Contracting Initiative, 12257-12259 [2015-05204]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 44 / Friday, March 6, 2015 / Notices
will not result in the creation a Class I
or Class II rail carrier and will not
exceed $5 million.
The transaction may be consummated
on or after March 20, 2015, the effective
date of the exemption (30 days after the
verified notice of exemption was filed).
If the verified notice contains false or
misleading information, the exemption
is void ab initio. Petitions to revoke the
exemption under 49 U.S.C. 10502(d)
may be filed at any time. The filing of
a petition to revoke will not
automatically stay the effectiveness of
the exemption. Petitions for stay must
be filed no later than March 13, 2015 (at
least seven days before the exemption
becomes effective).
An original and 10 copies of all
pleadings, referring to Docket No. FD
35902, must be filed with Surface
Transportation Board, 395 E Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20423–0001. In
addition, one copy of each pleading
must be served on John K. Fiorilla,
Capehart & Scatchard, P.A., 8000
Midlantic Drive, Suite 300S, Mount
Laurel, NJ 08054.
Board decisions and notices are
available on our Web site at
www.stb.dot.gov.
Decided: March 3, 2015.
By the Board, Rachel D. Campbell,
Director, Office of Proceedings.
Brendetta S. Jones,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2015–05212 Filed 3–5–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary
Contracting Initiative
Office of the Secretary (OST),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The DOT is announcing an
initiative to permit, on an experimental
basis, Federal Highway Administration
(FHWA) and Federal Transit
Administration (FTA) recipients and
subrecipients to utilize various
contracting requirements that generally
have been disallowed due to concerns
about adverse impacts on competition.
This initiative will be carried out as a
pilot program for a period of 1 year
(unless extended) under the FHWA and
FTA’s existing authorities. The purpose
of this pilot program is to determine
whether the use of such requirements
‘‘unduly limit competition,’’ as
provided in an August 23, 2013, opinion
from the Department of Justice’s Office
of Legal Counsel (OLC). Should DOT
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SUMMARY:
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find that such restrictions do not unduly
limit competition, DOT may provide
further guidance regarding their use.
DATES: This pilot program is effective
March 6, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
technical information: Mr. Michael
Harkins, Deputy Assistant General
Counsel for General Law, Office, U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC 20590, 202–366–0590 (telephone),
Michael.Harkins@dot.gov (email).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
An electronic copy of this document
may also be downloaded from the Office
of the Federal Register’s home page at
https://www.archives.gov/federal_register
and the Government Publishing Office’s
Web page at https://www.gpoaccess.gov.
Background
Interpretation of Competition Mandate
Traditionally, DOT has prohibited its
recipients and subrecipients from using
certain contracting provisions that do
not directly relate to the bidder’s
performance of work in a competent and
responsible manner. An example of
such provisions includes local and other
geographic-based labor hiring
preferences. The DOT’s position was
reinforced by a 1986 opinion of the
OLC, which concluded that 23 U.S.C.
112 (‘‘section 112’’) obligated the
Secretary of Transportation to withhold
Federal funding from highway
construction contracts that were subject
to a New York City law imposing
disadvantages on a class of responsible
bidders, where the city failed to
demonstrate that its departure from
competitive bidding requirements was
justified by considerations of costeffectiveness. See Compatibility of New
York City Local Law 19 with Federal
Highway Act Competitive Bidding
Requirements, 10 Op. O.L.C. 101 (1986).
However, in August 2013, at DOT’s
request, the OLC provided DOT with a
memorandum opinion, clarifying its
1986 opinion on section 112. See
Competitive Bidding Requirements
Under the Federal-Aid Highway
Program, 23 U.S.C. 112, (Aug. 23, 2013)
(‘‘2013 opinion’’). The 2013 opinion is
available at https://www.justice.gov/olc/
opinions. The 2013 opinion clarifies
that section 112 does not compel the
DOT’s position with respect to
contracting requirements that do not
directly relate to the bidder’s
performance of work, but rather
provides the Secretary with discretion
to permit other types of state or local
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12257
requirements as long as they do not
‘‘unduly limit competition.’’ 1
The 2013 opinion explains that
competition would not be unduly
limited by ‘‘[a] state or local
requirement that has only an incidental
effect on the pool of potential bidders or
that imposes reasonable requirements
related to the performance of the
necessary work. . . .’’ 2013 opinion at
2. In contrast, ‘‘a requirement that has
more than an incidental effect on the
pool of potential bidders and does not
relate to the work’s performance would
unduly limit competition unless it
promotes the efficient and effective use
of federal funds.’’ Id. at 2–3. In assessing
whether a requirement does promote the
efficient and effective use of federal
funds, the agency ‘‘may take into
account whether the requirement
promotes such efficiency in connection
with the letting of a particular contract
and also whether it more generally
furthers the efficient and effective use of
federal funds in the long run or protects
the integrity of the competitive bidding
process itself.’’ Id. at 3. So long as a state
or local requirement serves these
purposes, ‘‘the Administrator may
reasonably determine, consistent with
section 112, that the requirement does
not unduly limit competition, even if it
may have the effect of reducing the
number of eligible bidders for a
particular contract.’’ Id.
Thus, DOT retains discretion under
the statute to evaluate whether a
particular State or local law or policy
that has more than an incidental effect
on the pool of potential bidders is
nonetheless compatible with section
112(b)(1)’s competitive bidding
requirement. The process used to
evaluate whether state and local
requirements satisfy section 112 also is
a matter of agency discretion. Id. at 17–
18 (‘‘It is for FHWA and DOT to
determine the regulatory approach the
agency should take in exercising this
discretion and in evaluating whether
certain state and local requirements are
consistent with [section 112’s] statutory
mandates. . . .’’).
Experimental Authority
In 1988, a Transportation Research
Board (TRB) task force, comprised of
representatives from all segments of the
highway industry, was formed to
evaluate Innovative Contracting
Practices. This TRB task force requested
1 While the 2013 opinion was specific to section
112, which only applies to highway projects, it also
is relevant in interpreting and implementing FTA’s
statutory mandate under 49 U.S.C. 5325(a) that
broadly requires full and open competition in the
award of contracts utilizing financial assistance
from the FTA.
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12258
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 44 / Friday, March 6, 2015 / Notices
that the FHWA establish a project to
evaluate and validate certain findings of
the task force regarding innovative
contracting practices, which are
documented in Transportation Research
Circular Number 386, titled, ‘‘Innovative
Contracting Practices,’’ dated December
1991. In response, the FHWA initiated
Special Experimental Project No. 14
(SEP–14) pursuant to the authority
granted to the Secretary, which now is
codified at 23 U.S.C. 502. The SEP–14
program strives to identify, evaluate,
and document innovative contracting
practices that have the potential to
reduce the life cycle cost of projects,
while at the same time, maintain
product quality. Under SEP–14, the
FHWA has the flexibility to experiment
with innovative approaches to
contracting.
The innovative practices originally
approved for evaluation under SEP–14
were: Cost-plus-time bidding, lane
rental, design-build contracting, and
warranty clauses. Forty-one States have
used at least one of the innovative
practices under SEP–14. Based on their
collective experiences, FHWA decided
that cost-plus-time bidding, lane rental,
and warranty clauses were techniques
suitable for use as non-experimental,
operational practices and in 1995 these
were made regular Federal-aid
procedures. Design-build contracting in
the Federal-aid highway program was
conducted under SEP–14 until Congress
modified section 112 in section 1307 of
the Transportation Equity Act for the
21st Century to permanently authorize
the use of this contracting method.
Additionally, the construction manager/
general contractor method of contracting
in the Federal-aid highway program was
originally conducted under SEP–14
until Congress modified section 112 in
section 1303 of the Moving Ahead for
Progress in the 21st Century Act to
permanently authorize the use of this
contracting method. The SEP–14
program continues to be used to test and
evaluate experimental contracting
practices.
Also, the FTA has authority under 49
U.S.C. 5312 to carry out research,
development, demonstration, and
deployment projects that will improve
public transportation. Additionally, 49
U.S.C. 5314 authorizes FTA to carry out
activities that will assist recipients of
assistance to administer funds received
under Chapter 53 in compliance with
Federal law, including the development
of voluntary and consensus-based
standards and best practices by the
public transportation industry,
including standards and best practices
for procurement.
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18:59 Mar 05, 2015
Jkt 235001
Pilot Program
The DOT is interested in permitting
State and local recipients of Federal
financial assistance to utilize
contracting requirements that
traditionally have been prohibited on
the basis that they would restrict
competition by not directly relating to
the bidder’s performance of work. Thus,
DOT is establishing a pilot program
under the existing authorities of the
FHWA and FTA grant programs. The
objective of this pilot program is to
enable DOT to determine which
requirements may be used consistently
with the 2013 OLC opinion by
promoting efficiency in connection with
the letting of a particular contract,
furthering the efficient and effective use
of federal funds in the long run, or
protecting the integrity of the
competitive bidding process.
In particular, with respect to
procurements for which FHWA or FTA
funds will be used, recipients and
subrecipients may request those
agencies to permit the use of a particular
contracting requirement that otherwise
may be found to be inconsistent with
the general requirement for full and
open competition. DOT is particularly
interested in contracts for which
recipients and subrecipients wish to
utilize a local or other geographic labor
hiring preferences, economic-based
labor hiring preferences (i.e., lowincome workers), and labor hiring
preferences for veterans 2 because, in the
DOT’s view, such requirements can
promote Ladders of Opportunity by
ensuring that disadvantaged workers in
the communities in which the projects
are located benefit from the economic
opportunities such projects present.
DOT, however, will not approve
projects for which recipients wish to
alter the requirements of the
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
Program.
This pilot program will be carried out
for a period of 1 year from the date of
publication of this notice. As such, DOT
is only interested in contracts that will
be advertised during this time frame.
For any such contracts, the DOT will
monitor and evaluate whether
contracting requirements that
traditionally have been prohibited on
the basis that they would restrict
competition by not directly relating to
the bidder’s performance of work have
an undue restriction on competition.
While DOT’s current plan is to conduct
this pilot program for 1 year, DOT
2 See also 23 U.S.C. 114(d), which requires
recipients, to the extent practicable, to encourage
contractors to make a best faith effort to hire
veterans on Federal-aid highway projects.
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Frm 00121
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
reserves the right to extend this time
period at its discretion.
FHWA
For contracts to be funded by FHWA,
State and local recipients and
subrecipients must request prior
approval from the FHWA to use a
specific contracting requirement under
SEP–14. In order to receive SEP–14
approval, States and local recipients and
subrecipients would follow the normal
process that includes submitting work
plans to the appropriate FHWA division
office. For more information on the
SEP–14 process, please see: https://www.
fhwa.dot.gov/programadmin/contracts/
sep_a.cfm.
In developing requests to FHWA to
use contracting requirements under
SEP–14, recipients and subrecipients
should address, at a minimum, the
following points:
(1) Describe the project, including the
amount of FHWA funding involved in
the as well as the estimated total project
cost.
(2) Describe the contracting
requirement that may otherwise be
found to be inconsistent with the
general requirement for full and open
competition.
(3) Describe how they will evaluate
the effects of relevant contracting
requirements on competitive bidding. In
doing so, the recipient or subrecipient
should, at a minimum, provide
comparisons of bids received for the
projects utilizing the relevant contract
requirements to other projects of similar
size and scope and in the same
geographic area not utilizing such
requirements. If a reduction in the pool
of bidders is evident, explain the
potential offsetting benefits resulting
from the use of the requirement.
(1) Describe and quantify how the
relevant contracting requirement would
lead to increases in the effectiveness
and efficiency of Federal funds for the
project.
(2) Describe and quantify how the
experimental contracting technique
would protect the integrity of the
competitive bidding process either in
connection with the particular contract
or when considered over the long term
for that agency’s program.
For contracts involving the use of
local and other geographic labor hiring
preferences, economic-based labor
hiring preferences, and/or labor hiring
preferences for veterans, FHWA may
approve, at the request of the recipient
or subrecipient, the use of such
requirements for a specific contract, a
specific group of, or on a more general
programmatic basis. The use of other
contracting requirements may be
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 44 / Friday, March 6, 2015 / Notices
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approved by FHWA after coordination
with the DOT Office of General Counsel.
FTA
For contracts to be funded by FTA
(including federal financial assistance
under any FTA formula or discretionary
program), State and local recipients and
subrecipients must request prior
approval from the FTA to use a specific
contracting requirement pursuant to
FTA’s research and assistance
authorities discussed above. In making
such requests, recipients and
subrecipients must submit an
application to their FTA Regional
Office. In their application, recipients
should address, at a minimum, the
following points:
(1) Describe the contracting
opportunity, including the schedule for
the type of project and type of asset
being constructed and the amount of
FTA funding involved in the project as
well as the estimated total project cost.
(2) Describe the contracting
requirement that may otherwise be
found to be inconsistent with the
general requirement for full and open
competition.
(3) Describe how they will evaluate
the effects of relevant contracting
requirements on competitive bidding. In
doing so, the recipient and subrecipient
should, at a minimum, provide
comparisons of bids received for the
projects utilizing the relevant contract
requirements to other projects of similar
size and scope and in the same
geographic area not utilizing such
requirements. If a reduction in the pool
of bidders is evident, explain the
potential offsetting benefits resulting
from the use of the requirement.
(4) Describe how the relevant
contracting requirement would lead to
increases in the effectiveness and
efficiency of Federal funds for the
project.
(5) Describe and quantify how the
experimental contracting technique
would protect the integrity of the
competitive bidding process either in
connection with the particular contract
or when considered over the long term
for that agency’s program.
An evaluation committee comprised
of FTA staff will evaluate applications
for inclusion in the pilot program. The
evaluation committee reserves the right
to evaluate applications it receives and
to seek clarification from any proposer
about any statement that is made in an
application. FTA also may request
additional documentation or
information to be considered during the
evaluation process. The evaluation
committee will provide a
recommendation to the FTA
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18:59 Mar 05, 2015
Jkt 235001
Administrator regarding each
application. The FTA Administrator
will provide a final written
determination to each applicant, on a
rolling basis, regarding whether an
application has been accepted into the
pilot program.
For projects involving the use of local
and other geographic labor hiring
preferences, economic-based labor
hiring preferences, and/or labor hiring
preferences for veterans, FTA may
approve, at the request of the recipient
or subrecipient, the use of such
requirements for a specific contract, a
specific group of, or on a more general
programmatic basis. The use of other
contracting requirements may be
approved by FTA after coordination
with the DOT Office of General Counsel.
With respect to in-state or local
geographic labor hiring preferences,
please note that Section 418 of the
Consolidated and further Continuing
Appropriations Act, 2015, Public Law
113–235 (FY 2015 Appropriations Act),
prohibits FTA from using FY 2015
funds to implement, administer, or
enforce 49 CFR 18.36(c)(2), for
construction hiring. Section 18.36(c)(2)
prohibits the use of statutorily or
administratively imposed in-State or
local geographical preferences in the
evaluation of bids or proposals.3
Accordingly, for construction contracts
awarded or advertised in FY 2015, FTA
recipients may use in-state or local
geographic preferences for construction
labor hiring. Additional guidance on
FTA’s implementation of Section 418
may be found on FTA’s Web site at
www.fta.dot.gov.
As a result of the enactment of
Section 418, recipients and
subrecipients do not need to submit
applications for participation in the
pilot program for the use of in-state or
local geographic labor hiring
preferences for contracts awarded or
advertised on or before September 30,
2015. In other words, prior FTA
approval is not required to use such
requirements, and FTA recipients and
subrecipients may impose such
requirements for their contracts at their
discretion. Such projects will receive
automatic admission into the pilot
program. However, in order to assess the
effect of such preferences on
3 Effective December 26, 2014, 49 CFR part 18
will apply only to grants obligated on or before
December 25, 2014. Grants obligated on or after
December 26, 2014 will be subject to 2 CFR part
200. This provision (18.36(c)(2)) has been recodified
at 2 CFR 200.319(b) and is substantively the same
as 18.36(c)(2). Although Congress did not address
the change in codification in section 418, FTA
intends to apply section 418 to grants obligated on
or after December 26, 2014 and subject to 2 CFR
200.319(b).
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Sfmt 4703
12259
competition, recipients and
subrecipients that plan to utilize in-state
or local geographic labor hiring
preferences must notify their FTA
Regional Office prior to advertising
contracts that use such preferences. For
in-state or local geographic hiring
preferences proposed for inclusion in
contracts advertised after September 30,
2015, recipients and subrecipients must
request prior approval from the FTA to
utilize such hiring preferences through
the above-described process unless
provisions similar to section 418 are
included in a new appropriations or reauthorization act. Requests to use
requirements other than in-state or local
geographic preferences for construction
hiring, including requirements
involving the procurement of rolling
stock, must request prior FTA approval
as described above.
Issued in Washington, DC, on February 24,
2015.
Anthony R. Foxx,
Secretary of Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2015–05204 Filed 3–5–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
[Docket No. NHTSA–2015–0013]
National Emergency Medical Services
Advisory Council (NEMSAC); Notice of
Federal Advisory Committee Meeting
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA), U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT)
ACTION: Meeting Notice—National
Emergency Medical Services Advisory
Council.
AGENCY:
The NHTSA announces a
meeting of NEMSAC to be held in the
Metropolitan Washington, DC, area.
This notice announces the date, time,
and location of the meeting, which will
be open to the public, as well as
opportunities for public input to the
NEMSAC. The purpose of NEMSAC, a
nationally recognized council of
emergency medical services
representatives and consumers, is to
advise and consult with the U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT)
and the Federal Interagency Committee
on EMS (FICEMS) on matters relating to
emergency medical services (EMS). Preregistration is required to attend.
DATES: This open meeting will be held
on March 31, 2015, from 1 p.m. to 5:00
p.m. EDT, and on April 1, 2015 from, 9
a.m. to 12 p.m. EDT. A public comment
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\06MRN1.SGM
06MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 44 (Friday, March 6, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 12257-12259]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-05204]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary
Contracting Initiative
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary (OST), Department of Transportation
(DOT).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The DOT is announcing an initiative to permit, on an
experimental basis, Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) and Federal
Transit Administration (FTA) recipients and subrecipients to utilize
various contracting requirements that generally have been disallowed
due to concerns about adverse impacts on competition. This initiative
will be carried out as a pilot program for a period of 1 year (unless
extended) under the FHWA and FTA's existing authorities. The purpose of
this pilot program is to determine whether the use of such requirements
``unduly limit competition,'' as provided in an August 23, 2013,
opinion from the Department of Justice's Office of Legal Counsel (OLC).
Should DOT find that such restrictions do not unduly limit competition,
DOT may provide further guidance regarding their use.
DATES: This pilot program is effective March 6, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical information: Mr. Michael
Harkins, Deputy Assistant General Counsel for General Law, Office, U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC 20590, 202-366-0590 (telephone), Michael.Harkins@dot.gov (email).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
An electronic copy of this document may also be downloaded from the
Office of the Federal Register's home page at https://www.archives.gov/federal_register and the Government Publishing Office's Web page at
https://www.gpoaccess.gov.
Background
Interpretation of Competition Mandate
Traditionally, DOT has prohibited its recipients and subrecipients
from using certain contracting provisions that do not directly relate
to the bidder's performance of work in a competent and responsible
manner. An example of such provisions includes local and other
geographic-based labor hiring preferences. The DOT's position was
reinforced by a 1986 opinion of the OLC, which concluded that 23 U.S.C.
112 (``section 112'') obligated the Secretary of Transportation to
withhold Federal funding from highway construction contracts that were
subject to a New York City law imposing disadvantages on a class of
responsible bidders, where the city failed to demonstrate that its
departure from competitive bidding requirements was justified by
considerations of cost-effectiveness. See Compatibility of New York
City Local Law 19 with Federal Highway Act Competitive Bidding
Requirements, 10 Op. O.L.C. 101 (1986).
However, in August 2013, at DOT's request, the OLC provided DOT
with a memorandum opinion, clarifying its 1986 opinion on section 112.
See Competitive Bidding Requirements Under the Federal-Aid Highway
Program, 23 U.S.C. 112, (Aug. 23, 2013) (``2013 opinion''). The 2013
opinion is available at https://www.justice.gov/olc/opinions. The 2013
opinion clarifies that section 112 does not compel the DOT's position
with respect to contracting requirements that do not directly relate to
the bidder's performance of work, but rather provides the Secretary
with discretion to permit other types of state or local requirements as
long as they do not ``unduly limit competition.'' \1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ While the 2013 opinion was specific to section 112, which
only applies to highway projects, it also is relevant in
interpreting and implementing FTA's statutory mandate under 49
U.S.C. 5325(a) that broadly requires full and open competition in
the award of contracts utilizing financial assistance from the FTA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 2013 opinion explains that competition would not be unduly
limited by ``[a] state or local requirement that has only an incidental
effect on the pool of potential bidders or that imposes reasonable
requirements related to the performance of the necessary work. . . .''
2013 opinion at 2. In contrast, ``a requirement that has more than an
incidental effect on the pool of potential bidders and does not relate
to the work's performance would unduly limit competition unless it
promotes the efficient and effective use of federal funds.'' Id. at 2-
3. In assessing whether a requirement does promote the efficient and
effective use of federal funds, the agency ``may take into account
whether the requirement promotes such efficiency in connection with the
letting of a particular contract and also whether it more generally
furthers the efficient and effective use of federal funds in the long
run or protects the integrity of the competitive bidding process
itself.'' Id. at 3. So long as a state or local requirement serves
these purposes, ``the Administrator may reasonably determine,
consistent with section 112, that the requirement does not unduly limit
competition, even if it may have the effect of reducing the number of
eligible bidders for a particular contract.'' Id.
Thus, DOT retains discretion under the statute to evaluate whether
a particular State or local law or policy that has more than an
incidental effect on the pool of potential bidders is nonetheless
compatible with section 112(b)(1)'s competitive bidding requirement.
The process used to evaluate whether state and local requirements
satisfy section 112 also is a matter of agency discretion. Id. at 17-18
(``It is for FHWA and DOT to determine the regulatory approach the
agency should take in exercising this discretion and in evaluating
whether certain state and local requirements are consistent with
[section 112's] statutory mandates. . . .'').
Experimental Authority
In 1988, a Transportation Research Board (TRB) task force,
comprised of representatives from all segments of the highway industry,
was formed to evaluate Innovative Contracting Practices. This TRB task
force requested
[[Page 12258]]
that the FHWA establish a project to evaluate and validate certain
findings of the task force regarding innovative contracting practices,
which are documented in Transportation Research Circular Number 386,
titled, ``Innovative Contracting Practices,'' dated December 1991. In
response, the FHWA initiated Special Experimental Project No. 14 (SEP-
14) pursuant to the authority granted to the Secretary, which now is
codified at 23 U.S.C. 502. The SEP-14 program strives to identify,
evaluate, and document innovative contracting practices that have the
potential to reduce the life cycle cost of projects, while at the same
time, maintain product quality. Under SEP-14, the FHWA has the
flexibility to experiment with innovative approaches to contracting.
The innovative practices originally approved for evaluation under
SEP-14 were: Cost-plus-time bidding, lane rental, design-build
contracting, and warranty clauses. Forty-one States have used at least
one of the innovative practices under SEP-14. Based on their collective
experiences, FHWA decided that cost-plus-time bidding, lane rental, and
warranty clauses were techniques suitable for use as non-experimental,
operational practices and in 1995 these were made regular Federal-aid
procedures. Design-build contracting in the Federal-aid highway program
was conducted under SEP-14 until Congress modified section 112 in
section 1307 of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century to
permanently authorize the use of this contracting method. Additionally,
the construction manager/general contractor method of contracting in
the Federal-aid highway program was originally conducted under SEP-14
until Congress modified section 112 in section 1303 of the Moving Ahead
for Progress in the 21st Century Act to permanently authorize the use
of this contracting method. The SEP-14 program continues to be used to
test and evaluate experimental contracting practices.
Also, the FTA has authority under 49 U.S.C. 5312 to carry out
research, development, demonstration, and deployment projects that will
improve public transportation. Additionally, 49 U.S.C. 5314 authorizes
FTA to carry out activities that will assist recipients of assistance
to administer funds received under Chapter 53 in compliance with
Federal law, including the development of voluntary and consensus-based
standards and best practices by the public transportation industry,
including standards and best practices for procurement.
Pilot Program
The DOT is interested in permitting State and local recipients of
Federal financial assistance to utilize contracting requirements that
traditionally have been prohibited on the basis that they would
restrict competition by not directly relating to the bidder's
performance of work. Thus, DOT is establishing a pilot program under
the existing authorities of the FHWA and FTA grant programs. The
objective of this pilot program is to enable DOT to determine which
requirements may be used consistently with the 2013 OLC opinion by
promoting efficiency in connection with the letting of a particular
contract, furthering the efficient and effective use of federal funds
in the long run, or protecting the integrity of the competitive bidding
process.
In particular, with respect to procurements for which FHWA or FTA
funds will be used, recipients and subrecipients may request those
agencies to permit the use of a particular contracting requirement that
otherwise may be found to be inconsistent with the general requirement
for full and open competition. DOT is particularly interested in
contracts for which recipients and subrecipients wish to utilize a
local or other geographic labor hiring preferences, economic-based
labor hiring preferences (i.e., low-income workers), and labor hiring
preferences for veterans \2\ because, in the DOT's view, such
requirements can promote Ladders of Opportunity by ensuring that
disadvantaged workers in the communities in which the projects are
located benefit from the economic opportunities such projects present.
DOT, however, will not approve projects for which recipients wish to
alter the requirements of the Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
Program.
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\2\ See also 23 U.S.C. 114(d), which requires recipients, to the
extent practicable, to encourage contractors to make a best faith
effort to hire veterans on Federal-aid highway projects.
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This pilot program will be carried out for a period of 1 year from
the date of publication of this notice. As such, DOT is only interested
in contracts that will be advertised during this time frame. For any
such contracts, the DOT will monitor and evaluate whether contracting
requirements that traditionally have been prohibited on the basis that
they would restrict competition by not directly relating to the
bidder's performance of work have an undue restriction on competition.
While DOT's current plan is to conduct this pilot program for 1 year,
DOT reserves the right to extend this time period at its discretion.
FHWA
For contracts to be funded by FHWA, State and local recipients and
subrecipients must request prior approval from the FHWA to use a
specific contracting requirement under SEP-14. In order to receive SEP-
14 approval, States and local recipients and subrecipients would follow
the normal process that includes submitting work plans to the
appropriate FHWA division office. For more information on the SEP-14
process, please see: https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/programadmin/contracts/sep_a.cfm.
In developing requests to FHWA to use contracting requirements
under SEP-14, recipients and subrecipients should address, at a
minimum, the following points:
(1) Describe the project, including the amount of FHWA funding
involved in the as well as the estimated total project cost.
(2) Describe the contracting requirement that may otherwise be
found to be inconsistent with the general requirement for full and open
competition.
(3) Describe how they will evaluate the effects of relevant
contracting requirements on competitive bidding. In doing so, the
recipient or subrecipient should, at a minimum, provide comparisons of
bids received for the projects utilizing the relevant contract
requirements to other projects of similar size and scope and in the
same geographic area not utilizing such requirements. If a reduction in
the pool of bidders is evident, explain the potential offsetting
benefits resulting from the use of the requirement.
(1) Describe and quantify how the relevant contracting requirement
would lead to increases in the effectiveness and efficiency of Federal
funds for the project.
(2) Describe and quantify how the experimental contracting
technique would protect the integrity of the competitive bidding
process either in connection with the particular contract or when
considered over the long term for that agency's program.
For contracts involving the use of local and other geographic labor
hiring preferences, economic-based labor hiring preferences, and/or
labor hiring preferences for veterans, FHWA may approve, at the request
of the recipient or subrecipient, the use of such requirements for a
specific contract, a specific group of, or on a more general
programmatic basis. The use of other contracting requirements may be
[[Page 12259]]
approved by FHWA after coordination with the DOT Office of General
Counsel.
FTA
For contracts to be funded by FTA (including federal financial
assistance under any FTA formula or discretionary program), State and
local recipients and subrecipients must request prior approval from the
FTA to use a specific contracting requirement pursuant to FTA's
research and assistance authorities discussed above. In making such
requests, recipients and subrecipients must submit an application to
their FTA Regional Office. In their application, recipients should
address, at a minimum, the following points:
(1) Describe the contracting opportunity, including the schedule
for the type of project and type of asset being constructed and the
amount of FTA funding involved in the project as well as the estimated
total project cost.
(2) Describe the contracting requirement that may otherwise be
found to be inconsistent with the general requirement for full and open
competition.
(3) Describe how they will evaluate the effects of relevant
contracting requirements on competitive bidding. In doing so, the
recipient and subrecipient should, at a minimum, provide comparisons of
bids received for the projects utilizing the relevant contract
requirements to other projects of similar size and scope and in the
same geographic area not utilizing such requirements. If a reduction in
the pool of bidders is evident, explain the potential offsetting
benefits resulting from the use of the requirement.
(4) Describe how the relevant contracting requirement would lead to
increases in the effectiveness and efficiency of Federal funds for the
project.
(5) Describe and quantify how the experimental contracting
technique would protect the integrity of the competitive bidding
process either in connection with the particular contract or when
considered over the long term for that agency's program.
An evaluation committee comprised of FTA staff will evaluate
applications for inclusion in the pilot program. The evaluation
committee reserves the right to evaluate applications it receives and
to seek clarification from any proposer about any statement that is
made in an application. FTA also may request additional documentation
or information to be considered during the evaluation process. The
evaluation committee will provide a recommendation to the FTA
Administrator regarding each application. The FTA Administrator will
provide a final written determination to each applicant, on a rolling
basis, regarding whether an application has been accepted into the
pilot program.
For projects involving the use of local and other geographic labor
hiring preferences, economic-based labor hiring preferences, and/or
labor hiring preferences for veterans, FTA may approve, at the request
of the recipient or subrecipient, the use of such requirements for a
specific contract, a specific group of, or on a more general
programmatic basis. The use of other contracting requirements may be
approved by FTA after coordination with the DOT Office of General
Counsel.
With respect to in-state or local geographic labor hiring
preferences, please note that Section 418 of the Consolidated and
further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2015, Public Law 113-235 (FY
2015 Appropriations Act), prohibits FTA from using FY 2015 funds to
implement, administer, or enforce 49 CFR 18.36(c)(2), for construction
hiring. Section 18.36(c)(2) prohibits the use of statutorily or
administratively imposed in-State or local geographical preferences in
the evaluation of bids or proposals.\3\ Accordingly, for construction
contracts awarded or advertised in FY 2015, FTA recipients may use in-
state or local geographic preferences for construction labor hiring.
Additional guidance on FTA's implementation of Section 418 may be found
on FTA's Web site at www.fta.dot.gov.
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\3\ Effective December 26, 2014, 49 CFR part 18 will apply only
to grants obligated on or before December 25, 2014. Grants obligated
on or after December 26, 2014 will be subject to 2 CFR part 200.
This provision (18.36(c)(2)) has been recodified at 2 CFR 200.319(b)
and is substantively the same as 18.36(c)(2). Although Congress did
not address the change in codification in section 418, FTA intends
to apply section 418 to grants obligated on or after December 26,
2014 and subject to 2 CFR 200.319(b).
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As a result of the enactment of Section 418, recipients and
subrecipients do not need to submit applications for participation in
the pilot program for the use of in-state or local geographic labor
hiring preferences for contracts awarded or advertised on or before
September 30, 2015. In other words, prior FTA approval is not required
to use such requirements, and FTA recipients and subrecipients may
impose such requirements for their contracts at their discretion. Such
projects will receive automatic admission into the pilot program.
However, in order to assess the effect of such preferences on
competition, recipients and subrecipients that plan to utilize in-state
or local geographic labor hiring preferences must notify their FTA
Regional Office prior to advertising contracts that use such
preferences. For in-state or local geographic hiring preferences
proposed for inclusion in contracts advertised after September 30,
2015, recipients and subrecipients must request prior approval from the
FTA to utilize such hiring preferences through the above-described
process unless provisions similar to section 418 are included in a new
appropriations or re-authorization act. Requests to use requirements
other than in-state or local geographic preferences for construction
hiring, including requirements involving the procurement of rolling
stock, must request prior FTA approval as described above.
Issued in Washington, DC, on February 24, 2015.
Anthony R. Foxx,
Secretary of Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2015-05204 Filed 3-5-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-9X-P