Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustments, 18146-18158 [2015-07701]
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that the requirements of the Second
Order on Reconsideration will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
12. The Commission will send a copy
of the Second Order on Reconsideration,
including a copy of this final
certification, in a report to Congress
pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act, see U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A). In addition,
the Second Order on Reconsideration
and this certification will be sent to the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy of the Small
Business Administration. A copy of this
Second Order on Reconsideration and
this certification (or summaries thereof)
will also be published in the Federal
Register. See 5 U.S.C. 604(b).
III. Ordering Clauses
13. Accordingly, it is ordered
pursuant to sections 4(i), 303(r), and 405
of the Communications Act of 1934, as
amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 303(r), 405,
and § 1.429 of the Commission’s rules,
47 CFR 1.429, that the Petition for
Reconsideration of the Fifth Report and
Order filed by the Public Safety
Communications Council on June 12,
2013, is granted to the extent set forth
herein.
14. It is further ordered that part 90
of the Commission’s rules is amended,
effective May 4, 2015.
service contour (37 dBu for stations in
the 150–174 MHz band, and 39 dBu for
stations in the 421–512 MHz band) that
is overlapped by the proposed
centralized trunked station’s
interference contour (19 dBu for stations
in the 150–174 MHz band, and 21 dBu
for stations in the 421–512 MHz band).
Contour calculations are required for
base station facilities. Contour
calculations are required for associated
mobile stations only in the 150–174
MHz band, with the associated base
station’s service contour used as both
the mobile station’s service contour and
its interference contour.
*
*
*
*
*
(3) In addition, the service contour for
proposed centralized trunked stations
on Industrial/Business Pool frequencies
shall not be overlapped by an
incumbent licensee’s interference
contour. An application filed for Public
Safety Pool frequencies, see § 90.20, for
a proposed centralized trunked station
in which the service contour of the
proposed station is overlapped by the
interference contour of the incumbent
station(s) is allowed, but the applicant
must accept any resultant interference.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2015–07600 Filed 4–2–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
List of Subjects in 47 CFR Part 90
Communications equipment, Radio,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Communications Commission.
Marlene H. Dortch,
Secretary.
49 CFR Parts 383, 385, 386 and 387
For the reasons discussed, the Federal
Communications Commission amends
47 CFR part 90 as follows:
PART 90—PRIVATE LAND MOBILE
RADIO SERVICES
2. Section 90.187 is amended by
revising paragraphs (d)(1)(ii)(A) and
(d)(3) to read as follows:
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■
§ 90.187 Trunking in the bands between
150 and 512 MHz.
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(1) * * *
(ii) * * *
(A) Licensees (and filers of previously
filed pending applications) with a
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Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustments
The FMCSA specifies
inflation adjustments to civil penalty
amounts assessed to those who violate
the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Regulations (FMCSRs) and Hazardous
Materials Regulations (HMRs). Some of
these adjustments are required by the
Federal Civil Penalties Inflation
Adjustment Act of 1990 (Adjustment
Act), as amended by the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA). Most
of the civil penalties were last adjusted
for inflation in 2007, and some have not
been changed since 2003. Other changes
to the civil penalties were mandated by
Congress in the Moving Ahead for
Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP–
21). This final rule ensures that
SUMMARY:
Authority: Sections 4(i), 11, 303(g), 303(r),
and 332(c)(7) of the Communications Act of
1934, as amended, 47 U.S.C. 154(i), 161,
303(g), 303(r), and 332(c)(7) and Title VI of
the Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation
Act of 2012, Pub. L. 112–96 Stat. 156.
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RIN 2126–AB75
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
1. The authority citation for part 90
continues to read as follows:
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[Docket Number: FMCSA–2014–0261]
AGENCY:
■
*
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
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FMCSA’s civil penalties are consistent
with the applicable statutes.
DATES: Effective June 2, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms.
Nikki McDavid, Enforcement Division,
by email at nikki.mcdavid@dot.gov or
phone at 202–366–0831. Office hours
are from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The Supplementary Information
section of this rule is organized as
follows.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Summary of Major
Provisions
B. Benefits and Costs
II. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
A. MAP–21
B. The Debt Collection Improvement Act of
1996
C. SAFETEA–LU
D. Other Authorities
III. Background
A. Method of Calculation
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
V. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Summary of the Major
Provisions
This final rule adjusts the amount of
FMCSA’s civil penalties to account for
inflation as directed by the Adjustment
Act, as amended by the DCIA. The
specific inflation adjustment
methodology is described below. This
final rule also eliminates existing
inconsistencies between regulatory
language in Appendices A and B of 49
U.S.C. part 386 and other parts of the
FMCSRs by removing the penalty
amounts from the regulatory language
and listing all penalty amounts in these
appendices only. Finally, this
rulemaking addresses changes to the
hazardous material civil penalties
violations which were mandated by
MAP–21.
B. Benefits and Costs
The changes imposed by this final
rule upon the civil penalty amounts
alter only the magnitude of transfer
payments; transfer payments by
definition are not considered in the
monetization of societal costs and
benefits of rulemakings. Congress has
stated in the Adjustment Act, section 2,
that increasing penalties over time will
deter violations. Therefore, with this
deterrence, FMCSA infers that there
may be some safety benefits that occur
due to this final rule. The deterrence
effect of increasing penalties, which
Congress has recognized, cannot be
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reliably quantified into safety benefits,
however.
II. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
This rulemaking is based primarily on
three statutes.
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A. The Debt Collection Improvement
Act of 1996
To preserve the remedial effect of
civil penalties and foster compliance
with applicable regulations, the
Adjustment Act (Pub. L. 101–410, 104
Stat. 890, October 5, 1990), as amended
by the DCIA, (Pub. L. 104–134, April 26,
1996, 110 Stat. 1321–1373; 28 U.S.C.
2461), requires Federal agencies to
regularly adjust certain civil penalties
for inflation. The statute requires each
agency to make an initial inflationary
adjustment for all applicable civil
penalties and to make further
adjustments to these penalty amounts.
The detailed methodology required by
statute is discussed in the Background
section below.
B. MAP–21
This rule’s authority is partly based
on MAP–21 (Pub. L. 112–141, 126 Stat.
405, July 6, 2012). Specifically, the
authority comes from Title III of MAP–
21, the Hazardous Materials
Transportation Safety Improvement Act
of 2012, including section 33010, which
amended 49 U.S.C. 5123, a civil penalty
provision, effective on October 1, 2012.
Previously, 49 U.S.C. 5123 provided
for penalties of not less than $250 and
not more than $50,000 for violations of
regulations related to the transportation
of hazardous materials, and not less
than $450 and not more than $50,000
for violations of regulations related to
hazardous materials training. For
violations that resulted in death, serious
illness, or severe injury to any person or
substantial destruction of property,
section 5123 provided for penalties up
to $100,000. MAP–21 amended section
5123 to remove the minimum penalty
for violations related to the
transportation of hazardous materials,
provide for penalties up to $75,000 for
violations related to the transportation
of hazardous materials or training, and
$175,000 in the event of death, serious
illness, severe injury or substantial
destruction of property. To implement
these changes, this final rule amends 49
CFR part 386, Appendix B (e)(1–5).
Other MAP–21 provisions that are the
basis for changes to additional civil
penalties in this final rule include:
Section 32108, Reporting and
recordkeeping related to operating
authority registration (49 U.S.C.
14901(a)); section 32108, Passenger
carrier operating without registration
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(49 U.S.C. 14901(a)); section 32108,
Property carrier operating without
registration (49 U.S.C. 14901(a)); section
32108, a motor carrier or broker
transporting hazardous waste without
registration (49 U.S.C. 14901(b)); section
32110, Disobedience to a subpoena (49
U.S.C. 525); section 32503, Operating in
violation of an unsatisfactory/unfit out
of service order (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(F));
section 32503, Operating in violation of
an imminent hazard order (49 U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(F)); section 32505, Strikes
‘‘knowingly and willfully’’ from 49
U.S.C. 524 (evasion of safety-related
regulations); section 32505, Evasion of
commercial regulations (49 U.S.C.
14906);); and section 32919, Unlawful
brokering (49 U.S.C. 14916).
C. SAFETEA–LU
Two provisions under the Safe
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for
Users (Pub. L. 109–59, 119 Stat. 1144,
Aug. 10, 2005), (SAFETEA–LU)
provides authority to increase civil
penalties. First, section 4102 (b),
codified at 49 U.S.C. 31310 (i)(2)(C),
addresses an employer of a CDL-holder
who knowingly allows, requires,
permits, or authorizes an employee to
operate a CMV when the CDL-holder is
subject to an out-of-service order.
Second, section 4209 (d)(3), codified at
49 U.S.C. 14901 (d)(3), addresses
providing household good
transportation without a registration.
D. Other Authorities
Generally, agencies may promulgate
final rules only after issuing a notice of
proposed rulemaking and providing an
opportunity for public comment under
procedures required by the
Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C.
551–706) (APA), as provided in 5 U.S.C.
553(b) and (c). The APA provides a good
cause exception from these
requirements when notice and public
comment procedures are
‘‘impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary
to the public interest’’ (5 U.S.C.
553(b)(3)(B)). However, the good cause
exception requires an agency finding
that includes a brief statement of
reasons in the rules issued to dispense
with notice and comment procedures.
In this instance, FMCSA finds that
notice and comment is unnecessary
prior to adoption of this final rule
because adjustments to civil penalties
are statutorily mandated by Congress
and the Agency’s final rule is a
nondiscretionary, ministerial act to
implement these statutory obligations.
The amendments made in this final rule
merely adjust penalty provisions for
inflation and do not impose new
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discretionary requirements on the
public. For these reasons, the FMCSA
finds good cause that notice and public
comment in accordance with the APA
on this final rule is unnecessary. For the
same reasons the agency finds notice
and comment procedures unnecessary
under 49 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B), the agency
also finds good cause under 49 U.S.C.
553(d) that this rule be effective on the
date of publication in the Federal
Register.
Finally, 49 U.S.C. 31138 (c)(4) and 49
U.S.C. 31139 (c) are authorities relied
upon to address technical amendments
to part 387 regarding factors FMCSA
must take into account in assessing
penalties, which includes the ability of
parties to pay violations. These changes
to part 387 capture the precise statutory
language of those authorities.
III. Background
This final rule eliminates existing
inconsistencies between regulatory
language in Appendices A and B of part
386 and other parts of the FMCSRs by
removing the penalty amounts from the
regulatory language and listing all
penalty amounts in these appendices
only. Specifically, for ease of reference,
the penalty amounts contained in
sections 383.53 (b) and (c), section
385.111(h), section 387.17, and section
387.41 are removed and now referenced
only in Appendix B.
A. Method of Calculation
Under the DCIA, the inflation
adjustment for each civil penalty is
determined by increasing the maximum
civil penalty amount per violation by
applying a cost-of-living adjustment.
The DCIA specifies the cost-of-living
adjustment as the percentage by which
the Consumer Price Index (CPI) ‘‘for the
month of June of the calendar year
preceding the adjustment exceeds the
CPI for the month of June of the year in
which the amount of such civil penalty
was last set or adjusted pursuant to law’’
((section 5(b))). Any calculated increase
under this adjustment is subject to a
specific rounding formula set forth in
the DCIA as follows:
(1) Multiple of $10 in the case of
penalties less than or equal to $100;
(2) multiple of $100 in the case of
penalties greater than $100 but less than
or equal to $1,000;
(3) multiple of $1,000 in the case of
penalties greater than $1,000 but less
than or equal to $10,000;
(4) multiple of $5,000 in the case of
penalties greater than $10,000 but less
than or equal to $100,000;
(5) multiple of $10,000 in the case of
penalties greater than $100,000 but less
than or equal to $200,000; and
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(6) multiple of $25,000 in the case of
penalties greater than $200,000.
For example, under Appendix A of 49
CFR part 386, part IV, paragraph (e),
failure to return a written certification of
correction as required by an out-ofservice order, is subject to a civil
penalty. The penalty was adjusted for
inflation on September 28, 2007 (72 FR
55100), resulting in a maximum penalty
of $750 per violation. The CPI was
approximately 238 in June 2014, and
208 in June 7, 2007 (see U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics at https://www.bls.gov/
cpi/). Thus, the inflation factor is 238/
208 or 1.14.1 The new penalty amount
after the increase is the result of
multiplying $750 × 1.14 = $855. Under
the statute, however, the inflation
adjustment increase is to be rounded to
the nearest multiple of $100 in the case
of penalties greater than $100 but less
than or equal to $1,000. In this example,
the amount of the increase in the daily
maximum penalty was $105, and when
rounded to the nearest multiple of $100
equals $100, so the new daily maximum
penalty is $850. Therefore, Appendix A,
49 CFR part 386, part IV, paragraph (e)
is revised to provide an adjusted
maximum penalty of $850 ($750 + $100)
per violation.
The 1.14 inflation factor is used to
adjust penalties that were adjusted in
2007, which included penalties: Under
the Transportation Equity Act for the
21st Century (Pub. L. 105–178, 112 Stat.
107); established in the ICC Termination
Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–88, 109 Stat.
809); and enacted in the Motor Carrier
Safety Improvement Act of 1999 (Pub. L.
106–159, 113 Stat. 1748 (Dec. 9, 1999)).
Some penalties were adjusted in 2003
but not adjusted in 2007. The
adjustment factor used to update those
amounts in this final rule uses the June
2003 CPI value of 184: 238/184 = 1.30.
For example, the penalty for operating
a CMV when the driver was placed out
of service (49 CFR part 386, Appendix
B, paragraph (b)) was $3,750 per
violation. This penalty has not been
adjusted since 2003, so it will be
increased to $4,750, applying the
following calculation: The increment of
$1,125 ($3,750 × 1.30 = $4,875, less the
original penalty of $3,750) will be
rounded to the nearest thousand and
added to the original value of the
penalty. If the penalty is less than half
the rounding amount, no inflation factor
will be added. See the table, Inflation
Adjustments for part 386, in the
Section-by-Section discussion, directly
below.
However, the statute requires that any
penalty being adjusted for the first time
not exceed 10% of such penalty. Each
of these are marked with an asterisk in
the following table. For example, the
penalty for an employer of a CDL-holder
who knowingly allows, requires,
permits or authorizes that CDL-holder to
operate a CMV in violation of a Federal,
State, or local law or regulation (part
386, Appendix B (b)(3)) is $10,000 for
each offense. The adjustment would be
$3,000 based on the following
calculation: $10,000 × 1.30= $13,000, or
an increase of $3,000. But since its first
adjustment would be greater than 10%,
the actual adjustment is capped at
$1,000, which means the inflated
penalty amount is now $11,000 ($10,000
+ $1,000).
MAP–21 revised several civil
penalties under the Federal Hazardous
Materials Regulations (49 CFR parts
171–180), which have been promulgated
by final rule in 78 FR 60226, (October
1, 2013). The FMCSA is not adjusting
these penalties for inflation or any
penalties established in 2011 and 2012,
because, given their comparatively
recent establishment, the inflationary
adjustments would have, at most, a
minimal impact on these penalties.
However, the agency will increase such
penalties in future rulemakings as
appropriate.
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
Summary of Penalty Adjustments
As noted in the regulatory text (part
386 appendices A and B) in today’s rule,
the adjusted civil penalties identified in
the appendices supersede, where a
discrepancy exists, the corresponding
civil penalty amounts identified in title
49, United States Code.
Part 383
The penalty amounts contained in
Sections 383.53 (b) and (c) are removed
and now referenced in Appendix B
(b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3).
Part 385
The penalty amount contained in
Section 385.111(h) is removed and now
referenced in Appendix B (f)(1).
Part 386
Part 386 Appendix A has a new
introduction to mirror the language at
the beginning of Appendix B. Below is
the table with the current civil penalty
amounts in the appendices of part 386
and increases applied:
TABLE 1—INFLATION ADJUSTMENTS FOR PART 386
Civil penalty
location in
Part 386
Current
penalty
amount
Inflation
rate
Increment
applied
Final adjusted
value:
$1,000
0.00
$0
$1,000
Appendix A II Subpoena ...................
10,000
0.00
0
10,000
Appendix A IV (a) Out-of-service
order (operation of CMV by driver).
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Appendix A II Subpoena ...................
2,100
1.30
1,000
3,100
Appendix A IV (b) Out-of-service
order (requiring or permitting operation of CMV by driver).
16,000
1.30
5,000
21,000
1 For this calculation, FMCSA utilized the
unrounded CPI values and rounded the inflation
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Legal authority
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32110, 126 Stat. 405, 782, (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 525).
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32110, 126 Stat. 405, 782 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 525).
Pub. L. 98–554, sec. 213(b), 98
Stat. 2829, 2841–2843 (1984) (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(7)), 55 FR 11224
(March 27, 1990).
Pub. L. 98–554, sec. 213(a), 98
Stat, 2829 (1984) (49 U.S.C.
521(b)(7)), 55 FR 11224 (March
27, 1990).
factor to the nearest tenth. The exact calculation is
(238.343/208.352) = 1.14.
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18149
TABLE 1—INFLATION ADJUSTMENTS FOR PART 386—Continued
Civil penalty
location in
Part 386
Current
penalty
amount
Increment
applied
Final adjusted
value:
Legal authority
2,100
1.30
1,000
3,100
16,000
1.30
5,000
21,000
Pub. L. 98–554, sec. 213(a), 98
Stat 2829 (1984) (49 U.S.C.
521(b)(7)), 55 FR 11224 (March
27, 1990).
Pub. L. 98–554, sec. 213(a), 98
Stat 2829 (1984) (49 U.S.C.
521(b)(7)), 55 FR 11224 (March
27, 1990).
750
1.14
100
850
49 U.S.C. sec. 521 (b)(2)(B), 49
CFR 396.9 (d)(3).
25,000
0.00
0
25,000
16,000
0.00
0
16,000
11,000
1.30
5,000
16,000
Appendix A IV (j) (conducting operations during suspension or revocation).
Appendix B (a)(1)* Recordkeeping—
maximum penalty per day.
11,000
0.00
0
11,000
1,000
1.10
100
1,100
Appendix B (a)(1)* Recordkeeping—
maximum total penalty.
10,000
1.10
1,000
11,000
Appendix B (a)(2)* Knowing falsification of records.
10,000
1.10
1,000
11,000
Appendix B (a)(3) Non-recordkeeping
violations.
11,000
1.30
5,000
16,000
Appendix B (a)(4) Non-recordkeeping
violations by drivers.
2,750
1.30
1,000
3,750
Appendix B (a)(5)* Violation of 49
CFR 392.5.
3,750
1.10
375
4,125
Appendix B (b) Commercial driver’s
license (CDL) violations.
3,750
1.30
1,000
4,750
Appendix B (b)(1)*M Special penalties pertaining to violation of outof-service orders (first conviction).
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Appendix A IV (c) Out-of-service
order (operation by driver of CMV
or intermodal equipment that was
placed out of service).
Appendix A IV (d) Out-of-service
order (requiring or permitting operation of CMV or intermodal equipment that was placed out of service).
Appendix A IV (e) Out-of-service
order (failure to return written certification of correction).
Appendix A IV (g) Out-of-service
order (failure to cease operations
as ordered).
Appendix A IV (h) Out-of-service
order (operating in violation of
order.).
Appendix A IV (i) Out-of-service
order (conducting operations during suspension or revocation for
failure to pay penalties).
Inflation
rate
2,500
1.10
250
2,750
Appendix B (b)(1)*M Special penalties pertaining to violation of outof-service orders (second or subsequent conviction).
Appendix B (b)(2)M Employer violations pertaining to knowingly allowing, authorizing employee violations of out-of-service order (minimum penalty).
Appendix B (b)(2)*M Employer violations pertaining to knowingly allowing, authorizing employee violations of out-of-service order (maximum penalty).
5,000
1.10
500
5,500
3,750
1.30
1,000
4,750
MAP–21, Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32503, 126 Stat. 405, 803 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(F)).
Pub. L. 98–554, sec. 213(a), 98
Stat, 2829, 2841–2843 (1984) (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(7)).
TEA–21, Pub. L. 105–178, sec.
4015(b), 112 Stat. 411–12 (1998)
(49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(A)), 521
(b)(7)), 65 FR 56521, 56530
(September 19, 2000).
Pub. L. 98–554, sec. 213(a), 98
Stat, 2829, 2841–2843 (1984) (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(7)).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
sec. 4102 (a), 119 Stat. 1144,
1715
(2005)
(49
U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(B)(i)).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
sec. 4102 (a), 119 Stat. 1144,
1715
(2005)
(49
U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(B)(i)).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
sec. 4102 (a), 119 Stat. 1144,
1715
(2005)
(49
U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(B)(ii)).
TEA–21, Pub. L. 105–178, sec.
4015(b), 112 Stat. 107, 411–12
(1998) (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(A)).
TEA–21, Pub. L. 105–178, sec.
4015(b), 112 Stat. 107, 411–12
(1998) (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(A)).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59, 119
Stat. 1144, 1715; sec. 4102 (b),
119 Stat. 1715–16 (2005) (49
U.S.C. 31310 (i)(2)(A)).
Pub. L. 99–570,
sec. 12012(b), 100 Stat. 3207–184–
85
(1986)
(49
U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(C)).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
sec. 4102(b), 119 Stat. 1144,
1715 (2005) (49 U.S.C. 31310
(i)(2)(A)).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
119, sec. 4102 (b), Stat. 1144,
1715 (2005) (49 U.S.C. 31310
(i)(2)(A)).
Pub. L. 99–570, sec. 12012(b), 100
Stat. 3207,184–85 (1986) (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(C)).
25,000
1.10
2,500
27,500
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SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
sec. 4102 (b), 119 Stat. 1144,
1715 (2005) (49 U.S.C. 31310
(i)(2)(C)).
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TABLE 1—INFLATION ADJUSTMENTS FOR PART 386—Continued
Civil penalty
location in
Part 386
Current
penalty
amount
Inflation
rate
Increment
applied
Final adjusted
value:
Legal authority
10,000
1.10
1,000
11,000
Appendix B (d) Financial responsibility violations.
16,000
1.30
5,000
21,000
Appendix B (e)(1) Violations of Hazardous
Materials
Regulations
(HMRs) and Safety Permitting
Regulations (transportation or shipment of hazardous materials).
Appendix B (e)(2) Violations of Hazardous
Materials
Regulations
(HMRs) and Safety Permitting
Regulations
(training)—minimum
penalty.
Appendix B (e)(2) Violations of Hazardous
Materials
Regulations
(HMRs) and Safety Permitting
Regulations (training)—maximum
penalty.
Appendix B (e)(3) Violations of Hazardous
Materials
Regulations
(HMRs) and Safety Permitting
Regulations (packaging or container).
Appendix B (e)(4) Violations of Hazardous
Materials
Regulations
(HMRs) and Safety Permitting
Regulations
(compliance
with
FMCSRs).
Appendix B (e)(5) Violations of Hazardous
Materials
Regulations
(HMRs) and Safety Permitting
Regulations (death, serious illness,
severe injury to persons; destruction of property).
Appendix B (f)(1) Operating after
being declared unfit by assignment
of a final ‘‘unsatisfactory’’ safety
rating (generally).
Appendix B (f)(2) Operating after
being declared unfit by assignment
of a final ‘‘unsatisfactory’’ safety
rating (hazardous materials)—maximum penalty.
Appendix B (f)(2) Operating after
being declared unfit by assignment
of a final ‘‘unsatisfactory’’ safety
rating (hazardous materials)—maximum penalty if death, serious illness, severe injury to persons; destruction of property.
Appendix B (g)(1)M Violations of the
commercial regulations (CR) (property carriers).
Appendix B (g)(2) Violations of the
CRs (brokers).
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES
Appendix B (b)(3)M* Special penalties pertaining to railroad-highway grade crossing violations.
75,000
0.00
0
75,000
450
0.00
0
450
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
33010, 126 Stat. 405, 837 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 5123(a)(3)).
75,000
0.00
0
75,000
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
33010 126 Stat. 405, 837 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 5123(a)(1)).
75,000
0.00
0
75,000
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
33010, 126 Stat. 405, 837, (2012)
49 U.S.C. 5123(a)(1)).
75,000
0.00
0
75,000
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
33010, 126 Stat. 405, 837 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 5123(a)(1)).
175,000
0.00
0
175,000
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
33010, 126 Stat. 405, 837 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 5123(a)(2)).
25,000
0.00
0
25,000
MAP–21, Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32503, 126 Stat. 405, 803 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(F)).
75,000
0.00
0
75,000
MAP–21, Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
33010, 126 Stat. 405, 837 (49
U.S.C. 5123(a)(1)).
175,000
0.00
0
175,000
MAP–21, Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
33010, 126 Stat. 405, 837 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 5123(a)(2)).
10,000
0.00
0
10,000
10,000
0.00
0
10,000
Appendix B (g)(3) Violations of the
CRs (passenger carriers).
25,000
0.00
0
25,000
Appendix B (g)(4) Violations of the
CRs (foreign motor carriers, foreign motor private carriers).
10,000
0.00
0
10,000
MAP–21, Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32108(a), 126 Stat. 405, 782
(2012) (49 U.S.C. 14901(a)).
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32919(a), 126 Stat. 405, 827
(2012) (49 U.S.C. § 14916(c)).
MAP–21, Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32108(a), 126 Stat. 405, 782
(2012) (49 U.S.C. § 14901(a)).
MAP–21, Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32108(a), 126 Stat. 405, 782
(2012) (49 U.S.C. 14901(a)).
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ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 403(a), 109 Stat.
956
(1995)
(49
U.S.C.
31310(j)(2)(B)).
Pub. L. 103–272, sec. 31139(f), 108
Stat. 745, 1006–1008 (1994) (49
U.S.C. 31139(g)(1)).
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
33010, 126 Stat. 405, 837–838
(2012) (49 U.S.C. 5123(a)(1)).
03APR1
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18151
TABLE 1—INFLATION ADJUSTMENTS FOR PART 386—Continued
Civil penalty
location in
Part 386
Current
penalty
amount
Inflation
rate
Increment
applied
Final adjusted
value:
Legal authority
11,000
1.30
5,000
16,000
MCSIA of 1999, Pub. L. 106–59,
sec. 219(b), 113 Stat. 1748, 1768
(1999) (49 U.S.C. 14901 note).
32,500
1.14
5,000
37,500
MCSIA of 1999, Pub. L. 106–59,
sec. 219(c), 113 Stat. 1748, 1768
(1999) (49 U.S.C. 14901 note).
20,000
0.00
0
20,000
MAP–21, Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32108, 126 Stat. 405, 782 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 14901(b)).
40,000
0.00
0
40,000
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32108, 126 Stat. 405,782 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 14901(b)).
1,100
1.30
0
1,100
Appendix B (g)(8) Violation of the
CRs (weight of HHG shipment,
charging for services)—minimum
penalty for first violation.
Appendix B (g)(8) Violation of the
CRs (weight of HHG shipment,
charging for services)—subsequent violations.
Appendix B (g)(10) Tariff violations ..
2,200
1.30
1,000
3,200
6,500
1.14
1,000
7,500
120,000
1.14
20,000
140,000
Appendix B (g)(11) Additional tariff
violations (rebates or concessions)—first violation.
220
1.30
100
320
Appendix B (g)(11) Additional tariff
violations (rebates or concessions)—subsequent violations.
275
1.30
100
375
Appendix
(freight
penalty
Appendix
(freight
penalty
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Appendix B (g)(5) Violations of the
CRs (foreign motor carriers, foreign motor private carriers before
implementation of North American
Free Trade Agreement land transportation
provisions)—maximum
penalty for intentional violation.
Appendix B (g)(5) Violations of the
CRs (foreign motor carriers, foreign motor private carriers before
implementation of North American
Free Trade Agreement land transportation
provisions)—maximum
penalty for a pattern of intentional
violations.
Appendix B (g)(6) Violations of the
CRs (motor carrier or broker for
transportation
of
hazardous
wastes)—minimum penalty.
Appendix B (g)(6) Violations of the
CRs (motor carrier or broker for
transportation
of
hazardous
wastes)—maximum penalty.
Appendix B (g)(7) Violations of the
CRs (HHG carrier or freight forwarder, or their receiver or trustee).
650
1.14
100
750
2,200
1.30
1,000
3,200
650
1.14
100
750
2,200
1.30
1,000
3,200
11,000
1.30
5,000
16,000
1,000
0.00
0
1,000
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 914 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
§ 14901(d)(1)).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 914 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
§ 14901(e)).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 914 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14901(e)).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 868–869, 915 (1995) (49
U.S.C. 13702, 14903).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 915–916 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14904(a)).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 915–916 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14904(a)).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 916 (49 U.S.C. 14904(b)(1)).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 916 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
§ 14904(b)(1)).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 916 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14904(b)(2)).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 916 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14904(b)(2)).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 916 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14905).
MAP–21, Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32108, 126 Stat. 405, 782 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 14901).
B (g)(12) Tariff violations
forwarders)—maximum
for first violation.
B (g)(12) Tariff violations
forwarders)—maximum
for subsequent violations.
Appendix B (g)(13) service from
freight forwarder at less than rate
in effect—maximum penalty for
first violation.
Appendix B (g)(13) service from
freight forwarder at less than rate
in effect—maximum penalty for
subsequent violation(s).
Appendix B (g)(14) Violations related
to loading and unloading motor vehicles.
Appendix B (g)(16) Reporting and
recordkeeping under 49 U.S.C.
subtitle IV, part B (except 13901
and 13902(c)—minimum penalty.
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03APR1
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 64 / Friday, April 3, 2015 / Rules and Regulations
TABLE 1—INFLATION ADJUSTMENTS FOR PART 386—Continued
Civil penalty
location in
Part 386
Current
penalty
amount
Increment
applied
Final adjusted
value:
Legal authority
6,500
1.14
1,000
7,500
2,200
1.30
1,000
3,200
Appendix B (g)(18) Violation of 49
U.S.C. subtitle IV, part B, or condition of registration.
650
1.14
100
750
Appendix B (g)(21)(i)*M: Knowingly
and willfully fails to deliver or unload HHG at destination.
10,000
1.10
1,000
11,000
Appendix B (g)(22)* HHG broker estimate before entering into an
agreement with a motor carrier.
10,000
1.09
900
10,900
Appendix B (g)(23)* HHG transportation or broker services—registration requirement.
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with RULES
Appendix B (g)(16) Reporting and
recordkeeping under 49 U.S.C.
subtitle IV, part B—maximum penalty.
Appendix B (g)(17) Unauthorized disclosure of information.
Inflation
rate
25,000
1.09
2,250
27,250
Appendix B (h)* Copying of records
and access to equipment, lands,
and buildings—maximum penalty
per day.
Appendix B (h)* Copying of records
and access to equipment, lands,
and buildings—maximum total
penalty.
Appendix B (i)(1)M Evasion of regulations under 49 U.S.C. ch. 5, 51,
subchapter III of 311 (except
31138 and 31139), 31302–31304,
31305(b), 31310(g)(1)(A), 31502—
minimum penalty for first violation.
Appendix B (i)(1)M Evasion of regulations under 49 U.S.C. ch. 5, 51,
subchapter III of 311 (except
31138 and 31139), 31302–31304,
31305(b), 31310(g)(1)(A), 31502—
maximum penalty for first violation.
Appendix B (i)(1)M Evasion of regulations under 49 U.S.C. ch. 5, 51,
subchapter III of 311 (except
31138 and 31139), 31302–31304,
31305(b), 31310(g)(1)(A), 31502—
minimum penalty for subsequent
violation(s).
Appendix B (i)(1)M Evasion of regulations under 49 U.S.C. ch. 5, 51,
subchapter III of 311 (except
31138 and 31139), 31302–31304,
31305(b), 31310(g)(1)(A), 31502—
maximum penalty for subsequent
violation(s).
Appendix B (i)(2)M Evasion of regulations under 49 U.S.C. subtitle IV,
part B—minimum penalty for first
violation.
Appendix B (i)(2)M Evasion of regulations under 49 U.S.C. subtitle IV,
part B—minimum penalty for subsequent violation(s).
1,000
1.10
100
1,100
10,000
1.10
1,000
11,000
2,000
0.00
0
2,000
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32505, 126 Stat. 405, 804 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 524).
5,000
0.00
0
5,000
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, § sec.
32505, 126 Stat. 405, 804 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 524).
2,500
0.00
0
2,500
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32505, 126 Stat. 405, 804 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 524).
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, § 32505,
126 Stat. 405, 804 (2012) (49
U.S.C. 524).
7,500
0.00
0
7,500
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32505, 126 Stat. 405, 804 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 524).
2,000
0.00
0
2,000
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32505, 126 Stat. 405, 804 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 14906).
5,000
0.00
0
5,000
MAP–21 Pub. L. 112–141, sec.
32505, 126 Stat. 405, 804 (2012)
(49 U.S.C. 14906).
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ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 916–917 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14907).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 917 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14908).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 917 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14910).
ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104–88, sec. 103, 100 Stat.
803, 916 (1995) (49 U.S.C.
14905).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
sec. 4209(2), 119 Stat. 1144,
1758,
(2005)
(49
U.S.C.
14901(d)(2)).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
sec. 4209(d)(3), 119 Stat. 1144,
1758 (2005) (49 U.S.C. 14901
(d)(3)).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
sec. 4103(2), 119 Stat. 1144,
1716
(2005)
(49
U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(E)).
SAFETEA–LU, Pub. L. 109–59,
sec. 4103(2), 119 Stat. 1716
(2005) (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(E)).
03APR1
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The provisions that are being updated
for the first time here are marked with
an asterisk. Their adjustment is capped
at 10%. There are two penalties from
2010 that will be updated for the first
time in this rule and will have an
inflation rate of 1.09 (238/218).
Penalties that were established recently
will not be adjusted and are marked
with an n/a for not applicable. Penalties
marked with an ‘‘M’’ were moved from
other locations in Appendix B or other
regulatory provisions, as noted in this
section. Of these moved provisions, two
contain no penalty amounts because
they were reserved for future use.
Penalties that were last adjusted in 2003
have an inflation rate of 1.30, and those
that were adjusted for inflation in 2007
have an inflation rate of 1.14.
In Appendix B subsection (c), Special
penalties pertaining to violations of outof-service orders by CDL holders, was
reserved, and its former provisions were
placed into two subsections Appendix B
(b)(1) and (2) in the same order they
appeared in subsection (c). The first
provision relates to a CDL holder, while
the second relates to an employer of a
CDL holder. This change clarifies
Appendix B by placing all penalties
related to commercial driver license
programs into one section for ease of
use. To implement this change, the
reserved subsection (c) title, ‘‘Special
penalties pertaining to violations of outof-service orders by CDL holders,’’ was
deleted. Second, the phrase ‘‘except:
(1)’’ Was inserted before the new
provision beginning with the phrase ‘‘A
CDL holder.’’ Third, the word ‘‘and’’
was added between new subsections
(b)(1) and (b)(2) to properly mark them
as separate provisions.
Appendix B subsection (g)(1) is
deleted and moved to current
subsection (g)(16) in order that both the
minimum and maximum penalties
appear in one consolidated provision.
Former Appendix B subsection (g)(2)
is now divided into two separate
subsections, the first regarding motor
carriers and the second addressing
brokers. Specifically, former subsection
(g)(2) is renamed subsection (g)(1) and
the term ‘‘broker’’ is deleted and the
term ‘‘motor’’ added before the term
‘‘carrier’’ to clarify its application to
motor carriers only. In addition, a new
subsection (g)(2) is amended based on a
statutory provision in MAP–21, sec.
32919(a), 49 U.S.C. 14916, which
contains penalties associated with
knowingly violating registration (49
U.S.C. 13904) and financial security
requirements (49 U.S.C. 13906) for
brokers.
Subsection (g)(15), regarding evasion
of commercial regulations was reserved.
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And its provisions were moved to
section (i) in a new paragraph (2).
Existing paragraph (1) regarding evasion
of safety regulations remains in place.
Part 387
The penalty amounts contained in
Sections 387.17 and 387.41 are removed
and now referenced in Appendix B (d)
only. This also corrects a discrepancy
between the Appendix B penalty
amount, that had been properly inflated,
and the amount in the regulatory text,
which had not been properly inflated. In
addition, the phrase ‘‘ability to pay and
any’’ was added before the phrase
‘‘effect on ability’’ in both sections
387.17 and 387.41 to capture the precise
statutory language in 49 U.S.C. 31138
(c)(4) and 49 U.S.C. 31139 (c) regarding
factors FMCSA must consider before
assessing penalties.
V. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
Regulatory Planning and Review
(Executive Order (E.O.) 12866) and DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures
The FMCSA has determined that this
action is not a significant regulatory
action within the meaning of Executive
Order 12866, as supplemented by E.O.
13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011) or
within the meaning of Department of
Transportation Regulatory Policies and
Procedures. The Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) did not review this
document. The changes imposed by this
final rule upon the civil penalty
amounts alter only the magnitude of
transfer payments, which by definition
are not considered in the monetization
of societal costs and benefits of
rulemakings. Congress has stated in the
Adjustment Act, section 2, that
increasing penalties over time will deter
violations. Therefore, FMCSA infers that
there may be some safety benefits that
occur due to this final rule. The
deterrence effect of increasing penalties
that Congress has recognized, however,
cannot be quantified into safety benefits.
The Agency expects the final rule,
which is statutorily mandated to
preserve the remedial effect of civil
penalties, will have minimal costs.
Therefore, a full regulatory evaluation is
unnecessary.
Assistance for Small Entities
In accordance with section 213(a) of
the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,
FMCSA wants to assist small entities in
understanding this final rule so that
they can better evaluate its effects on
themselves and participate in the
rulemaking initiative. If the final rule
would affect your small business,
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18153
organization, or governmental
jurisdiction and you have questions
concerning its provisions or options for
compliance, please consult the FMCSA
point of contact, Ms. Nikki McDavid,
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section of this final rule.
Small businesses may send comments
on the actions of Federal employees
who enforce or otherwise determine
compliance with Federal regulations to
the Small Business Administration’s
Small Business and Agriculture
Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman
and the Regional Small Business
Regulatory Fairness Boards. The
Ombudsman evaluates these actions
annually and rates each agency’s
responsiveness to small business. If you
wish to comment on actions by
employees of FMCSA, call 1–888–REG–
FAIR (1–888–734–3247). DOT has a
policy regarding the rights of small
entities to regulatory enforcement
fairness and an explicit policy against
retaliation for exercising these rights.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The final rule will not impose an
unfunded Federal mandate, as defined
by the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1532, et seq.), that will
result in the expenditure by State, local
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $151 million
(which is the value equivalent of
$100,000,000 in 1995, adjusted for
inflation to 2012 levels) or more in any
1 year.
Federalism (E.O. 13132)
A rule has implications for
Federalism under Section 1(a) of
Executive Order 13132 if it has
‘‘substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’ FMCSA has
determined that this rule would not
have substantial direct costs on or for
States, nor would it limit the
policymaking discretion of States.
Nothing in this document preempts any
State law or regulation. Therefore, this
rule does not have sufficient federalism
implications to warrant the preparation
of a federalism assessment.
Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This final rule meets applicable
standards in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of
E.O. 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to
minimize litigation, eliminates
ambiguity, and reduce burden.
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Protection of Children (E.O. 13045)
E.O. 13045, Protection of Children
from Environmental Health Risks and
Safety Risks (62 FR 19885, Apr. 23,
1997), requires agencies issuing
‘‘economically significant’’ rules, if the
regulation also concerns an
environmental health or safety risk that
an agency has reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, to
include an evaluation of the regulation’s
environmental health and safety effects
on children. The Agency determined
that this final rule is not economically
significant. Therefore, no analysis of the
impacts on children is required. In any
event, the Agency does not anticipate
that this regulatory action could in any
respect present an environmental or
safety risk that could disproportionately
affect children.
(6)(b). The Categorical Exclusion (CE) in
paragraph 6(b) covers technical or minor
amendments to existing FMCSRs. The
content in this rule is covered by this
CE. The CE determination is available
for inspection or copying in the
Regulations.gov Web site listed under
ADDRESSES.
FMCSA also analyzed this rule under
the Clean Air Act, as amended (CAA),
section 176(c) (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.),
and implementing regulations
promulgated by the Environmental
Protection Agency. Approval of this
action is exempt from the CAA’s general
conformity requirement since it does
not affect direct or indirect emissions of
criteria pollutants.
Taking of Private Property (E.O. 12630)
FMCSA reviewed this final rule in
accordance with E.O. 12630,
Governmental Actions and Interference
with Constitutionally Protected Property
Rights, and has determined it will not
effect a taking of private property or
otherwise have taking implications.
Under E.O. 12898, each Federal
agency must identify and address, as
appropriate, ‘‘disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects of its programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations and low-income
populations’’ in the United States, its
possessions, and territories. FMCSA
evaluated the environmental justice
effects of this rule in accordance with
the E.O., and has determined that no
environmental justice issue is associated
with this rule, nor is there any collective
environmental impact that would result
from its promulgation.
Privacy Impact Assessment
Section 522 of title I of division H of
the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2005, enacted December 8, 2004 (Pub. L.
108–447, 118 Stat. 2809, 3268, 5 U.S.C.
552a note), requires the Agency to
conduct a privacy impact assessment
(PIA) of a regulation that will affect the
privacy of individuals. This rule does
not require the collection of personally
identifiable information (PII).
Intergovernmental Review (E.O. 12372)
The regulations implementing
Executive Order 12372 regarding
intergovernmental consultation on
Federal programs and activities do not
apply to this program.
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Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not contain
information collection requirements for
purposes of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.).
National Environmental Policy Act and
Clean Air Act
FMCSA analyzed this rule for the
purpose of the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.) and determined this action is
categorically excluded from further
analysis and documentation in an
environmental assessment or
environmental impact statement under
FMCSA Order 5610.1(69 FR 9680,
March 1, 2004), Appendix 2, paragraph
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Environmental Justice (E.O. 12898)
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
(E.O. 13211)
FMCSA has analyzed this rule under
E.O. 13211, Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use.
The Agency has determined that it is
not a ‘‘significant energy action’’ under
that order because it is not a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ likely to have a
significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy. Therefore,
it does not require a Statement of Energy
Effects under E.O. 13211.
Indian Tribal Governments (E.O. 13175)
This rule does not have tribal
implications under E.O. 13175,
Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments, because it
does not have a substantial direct effect
on one or more Indian tribes, on the
relationship between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes.
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National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act (Technical
Standards)
The National Technology Transfer
and Advancement Act (NTTAA) (15
U.S.C. 272 note) directs agencies to use
voluntary consensus standards in their
regulatory activities unless the agency
provides Congress, through OMB, with
an explanation of why using these
standards would be inconsistent with
applicable law or otherwise impractical.
Voluntary consensus standards (e.g.,
specifications of materials, performance,
design, or operation; test methods;
sampling procedures; and related
management systems practices) are
standards that are developed or adopted
by voluntary consensus standards
bodies. This rule does not use technical
standards. Therefore, we did not
consider the use of voluntary consensus
standards.
List of Subjects
49 CFR Part 383
Administrative practice and
procedure, Alcohol abuse, Drug abuse,
Highway safety, Motor carriers.
49 CFR Part 385
Administrative practice and
procedure, Highway safety, Mexico,
Motor carriers, Motor vehicle safety,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
49 CFR Part 386
Administrative procedures,
Commercial motor vehicle safety,
Highways and roads, Motor carriers,
Penalties.
49 CFR Part 387
Buses, Freight, Freight forwarders,
Hazardous materials transportation,
Highway safety, Insurance,
Intergovernmental relations, Motor
carriers, Motor vehicle safety, Moving of
household goods, Penalties, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Surety
bonds.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, FMCSA is amending title 49
CFR parts 383, 385, 386, and 387 to read
as follows:
PART 383—COMMERCIAL DRIVER’S
LICENSE STANDARDS;
REQUIREMENTS AND PENALTIES
1. The authority citation for part 383
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 521, 31136, 31301 et
seq., and 31502; secs. 214 and 215 of Pub. L.
106–159, 113 Stat. 1748, 1766, 1767; sec.
1012(b) of Pub. L. 107–56, 115 Stat. 272, 297,
sec. 4140 of Pub. L. 109–59, 119 Stat. 1144,
1746; and 49 CFR 1.87.
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■
206, Pub. L. 106–159, 113 Stat. 1763; subtitle
B, title IV of Pub. L. 109–59; and 49 CFR 1.81
and 1.87.
2. Revise § 383.53 to read as follows:
§ 383.53
Penalties.
(a) General rule. Any person who
violates the rules set forth in subparts B
and C of this part may be subject to civil
or criminal penalties under 49 U.S.C.
521(b), as provided in part 386,
Appendix B, of this chapter.
(b) Special penalties pertaining to
violation of out-of-service orders—(1)
Driver violations. A driver who is
convicted of violating an out-of-service
order shall be subject to a civil penalty
as stated in part 386 Appendix B, in
addition to disqualification under
§ 383.51(e).
(2) Employer violations. An employer
who is convicted of a violation of
§ 383.37(d) shall be subject to a civil
penalty as stated in part 386, appendix
B, of this chapter.
(c) Special penalties pertaining to
railroad-highway grade crossing
violations. An employer who is
convicted of a violation of § 383.37(e)
shall be subject to a civil penalty stated
in part 386, appendix B, of this chapter.
PART 385—SAFETY FITNESS
PROCEDURES
3. The authority citation for part 385
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 113, 504, 521(b),
5105(e), 5109, 5123, 13901–13905, 31133,
31135, 31136, 31137(a), 31144, 31148, and
31502; Sec. 113(a), Pub. L. 103–311; Sec. 408,
Pub. L. 104–88; Sec. 350 of Pub. L. 107–87;
and 49 CFR 1.87.
4. Amend § 385.111 by revising
paragraph (h) to read as follows:
■
§ 385.111 Suspension and revocation of
Mexico-domiciled carrier registration.
*
*
*
*
(h) If a Mexico-domiciled motor
carrier operates a commercial motor
vehicle in violation of a suspension or
out-of-service order, it shall be subject
to the penalty provisions in 49 U.S.C.
521(b) and the amount as stated in part
386, appendix B, of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
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*
PART 386—RULES OF PRACTICE FOR
MOTOR CARRIER, INTERMODAL
EQUIPMENT PROVIDER, BROKER,
FREIGHT FORWARDER, AND
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
PROCEEDINGS
5. The authority citation for part 386
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 113, chapters 5, 51,
59, 131–141, 145–149, 311, 313, and 315; 49
U.S.C. 5123; Sec. 204, Pub. L. 104–88, 109
Stat. 803, 941 (49 U.S.C. 701 note); Sec. 217,
Pub. L. 105–159, 113 Stat. 1748, 1767; Sec.
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6. Revise Appendix A to part 386 to
read as follows:
■
Appendix A to Part 386—Penalty
Schedule: Violations of Notices and
Orders
The Debt Collection Improvement Act of
1996 [Pub. L. 104–134, title III, chapter 10,
sec. 31001, par. (s), 110 Stat. 1321–1373]
amended the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation
Adjustment Act of 1990 to require agencies
to adjust for inflation ‘‘each civil monetary
penalty provided by law within the
jurisdiction of the Federal agency . . .’’ and
to publish that regulation in the Federal
Register. Pursuant to that authority, the
inflation adjusted civil penalties identified in
this appendix supersede the corresponding
civil penalty amounts identified in title 49,
United States Code.
I. Notice to Abate
Violation—Failure to cease violations
of the regulations in the time prescribed
in the notice. (The time within which to
comply with a notice to abate shall not
begin to run with respect to contested
violations, i.e., where there are material
issues in dispute under § 386.14, until
such time as the violation has been
established.)
Penalty—Reinstatement of any
deferred assessment or payment of a
penalty or portion thereof.
II. Subpoena
Violation—Failure to respond to
Agency subpoena to appear and testify
or produce records.
Penalty—minimum of $1,000 but not
more than $10,000 per violation.
III. Final Order
Violation—Failure to comply with
Final Agency Order.
Penalty—Automatic reinstatement of
any penalty previously reduced or held
in abeyance and restoration of the full
amount assessed in the Notice of Claim
less any payments previously made.
IV. Out-of-Service Order
a. Violation—Operation of a
commercial vehicle by a driver during
the period the driver was placed out of
service.
Penalty—Up to $3,100 per violation.
(For purposes of this violation, the
term ‘‘driver’’ means an operator of a
commercial motor vehicle, including an
independent contractor who, while in
the course of operating a commercial
motor vehicle, is employed or used by
another person.)
b. Violation—Requiring or permitting
a driver to operate a commercial vehicle
during the period the driver was placed
out of service.
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Penalty—Up to $21,000 per violation.
(This violation applies to motor carriers
including an independent contractor
who is not a ‘‘driver,’’ as defined under
paragraph IV(a) of this appendix.)
c. Violation—Operation of a
commercial motor vehicle or intermodal
equipment by a driver after the vehicle
or intermodal equipment was placed
out-of-service and before the required
repairs are made.
Penalty—$3,100 each time the vehicle
or intermodal equipment is so operated.
(This violation applies to drivers as
defined in paragraph IV(a) of this
appendix.)
d. Violation—Requiring or permitting
the operation of a commercial motor
vehicle or intermodal equipment placed
out-of-service before the required
repairs are made.
Penalty—Up to $21,000 each time the
vehicle or intermodal equipment is so
operated after notice of the defect is
received. (This violation applies to
intermodal equipment providers and
motor carriers, including an
independent owner operator who is not
a ‘‘driver,’’ as defined in paragraph IV(a)
of this appendix.)
e. Violation—Failure to return written
certification of correction as required by
the out-of-service order.
Penalty—Up to $850 per violation.
f. Violation—Knowingly falsifies
written certification of correction
required by the out of service order.
Penalty—Considered the same as the
violations described in paragraphs IV(c)
and IV(d) of this appendix, and subject
to the same penalties.
Note: Falsification of certification may also
result in criminal prosecution under 18
U.S.C.1001.
g. Violation—Operating in violation of
an order issued under § 386.72(b) to
cease all or part of the employer’s
commercial motor vehicle operations or
to cease part of an intermodal
equipment provider’s operations, i.e.
failure to cease operations as ordered.
Penalty—Up to $25,000 per day the
operation continues after the effective
date and time of the order to cease.
h. Violation—Operating in violation
of an order issued under § 386.73.
Penalty—Up to $16,000 per day the
operation continues after the effective
date and time of the out-of-service
order.
i. Violation—Conducting operations
during a period of suspension under
§ 386.83 or § 386.84 for failure to pay
penalties.
Penalty—Up to $16,000 for each day
that operations are conducted during
the suspension or revocation period.
j. Violation—Conducting operations
during a period of suspension or
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revocation under §§ 385.911, 385.913,
385.1009 or 385.1011.
Penalty—Up to $11,000 for each day
that operations are conducted during
the suspension or revocation period.
■ 7. Revise Appendix B to part 386 to
read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 386—Penalty
Schedule: Violations and Monetary
Penalties
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The Debt Collection Improvement Act of
1996 [Pub. L. 104–134, title III, chapter 10,
sec. 31001, par. (s), 110 Stat. 1321–1373]
amended the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation
Adjustment Act of 1990 to require agencies
to adjust for inflation ‘‘each civil monetary
penalty provided by law within the
jurisdiction of the Federal agency . . .’’ and
to publish that regulation in the Federal
Register. Pursuant to that authority, the
inflation-adjusted civil penalties listed in this
appendix supersede the corresponding civil
penalty amounts listed in title 49, United
States Code.
What are the types of violations and
maximum monetary penalties?
(a) Violations of the Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs):
(1) Recordkeeping. A person or entity
that fails to prepare or maintain a record
required by parts 40, 382, 385, and 390–
99 of this subchapter, or prepares or
maintains a required record that is
incomplete, inaccurate, or false, is
subject to a maximum civil penalty of
$1,100 for each day the violation
continues, up to $11,000.
(2) Knowing falsification of records. A
person or entity that knowingly falsifies,
destroys, mutilates, or changes a report
or record required by parts 382, 385,
and 390–99 of this subchapter,
knowingly makes or causes to be made
a false or incomplete record about an
operation or business fact or transaction,
or knowingly makes, prepares, or
preserves a record in violation of a
regulation order of the Secretary is
subject to a maximum civil penalty of
$11,000 if such action misrepresents a
fact that constitutes a violation other
than a reporting or recordkeeping
violation.
(3) Non-recordkeeping violations. A
person or entity that violates parts 382,
385, or 390–99 of this subchapter,
except a recordkeeping requirement, is
subject to a civil penalty not to exceed
$16,000 for each violation.
(4) Non-recordkeeping violations by
drivers. A driver who violates parts 382,
385, and 390–99 of this subchapter,
except a recordkeeping violation, is
subject to a civil penalty not to exceed
$3,750.
(5) Violation of 49 CFR 392.5. A
driver placed out of service for 24 hours
for violating the alcohol prohibitions of
49 CFR 392.5(a) or (b) who drives
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during that period is subject to a civil
penalty not to exceed $4,125 for each
violation.
(6) Egregious violations of drivingtime limits in 49 CFR part 395. A driver
who exceeds, and a motor carrier that
requires or permits a driver to exceed,
by more than 3 hours the driving-time
limit in 49 CFR 395.3(a) or 395.5(a), as
applicable, shall be deemed to have
committed an egregious driving-time
limit violation. In instances of an
egregious driving-time violation, the
Agency will consider the ‘‘gravity of the
violation,’’ for purposes of 49 U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(D), sufficient to warrant
imposition of penalties up to the
maximum permitted by law.
(b) Commercial driver’s license (CDL)
violations. Any person who violates 49
CFR part 383, subparts B, C, E, F, G, or
H is subject to a civil penalty not to
exceed $4,750; except:
(1) A CDL-holder who is convicted of
violating an out-of-service order shall be
subject to a civil penalty of not less than
$2,750 for a first conviction and not less
than $5,500 for a second or subsequent
conviction;
(2) An employer of a CDL-holder who
knowingly allows, requires, permits, or
authorizes an employee to operate a
CMV during any period in which the
CDL-holder is subject to an out-ofservice order, is subject to a civil
penalty of not less than $4,750 or more
than $27,500; and
(3) An employer of a CDL-holder who
knowingly allows, requires, permits, or
authorizes that CDL-holder to operate a
CMV in violation of a Federal, State, or
local law or regulation pertaining to
railroad-highway grade crossings is
subject to a civil penalty of not more
than $11,000.
(c) [Reserved]
(d) Financial responsibility violations.
A motor carrier that fails to maintain the
levels of financial responsibility
prescribed by part 387 of this
subchapter or any person (except an
employee who acts without knowledge)
who knowingly violates the rules of part
387 subparts A and B is subject to a
maximum penalty of $21,000. Each day
of a continuing violation constitutes a
separate offense.
(e) Violations of the Hazardous
Materials Regulations (HMRs) and
Safety Permitting Regulations found in
Subpart E of Part 385. This paragraph
applies to violations by motor carriers,
drivers, shippers and other person who
transport hazardous materials on the
highway in commercial motor vehicles
or cause hazardous materials to be so
transported.
(1) All knowing violations of 49
U.S.C. chapter 51 or orders or
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regulations issued under the authority
of that chapter applicable to the
transportation or shipment of hazardous
materials by commercial motor vehicle
on the highways are subject to a civil
penalty of not more than $75,000 for
each violation. Each day of continuing
violation constitutes a separate offense.
(2) All knowing violations of 49
U.S.C. chapter 51 or orders or
regulations issued under the authority
of that chapter applicable to training
related to the transportation or shipment
of hazardous materials by commercial
motor vehicle on highways are subject
to a civil penalty of not less than $450
and not more than $75,000 for each
violation.
(3) All knowing violations of 49
U.S.C. chapter 51 or orders, regulations
or exemptions under the authority of
that chapter applicable to the
manufacture, fabrication, marking,
maintenance, reconditioning, repair, or
testing of a packaging or container that
is represented, marked, certified, or sold
as being qualified for use in the
transportation or shipment of hazardous
materials by commercial motor vehicle
on highways are subject to a civil
penalty of not more than $75,000 for
each violation.
(4) Whenever regulations issued
under the authority of 49 U.S.C. chapter
51 require compliance with the FMCSRs
while transporting hazardous materials,
any violations of the FMCSRs will be
considered a violation of the HMRs and
subject to a civil penalty of not more
than $75,000.
(5) If any violation subject to the civil
penalties set out in paragraphs (e)(1)
through (4) of this appendix results in
death, serious illness, or severe injury to
any person or in substantial destruction
of property, the civil penalty may be
increased to not more than $175,000 for
each offense.
(f) Operating after being declared
unfit by assignment of a final
‘‘unsatisfactory’’ safety rating. (1) A
motor carrier operating a commercial
motor vehicle in interstate commerce
(except owners or operators of
commercial motor vehicles designed or
used to transport hazardous materials
for which placarding of a motor vehicle
is required under regulations prescribed
under 49 U.S.C. chapter 51) is subject,
after being placed out of service because
of receiving a final ‘‘unsatisfactory’’
safety rating, to a civil penalty of not
more than $25,000 (49 CFR 385.13).
Each day the transportation continues in
violation of a final ‘‘unsatisfactory’’
safety rating constitutes a separate
offense.
(2) A motor carrier operating a
commercial motor vehicle designed or
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used to transport hazardous materials
for which placarding of a motor vehicle
is required under regulations prescribed
under 49 U.S.C. chapter 51 is subject,
after being placed out of service because
of receiving a final ‘‘unsatisfactory’’
safety rating, to a civil penalty of not
more than $75,000 for each offense. If
the violation results in death, serious
illness, or severe injury to any person or
in substantial destruction of property,
the civil penalty may be increased to not
more than $175,000 for each offense.
Each day the transportation continues in
violation of a final ‘‘unsatisfactory’’
safety rating constitutes a separate
offense.
(g) Violations of the commercial
regulations (CRs). Penalties for
violations of the CRs are specified in 49
U.S.C. Chapter 149. These penalties
relate to transportation subject to the
Secretary’s jurisdiction under 49 U.S.C.
Chapter 135. Unless otherwise noted, a
separate violation occurs for each day
the violation continues.
(1) A person who operates as a motor
carrier for the transportation of property
in violation of the registration
requirements of 49 U.S.C. 13901 is
liable for a minimum penalty of $10,000
per violation.
(2) A person who knowingly operates
as a broker in violation of registration
requirements of 49 U.S.C. 13904 or
financial security requirements of 49
U.S.C. 13906 is liable for a penalty not
to exceed $10,000 for each violation.
(3) A person who operates as a motor
carrier of passengers in violation of the
registration requirements of 49 U.S.C.
13901 is liable for a minimum penalty
of $25,000 per violation.
(4) A person who operates as a foreign
motor carrier or foreign motor private
carrier of property in violation of the
provisions of 49 U.S.C. 13902(c) is liable
for a minimum penalty of $10,000 per
violation.
(5) A person who operates as a foreign
motor carrier or foreign motor private
carrier without authority, before the
implementation of the land
transportation provisions of the North
American Free Trade Agreement,
outside the boundaries of a commercial
zone along the United States-Mexico
border is liable for a maximum penalty
of $16,000 for an intentional violation
and a maximum penalty of $37,500 for
a pattern of intentional violations.
(6) A person who operates as a motor
carrier or broker for the transportation of
hazardous wastes in violation of the
registration provisions of 49 U.S.C.
13901 is liable for a minimum penalty
of $20,000 and a maximum penalty of
$40,000 per violation.
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(7) A motor carrier or freight
forwarder of household goods, or their
receiver or trustee, that does not comply
with any regulation relating to the
protection of individual shippers, is
liable for a minimum penalty of $1,100
per violation.
(8) A person—
(i) Who falsifies, or authorizes an
agent or other person to falsify,
documents used in the transportation of
household goods by motor carrier or
freight forwarder to evidence the weight
of a shipment or
(ii) Who charges for services which
are not performed or are not reasonably
necessary in the safe and adequate
movement of the shipment is liable for
a minimum penalty of $3,200 for the
first violation and $7,500 for each
subsequent violation.
(9) A person who knowingly accepts
or receives from a carrier a rebate or
offset against the rate specified in a tariff
required under 49 U.S.C. 13702 for the
transportation of property delivered to
the carrier commits a violation for
which the penalty is equal to three
times the amount accepted as a rebate
or offset and three times the value of
other consideration accepted or received
as a rebate or offset for the six-year
period before the action is begun.
(10) A person who offers, gives,
solicits, or receives transportation of
property by a carrier at a different rate
than the rate in effect under 49 U.S.C.
13702 is liable for a maximum penalty
of $140,000 per violation. When acting
in the scope of his/her employment, the
acts or omissions of a person acting for
or employed by a carrier or shipper are
considered to be the acts and omissions
of that carrier or shipper, as well as that
person.
(11) Any person who offers, gives,
solicits, or receives a rebate or
concession related to motor carrier
transportation subject to jurisdiction
under subchapter I of 49 U.S.C. Chapter
135, or who assists or permits another
person to get that transportation at less
than the rate in effect under 49 U.S.C.
13702, commits a violation for which
the penalty is $320 for the first violation
and $375 for each subsequent violation.
(12) A freight forwarder, its officer,
agent, or employee, that assists or
willingly permits a person to get service
under 49 U.S.C. 13531 at less than the
rate in effect under 49 U.S.C. 13702
commits a violation for which the
penalty is up to $750 for the first
violation and up to $3,200 for each
subsequent violation.
(13) A person who gets or attempts to
get service from a freight forwarder
under 49 U.S.C. 13531 at less than the
rate in effect under 49 U.S.C. 13702
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commits a violation for which the
penalty is up to $750 for the first
violation and up to $3,200 for each
subsequent violation.
(14) A person who knowingly
authorizes, consents to, or permits a
violation of 49 U.S.C. 14103 relating to
loading and unloading motor vehicles or
who knowingly violates subsection (a)
of 49 U.S.C. 14103 is liable for a penalty
of not more than $16,000 per violation.
(15) [Reserved]
(16) A person required to make a
report to the Secretary, answer a
question, or make, prepare, or preserve
a record under Part B of Subtitle IV,
Title 49, U.S.C., or an officer, agent, or
employee of that person, is liable for a
minimum penalty of $1,000 and for a
maximum penalty of $7,500 per
violation if it does not make the report,
does not completely and truthfully
answer the question within 30 days
from the date the Secretary requires the
answer, does not make or preserve the
record in the form and manner
prescribed, falsifies, destroys, or
changes the report or record, files a false
report or record, makes a false or
incomplete entry in the record about a
business related fact, or prepares or
preserves a record in violation of a
regulation or order of the Secretary.
(17) A motor carrier, water carrier,
freight forwarder, or broker, or their
officer, receiver, trustee, lessee,
employee, or other person authorized to
receive information from them, who
discloses information identified in 49
U.S.C. 14908 without the permission of
the shipper or consignee is liable for a
maximum penalty of $3,200.
(18) A person who violates a
provision of Part B, Subtitle IV, Title 49,
U.S.C., or a regulation or order under
Part B, or who violates a condition of
registration related to transportation that
is subject to jurisdiction under
subchapter I or III or Chapter 135, or
who violates a condition of registration
of a foreign motor carrier or foreign
motor private carrier under section
13902, is liable for a penalty of $750 for
each violation if another penalty is not
provided in 49 U.S.C. Chapter 149.
(19) A violation of Part B, Subtitle IV,
Title 49, U.S.C., committed by a
director, officer, receiver, trustee, lessee,
agent, or employee of a carrier that is a
corporation is also a violation by the
corporation to which the penalties of
Chapter 149 apply. Acts and omissions
of individuals acting in the scope of
their employment with a carrier are
considered to be the actions and
omissions of the carrier as well as the
individual.
(20) In a proceeding begun under 49
U.S.C. 14902 or 14903, the rate that a
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carrier publishes, files, or participates in
under section 13702 is conclusive proof
against the carrier, its officers, and
agents that it is the legal rate for the
transportation or service. Departing, or
offering to depart, from that published
or filed rate is a violation of 49 U.S.C.
14902 and 14903.
(21) A person—
(i) Who knowingly and willfully fails,
in violation of a contract, to deliver to,
or unload at, the destination of a
shipment of household goods in
interstate commerce for which charges
have been estimated by the motor
carrier transporting such goods, and for
which the shipper has tendered a
payment in accordance with part 375,
subpart G of this chapter, is liable for a
civil penalty of not less than $11,000 for
each violation. Each day of a continuing
violation constitutes a separate offense.
(ii) Who is a carrier or broker and is
found to be subject to the civil penalties
in paragraph (i) of this appendix may
also have his or her carrier and/or
broker registration suspended for not
less than 12 months and not more than
36 months under 49 U.S.C. chapter 139.
Such suspension of a carrier or broker
shall extend to and include any carrier
or broker having the same ownership or
operational control as the suspended
carrier or broker.
(22) A broker for transportation of
household goods who makes an
estimate of the cost of transporting any
such goods before entering into an
agreement with a motor carrier to
provide transportation of household
goods subject to FMCSA jurisdiction is
liable to the United States for a civil
penalty of not less than $10,900 for each
violation.
(23) A person who provides
transportation of household goods
subject to jurisdiction under 49 U.S.C.
chapter 135, subchapter I, or provides
broker services for such transportation,
without being registered under 49
U.S.C. chapter 139 to provide such
transportation or services as a motor
carrier or broker, as the case may be, is
liable to the United States for a civil
penalty of not less than $27,250 for each
violation.
(h) Copying of records and access to
equipment, lands, and buildings. A
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:21 Apr 02, 2015
Jkt 235001
person subject to 49 U.S.C. chapter 51
or a motor carrier, broker, freight
forwarder, or owner or operator of a
commercial motor vehicle subject to
part B of subtitle VI of title 49 U.S.C.
who fails to allow promptly, upon
demand in person or in writing, the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, an employee designated
by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration, or an employee of a
MCSAP grant recipient to inspect and
copy any record or inspect and examine
equipment, lands, buildings, and other
property, in accordance with 49 U.S.C.
504(c), 5121(c), and 14122(b), is subject
to a civil penalty of not more than
$1,100 for each offense. Each day of a
continuing violation constitutes a
separate offense, except that the total of
all civil penalties against any violator
for all offenses related to a single
violation shall not exceed $11,000.
(i) Evasion. A person, or an officer,
employee, or agent of that person:
(1) Who by any means tries to evade
regulation of motor carriers under Title
49, United States Code chapter 5,
chapter 51, subchapter III of chapter 311
(except sections 31138 and 31139) or
section 31302, 31303, 31304, 31305(b),
31310(g)(1)(A), or 31502, or a regulation
issued under any of those provisions,
shall be fined at least $2,000 but not
more than $5,000 for the first violation
and at least $2,500 but not more than
$7,500 for a subsequent violation.
(2) Who tries to evade regulation
under Part B of Subtitle IV, Title 49,
U.S.C., for carriers or brokers is liable
for a penalty of at least $2,000 for the
first violation of at least $5,000 for a
subsequent violation.
PART 387—MINIMUM LEVELS OF
FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR
MOTOR CARRIERS
8. The authority citation for part 387
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 13101, 13301, 13906,
14701, 31138, 31139, and 31144; and 49 CFR
1.87.
■
9. Revise § 387.17 to read as follows:
§ 387.17
Violation and penalty.
Any person (except an employee who
acts without knowledge) who
PO 00000
Frm 00076
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
knowingly violates the rules of this
subpart shall be liable to the United
States for a civil penalty as stated in part
386, appendix B, of this chapter, and if
any such violation is a continuing one,
each day of violation will constitute a
separate offense. The amount of any
such penalty shall be assessed by
FMCSA’s Administrator, by written
notice. In determining the amount of
such penalty, the Administrator, or his/
her authorized delegate shall take into
account the nature, circumstances,
extent, the gravity of the violation
committed and, with respect to the
person found to have committed such
violation, the degree of culpability, any
history of prior violations, ability to pay,
and any effect on ability to continue to
do business, and such other matters as
justice may require.
■
10. Revise § 387.41 to read as follows:
§ 387.41
Violation and penalty.
(a) Any person (except an employee
who acts without knowledge) who
knowingly violates the rules of this
subpart shall be liable to the United
States for a civil penalty as stated in part
386, appendix B, of this chapter, and if
any such violation is a continuing one,
each day of violation will constitute a
separate offense. The amount of any
such penalty shall be assessed by the
Administrator or his/her designee, by
written notice.
(b) In determining the amount of such
penalty, the Administrator or his/her
designee shall take into account the
nature, circumstances, extent, the
gravity of the violation committed and,
with respect to the person found to have
committed such violation, the degree of
culpability, any history of prior
violations, the ability to pay, and any
effect on ability to continue to do
business, and such other matters as
justice may require.
Issued under the authority of delegation in
49 CFR 1.87 on March 26, 2015.
T.F. Scott Darling, III,
Chief Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2015–07701 Filed 4–2–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
E:\FR\FM\03APR1.SGM
03APR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 64 (Friday, April 3, 2015)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 18146-18158]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-07701]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration
49 CFR Parts 383, 385, 386 and 387
[Docket Number: FMCSA-2014-0261]
RIN 2126-AB75
Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustments
AGENCY: Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The FMCSA specifies inflation adjustments to civil penalty
amounts assessed to those who violate the Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Regulations (FMCSRs) and Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMRs). Some
of these adjustments are required by the Federal Civil Penalties
Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990 (Adjustment Act), as amended by the
Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 (DCIA). Most of the civil
penalties were last adjusted for inflation in 2007, and some have not
been changed since 2003. Other changes to the civil penalties were
mandated by Congress in the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st
Century Act (MAP-21). This final rule ensures that FMCSA's civil
penalties are consistent with the applicable statutes.
DATES: Effective June 2, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ms. Nikki McDavid, Enforcement
Division, by email at nikki.mcdavid@dot.gov or phone at 202-366-0831.
Office hours are from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The Supplementary Information section of this rule is organized as
follows.
Table of Contents
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Summary of Major Provisions
B. Benefits and Costs
II. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
A. MAP-21
B. The Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996
C. SAFETEA-LU
D. Other Authorities
III. Background
A. Method of Calculation
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
V. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
I. Executive Summary
A. Purpose and Summary of the Major Provisions
This final rule adjusts the amount of FMCSA's civil penalties to
account for inflation as directed by the Adjustment Act, as amended by
the DCIA. The specific inflation adjustment methodology is described
below. This final rule also eliminates existing inconsistencies between
regulatory language in Appendices A and B of 49 U.S.C. part 386 and
other parts of the FMCSRs by removing the penalty amounts from the
regulatory language and listing all penalty amounts in these appendices
only. Finally, this rulemaking addresses changes to the hazardous
material civil penalties violations which were mandated by MAP-21.
B. Benefits and Costs
The changes imposed by this final rule upon the civil penalty
amounts alter only the magnitude of transfer payments; transfer
payments by definition are not considered in the monetization of
societal costs and benefits of rulemakings. Congress has stated in the
Adjustment Act, section 2, that increasing penalties over time will
deter violations. Therefore, with this deterrence, FMCSA infers that
there may be some safety benefits that occur due to this final rule.
The deterrence effect of increasing penalties, which Congress has
recognized, cannot be
[[Page 18147]]
reliably quantified into safety benefits, however.
II. Legal Basis for the Rulemaking
This rulemaking is based primarily on three statutes.
A. The Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996
To preserve the remedial effect of civil penalties and foster
compliance with applicable regulations, the Adjustment Act (Pub. L.
101-410, 104 Stat. 890, October 5, 1990), as amended by the DCIA, (Pub.
L. 104-134, April 26, 1996, 110 Stat. 1321-1373; 28 U.S.C. 2461),
requires Federal agencies to regularly adjust certain civil penalties
for inflation. The statute requires each agency to make an initial
inflationary adjustment for all applicable civil penalties and to make
further adjustments to these penalty amounts. The detailed methodology
required by statute is discussed in the Background section below.
B. MAP-21
This rule's authority is partly based on MAP-21 (Pub. L. 112-141,
126 Stat. 405, July 6, 2012). Specifically, the authority comes from
Title III of MAP-21, the Hazardous Materials Transportation Safety
Improvement Act of 2012, including section 33010, which amended 49
U.S.C. 5123, a civil penalty provision, effective on October 1, 2012.
Previously, 49 U.S.C. 5123 provided for penalties of not less than
$250 and not more than $50,000 for violations of regulations related to
the transportation of hazardous materials, and not less than $450 and
not more than $50,000 for violations of regulations related to
hazardous materials training. For violations that resulted in death,
serious illness, or severe injury to any person or substantial
destruction of property, section 5123 provided for penalties up to
$100,000. MAP-21 amended section 5123 to remove the minimum penalty for
violations related to the transportation of hazardous materials,
provide for penalties up to $75,000 for violations related to the
transportation of hazardous materials or training, and $175,000 in the
event of death, serious illness, severe injury or substantial
destruction of property. To implement these changes, this final rule
amends 49 CFR part 386, Appendix B (e)(1-5).
Other MAP-21 provisions that are the basis for changes to
additional civil penalties in this final rule include: Section 32108,
Reporting and recordkeeping related to operating authority registration
(49 U.S.C. 14901(a)); section 32108, Passenger carrier operating
without registration (49 U.S.C. 14901(a)); section 32108, Property
carrier operating without registration (49 U.S.C. 14901(a)); section
32108, a motor carrier or broker transporting hazardous waste without
registration (49 U.S.C. 14901(b)); section 32110, Disobedience to a
subpoena (49 U.S.C. 525); section 32503, Operating in violation of an
unsatisfactory/unfit out of service order (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(F));
section 32503, Operating in violation of an imminent hazard order (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(F)); section 32505, Strikes ``knowingly and
willfully'' from 49 U.S.C. 524 (evasion of safety-related regulations);
section 32505, Evasion of commercial regulations (49 U.S.C. 14906););
and section 32919, Unlawful brokering (49 U.S.C. 14916).
C. SAFETEA-LU
Two provisions under the Safe Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users (Pub. L. 109-59, 119
Stat. 1144, Aug. 10, 2005), (SAFETEA-LU) provides authority to increase
civil penalties. First, section 4102 (b), codified at 49 U.S.C. 31310
(i)(2)(C), addresses an employer of a CDL-holder who knowingly allows,
requires, permits, or authorizes an employee to operate a CMV when the
CDL-holder is subject to an out-of-service order. Second, section 4209
(d)(3), codified at 49 U.S.C. 14901 (d)(3), addresses providing
household good transportation without a registration.
D. Other Authorities
Generally, agencies may promulgate final rules only after issuing a
notice of proposed rulemaking and providing an opportunity for public
comment under procedures required by the Administrative Procedure Act
(5 U.S.C. 551-706) (APA), as provided in 5 U.S.C. 553(b) and (c). The
APA provides a good cause exception from these requirements when notice
and public comment procedures are ``impracticable, unnecessary, or
contrary to the public interest'' (5 U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B)). However, the
good cause exception requires an agency finding that includes a brief
statement of reasons in the rules issued to dispense with notice and
comment procedures.
In this instance, FMCSA finds that notice and comment is
unnecessary prior to adoption of this final rule because adjustments to
civil penalties are statutorily mandated by Congress and the Agency's
final rule is a nondiscretionary, ministerial act to implement these
statutory obligations. The amendments made in this final rule merely
adjust penalty provisions for inflation and do not impose new
discretionary requirements on the public. For these reasons, the FMCSA
finds good cause that notice and public comment in accordance with the
APA on this final rule is unnecessary. For the same reasons the agency
finds notice and comment procedures unnecessary under 49 U.S.C.
553(b)(3)(B), the agency also finds good cause under 49 U.S.C. 553(d)
that this rule be effective on the date of publication in the Federal
Register.
Finally, 49 U.S.C. 31138 (c)(4) and 49 U.S.C. 31139 (c) are
authorities relied upon to address technical amendments to part 387
regarding factors FMCSA must take into account in assessing penalties,
which includes the ability of parties to pay violations. These changes
to part 387 capture the precise statutory language of those
authorities.
III. Background
This final rule eliminates existing inconsistencies between
regulatory language in Appendices A and B of part 386 and other parts
of the FMCSRs by removing the penalty amounts from the regulatory
language and listing all penalty amounts in these appendices only.
Specifically, for ease of reference, the penalty amounts contained in
sections 383.53 (b) and (c), section 385.111(h), section 387.17, and
section 387.41 are removed and now referenced only in Appendix B.
A. Method of Calculation
Under the DCIA, the inflation adjustment for each civil penalty is
determined by increasing the maximum civil penalty amount per violation
by applying a cost-of-living adjustment. The DCIA specifies the cost-
of-living adjustment as the percentage by which the Consumer Price
Index (CPI) ``for the month of June of the calendar year preceding the
adjustment exceeds the CPI for the month of June of the year in which
the amount of such civil penalty was last set or adjusted pursuant to
law'' ((section 5(b))). Any calculated increase under this adjustment
is subject to a specific rounding formula set forth in the DCIA as
follows:
(1) Multiple of $10 in the case of penalties less than or equal to
$100;
(2) multiple of $100 in the case of penalties greater than $100 but
less than or equal to $1,000;
(3) multiple of $1,000 in the case of penalties greater than $1,000
but less than or equal to $10,000;
(4) multiple of $5,000 in the case of penalties greater than
$10,000 but less than or equal to $100,000;
(5) multiple of $10,000 in the case of penalties greater than
$100,000 but less than or equal to $200,000; and
[[Page 18148]]
(6) multiple of $25,000 in the case of penalties greater than
$200,000.
For example, under Appendix A of 49 CFR part 386, part IV,
paragraph (e), failure to return a written certification of correction
as required by an out-of-service order, is subject to a civil penalty.
The penalty was adjusted for inflation on September 28, 2007 (72 FR
55100), resulting in a maximum penalty of $750 per violation. The CPI
was approximately 238 in June 2014, and 208 in June 7, 2007 (see U.S.
Bureau of Labor Statistics at https://www.bls.gov/cpi/). Thus, the
inflation factor is 238/208 or 1.14.\1\ The new penalty amount after
the increase is the result of multiplying $750 x 1.14 = $855. Under the
statute, however, the inflation adjustment increase is to be rounded to
the nearest multiple of $100 in the case of penalties greater than $100
but less than or equal to $1,000. In this example, the amount of the
increase in the daily maximum penalty was $105, and when rounded to the
nearest multiple of $100 equals $100, so the new daily maximum penalty
is $850. Therefore, Appendix A, 49 CFR part 386, part IV, paragraph (e)
is revised to provide an adjusted maximum penalty of $850 ($750 + $100)
per violation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ For this calculation, FMCSA utilized the unrounded CPI
values and rounded the inflation factor to the nearest tenth. The
exact calculation is (238.343/208.352) = 1.14.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 1.14 inflation factor is used to adjust penalties that were
adjusted in 2007, which included penalties: Under the Transportation
Equity Act for the 21st Century (Pub. L. 105-178, 112 Stat. 107);
established in the ICC Termination Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-88, 109
Stat. 809); and enacted in the Motor Carrier Safety Improvement Act of
1999 (Pub. L. 106-159, 113 Stat. 1748 (Dec. 9, 1999)).
Some penalties were adjusted in 2003 but not adjusted in 2007. The
adjustment factor used to update those amounts in this final rule uses
the June 2003 CPI value of 184: 238/184 = 1.30. For example, the
penalty for operating a CMV when the driver was placed out of service
(49 CFR part 386, Appendix B, paragraph (b)) was $3,750 per violation.
This penalty has not been adjusted since 2003, so it will be increased
to $4,750, applying the following calculation: The increment of $1,125
($3,750 x 1.30 = $4,875, less the original penalty of $3,750) will be
rounded to the nearest thousand and added to the original value of the
penalty. If the penalty is less than half the rounding amount, no
inflation factor will be added. See the table, Inflation Adjustments
for part 386, in the Section-by-Section discussion, directly below.
However, the statute requires that any penalty being adjusted for
the first time not exceed 10% of such penalty. Each of these are marked
with an asterisk in the following table. For example, the penalty for
an employer of a CDL-holder who knowingly allows, requires, permits or
authorizes that CDL-holder to operate a CMV in violation of a Federal,
State, or local law or regulation (part 386, Appendix B (b)(3)) is
$10,000 for each offense. The adjustment would be $3,000 based on the
following calculation: $10,000 x 1.30= $13,000, or an increase of
$3,000. But since its first adjustment would be greater than 10%, the
actual adjustment is capped at $1,000, which means the inflated penalty
amount is now $11,000 ($10,000 + $1,000).
MAP-21 revised several civil penalties under the Federal Hazardous
Materials Regulations (49 CFR parts 171-180), which have been
promulgated by final rule in 78 FR 60226, (October 1, 2013). The FMCSA
is not adjusting these penalties for inflation or any penalties
established in 2011 and 2012, because, given their comparatively recent
establishment, the inflationary adjustments would have, at most, a
minimal impact on these penalties. However, the agency will increase
such penalties in future rulemakings as appropriate.
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
Summary of Penalty Adjustments
As noted in the regulatory text (part 386 appendices A and B) in
today's rule, the adjusted civil penalties identified in the appendices
supersede, where a discrepancy exists, the corresponding civil penalty
amounts identified in title 49, United States Code.
Part 383
The penalty amounts contained in Sections 383.53 (b) and (c) are
removed and now referenced in Appendix B (b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3).
Part 385
The penalty amount contained in Section 385.111(h) is removed and
now referenced in Appendix B (f)(1).
Part 386
Part 386 Appendix A has a new introduction to mirror the language
at the beginning of Appendix B. Below is the table with the current
civil penalty amounts in the appendices of part 386 and increases
applied:
Table 1--Inflation Adjustments for Part 386
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Current Inflation Increment Final adjusted
Civil penalty location in Part 386 penalty amount rate applied value: Legal authority
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appendix A II Subpoena......................... $1,000 0.00 $0 $1,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32110, 126
Stat. 405, 782, (2012) (49 U.S.C.
525).
Appendix A II Subpoena......................... 10,000 0.00 0 10,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32110, 126
Stat. 405, 782 (2012) (49 U.S.C. 525).
Appendix A IV (a) Out-of-service order 2,100 1.30 1,000 3,100 Pub. L. 98-554, sec. 213(b), 98 Stat.
(operation of CMV by driver). 2829, 2841-2843 (1984) (49 U.S.C.
521(b)(7)), 55 FR 11224 (March 27,
1990).
Appendix A IV (b) Out-of-service order 16,000 1.30 5,000 21,000 Pub. L. 98-554, sec. 213(a), 98 Stat,
(requiring or permitting operation of CMV by 2829 (1984) (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(7)), 55
driver). FR 11224 (March 27, 1990).
[[Page 18149]]
Appendix A IV (c) Out-of-service order 2,100 1.30 1,000 3,100 Pub. L. 98-554, sec. 213(a), 98 Stat
(operation by driver of CMV or intermodal 2829 (1984) (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(7)), 55
equipment that was placed out of service). FR 11224 (March 27, 1990).
Appendix A IV (d) Out-of-service order 16,000 1.30 5,000 21,000 Pub. L. 98-554, sec. 213(a), 98 Stat
(requiring or permitting operation of CMV or 2829 (1984) (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(7)), 55
intermodal equipment that was placed out of FR 11224 (March 27, 1990).
service).
Appendix A IV (e) Out-of-service order (failure 750 1.14 100 850 49 U.S.C. sec. 521 (b)(2)(B), 49 CFR
to return written certification of correction). 396.9 (d)(3).
Appendix A IV (g) Out-of-service order (failure 25,000 0.00 0 25,000 MAP-21, Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32503,
to cease operations as ordered). 126 Stat. 405, 803 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
521(b)(2)(F)).
Appendix A IV (h) Out-of-service order 16,000 0.00 0 16,000 Pub. L. 98-554, sec. 213(a), 98 Stat,
(operating in violation of order.). 2829, 2841-2843 (1984) (49 U.S.C.
521(b)(7)).
Appendix A IV (i) Out-of-service order 11,000 1.30 5,000 16,000 TEA-21, Pub. L. 105-178, sec. 4015(b),
(conducting operations during suspension or 112 Stat. 411-12 (1998) (49 U.S.C.
revocation for failure to pay penalties). 521(b)(2)(A)), 521 (b)(7)), 65 FR
56521, 56530 (September 19, 2000).
Appendix A IV (j) (conducting operations during 11,000 0.00 0 11,000 Pub. L. 98-554, sec. 213(a), 98 Stat,
suspension or revocation). 2829, 2841-2843 (1984) (49 U.S.C.
521(b)(7)).
Appendix B (a)(1)* Recordkeeping--maximum 1,000 1.10 100 1,100 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, sec. 4102
penalty per day. (a), 119 Stat. 1144, 1715 (2005) (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(B)(i)).
Appendix B (a)(1)* Recordkeeping--maximum total 10,000 1.10 1,000 11,000 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, sec. 4102
penalty. (a), 119 Stat. 1144, 1715 (2005) (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(B)(i)).
Appendix B (a)(2)* Knowing falsification of 10,000 1.10 1,000 11,000 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, sec. 4102
records. (a), 119 Stat. 1144, 1715 (2005) (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(B)(ii)).
Appendix B (a)(3) Non-recordkeeping violations. 11,000 1.30 5,000 16,000 TEA-21, Pub. L. 105-178, sec. 4015(b),
112 Stat. 107, 411-12 (1998) (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(A)).
Appendix B (a)(4) Non-recordkeeping violations 2,750 1.30 1,000 3,750 TEA-21, Pub. L. 105-178, sec. 4015(b),
by drivers. 112 Stat. 107, 411-12 (1998) (49
U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(A)).
Appendix B (a)(5)* Violation of 49 CFR 392.5... 3,750 1.10 375 4,125 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, 119 Stat.
1144, 1715; sec. 4102 (b), 119 Stat.
1715-16 (2005) (49 U.S.C. 31310
(i)(2)(A)).
Appendix B (b) Commercial driver's license 3,750 1.30 1,000 4,750 Pub. L. 99-570,
(CDL) violations. sec. 12012(b), 100 Stat. 3207-184-85
(1986) (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(C)).
Appendix B (b)(1)*\M\ Special penalties 2,500 1.10 250 2,750 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, sec.
pertaining to violation of out-of-service 4102(b), 119 Stat. 1144, 1715 (2005)
orders (first conviction). (49 U.S.C. 31310 (i)(2)(A)).
Appendix B (b)(1)*\M\ Special penalties 5,000 1.10 500 5,500 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, 119, sec.
pertaining to violation of out-of-service 4102 (b), Stat. 1144, 1715 (2005) (49
orders (second or subsequent conviction). U.S.C. 31310 (i)(2)(A)).
Appendix B (b)(2)\M\ Employer violations 3,750 1.30 1,000 4,750 Pub. L. 99-570, sec. 12012(b), 100
pertaining to knowingly allowing, authorizing Stat. 3207,184-85 (1986) (49 U.S.C.
employee violations of out-of-service order 521(b)(2)(C)).
(minimum penalty).
Appendix B (b)(2)*\M\ Employer violations 25,000 1.10 2,500 27,500 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, sec. 4102
pertaining to knowingly allowing, authorizing (b), 119 Stat. 1144, 1715 (2005) (49
employee violations of out-of-service order U.S.C. 31310 (i)(2)(C)).
(maximum penalty).
[[Page 18150]]
Appendix B (b)(3)\M\* Special penalties 10,000 1.10 1,000 11,000 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
pertaining to railroad-highway grade crossing 104-88, sec. 403(a), 109 Stat. 956
violations. (1995) (49 U.S.C. 31310(j)(2)(B)).
Appendix B (d) Financial responsibility 16,000 1.30 5,000 21,000 Pub. L. 103-272, sec. 31139(f), 108
violations. Stat. 745, 1006-1008 (1994) (49 U.S.C.
31139(g)(1)).
Appendix B (e)(1) Violations of Hazardous 75,000 0.00 0 75,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 33010, 126
Materials Regulations (HMRs) and Safety Stat. 405, 837-838 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
Permitting Regulations (transportation or 5123(a)(1)).
shipment of hazardous materials).
Appendix B (e)(2) Violations of Hazardous 450 0.00 0 450 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 33010, 126
Materials Regulations (HMRs) and Safety Stat. 405, 837 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
Permitting Regulations (training)--minimum 5123(a)(3)).
penalty.
Appendix B (e)(2) Violations of Hazardous 75,000 0.00 0 75,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 33010 126
Materials Regulations (HMRs) and Safety Stat. 405, 837 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
Permitting Regulations (training)--maximum 5123(a)(1)).
penalty.
Appendix B (e)(3) Violations of Hazardous 75,000 0.00 0 75,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 33010, 126
Materials Regulations (HMRs) and Safety Stat. 405, 837, (2012) 49 U.S.C.
Permitting Regulations (packaging or 5123(a)(1)).
container).
Appendix B (e)(4) Violations of Hazardous 75,000 0.00 0 75,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 33010, 126
Materials Regulations (HMRs) and Safety Stat. 405, 837 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
Permitting Regulations (compliance with 5123(a)(1)).
FMCSRs).
Appendix B (e)(5) Violations of Hazardous 175,000 0.00 0 175,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 33010, 126
Materials Regulations (HMRs) and Safety Stat. 405, 837 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
Permitting Regulations (death, serious 5123(a)(2)).
illness, severe injury to persons; destruction
of property).
Appendix B (f)(1) Operating after being 25,000 0.00 0 25,000 MAP-21, Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32503,
declared unfit by assignment of a final 126 Stat. 405, 803 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
``unsatisfactory'' safety rating (generally). 521(b)(2)(F)).
Appendix B (f)(2) Operating after being 75,000 0.00 0 75,000 MAP-21, Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 33010,
declared unfit by assignment of a final 126 Stat. 405, 837 (49 U.S.C.
``unsatisfactory'' safety rating (hazardous 5123(a)(1)).
materials)--maximum penalty.
Appendix B (f)(2) Operating after being 175,000 0.00 0 175,000 MAP-21, Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 33010,
declared unfit by assignment of a final 126 Stat. 405, 837 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
``unsatisfactory'' safety rating (hazardous 5123(a)(2)).
materials)--maximum penalty if death, serious
illness, severe injury to persons; destruction
of property.
Appendix B (g)(1)\M\ Violations of the 10,000 0.00 0 10,000 MAP-21, Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32108(a),
commercial regulations (CR) (property 126 Stat. 405, 782 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
carriers). 14901(a)).
Appendix B (g)(2) Violations of the CRs 10,000 0.00 0 10,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32919(a),
(brokers). 126 Stat. 405, 827 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
Sec. 14916(c)).
Appendix B (g)(3) Violations of the CRs 25,000 0.00 0 25,000 MAP-21, Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32108(a),
(passenger carriers). 126 Stat. 405, 782 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
Sec. 14901(a)).
Appendix B (g)(4) Violations of the CRs 10,000 0.00 0 10,000 MAP-21, Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32108(a),
(foreign motor carriers, foreign motor private 126 Stat. 405, 782 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
carriers). 14901(a)).
[[Page 18151]]
Appendix B (g)(5) Violations of the CRs 11,000 1.30 5,000 16,000 MCSIA of 1999, Pub. L. 106-59, sec.
(foreign motor carriers, foreign motor private 219(b), 113 Stat. 1748, 1768 (1999)
carriers before implementation of North (49 U.S.C. 14901 note).
American Free Trade Agreement land
transportation provisions)--maximum penalty
for intentional violation.
Appendix B (g)(5) Violations of the CRs 32,500 1.14 5,000 37,500 MCSIA of 1999, Pub. L. 106-59, sec.
(foreign motor carriers, foreign motor private 219(c), 113 Stat. 1748, 1768 (1999)
carriers before implementation of North (49 U.S.C. 14901 note).
American Free Trade Agreement land
transportation provisions)--maximum penalty
for a pattern of intentional violations.
Appendix B (g)(6) Violations of the CRs (motor 20,000 0.00 0 20,000 MAP-21, Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32108,
carrier or broker for transportation of 126 Stat. 405, 782 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
hazardous wastes)--minimum penalty. 14901(b)).
Appendix B (g)(6) Violations of the CRs (motor 40,000 0.00 0 40,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32108, 126
carrier or broker for transportation of Stat. 405,782 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
hazardous wastes)--maximum penalty. 14901(b)).
Appendix B (g)(7) Violations of the CRs (HHG 1,100 1.30 0 1,100 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
carrier or freight forwarder, or their 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 914
receiver or trustee). (1995) (49 U.S.C. Sec. 14901(d)(1)).
Appendix B (g)(8) Violation of the CRs (weight 2,200 1.30 1,000 3,200 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
of HHG shipment, charging for services)-- 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 914
minimum penalty for first violation. (1995) (49 U.S.C. Sec. 14901(e)).
Appendix B (g)(8) Violation of the CRs (weight 6,500 1.14 1,000 7,500 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
of HHG shipment, charging for services)-- 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 914
subsequent violations. (1995) (49 U.S.C. 14901(e)).
Appendix B (g)(10) Tariff violations........... 120,000 1.14 20,000 140,000 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 868-
869, 915 (1995) (49 U.S.C. 13702,
14903).
Appendix B (g)(11) Additional tariff violations 220 1.30 100 320 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
(rebates or concessions)--first violation. 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 915-
916 (1995) (49 U.S.C. 14904(a)).
Appendix B (g)(11) Additional tariff violations 275 1.30 100 375 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
(rebates or concessions)--subsequent 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 915-
violations. 916 (1995) (49 U.S.C. 14904(a)).
Appendix B (g)(12) Tariff violations (freight 650 1.14 100 750 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
forwarders)--maximum penalty for first 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 916
violation. (49 U.S.C. 14904(b)(1)).
Appendix B (g)(12) Tariff violations (freight 2,200 1.30 1,000 3,200 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
forwarders)--maximum penalty for subsequent 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 916
violations. (1995) (49 U.S.C. Sec. 14904(b)(1)).
Appendix B (g)(13) service from freight 650 1.14 100 750 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
forwarder at less than rate in effect--maximum 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 916
penalty for first violation. (1995) (49 U.S.C. 14904(b)(2)).
Appendix B (g)(13) service from freight 2,200 1.30 1,000 3,200 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
forwarder at less than rate in effect--maximum 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 916
penalty for subsequent violation(s). (1995) (49 U.S.C. 14904(b)(2)).
Appendix B (g)(14) Violations related to 11,000 1.30 5,000 16,000 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
loading and unloading motor vehicles. 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 916
(1995) (49 U.S.C. 14905).
Appendix B (g)(16) Reporting and recordkeeping 1,000 0.00 0 1,000 MAP-21, Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32108,
under 49 U.S.C. subtitle IV, part B (except 126 Stat. 405, 782 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
13901 and 13902(c)--minimum penalty. 14901).
[[Page 18152]]
Appendix B (g)(16) Reporting and recordkeeping 6,500 1.14 1,000 7,500 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
under 49 U.S.C. subtitle IV, part B--maximum 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 916-
penalty. 917 (1995) (49 U.S.C. 14907).
Appendix B (g)(17) Unauthorized disclosure of 2,200 1.30 1,000 3,200 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
information. 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 917
(1995) (49 U.S.C. 14908).
Appendix B (g)(18) Violation of 49 U.S.C. 650 1.14 100 750 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
subtitle IV, part B, or condition of 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 917
registration. (1995) (49 U.S.C. 14910).
Appendix B (g)(21)(i)*\M\: Knowingly and 10,000 1.10 1,000 11,000 ICC Termination Act of 1995, Pub. L.
willfully fails to deliver or unload HHG at 104-88, sec. 103, 100 Stat. 803, 916
destination. (1995) (49 U.S.C. 14905).
Appendix B (g)(22)* HHG broker estimate before 10,000 1.09 900 10,900 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, sec.
entering into an agreement with a motor 4209(2), 119 Stat. 1144, 1758, (2005)
carrier. (49 U.S.C. 14901(d)(2)).
Appendix B (g)(23)* HHG transportation or 25,000 1.09 2,250 27,250 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, sec.
broker services--registration requirement. 4209(d)(3), 119 Stat. 1144, 1758
(2005) (49 U.S.C. 14901 (d)(3)).
Appendix B (h)* Copying of records and access 1,000 1.10 100 1,100 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, sec.
to equipment, lands, and buildings--maximum 4103(2), 119 Stat. 1144, 1716 (2005)
penalty per day. (49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(E)).
Appendix B (h)* Copying of records and access 10,000 1.10 1,000 11,000 SAFETEA-LU, Pub. L. 109-59, sec.
to equipment, lands, and buildings--maximum 4103(2), 119 Stat. 1716 (2005) (49
total penalty. U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(E)).
Appendix B (i)(1)\M\ Evasion of regulations 2,000 0.00 0 2,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32505, 126
under 49 U.S.C. ch. 5, 51, subchapter III of Stat. 405, 804 (2012) (49 U.S.C. 524).
311 (except 31138 and 31139), 31302-31304,
31305(b), 31310(g)(1)(A), 31502--minimum
penalty for first violation.
Appendix B (i)(1)\M\ Evasion of regulations 5,000 0.00 0 5,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, Sec. sec.
under 49 U.S.C. ch. 5, 51, subchapter III of 32505, 126 Stat. 405, 804 (2012) (49
311 (except 31138 and 31139), 31302-31304, U.S.C. 524).
31305(b), 31310(g)(1)(A), 31502--maximum
penalty for first violation.
Appendix B (i)(1)\M\ Evasion of regulations 2,500 0.00 0 2,500 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32505, 126
under 49 U.S.C. ch. 5, 51, subchapter III of Stat. 405, 804 (2012) (49 U.S.C. 524).
311 (except 31138 and 31139), 31302-31304, MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, Sec. 32505,
31305(b), 31310(g)(1)(A), 31502--minimum 126 Stat. 405, 804 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
penalty for subsequent violation(s). 524).
Appendix B (i)(1)\M\ Evasion of regulations 7,500 0.00 0 7,500 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32505, 126
under 49 U.S.C. ch. 5, 51, subchapter III of Stat. 405, 804 (2012) (49 U.S.C. 524).
311 (except 31138 and 31139), 31302-31304,
31305(b), 31310(g)(1)(A), 31502--maximum
penalty for subsequent violation(s).
Appendix B (i)(2)\M\ Evasion of regulations 2,000 0.00 0 2,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32505, 126
under 49 U.S.C. subtitle IV, part B--minimum Stat. 405, 804 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
penalty for first violation. 14906).
Appendix B (i)(2)\M\ Evasion of regulations 5,000 0.00 0 5,000 MAP-21 Pub. L. 112-141, sec. 32505, 126
under 49 U.S.C. subtitle IV, part B--minimum Stat. 405, 804 (2012) (49 U.S.C.
penalty for subsequent violation(s). 14906).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 18153]]
The provisions that are being updated for the first time here are
marked with an asterisk. Their adjustment is capped at 10%. There are
two penalties from 2010 that will be updated for the first time in this
rule and will have an inflation rate of 1.09 (238/218). Penalties that
were established recently will not be adjusted and are marked with an
n/a for not applicable. Penalties marked with an ``\M\'' were moved
from other locations in Appendix B or other regulatory provisions, as
noted in this section. Of these moved provisions, two contain no
penalty amounts because they were reserved for future use. Penalties
that were last adjusted in 2003 have an inflation rate of 1.30, and
those that were adjusted for inflation in 2007 have an inflation rate
of 1.14.
In Appendix B subsection (c), Special penalties pertaining to
violations of out-of-service orders by CDL holders, was reserved, and
its former provisions were placed into two subsections Appendix B
(b)(1) and (2) in the same order they appeared in subsection (c). The
first provision relates to a CDL holder, while the second relates to an
employer of a CDL holder. This change clarifies Appendix B by placing
all penalties related to commercial driver license programs into one
section for ease of use. To implement this change, the reserved
subsection (c) title, ``Special penalties pertaining to violations of
out-of-service orders by CDL holders,'' was deleted. Second, the phrase
``except: (1)'' Was inserted before the new provision beginning with
the phrase ``A CDL holder.'' Third, the word ``and'' was added between
new subsections (b)(1) and (b)(2) to properly mark them as separate
provisions.
Appendix B subsection (g)(1) is deleted and moved to current
subsection (g)(16) in order that both the minimum and maximum penalties
appear in one consolidated provision.
Former Appendix B subsection (g)(2) is now divided into two
separate subsections, the first regarding motor carriers and the second
addressing brokers. Specifically, former subsection (g)(2) is renamed
subsection (g)(1) and the term ``broker'' is deleted and the term
``motor'' added before the term ``carrier'' to clarify its application
to motor carriers only. In addition, a new subsection (g)(2) is amended
based on a statutory provision in MAP-21, sec. 32919(a), 49 U.S.C.
14916, which contains penalties associated with knowingly violating
registration (49 U.S.C. 13904) and financial security requirements (49
U.S.C. 13906) for brokers.
Subsection (g)(15), regarding evasion of commercial regulations was
reserved. And its provisions were moved to section (i) in a new
paragraph (2). Existing paragraph (1) regarding evasion of safety
regulations remains in place.
Part 387
The penalty amounts contained in Sections 387.17 and 387.41 are
removed and now referenced in Appendix B (d) only. This also corrects a
discrepancy between the Appendix B penalty amount, that had been
properly inflated, and the amount in the regulatory text, which had not
been properly inflated. In addition, the phrase ``ability to pay and
any'' was added before the phrase ``effect on ability'' in both
sections 387.17 and 387.41 to capture the precise statutory language in
49 U.S.C. 31138 (c)(4) and 49 U.S.C. 31139 (c) regarding factors FMCSA
must consider before assessing penalties.
V. Rulemaking Analyses and Notices
Regulatory Planning and Review (Executive Order (E.O.) 12866) and DOT
Regulatory Policies and Procedures
The FMCSA has determined that this action is not a significant
regulatory action within the meaning of Executive Order 12866, as
supplemented by E.O. 13563 (76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011) or within the
meaning of Department of Transportation Regulatory Policies and
Procedures. The Office of Management and Budget (OMB) did not review
this document. The changes imposed by this final rule upon the civil
penalty amounts alter only the magnitude of transfer payments, which by
definition are not considered in the monetization of societal costs and
benefits of rulemakings. Congress has stated in the Adjustment Act,
section 2, that increasing penalties over time will deter violations.
Therefore, FMCSA infers that there may be some safety benefits that
occur due to this final rule. The deterrence effect of increasing
penalties that Congress has recognized, however, cannot be quantified
into safety benefits. The Agency expects the final rule, which is
statutorily mandated to preserve the remedial effect of civil
penalties, will have minimal costs. Therefore, a full regulatory
evaluation is unnecessary.
Assistance for Small Entities
In accordance with section 213(a) of the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, FMCSA wants to assist small entities
in understanding this final rule so that they can better evaluate its
effects on themselves and participate in the rulemaking initiative. If
the final rule would affect your small business, organization, or
governmental jurisdiction and you have questions concerning its
provisions or options for compliance, please consult the FMCSA point of
contact, Ms. Nikki McDavid, listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section of this final rule.
Small businesses may send comments on the actions of Federal
employees who enforce or otherwise determine compliance with Federal
regulations to the Small Business Administration's Small Business and
Agriculture Regulatory Enforcement Ombudsman and the Regional Small
Business Regulatory Fairness Boards. The Ombudsman evaluates these
actions annually and rates each agency's responsiveness to small
business. If you wish to comment on actions by employees of FMCSA, call
1-888-REG-FAIR (1-888-734-3247). DOT has a policy regarding the rights
of small entities to regulatory enforcement fairness and an explicit
policy against retaliation for exercising these rights.
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The final rule will not impose an unfunded Federal mandate, as
defined by the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1532, et
seq.), that will result in the expenditure by State, local and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $151
million (which is the value equivalent of $100,000,000 in 1995,
adjusted for inflation to 2012 levels) or more in any 1 year.
Federalism (E.O. 13132)
A rule has implications for Federalism under Section 1(a) of
Executive Order 13132 if it has ``substantial direct effects on the
States, on the relationship between the national government and the
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.'' FMCSA has determined that this rule
would not have substantial direct costs on or for States, nor would it
limit the policymaking discretion of States. Nothing in this document
preempts any State law or regulation. Therefore, this rule does not
have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
federalism assessment.
Civil Justice Reform (E.O. 12988)
This final rule meets applicable standards in sections 3(a) and
3(b)(2) of E.O. 12988, Civil Justice Reform, to minimize litigation,
eliminates ambiguity, and reduce burden.
[[Page 18154]]
Protection of Children (E.O. 13045)
E.O. 13045, Protection of Children from Environmental Health Risks
and Safety Risks (62 FR 19885, Apr. 23, 1997), requires agencies
issuing ``economically significant'' rules, if the regulation also
concerns an environmental health or safety risk that an agency has
reason to believe may disproportionately affect children, to include an
evaluation of the regulation's environmental health and safety effects
on children. The Agency determined that this final rule is not
economically significant. Therefore, no analysis of the impacts on
children is required. In any event, the Agency does not anticipate that
this regulatory action could in any respect present an environmental or
safety risk that could disproportionately affect children.
Taking of Private Property (E.O. 12630)
FMCSA reviewed this final rule in accordance with E.O. 12630,
Governmental Actions and Interference with Constitutionally Protected
Property Rights, and has determined it will not effect a taking of
private property or otherwise have taking implications.
Privacy Impact Assessment
Section 522 of title I of division H of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2005, enacted December 8, 2004 (Pub. L. 108-447,
118 Stat. 2809, 3268, 5 U.S.C. 552a note), requires the Agency to
conduct a privacy impact assessment (PIA) of a regulation that will
affect the privacy of individuals. This rule does not require the
collection of personally identifiable information (PII).
Intergovernmental Review (E.O. 12372)
The regulations implementing Executive Order 12372 regarding
intergovernmental consultation on Federal programs and activities do
not apply to this program.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This action does not contain information collection requirements
for purposes of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq.).
National Environmental Policy Act and Clean Air Act
FMCSA analyzed this rule for the purpose of the National
Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and
determined this action is categorically excluded from further analysis
and documentation in an environmental assessment or environmental
impact statement under FMCSA Order 5610.1(69 FR 9680, March 1, 2004),
Appendix 2, paragraph (6)(b). The Categorical Exclusion (CE) in
paragraph 6(b) covers technical or minor amendments to existing FMCSRs.
The content in this rule is covered by this CE. The CE determination is
available for inspection or copying in the Regulations.gov Web site
listed under ADDRESSES.
FMCSA also analyzed this rule under the Clean Air Act, as amended
(CAA), section 176(c) (42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.), and implementing
regulations promulgated by the Environmental Protection Agency.
Approval of this action is exempt from the CAA's general conformity
requirement since it does not affect direct or indirect emissions of
criteria pollutants.
Environmental Justice (E.O. 12898)
Under E.O. 12898, each Federal agency must identify and address, as
appropriate, ``disproportionately high and adverse human health or
environmental effects of its programs, policies, and activities on
minority populations and low-income populations'' in the United States,
its possessions, and territories. FMCSA evaluated the environmental
justice effects of this rule in accordance with the E.O., and has
determined that no environmental justice issue is associated with this
rule, nor is there any collective environmental impact that would
result from its promulgation.
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use (E.O. 13211)
FMCSA has analyzed this rule under E.O. 13211, Actions Concerning
Regulations That Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or
Use. The Agency has determined that it is not a ``significant energy
action'' under that order because it is not a ``significant regulatory
action'' likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution, or use of energy. Therefore, it does not require a
Statement of Energy Effects under E.O. 13211.
Indian Tribal Governments (E.O. 13175)
This rule does not have tribal implications under E.O. 13175,
Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments, because
it does not have a substantial direct effect on one or more Indian
tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and Indian
tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities between
the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (Technical Standards)
The National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act (NTTAA) (15
U.S.C. 272 note) directs agencies to use voluntary consensus standards
in their regulatory activities unless the agency provides Congress,
through OMB, with an explanation of why using these standards would be
inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical. Voluntary
consensus standards (e.g., specifications of materials, performance,
design, or operation; test methods; sampling procedures; and related
management systems practices) are standards that are developed or
adopted by voluntary consensus standards bodies. This rule does not use
technical standards. Therefore, we did not consider the use of
voluntary consensus standards.
List of Subjects
49 CFR Part 383
Administrative practice and procedure, Alcohol abuse, Drug abuse,
Highway safety, Motor carriers.
49 CFR Part 385
Administrative practice and procedure, Highway safety, Mexico,
Motor carriers, Motor vehicle safety, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
49 CFR Part 386
Administrative procedures, Commercial motor vehicle safety,
Highways and roads, Motor carriers, Penalties.
49 CFR Part 387
Buses, Freight, Freight forwarders, Hazardous materials
transportation, Highway safety, Insurance, Intergovernmental relations,
Motor carriers, Motor vehicle safety, Moving of household goods,
Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Surety bonds.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, FMCSA is amending title 49
CFR parts 383, 385, 386, and 387 to read as follows:
PART 383--COMMERCIAL DRIVER'S LICENSE STANDARDS; REQUIREMENTS AND
PENALTIES
0
1. The authority citation for part 383 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 521, 31136, 31301 et seq., and 31502;
secs. 214 and 215 of Pub. L. 106-159, 113 Stat. 1748, 1766, 1767;
sec. 1012(b) of Pub. L. 107-56, 115 Stat. 272, 297, sec. 4140 of
Pub. L. 109-59, 119 Stat. 1144, 1746; and 49 CFR 1.87.
[[Page 18155]]
0
2. Revise Sec. 383.53 to read as follows:
Sec. 383.53 Penalties.
(a) General rule. Any person who violates the rules set forth in
subparts B and C of this part may be subject to civil or criminal
penalties under 49 U.S.C. 521(b), as provided in part 386, Appendix B,
of this chapter.
(b) Special penalties pertaining to violation of out-of-service
orders--(1) Driver violations. A driver who is convicted of violating
an out-of-service order shall be subject to a civil penalty as stated
in part 386 Appendix B, in addition to disqualification under Sec.
383.51(e).
(2) Employer violations. An employer who is convicted of a
violation of Sec. 383.37(d) shall be subject to a civil penalty as
stated in part 386, appendix B, of this chapter.
(c) Special penalties pertaining to railroad-highway grade crossing
violations. An employer who is convicted of a violation of Sec.
383.37(e) shall be subject to a civil penalty stated in part 386,
appendix B, of this chapter.
PART 385--SAFETY FITNESS PROCEDURES
0
3. The authority citation for part 385 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 113, 504, 521(b), 5105(e), 5109, 5123,
13901-13905, 31133, 31135, 31136, 31137(a), 31144, 31148, and 31502;
Sec. 113(a), Pub. L. 103-311; Sec. 408, Pub. L. 104-88; Sec. 350 of
Pub. L. 107-87; and 49 CFR 1.87.
0
4. Amend Sec. 385.111 by revising paragraph (h) to read as follows:
Sec. 385.111 Suspension and revocation of Mexico-domiciled carrier
registration.
* * * * *
(h) If a Mexico-domiciled motor carrier operates a commercial motor
vehicle in violation of a suspension or out-of-service order, it shall
be subject to the penalty provisions in 49 U.S.C. 521(b) and the amount
as stated in part 386, appendix B, of this chapter.
* * * * *
PART 386--RULES OF PRACTICE FOR MOTOR CARRIER, INTERMODAL EQUIPMENT
PROVIDER, BROKER, FREIGHT FORWARDER, AND HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
PROCEEDINGS
0
5. The authority citation for part 386 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 113, chapters 5, 51, 59, 131-141, 145-149,
311, 313, and 315; 49 U.S.C. 5123; Sec. 204, Pub. L. 104-88, 109
Stat. 803, 941 (49 U.S.C. 701 note); Sec. 217, Pub. L. 105-159, 113
Stat. 1748, 1767; Sec. 206, Pub. L. 106-159, 113 Stat. 1763;
subtitle B, title IV of Pub. L. 109-59; and 49 CFR 1.81 and 1.87.
0
6. Revise Appendix A to part 386 to read as follows:
Appendix A to Part 386--Penalty Schedule: Violations of Notices and
Orders
The Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 [Pub. L. 104-134,
title III, chapter 10, sec. 31001, par. (s), 110 Stat. 1321-1373]
amended the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990
to require agencies to adjust for inflation ``each civil monetary
penalty provided by law within the jurisdiction of the Federal
agency . . .'' and to publish that regulation in the Federal
Register. Pursuant to that authority, the inflation adjusted civil
penalties identified in this appendix supersede the corresponding
civil penalty amounts identified in title 49, United States Code.
I. Notice to Abate
Violation--Failure to cease violations of the regulations in the
time prescribed in the notice. (The time within which to comply with a
notice to abate shall not begin to run with respect to contested
violations, i.e., where there are material issues in dispute under
Sec. 386.14, until such time as the violation has been established.)
Penalty--Reinstatement of any deferred assessment or payment of a
penalty or portion thereof.
II. Subpoena
Violation--Failure to respond to Agency subpoena to appear and
testify or produce records.
Penalty--minimum of $1,000 but not more than $10,000 per violation.
III. Final Order
Violation--Failure to comply with Final Agency Order.
Penalty--Automatic reinstatement of any penalty previously reduced
or held in abeyance and restoration of the full amount assessed in the
Notice of Claim less any payments previously made.
IV. Out-of-Service Order
a. Violation--Operation of a commercial vehicle by a driver during
the period the driver was placed out of service.
Penalty--Up to $3,100 per violation.
(For purposes of this violation, the term ``driver'' means an
operator of a commercial motor vehicle, including an independent
contractor who, while in the course of operating a commercial motor
vehicle, is employed or used by another person.)
b. Violation--Requiring or permitting a driver to operate a
commercial vehicle during the period the driver was placed out of
service.
Penalty--Up to $21,000 per violation. (This violation applies to
motor carriers including an independent contractor who is not a
``driver,'' as defined under paragraph IV(a) of this appendix.)
c. Violation--Operation of a commercial motor vehicle or intermodal
equipment by a driver after the vehicle or intermodal equipment was
placed out-of-service and before the required repairs are made.
Penalty--$3,100 each time the vehicle or intermodal equipment is so
operated. (This violation applies to drivers as defined in paragraph
IV(a) of this appendix.)
d. Violation--Requiring or permitting the operation of a commercial
motor vehicle or intermodal equipment placed out-of-service before the
required repairs are made.
Penalty--Up to $21,000 each time the vehicle or intermodal
equipment is so operated after notice of the defect is received. (This
violation applies to intermodal equipment providers and motor carriers,
including an independent owner operator who is not a ``driver,'' as
defined in paragraph IV(a) of this appendix.)
e. Violation--Failure to return written certification of correction
as required by the out-of-service order.
Penalty--Up to $850 per violation.
f. Violation--Knowingly falsifies written certification of
correction required by the out of service order.
Penalty--Considered the same as the violations described in
paragraphs IV(c) and IV(d) of this appendix, and subject to the same
penalties.
Note: Falsification of certification may also result in criminal
prosecution under 18 U.S.C.1001.
g. Violation--Operating in violation of an order issued under Sec.
386.72(b) to cease all or part of the employer's commercial motor
vehicle operations or to cease part of an intermodal equipment
provider's operations, i.e. failure to cease operations as ordered.
Penalty--Up to $25,000 per day the operation continues after the
effective date and time of the order to cease.
h. Violation--Operating in violation of an order issued under Sec.
386.73.
Penalty--Up to $16,000 per day the operation continues after the
effective date and time of the out-of-service order.
i. Violation--Conducting operations during a period of suspension
under Sec. 386.83 or Sec. 386.84 for failure to pay penalties.
Penalty--Up to $16,000 for each day that operations are conducted
during the suspension or revocation period.
j. Violation--Conducting operations during a period of suspension
or
[[Page 18156]]
revocation under Sec. Sec. 385.911, 385.913, 385.1009 or 385.1011.
Penalty--Up to $11,000 for each day that operations are conducted
during the suspension or revocation period.
0
7. Revise Appendix B to part 386 to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 386--Penalty Schedule: Violations and Monetary
Penalties
The Debt Collection Improvement Act of 1996 [Pub. L. 104-134,
title III, chapter 10, sec. 31001, par. (s), 110 Stat. 1321-1373]
amended the Federal Civil Penalties Inflation Adjustment Act of 1990
to require agencies to adjust for inflation ``each civil monetary
penalty provided by law within the jurisdiction of the Federal
agency . . .'' and to publish that regulation in the Federal
Register. Pursuant to that authority, the inflation-adjusted civil
penalties listed in this appendix supersede the corresponding civil
penalty amounts listed in title 49, United States Code.
What are the types of violations and maximum monetary penalties?
(a) Violations of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations
(FMCSRs):
(1) Recordkeeping. A person or entity that fails to prepare or
maintain a record required by parts 40, 382, 385, and 390-99 of this
subchapter, or prepares or maintains a required record that is
incomplete, inaccurate, or false, is subject to a maximum civil penalty
of $1,100 for each day the violation continues, up to $11,000.
(2) Knowing falsification of records. A person or entity that
knowingly falsifies, destroys, mutilates, or changes a report or record
required by parts 382, 385, and 390-99 of this subchapter, knowingly
makes or causes to be made a false or incomplete record about an
operation or business fact or transaction, or knowingly makes,
prepares, or preserves a record in violation of a regulation order of
the Secretary is subject to a maximum civil penalty of $11,000 if such
action misrepresents a fact that constitutes a violation other than a
reporting or recordkeeping violation.
(3) Non-recordkeeping violations. A person or entity that violates
parts 382, 385, or 390-99 of this subchapter, except a recordkeeping
requirement, is subject to a civil penalty not to exceed $16,000 for
each violation.
(4) Non-recordkeeping violations by drivers. A driver who violates
parts 382, 385, and 390-99 of this subchapter, except a recordkeeping
violation, is subject to a civil penalty not to exceed $3,750.
(5) Violation of 49 CFR 392.5. A driver placed out of service for
24 hours for violating the alcohol prohibitions of 49 CFR 392.5(a) or
(b) who drives during that period is subject to a civil penalty not to
exceed $4,125 for each violation.
(6) Egregious violations of driving-time limits in 49 CFR part 395.
A driver who exceeds, and a motor carrier that requires or permits a
driver to exceed, by more than 3 hours the driving-time limit in 49 CFR
395.3(a) or 395.5(a), as applicable, shall be deemed to have committed
an egregious driving-time limit violation. In instances of an egregious
driving-time violation, the Agency will consider the ``gravity of the
violation,'' for purposes of 49 U.S.C. 521(b)(2)(D), sufficient to
warrant imposition of penalties up to the maximum permitted by law.
(b) Commercial driver's license (CDL) violations. Any person who
violates 49 CFR part 383, subparts B, C, E, F, G, or H is subject to a
civil penalty not to exceed $4,750; except:
(1) A CDL-holder who is convicted of violating an out-of-service
order shall be subject to a civil penalty of not less than $2,750 for a
first conviction and not less than $5,500 for a second or subsequent
conviction;
(2) An employer of a CDL-holder who knowingly allows, requires,
permits, or authorizes an employee to operate a CMV during any period
in which the CDL-holder is subject to an out-of-service order, is
subject to a civil penalty of not less than $4,750 or more than
$27,500; and
(3) An employer of a CDL-holder who knowingly allows, requires,
permits, or authorizes that CDL-holder to operate a CMV in violation of
a Federal, State, or local law or regulation pertaining to railroad-
highway grade crossings is subject to a civil penalty of not more than
$11,000.
(c) [Reserved]
(d) Financial responsibility violations. A motor carrier that fails
to maintain the levels of financial responsibility prescribed by part
387 of this subchapter or any person (except an employee who acts
without knowledge) who knowingly violates the rules of part 387
subparts A and B is subject to a maximum penalty of $21,000. Each day
of a continuing violation constitutes a separate offense.
(e) Violations of the Hazardous Materials Regulations (HMRs) and
Safety Permitting Regulations found in Subpart E of Part 385. This
paragraph applies to violations by motor carriers, drivers, shippers
and other person who transport hazardous materials on the highway in
commercial motor vehicles or cause hazardous materials to be so
transported.
(1) All knowing violations of 49 U.S.C. chapter 51 or orders or
regulations issued under the authority of that chapter applicable to
the transportation or shipment of hazardous materials by commercial
motor vehicle on the highways are subject to a civil penalty of not
more than $75,000 for each violation. Each day of continuing violation
constitutes a separate offense.
(2) All knowing violations of 49 U.S.C. chapter 51 or orders or
regulations issued under the authority of that chapter applicable to
training related to the transportation or shipment of hazardous
materials by commercial motor vehicle on highways are subject to a
civil penalty of not less than $450 and not more than $75,000 for each
violation.
(3) All knowing violations of 49 U.S.C. chapter 51 or orders,
regulations or exemptions under the authority of that chapter
applicable to the manufacture, fabrication, marking, maintenance,
reconditioning, repair, or testing of a packaging or container that is
represented, marked, certified, or sold as being qualified for use in
the transportation or shipment of hazardous materials by commercial
motor vehicle on highways are subject to a civil penalty of not more
than $75,000 for each violation.
(4) Whenever regulations issued under the authority of 49 U.S.C.
chapter 51 require compliance with the FMCSRs while transporting
hazardous materials, any violations of the FMCSRs will be considered a
violation of the HMRs and subject to a civil penalty of not more than
$75,000.
(5) If any violation subject to the civil penalties set out in
paragraphs (e)(1) through (4) of this appendix results in death,
serious illness, or severe injury to any person or in substantial
destruction of property, the civil penalty may be increased to not more
than $175,000 for each offense.
(f) Operating after being declared unfit by assignment of a final
``unsatisfactory'' safety rating. (1) A motor carrier operating a
commercial motor vehicle in interstate commerce (except owners or
operators of commercial motor vehicles designed or used to transport
hazardous materials for which placarding of a motor vehicle is required
under regulations prescribed under 49 U.S.C. chapter 51) is subject,
after being placed out of service because of receiving a final
``unsatisfactory'' safety rating, to a civil penalty of not more than
$25,000 (49 CFR 385.13). Each day the transportation continues in
violation of a final ``unsatisfactory'' safety rating constitutes a
separate offense.
(2) A motor carrier operating a commercial motor vehicle designed
or
[[Page 18157]]
used to transport hazardous materials for which placarding of a motor
vehicle is required under regulations prescribed under 49 U.S.C.
chapter 51 is subject, after being placed out of service because of
receiving a final ``unsatisfactory'' safety rating, to a civil penalty
of not more than $75,000 for each offense. If the violation results in
death, serious illness, or severe injury to any person or in
substantial destruction of property, the civil penalty may be increased
to not more than $175,000 for each offense. Each day the transportation
continues in violation of a final ``unsatisfactory'' safety rating
constitutes a separate offense.
(g) Violations of the commercial regulations (CRs). Penalties for
violations of the CRs are specified in 49 U.S.C. Chapter 149. These
penalties relate to transportation subject to the Secretary's
jurisdiction under 49 U.S.C. Chapter 135. Unless otherwise noted, a
separate violation occurs for each day the violation continues.
(1) A person who operates as a motor carrier for the transportation
of property in violation of the registration requirements of 49 U.S.C.
13901 is liable for a minimum penalty of $10,000 per violation.
(2) A person who knowingly operates as a broker in violation of
registration requirements of 49 U.S.C. 13904 or financial security
requirements of 49 U.S.C. 13906 is liable for a penalty not to exceed
$10,000 for each violation.
(3) A person who operates as a motor carrier of passengers in
violation of the registration requirements of 49 U.S.C. 13901 is liable
for a minimum penalty of $25,000 per violation.
(4) A person who operates as a foreign motor carrier or foreign
motor private carrier of property in violation of the provisions of 49
U.S.C. 13902(c) is liable for a minimum penalty of $10,000 per
violation.
(5) A person who operates as a foreign motor carrier or foreign
motor private carrier without authority, before the implementation of
the land transportation provisions of the North American Free Trade
Agreement, outside the boundaries of a commercial zone along the United
States-Mexico border is liable for a maximum penalty of $16,000 for an
intentional violation and a maximum penalty of $37,500 for a pattern of
intentional violations.
(6) A person who operates as a motor carrier or broker for the
transportation of hazardous wastes in violation of the registration
provisions of 49 U.S.C. 13901 is liable for a minimum penalty of
$20,000 and a maximum penalty of $40,000 per violation.
(7) A motor carrier or freight forwarder of household goods, or
their receiver or trustee, that does not comply with any regulation
relating to the protection of individual shippers, is liable for a
minimum penalty of $1,100 per violation.
(8) A person--
(i) Who falsifies, or authorizes an agent or other person to
falsify, documents used in the transportation of household goods by
motor carrier or freight forwarder to evidence the weight of a shipment
or
(ii) Who charges for services which are not performed or are not
reasonably necessary in the safe and adequate movement of the shipment
is liable for a minimum penalty of $3,200 for the first violation and
$7,500 for each subsequent violation.
(9) A person who knowingly accepts or receives from a carrier a
rebate or offset against the rate specified in a tariff required under
49 U.S.C. 13702 for the transportation of property delivered to the
carrier commits a violation for which the penalty is equal to three
times the amount accepted as a rebate or offset and three times the
value of other consideration accepted or received as a rebate or offset
for the six-year period before the action is begun.
(10) A person who offers, gives, solicits, or receives
transportation of property by a carrier at a different rate than the
rate in effect under 49 U.S.C. 13702 is liable for a maximum penalty of
$140,000 per violation. When acting in the scope of his/her employment,
the acts or omissions of a person acting for or employed by a carrier
or shipper are considered to be the acts and omissions of that carrier
or shipper, as well as that person.
(11) Any person who offers, gives, solicits, or receives a rebate
or concession related to motor carrier transportation subject to
jurisdiction under subchapter I of 49 U.S.C. Chapter 135, or who
assists or permits another person to get that transportation at less
than the rate in effect under 49 U.S.C. 13702, commits a violation for
which the penalty is $320 for the first violation and $375 for each
subsequent violation.
(12) A freight forwarder, its officer, agent, or employee, that
assists or willingly permits a person to get service under 49 U.S.C.
13531 at less than the rate in effect under 49 U.S.C. 13702 commits a
violation for which the penalty is up to $750 for the first violation
and up to $3,200 for each subsequent violation.
(13) A person who gets or attempts to get service from a freight
forwarder under 49 U.S.C. 13531 at less than the rate in effect under
49 U.S.C. 13702 commits a violation for which the penalty is up to $750
for the first violation and up to $3,200 for each subsequent violation.
(14) A person who knowingly authorizes, consents to, or permits a
violation of 49 U.S.C. 14103 relating to loading and unloading motor
vehicles or who knowingly violates subsection (a) of 49 U.S.C. 14103 is
liable for a penalty of not more than $16,000 per violation.
(15) [Reserved]
(16) A person required to make a report to the Secretary, answer a
question, or make, prepare, or preserve a record under Part B of
Subtitle IV, Title 49, U.S.C., or an officer, agent, or employee of
that person, is liable for a minimum penalty of $1,000 and for a
maximum penalty of $7,500 per violation if it does not make the report,
does not completely and truthfully answer the question within 30 days
from the date the Secretary requires the answer, does not make or
preserve the record in the form and manner prescribed, falsifies,
destroys, or changes the report or record, files a false report or
record, makes a false or incomplete entry in the record about a
business related fact, or prepares or preserves a record in violation
of a regulation or order of the Secretary.
(17) A motor carrier, water carrier, freight forwarder, or broker,
or their officer, receiver, trustee, lessee, employee, or other person
authorized to receive information from them, who discloses information
identified in 49 U.S.C. 14908 without the permission of the shipper or
consignee is liable for a maximum penalty of $3,200.
(18) A person who violates a provision of Part B, Subtitle IV,
Title 49, U.S.C., or a regulation or order under Part B, or who
violates a condition of registration related to transportation that is
subject to jurisdiction under subchapter I or III or Chapter 135, or
who violates a condition of registration of a foreign motor carrier or
foreign motor private carrier under section 13902, is liable for a
penalty of $750 for each violation if another penalty is not provided
in 49 U.S.C. Chapter 149.
(19) A violation of Part B, Subtitle IV, Title 49, U.S.C.,
committed by a director, officer, receiver, trustee, lessee, agent, or
employee of a carrier that is a corporation is also a violation by the
corporation to which the penalties of Chapter 149 apply. Acts and
omissions of individuals acting in the scope of their employment with a
carrier are considered to be the actions and omissions of the carrier
as well as the individual.
(20) In a proceeding begun under 49 U.S.C. 14902 or 14903, the rate
that a
[[Page 18158]]
carrier publishes, files, or participates in under section 13702 is
conclusive proof against the carrier, its officers, and agents that it
is the legal rate for the transportation or service. Departing, or
offering to depart, from that published or filed rate is a violation of
49 U.S.C. 14902 and 14903.
(21) A person--
(i) Who knowingly and willfully fails, in violation of a contract,
to deliver to, or unload at, the destination of a shipment of household
goods in interstate commerce for which charges have been estimated by
the motor carrier transporting such goods, and for which the shipper
has tendered a payment in accordance with part 375, subpart G of this
chapter, is liable for a civil penalty of not less than $11,000 for
each violation. Each day of a continuing violation constitutes a
separate offense.
(ii) Who is a carrier or broker and is found to be subject to the
civil penalties in paragraph (i) of this appendix may also have his or
her carrier and/or broker registration suspended for not less than 12
months and not more than 36 months under 49 U.S.C. chapter 139. Such
suspension of a carrier or broker shall extend to and include any
carrier or broker having the same ownership or operational control as
the suspended carrier or broker.
(22) A broker for transportation of household goods who makes an
estimate of the cost of transporting any such goods before entering
into an agreement with a motor carrier to provide transportation of
household goods subject to FMCSA jurisdiction is liable to the United
States for a civil penalty of not less than $10,900 for each violation.
(23) A person who provides transportation of household goods
subject to jurisdiction under 49 U.S.C. chapter 135, subchapter I, or
provides broker services for such transportation, without being
registered under 49 U.S.C. chapter 139 to provide such transportation
or services as a motor carrier or broker, as the case may be, is liable
to the United States for a civil penalty of not less than $27,250 for
each violation.
(h) Copying of records and access to equipment, lands, and
buildings. A person subject to 49 U.S.C. chapter 51 or a motor carrier,
broker, freight forwarder, or owner or operator of a commercial motor
vehicle subject to part B of subtitle VI of title 49 U.S.C. who fails
to allow promptly, upon demand in person or in writing, the Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration, an employee designated by the
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, or an employee of a MCSAP
grant recipient to inspect and copy any record or inspect and examine
equipment, lands, buildings, and other property, in accordance with 49
U.S.C. 504(c), 5121(c), and 14122(b), is subject to a civil penalty of
not more than $1,100 for each offense. Each day of a continuing
violation constitutes a separate offense, except that the total of all
civil penalties against any violator for all offenses related to a
single violation shall not exceed $11,000.
(i) Evasion. A person, or an officer, employee, or agent of that
person:
(1) Who by any means tries to evade regulation of motor carriers
under Title 49, United States Code chapter 5, chapter 51, subchapter
III of chapter 311 (except sections 31138 and 31139) or section 31302,
31303, 31304, 31305(b), 31310(g)(1)(A), or 31502, or a regulation
issued under any of those provisions, shall be fined at least $2,000
but not more than $5,000 for the first violation and at least $2,500
but not more than $7,500 for a subsequent violation.
(2) Who tries to evade regulation under Part B of Subtitle IV,
Title 49, U.S.C., for carriers or brokers is liable for a penalty of at
least $2,000 for the first violation of at least $5,000 for a
subsequent violation.
PART 387--MINIMUM LEVELS OF FINANCIAL RESPONSIBILITY FOR MOTOR
CARRIERS
0
8. The authority citation for part 387 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 13101, 13301, 13906, 14701, 31138, 31139,
and 31144; and 49 CFR 1.87.
0
9. Revise Sec. 387.17 to read as follows:
Sec. 387.17 Violation and penalty.
Any person (except an employee who acts without knowledge) who
knowingly violates the rules of this subpart shall be liable to the
United States for a civil penalty as stated in part 386, appendix B, of
this chapter, and if any such violation is a continuing one, each day
of violation will constitute a separate offense. The amount of any such
penalty shall be assessed by FMCSA's Administrator, by written notice.
In determining the amount of such penalty, the Administrator, or his/
her authorized delegate shall take into account the nature,
circumstances, extent, the gravity of the violation committed and, with
respect to the person found to have committed such violation, the
degree of culpability, any history of prior violations, ability to pay,
and any effect on ability to continue to do business, and such other
matters as justice may require.
0
10. Revise Sec. 387.41 to read as follows:
Sec. 387.41 Violation and penalty.
(a) Any person (except an employee who acts without knowledge) who
knowingly violates the rules of this subpart shall be liable to the
United States for a civil penalty as stated in part 386, appendix B, of
this chapter, and if any such violation is a continuing one, each day
of violation will constitute a separate offense. The amount of any such
penalty shall be assessed by the Administrator or his/her designee, by
written notice.
(b) In determining the amount of such penalty, the Administrator or
his/her designee shall take into account the nature, circumstances,
extent, the gravity of the violation committed and, with respect to the
person found to have committed such violation, the degree of
culpability, any history of prior violations, the ability to pay, and
any effect on ability to continue to do business, and such other
matters as justice may require.
Issued under the authority of delegation in 49 CFR 1.87 on March
26, 2015.
T.F. Scott Darling, III,
Chief Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2015-07701 Filed 4-2-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-EX-P