Notice of Order Soliciting Community Proposals, 35721-35733 [2015-15393]
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 119 / Monday, June 22, 2015 / Notices
Chrysler has reasonably met the
notification and/or remedy
requirements under 49 U.S.C. §§ 30118
and 30120, and in developing the terms
of an order (if any) requiring Fiat
Chrysler to take specified action as the
remedy for the recalls and/or take other
action. 49 U.S.C. §§ 30118(e), 30120(e);
49 CFR 557.8.
Procedural Matters: Interested
persons may participate in these
proceedings through written and/or oral
presentations. Persons wishing to attend
must notify Carla Bridges, National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration,
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590 (Telephone:
202–366–2992) (Fax: 202–366–3820),
before the close of business on June 30,
2015 (and June 26, 2015, for non-U.S.
citizens). Each person wishing to attend
must provide his or her name and
country of citizenship. Non-U.S.
citizens must also provide date of birth,
title or position, and passport or
diplomatic ID number, along with
expiration date. Each person wishing to
make an oral presentation must also
specify the amount of time that the
presentation is expected to last, his or
her organizational affiliation, phone
number, and email address. NHTSA
will prepare a schedule of presentations.
Depending upon the number of persons
who wish to make oral presentations
and the anticipated length of those
presentations, NHTSA may limit the
length of oral presentations.
For security purposes, photo
identification is required to enter the
U.S. Department of Transportation
building. To allow sufficient time to
clear security and enter the building,
NHTSA recommends that hearing
participants arrive 30 to 60 minutes
prior to the start of the public hearing.
The hearing will be held at a site
accessible to individuals with
disabilities. Individuals who require
accommodations, such as sign language
interpreters, should contact Ms. Justine
Casselle using the contact information
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section above no later than
June 24, 2015. A transcript of the
proceedings will be placed in the docket
for this notice at a later date.
Persons who wish to file written
comments should submit them so that
they are received by NHTSA no later
than June 23, 2015. Instructions on how
to submit written comments to the
docket is located under the ADDRESSES
section of this notice.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. §§ 30118(e), 30120(e);
49 CFR 557.6(d), 557.7; delegations of
authority at 49 CFR 1.95(a) and 501.2(a)(1).
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Issued: June 16, 2015.
Mark R. Rosekind,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2015–15246 Filed 6–19–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary of
Transportation
[Docket No. DOT–OST–2015–0126]
Notice of Order Soliciting Community
Proposals
Office of the Secretary,
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of order soliciting
community proposals (Order 2015–6–
18).
AGENCY:
The Department of
Transportation is soliciting proposals
from communities or consortia of
communities interested in receiving
grants under the Small Community Air
Service Development Program. The full
text of the Department’s order,
including Appendices, is included in
this Notice. As noted in the order, an
application for a grant under this
program must include a Grant Proposal
of no more than 20 pages (one-sided
only), a completed Application for
Federal Domestic Assistance (SF424), a
Summary Information Schedule, and
any letters from the applicant
community showing support.
DATES: Applications must be submitted
no later than July 22, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Communities must submit
applications electronically through
https://www.grants.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Brooke Chapman, Associate Director,
Small Community Air Service
Development Program, Office of
Aviation Analysis, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., W86–307, Washington, DC
20590, (202) 366 0577.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: By this
order, the Department of Transportation
(the Department or DOT) invites
proposals from communities and/or
consortia of communities interested in
obtaining a federal grant under the
Small Community Air Service
Development Program (‘‘Small
Community Program’’ or ‘‘SCASDP’’) to
address air service and airfare issues in
their communities. Applications of no
more than 20 one-sided pages each
(excluding the completed Application
for Federal Domestic Assistance
(SF424), Summary Information
schedule, and any letters from the
community or an air carrier showing
SUMMARY:
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support for the application), including
all required information, must be
submitted to www.grants.gov no later
than 5:00 p.m. EDT on July 22, 2015.
You are strongly encouraged to submit
applications in advance of the deadline.
Please be aware that you must complete
the registration process before
submitting an application, and that this
process usually takes two to four weeks
to complete. If interested parties
experience difficulties at any point
during the registration or application
process, please call the grants.gov
Customer Support Hotline at 1–800–
518–4726, Monday-Friday, from 7:00
a.m. to 9:00 p.m. EDT. The Department
will not accept late-filed applications.
Additional information on applying
through grants.gov is in Appendix A,
including a notice regarding late
submissions related to technical
difficulties. This order is organized into
the following sections:
I. Background
II. Selection Criteria and Guidance on
Application of Selection Criteria
III. Evaluation and Selection Process
IV. How to Apply
V. Air Service Development Zone
VI. Grant Administration
VII. Questions and Clarifications
Appendix A—Additional Information on
Applying Through www.grants.gov
Appendix B—Summary Information
Appendix C—Application Checklist
Appendix D—Confidential Commercial
Information
I. Background
The Small Community Program was
established by the Wendell H. Ford
Aviation Investment and Reform Act for
the 21st Century (Pub. L. 106–181) and
reauthorized by the Vision 100-Century
of Aviation Reauthorization Act (Pub. L.
108–176) and subsequently the FAA
Modernization and Reform Act of 2012
(Pub. L. 112–95) (FAA 2012). The
program is designed to provide financial
assistance to small communities in
order to help them enhance their air
service. The Department provides this
assistance in the form of monetary
grants that are disbursed on a
reimbursable basis. Authorization for
this program is codified at 49 U.S.C.
41743.
The Small Community Program is
authorized to receive appropriations
under 49 U.S.C. 41743(e)(2), as
amended. Appropriations are provided
for this program for award selection in
FY 2015 pursuant to FAA 2012 and the
FY 2015 Appropriations Act (Pub. L.
113–235). The Department has up to
$5.5 million available for FY 2015 grant
awards to carry out this program. There
is no limit on the amount of individual
awards, and the amounts awarded will
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vary depending upon the features and
merits of the selected proposals. In past
years, the Department’s individual grant
sizes have ranged from $20,000 to
nearly $1.6 million.
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A. Eligible Applicants
Eligible applicants are small
communities that meet the following
statutory criteria under 49 U.S.C. 41743:
1. As of calendar year 1997, the
airport serving the community was not
larger than a small hub airport,1 and it
has insufficient air carrier service or
unreasonably high air fares; and
2. The airport serving the community
presents characteristics, such as
geographic diversity or unique
circumstances that demonstrate the
need for, and feasibility of, grant
assistance from the Small Community
Program.
No more than four communities or
consortia of communities, or a
combination thereof, from the same
state may be selected to participate in
the program in any fiscal year. No more
than 40 communities or consortia of
communities, or a combination thereof,
may be selected to participate in the
program in each year for which the
funds are appropriated.
Consortium applications: Both
individual communities and consortia
of communities are eligible for SCASDP
funds. An application from a
consortium of communities must be one
that seeks to facilitate the efforts of the
communities working together toward
one joint grant project, with one joint
objective, including the establishment of
one entity to ensure that the joint
objective is accomplished.
Multiple Applications: A community
may file only one application for a
grant, either individually or as part of a
consortium.
Communities without existing air
service: Communities that do not
currently have commercial air service
are eligible for SCASDP funds.
Essential Air Service communities:
Small communities that meet the basic
SCASDP criteria and currently receive
subsidized air service under the
Essential Air Service (‘‘EAS’’) program
are eligible to apply for SCASDP funds.
However, grant awards to EASsubsidized communities are limited to
marketing or promotion projects that
support existing or newly subsidized
EAS. Grant funds will not be authorized
for EAS-subsidized communities to
support any new competing air service.
1 See, https://www.dot.gov/policy/aviation-policy/
small-community-rural-air-service/SCASDP, for the
FAA’s 1997 list of Primary and Nonprimary
Commercial Service Airports.
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Furthermore, no funds will be
authorized to support additional flights
by EAS carriers or changes to those
carriers’ existing schedules. These
restrictions are necessary to avoid
conflicts with the mandate of the EAS
program.
B. Eligible Projects
The Department is authorized to
award grants under 49 U.S.C. 41743 to
communities that seek to provide
assistance to:
• A U.S. air carrier 2 to subsidize
service to and from an underserved
airport for a period not to exceed 3
years;
• an underserved airport to obtain
service to and from the underserved
airport; and/or
• an underserved airport to
implement such other measures as the
Secretary, in consultation with such
airport, considers appropriate to
improve air service both in terms of the
cost of such service to consumers and
the availability of such service,
including improving air service through
marketing and promotion of air service
and enhanced utilization of airport
facilities.
Applicants should also keep in mind
the following statutory restrictions on
eligible projects:
• An applicant may not receive an
additional grant to support the same
project from a previous grant (see Same
Project Limitation, below); and
• An applicant may not receive an
additional grant, prior to the completion
of its previous grant (see Concurrent
Grant Limitation, below).
Same Project Limitation: Under 49
U.S.C. 41743(c), a community may not
receive an additional grant to support
the same project for which it received a
previous grant (Same Project
Limitation).3 In assessing whether a
previous grantee’s current application
represents a new project, the
Department will compare the goals and
objectives of the previous grant,
including the key components of the
means by which those goals and
objectives were to be achieved, to the
current application. For example, if a
community received an earlier grant to
support a revenue guarantee for service
to a particular destination or direction,
a new application by that community
2 Only U.S. air carriers are eligible to receive
assistance from communities under SCASDP. See
49 U.S.C. 41743(d)(1) and 40102(a)(2).
3 This limitation applies for all projects contained
in a previous grant agreement’s scope; thus, even
if the community did not actively implement a
project listed in the scope of an earlier grant
agreement, it may not receive funding for that
project in a subsequent round of SCASDP funding.
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for another revenue guarantee for
service to the same destination or in the
same direction is ineligible, even if the
revenue guarantee were structured
differently or the type of carrier were
different. However, a new application
by such a previous grantee for service to
a new destination or direction using a
revenue guarantee, or for general
marketing of the airport and the various
services it offers, is eligible. The
Department recognizes that not all
revenue guarantees, marketing
agreements, studies, etc. are of the same
nature, and that if a subsequent
application incorporates different goals
or significantly different components, it
may be sufficiently different to
constitute a new project under 49 U.S.C.
41743(c).
Concurrent Grant Limitation: A
community or consortium may have
only one SCASDP grant at any time. If
a community or consortium applies for
a subsequent SCASDP grant when its
current grant has not yet expired, that
community/consortium must notify the
Department of its intent to terminate the
current SCASDP grant, and, if the
community/consortium is selected for a
new grant, such termination must take
place prior to entering into the new
grant. In addition, for consortium
member applicants, permission must be
granted from both the grant sponsor and
the Department to withdraw from the
current SCASDP grant before that
consortium member will be deemed
eligible to receive a subsequent SCASDP
grant.
Airport Capital Improvements
Ineligible: Airport capital improvement
projects, including, but not limited to,
runway expansions and enhancements,
the construction of additional aircraft
gates, and other airport terminal
expansions and reconfigurations are
ineligible for funding under the Small
Community Program. Airports seeking
funding for airport capital improvement
projects may want to consult with their
local FAA Regional Office to discuss
potential eligibility for grants under the
Airport Improvement Program.
II. Selection Criteria and Guidance on
Application of Selection Criteria
SCASDP grants will be awarded based
on the selection criteria as outlined
below. There are two categories of
selection criteria: Priority Selection
Criteria and Secondary Selection
Criteria. Applications that meet one or
more of the Priority Selection Criteria
will be viewed more favorably than
those that do not meet any Priority
Selection Criteria.
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A. Priority Selection Criteria
The statute directs the Department to
give priority consideration to those
communities or consortia where the
following criteria are met:
1. Air fares are higher than the
national average air fares for all
communities—The Department will
compare the local community’s air fares
to the national average air fares for all
similar markets. Communities with
market air fares significantly higher than
the national average air fares in similar
markets will receive priority
consideration. The Department
calculates these fares using data from
the Bureau of Transportation Statistics
(BTS) Airline Origin and Destination
Survey data. The Department evaluates
all fares in all relevant markets that
serve a SCASDP community and
compares the SCASDP community fares
to all fares in similar markets across the
country. Each SCASDP applicant’s air
fares are computed as a percentage
above or below the national averages.
The report compares a community’s air
fares to the average for all other similar
markets in the country that have similar
density (passenger volume) and similar
distance characteristics (market
groupings). All calculations are based
on 12-month ended periods to control
for seasonal variation of fares.
2. The community or consortium will
provide a portion of the cost of the
activity from local sources other than
airport revenue sources—The
Department will consider whether a
community or consortium proposes
local funding for the proposed project.
Applications providing proportionately
higher levels of cash contributions from
sources other than airport revenues will
be viewed more favorably. Applications
that provide multiple levels of
contributions (state, local, airport, cash
and in-kind contributions) will also be
viewed more favorably. See Additional
Guidance—Cost Sharing and Local
Contributions, in Subsection C below,
for more information on the application
of this selection criterion.
3. The community or consortium has
established or will establish a publicprivate partnership to facilitate air
carrier service to the public—The
Department will consider a
community’s or consortium’s
commitment to facilitate air carrier
service in the form of a public-private
partnership. Applications that describe
in detail how the partnership will
actively participate in the
implementation of the proposed project
will be viewed more favorably.
4. The assistance will provide
material benefits to a broad segment of
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the traveling public, including
businesses, educational institutions,
and other enterprises, whose access to
the national air transportation system is
limited—The Department will consider
whether the proposed project would
provide, to a broad segment of the
community’s traveling public, important
benefits relevant to the community.
Examples include service that would
offer new or additional access to a
connecting hub airport, service that
would provide convenient travel times
for both business and leisure travelers
that would help obviate the need to
drive long distances, and service that
would offer lower fares.
5. The assistance will be used in a
timely manner—The Department will
consider whether a proposed project
provides a well-defined strategic plan
and reasonable timetable for use of the
grant funds. In the Department’s
experience, a reasonable timetable for
use of grant funds includes a year to
complete studies, two years for
marketing and promotion of the airport,
community, carrier, or destination, and
three years for projects that target a
revenue guarantee, subsidy, or other
financial incentives. Applicants should
describe how their projects can be
accomplished within this timetable,
including whether the airport and
proposed air service provider have the
requisite authorities and certifications
necessary to carry out the proposed
projects. In addition, because of this
emphasis placed on timely use of funds,
applicants proposing new service
should describe the airport and whether
it can support the proposed service,
including whether the airport holds, or
intends to apply for, an airport
operating certificate issued under 14
CFR part 139. Air service providers
proposed for the new service must have
met or be able to meet in a reasonably
short period of time, all Department
requirements for air service
certification, including safety and
economic authorities.
6. Multiple communities cooperate to
submit a regional or multistate
application to consolidate air service
into one regional airport—The
Department will consider whether a
proposed project involves a consortium
effort to consolidate air service into one
regional airport. This statutory priority
criterion was added pursuant to Section
429 of the FAA Modernization and
Reform Act of 2012 (Pub. L. 112–95).
B. Secondary Selection Criteria
1. Innovation—The Department will
consider whether an application
proposes new and creative solutions to
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air transportation issues facing the
community, including:
• The extent to which the applicant’s
proposed solution(s) to solving the
problem(s) is new or innovative,
including whether the proposed project
utilizes or encourages intermodal or
regional solutions to connect passengers
to the community’s air service (or, if the
community cannot implement or
sustain its own air services, to connect
to a neighboring community’s air
service (e.g., cost-effective inter/intra
city passenger bus service, or marketing
of intermodal surface transportation
options also available to air travelers;
and
• whether the proposed project, if
successfully implemented, could serve
as a working model for other
communities.
2. Community Participation—The
Department will consider whether an
application has broad community
participation, including:
• Whether the proposed project has
broad community support; and
• the community’s demonstrated
commitment to and participation in the
proposed project.
3. Location—The Department will
consider the location and characteristics
of a community:
• The geographic location of each
applicant, including the community’s
proximity to larger centers of air service
and low-fare service alternatives;
• the population and business
activity, as well as the relative size of
each community; and
• whether the community’s proximity
to an existing or prior grant recipient
could adversely affect either its proposal
or the project undertaken by the other
recipient.
4. Other Factors—The Department
will also consider:
• Whether the proposed project
clearly addresses the applicant’s stated
problems;
• the community’s existing level of
air service and whether that service has
been increasing or decreasing;
• whether the applicant has a plan to
provide any necessary continued
financial support for the proposed
project after the requested grant award
expires;
• the grant amount requested
compared with total funds available for
all communities;
• the proposed federal grant amount
requested compared with the local share
offered;
• any letters of intent from airline
planning departments or intermodal
surface transportation providers on
behalf of applications that are
specifically intended to enlist new or
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expanded air service or surface
transportation service in support of the
air service in the community;
• whether the applicant has plans to
continue with the proposed project if it
is not self-sustaining after the grant
award expires; and
• equitable and geographic
distribution of available funds.
C. Additional Guidance
Market Analysis: Applicants
requesting funds for a revenue
guarantee/subsidy/financial incentive
are encouraged to conduct and reference
in their applications an in-depth
analysis of their target markets. Target
markets can be destination specific (e.g.,
service to LAX), a geographic region
(e.g., northwest mountain region) or
directional (e.g., hub in the southeastern
United States or a point north, south,
east, or west of the applicant
community).
Complementary Marketing
Commitment: Applicants requesting
funds for a revenue guarantee/subsidy/
financial incentive are encouraged to
designate in their applications a portion
of the project funds (federal, local or inkind) for the development and
implementation of a marketing plan in
support of the service sought.
Subsidies for a carrier to compete
against an incumbent: The Department
is reluctant to subsidize one carrier but
not others in a competitive market. For
this reason, a community that proposes
to use the grant funds for service in a
city-pair market that is already served
by another air carrier must explain in
detail why the existing service is
insufficient or unsatisfactory, or provide
other compelling information to support
such a proposal.
Cost Sharing and Local Contributions:
Applications must clearly identify the
level of federal funding sought for the
proposed project. Applications must
also identify the community’s cash
contributions to the proposed project,
in-kind contributions from the airport,
and in-kind contributions from the
community. Non-federal funds will be
applied proportionately to the entire
scope of the project. Communities
cannot use non-federal funds selectively
to fund certain components of a project
(see Section VI—Grant AdministrationPayments for more information). Cash
contributions from airport revenues
must be identified separately from cash
contributions from other community
sources, and cash contributions from the
state and/or local government should be
separately identified and described.
Types of contributions. Contributions
should represent a new financial
commitment or new financial resources
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devoted to attracting new or improved
service, or addressing specific high-fare
or other service issues, such as
improving patronage of existing service
at the airport. For communities that
propose to contribute to the grant
project, that contribution can be in the
following forms:
Cash from non-airport revenues. A
cash contribution can include funds
from the state, the county or local
government, and/or from local
businesses, or other private
organizations in the community.
Because private cash contributions are
to be from local community sources, the
Department will not consider as a part
of these non-airport revenues any funds
that a community might receive from an
air carrier interested in providing
service under that community’s
proposal. Moreover, contributions that
are comprised of intangible non-cash
items, such as the value of donated
advertising, are considered in-kind
contributions (see further discussion
below).
Cash from airport revenues. This
includes contributions from funds
generated by airport operations. Airport
revenues may not be used for revenue
guarantees to airlines, per 49 U.S.C.
47107 and 47133. Applications that
include local contributions based on
airport revenues do not receive priority
consideration for selection.
In-kind contributions from the airport.
This can include such items as waivers
of landing fees, ground handling fees,
terminal rents, fuel fees, and/or vehicle
parking fees.
In-kind contributions from the
community. This can include such
items as donated advertising from media
outlets, catering services for inaugural
events, or in-kind trading, such as
advertising in exchange for free air
travel. Travel banks and travel
commitments/pledges are considered to
be in-kind contributions.
Cash vs. in-kind contributions.
Communities that include local
contributions made in cash will be
viewed more favorably.
III. Evaluation and Selection Process
The Department will first review each
application to determine whether it has
satisfied the following eligibility
requirements:
1. The applicant is an eligible
applicant;
2. The application is for an eligible
project (including compliance with the
Same Project Limitation); and
3. The application is complete
(including submission of a completed
SF424 and all of the information listed
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in Contents of Application, in Section
IV below).
To the extent that the Department
determines that an application does not
satisfy these eligibility requirements, the
Department will deem that application
ineligible and not consider it further.
The Department will then review all
eligible applications based on the
selection criteria outlined above in
Section II. The Department will not
assign specific numerical scores to
projects based on the selection criteria.
Rather, ratings of ‘‘highly
recommended,’’ ‘‘recommended,’’
‘‘acceptable,’’ or ‘‘not recommended’’
will be assigned to applications.
Applications that align well with one or
more of the Priority Selection Criteria
will be viewed more favorably than
those that do not align with any Priority
Selection Criteria. The Department will
consider the Secondary Selection
Criteria when comparing and selecting
among similarly-rated projects.
The Department reserves the right to
award funds for a part of the project
included in an application, if a part of
the project is eligible and aligns well
with the selection criteria specified in
this Order. In addition, as part of its
review of the Secondary Selection
Criterion ‘‘Other Factors,’’ the
Department will consider the
geographical distribution of the
applications to ensure consistency with
the statutory requirement limiting
awards to no more than four
communities or consortia of
communities, or a combination thereof,
from the same state. The final selections
will be limited to no more than 40
communities or consortia of
communities, or a combination thereof.
Grant awards will be made as
promptly as possible so that selected
communities can complete the grant
agreement process and implement their
plans. Given the competitive nature of
the grant process, the Department will
not meet with applicants regarding their
applications. All non-confidential
portions of each application, all
correspondence and ex-parte
communications, and all orders will be
posted in the above-captioned docket on
www.regulations.gov. The Department
will announce its grant selections in a
Selection Order that will be posted in
the above-captioned docket, served on
all applicants and all parties served
with this Solicitation Order, and posted
on the Department’s SCASDP Web site
at https://www.dot.gov/policy/aviationpolicy/small-community-rural-airservice/SCASDP.
IV. How to Apply
Required Steps:
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• Determine eligibility;
• Register with www.grants.gov (see
Registration with www.grants.gov,
below);
• Submit an Application for Federal
Domestic Assistance (SF424);
• Submit a completed ‘‘Summary
Information’’ schedule. This is your
application cover sheet (see Appendix
B);
• Submit a detailed application of up
to one-sided 20 pages (excluding the
completed SF424, Summary
Information schedule, and any letters
from the community or an air carrier
showing support for the application)
that meets all required criteria (see
Appendix C);
• Attach any letters from the
community or an air carrier showing
support for the application to the
proposal, which should be addressed to
Brooke Chapman, Associate Director,
Small Community Air Service
Development Program; and
• Provide separate submission of
confidential material, if requested. (see
Appendix D) An application will not be
complete and will be deemed ineligible
for a grant award until and unless all
required materials, including SF424,
have been submitted through
www.grants.gov and time-stamped by
5:00 p.m. EDT on July 22, 2015 (the
‘‘Application Deadline’’). An
application consisting of more than 20
pages will be accepted by the
Department, but the content in the
additional pages past page 20 will not
be evaluated or considered by the
Department. The Department would
prefer that applicants use one-inch
margins and a font size not less than 12
point type.
Late Application Notice: Applicants
who are unable to successfully submit
their application package through
grants.gov prior to the Application
Deadline due to technical difficulties
outside their control must submit an
email to SCASDPgrants@dot.gov with
the information described in Appendix
A.
Registration with www.grants.gov:
Communities must be registered with
www.grants.gov in order to submit an
application for funds available under
this program. For consortium
applications, only the Legal Sponsor
must be registered with www.grants.gov
in order to submit its application for
funds available under this program. See
Appendix A for additional information
on applying through www.grants.gov.
Contents of Application: There is no
set format that must be used for
applications. Each application should,
to the maximum extent possible,
address the selection criteria set forth in
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Section II, above, including a clear
description of the air service needs/
deficiencies and present plans/strategies
that directly address those needs/
deficiencies. At a minimum, however,
each application must include the
following information:
A description of the community’s air
service needs or deficiencies, including
information about: (1) Major origin/
destination markets that are not now
served or are not served adequately; (2)
fare levels that the community deems
relevant to consideration of its
application, including market analyses
or studies demonstrating an
understanding of local air service needs;
(3) any recent air service developments
that have adversely affected the
community; 4 and (4) any air service
development efforts over the past three
years and the results of those efforts
(including marketing and promotional
efforts).
• A strategic plan for meeting those
needs under the Small Community
Program, including the community’s
specific project goal(s) and detailed plan
for attaining such goal(s). If the
application is selected, DOT will work
with the grantee to incorporate the
relevant elements of the application’s
strategic plan into the grant agreement’s
project scope.5 Applicants should note
that, once a grant agreement is signed,
the agreement cannot be amended in a
way that would alter the project scope.
Applicants also are advised to obtain
firm assurances from air carriers
proposing to offer new air services if a
grant is awarded. Strategic plans should:
Æ For applications involving new or
improved service, explain how the
service will become self-sufficient;
Æ fully and clearly outline the goals
and objectives of the project; and
Æ fully and clearly summarize the
actual, specific steps (in bullet form,
with a proposed timeline) that the
community intends to take to bring
about these goals and objectives.
• A detailed description of the
funding necessary for implementation of
4 For example, if a community has lost service or
been otherwise adversely affected as a result of an
airline merger, the applicant should describe the
situation in detail and quantify, to the extent
possible, its effects on the community.
5 If new service is proposed to or from a specific
city or market served by multiple airports (such as
New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, or Washington,
D.C., for example), the applicant is encouraged to
identify the airport(s) in that city or market the
community would be targeting under its proposal
in order to facilitate the drafting of the grant
agreement’s project scope. Communities should
carefully select, within a specific city or market,
those airports for which it proposes service, as
proposing multiple airports in a city or market
could impact the ability of a community to seek
future grants involving those airports (see Same
Project Limitation, above).
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the proposed project (including federal
and non-federal contributions).
• An explanation of how the
proposed project differs from any
previous projects for which the
community received SCASDP funds (see
Same Project Limitation, above).
• Designation of a legal sponsor
responsible for administering the
proposed project. The legal sponsor of
the proposed project must be a
government entity, such as a state,
county, or municipality. The legal
sponsor must be legally, financially, and
otherwise able to execute the grant
agreement and administer the grant,
including having the authority to sign
the grant agreement and to assume and
carry out the certifications,
representations, warranties, assurances,
covenants and other obligations
required under the grant agreement with
the Department and to ensure
compliance by the grant recipient with
the grant agreement and grant
assurances. If the applicant is a publicprivate partnership, a public
government member of the organization
must be identified as the community’s
sponsor to receive project cost
reimbursements. A community may
designate only one government entity as
the legal sponsor, even if it is applying
as a consortium that consists of two or
more local government entities. Private
organizations may not be designated as
the legal sponsor of a grant under the
Small Community Program. The
community has the responsibility to
ensure that the legal sponsor and grant
recipient of any funding has the legal
authority under state and local laws to
carry out all aspects of the grant, and the
Department may require an opinion of
the legal sponsor’s attorney as to its
legal authority to act as a sponsor and
to carry out its responsibilities under
the grant agreement. The applicant
should also provide the name of the
signatory party for the legal sponsor.
V. Air Service Development Zone
Designation
As part of the Small Community
Program, the Department may also
designate one grant recipient as an ‘‘Air
Service Development Zone’’ (ASDZ).6
The purpose of the designation is to
provide communities interested in
attracting business to the area
surrounding the airport and/or
developing land-use options for the area
to work with the Department on means
to achieve those goals. The Department
will assist the designated community in
establishing contacts with and obtaining
advice and assistance from appropriate
6 See
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government agencies, including the
Department of Commerce and other
offices within the Department of
Transportation, and in identifying other
pertinent resources that may aid the
community in its efforts to attract
businesses and to formulate land-use
options. However, the community
receiving this designation will be
responsible for developing,
implementing, and managing activities
related to the air service development
zone initiative. Only communities that
are interested in these objectives and
have a plan to accomplish them should
apply for this designation. There are no
additional funds associated with this
designation, and applying for this
designation will provide no special
benefits or priority to the community
applying for a SCASDP grant.
Only one SCASDP grant recipient
may hold an ASDZ designation at any
one time. At present, an existing
SCASDP grant recipient, Casper, WY, is
active as ASDZ designee, with a grant
award set to expire on September 30,
2015. Upon expiration of this
community’s grant award, the ASDZ
designation will become available for a
new grant recipient, and the Department
is therefore soliciting a new ASDZ
designee in this proceeding.
Grant applicants interested in
selection for the Air Service
Development Zone designation must
include in their applications a separate
section, titled, Support for Air Service
Development Zone Designation. The
community should provide as detailed a
plan as possible, including what goals it
expects to achieve from the air service
development zone designation and the
types of activities on which it would
like to work with the Department in
achieving those goals. The community
should also indicate whether further
local government approvals are required
in order to implement the proposed
activities.
communities receiving a grant will be
required to accept and meet the
obligations created by these assurances
when they execute their grant
agreements. Copies of assurances are
available online at https://www.dot.gov/
policy/aviation-policy/smallcommunity-rural-air-service/SCASDP,
(click on ‘‘SCASDP Grant Assurances’’).
Payments: The Small Community
Program is a reimbursable program;
therefore, communities are required to
make expenditures for project
implementation under the program
prior to seeking reimbursement from the
Department. Project implementation
costs are reimbursable from grant funds
only for services or property delivered
during the grant term. Reimbursement
rates are calculated as a percentage of
the total federal funds requested divided
by the federal funds plus the local cash
contribution (which is not refundable).
The percentage is determined by:
(SCASDP Grant Amount) ÷ (SCASDP
Grant Amount + Local Cash
Contribution + State Cash Contribution,
if applicable). Payments/expenditures in
forms other than cash (e.g., in-kind) are
not reimbursable. For example, if a
community requests $500,000 in federal
funding and provides $100,000 in local
contributions, the reimbursement rate
would be 83.33 percent: ((500,000)/
(500,000 + 100,000)) = 83.33.
Grantee Reports: Each grantee must
submit quarterly reports on the progress
made during the previous quarter in
implementing its grant project. In
addition, each community will be
required to submit a final report on its
project to the Department, and 10
percent of the grant funds will not be
reimbursed to the community until such
a final report is received. Additional
information on award administration for
selected communities will be provided
in the grant agreement.
VI. Grant Administration
Grant Agreements: Communities
awarded grants are required to execute
a grant agreement with the Department
before they begin to expend funds under
the grant award. Applicants should not
assume they have received a grant, nor
should they obligate or expend local
funds prior to receiving and fully
executing a grant agreement with the
Department. Expenditures made prior to
the execution of a grant agreement,
including costs associated with
preparation of the grant application,
will not be reimbursed. Moreover, there
are numerous assurances that grant
recipients must sign and honor when
federal funds are awarded. All
For further information concerning
the technical requirements set out in
this Order, please contact Brooke
Chapman at Brooke.Chapman@dot.gov
or (202) 366–0577. A TDD is available
for individuals who are deaf or hard of
hearing at (202) 366–3993. The
Department may post answers to
questions and other important
clarifications in the above-captioned
docket on www.regulations.gov and on
the program Web site at https://
www.dot.gov/policy/aviation-policy/
small-community-rural-air-service/
SCASDP.
This Order is issued under authority
delegated in 49 CFR 1.25a(b).
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VII. Questions and Clarifications
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An electronic version of this
document is available online at
www.regulations.gov.
APPENDIX A
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON
APPLYING THROUGH
WWW.GRANTS.GOV
Applications must be submitted
electronically through https://
www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/
apply-for-grants.html. To apply for funding
through www.grants.gov, applicants must be
properly registered. The Grants.gov/Apply
feature includes a simple, unified application
process that makes it possible for applicants
to apply for grants online. There are five ‘‘Get
Registered’’ steps for an organization to
complete at Grants.gov. Complete
instructions on how to register and apply can
be found at https://www.grants.gov/web/
grants/applicants/organizationregistration.html If applicants experience
difficulties at any point during registration or
application process, please call the
www.grants.gov Customer Support Hotline at
1–800–518–4726, Monday–Friday from 7:00
a.m. to 9:00 p.m. EDT.
Registering with www.grants.gov is a onetime process; however, processing delays
may occur and it can take up to several
weeks for first-time registrants to receive
confirmation and a user password. It is
highly recommended that applicants start the
registration process as early as possible to
prevent delays that may preclude submitting
an application by the deadlines specified.
Applications must be submitted and timestamped not later than 5:00 p.m. EDT on July
22, 2015 (the Application Deadline), and, as
set forth below, failure to complete the
registration process before the Application
Deadline is not a valid reason to permit late
submissions.
In order to apply for SCASDP funding
through https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/
applicants/apply-for-grants.html, all
applicants are required to complete the
following:
1. DUNS Requirement. The Office of
Management and Budget requires that all
businesses and nonprofit applicants for
federal funds include a Dun and Bradstreet
Data Universal Numbering System (DUNS)
number in their applications for a new award
or renewal of an existing award. A DUNS
number is a unique nine-digit sequence
recognized as the universal standard for
identifying and keeping track of entities
receiving federal funds. The identifier is used
for tracking purposes and to validate address
and point of contact information for federal
assistance applicants, recipients, and subrecipients. The DUNS number will be used
throughout the grant life cycle. The DUNS
number must be included in the data entry
field labeled ‘‘Organizational DUNS’’ on the
SF–424 form. Instructions for obtaining
DUNS number can be found at the following
Web site: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/
applicants/organization-registration/step-1obtain-duns-number.html.
2. System for Award Management. In
addition to having a DUNS number,
applicants applying electronically through
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Grants.gov must register with the federal
System for Award Management (SAM). Stepby-step instructions for registering with SAM
can be found here: https://www.grants.gov/
web/grants/applicants/organizationregistration/step-2-register-with-sam.html.
All applicants must register with SAM in
order to apply online. Failure to register with
the SAM will result in your application being
rejected by Grants.gov during the
submissions process.
3. Username and Password. Acquire an
Authorized Organization Representative
(AOR) and a www.grants.gov username and
password. Complete your AOR profile on
www.grants.gov and create your username
and password. You will need to use your
organization’s DUNS Number to complete
this step. For more information about
creating a profile on Grants.gov visit:
https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/
applicants/organization-registration/step-3username-password.html.
4. After creating a profile on Grants.gov,
the E-Biz Point of Contact (E-Biz POC)—a
representative from your organization who is
the contact listed for SAM—will receive an
email to grant the AOR permission to submit
applications on behalf of their organization.
The E-Biz POC will then log in to Grants.gov
and approve an applicant as the AOR,
thereby giving him or her permission to
submit applications. To learn more about
AOR Authorization visit: https://
www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/
organization-registration/step-4-aorauthorization.html. To track an AOR status
visit: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/
applicants/organization-registration/step-5track-aor-status.html.
Applicants are, therefore, encouraged to
register early. The registration process can
take up to four weeks to be completed. Thus,
registration should be done in sufficient time
to ensure it does not impact your ability to
meet required submission deadlines. You
will be able to submit your application
online any time after you have approved as
an AOR.
5. Electronic Signature. Applications
submitted through Grants.gov constitute a
submission as electronically signed
applications. The registration and account
creation with Grants.gov with E-Biz POC
approval establishes an Authorized
Organization Representative (AOR). When
you submit the application through
Grants.gov, the name of your AOR on file
will be inserted into the signature line of the
application. Applicants must register the
individual who is able to make legally
binding commitments for the applicant
organization as the Authorized Organization
Representative (AOR);
6. Search for the Funding Opportunity on
www.grants.gov. Please use the following
identifying information when searching for
the SCASDP funding opportunity on
www.grants.gov. The Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance (CFDA) number for this
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solicitation is 20.930, titled Payments for
Small Community Air Service Development.
7. Submit an application addressing all of
the requirements outlined in this funding
availability announcement. Within 24–48
hours after submitting your electronic
application, you should receive an email
validation message from www.grants.gov. The
validation message will tell you whether the
application has been received and validated
or rejected, with an explanation. You are
urged to submit your application at least 72
hours prior to the due date of the application
to allow time to receive the validation
message and to correct any problems that
may have caused a rejection notification.
8. Timely Receipt Requirements and Proof
of Timely Submission. Proof of timely
submission is automatically recorded by
Grants.gov. An electronic timestamp is
generated within the system when the
application is successfully received by
Grants.gov. The applicant will receive an
acknowledgement of receipt and a tracking
number from Grants.gov with successful
transmission of the application. Applicants
should print this receipt and save it, as a
proof of timely submission.
9. Grants.gov allows applicants to
download the application package,
instructions and forms that are incorporated
in the instructions, and work offline. In
addition to forms that are part of the
application instructions, there will be a series
of electronic forms that are provided utilizing
Adobe Reader.
a. Adobe Reader. Adobe Reader is available
for free to download from on the Download
Software page: https://www.grants.gov/web/
grants/support/technical-support/
recommended-software.html. Adobe Reader
allows applicants to read the electronic files
in a form format so that they will look like
any other Standard form. The Adobe Reader
forms have content sensitive help. This
engages the content sensitive help for each
field you will need to complete on the form.
The Adobe Reader forms can be downloaded
and saved on your hard drive, network
drive(s), or CDs.
b. NOTE: For the Adobe Reader, Grants.gov
is compatible with versions 9.0.0 and later
versions. Always refer to the Download
Software page for compatible versions for the
operating system you are using. Please do not
use lower versions of the Adobe Reader.7
c. Mandatory Fields in Adobe Forms. In
the Adobe Reader forms, you will note fields
that will appear with a background color on
the data fields to be completed. These fields
are mandatory fields and they must be
completed to successfully submit your
application.
7 Grants.gov recommends using Adobe Reader
versions 10.1.4 and 11.0.11 for Mac OS and
Windows. See https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/
support/technical-support/recommendedsoftware.html.
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NOTE: When uploading attachments
please use generally accepted formats such as
.pdf, .doc, and .xls. While you may imbed
picture files such as .jpg, .gif, .bmp, in your
files, please do not save and submit the
attachment in these formats. Additionally,
the following formats will not be accepted:
.com, .bat, .exe, .vbs, .cfg, .dat, .db, .dbf, .dll,
.ini, .log, .ora, .sys, and .zip.
Experiencing Unforeseen www.grants.gov
Technical Issues
Late Application Notice: Applicants who
are unable to successfully submit their
application package through grants.gov prior
to the Application Deadline due to technical
difficulties outside their control must submit
an email to SCASDPgrants@dot.gov with the
following information:
• The nature of the technical difficulties
experienced in attempting to submit an
application;
• A screenshot of the error;
• The Legal Sponsor’s name; and
• The Grants.Gov tracking number (e.g.
GRANT12345678).
DOT will consider late applications on a
case-by-case basis and reserves the right to
reject late applications that do not meet the
conditions outlined in the Order Soliciting
Small Community Grant Proposals. Late
applications from applicants that do not
provide DOT an email with the items
specified above will not be considered.
If you experience unforeseen
www.grants.gov technical issues beyond your
control that prevent you from submitting
your application by the Application
Deadline, you must contact us at
[SCASDPgrants@dot.gov or] Vince.Corsaro@
dot.gov or (202) 366–1842 by 5:00 p.m. EDT
the day following the deadline and request
approval to submit your application after the
deadline has passed. At that time, DOT staff
will require you to provide your DUNS
number and your www.grants.gov Help Desk
tracking number(s). After DOT staff review
all of the information submitted and contact
the www.grants.gov Help Desk to validate the
technical issues you reported, DOT staff will
contact you to either approve or deny your
request to submit a late application through
www.grants.gov. If the technical issues you
reported cannot be validated, your
application will be rejected as untimely.
To ensure a fair competition for limited
discretionary funds, the following conditions
are not valid reasons to permit late
submissions: (1) Failure to complete the
registration process before the deadline date;
(2) failure to follow www.grants.gov
instructions on how to register and apply as
posted on its Web site; (3) failure to follow
all of the instructions in the funding
availability notice; and (4) technical issues
experienced with the applicant’s computer or
information technology (IT) environment.
Appendix B
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APPLICATION UNDER
SMALL COMMUNITY AIR SERVICE DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
DOCKET DOT -OST-2015-0126
SUMMARY INFORMATION~
All applicants must submit this Summary Information schedule, as the application
coversheet, a completed standard form SF424 and the full application proposal on
For your preparation convenience, this Summary Information schedule is located at
A. PROVIDE THE LEGAL SPONSOR AND ITS DUN AND BRADSTREET (D&B) DATA UNIVERSAL
NUMBERING SYSTEM (DUNS) NUMBER, INCLUDING +4, EMPLOYEE IDENTIFICATION NUMBER
(EIN) OR TAX ID.
Legal Sponsor Name:
Name of Signatory Party for Legal Sponsor:
DUNS Number:
EIN/Tax ID:
B. LIST THE NAME OF THE COMMUNITY OR CONSORTIUM OF COMMUNITIES APPLYING:
1.______________________________________________
2. ______________________________________________
3._______________________________________________
4. _______________________________________________
C. PROVIDE THE FULL AIRPORT NAME AND 3-LETTER lATA AIRPORT CODE FOR THE
APPLICANT(S) AIRPORT(S) (ONLY PROVIDE CODES FOR THE AIRPORT(S) THAT ARE ACTUALLY
SEEKING SERVICE).
2.
3.
4.
8 Note that the Summary Information does not count against the 20-page limit of the SCASDP application.
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1.
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35729
DOES THE AIRPORT SEEKING SERVICE HOLD AN AIRPORT OPERATING CERTIFICATE ISSUED BY
THE FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION UNDER 14 CFRPART 139? (IF"No", PLEASE
EXPLAIN WHETHER THE AIRPORT INTENDS TO APPLY FOR A CERTIFICATE OR WHETHER AN
APPLICATION UNDERPART 139 IS PENDING.)
D Yes
D
No (explain)
D. SHOW THE DRIVING DISTANCE FROM THE APPLICANT COMMUNITY TO THE NEAREST:
1. Large hub airport: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
2. Medium hub airport: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
3. Small hub airport: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
4. Airport with jet service: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Note: Provide the airport name and distance, in miles, for each category.
E. LIST THE 2-DIGIT CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT CODE APPLICABLE TO THE SPONSORING
ORGANIZATION, AND IF A CONSORTIUM, TO EACH PARTICIPATING COMMUNITY.
1.
2.
3.
4.
F. APPLICANT INFORMATION: (CHECKALL THAT APPLY)
D Interstate Consortium
D Intrastate Consortium
D
Not a Consortium
D
Community currently receives subsidized Essential Air Service
D
Community (or Consortium member) previously received a Small Community Air
Service Development Program Grant
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If previous recipient: Provide year of grant(s):
· and,
the text of the grant agreement section(s) setting forth the scope of the grant project:
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G. PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS: (LIST ORGANIZATION NAMES)
PUBLIC
PRIVATE
1.
1.
2.
2.
3.
3.
4.
4.
5.
5.
H. PROJECT PROPOSAL:
la. GRANT GOALS: (CHECK ALL THAT APPLY)
Secure Additional Service
0
First Service
D
D
New Route
D Service Restoration
D
Regional Service
D
Surface Transportation
D Professional Services 9
D
Other (explain below)
D
D
Launch New Carrier
Upgrade Aircraft
lb. GRANT GOALS: (SYNOPSIS)
Concisely describe the scope of the proposed grant project. (For example, "Revenue guarantee
to recruit, initiate, and support new daily service between ___ and ___;" or "Marketing
program to support existing service between _ _ and _ _ by _ _ Airlines.")
2. FINANCIAL TOOLS TO BE USED: (CHECK ALL THAT APPLY)
D
D
Marketing (including Advertising): promotion of the air service to the public
Start-up Cost Offset: offsetting expenses to assist an air service provider in setting up a
9 "Professional Services" involve a connnunity contracting with a firm to produce a product such as a marketing
plan, study, air carrier proposal, etc.
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new station and starting new service (for example, ticket counter reconfiguration)
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D
35731
Revenue Guarantee: an agreement with an air service provider setting forth a minimum
guaranteed profit margin, a portion of which is eligible for reimbursement by the
community
D
Recruitment of U.S. Air Carrier: air service development activities to recruit new air
service, including expenses for airport marketers to meet with air service providers to make
the case for new air service
D
Fee Waivers: waiver of airport fees, such as landing fees, to encourage new air service;
counted as in-kind contributions only
D
Ground Handling Fee: reimbursement of expenses for passenger, cabin, and ramp (below
wing) services provided by third party ground handlers
D
Travel Bank: travel pledges, or deposited monetary funds, from participating parties for
the purchase of air travel on a U.S. air carrier, with defined procedures for the subsequent
use of the pledges or the deposited funds; counted as in-kind contributions only
D
I.
Other (explain below)
EXISTING LANDING AIDS AT LOCAL AIRPORT:
D
Full ILS
D Outer/Middle Marker D
D
Localizer
D Other (specify)
J.
Published Instrument Approach
PROJECT COST: Do NOT ENTER TEXT IN SHADED AREA
REMINDER: LOCAL CASH CONTRIBUTIONS MAY NOT BE PROVIDED BY AN AIR CARRIER (SEE "TYPES
OF CONTRIBUTIONS FOR REFERENCE).
LINE
DESCRIPTION
SUBTOTAL
1
Federal amount requested
2
TOTAL AMOUNT
State cash financial contribution
Local cash financial contribution
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Non-airport cash funds
Total local cash funds (3a + 3b)
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3a
35732
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 119 / Monday, June 22, 2015 / Notices
4
TOTAL CASH FUNDING (1+2+3)
In-Kind contribution
5a
5b
5
Airport In-Kind contribution**
Other In-Kind contribution**
TOTAL IN-KIND CONTRIBUTION
(5a + 5b)
6
TOTAL PROJECT COST (4+5)
K. IN-KIND CONTRIBUTIONS**
For funds in lines Sa (Airport In-Kind contribution) and 5b (Other In-Kind contribution), please
describe the source(s) offund(s) and the value($) of each.
L. IS THIS APPLICATION SURJECT To REVIEW BY AN AFFECTED STATE UNDER EXECUTIVE
ORDER 12372 PROCESS?
D
a. This application was made available to the State under the Executive Order 12372
Process for review on (date) _ _ _ _ __
D
b. Program is subject to E.O. 12372, but has not been selected by the State for review.
D
c. Program is not covered by E.O. 12372.
M. IS THE LEAD APPLICANT OR ANY Co-APPLICANTS DELINQUENT ON ANY FEDERAL DEBT?
(IF "YES", PROVIDE EXPLANATION)
D No
D
Yes (explain)
APPENDIXC
I
INCLUDED?
I ITEM
For Immediate Action
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APPLICATION CHECKLIST
Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 119 / Monday, June 22, 2015 / Notices
Confidential Commercial Information
Applicants will be able to provide certain
confidential business information relevant to
their proposals on a confidential basis. Under
the Department’s Freedom of Information Act
regulations (49 CFR 7.17), such information
is limited to commercial or financial
information that, if disclosed, would either
likely cause substantial harm to the
competitive position of a business or
enterprise or make it more difficult for the
Federal Government to obtain similar
information in the future.
Applicants seeking confidential treatment
of a portion of their applications must
segregate the confidential material in a sealed
envelope marked ‘‘Confidential Submission
of X (the applicant) in Docket DOT–OST–
2015–0126’’ and include with that material a
request in the form of a motion seeking
confidential treatment of the material under
14 CFR 302.12 (‘‘Rule 12’’) of the
Department’s regulations. The applicant
should submit an original and two copies of
its motion and an original and two copies of
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the confidential material in the sealed
envelope.
The confidential material should not be
included with the original of the applicant’s
proposal that is submitted via
www.grants.gov. The applicant’s original
submission, however, should indicate clearly
where the confidential material would have
been inserted. If an applicant invokes Rule
12, the confidential portion of its filing will
be treated as confidential pending a final
determination. All confidential material must
be received by 5:00 p.m. EDT, July 22, 2015,
and delivered to the U.S. Department of
Transportation, Office of Aviation Analysis,
8th Floor, Room W86–307, 1200 New Jersey
Ave. SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Accordingly,
1. Applications for funding under the
Small Community Air Service Development
Program should be submitted via
www.grants.gov as an attachment to the
SF424 by 5:00 p.m. EDT, July 22, 2015; and
2. This Order will be published in the
Federal Register, posted on www.grants.gov
and www.regulations.gov, and served on the
United States Conference of Mayors, the
PO 00000
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National League of Cities, the National
Governors Association, the National
Association of State Aviation Officials,
County Executives of America, the American
Association of Airport Executives, and the
Airports Council International—North
America.
Issued in Washington, DC, on June 18,
2015.
Brandon Belford,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Aviation and
International Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2015–15393 Filed 6–19–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P
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Appendix D
35733
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 119 (Monday, June 22, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 35721-35733]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-15393]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary of Transportation
[Docket No. DOT-OST-2015-0126]
Notice of Order Soliciting Community Proposals
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of order soliciting community proposals (Order 2015-6-
18).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Department of Transportation is soliciting proposals from
communities or consortia of communities interested in receiving grants
under the Small Community Air Service Development Program. The full
text of the Department's order, including Appendices, is included in
this Notice. As noted in the order, an application for a grant under
this program must include a Grant Proposal of no more than 20 pages
(one-sided only), a completed Application for Federal Domestic
Assistance (SF424), a Summary Information Schedule, and any letters
from the applicant community showing support.
DATES: Applications must be submitted no later than July 22, 2015.
ADDRESSES: Communities must submit applications electronically through
https://www.grants.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brooke Chapman, Associate Director,
Small Community Air Service Development Program, Office of Aviation
Analysis, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., W86-307, Washington, DC 20590,
(202) 366 0577.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: By this order, the Department of
Transportation (the Department or DOT) invites proposals from
communities and/or consortia of communities interested in obtaining a
federal grant under the Small Community Air Service Development Program
(``Small Community Program'' or ``SCASDP'') to address air service and
airfare issues in their communities. Applications of no more than 20
one-sided pages each (excluding the completed Application for Federal
Domestic Assistance (SF424), Summary Information schedule, and any
letters from the community or an air carrier showing support for the
application), including all required information, must be submitted to
www.grants.gov no later than 5:00 p.m. EDT on July 22, 2015. You are
strongly encouraged to submit applications in advance of the deadline.
Please be aware that you must complete the registration process before
submitting an application, and that this process usually takes two to
four weeks to complete. If interested parties experience difficulties
at any point during the registration or application process, please
call the grants.gov Customer Support Hotline at 1-800-518-4726, Monday-
Friday, from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. EDT. The Department will not accept
late-filed applications. Additional information on applying through
grants.gov is in Appendix A, including a notice regarding late
submissions related to technical difficulties. This order is organized
into the following sections:
I. Background
II. Selection Criteria and Guidance on Application of Selection
Criteria
III. Evaluation and Selection Process
IV. How to Apply
V. Air Service Development Zone
VI. Grant Administration
VII. Questions and Clarifications
Appendix A--Additional Information on Applying Through
www.grants.gov
Appendix B--Summary Information
Appendix C--Application Checklist
Appendix D--Confidential Commercial Information
I. Background
The Small Community Program was established by the Wendell H. Ford
Aviation Investment and Reform Act for the 21st Century (Pub. L. 106-
181) and reauthorized by the Vision 100-Century of Aviation
Reauthorization Act (Pub. L. 108-176) and subsequently the FAA
Modernization and Reform Act of 2012 (Pub. L. 112-95) (FAA 2012). The
program is designed to provide financial assistance to small
communities in order to help them enhance their air service. The
Department provides this assistance in the form of monetary grants that
are disbursed on a reimbursable basis. Authorization for this program
is codified at 49 U.S.C. 41743.
The Small Community Program is authorized to receive appropriations
under 49 U.S.C. 41743(e)(2), as amended. Appropriations are provided
for this program for award selection in FY 2015 pursuant to FAA 2012
and the FY 2015 Appropriations Act (Pub. L. 113-235). The Department
has up to $5.5 million available for FY 2015 grant awards to carry out
this program. There is no limit on the amount of individual awards, and
the amounts awarded will
[[Page 35722]]
vary depending upon the features and merits of the selected proposals.
In past years, the Department's individual grant sizes have ranged from
$20,000 to nearly $1.6 million.
A. Eligible Applicants
Eligible applicants are small communities that meet the following
statutory criteria under 49 U.S.C. 41743:
1. As of calendar year 1997, the airport serving the community was
not larger than a small hub airport,\1\ and it has insufficient air
carrier service or unreasonably high air fares; and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See, https://www.dot.gov/policy/aviation-policy/small-community-rural-air-service/SCASDP, for the FAA's 1997 list of
Primary and Nonprimary Commercial Service Airports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. The airport serving the community presents characteristics, such
as geographic diversity or unique circumstances that demonstrate the
need for, and feasibility of, grant assistance from the Small Community
Program.
No more than four communities or consortia of communities, or a
combination thereof, from the same state may be selected to participate
in the program in any fiscal year. No more than 40 communities or
consortia of communities, or a combination thereof, may be selected to
participate in the program in each year for which the funds are
appropriated.
Consortium applications: Both individual communities and consortia
of communities are eligible for SCASDP funds. An application from a
consortium of communities must be one that seeks to facilitate the
efforts of the communities working together toward one joint grant
project, with one joint objective, including the establishment of one
entity to ensure that the joint objective is accomplished.
Multiple Applications: A community may file only one application
for a grant, either individually or as part of a consortium.
Communities without existing air service: Communities that do not
currently have commercial air service are eligible for SCASDP funds.
Essential Air Service communities: Small communities that meet the
basic SCASDP criteria and currently receive subsidized air service
under the Essential Air Service (``EAS'') program are eligible to apply
for SCASDP funds. However, grant awards to EAS-subsidized communities
are limited to marketing or promotion projects that support existing or
newly subsidized EAS. Grant funds will not be authorized for EAS-
subsidized communities to support any new competing air service.
Furthermore, no funds will be authorized to support additional flights
by EAS carriers or changes to those carriers' existing schedules. These
restrictions are necessary to avoid conflicts with the mandate of the
EAS program.
B. Eligible Projects
The Department is authorized to award grants under 49 U.S.C. 41743
to communities that seek to provide assistance to:
A U.S. air carrier \2\ to subsidize service to and from an
underserved airport for a period not to exceed 3 years;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Only U.S. air carriers are eligible to receive assistance
from communities under SCASDP. See 49 U.S.C. 41743(d)(1) and
40102(a)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
an underserved airport to obtain service to and from the
underserved airport; and/or
an underserved airport to implement such other measures as
the Secretary, in consultation with such airport, considers appropriate
to improve air service both in terms of the cost of such service to
consumers and the availability of such service, including improving air
service through marketing and promotion of air service and enhanced
utilization of airport facilities.
Applicants should also keep in mind the following statutory
restrictions on eligible projects:
An applicant may not receive an additional grant to
support the same project from a previous grant (see Same Project
Limitation, below); and
An applicant may not receive an additional grant, prior to
the completion of its previous grant (see Concurrent Grant Limitation,
below).
Same Project Limitation: Under 49 U.S.C. 41743(c), a community may
not receive an additional grant to support the same project for which
it received a previous grant (Same Project Limitation).\3\ In assessing
whether a previous grantee's current application represents a new
project, the Department will compare the goals and objectives of the
previous grant, including the key components of the means by which
those goals and objectives were to be achieved, to the current
application. For example, if a community received an earlier grant to
support a revenue guarantee for service to a particular destination or
direction, a new application by that community for another revenue
guarantee for service to the same destination or in the same direction
is ineligible, even if the revenue guarantee were structured
differently or the type of carrier were different. However, a new
application by such a previous grantee for service to a new destination
or direction using a revenue guarantee, or for general marketing of the
airport and the various services it offers, is eligible. The Department
recognizes that not all revenue guarantees, marketing agreements,
studies, etc. are of the same nature, and that if a subsequent
application incorporates different goals or significantly different
components, it may be sufficiently different to constitute a new
project under 49 U.S.C. 41743(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ This limitation applies for all projects contained in a
previous grant agreement's scope; thus, even if the community did
not actively implement a project listed in the scope of an earlier
grant agreement, it may not receive funding for that project in a
subsequent round of SCASDP funding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Concurrent Grant Limitation: A community or consortium may have
only one SCASDP grant at any time. If a community or consortium applies
for a subsequent SCASDP grant when its current grant has not yet
expired, that community/consortium must notify the Department of its
intent to terminate the current SCASDP grant, and, if the community/
consortium is selected for a new grant, such termination must take
place prior to entering into the new grant. In addition, for consortium
member applicants, permission must be granted from both the grant
sponsor and the Department to withdraw from the current SCASDP grant
before that consortium member will be deemed eligible to receive a
subsequent SCASDP grant.
Airport Capital Improvements Ineligible: Airport capital
improvement projects, including, but not limited to, runway expansions
and enhancements, the construction of additional aircraft gates, and
other airport terminal expansions and reconfigurations are ineligible
for funding under the Small Community Program. Airports seeking funding
for airport capital improvement projects may want to consult with their
local FAA Regional Office to discuss potential eligibility for grants
under the Airport Improvement Program.
II. Selection Criteria and Guidance on Application of Selection
Criteria
SCASDP grants will be awarded based on the selection criteria as
outlined below. There are two categories of selection criteria:
Priority Selection Criteria and Secondary Selection Criteria.
Applications that meet one or more of the Priority Selection Criteria
will be viewed more favorably than those that do not meet any Priority
Selection Criteria.
[[Page 35723]]
A. Priority Selection Criteria
The statute directs the Department to give priority consideration
to those communities or consortia where the following criteria are met:
1. Air fares are higher than the national average air fares for all
communities--The Department will compare the local community's air
fares to the national average air fares for all similar markets.
Communities with market air fares significantly higher than the
national average air fares in similar markets will receive priority
consideration. The Department calculates these fares using data from
the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) Airline Origin and
Destination Survey data. The Department evaluates all fares in all
relevant markets that serve a SCASDP community and compares the SCASDP
community fares to all fares in similar markets across the country.
Each SCASDP applicant's air fares are computed as a percentage above or
below the national averages. The report compares a community's air
fares to the average for all other similar markets in the country that
have similar density (passenger volume) and similar distance
characteristics (market groupings). All calculations are based on 12-
month ended periods to control for seasonal variation of fares.
2. The community or consortium will provide a portion of the cost
of the activity from local sources other than airport revenue sources--
The Department will consider whether a community or consortium proposes
local funding for the proposed project. Applications providing
proportionately higher levels of cash contributions from sources other
than airport revenues will be viewed more favorably. Applications that
provide multiple levels of contributions (state, local, airport, cash
and in-kind contributions) will also be viewed more favorably. See
Additional Guidance--Cost Sharing and Local Contributions, in
Subsection C below, for more information on the application of this
selection criterion.
3. The community or consortium has established or will establish a
public-private partnership to facilitate air carrier service to the
public--The Department will consider a community's or consortium's
commitment to facilitate air carrier service in the form of a public-
private partnership. Applications that describe in detail how the
partnership will actively participate in the implementation of the
proposed project will be viewed more favorably.
4. The assistance will provide material benefits to a broad segment
of the traveling public, including businesses, educational
institutions, and other enterprises, whose access to the national air
transportation system is limited--The Department will consider whether
the proposed project would provide, to a broad segment of the
community's traveling public, important benefits relevant to the
community. Examples include service that would offer new or additional
access to a connecting hub airport, service that would provide
convenient travel times for both business and leisure travelers that
would help obviate the need to drive long distances, and service that
would offer lower fares.
5. The assistance will be used in a timely manner--The Department
will consider whether a proposed project provides a well-defined
strategic plan and reasonable timetable for use of the grant funds. In
the Department's experience, a reasonable timetable for use of grant
funds includes a year to complete studies, two years for marketing and
promotion of the airport, community, carrier, or destination, and three
years for projects that target a revenue guarantee, subsidy, or other
financial incentives. Applicants should describe how their projects can
be accomplished within this timetable, including whether the airport
and proposed air service provider have the requisite authorities and
certifications necessary to carry out the proposed projects. In
addition, because of this emphasis placed on timely use of funds,
applicants proposing new service should describe the airport and
whether it can support the proposed service, including whether the
airport holds, or intends to apply for, an airport operating
certificate issued under 14 CFR part 139. Air service providers
proposed for the new service must have met or be able to meet in a
reasonably short period of time, all Department requirements for air
service certification, including safety and economic authorities.
6. Multiple communities cooperate to submit a regional or
multistate application to consolidate air service into one regional
airport--The Department will consider whether a proposed project
involves a consortium effort to consolidate air service into one
regional airport. This statutory priority criterion was added pursuant
to Section 429 of the FAA Modernization and Reform Act of 2012 (Pub. L.
112-95).
B. Secondary Selection Criteria
1. Innovation--The Department will consider whether an application
proposes new and creative solutions to air transportation issues facing
the community, including:
The extent to which the applicant's proposed solution(s)
to solving the problem(s) is new or innovative, including whether the
proposed project utilizes or encourages intermodal or regional
solutions to connect passengers to the community's air service (or, if
the community cannot implement or sustain its own air services, to
connect to a neighboring community's air service (e.g., cost-effective
inter/intra city passenger bus service, or marketing of intermodal
surface transportation options also available to air travelers; and
whether the proposed project, if successfully implemented,
could serve as a working model for other communities.
2. Community Participation--The Department will consider whether an
application has broad community participation, including:
Whether the proposed project has broad community support;
and
the community's demonstrated commitment to and
participation in the proposed project.
3. Location--The Department will consider the location and
characteristics of a community:
The geographic location of each applicant, including the
community's proximity to larger centers of air service and low-fare
service alternatives;
the population and business activity, as well as the
relative size of each community; and
whether the community's proximity to an existing or prior
grant recipient could adversely affect either its proposal or the
project undertaken by the other recipient.
4. Other Factors--The Department will also consider:
Whether the proposed project clearly addresses the
applicant's stated problems;
the community's existing level of air service and whether
that service has been increasing or decreasing;
whether the applicant has a plan to provide any necessary
continued financial support for the proposed project after the
requested grant award expires;
the grant amount requested compared with total funds
available for all communities;
the proposed federal grant amount requested compared with
the local share offered;
any letters of intent from airline planning departments or
intermodal surface transportation providers on behalf of applications
that are specifically intended to enlist new or
[[Page 35724]]
expanded air service or surface transportation service in support of
the air service in the community;
whether the applicant has plans to continue with the
proposed project if it is not self-sustaining after the grant award
expires; and
equitable and geographic distribution of available funds.
C. Additional Guidance
Market Analysis: Applicants requesting funds for a revenue
guarantee/subsidy/financial incentive are encouraged to conduct and
reference in their applications an in-depth analysis of their target
markets. Target markets can be destination specific (e.g., service to
LAX), a geographic region (e.g., northwest mountain region) or
directional (e.g., hub in the southeastern United States or a point
north, south, east, or west of the applicant community).
Complementary Marketing Commitment: Applicants requesting funds for
a revenue guarantee/subsidy/financial incentive are encouraged to
designate in their applications a portion of the project funds
(federal, local or in-kind) for the development and implementation of a
marketing plan in support of the service sought.
Subsidies for a carrier to compete against an incumbent: The
Department is reluctant to subsidize one carrier but not others in a
competitive market. For this reason, a community that proposes to use
the grant funds for service in a city-pair market that is already
served by another air carrier must explain in detail why the existing
service is insufficient or unsatisfactory, or provide other compelling
information to support such a proposal.
Cost Sharing and Local Contributions: Applications must clearly
identify the level of federal funding sought for the proposed project.
Applications must also identify the community's cash contributions to
the proposed project, in-kind contributions from the airport, and in-
kind contributions from the community. Non-federal funds will be
applied proportionately to the entire scope of the project. Communities
cannot use non-federal funds selectively to fund certain components of
a project (see Section VI--Grant Administration-Payments for more
information). Cash contributions from airport revenues must be
identified separately from cash contributions from other community
sources, and cash contributions from the state and/or local government
should be separately identified and described.
Types of contributions. Contributions should represent a new
financial commitment or new financial resources devoted to attracting
new or improved service, or addressing specific high-fare or other
service issues, such as improving patronage of existing service at the
airport. For communities that propose to contribute to the grant
project, that contribution can be in the following forms:
Cash from non-airport revenues. A cash contribution can include
funds from the state, the county or local government, and/or from local
businesses, or other private organizations in the community. Because
private cash contributions are to be from local community sources, the
Department will not consider as a part of these non-airport revenues
any funds that a community might receive from an air carrier interested
in providing service under that community's proposal. Moreover,
contributions that are comprised of intangible non-cash items, such as
the value of donated advertising, are considered in-kind contributions
(see further discussion below).
Cash from airport revenues. This includes contributions from funds
generated by airport operations. Airport revenues may not be used for
revenue guarantees to airlines, per 49 U.S.C. 47107 and 47133.
Applications that include local contributions based on airport revenues
do not receive priority consideration for selection.
In-kind contributions from the airport. This can include such items
as waivers of landing fees, ground handling fees, terminal rents, fuel
fees, and/or vehicle parking fees.
In-kind contributions from the community. This can include such
items as donated advertising from media outlets, catering services for
inaugural events, or in-kind trading, such as advertising in exchange
for free air travel. Travel banks and travel commitments/pledges are
considered to be in-kind contributions.
Cash vs. in-kind contributions. Communities that include local
contributions made in cash will be viewed more favorably.
III. Evaluation and Selection Process
The Department will first review each application to determine
whether it has satisfied the following eligibility requirements:
1. The applicant is an eligible applicant;
2. The application is for an eligible project (including compliance
with the Same Project Limitation); and
3. The application is complete (including submission of a completed
SF424 and all of the information listed in Contents of Application, in
Section IV below).
To the extent that the Department determines that an application
does not satisfy these eligibility requirements, the Department will
deem that application ineligible and not consider it further. The
Department will then review all eligible applications based on the
selection criteria outlined above in Section II. The Department will
not assign specific numerical scores to projects based on the selection
criteria. Rather, ratings of ``highly recommended,'' ``recommended,''
``acceptable,'' or ``not recommended'' will be assigned to
applications. Applications that align well with one or more of the
Priority Selection Criteria will be viewed more favorably than those
that do not align with any Priority Selection Criteria. The Department
will consider the Secondary Selection Criteria when comparing and
selecting among similarly-rated projects.
The Department reserves the right to award funds for a part of the
project included in an application, if a part of the project is
eligible and aligns well with the selection criteria specified in this
Order. In addition, as part of its review of the Secondary Selection
Criterion ``Other Factors,'' the Department will consider the
geographical distribution of the applications to ensure consistency
with the statutory requirement limiting awards to no more than four
communities or consortia of communities, or a combination thereof, from
the same state. The final selections will be limited to no more than 40
communities or consortia of communities, or a combination thereof.
Grant awards will be made as promptly as possible so that selected
communities can complete the grant agreement process and implement
their plans. Given the competitive nature of the grant process, the
Department will not meet with applicants regarding their applications.
All non-confidential portions of each application, all correspondence
and ex-parte communications, and all orders will be posted in the
above-captioned docket on www.regulations.gov. The Department will
announce its grant selections in a Selection Order that will be posted
in the above-captioned docket, served on all applicants and all parties
served with this Solicitation Order, and posted on the Department's
SCASDP Web site at https://www.dot.gov/policy/aviation-policy/small-community-rural-air-service/SCASDP.
IV. How to Apply
Required Steps:
[[Page 35725]]
Determine eligibility;
Register with www.grants.gov (see Registration with
www.grants.gov, below);
Submit an Application for Federal Domestic Assistance
(SF424);
Submit a completed ``Summary Information'' schedule. This
is your application cover sheet (see Appendix B);
Submit a detailed application of up to one-sided 20 pages
(excluding the completed SF424, Summary Information schedule, and any
letters from the community or an air carrier showing support for the
application) that meets all required criteria (see Appendix C);
Attach any letters from the community or an air carrier
showing support for the application to the proposal, which should be
addressed to Brooke Chapman, Associate Director, Small Community Air
Service Development Program; and
Provide separate submission of confidential material, if
requested. (see Appendix D) An application will not be complete and
will be deemed ineligible for a grant award until and unless all
required materials, including SF424, have been submitted through
www.grants.gov and time-stamped by 5:00 p.m. EDT on July 22, 2015 (the
``Application Deadline''). An application consisting of more than 20
pages will be accepted by the Department, but the content in the
additional pages past page 20 will not be evaluated or considered by
the Department. The Department would prefer that applicants use one-
inch margins and a font size not less than 12 point type.
Late Application Notice: Applicants who are unable to successfully
submit their application package through grants.gov prior to the
Application Deadline due to technical difficulties outside their
control must submit an email to SCASDPgrants@dot.gov with the
information described in Appendix A.
Registration with www.grants.gov: Communities must be registered
with www.grants.gov in order to submit an application for funds
available under this program. For consortium applications, only the
Legal Sponsor must be registered with www.grants.gov in order to submit
its application for funds available under this program. See Appendix A
for additional information on applying through www.grants.gov.
Contents of Application: There is no set format that must be used
for applications. Each application should, to the maximum extent
possible, address the selection criteria set forth in Section II,
above, including a clear description of the air service needs/
deficiencies and present plans/strategies that directly address those
needs/deficiencies. At a minimum, however, each application must
include the following information:
A description of the community's air service needs or deficiencies,
including information about: (1) Major origin/destination markets that
are not now served or are not served adequately; (2) fare levels that
the community deems relevant to consideration of its application,
including market analyses or studies demonstrating an understanding of
local air service needs; (3) any recent air service developments that
have adversely affected the community; \4\ and (4) any air service
development efforts over the past three years and the results of those
efforts (including marketing and promotional efforts).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ For example, if a community has lost service or been
otherwise adversely affected as a result of an airline merger, the
applicant should describe the situation in detail and quantify, to
the extent possible, its effects on the community.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A strategic plan for meeting those needs under the Small
Community Program, including the community's specific project goal(s)
and detailed plan for attaining such goal(s). If the application is
selected, DOT will work with the grantee to incorporate the relevant
elements of the application's strategic plan into the grant agreement's
project scope.\5\ Applicants should note that, once a grant agreement
is signed, the agreement cannot be amended in a way that would alter
the project scope. Applicants also are advised to obtain firm
assurances from air carriers proposing to offer new air services if a
grant is awarded. Strategic plans should:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ If new service is proposed to or from a specific city or
market served by multiple airports (such as New York, Chicago, Los
Angeles, or Washington, D.C., for example), the applicant is
encouraged to identify the airport(s) in that city or market the
community would be targeting under its proposal in order to
facilitate the drafting of the grant agreement's project scope.
Communities should carefully select, within a specific city or
market, those airports for which it proposes service, as proposing
multiple airports in a city or market could impact the ability of a
community to seek future grants involving those airports (see Same
Project Limitation, above).
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[cir] For applications involving new or improved service, explain
how the service will become self-sufficient;
[cir] fully and clearly outline the goals and objectives of the
project; and
[cir] fully and clearly summarize the actual, specific steps (in
bullet form, with a proposed timeline) that the community intends to
take to bring about these goals and objectives.
A detailed description of the funding necessary for
implementation of the proposed project (including federal and non-
federal contributions).
An explanation of how the proposed project differs from
any previous projects for which the community received SCASDP funds
(see Same Project Limitation, above).
Designation of a legal sponsor responsible for
administering the proposed project. The legal sponsor of the proposed
project must be a government entity, such as a state, county, or
municipality. The legal sponsor must be legally, financially, and
otherwise able to execute the grant agreement and administer the grant,
including having the authority to sign the grant agreement and to
assume and carry out the certifications, representations, warranties,
assurances, covenants and other obligations required under the grant
agreement with the Department and to ensure compliance by the grant
recipient with the grant agreement and grant assurances. If the
applicant is a public-private partnership, a public government member
of the organization must be identified as the community's sponsor to
receive project cost reimbursements. A community may designate only one
government entity as the legal sponsor, even if it is applying as a
consortium that consists of two or more local government entities.
Private organizations may not be designated as the legal sponsor of a
grant under the Small Community Program. The community has the
responsibility to ensure that the legal sponsor and grant recipient of
any funding has the legal authority under state and local laws to carry
out all aspects of the grant, and the Department may require an opinion
of the legal sponsor's attorney as to its legal authority to act as a
sponsor and to carry out its responsibilities under the grant
agreement. The applicant should also provide the name of the signatory
party for the legal sponsor.
V. Air Service Development Zone Designation
As part of the Small Community Program, the Department may also
designate one grant recipient as an ``Air Service Development Zone''
(ASDZ).\6\ The purpose of the designation is to provide communities
interested in attracting business to the area surrounding the airport
and/or developing land-use options for the area to work with the
Department on means to achieve those goals. The Department will assist
the designated community in establishing contacts with and obtaining
advice and assistance from appropriate
[[Page 35726]]
government agencies, including the Department of Commerce and other
offices within the Department of Transportation, and in identifying
other pertinent resources that may aid the community in its efforts to
attract businesses and to formulate land-use options. However, the
community receiving this designation will be responsible for
developing, implementing, and managing activities related to the air
service development zone initiative. Only communities that are
interested in these objectives and have a plan to accomplish them
should apply for this designation. There are no additional funds
associated with this designation, and applying for this designation
will provide no special benefits or priority to the community applying
for a SCASDP grant.
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\6\ See 49 U.S.C. 41743(h).
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Only one SCASDP grant recipient may hold an ASDZ designation at any
one time. At present, an existing SCASDP grant recipient, Casper, WY,
is active as ASDZ designee, with a grant award set to expire on
September 30, 2015. Upon expiration of this community's grant award,
the ASDZ designation will become available for a new grant recipient,
and the Department is therefore soliciting a new ASDZ designee in this
proceeding.
Grant applicants interested in selection for the Air Service
Development Zone designation must include in their applications a
separate section, titled, Support for Air Service Development Zone
Designation. The community should provide as detailed a plan as
possible, including what goals it expects to achieve from the air
service development zone designation and the types of activities on
which it would like to work with the Department in achieving those
goals. The community should also indicate whether further local
government approvals are required in order to implement the proposed
activities.
VI. Grant Administration
Grant Agreements: Communities awarded grants are required to
execute a grant agreement with the Department before they begin to
expend funds under the grant award. Applicants should not assume they
have received a grant, nor should they obligate or expend local funds
prior to receiving and fully executing a grant agreement with the
Department. Expenditures made prior to the execution of a grant
agreement, including costs associated with preparation of the grant
application, will not be reimbursed. Moreover, there are numerous
assurances that grant recipients must sign and honor when federal funds
are awarded. All communities receiving a grant will be required to
accept and meet the obligations created by these assurances when they
execute their grant agreements. Copies of assurances are available
online at https://www.dot.gov/policy/aviation-policy/small-community-rural-air-service/SCASDP, (click on ``SCASDP Grant Assurances'').
Payments: The Small Community Program is a reimbursable program;
therefore, communities are required to make expenditures for project
implementation under the program prior to seeking reimbursement from
the Department. Project implementation costs are reimbursable from
grant funds only for services or property delivered during the grant
term. Reimbursement rates are calculated as a percentage of the total
federal funds requested divided by the federal funds plus the local
cash contribution (which is not refundable). The percentage is
determined by: (SCASDP Grant Amount) / (SCASDP Grant Amount + Local
Cash Contribution + State Cash Contribution, if applicable). Payments/
expenditures in forms other than cash (e.g., in-kind) are not
reimbursable. For example, if a community requests $500,000 in federal
funding and provides $100,000 in local contributions, the reimbursement
rate would be 83.33 percent: ((500,000)/(500,000 + 100,000)) = 83.33.
Grantee Reports: Each grantee must submit quarterly reports on the
progress made during the previous quarter in implementing its grant
project. In addition, each community will be required to submit a final
report on its project to the Department, and 10 percent of the grant
funds will not be reimbursed to the community until such a final report
is received. Additional information on award administration for
selected communities will be provided in the grant agreement.
VII. Questions and Clarifications
For further information concerning the technical requirements set
out in this Order, please contact Brooke Chapman at
Brooke.Chapman@dot.gov or (202) 366-0577. A TDD is available for
individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing at (202) 366-3993. The
Department may post answers to questions and other important
clarifications in the above-captioned docket on www.regulations.gov and
on the program Web site at https://www.dot.gov/policy/aviation-policy/small-community-rural-air-service/SCASDP.
This Order is issued under authority delegated in 49 CFR 1.25a(b).
An electronic version of this document is available online at
www.regulations.gov.
APPENDIX A
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ON APPLYING THROUGH WWW.GRANTS.GOV
Applications must be submitted electronically through https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/apply-for-grants.html. To apply
for funding through www.grants.gov, applicants must be properly
registered. The Grants.gov/Apply feature includes a simple, unified
application process that makes it possible for applicants to apply
for grants online. There are five ``Get Registered'' steps for an
organization to complete at Grants.gov. Complete instructions on how
to register and apply can be found at https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/organization-registration.html If applicants
experience difficulties at any point during registration or
application process, please call the www.grants.gov Customer Support
Hotline at 1-800-518-4726, Monday-Friday from 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
EDT.
Registering with www.grants.gov is a one-time process; however,
processing delays may occur and it can take up to several weeks for
first-time registrants to receive confirmation and a user password.
It is highly recommended that applicants start the registration
process as early as possible to prevent delays that may preclude
submitting an application by the deadlines specified. Applications
must be submitted and time-stamped not later than 5:00 p.m. EDT on
July 22, 2015 (the Application Deadline), and, as set forth below,
failure to complete the registration process before the Application
Deadline is not a valid reason to permit late submissions.
In order to apply for SCASDP funding through https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/apply-for-grants.html, all
applicants are required to complete the following:
1. DUNS Requirement. The Office of Management and Budget
requires that all businesses and nonprofit applicants for federal
funds include a Dun and Bradstreet Data Universal Numbering System
(DUNS) number in their applications for a new award or renewal of an
existing award. A DUNS number is a unique nine-digit sequence
recognized as the universal standard for identifying and keeping
track of entities receiving federal funds. The identifier is used
for tracking purposes and to validate address and point of contact
information for federal assistance applicants, recipients, and sub-
recipients. The DUNS number will be used throughout the grant life
cycle. The DUNS number must be included in the data entry field
labeled ``Organizational DUNS'' on the SF-424 form. Instructions for
obtaining DUNS number can be found at the following Web site: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/organization-registration/step-1-obtain-duns-number.html.
2. System for Award Management. In addition to having a DUNS
number, applicants applying electronically through
[[Page 35727]]
Grants.gov must register with the federal System for Award
Management (SAM). Step-by-step instructions for registering with SAM
can be found here: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/organization-registration/step-2-register-with-sam.html. All
applicants must register with SAM in order to apply online. Failure
to register with the SAM will result in your application being
rejected by Grants.gov during the submissions process.
3. Username and Password. Acquire an Authorized Organization
Representative (AOR) and a www.grants.gov username and password.
Complete your AOR profile on www.grants.gov and create your username
and password. You will need to use your organization's DUNS Number
to complete this step. For more information about creating a profile
on Grants.gov visit: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/organization-registration/step-3-username-password.html.
4. After creating a profile on Grants.gov, the E-Biz Point of
Contact (E-Biz POC)--a representative from your organization who is
the contact listed for SAM--will receive an email to grant the AOR
permission to submit applications on behalf of their organization.
The E-Biz POC will then log in to Grants.gov and approve an
applicant as the AOR, thereby giving him or her permission to submit
applications. To learn more about AOR Authorization visit: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/organization-registration/step-4-aor-authorization.html. To track an AOR status visit: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/applicants/organization-registration/step-5-track-aor-status.html.
Applicants are, therefore, encouraged to register early. The
registration process can take up to four weeks to be completed.
Thus, registration should be done in sufficient time to ensure it
does not impact your ability to meet required submission deadlines.
You will be able to submit your application online any time after
you have approved as an AOR.
5. Electronic Signature. Applications submitted through
Grants.gov constitute a submission as electronically signed
applications. The registration and account creation with Grants.gov
with E-Biz POC approval establishes an Authorized Organization
Representative (AOR). When you submit the application through
Grants.gov, the name of your AOR on file will be inserted into the
signature line of the application. Applicants must register the
individual who is able to make legally binding commitments for the
applicant organization as the Authorized Organization Representative
(AOR);
6. Search for the Funding Opportunity on www.grants.gov. Please
use the following identifying information when searching for the
SCASDP funding opportunity on www.grants.gov. The Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance (CFDA) number for this solicitation is 20.930,
titled Payments for Small Community Air Service Development.
7. Submit an application addressing all of the requirements
outlined in this funding availability announcement. Within 24-48
hours after submitting your electronic application, you should
receive an email validation message from www.grants.gov. The
validation message will tell you whether the application has been
received and validated or rejected, with an explanation. You are
urged to submit your application at least 72 hours prior to the due
date of the application to allow time to receive the validation
message and to correct any problems that may have caused a rejection
notification.
8. Timely Receipt Requirements and Proof of Timely Submission.
Proof of timely submission is automatically recorded by Grants.gov.
An electronic timestamp is generated within the system when the
application is successfully received by Grants.gov. The applicant
will receive an acknowledgement of receipt and a tracking number
from Grants.gov with successful transmission of the application.
Applicants should print this receipt and save it, as a proof of
timely submission.
9. Grants.gov allows applicants to download the application
package, instructions and forms that are incorporated in the
instructions, and work offline. In addition to forms that are part
of the application instructions, there will be a series of
electronic forms that are provided utilizing Adobe Reader.
a. Adobe Reader. Adobe Reader is available for free to download
from on the Download Software page: https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/support/technical-support/recommended-software.html. Adobe
Reader allows applicants to read the electronic files in a form
format so that they will look like any other Standard form. The
Adobe Reader forms have content sensitive help. This engages the
content sensitive help for each field you will need to complete on
the form. The Adobe Reader forms can be downloaded and saved on your
hard drive, network drive(s), or CDs.
b. NOTE: For the Adobe Reader, Grants.gov is compatible with
versions 9.0.0 and later versions. Always refer to the Download
Software page for compatible versions for the operating system you
are using. Please do not use lower versions of the Adobe Reader.\7\
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\7\ Grants.gov recommends using Adobe Reader versions 10.1.4 and
11.0.11 for Mac OS and Windows. See https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/support/technical-support/recommended-software.html.
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c. Mandatory Fields in Adobe Forms. In the Adobe Reader forms,
you will note fields that will appear with a background color on the
data fields to be completed. These fields are mandatory fields and
they must be completed to successfully submit your application.
NOTE: When uploading attachments please use generally accepted
formats such as .pdf, .doc, and .xls. While you may imbed picture
files such as .jpg, .gif, .bmp, in your files, please do not save
and submit the attachment in these formats. Additionally, the
following formats will not be accepted: .com, .bat, .exe, .vbs,
.cfg, .dat, .db, .dbf, .dll, .ini, .log, .ora, .sys, and .zip.
Experiencing Unforeseen www.grants.gov Technical Issues
Late Application Notice: Applicants who are unable to
successfully submit their application package through grants.gov
prior to the Application Deadline due to technical difficulties
outside their control must submit an email to SCASDPgrants@dot.gov
with the following information:
The nature of the technical difficulties experienced in
attempting to submit an application;
A screenshot of the error;
The Legal Sponsor's name; and
The Grants.Gov tracking number (e.g. GRANT12345678).
DOT will consider late applications on a case-by-case basis and
reserves the right to reject late applications that do not meet the
conditions outlined in the Order Soliciting Small Community Grant
Proposals. Late applications from applicants that do not provide DOT
an email with the items specified above will not be considered.
If you experience unforeseen www.grants.gov technical issues
beyond your control that prevent you from submitting your
application by the Application Deadline, you must contact us at
[SCASDPgrants@dot.gov or] Vince.Corsaro@dot.gov or (202) 366-1842 by
5:00 p.m. EDT the day following the deadline and request approval to
submit your application after the deadline has passed. At that time,
DOT staff will require you to provide your DUNS number and your
www.grants.gov Help Desk tracking number(s). After DOT staff review
all of the information submitted and contact the www.grants.gov Help
Desk to validate the technical issues you reported, DOT staff will
contact you to either approve or deny your request to submit a late
application through www.grants.gov. If the technical issues you
reported cannot be validated, your application will be rejected as
untimely.
To ensure a fair competition for limited discretionary funds,
the following conditions are not valid reasons to permit late
submissions: (1) Failure to complete the registration process before
the deadline date; (2) failure to follow www.grants.gov instructions
on how to register and apply as posted on its Web site; (3) failure
to follow all of the instructions in the funding availability
notice; and (4) technical issues experienced with the applicant's
computer or information technology (IT) environment.
Appendix B
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Appendix D
Confidential Commercial Information
Applicants will be able to provide certain confidential business
information relevant to their proposals on a confidential basis.
Under the Department's Freedom of Information Act regulations (49
CFR 7.17), such information is limited to commercial or financial
information that, if disclosed, would either likely cause
substantial harm to the competitive position of a business or
enterprise or make it more difficult for the Federal Government to
obtain similar information in the future.
Applicants seeking confidential treatment of a portion of their
applications must segregate the confidential material in a sealed
envelope marked ``Confidential Submission of X (the applicant) in
Docket DOT-OST-2015-0126'' and include with that material a request
in the form of a motion seeking confidential treatment of the
material under 14 CFR 302.12 (``Rule 12'') of the Department's
regulations. The applicant should submit an original and two copies
of its motion and an original and two copies of the confidential
material in the sealed envelope.
The confidential material should not be included with the
original of the applicant's proposal that is submitted via
www.grants.gov. The applicant's original submission, however, should
indicate clearly where the confidential material would have been
inserted. If an applicant invokes Rule 12, the confidential portion
of its filing will be treated as confidential pending a final
determination. All confidential material must be received by 5:00
p.m. EDT, July 22, 2015, and delivered to the U.S. Department of
Transportation, Office of Aviation Analysis, 8th Floor, Room W86-
307, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., Washington, DC 20590.
Accordingly,
1. Applications for funding under the Small Community Air
Service Development Program should be submitted via www.grants.gov
as an attachment to the SF424 by 5:00 p.m. EDT, July 22, 2015; and
2. This Order will be published in the Federal Register, posted
on www.grants.gov and www.regulations.gov, and served on the United
States Conference of Mayors, the National League of Cities, the
National Governors Association, the National Association of State
Aviation Officials, County Executives of America, the American
Association of Airport Executives, and the Airports Council
International--North America.
Issued in Washington, DC, on June 18, 2015.
Brandon Belford,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Aviation and International Affairs.
[FR Doc. 2015-15393 Filed 6-19-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-9X-P