Grand Canyon National Park Quiet Aircraft Technology Incentive: Seasonal Relief From Allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point Corridors, 22606-22611 [2015-09380]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 77 / Wednesday, April 22, 2015 / Notices
‘‘prior notice to persons determined to
be subject to the Order who might have
a constitutional presence in the United
States would render ineffectual the
blocking and other measures authorized
in the Order because of the ability to
transfer funds instantaneously,’’ I
determine that no prior notice needs to
be provided to any person subject to this
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constitutional presence in the United
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ineffectual the measures authorized in
the Order.
This notice shall be published in the
Federal Register.
Dated: April 10, 2015.
John F. Kerry,
Secretary of State.
Dated: April 15, 2015.
Marlon Henry,
Management and Program Analyst, A/EX/
CSM., Department of State.
[FR Doc. 2015–09374 Filed 4–21–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–24–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[Docket No. FAA–2014–0782]
BILLING CODE 4710–05–P
Grand Canyon National Park Quiet
Aircraft Technology Incentive:
Seasonal Relief From Allocations in
the Dragon and Zuni Point Corridors
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
AGENCY:
[FR Doc. 2015–09379 Filed 4–21–15; 8:45 am]
Federal Aviation
Administration, Transportation;
National Park Service, Interior.
[Public Notice 9105]
Final notice to announce
implementation and disposition of
public comments.
ACTION:
Department of State FY 2014 Service
Contract Inventory
AGENCY:
Department of State.
Notice of Release of the
Department of State’s FY 2014 Service
Contract Inventory.
ACTION:
Acting in compliance with
Section 743 of Division C of the
Consolidated Appropriations Act of
2010 (Pub. L. 111–117), the Department
of State is publishing this notice to
advise the public of the availability of
the FY 2014 Service Contract Inventory.
The FY 2014 Service Contract Inventory
includes the Summary Report, Detailed
Report, Supplement Report, and
Planned Analysis. Additionally, the FY
2013 Meaningful Analysis is available.
The inventory was developed in
accordance with guidance issued on
November 5, 2010, December 19, 2011,
and November 25, 2014 by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB), Office
of Federal Procurement Policy (OFPP).
The Department of State has posted its
FY 2014 Service Contract Inventory and
FY 2013 Meaningful Analysis at the
following link: https://csm.state.gov/
content.asp?content_id=135&menu_
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SUMMARY:
The inventory is available on the
Department’s Web site as of April 9,
2015.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marlon Henry, Management and
Program Analyst, A/EX/CSM, 202–485–
7210, HenryMD@state.gov.
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On November 10, 2014, the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
and the National Park Service (NPS)
published in the Federal Register [79
FR 66763–66765] a notice of the
agencies’ proposal to provide a quiet
aircraft technology incentive for
commercial air tour operators at Grand
Canyon National Park and a request for
public comments. Specifically, the
agencies proposed to provide seasonal
relief from allocations in the Dragon and
Zuni Point corridors for commercial air
tour operators that convert or have
converted to quiet aircraft technology.
The FAA and the NPS have reviewed
and considered all comments, and have
decided to proceed with
implementation of the incentive as
proposed. This notice describes that
decision and responds to the
substantive comments received.
SUMMARY:
This incentive is effective as of
January 1, 2015.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Keith Lusk, Program Manager, Federal
Aviation Administration, P.O. Box
92007, Los Angeles, California 90009–
2007; telephone (310) 725–3808; email
keith.lusk@faa.gov Robin Martin, Chief,
Office of Planning and Compliance,
Grand Canyon National Park, P.O. Box
129, Grand Canyon, Arizona 86023–
0129; telephone (928) 638–7684; email
Robin_Martin@nps.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Authority
Authority: Moving Ahead for Progress in
the 21st Century Act, Sec. 35001, Pub. L.
112–141, 126 Stat. 843; National Parks Air
Tour Management Act, Sec. 804, Pub. L. 106–
181, 114 Stat. 192.
1. The National Park Overflights Act
of 1987, Pub. L. 100–91, directed the
Secretary of the Interior and the
Administrator of the FAA to take
actions to provide for the substantial
restoration of the natural quiet and
experience of Grand Canyon National
Park and the protection of public health
and safety from adverse effects
associated with aircraft overflight. As
part of these actions, operational limits
for commercial air tour operations at
Grand Canyon National Park (the park)
were imposed by FAA regulations at 14
CFR part 93 issued on April 4, 2000.
With some exceptions not relevant to
this notice, these regulations establish
an allocation scheme for the park,
require commercial air tour operators to
use one allocation for each flight that is
a commercial air tour, and prohibit
operators from conducting more
commercial air tours in any calendar
year than the number of allocations
specified on the certificate holder’s
operations specifications issued by the
FAA. 14 CFR 93.319.
2. The National Parks Air Tour
Management Act (NPATMA), Pub. L.
106–181, was signed into law on April
5, 2000. Section 804(a) required the
FAA to designate reasonably achievable
requirements for fixed-wing and
helicopter aircraft to be considered quiet
aircraft technology (QT) for purposes of
the statute’s provisions. In 2005, the
FAA issued a final rule classifying
aircraft operating in Grand Canyon
National Park and designating aircraft
that meet the noise criteria as QT. 70 FR
16084–16093. These regulations were
codified at 14 CFR 93.303 and
Appendix A to Subpart U of Part 93.
Under NPATMA section 804(c),
commercial air tour operations by fixedwing or helicopter aircraft that employ
QT and that replace existing aircraft are
not subject to the operational flight
allocations that apply to other
commercial air tour operations at the
park, provided that the cumulative
impact of such operations does not
increase noise at the Grand Canyon.
Section 804(d) provides that a
commercial air tour operation by an
aircraft in a commercial air tour
operator’s fleet on the date of enactment
of NPATMA that meets QT
requirements or is subsequently
modified to meet QT requirements may
be used for commercial air tour
operations under the same terms and
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conditions as section 804(c) without
regard to whether it replaces an existing
aircraft. In addition, NPATMA expressly
states that it does not relieve or
diminish the statutory mandate to
achieve substantial restoration of
natural quiet and experience at the park.
3. Section 35001 of the Moving Ahead
for Progress in the 21st Century Act
(MAP–21), Pub. L. 112–141, July 6,
2012, directs the Secretary of the
Interior and the Administrator of the
Federal Aviation Administration to
provide incentives for commercial air
tour operators that convert to QT,
determined in accordance with the
regulations then in effect. MAP–21 gives
as an example of an incentive increasing
the flight allocations for operators of QT
on a net basis consistent with section
804(c) of NPATMA, provided that the
cumulative impact of such operations
does not increase noise at the Grand
Canyon. MAP–21 also provides that all
commercial air tour operators must
convert to QT by 2027.
II. Background
Congress has encouraged the use of
quiet aircraft technology (QT) as one
means of addressing noise from
commercial air tours at Grand Canyon
National Park. The FAA was required by
NPATMA to designate reasonably
achievable requirements for fixed-wing
and helicopter aircraft to be considered
QT, and issued a final rule to
accomplish this in 2005. This rule did
not include QT incentives and did not
relieve commercial air tour operators of
their operational limitations.
NPATMA’s provision that allocations
do not apply to QT operations only
takes effect if the cumulative impact of
such operations does not increase noise
at the Grand Canyon. Although the FAA
concluded that aircraft that meet the QT
designation are consistently quieter than
aircraft that do not, 70 FR 16088, neither
the FAA nor the NPS had sufficient data
at that time to determine whether noise
would increase if limits on the number
of QT operations were removed. In
addition, NPATMA expressly states that
it does not relieve or diminish the
statutory mandate to achieve substantial
restoration of natural quiet and
experience at the park. Substantial
restoration of natural quiet had not been
determined to be achieved at that time.
Various QT incentives were considered
by the agencies following the 2005 final
rule, but were not finalized.
MAP–21, enacted in July 2012,
provided additional direction to the
FAA and the NPS on QT incentives. In
response to MAP–21, the NPS, in
consultation with the FAA, reduced the
fees applicable to commercial air tour
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operations at the Grand Canyon by 20
percent (from $25 to $20 per flight) for
an air tour using QT effective January 1,
2014. On February 3, 2014, the FAA, in
consultation with the NPS, announced
its intention to distribute FAA-held
allocations to commercial tour operators
in proportion to the number of QT
operations flown in the first six months
of 2014. 79 FR 6267–6268. These
allocations were subsequently
distributed for use for QT flights during
the 2014 air tour season and beyond.
III. Seasonal Relief From Allocations
for QT in the Dragon and Zuni Point
Corridors
Following notice and public
comment, the FAA and the NPS have
decided to provide an additional QT
incentive in the Dragon and Zuni Point
corridors where QT can have the
greatest positive effect on park resources
and where the need for relief from
allocations has been demonstrated.
Under this incentive, commercial air
tour operators flying QT aircraft in the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors
initially will be relieved from having
such operations count against their
annual allocations in the first quarter
(January 1–March 31) of 2015. The FAA
and the NPS will use the quarterly
reports that are currently required to be
submitted by the operators to determine
the number of QT flights flown during
the first quarter that will not count
against their annual allocations. During
this first quarter, QT flights will not use
an allocation, while non-QT flights must
still use an allocation. All commercial
air tour flights, QT and non-QT, must
use an allocation for the remainder of
the year (April 1–December 31).
However, operators will continue to
benefit from the seasonal relief
throughout the remainder of the year
since they may use allocations in April
through December that they would
otherwise have used for QT flights
conducted in January through March.
The first quarter of the calendar year,
when park visitation and demand for air
tours are seasonally low, has historically
had the lowest level of commercial air
tour operations. Providing this incentive
initially in the first quarter of 2015 is a
prudent action that gives the FAA and
the NPS an opportunity to evaluate the
impact of the incentive, including the
extent to which commercial air tour
operators continue to use QT in the
remainder of the year which will
produce additional noise benefits for the
park. The FAA and the NPS want to
incentivize commercial air tour
operators to maximize the use of QT
throughout the year. To that end, the
seasonal relief from allocations may be
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extended to part or all of the fourth
quarter (October 1–December 31) in
2016 and following years, in addition to
the first quarter, based on an evaluation
of the preceding year. In 2015, the more
that increased QT use reduces the noise
level below the noise baseline described
in the following paragraph, the greater
the prospect for operators to have
additional seasonal relief from
allocations in 2016.
To meet the statutory conditions in
NPATMA and MAP–21, the FAA and
the NPS must ensure that the
cumulative impact of QT operations
relieved from allocations does not
increase noise at the park. Neither
NPATMA nor MAP–21 specifies a
methodology for calculating whether the
cumulative impact of relieving QT
operations from allocations would
increase noise. After extensive
consideration of the statutory language
and the associated technical issues, the
FAA and the NPS have determined that,
for this seasonal relief incentive, the
annual noise from both QT and non-QT
commercial air tour flights conducted in
the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors
must not exceed the annual noise level
of commercial air tour flights under the
current Dragon and Zuni Point corridors
allocation system.
The agencies have agreed that the
cumulative noise impact 1 will be
evaluated in terms of the total amount
of commercial air tour noise energy
occurring inside park boundaries
averaged over an entire year. The
agencies further agreed that the most
suitable way to ensure that the seasonal
relief from allocations incentive for QT
operations in the Dragon and Zuni Point
corridors does not increase noise in the
park is to compute noise at a large
number of grid points throughout the
park, instead of only using grid points
in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors.
Accordingly, the NPS and the FAA used
a grid of 1224 points with 2 km spacing
across the park. Technical experts from
both agencies also determined that a
single number provides the most
straightforward means of determining
whether there is an increase in noise.
This number is calculated by taking the
total noise energy calculated for a year’s
air tour data at each of the individual
grid points and averaging it over the
entire park—resulting in a single LEQ12
value.2
1 Cumulative noise impact is not the same
criterion as the substantial restoration of natural
quiet (SRNQ). SRNQ is calculated and determined
on the peak day of air tour operations using the
percent time audible metric.
2 LEQ
12 stands for Equivalent Sound Level for 12
hours, which is a cumulative measure of the noise
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Using this methodology, the FAA and
the NPS have modeled the annual noise
of commercial air tour allocations in the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors as
flown with the 2012 commercial air tour
fleet mix and route structure—resulting
in a noise baseline of LEQ12 58.1
decibels (dB). This single number serves
as a reference criterion for measuring
changes to the noise environment based
on the cumulative impact of operations.
It is the average noise level across the
entire park as if a year’s worth of flight
allocations in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors took place in twelve
hours on a single day. It is not intended
to represent a value which may be
experienced by visitors to the park on
any particular day.3
A more detailed technical description
of the methodology and calculations
that resulted in the LEQ12 58.1 dB
reference criterion has been placed in
the docket. In order to accurately and
reliably ensure compliance with the
statutory mandate that the cumulative
impact of operations under this QT
incentive not increase noise at the park,
the same calculation described above
will be applied to each year’s air tour
data. The FAA and the NPS will model
the annual noise from all commercial air
tour operations conducted in the Dragon
and Zuni Point corridors and compare
the annual noise with the seasonal relief
incentive in place with the noise
baseline of all commercial air tour
allocations in these corridors. Noise will
be determined to increase if the annual
modeled LEQ12 noise of commercial air
tour operations conducted in the Dragon
and Zuni Point corridors exceeds LEQ12
58.1 dB in the park. If noise in any year
exceeds the noise baseline, the seasonal
relief incentive will be modified or
discontinued as determined necessary
to comply with the statutory condition.
To ensure that this incentive will not
diminish the achievement of substantial
restoration of natural quiet and
experience at the park, all commercial
air tour aircraft including QT must
adhere to the existing route structure
throughout the park, including the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors.
Substantial restoration of natural quiet
exposure of A-weighted sound levels over a 12-hour
period. LEQ12 is one of several metrics used to
evaluate air tour noise in Grand Canyon and other
national parks. The metric takes into account
aircraft noise levels, the number of aircraft
operations, and the duration of noise. A 12-hour
LEQ is used since air tour operations occur during
the day, rather than over a 24-hour period.
3 This LEQ
12 value is not an average day noise
level. To produce a noise level representing an
average day at an average location in the park,
further calculations of the 2012 LEQ12 58.1 dB value
would need to be made and would produce an
LEQ12 average day noise level of 32.5 dB.
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in the park will continue to be
calculated based on the peak day of air
tour operations using the percent time
audible metric. The NPS will continue
to monitor noise to evaluate substantial
restoration of natural quiet.
This incentive applies only to
commercial air tour operators that have
allocations in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors; i.e., operators must have
allocations in these corridors in order to
be relieved from allocations. It does not
apply elsewhere in the Grand Canyon
Special Flight Rules Area (SFRA). There
is an ample unused surplus of
commercial air tour allocations in the
SFRA outside of the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors; therefore, operators
conducting air tours in these other
SFRA areas do not need relief from
allocations and would not be
incentivized to convert to QT by a
seasonal relief incentive.
Seasonal relief from allocations is
intended to provide an incentive for
operators with non-QT aircraft to
convert to QT in advance of the
statutory requirement for full QT
conversion, and to maximize use of QT
already in the fleet. It rewards those
operators who have already fully
converted to QT by allowing them to
take full advantage of the incentive. The
number of air tours conducted by
operators using QT can increase beyond
the level permitted under the existing
allocation system as long as the
cumulative impact of the additional
number of quieter aircraft operating in
the park does not increase noise at the
park.
Seasonal relief from allocations will
not automatically increase the number
of flights. Any increase in air tour flights
will depend on the demand for air tours,
which is influenced by factors such as
general economic conditions and the
amount of tourism. Seasonal relief
allows air tour operators to save
allocations that would have been used
in the first quarter of the year and to use
them during times of year when air tour
demand is higher. The most immediate
effect of the incentive is likely to be to
provide a cushion of allocations to any
qualifying operator in the Dragon and
Zuni Point corridors that is at risk of
running out of allocations before the
end of the calendar year.
If the seasonal relief in the Dragon
and Zuni Point corridors is a successful
QT incentive, it is proposed to remain
in effect unless it violates the statutory
condition that the cumulative effect of
such operations must not increase noise
at the Grand Canyon, or diminishes the
achievement of substantial restoration of
natural quiet, in which case it will be
either modified or discontinued; or until
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a longer term approach for managing air
tour noise in the park is in place.
The FAA and the NPS commit to
developing a long term approach for
managing noise in the park in an
expeditious manner. Any long term
approach will continue to incentivize
conversion to QT and will not penalize
earlier conversion to QT realized
through the seasonal relief incentive.
IV. Discussion of Comments
The public comment period was open
until December 10, 2014. The FAA and
the NPS received 147 comments on the
November 10, 2014 notice describing
the proposal to provide seasonal relief
from allocations in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors, including 60 comments
which were posted after the close of the
comment period. Commenters included
individuals identifying themselves as
hikers, backpackers, river rafters and
back-country visitors to the Grand
Canyon; groups representing those types
of park users; environmental and
conservation organizations (collectively
referred to as ‘‘recreational and
environmental interests’’). Joint
comments were filed by a helicopter
trade association and a coalition of
Grand Canyon air tour operators
(collectively referred to as ‘‘air tour
interests’’). Most of the comments
expressed appreciation for the unique
qualities of the Grand Canyon,
including natural quiet, and the desire
that these qualities be protected. The
agencies reviewed and considered all
comments, and have responded below
to comments of substance on the QT
seasonal relief incentive. Comments and
responses are organized under subject
matter headings.
Statutory Basis for Incentives
Comment: Several commenters
representing recreational and
environmental interests questioned the
authority for QT incentives and
expressed concern about the
consistency of this seasonal relief
incentive with other laws protecting
national parks. The air tour interests
offered their view of Congressional
intent and criticized the agencies for
delay in implementing the legislative
directive.
FAA and NPS Response: This QT
incentive is offered pursuant to MAP–21
and to implement Section 804(c) of
NPATMA, as described in this notice.
MAP–21 and NPATMA include
protections to Grand Canyon National
Park, namely that the cumulative impact
of QT operations relieved from
allocations must not increase noise at
the park and that the achievement of
substantial restoration of natural quiet
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and experience at the park shall not be
relieved or diminished. This latter
provision in NPATMA ensures that this
QT incentive is consistent with the
mandate in the 1987 Overflights Act to
achieve substantial restoration of
natural quiet. Further, the NPS has an
affirmative responsibility to protect the
resources and values of national park
units, including park soundscapes. To
that end, since this measure provides
incentive for air tour operators and
owners to improve their fleets
commensurate with industry
advancements in quiet aircraft
technology, this incentive holds
promise for the continual reduction of
noise in Grand Canyon National Park.
The FAA and the NPS describe the
history of events that affected the time
line of QT incentives in the Background
section of this notice.
Quiet Technology Incentives
Comment: Commenters questioned
whether the proposed incentive is
necessary in light of other incentives
and the fact that operators are already
converting to QT. Some commenters
representing recreational and
environmental interests objected to
what they view as subsidizing a private
industry and suggested that operators
should pay the cost of converting to QT.
The air tour interests noted that over
$200 million has been invested in QT
aircraft by the air tour industry.
FAA and NPS Response: Both
NPATMA and MAP–21 contemplate
allowing increased flights, i.e., relief
from allocations or operational caps, by
QT. This incentive addresses those
provisions, i.e., it creates an incentive
for air tour operators to maximize use of
QT aircraft by allowing them to fly
additional air tours beyond their current
allocations. Operators are financially
responsible for the aircraft they use for
air tours and have already acquired a
significant number of QT aircraft at their
own cost. MAP–21 requires all
commercial air tour aircraft operating in
Grand Canyon National Park to fully
convert to QT not later than 2027.
Comment: Some commenters
representing recreational and
environmental interests suggested the
proposal actually gives an incentive to
retain and operate noisier helicopters.
The air tour interests commented that
operators already need to maximize use
of QT to recoup costs.
FAA and NPS Response: Air tour
operators that have already converted to
QT aircraft will have an additional
incentive to maximize use of those
aircraft; other operators will have an
incentive to convert to QT. Because the
cumulative impact of the incentive will
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be evaluated based on the annual
commercial air tour operations
conducted in the Dragon and Zuni Point
corridors, the use of QT aircraft at any
time of the year will contribute to a
determination that noise has not
increased and will increase the potential
for the incentive to be continued and
extended to the fourth quarter in
subsequent years.
Comment: Commenters questioned
the basis for classifying aircraft as QT
and asked who would validate aircraft
in an air tour operator’s fleet as QT.
FAA and NPS Response: Appendix A
to Subpart U of 14 CFR part 93 contains
the procedures for determining the QT
designation status for each aircraft.
Additional guidance can be found in the
FAA’s Advisory Circular 93–2, Noise
Levels for Aircraft used for Commercial
Operations in Grand Canyon National
Park Special Flight Rules Area. The
FAA is responsible for designating
aircraft as QT and for determining
which aircraft comply with that
designation.
Comment: Some commenters
suggested that air tour operators should
be required by regulations to use QT
aircraft all of the time or convert over
a period of time, while others called for
a transition as soon as possible to QT.
FAA and NPS Response: MAP–21
requires all commercial air tour aircraft
operating in the Grand Canyon National
Park Special Flight Rules Area to fully
convert to QT not later than 2027. In the
meantime, MAP–21 directs the FAA and
the NPS to provide QT incentives to
encourage earlier conversion and use of
QT.
Comment: Some commenters
representing recreational and
environmental interests suggested that
flights using ‘‘saved’’ allocations should
use QT. Other commenters suggested
that each QT flight should use a fraction
of an allocation.
FAA and NPS Response: The agencies
structured this incentive to be
consistent with the NPATMA Sec.
804(c) provision relieving commercial
air tour operations by QT from
operational flight allocations, subject to
protections with respect to noise and
substantial restoration of natural quiet
in the park, and with the MAP–21
provision that references increasing
flight allocations consistent with
NPATMA Sec. 804(c). Neither NPATMA
nor MAP–21 requires additional
conditions to be placed on flights using
allocations, as suggested by
commenters. As a practical matter, the
FAA expects an air tour operator’s fleet
to include the same proportion of QT for
an entire year that it uses in the first
quarter of the year, which means that
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QT would be used for allocations.
Furthermore, the overall air tour activity
in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors,
whether using QT or non-QT, cannot
increase noise at the park.
Comment: Some commenters
representing recreational and
environmental interests advocated a 1–
2 year trial period for the incentive that
expires on date certain. The air tour
interests suggested that the incentive
include the fourth quarter at the outset.
FAA and NPS Response: The agencies
have determined that providing this
incentive initially in the first quarter of
the year is a prudent action that gives
the FAA and the NPS an opportunity to
evaluate the noise impact of the
incentive, which will depend not only
on the first quarter QT use but also on
the extent to which commercial air tour
operators continue to use QT in the
remainder of the year. The incentive
may be modified or discontinued as
determined necessary to comply with
the statutory condition at the end of the
first year or any subsequent year.
Noise Calculation and Impact
Comment: Some commenters were
uncertain as to what the LEQ12 58.1 dB
metric represents and asked how the
baseline was developed.
FAA and NPS Response: The LEQ12
58.1 decibels (dB) reference criterion is
a basis for judging changes to the noise
environment, and is not intended to
represent a value which may be
experienced by visitors to the park on
any particular day. Additional
information has been provided in this
final notice, and a more detailed
technical description of the LEQ12 58.1
dB reference criterion, including how it
was calculated, has been placed in the
docket.
Comment: Some commenters
representing recreational and
environmental interests disagreed with
using a cumulative metric or annual
average and said that noise increases
should be measured based on peak day
or each and every day. Commenters also
suggested that supplemental noise
metrics be considered.
FAA and NPS Response: The
statutory language ‘‘cumulative impact
of such flights’’ calls for a metric that
calculates noise cumulatively over a
period of time. LEQ12 is one of several
metrics that is used to evaluate air tour
noise in Grand Canyon and other
national parks and was selected by
technical experts in the FAA and the
NPS as the most appropriate to use to
determine cumulative impact. A daily
noise calculation is not appropriate for
this purpose. Substantial restoration of
natural quiet, another required criterion,
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will continue to be calculated based on
the peak day of air tour operations using
the percent time audible metric.
Comment: One commenter suggested
that the annual evaluation of the
incentive’s impact should reflect
conversion to any QT aircraft that
produces more noise than an aircraft in
the baseline.
FAA and NPS Response: The annual
evaluation will calculate the noise of all
QT and all non-QT aircraft and will
account for any additional noise,
whether from a noisier aircraft or from
more aircraft operations.
Comment: Commenters questioned
the baseline against which the
cumulative impact of QT operations
will be compared (i.e., the annual noise
of commercial air tour allocations in the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors as
flown with the 2012 commercial air tour
fleet mix and route structure).
Commenters representing recreational
and environmental interests suggested
there should be an improvement in the
noise level over the status quo measured
by actual operations rather than
allocations. The air tour interests
questioned use of a 2012 fleet mix rather
than a fleet mix representative of either
the year 2000 or 2005 and suggested that
the comparison should be to sound
levels that would have been present if
all aircraft were non-QT. The air tour
interests also suggested that the baseline
should be substantial restoration of
natural quiet.
FAA and NPS Response: Both
NPATMA and MAP–21 include the QT
limiting provision: ‘‘. . . provided that
the cumulative impact of such
operations does not increase noise . . .’’
at the park. Neither statute provides for
further reductions in noise with respect
to QT incentives. The prohibition on
increasing noise is not defined or
elaborated on in either statute. The FAA
and the NPS considered various
possible baselines and determined that
the baseline should reflect the amount
of noise that can be generated by the
number of commercial air tour
operations that are permitted under the
current allocation system. If noise
exceeds a level that is currently
permitted under the allocation system,
the agencies will consider it to be an
increase in noise. The alternative
selection of a noise baseline using the
actual level of air tour operations in
2012, as recreational and environmental
interests suggested, would constitute a
reduction from what is currently
allowed since the actual 2012 level of
air tour operations was lower than what
is authorized. It would not be a QT
incentive to set a baseline that is lower
than what air tour operators would be
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:00 Apr 21, 2015
Jkt 235001
allowed to do under the current
allocation system. In addition, the
agencies chose 2012 as the year to
model baseline noise. MAP–21 provided
renewed direction for QT incentives in
July 2012 and directed the agencies to
provide such incentives not later than
60 days after the date of enactment of
MAP–21. While the agencies could not
meet the 60-day time frame, it was clear
that the Congress gave meaning to 2012
with respect to QT incentives. An
additional consideration by the agencies
was the availability and currency of air
tour fleet and operational data in 2012,
as opposed to looking back to previous
years. The alternative of selecting either
the year 2000 or 2005, as the air tour
interests suggested, was considered by
the agencies, but was not adopted
because of concerns about re-creating
earlier data for modeling input to obtain
a noise baseline and whether the
selection of a past year would
adequately ensure no increase in noise
and no diminishment of the
achievement of substantial restoration of
natural quiet. This latter consideration
was involved in deciding not to model
the noise baseline with an all non-QT
fleet, which would not reflect the noise
environment in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors in 2012. The agencies
are also cognizant that an incentive
must be based on a stable baseline that
can be relied on by air tour operators as
they make QT conversion decisions;
therefore, the 2012 noise baseline will
continue to be used for this seasonal
relief incentive in future years. With
respect to using a baseline of substantial
restoration of natural quiet, this is a
separate applicable standard in
NPATMA; not a substitute for the no
cumulative noise increase requirement.
Both requirements must be met. To
ensure that this incentive will not
diminish the achievement of substantial
restoration of natural quiet by exposing
new areas of the park to air tour noise,
all commercial air tour aircraft,
including QT, must adhere to the
existing route structure in the park.
Comment: The air tour interests
suggested that any noise increase should
be substantial or perceptible in order to
justify discontinuing the incentive.
Commenters representing recreational
and environmental interests called for
transparency and accountability,
continued modeling and/or monitoring
to ensure noise does not increase, and
suggested that noise data should be
made public.
FAA and NPS Response: The FAA
and the NPS are responsible and
accountable for ensuring that this QT
incentive does not increase noise at the
park or diminish the achievement of
PO 00000
Frm 00138
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
substantial restoration of natural quiet.
The LEQ12 58.1 dB baseline is a fixed
baseline against which noise increases
will be judged. Noise above the baseline
level will be considered to be an
increase, regardless of whether it is
considered to be either ‘‘substantial’’ or
‘‘perceptible’’. The agencies will
monitor the air tour operators’ use of QT
for air tours as required to be reported
in the operators’ quarterly reports
submitted to the FAA, and will annually
model noise as described in this notice.
Annual noise results will be publicly
available. In addition, the NPS will use
periodic on site monitoring consistent
with industry standards. The NPS
routinely uses monitoring to
supplement modeling results.
Monitoring data would enable the NPS
to check the number of flights flown on
each route segment, providing crossvalidation for the numbers reported by
air tour operators. Monitoring data also
would provide the single event level
(SEL) and maximum sound level (Lmax)
for each flight, enabling the NPS to
confirm the benefits of QT aircraft.
Comment: Some commenters noted
that ambient noise levels at the Grand
Canyon are very low and even QT
aircraft can be heard. Commenters
representing recreational and
environmental interests expressed
concern that overall noise will increase
even if QT operations result in a
reduction in noise per flight and that
park visitors will be in worse position
if the result is more constant noise from
more frequent flights.
FAA and NPS Response: The overall
noise cannot increase under the
statutory mandate that provides for the
QT incentive to be allowed subject to
the cumulative impact not increasing
noise at the park. The LEQ12 metric used
to evaluate cumulative impact takes into
account aircraft noise levels, the number
of aircraft operations, and the duration
of noise. In addition, the incentive
cannot, by statute, diminish the
achievement of substantial restoration of
natural quiet at the park.
Comment: Commenters representing
recreational and environmental interests
expressed concern that noise would
increase in backcountry or elsewhere in
the Grand Canyon; that noise would
increase in off-season when
backpacking and hiking is most
comfortable and visitors enjoy a respite
from noise; or that the incentive would
result in increased flights of loud
aircraft in summer.
FAA and NPS Response: There are
statutory protections to preclude an
overall, i.e., cumulative, increase in
noise and to prevent diminishing the
achievement of substantial restoration of
E:\FR\FM\22APN1.SGM
22APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 77 / Wednesday, April 22, 2015 / Notices
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
natural quiet, as described in this notice
and in the response to the previous
comment. QT aircraft must adhere to the
current route structure defined for air
tour operations; no new areas of the
Grand Canyon will be opened to air
tours under this incentive. The agencies
do not anticipate a significant increase
in the number of air tours operated in
the winter months when tour demand is
low. The incentive should increase the
proportion of QT aircraft used for air
tours in the Dragon and Zuni Point
corridors and decrease the number of
louder non-QT aircraft. Air tour
operators that convert or have converted
to QT for the seasonal relief are
anticipated to continue to operate those
quieter fleets during the summer season.
Seasonal relief allows air tour operators
to save allocations that would have been
used in the first quarter of the year and
to use them during times of year when
air tour demand is higher; therefore,
there may be increases in the number of
air tour flights at other times of year
above the number that has been allowed
under the allocation system. If an
increase in the number of flights rises to
the level that results in a cumulative
increase in noise, the seasonal relief
incentive will be modified to reduce
noise or will be discontinued.
Comment: Commenters suggest
agencies mandate one ‘‘quiet day’’ per
month.
FAA and NPS Response: This
suggestion would presumably involve a
prohibition on air tours for one day each
month, which is outside the scope of
approved measures currently in place at
the park and is not a QT incentive.
Comment: One commenter called for
assurance that incentives will not
degrade substantial restoration of
natural quiet.
FAA and NPS Response: The agencies
will ensure that this incentive does not
diminish substantial restoration of
natural quiet as required by NPATMA.
Impact on air tour operations
Comment: Commenters representing
recreational and environmental interests
suggest this is an attempt to increase
number of operations by labeling them
as quieter. The air tour interests express
concern that operators who have already
converted to QT may not see a
permanent increase in their allocations.
Commenters representing recreational
and environmental interests noted that
they expected to see flights shift from
peak to off-peak as part of a QT
incentive. One commenter expressed
the view that the seasonal relief
incentive will result in vigorous
marketing of air tours in January
through March.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:00 Apr 21, 2015
Jkt 235001
FAA and NPS Response: Currently,
air tour operators can use allocations at
any time throughout the year based on
the demand for air tours and individual
business decisions. This incentive does
not change that situation. The demand
for air tours is expected to remain
highest in the peak season.
Comment: Commenters representing
recreational and environmental interests
advocated a cap on operations.
FAA and NPS Response: Rather than
imposing a numerical cap, the statutory
noise conditions effectively provide a
limit.
Comment: Commenters asserted that
more frequent flights will produce more
air emissions.
FAA and NPS Response: FAA and
NPS air quality specialists do not expect
air tours to significantly affect air
quality in national parks.
V. Implementation Steps
The FAA and the NPS will use the
quarterly reports that are currently
required to be submitted by the
operators to determine the number of
QT flights flown during the first quarter
that will not count against their annual
allocations. The FAA will implement
the incentive by amending the
operations specifications of commercial
air tour operators holding allocations in
the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors to
allow them to conduct air tours with QT
aircraft without using an allocation for
such tours in the specified seasonal time
periods. The FAA and the NPS will
cooperatively ensure that the statutory
conditions protecting the park are met.
VI. Environmental Considerations
This action involving the FAA’s
amendment of operations specifications
is categorically excluded from more
detailed environmental review because
it would not have a significant effect on
the environment. The FAA and the NPS
have designed this incentive to ensure
compliance with the statutory
conditions that the cumulative impact
of QT operating without allocations
does not increase noise and that the
incentive does not diminish the
statutory mandate to achieve the
substantial restoration of natural quiet at
the park.
PO 00000
22611
Issued in Hawthorne, CA, on March 19,
2015.
Glen A. Martin,
Regional Administrator, Western-Pacific
Region, Federal Aviation Administration.
Issued in Lakewood, CO, on March 23,
2015.
Sue E. Masica,
Regional Director, Intermountain Region,
National Park Service.
[FR Doc. 2015–09380 Filed 4–21–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
Sunshine Act Meetings; Unified Carrier
Registration Plan Board of Directors
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of Unified Carrier
Registration Plan Board of Directors
Meeting.
AGENCY:
The meeting will be held
on May 7, 2015, from 12:00 Noon to
3:00 p.m., Eastern Daylight Time.
PLACE: This meeting will be open to the
public via conference call. Any
interested person may call 1–877–422–
1931, passcode 2855443940, to listen
and participate in this meeting.
STATUS: Open to the public.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED: The Unified
Carrier Registration Plan Board of
Directors (the Board) will continue its
work in developing and implementing
the Unified Carrier Registration Plan
and Agreement and to that end, may
consider matters properly before the
Board.
TIME AND DATE:
Mr.
Avelino Gutierrez, Chair, Unified
Carrier Registration Board of Directors at
(505) 827–4565.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Issued on: April 17, 2015.
Larry W. Minor,
Associate Administrator for Policy.
[FR Doc. 2015–09462 Filed 4–20–15; 4:15 pm]
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Maritime Administration
[Docket No. MARAD 2015–0049]
Application of Cargo Preference
Requirements to the Federal Ship
Financing Program
Maritime Administration,
MARAD, Department of Transportation.
AGENCY:
Frm 00139
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E:\FR\FM\22APN1.SGM
22APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 77 (Wednesday, April 22, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 22606-22611]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-09380]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
[Docket No. FAA-2014-0782]
Grand Canyon National Park Quiet Aircraft Technology Incentive:
Seasonal Relief From Allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point Corridors
AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration, Transportation; National Park
Service, Interior.
ACTION: Final notice to announce implementation and disposition of
public comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: On November 10, 2014, the Federal Aviation Administration
(FAA) and the National Park Service (NPS) published in the Federal
Register [79 FR 66763-66765] a notice of the agencies' proposal to
provide a quiet aircraft technology incentive for commercial air tour
operators at Grand Canyon National Park and a request for public
comments. Specifically, the agencies proposed to provide seasonal
relief from allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors for
commercial air tour operators that convert or have converted to quiet
aircraft technology. The FAA and the NPS have reviewed and considered
all comments, and have decided to proceed with implementation of the
incentive as proposed. This notice describes that decision and responds
to the substantive comments received.
DATES: This incentive is effective as of January 1, 2015.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Keith Lusk, Program Manager, Federal
Aviation Administration, P.O. Box 92007, Los Angeles, California 90009-
2007; telephone (310) 725-3808; email keith.lusk@faa.gov Robin Martin,
Chief, Office of Planning and Compliance, Grand Canyon National Park,
P.O. Box 129, Grand Canyon, Arizona 86023-0129; telephone (928) 638-
7684; email Robin_Martin@nps.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Authority
Authority: Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act,
Sec. 35001, Pub. L. 112-141, 126 Stat. 843; National Parks Air Tour
Management Act, Sec. 804, Pub. L. 106-181, 114 Stat. 192.
1. The National Park Overflights Act of 1987, Pub. L. 100-91,
directed the Secretary of the Interior and the Administrator of the FAA
to take actions to provide for the substantial restoration of the
natural quiet and experience of Grand Canyon National Park and the
protection of public health and safety from adverse effects associated
with aircraft overflight. As part of these actions, operational limits
for commercial air tour operations at Grand Canyon National Park (the
park) were imposed by FAA regulations at 14 CFR part 93 issued on April
4, 2000. With some exceptions not relevant to this notice, these
regulations establish an allocation scheme for the park, require
commercial air tour operators to use one allocation for each flight
that is a commercial air tour, and prohibit operators from conducting
more commercial air tours in any calendar year than the number of
allocations specified on the certificate holder's operations
specifications issued by the FAA. 14 CFR 93.319.
2. The National Parks Air Tour Management Act (NPATMA), Pub. L.
106-181, was signed into law on April 5, 2000. Section 804(a) required
the FAA to designate reasonably achievable requirements for fixed-wing
and helicopter aircraft to be considered quiet aircraft technology (QT)
for purposes of the statute's provisions. In 2005, the FAA issued a
final rule classifying aircraft operating in Grand Canyon National Park
and designating aircraft that meet the noise criteria as QT. 70 FR
16084-16093. These regulations were codified at 14 CFR 93.303 and
Appendix A to Subpart U of Part 93. Under NPATMA section 804(c),
commercial air tour operations by fixed-wing or helicopter aircraft
that employ QT and that replace existing aircraft are not subject to
the operational flight allocations that apply to other commercial air
tour operations at the park, provided that the cumulative impact of
such operations does not increase noise at the Grand Canyon. Section
804(d) provides that a commercial air tour operation by an aircraft in
a commercial air tour operator's fleet on the date of enactment of
NPATMA that meets QT requirements or is subsequently modified to meet
QT requirements may be used for commercial air tour operations under
the same terms and
[[Page 22607]]
conditions as section 804(c) without regard to whether it replaces an
existing aircraft. In addition, NPATMA expressly states that it does
not relieve or diminish the statutory mandate to achieve substantial
restoration of natural quiet and experience at the park.
3. Section 35001 of the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st
Century Act (MAP-21), Pub. L. 112-141, July 6, 2012, directs the
Secretary of the Interior and the Administrator of the Federal Aviation
Administration to provide incentives for commercial air tour operators
that convert to QT, determined in accordance with the regulations then
in effect. MAP-21 gives as an example of an incentive increasing the
flight allocations for operators of QT on a net basis consistent with
section 804(c) of NPATMA, provided that the cumulative impact of such
operations does not increase noise at the Grand Canyon. MAP-21 also
provides that all commercial air tour operators must convert to QT by
2027.
II. Background
Congress has encouraged the use of quiet aircraft technology (QT)
as one means of addressing noise from commercial air tours at Grand
Canyon National Park. The FAA was required by NPATMA to designate
reasonably achievable requirements for fixed-wing and helicopter
aircraft to be considered QT, and issued a final rule to accomplish
this in 2005. This rule did not include QT incentives and did not
relieve commercial air tour operators of their operational limitations.
NPATMA's provision that allocations do not apply to QT operations only
takes effect if the cumulative impact of such operations does not
increase noise at the Grand Canyon. Although the FAA concluded that
aircraft that meet the QT designation are consistently quieter than
aircraft that do not, 70 FR 16088, neither the FAA nor the NPS had
sufficient data at that time to determine whether noise would increase
if limits on the number of QT operations were removed. In addition,
NPATMA expressly states that it does not relieve or diminish the
statutory mandate to achieve substantial restoration of natural quiet
and experience at the park. Substantial restoration of natural quiet
had not been determined to be achieved at that time. Various QT
incentives were considered by the agencies following the 2005 final
rule, but were not finalized.
MAP-21, enacted in July 2012, provided additional direction to the
FAA and the NPS on QT incentives. In response to MAP-21, the NPS, in
consultation with the FAA, reduced the fees applicable to commercial
air tour operations at the Grand Canyon by 20 percent (from $25 to $20
per flight) for an air tour using QT effective January 1, 2014. On
February 3, 2014, the FAA, in consultation with the NPS, announced its
intention to distribute FAA-held allocations to commercial tour
operators in proportion to the number of QT operations flown in the
first six months of 2014. 79 FR 6267-6268. These allocations were
subsequently distributed for use for QT flights during the 2014 air
tour season and beyond.
III. Seasonal Relief From Allocations for QT in the Dragon and Zuni
Point Corridors
Following notice and public comment, the FAA and the NPS have
decided to provide an additional QT incentive in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors where QT can have the greatest positive effect on park
resources and where the need for relief from allocations has been
demonstrated. Under this incentive, commercial air tour operators
flying QT aircraft in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors initially
will be relieved from having such operations count against their annual
allocations in the first quarter (January 1-March 31) of 2015. The FAA
and the NPS will use the quarterly reports that are currently required
to be submitted by the operators to determine the number of QT flights
flown during the first quarter that will not count against their annual
allocations. During this first quarter, QT flights will not use an
allocation, while non-QT flights must still use an allocation. All
commercial air tour flights, QT and non-QT, must use an allocation for
the remainder of the year (April 1-December 31). However, operators
will continue to benefit from the seasonal relief throughout the
remainder of the year since they may use allocations in April through
December that they would otherwise have used for QT flights conducted
in January through March.
The first quarter of the calendar year, when park visitation and
demand for air tours are seasonally low, has historically had the
lowest level of commercial air tour operations. Providing this
incentive initially in the first quarter of 2015 is a prudent action
that gives the FAA and the NPS an opportunity to evaluate the impact of
the incentive, including the extent to which commercial air tour
operators continue to use QT in the remainder of the year which will
produce additional noise benefits for the park. The FAA and the NPS
want to incentivize commercial air tour operators to maximize the use
of QT throughout the year. To that end, the seasonal relief from
allocations may be extended to part or all of the fourth quarter
(October 1-December 31) in 2016 and following years, in addition to the
first quarter, based on an evaluation of the preceding year. In 2015,
the more that increased QT use reduces the noise level below the noise
baseline described in the following paragraph, the greater the prospect
for operators to have additional seasonal relief from allocations in
2016.
To meet the statutory conditions in NPATMA and MAP-21, the FAA and
the NPS must ensure that the cumulative impact of QT operations
relieved from allocations does not increase noise at the park. Neither
NPATMA nor MAP-21 specifies a methodology for calculating whether the
cumulative impact of relieving QT operations from allocations would
increase noise. After extensive consideration of the statutory language
and the associated technical issues, the FAA and the NPS have
determined that, for this seasonal relief incentive, the annual noise
from both QT and non-QT commercial air tour flights conducted in the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors must not exceed the annual noise level
of commercial air tour flights under the current Dragon and Zuni Point
corridors allocation system.
The agencies have agreed that the cumulative noise impact \1\ will
be evaluated in terms of the total amount of commercial air tour noise
energy occurring inside park boundaries averaged over an entire year.
The agencies further agreed that the most suitable way to ensure that
the seasonal relief from allocations incentive for QT operations in the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors does not increase noise in the park is
to compute noise at a large number of grid points throughout the park,
instead of only using grid points in the Dragon and Zuni Point
corridors. Accordingly, the NPS and the FAA used a grid of 1224 points
with 2 km spacing across the park. Technical experts from both agencies
also determined that a single number provides the most straightforward
means of determining whether there is an increase in noise. This number
is calculated by taking the total noise energy calculated for a year's
air tour data at each of the individual grid points and averaging it
over the entire park--resulting in a single LEQ12 value.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Cumulative noise impact is not the same criterion as the
substantial restoration of natural quiet (SRNQ). SRNQ is calculated
and determined on the peak day of air tour operations using the
percent time audible metric.
\2\ LEQ12 stands for Equivalent Sound Level for 12
hours, which is a cumulative measure of the noise exposure of A-
weighted sound levels over a 12-hour period. LEQ12 is one
of several metrics used to evaluate air tour noise in Grand Canyon
and other national parks. The metric takes into account aircraft
noise levels, the number of aircraft operations, and the duration of
noise. A 12-hour LEQ is used since air tour operations occur during
the day, rather than over a 24-hour period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 22608]]
Using this methodology, the FAA and the NPS have modeled the annual
noise of commercial air tour allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point
corridors as flown with the 2012 commercial air tour fleet mix and
route structure--resulting in a noise baseline of LEQ12 58.1
decibels (dB). This single number serves as a reference criterion for
measuring changes to the noise environment based on the cumulative
impact of operations. It is the average noise level across the entire
park as if a year's worth of flight allocations in the Dragon and Zuni
Point corridors took place in twelve hours on a single day. It is not
intended to represent a value which may be experienced by visitors to
the park on any particular day.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ This LEQ12 value is not an average day noise
level. To produce a noise level representing an average day at an
average location in the park, further calculations of the 2012
LEQ12 58.1 dB value would need to be made and would
produce an LEQ12 average day noise level of 32.5 dB.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A more detailed technical description of the methodology and
calculations that resulted in the LEQ12 58.1 dB reference
criterion has been placed in the docket. In order to accurately and
reliably ensure compliance with the statutory mandate that the
cumulative impact of operations under this QT incentive not increase
noise at the park, the same calculation described above will be applied
to each year's air tour data. The FAA and the NPS will model the annual
noise from all commercial air tour operations conducted in the Dragon
and Zuni Point corridors and compare the annual noise with the seasonal
relief incentive in place with the noise baseline of all commercial air
tour allocations in these corridors. Noise will be determined to
increase if the annual modeled LEQ12 noise of commercial air
tour operations conducted in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors
exceeds LEQ12 58.1 dB in the park. If noise in any year
exceeds the noise baseline, the seasonal relief incentive will be
modified or discontinued as determined necessary to comply with the
statutory condition.
To ensure that this incentive will not diminish the achievement of
substantial restoration of natural quiet and experience at the park,
all commercial air tour aircraft including QT must adhere to the
existing route structure throughout the park, including the Dragon and
Zuni Point corridors. Substantial restoration of natural quiet in the
park will continue to be calculated based on the peak day of air tour
operations using the percent time audible metric. The NPS will continue
to monitor noise to evaluate substantial restoration of natural quiet.
This incentive applies only to commercial air tour operators that
have allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors; i.e.,
operators must have allocations in these corridors in order to be
relieved from allocations. It does not apply elsewhere in the Grand
Canyon Special Flight Rules Area (SFRA). There is an ample unused
surplus of commercial air tour allocations in the SFRA outside of the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors; therefore, operators conducting air
tours in these other SFRA areas do not need relief from allocations and
would not be incentivized to convert to QT by a seasonal relief
incentive.
Seasonal relief from allocations is intended to provide an
incentive for operators with non-QT aircraft to convert to QT in
advance of the statutory requirement for full QT conversion, and to
maximize use of QT already in the fleet. It rewards those operators who
have already fully converted to QT by allowing them to take full
advantage of the incentive. The number of air tours conducted by
operators using QT can increase beyond the level permitted under the
existing allocation system as long as the cumulative impact of the
additional number of quieter aircraft operating in the park does not
increase noise at the park.
Seasonal relief from allocations will not automatically increase
the number of flights. Any increase in air tour flights will depend on
the demand for air tours, which is influenced by factors such as
general economic conditions and the amount of tourism. Seasonal relief
allows air tour operators to save allocations that would have been used
in the first quarter of the year and to use them during times of year
when air tour demand is higher. The most immediate effect of the
incentive is likely to be to provide a cushion of allocations to any
qualifying operator in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors that is at
risk of running out of allocations before the end of the calendar year.
If the seasonal relief in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors is a
successful QT incentive, it is proposed to remain in effect unless it
violates the statutory condition that the cumulative effect of such
operations must not increase noise at the Grand Canyon, or diminishes
the achievement of substantial restoration of natural quiet, in which
case it will be either modified or discontinued; or until a longer term
approach for managing air tour noise in the park is in place.
The FAA and the NPS commit to developing a long term approach for
managing noise in the park in an expeditious manner. Any long term
approach will continue to incentivize conversion to QT and will not
penalize earlier conversion to QT realized through the seasonal relief
incentive.
IV. Discussion of Comments
The public comment period was open until December 10, 2014. The FAA
and the NPS received 147 comments on the November 10, 2014 notice
describing the proposal to provide seasonal relief from allocations in
the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors, including 60 comments which were
posted after the close of the comment period. Commenters included
individuals identifying themselves as hikers, backpackers, river
rafters and back-country visitors to the Grand Canyon; groups
representing those types of park users; environmental and conservation
organizations (collectively referred to as ``recreational and
environmental interests''). Joint comments were filed by a helicopter
trade association and a coalition of Grand Canyon air tour operators
(collectively referred to as ``air tour interests''). Most of the
comments expressed appreciation for the unique qualities of the Grand
Canyon, including natural quiet, and the desire that these qualities be
protected. The agencies reviewed and considered all comments, and have
responded below to comments of substance on the QT seasonal relief
incentive. Comments and responses are organized under subject matter
headings.
Statutory Basis for Incentives
Comment: Several commenters representing recreational and
environmental interests questioned the authority for QT incentives and
expressed concern about the consistency of this seasonal relief
incentive with other laws protecting national parks. The air tour
interests offered their view of Congressional intent and criticized the
agencies for delay in implementing the legislative directive.
FAA and NPS Response: This QT incentive is offered pursuant to MAP-
21 and to implement Section 804(c) of NPATMA, as described in this
notice. MAP-21 and NPATMA include protections to Grand Canyon National
Park, namely that the cumulative impact of QT operations relieved from
allocations must not increase noise at the park and that the
achievement of substantial restoration of natural quiet
[[Page 22609]]
and experience at the park shall not be relieved or diminished. This
latter provision in NPATMA ensures that this QT incentive is consistent
with the mandate in the 1987 Overflights Act to achieve substantial
restoration of natural quiet. Further, the NPS has an affirmative
responsibility to protect the resources and values of national park
units, including park soundscapes. To that end, since this measure
provides incentive for air tour operators and owners to improve their
fleets commensurate with industry advancements in quiet aircraft
technology, this incentive holds promise for the continual reduction of
noise in Grand Canyon National Park. The FAA and the NPS describe the
history of events that affected the time line of QT incentives in the
Background section of this notice.
Quiet Technology Incentives
Comment: Commenters questioned whether the proposed incentive is
necessary in light of other incentives and the fact that operators are
already converting to QT. Some commenters representing recreational and
environmental interests objected to what they view as subsidizing a
private industry and suggested that operators should pay the cost of
converting to QT. The air tour interests noted that over $200 million
has been invested in QT aircraft by the air tour industry.
FAA and NPS Response: Both NPATMA and MAP-21 contemplate allowing
increased flights, i.e., relief from allocations or operational caps,
by QT. This incentive addresses those provisions, i.e., it creates an
incentive for air tour operators to maximize use of QT aircraft by
allowing them to fly additional air tours beyond their current
allocations. Operators are financially responsible for the aircraft
they use for air tours and have already acquired a significant number
of QT aircraft at their own cost. MAP-21 requires all commercial air
tour aircraft operating in Grand Canyon National Park to fully convert
to QT not later than 2027.
Comment: Some commenters representing recreational and
environmental interests suggested the proposal actually gives an
incentive to retain and operate noisier helicopters. The air tour
interests commented that operators already need to maximize use of QT
to recoup costs.
FAA and NPS Response: Air tour operators that have already
converted to QT aircraft will have an additional incentive to maximize
use of those aircraft; other operators will have an incentive to
convert to QT. Because the cumulative impact of the incentive will be
evaluated based on the annual commercial air tour operations conducted
in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors, the use of QT aircraft at any
time of the year will contribute to a determination that noise has not
increased and will increase the potential for the incentive to be
continued and extended to the fourth quarter in subsequent years.
Comment: Commenters questioned the basis for classifying aircraft
as QT and asked who would validate aircraft in an air tour operator's
fleet as QT.
FAA and NPS Response: Appendix A to Subpart U of 14 CFR part 93
contains the procedures for determining the QT designation status for
each aircraft. Additional guidance can be found in the FAA's Advisory
Circular 93-2, Noise Levels for Aircraft used for Commercial Operations
in Grand Canyon National Park Special Flight Rules Area. The FAA is
responsible for designating aircraft as QT and for determining which
aircraft comply with that designation.
Comment: Some commenters suggested that air tour operators should
be required by regulations to use QT aircraft all of the time or
convert over a period of time, while others called for a transition as
soon as possible to QT.
FAA and NPS Response: MAP-21 requires all commercial air tour
aircraft operating in the Grand Canyon National Park Special Flight
Rules Area to fully convert to QT not later than 2027. In the meantime,
MAP-21 directs the FAA and the NPS to provide QT incentives to
encourage earlier conversion and use of QT.
Comment: Some commenters representing recreational and
environmental interests suggested that flights using ``saved''
allocations should use QT. Other commenters suggested that each QT
flight should use a fraction of an allocation.
FAA and NPS Response: The agencies structured this incentive to be
consistent with the NPATMA Sec. 804(c) provision relieving commercial
air tour operations by QT from operational flight allocations, subject
to protections with respect to noise and substantial restoration of
natural quiet in the park, and with the MAP-21 provision that
references increasing flight allocations consistent with NPATMA Sec.
804(c). Neither NPATMA nor MAP-21 requires additional conditions to be
placed on flights using allocations, as suggested by commenters. As a
practical matter, the FAA expects an air tour operator's fleet to
include the same proportion of QT for an entire year that it uses in
the first quarter of the year, which means that QT would be used for
allocations. Furthermore, the overall air tour activity in the Dragon
and Zuni Point corridors, whether using QT or non-QT, cannot increase
noise at the park.
Comment: Some commenters representing recreational and
environmental interests advocated a 1-2 year trial period for the
incentive that expires on date certain. The air tour interests
suggested that the incentive include the fourth quarter at the outset.
FAA and NPS Response: The agencies have determined that providing
this incentive initially in the first quarter of the year is a prudent
action that gives the FAA and the NPS an opportunity to evaluate the
noise impact of the incentive, which will depend not only on the first
quarter QT use but also on the extent to which commercial air tour
operators continue to use QT in the remainder of the year. The
incentive may be modified or discontinued as determined necessary to
comply with the statutory condition at the end of the first year or any
subsequent year.
Noise Calculation and Impact
Comment: Some commenters were uncertain as to what the
LEQ12 58.1 dB metric represents and asked how the baseline
was developed.
FAA and NPS Response: The LEQ12 58.1 decibels (dB)
reference criterion is a basis for judging changes to the noise
environment, and is not intended to represent a value which may be
experienced by visitors to the park on any particular day. Additional
information has been provided in this final notice, and a more detailed
technical description of the LEQ12 58.1 dB reference
criterion, including how it was calculated, has been placed in the
docket.
Comment: Some commenters representing recreational and
environmental interests disagreed with using a cumulative metric or
annual average and said that noise increases should be measured based
on peak day or each and every day. Commenters also suggested that
supplemental noise metrics be considered.
FAA and NPS Response: The statutory language ``cumulative impact of
such flights'' calls for a metric that calculates noise cumulatively
over a period of time. LEQ12 is one of several metrics that
is used to evaluate air tour noise in Grand Canyon and other national
parks and was selected by technical experts in the FAA and the NPS as
the most appropriate to use to determine cumulative impact. A daily
noise calculation is not appropriate for this purpose. Substantial
restoration of natural quiet, another required criterion,
[[Page 22610]]
will continue to be calculated based on the peak day of air tour
operations using the percent time audible metric.
Comment: One commenter suggested that the annual evaluation of the
incentive's impact should reflect conversion to any QT aircraft that
produces more noise than an aircraft in the baseline.
FAA and NPS Response: The annual evaluation will calculate the
noise of all QT and all non-QT aircraft and will account for any
additional noise, whether from a noisier aircraft or from more aircraft
operations.
Comment: Commenters questioned the baseline against which the
cumulative impact of QT operations will be compared (i.e., the annual
noise of commercial air tour allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point
corridors as flown with the 2012 commercial air tour fleet mix and
route structure). Commenters representing recreational and
environmental interests suggested there should be an improvement in the
noise level over the status quo measured by actual operations rather
than allocations. The air tour interests questioned use of a 2012 fleet
mix rather than a fleet mix representative of either the year 2000 or
2005 and suggested that the comparison should be to sound levels that
would have been present if all aircraft were non-QT. The air tour
interests also suggested that the baseline should be substantial
restoration of natural quiet.
FAA and NPS Response: Both NPATMA and MAP-21 include the QT
limiting provision: ``. . . provided that the cumulative impact of such
operations does not increase noise . . .'' at the park. Neither statute
provides for further reductions in noise with respect to QT incentives.
The prohibition on increasing noise is not defined or elaborated on in
either statute. The FAA and the NPS considered various possible
baselines and determined that the baseline should reflect the amount of
noise that can be generated by the number of commercial air tour
operations that are permitted under the current allocation system. If
noise exceeds a level that is currently permitted under the allocation
system, the agencies will consider it to be an increase in noise. The
alternative selection of a noise baseline using the actual level of air
tour operations in 2012, as recreational and environmental interests
suggested, would constitute a reduction from what is currently allowed
since the actual 2012 level of air tour operations was lower than what
is authorized. It would not be a QT incentive to set a baseline that is
lower than what air tour operators would be allowed to do under the
current allocation system. In addition, the agencies chose 2012 as the
year to model baseline noise. MAP-21 provided renewed direction for QT
incentives in July 2012 and directed the agencies to provide such
incentives not later than 60 days after the date of enactment of MAP-
21. While the agencies could not meet the 60-day time frame, it was
clear that the Congress gave meaning to 2012 with respect to QT
incentives. An additional consideration by the agencies was the
availability and currency of air tour fleet and operational data in
2012, as opposed to looking back to previous years. The alternative of
selecting either the year 2000 or 2005, as the air tour interests
suggested, was considered by the agencies, but was not adopted because
of concerns about re-creating earlier data for modeling input to obtain
a noise baseline and whether the selection of a past year would
adequately ensure no increase in noise and no diminishment of the
achievement of substantial restoration of natural quiet. This latter
consideration was involved in deciding not to model the noise baseline
with an all non-QT fleet, which would not reflect the noise environment
in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors in 2012. The agencies are also
cognizant that an incentive must be based on a stable baseline that can
be relied on by air tour operators as they make QT conversion
decisions; therefore, the 2012 noise baseline will continue to be used
for this seasonal relief incentive in future years. With respect to
using a baseline of substantial restoration of natural quiet, this is a
separate applicable standard in NPATMA; not a substitute for the no
cumulative noise increase requirement. Both requirements must be met.
To ensure that this incentive will not diminish the achievement of
substantial restoration of natural quiet by exposing new areas of the
park to air tour noise, all commercial air tour aircraft, including QT,
must adhere to the existing route structure in the park.
Comment: The air tour interests suggested that any noise increase
should be substantial or perceptible in order to justify discontinuing
the incentive. Commenters representing recreational and environmental
interests called for transparency and accountability, continued
modeling and/or monitoring to ensure noise does not increase, and
suggested that noise data should be made public.
FAA and NPS Response: The FAA and the NPS are responsible and
accountable for ensuring that this QT incentive does not increase noise
at the park or diminish the achievement of substantial restoration of
natural quiet. The LEQ12 58.1 dB baseline is a fixed
baseline against which noise increases will be judged. Noise above the
baseline level will be considered to be an increase, regardless of
whether it is considered to be either ``substantial'' or
``perceptible''. The agencies will monitor the air tour operators' use
of QT for air tours as required to be reported in the operators'
quarterly reports submitted to the FAA, and will annually model noise
as described in this notice. Annual noise results will be publicly
available. In addition, the NPS will use periodic on site monitoring
consistent with industry standards. The NPS routinely uses monitoring
to supplement modeling results. Monitoring data would enable the NPS to
check the number of flights flown on each route segment, providing
cross-validation for the numbers reported by air tour operators.
Monitoring data also would provide the single event level (SEL) and
maximum sound level (Lmax) for each flight, enabling the NPS to confirm
the benefits of QT aircraft.
Comment: Some commenters noted that ambient noise levels at the
Grand Canyon are very low and even QT aircraft can be heard. Commenters
representing recreational and environmental interests expressed concern
that overall noise will increase even if QT operations result in a
reduction in noise per flight and that park visitors will be in worse
position if the result is more constant noise from more frequent
flights.
FAA and NPS Response: The overall noise cannot increase under the
statutory mandate that provides for the QT incentive to be allowed
subject to the cumulative impact not increasing noise at the park. The
LEQ12 metric used to evaluate cumulative impact takes into
account aircraft noise levels, the number of aircraft operations, and
the duration of noise. In addition, the incentive cannot, by statute,
diminish the achievement of substantial restoration of natural quiet at
the park.
Comment: Commenters representing recreational and environmental
interests expressed concern that noise would increase in backcountry or
elsewhere in the Grand Canyon; that noise would increase in off-season
when backpacking and hiking is most comfortable and visitors enjoy a
respite from noise; or that the incentive would result in increased
flights of loud aircraft in summer.
FAA and NPS Response: There are statutory protections to preclude
an overall, i.e., cumulative, increase in noise and to prevent
diminishing the achievement of substantial restoration of
[[Page 22611]]
natural quiet, as described in this notice and in the response to the
previous comment. QT aircraft must adhere to the current route
structure defined for air tour operations; no new areas of the Grand
Canyon will be opened to air tours under this incentive. The agencies
do not anticipate a significant increase in the number of air tours
operated in the winter months when tour demand is low. The incentive
should increase the proportion of QT aircraft used for air tours in the
Dragon and Zuni Point corridors and decrease the number of louder non-
QT aircraft. Air tour operators that convert or have converted to QT
for the seasonal relief are anticipated to continue to operate those
quieter fleets during the summer season. Seasonal relief allows air
tour operators to save allocations that would have been used in the
first quarter of the year and to use them during times of year when air
tour demand is higher; therefore, there may be increases in the number
of air tour flights at other times of year above the number that has
been allowed under the allocation system. If an increase in the number
of flights rises to the level that results in a cumulative increase in
noise, the seasonal relief incentive will be modified to reduce noise
or will be discontinued.
Comment: Commenters suggest agencies mandate one ``quiet day'' per
month.
FAA and NPS Response: This suggestion would presumably involve a
prohibition on air tours for one day each month, which is outside the
scope of approved measures currently in place at the park and is not a
QT incentive.
Comment: One commenter called for assurance that incentives will
not degrade substantial restoration of natural quiet.
FAA and NPS Response: The agencies will ensure that this incentive
does not diminish substantial restoration of natural quiet as required
by NPATMA.
Impact on air tour operations
Comment: Commenters representing recreational and environmental
interests suggest this is an attempt to increase number of operations
by labeling them as quieter. The air tour interests express concern
that operators who have already converted to QT may not see a permanent
increase in their allocations. Commenters representing recreational and
environmental interests noted that they expected to see flights shift
from peak to off-peak as part of a QT incentive. One commenter
expressed the view that the seasonal relief incentive will result in
vigorous marketing of air tours in January through March.
FAA and NPS Response: Currently, air tour operators can use
allocations at any time throughout the year based on the demand for air
tours and individual business decisions. This incentive does not change
that situation. The demand for air tours is expected to remain highest
in the peak season.
Comment: Commenters representing recreational and environmental
interests advocated a cap on operations.
FAA and NPS Response: Rather than imposing a numerical cap, the
statutory noise conditions effectively provide a limit.
Comment: Commenters asserted that more frequent flights will
produce more air emissions.
FAA and NPS Response: FAA and NPS air quality specialists do not
expect air tours to significantly affect air quality in national parks.
V. Implementation Steps
The FAA and the NPS will use the quarterly reports that are
currently required to be submitted by the operators to determine the
number of QT flights flown during the first quarter that will not count
against their annual allocations. The FAA will implement the incentive
by amending the operations specifications of commercial air tour
operators holding allocations in the Dragon and Zuni Point corridors to
allow them to conduct air tours with QT aircraft without using an
allocation for such tours in the specified seasonal time periods. The
FAA and the NPS will cooperatively ensure that the statutory conditions
protecting the park are met.
VI. Environmental Considerations
This action involving the FAA's amendment of operations
specifications is categorically excluded from more detailed
environmental review because it would not have a significant effect on
the environment. The FAA and the NPS have designed this incentive to
ensure compliance with the statutory conditions that the cumulative
impact of QT operating without allocations does not increase noise and
that the incentive does not diminish the statutory mandate to achieve
the substantial restoration of natural quiet at the park.
Issued in Hawthorne, CA, on March 19, 2015.
Glen A. Martin,
Regional Administrator, Western-Pacific Region, Federal Aviation
Administration.
Issued in Lakewood, CO, on March 23, 2015.
Sue E. Masica,
Regional Director, Intermountain Region, National Park Service.
[FR Doc. 2015-09380 Filed 4-21-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-13-P