Grand Canyon National Park Quiet Aircraft Technology Incentive: Seasonal Relief From Allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point Corridors, 66763-66765 [2014-26668]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 217 / Monday, November 10, 2014 / Notices
November 6, 2014, and identified in the
notice for such hearing, which was
published in 79 FR 61683, October 14,
2014.
SUSQUEHANNA RIVER BASIN
COMMISSION
Commission Meeting
Susquehanna River Basin
Commission.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Susquehanna River Basin
Commission will hold its regular
business meeting on December 5, 2014,
in Annapolis, Maryland. Details
concerning the matters to be addressed
at the business meeting are contained in
the Supplementary Information section
of this notice.
DATES: December 5, 2014, at 9:00 a.m.
ADDRESSES: Lowe House Office
Building, House of Delegates,
Appropriation Hearing Room (Room
#120), 6 Bladen Street, Annapolis, Md.
21401. (The recommended parking and
transportation option is to park at the
Navy-Marine Corps Memorial Stadium
and take the Annapolis Transit Trolley
Shuttle from there—for all available
parking options, see https://
www.downtownannapolis.org/_pages/
transport/tr_parking.htm.)
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jason E. Oyler, Regulatory Counsel,
telephone: (717) 238–0423, ext. 1312;
fax: (717) 238–2436.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
business meeting will include actions or
presentations on the following items: (1)
Informational presentation of interest to
the Lower Susquehanna Subbasin area;
(2) resolution concerning FY–2016
federal funding of the Susquehanna
Flood Forecast and Warning System and
National Streamflow Information
Program; (3) rulemaking action to clarify
the water uses involved in hydrocarbon
development that are subject to the
consumptive use regulations, as
implemented by the Approval By Rule
program; (4) resolution concerning
delegation of authority; (5) ratification/
approval of contracts/grants; (6)
regulatory compliance matters for Lion
Brewery, LHP Management, and
Southwestern Energy Company; (7)
transfer of approval (Docket No.
20081222) from Sunbury Generation LP
to Hummel Station LLC; and (8)
Regulatory Program projects.
The rulemaking item listed for
Commission action was the subject of a
public hearing conducted by the
Commission on November 6, 2014, and
identified in the notice for such hearing,
which was published in 79 FR 57850,
September 26, 2014. Projects listed for
Commission action are those that were
the subject of a public hearing
conducted by the Commission on
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 Nov 07, 2014
Jkt 235001
Opportunity to Appear and Comment
Interested parties are invited to attend
the business meeting and encouraged to
review the Commission’s Public
Meeting Rules of Conduct, which are
posted on the Commission’s Web site,
www.srbc.net. As identified in the
public hearing notices referenced above,
written comments on the rulemaking
item and Regulatory Program projects
that were the subject of public hearings,
and are listed for action at the business
meeting, are subject to a comment
deadline of November 17, 2014. Written
comments pertaining to any other
matters listed for action at the business
meeting may be mailed to the
Susquehanna River Basin Commission,
4423 North Front Street, Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania 17110–1788, or submitted
electronically through https://
www.srbc.net/pubinfo/
publicparticipation.htm. Any such
comments mailed or electronically
submitted must be received by the
Commission on or before November 26,
2014, to be considered.
Authority: Pub. L. 91–575, 84 Stat. 1509 et
seq., 18 CFR Parts 806, 807, and 808.
Dated: October 31, 2014.
Stephanie L. Richardson,
Secretary to the Commission.
[FR Doc. 2014–26594 Filed 11–7–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7040–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR
National Park Service
[Docket No. FAA–2014–0782]
Grand Canyon National Park Quiet
Aircraft Technology Incentive:
Seasonal Relief From Allocations in
the Dragon and Zuni Point Corridors
Authority: Moving Ahead for Progress in
the 21st Century Act, Sec. 35001, Public Law
112–141, 126 Stat. 843; National Parks Air
Tour Management Act, Sec. 804, Public Law
106–181, 114 Stat. 192.
Federal Aviation
Administration, Transportation;
National Park Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice and request for public
comment.
AGENCY:
The Moving Ahead for
Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP–
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00081
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
66763
21) in section 35001(b)(2) directs the
Administrator of the Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) and the Secretary
of the Interior to provide quiet aircraft
technology incentives for commercial
air tour operators at Grand Canyon
National Park. The FAA and the
National Park Service (NPS) propose to
implement this directive by giving effect
to section 804(c) of the National Parks
Air Tour Management Act (NPATMA)
to provide seasonal relief from
allocations in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors for commercial air tour
operators that convert or have converted
to quiet aircraft technology. The FAA
and the NPS will ensure that seasonal
relief from allocations complies with
statutory conditions that the cumulative
impact of such operations does not
increase noise at the Grand Canyon and
that this incentive does not diminish the
statutory mandate to achieve the
substantial restoration of natural quiet.
This incentive is proposed to be made
available in the Dragon and Zuni Point
corridors during the first quarter
(January–March) beginning in 2015,
may be extended to include part or all
of the fourth quarter beginning in 2016,
and will remain in effect unless it
violates the statutory conditions or until
a longer term approach for managing air
tour noise is in place.
DATES: Send comments on or before
December 10, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Send comments identified
by docket number FAA–2014–0782
using any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov and follow
the online instructions for sending your
comments electronically.
• Mail: Send comments to Docket
Operations, M–30; U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT), 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Room W12–140, West
Building Ground Floor, Washington, DC
20590–0001.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: Take
comments to Docket Operations in
Room W12–140 of the West Building
Ground Floor at 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC, between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
• Fax: Fax comments to Docket
Operations at 202–493–2251.
Privacy: All comments received will
be posted, without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information the commenter
provides. Using the search function of
the docket Web site, anyone can find
and read the electronic form of all
comments received into any docket,
including the name of the individual
sending the comment (or signing the
E:\FR\FM\10NON1.SGM
10NON1
66764
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 217 / Monday, November 10, 2014 / Notices
comment for an association, business,
labor union, etc.). DOT’s complete
Privacy Act Statement can be found in
the Federal Register published on April
11, 2000 (65 FR 19477–19478), as well
as at https://DocketsInfo.dot.gov.
Docket: Background documents or
comments received may be read at
https://www.regulations.gov at any time.
Follow the online instructions for
accessing the docket or go to the Docket
Operations in Room W12–140 of the
West Building Ground Floor at 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Keith Lusk, Program Manager, Federal
Aviation Administration, P.O. Box
92007, Los Angeles, California 90009–
2007; telephone (310) 725–3808;
email keith.lusk@faa.gov
Robin Martin, Chief, Office of Planning
and Compliance, Grand Canyon
National Park, P.O. Box 129, Grand
Canyon, Arizona 86023–0129;
telephone (928) 638–7684; email
Robin_Martin@nps.gov
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
I. Authority
1. The National Park Overflights Act
of 1987, Public Law 100–91, directed
the Secretary of the Interior and the
Administrator of the FAA to take
actions to provide for the substantial
restoration of the natural quiet and
experience of Grand Canyon National
Park and the protection of public health
and safety from adverse effects
associated with aircraft overflight. As
part of these actions, operational limits
for commercial air tour operations at
Grand Canyon National Park (the park)
were imposed by FAA regulations at 14
CFR part 93 issued on April 4, 2000.
With some exceptions not relevant to
this notice, these regulations establish
an allocation scheme for the park,
require commercial air tour operators to
use one allocation for each flight that is
a commercial air tour, and prohibit
operators from conducting more
commercial air tours in any calendar
year than the number of allocations
specified on the certificate holder’s
operations specifications issued by the
FAA. 14 CFR 93.319. These regulations
also define and describe quiet aircraft
technology (QT). 14 CFR 93.303 and
appendix A to subpart U of part 93.
2. The National Parks Air Tour
Management Act (NPATMA), Public
Law 106–181, was signed into law on
April 5, 2000. Under section 804(c),
commercial air tour operations by any
fixed-wing or helicopter aircraft that
employs QT and that replaces an
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 Nov 07, 2014
Jkt 235001
existing aircraft are not subject to the
operational flight allocations that apply
to other commercial air tour operations
at the park, provided that the
cumulative impact of such operations
does not increase noise at the Grand
Canyon. Section 804(d) provides that a
commercial air tour operation by an
aircraft in a commercial air tour
operator’s fleet on the date of enactment
of NPATMA that meets QT
requirements or is subsequently
modified to meet QT requirements may
be used for commercial air tour
operations under the same terms and
conditions as section 804(c) without
regard to whether it replaces an existing
aircraft. In addition, NPATMA expressly
states that it does not relieve or
diminish the statutory mandate to
achieve substantial restoration of
natural quiet and experience at the park.
3. Section 35001 of the Moving Ahead
for Progress in the 21st Century Act
(MAP–21), Public Law 112–141, July 6,
2012, directs the Secretary of the
Interior and the Administrator of the
Federal Aviation Administration to
provide incentives for commercial air
tour operators that convert to QT,
determined in accordance with the
regulations then in effect. MAP–21 gives
as an example of an incentive increasing
the flight allocations for operators of QT
on a net basis consistent with section
804(c) of NPATMA, provided that the
cumulative impact of such operations
does not increase noise at the Grand
Canyon.
II. Current QT Incentives
This proposed incentive is one of
several that the FAA and the NPS are
providing for operators that convert or
have converted to QT to encourage
greater use of QT. The NPS, in
consultation with the FAA, reduced the
fees applicable to commercial air tour
operations at the Grand Canyon by 20
percent (from $25 to $20 per flight) for
an air tour using QT. This fee reduction
went into effect on January 1, 2014.
On February 3, 2014, the FAA, in
consultation with the NPS, announced
its intention to distribute FAA-held
allocations to commercial tour operators
in proportion to the number of QT
operations flown in the first six months
of 2014. 79 FR 6267. These allocations
are to be used for QT flights during the
2014 air tour season and beyond.
III. Seasonal Relief From Allocations
for QT in the Dragon and Zuni Point
Corridors
The FAA and the NPS propose to
provide an additional QT incentive in
the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors
where QT can have the greatest positive
PO 00000
Frm 00082
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
effect on park resources and where the
need for relief from allocations has been
demonstrated. Under this proposed
incentive, commercial air tour operators
flying QT aircraft in the Dragon and
Zuni Point corridors will initially be
relieved from having such operations
count against their annual allocations in
the first quarter (January 1–March 31) of
2015. During this first quarter, QT
flights will not use an allocation, while
non-QT flights must still use an
allocation. All commercial air tour
flights, QT and non-QT, must use an
allocation for the remainder of the year
(April 1–December 31). However,
operators will continue to benefit from
the seasonal relief since they may use
allocations in April through December
that would otherwise have been used for
QT flights conducted in January through
March.
The first quarter of the calendar year
has historically had the lowest level of
commercial air tour operations.
Providing this incentive initially in the
first quarter of 2015 is a prudent action
that gives the FAA and the NPS an
opportunity to evaluate the impact of
the incentive, including the extent to
which commercial air tour operators
continue to use QT in the remainder of
the year, which will produce additional
noise benefits for the park. The FAA
and the NPS want to incentivize
commercial air tour operators to
maximize the use of QT throughout the
year. To that end, the seasonal relief
from allocations may be extended to
part or all of the fourth quarter (October
1–December 31) in 2016 and following
years, in addition to the first quarter,
based on an evaluation of the preceding
year. In 2015, the more that increased
QT use reduces the noise level below
the noise baseline described in the
following paragraph, the greater the
prospect for operators to have additional
seasonal relief from allocations in 2016.
To meet the statutory conditions in
NPATMA and MAP–21, the FAA and
the NPS must ensure that the
cumulative impact of QT operations
relieved from allocations does not
increase noise at the park. For this
proposed seasonal relief incentive, this
means that the annual noise from both
QT and non-QT commercial air tour
flights conducted in the Dragon and
Zuni Point corridors must not exceed
the annual noise level of commercial air
tour flights in these corridors under the
current allocation system. The FAA and
the NPS have modeled the noise of
commercial air tour allocations in the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors as
flown with the 2012 commercial air tour
fleet mix and route structure—resulting
E:\FR\FM\10NON1.SGM
10NON1
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 217 / Monday, November 10, 2014 / Notices
in a noise baseline of LEQ12 58.1 dB.1
To determine if there is an increase in
noise associated with this incentive, the
FAA and the NPS will model the annual
noise from all commercial air tour
operations conducted in the Dragon and
Zuni Point corridors and compare the
annual noise with the seasonal relief
incentive in place with the noise
baseline of all commercial air tour
allocations in these corridors. Noise will
be determined to increase if the annual
modeled LEQ12 noise of commercial air
tour operations in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors exceeds LEQ12 58.1 dB.
If noise in any year exceeds the noise
baseline, the seasonal relief incentive
will be modified or discontinued as
determined necessary to comply with
the statutory condition.
To ensure that this incentive will not
diminish the achievement of substantial
restoration of natural quiet and
experience at the park, all commercial
air tour aircraft including QT must
adhere to the existing route structure
throughout the park, including the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors.
This incentive applies only to
commercial air tour operators that
currently have allocations in the Dragon
and Zuni Point corridors; i.e., operators
must have allocations in these corridors
in order to be relieved from allocations.
It does not apply elsewhere in the Grand
Canyon Special Flight Rules Area
(SFRA). There is an ample unused
surplus of commercial air tour
allocations in the SFRA outside of the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors;
therefore, operators conducting air tours
in these other SFRA areas do not need
relief from allocations and would not be
incentivized to convert to QT by a
seasonal relief incentive.
If the seasonal relief in the Dragon
and Zuni Point corridors is a successful
QT incentive, it is proposed to remain
in effect unless it violates the statutory
condition that the cumulative effect of
such operations must not increase noise
at the Grand Canyon or diminishes the
achievement of substantial restoration of
natural quiet, in which case it will be
either modified or discontinued; or until
a longer term approach for managing air
tour noise in the park is in place.
The FAA and the NPS commit to
developing a long term approach for
managing noise in the park in an
expeditious manner. Any long term
approach will continue to incentivize
conversion to QT and will not penalize
1 LEQ
12 stands for Equivalent Sound Level for 12
hours, which is a cumulative measure of the noise
exposure of A-weighted sound levels over a 12-hour
period. For this purpose, the LEQ was calculated
annually and averaged over the park to get a single
LEQ12 value.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:25 Nov 07, 2014
Jkt 235001
earlier conversion to QT realized
through the seasonal relief incentive.
IV. Implementation Steps
All comments on this proposed
incentive will be considered and will
inform the agencies’ next steps. If the
agencies proceed with the seasonal
relief incentive as proposed in this
notice or as modified in response to
comments, the FAA will implement the
incentive by amending the operations
specifications of commercial air tour
operators holding allocations in the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors to
allow them to conduct air tours with QT
aircraft without using an allocation for
such tours in the specified seasonal time
periods. The FAA and the NPS will
cooperatively ensure that the statutory
conditions protecting the park are met.
V. Environmental Considerations
This action involving the FAA’s
amendment of operations specifications
is categorically excluded from more
detailed environmental review because
it would not have a significant effect on
the environment. The FAA and the NPS
have designed this incentive to ensure
compliance with the statutory
conditions that the cumulative impact
of QT operating without allocations
does not increase noise and that the
incentive does not diminish the
statutory mandate to achieve the
substantial restoration of natural quiet at
the park.
Issued in Hawthorne, CA, on October 7,
2014.
Glen A. Martin,
Regional Administrator, Western-Pacific
Region, Federal Aviation Administration.
Issued in Lakewood, CO, on October 16,
2014.
Sue E. Masica,
Regional Director, Intermountain Region,
National Park Service.
[FR Doc. 2014–26668 Filed 11–7–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
[Summary Notice No. PE–2014–131]
Petition for Exemption; Summary of
Petition Received
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of petition for exemption
received.
AGENCY:
This notice contains a
summary of a petition seeking relief
from specified requirements of 14 CFR.
The purpose of this notice is to improve
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00083
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
66765
the public’s awareness of, and
participation in, this aspect of FAA’s
regulatory activities. Neither publication
of this notice nor the inclusion or
omission of information in the summary
is intended to affect the legal status of
the petition or its final disposition.
DATES: Comments on this petition must
identify the petition docket number and
must be received on or before December
1, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments
identified by Docket Number FAA–
2014–0597 using any of the following
methods:
• Government-wide rulemaking Web
site: Go to https://www.regulations.gov
and follow the instructions for sending
your comments electronically.
• Mail: Send comments to the Docket
Management Facility; U.S. Department
of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12–140, Washington, DC
20590.
• Fax: Fax comments to the Docket
Management Facility at 202–493–2251.
• Hand Delivery: Bring comments to
the Docket Management Facility in
Room W12–140 of the West Building
Ground Floor at 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC, between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
Privacy: We will post all comments
we receive, without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide.
Using the search function of our docket
Web site, anyone can find and read the
comments received into any of our
dockets, including the name of the
individual sending the comment (or
signing the comment for an association,
business, labor union, etc.). You may
review DOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR
19477–78).
Docket: To read background
documents or comments received, go to
https://www.regulations.gov at any time
or to the Docket Management Facility in
Room W12–140 of the West Building
Ground Floor at 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC, between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brenda Robeson, ARM–210, Federal
Aviation Administration, Office of
Rulemaking, 800 Independence Ave.
SW., Washington, DC 20591; email
Brenda.Robeson@faa.gov; (202) 267–
4712.
This notice is published pursuant to
14 CFR 11.85.
E:\FR\FM\10NON1.SGM
10NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 217 (Monday, November 10, 2014)]
[Notices]
[Pages 66763-66765]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-26668]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR
National Park Service
[Docket No. FAA-2014-0782]
Grand Canyon National Park Quiet Aircraft Technology Incentive:
Seasonal Relief From Allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point Corridors
Authority: Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act,
Sec. 35001, Public Law 112-141, 126 Stat. 843; National Parks Air
Tour Management Act, Sec. 804, Public Law 106-181, 114 Stat. 192.
AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration, Transportation; National Park
Service, Interior.
ACTION: Notice and request for public comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21)
in section 35001(b)(2) directs the Administrator of the Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) and the Secretary of the Interior to
provide quiet aircraft technology incentives for commercial air tour
operators at Grand Canyon National Park. The FAA and the National Park
Service (NPS) propose to implement this directive by giving effect to
section 804(c) of the National Parks Air Tour Management Act (NPATMA)
to provide seasonal relief from allocations in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors for commercial air tour operators that convert or have
converted to quiet aircraft technology. The FAA and the NPS will ensure
that seasonal relief from allocations complies with statutory
conditions that the cumulative impact of such operations does not
increase noise at the Grand Canyon and that this incentive does not
diminish the statutory mandate to achieve the substantial restoration
of natural quiet. This incentive is proposed to be made available in
the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors during the first quarter (January-
March) beginning in 2015, may be extended to include part or all of the
fourth quarter beginning in 2016, and will remain in effect unless it
violates the statutory conditions or until a longer term approach for
managing air tour noise is in place.
DATES: Send comments on or before December 10, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Send comments identified by docket number FAA-2014-0782
using any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and follow the online instructions for sending your
comments electronically.
Mail: Send comments to Docket Operations, M-30; U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT), 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Room
W12-140, West Building Ground Floor, Washington, DC 20590-0001.
Hand Delivery or Courier: Take comments to Docket
Operations in Room W12-140 of the West Building Ground Floor at 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Fax: Fax comments to Docket Operations at 202-493-2251.
Privacy: All comments received will be posted, without change, to
https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information the
commenter provides. Using the search function of the docket Web site,
anyone can find and read the electronic form of all comments received
into any docket, including the name of the individual sending the
comment (or signing the
[[Page 66764]]
comment for an association, business, labor union, etc.). DOT's
complete Privacy Act Statement can be found in the Federal Register
published on April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477-19478), as well as at https://DocketsInfo.dot.gov.
Docket: Background documents or comments received may be read at
https://www.regulations.gov at any time. Follow the online instructions
for accessing the docket or go to the Docket Operations in Room W12-140
of the West Building Ground Floor at 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Keith Lusk, Program Manager, Federal Aviation Administration, P.O. Box
92007, Los Angeles, California 90009-2007; telephone (310) 725-3808;
email keith.lusk@faa.gov
Robin Martin, Chief, Office of Planning and Compliance, Grand Canyon
National Park, P.O. Box 129, Grand Canyon, Arizona 86023-0129;
telephone (928) 638-7684; email Robin_Martin@nps.gov
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Authority
1. The National Park Overflights Act of 1987, Public Law 100-91,
directed the Secretary of the Interior and the Administrator of the FAA
to take actions to provide for the substantial restoration of the
natural quiet and experience of Grand Canyon National Park and the
protection of public health and safety from adverse effects associated
with aircraft overflight. As part of these actions, operational limits
for commercial air tour operations at Grand Canyon National Park (the
park) were imposed by FAA regulations at 14 CFR part 93 issued on April
4, 2000. With some exceptions not relevant to this notice, these
regulations establish an allocation scheme for the park, require
commercial air tour operators to use one allocation for each flight
that is a commercial air tour, and prohibit operators from conducting
more commercial air tours in any calendar year than the number of
allocations specified on the certificate holder's operations
specifications issued by the FAA. 14 CFR 93.319. These regulations also
define and describe quiet aircraft technology (QT). 14 CFR 93.303 and
appendix A to subpart U of part 93.
2. The National Parks Air Tour Management Act (NPATMA), Public Law
106-181, was signed into law on April 5, 2000. Under section 804(c),
commercial air tour operations by any fixed-wing or helicopter aircraft
that employs QT and that replaces an existing aircraft are not subject
to the operational flight allocations that apply to other commercial
air tour operations at the park, provided that the cumulative impact of
such operations does not increase noise at the Grand Canyon. Section
804(d) provides that a commercial air tour operation by an aircraft in
a commercial air tour operator's fleet on the date of enactment of
NPATMA that meets QT requirements or is subsequently modified to meet
QT requirements may be used for commercial air tour operations under
the same terms and conditions as section 804(c) without regard to
whether it replaces an existing aircraft. In addition, NPATMA expressly
states that it does not relieve or diminish the statutory mandate to
achieve substantial restoration of natural quiet and experience at the
park.
3. Section 35001 of the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st
Century Act (MAP-21), Public Law 112-141, July 6, 2012, directs the
Secretary of the Interior and the Administrator of the Federal Aviation
Administration to provide incentives for commercial air tour operators
that convert to QT, determined in accordance with the regulations then
in effect. MAP-21 gives as an example of an incentive increasing the
flight allocations for operators of QT on a net basis consistent with
section 804(c) of NPATMA, provided that the cumulative impact of such
operations does not increase noise at the Grand Canyon.
II. Current QT Incentives
This proposed incentive is one of several that the FAA and the NPS
are providing for operators that convert or have converted to QT to
encourage greater use of QT. The NPS, in consultation with the FAA,
reduced the fees applicable to commercial air tour operations at the
Grand Canyon by 20 percent (from $25 to $20 per flight) for an air tour
using QT. This fee reduction went into effect on January 1, 2014.
On February 3, 2014, the FAA, in consultation with the NPS,
announced its intention to distribute FAA-held allocations to
commercial tour operators in proportion to the number of QT operations
flown in the first six months of 2014. 79 FR 6267. These allocations
are to be used for QT flights during the 2014 air tour season and
beyond.
III. Seasonal Relief From Allocations for QT in the Dragon and Zuni
Point Corridors
The FAA and the NPS propose to provide an additional QT incentive
in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors where QT can have the greatest
positive effect on park resources and where the need for relief from
allocations has been demonstrated. Under this proposed incentive,
commercial air tour operators flying QT aircraft in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors will initially be relieved from having such operations
count against their annual allocations in the first quarter (January 1-
March 31) of 2015. During this first quarter, QT flights will not use
an allocation, while non-QT flights must still use an allocation. All
commercial air tour flights, QT and non-QT, must use an allocation for
the remainder of the year (April 1-December 31). However, operators
will continue to benefit from the seasonal relief since they may use
allocations in April through December that would otherwise have been
used for QT flights conducted in January through March.
The first quarter of the calendar year has historically had the
lowest level of commercial air tour operations. Providing this
incentive initially in the first quarter of 2015 is a prudent action
that gives the FAA and the NPS an opportunity to evaluate the impact of
the incentive, including the extent to which commercial air tour
operators continue to use QT in the remainder of the year, which will
produce additional noise benefits for the park. The FAA and the NPS
want to incentivize commercial air tour operators to maximize the use
of QT throughout the year. To that end, the seasonal relief from
allocations may be extended to part or all of the fourth quarter
(October 1-December 31) in 2016 and following years, in addition to the
first quarter, based on an evaluation of the preceding year. In 2015,
the more that increased QT use reduces the noise level below the noise
baseline described in the following paragraph, the greater the prospect
for operators to have additional seasonal relief from allocations in
2016.
To meet the statutory conditions in NPATMA and MAP-21, the FAA and
the NPS must ensure that the cumulative impact of QT operations
relieved from allocations does not increase noise at the park. For this
proposed seasonal relief incentive, this means that the annual noise
from both QT and non-QT commercial air tour flights conducted in the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors must not exceed the annual noise level
of commercial air tour flights in these corridors under the current
allocation system. The FAA and the NPS have modeled the noise of
commercial air tour allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors
as flown with the 2012 commercial air tour fleet mix and route
structure--resulting
[[Page 66765]]
in a noise baseline of LEQ12 58.1 dB.\1\ To determine if
there is an increase in noise associated with this incentive, the FAA
and the NPS will model the annual noise from all commercial air tour
operations conducted in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors and compare
the annual noise with the seasonal relief incentive in place with the
noise baseline of all commercial air tour allocations in these
corridors. Noise will be determined to increase if the annual modeled
LEQ12 noise of commercial air tour operations in the Dragon
and Zuni Point corridors exceeds LEQ12 58.1 dB. If noise in
any year exceeds the noise baseline, the seasonal relief incentive will
be modified or discontinued as determined necessary to comply with the
statutory condition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ LEQ12 stands for Equivalent Sound Level for 12
hours, which is a cumulative measure of the noise exposure of A-
weighted sound levels over a 12-hour period. For this purpose, the
LEQ was calculated annually and averaged over the park to get a
single LEQ12 value.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To ensure that this incentive will not diminish the achievement of
substantial restoration of natural quiet and experience at the park,
all commercial air tour aircraft including QT must adhere to the
existing route structure throughout the park, including the Dragon and
Zuni Point corridors.
This incentive applies only to commercial air tour operators that
currently have allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors;
i.e., operators must have allocations in these corridors in order to be
relieved from allocations. It does not apply elsewhere in the Grand
Canyon Special Flight Rules Area (SFRA). There is an ample unused
surplus of commercial air tour allocations in the SFRA outside of the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors; therefore, operators conducting air
tours in these other SFRA areas do not need relief from allocations and
would not be incentivized to convert to QT by a seasonal relief
incentive.
If the seasonal relief in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors is a
successful QT incentive, it is proposed to remain in effect unless it
violates the statutory condition that the cumulative effect of such
operations must not increase noise at the Grand Canyon or diminishes
the achievement of substantial restoration of natural quiet, in which
case it will be either modified or discontinued; or until a longer term
approach for managing air tour noise in the park is in place.
The FAA and the NPS commit to developing a long term approach for
managing noise in the park in an expeditious manner. Any long term
approach will continue to incentivize conversion to QT and will not
penalize earlier conversion to QT realized through the seasonal relief
incentive.
IV. Implementation Steps
All comments on this proposed incentive will be considered and will
inform the agencies' next steps. If the agencies proceed with the
seasonal relief incentive as proposed in this notice or as modified in
response to comments, the FAA will implement the incentive by amending
the operations specifications of commercial air tour operators holding
allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors to allow them to
conduct air tours with QT aircraft without using an allocation for such
tours in the specified seasonal time periods. The FAA and the NPS will
cooperatively ensure that the statutory conditions protecting the park
are met.
V. Environmental Considerations
This action involving the FAA's amendment of operations
specifications is categorically excluded from more detailed
environmental review because it would not have a significant effect on
the environment. The FAA and the NPS have designed this incentive to
ensure compliance with the statutory conditions that the cumulative
impact of QT operating without allocations does not increase noise and
that the incentive does not diminish the statutory mandate to achieve
the substantial restoration of natural quiet at the park.
Issued in Hawthorne, CA, on October 7, 2014.
Glen A. Martin,
Regional Administrator, Western-Pacific Region, Federal Aviation
Administration.
Issued in Lakewood, CO, on October 16, 2014.
Sue E. Masica,
Regional Director, Intermountain Region, National Park Service.
[FR Doc. 2014-26668 Filed 11-7-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-13-P