
Winners will have their innovation featured on the Secretary's
FastLane Blog and will receive a letter of recognition from the
Secretary. Following the announcement of the award, awardees will be
honored by Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx in a special session
where awardees will present their Concept for senior officials from
across the U.S. Department of Transportation, Challenge judges, and
other members of DOT staff. Outside guests will also be invited to
attend. Furthermore, depending upon the quality of submissions and
subject to the Federal Acquisitions Regulations, the Department may
negotiate licensing for the use of intellectual property developed by
selected submission winner(s) beyond the one year royalty-free
nonexclusive worldwide license provided under Submission Rights.
Basis Upon Which the Winner Will Be Selected:
Submission Judging
Submissions will be scored in each of four criteria, as listed
below.
1. Technical and Operational Feasibility
The successful operation of the proposed application or
visualization tool will depend both upon the soundness of the
application and tool itself and its relationship to the rest of the
transportation system, and the data that is used during its
development.
How plausible is it that this Concept could be implemented? What
risks or challenges exist, and how could they be overcome?
2. Potential for Widespread Adoption
Widespread adoption of the application and/or visualization tool
will depend upon a system of interrelated decisions made by various
stakeholders in the transportation network. Stakeholders' incentives
toward action must be aligned with their capabilities for adoption to
occur. How likely is it that this application or visualization tool
would be widely adopted or go viral, if it were developed? What are the
challenges facing broad adoption, and how could they be overcome?
3. Innovation
To what degree does the tool present a novel idea or approach?
4. Social Benefit
How much would this idea benefit transportation users or society at
large? Emphasis is on improvements to transportation safety, mobility,
reliability, accessibility and/or environmental impact.
The Submissions will be judged by a qualified panel selected by the
U.S. DOT at its sole discretion. The panel will judge the entire
Submission on the judging criteria identified above in order to select
five winners. Judges reserve the right to withdraw without advance
notice.
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Additional Information:
Federal grantees may not use Federal funds to develop COMPETES Act
challenge applications.
Federal contractors may not use Federal funds from a contract to
develop COMPETES Act challenge applications or to fund efforts in
support of a COMPETES Act challenge submission.
Issued On: February 21, 2014
Anthony Foxx,
Secretary of Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2014-04399 Filed 3-7-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-9X-P