Notice of Request for Comments on Update to the Uniform System of Accounts (USOA) and Changes to the National Transit Database (NTD) Reporting Requirements, 5816-5819 [2016-01941]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 22 / Wednesday, February 3, 2016 / Notices
www.regulations.gov/#!privacyNotice
for the privacy notice of regulations.gov.
Robert C. Lauby,
Associate Administrator for Railroad Safety,
Chief Safety Officer.
[FR Doc. 2016–01968 Filed 2–2–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
[Docket No. FTA–2016–0009]
Notice of Request for Comments on
Update to the Uniform System of
Accounts (USOA) and Changes to the
National Transit Database (NTD)
Reporting Requirements
Federal Transit Administration
(FTA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments on
updates to the USOA and changes to the
NTD reporting requirements.
AGENCY:
The Federal Transit
Administration is updating the Uniform
System of Accounts (USOA). The
proposed updates are prompted by the
outdated nature of the 1995 USOA. FTA
is seeking public comment on these
proposed changes before releasing the
updated USOA and implementing the
associated changes to 49 U.S.C. 5335,
National Transit Database.
DATES: Comments must be received by
April 4, 2016. Any comments filed after
this deadline will be considered to the
extent practicable.
ADDRESSES: Please submit your
comments by only one of the following
methods, identifying your submission
by Docket Number FTA–2016–0009
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
Submit electronic comments and other
data to https://www.regulations.gov.
• U.S. Mail: Send comments to
Docket Operations; U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., West Building Room W12–
140, Washington, DC 20590–0001.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: Take
comments to Docket Operations in
Room W12–140 of the West Building,
Ground Floor, at 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC, between
9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
• Fax: Fax comments to Docket
Operations, U.S. Department of
Transportation, at (202) 493–2251.
Instructions: You must include the
agency name (Federal Transit
Administration) and Docket Number
(FTA–2016–0009) for this notice, at the
beginning of your comments. If sent by
mail, submit two copies of your
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SUMMARY:
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comments. Due to security procedures
in effect since October 2001, mail
received through the U.S. Postal Service
may be subject to delays. Parties
submitting comments should consider
using an express mail firm to ensure
their prompt filing of any submissions
not filed electronically or by hand. If
you wish to get confirmation that FTA
received your comments, you must
include a self-addressed stamped
postcard. All comments received will be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. You
may review U.S. DOT’s complete
Privacy Act Statement published in the
Federal Register on April 11, 2000, at
65 FR 19476 or https://
DocketsInfo.dot.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Margaret Schilling, National Transit
Database Program Manager, Office of
Budget and Policy, (202) 366–2054, or
email: margaret.schilling@dot.gov.
Office hours are from 8:30 a.m. to 5:00
p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The National Transit Database (NTD)
is the Federal Transit Administration’s
(FTA) primary database for statistics on
the transit industry. Congress
established the NTD to ‘‘help meet the
needs of . . . the public for information
on which to base public transportation
service planning . . .’’ (49 U.S.C 5335).
Currently, 821 transit providers in
urbanized areas report to the NTD
through its online reporting system.
Each year, performance data from these
submissions are used to apportion over
$7 billion of FTA funds for Urbanized
Area Formula (section 5307) grants,
Rural Area Formula (section 5311)
grants, Tribal Transit Formula grants,
Bus and Bus Facilities Formula (section
5339) grants, and State of Good Repair
(section 5337) grants. The data is made
available on the NTD Web site at
www.ntdprogram.gov for the benefit of
the public, transit systems, and all
levels of government. The data is also
used in the annual National Transit
Summaries and Trends report, the
biennial Conditions and Performance
Report to Congress, and in meeting
FTA’s obligations under the
Government Performance and Results
Act. Reporting requirements are
governed by a Uniform System of
Accounts (USOA) and Reporting
Manuals that are issued each year. The
USOA is the chart of accounts and
accounting manual that describes how
transit agencies are to report to the NTD.
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The USOA was originally published in
1977 when NTD reporting began. While
the NTD has undergone numerous and
substantial changes in the past 38 years,
the USOA was last updated for minor
changes in 1995. This notice proposes
updates to the USOA to better align
with today’s NTD and accounting
practices and to address FTA data needs
and common questions among NTD
reporters.
II. Background
This notice proposes changes to the
USOA that impact NTD reporting
requirements. FTA proposes that
changes A–J below take effect starting
with the FY17 data reporting cycle.
Change K below, the revised APC
certification policy, would take effect
when changes are proposed in the
Federal Register. Following is a
summary of proposed changes:
A. Separation of ‘‘Passenger-Paid Fares’’
and ‘‘Organization-Paid Fares’’
B. Separation of ‘‘Paid Absences’’ From
‘‘Fringe Benefits’’
C. Consolidation of ‘‘Casualty and
Liability Costs’’ Under General
Administration Function
D. Expansion of Assets and Liabilities
Object Classes (F–60)
E. Addition of ‘‘Voluntary NonExchange Transactions’’
F. Addition of ‘‘Sales and Disposals of
Assets’’
G. Simplification of State Fund
Reporting
H. Reorganization of B–30 Contractual
Relationship
Additionally, this notice proposes the
following changes to the NTD reporting
requirements that are not directly
addressed in the updated USOA:
I. Separation of Operators’ and NonOperators’ Work Hours and Counts
J. Enhanced Auditor’s Review
K. Revised APC Certification Policy
Finally, FTA seeks comments on the
decision to not require a separate nonadd item for police force expenses.
III. Proposed Changes to the National
Transit Database Reporting
Requirements
A. Separation of ‘‘Passenger-Paid Fares’’
and ‘‘Organization-Paid Fares’’
Currently, the NTD category
‘‘Passenger Fares’’ includes both
directly paid fares collected via
standard methods such as a farebox or
purchase of monthly passes and less
direct fares—for example, where a
university pays the transit agency to
provide fare-free service to students.
This combination of revenue sources
has been confusing to some reporters.
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There are examples where guidance is
ambiguous, including when another
entity pays the transit agency for service
but does not pay the full cost of the
service.
In order to address these issues and
clarify reporting requirements, FTA
proposes the separation of Passenger
Fares into two categories: ‘‘PassengerPaid Fares’’ and ‘‘Organization-Paid
Fares.’’ Traditional fare revenue would
be captured as ‘‘Passenger-Paid Fares’’,
while other ‘‘farelike’’ revenue would be
‘‘Organization-Paid Fares.’’ This
proposed update provides additional
insight into the sources of revenues and
helps the reporters identify peers with
similar operating models.
B. Separation of ‘‘Paid Absences’’ From
‘‘Fringe Benefits’’
Currently the NTD includes
employees’ paid absences, e.g., vacation
time, holidays, and sick leave, as
‘‘Fringe Benefits.’’ However, this differs
from many reporters’ internal accounts;
many reporters classify these expenses
as salaries and wages.
In order to resolve this discrepancy,
FTA proposes the creation of a new
category ‘‘Paid Absences.’’ This category
would be further divided between
operators and non-operators, to align
with the way salaries and wages are
reported in NTD. FTA considered
simply moving paid absences from
‘‘Fringe Benefits’’ to ‘‘Salaries and
Wages,’’ but did not propose this change
because it would produce a
discontinuity in the data over time.
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C. Consolidation of ‘‘Casualty and
Liability Costs’’ Under General
Administration Function
Currently the NTD captures ‘‘Casualty
and Liability Costs’’ expenses under
three functions: Vehicle Maintenance,
Non-Vehicle Maintenance, and General
Administration. However, these
expenses are reported under these
functions inconsistently across
reporters. Some reporters divide the
expenses among the three functions
according to the type of expense, while
others report all ‘‘Casualty and Liability
Costs’’ under General Administration.
Due to the intricacy and variety of
expenses classified as ‘‘Casualty and
Liability Costs,’’ it may be impractical to
provide classifications for all possible
‘‘Casualty and Liability Costs’’ by
function. Therefore, FTA proposes that
reporters consolidate all ‘‘Casualty and
Liability Costs’’ under the General
Administration function. While this
would produce a one-time discontinuity
in the data for some reporters, it would
improve comparability of data across
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reporters in the future and reduce
reporting burden.
D. Expansion of Assets and Liabilities
Object Classes (F–60)
The current F–60 Statement of
Finances form was instituted with the
purpose of providing a transit agency’s
financial status at a glance. However the
required fields in the current form do
not provide a comprehensive insight
into the agency’s financial status. Its
limited nature makes it only marginally
useful for this purpose while creating
confusion for reporters in determining
what information to report.
FTA proposes expanding the form to
resemble an agency’s published balance
sheet at the summary level. FTA
initially considered requiring agencies
to upload their published balanced
sheets to NTD but decided against this
because it would not provide uniform
categories with which to facilitate fair
peer comparisons and calculation of
financial metrics. FTA proposes the
following categories:
• Assets
Æ Current Assets
D Cash and Cash Equivalents
D Accounts Receivable
D Inventory
D Prepaid Expenses
D Current Investments and Current
Portions of Long-Term Investments
D Other Current Assets
Æ Noncurrent Assets
D Capital Assets
D Intangible Assets
D Capital Leases Receivable
D Pension Funds
D Special Funds
D Work in Process
D Investments
• Liabilities
Æ Current Liabilities
D Current Accounts Payable
D Short-Term Debt and Current
Portions of Long-Term Debt
D Accrued Liabilities
D Other Current Liabilities
Æ Noncurrent Liabilities
D Long-Term Debt
D Noncurrent Accounts Payable
D Capital Lease Obligations
D Long-Term Pension Liabilities
D Estimated Liabilities
D Other Noncurrent Liabilities
E. Addition of ‘‘Voluntary NonExchange Transactions’’
The existing USOA did not provide
guidance on how agencies should report
transaction in which an entity does not
receive equal return for what it
provides. For example, if one agency
constructs a new fixed rail line and
transfers ownership to another agency,
this transaction is called a ‘‘Voluntary
Non-Exchange Transaction.’’
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FTA proposes the addition of revenue
and expense fields for ‘‘Voluntary NonExchange Transactions’’ on the F–10
Sources of Funds: Non-Added Revenue
and F–40 Operating Expenses Summary
and Reconciling Items forms. The
reporter providing the asset or service
would record the value of the asset as
a reconciling item expense, while the
receiving reporter would record its
value as non-added revenue, which
means it would not be included in the
reporter’s revenue total alongside cash
revenues like fares, local funds, and
federal grants. This would provide
explanation for the sudden decrease/
increase in assets.
F. Addition of Sales and Disposals of
Assets
Currently, the USOA includes funds
received from selling or disposing
capital assets in directly generated
funds. In most cases this activity is not
considered a revenue, since the agency
is simply converting an asset from one
form to another (e.g., capital asset to
cash) rather than increasing its total
assets. FTA proposes to add an object
class called ‘‘Sales and Disposals of
Assets’’ under the category Non-Added
Revenues on the F–10 Sources of Funds
to capture funds earned from sales and
disposals of capital assets. When the
agency recognizes a gain on such a sale
by selling the asset for more than its
book value, the gain would be reported
as revenue.
G. Simplification of State Fund
Reporting
All State funding comes either from
the General Fund or the Transportation
Fund. Currently, the NTD requires
transit agencies to report the
Transportation Fund at the original
dedicated sources of funds level such as
fuel taxes, income taxes, and vehicle
registration fees. However, it has proved
impractical for reporters to separate
their Transportation Funds into these
categories, since the proportion of the
Transportation Funds provided by each
funding source changes from year to
year, and in many cases, occurs before
the funding ever reaches the transit
agency.
FTA proposes to consolidate all
Dedicated Funds and Other Funds
under the State section on the F–10
Sources of Funds form into a single
category called ‘‘State Transportation
Funds.’’ Rather than gathering
inaccurate or inconsistent data, NTD
will simply collect whether state
funding comes from the General Fund
or the Transportation Fund.
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H. Reorganization of B–30 Contractual
Relationship
At present, the B–30 Contractual
Relationship form requires agencies to
perform counterintuitive calculations
and report data in fields with names
that are difficult to understand. As a
result, agencies may report inaccurate
and inconsistent data into the NTD and
data users have difficulty interpreting
NTD data.
FTA proposes to have three different
versions of this form, customized based
on whether the fare revenues are
retained by the contractor or by the
reporter, and whether the purchased
transportation mode is Vanpool. The
customized forms will reduce confusion
regarding the calculation that must be
performed to report data into the form.
In the new scheme, there would be
separate versions of the form for the
case where the contractor retains the
fare revenue, and the case where the
agency retains the fare revenue. The
reporter would complete fields called
‘‘Purchased Transportation Fare
Revenue,’’ ‘‘Direct Payment,’’ ‘‘Capital
Leasing,’’ ‘‘Other Operating Expenses
Incurred by the Buyer,’’ and ‘‘Other
Reconciling Item Expenses Incurred by
the Buyer.’’
In addition, FTA proposes that
Vanpool mode should have its own
version of the B–30 form. This will
reflect the ways Vanpool contracts
usually differ from other purchased
transportation contracts. Vanpool
reporters would complete fields called
‘‘Passenger Fees,’’ ‘‘Passenger Out-ofPocket Expenses,’’ ‘‘Agency Subsidy,’’
‘‘Capital Leasing,’’ ‘‘Other Operating
Expenses Incurred by the Buyer,’’ and
‘‘Other Reconciling Item Expenses
Incurred by the Buyer.’’
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I. Separation of Operators’ and NonOperators’ Work Hours and Counts
On the F–30 Operating Expenses
form, NTD collects data on salaries and
wages for operators and non-operators
separately. However, on the R–10
Employees form, NTD currently collects
data on hours worked and employee
counts for these categories combined.
FTA proposes that NTD collect data
on hours worked and employee counts
for operators and non-operators
separately. This would allow
calculation of separate wage rates and
hours per employee for these two
categories, which would be useful data
to any user interested in labor costs. The
data should be readily available in most
agencies’ payroll systems and thus a
marginal increase in burden.
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J. Enhanced Auditor’s Review
Currently FTA requires NTD reporters
to undergo a one-time auditor’s review
at the commencement of reporting. The
agency must file an Independent
Auditor’s Statement for Financial Data.
The purpose of this review is to ensure
that the reporter is equipped to report to
the NTD according to FTA’s
requirements, using accrual accounting
and the USOA. There is currently little
guidance on when, if ever, an agency
must obtain a new Auditor’s Statement.
In addition, Reduced Reporters (Small
Systems) are not required to perform
this review.
FTA proposes that Reduced Reporters
be required to undergo this review, and
further, that all NTD reporters be
required to undergo a new review once
every ten years. This would provide
additional confidence that all reporters
are conforming to FTA’s reporting
requirements. Due to the limited nature
and infrequency of this review, this new
requirement should not be overly
burdensome to reporters.
K. Revised APC Certification Policy
The NTD requires the reporting of
ridership data, both unlinked passenger
trips (UPT) and passenger miles traveled
(PMT), by mode and type of service.
These two data items are important
measures of service consumed and are
used by many analysts to assess the
effectiveness of transit services. PMT is
also used in the annual formula
allocation of federal transit funds for the
Urbanized Area Formula Program
(§ 5307) and the Bus and Bus Facilities
Grants (§ 5339).
Some transit agencies use automatic
passenger counters (APCs) for collecting
UPT and PMT. This requires prior FTA
approval. If a transit agency fails to
obtain FTA approval in advance, the
NTD will not accept the reported APCderived data.
In the current certification process
FTA requires agencies to submit the
following plans:
• An APC benchmarking plan for the
first year and,
• AN APC maintenance plan for
subsequent years.
The APC benchmarking plan must
include a validation of the APC
measuring process for UPT and PMT
data against a separate manual sample
covering a full year. The maintenance
plan includes an annual checkup to
insure that the APC system continues to
function correctly.
We propose to revise the certification
requirements for new APC systems and
for maintenance testing of all APC
systems. FTA believes that APC
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technologies have advanced to the point
where they produce better data than
sampling with manual counts and, as
such, we no longer need the extensive
comparisons we have required in the
past. The goal of the new certification
procedures proposed here is to insure
that APC data collection systems are
implemented correctly while reducing
the time and effort required for reporters
to demonstrate this.
We propose to revise the
benchmarking test by eliminating the
full year comparison of manual and
APC counts on randomly-selected trips
and replacing it with a more
comprehensive comparison of a much
smaller number of trips. Reporters with
fewer than 30 APC-equipped vehicles
would need to evaluate fifteen trips.
Reporters with more than 30 APCequipped vehicles would need to
evaluate a number of trips equivalent to
half their number of APC-equipped
vehicles, up to a maximum of 50 trips.
The trips selected for evaluation must
meet the following requirements:
• The trips must include some of the
reporter’s heaviest passenger loads,
• The trips must be distributed over
as much of the agency’s fleet of APCequipped vehicles as possible, and
• Manual and APC data sets must be
collected for each trip.
Trips do not have to be selected
randomly. They can be spread over any
convenient period of time. They no
longer need to be distributed over an
entire year.
Manual counts can be made using
data collection staff or on-board
cameras. To insure accurate counts we
recommend using a data collector at
each door on heavily-loaded trips. APC
data should be processed to correct for
anomalies as it would be in the
reporter’s normal data collection
process. The objective is to compare
manually-collected data with processed
APC data and demonstrate that they are
equivalent or that any differences are
justifiable.
Reporters would be required to
analyze the manual and APC data on a
side-by-side basis to identify and
explain inconsistencies. APC and
manual counts of passengers getting on
and off at each stop should be compared
for each trip. FTA may ask to see this
data as part of our certification review.
A report on the results of the analysis
must be submitted to FTA with the
certification request. This report would
include:
• Description of the APC system(s)
used,
• Description of the benchmarking
procedure,
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• Description of trips that were
eliminated due to APC data that failed
diagnostic tests,
• Comparison of distances between
stops used by the two methods,
• Passenger count comparison (%
difference),
• Passenger miles comparison (%
difference), and
• Calculation of unbalanced error
over all trips (sum of magnitude of
differences in on and off counts at each
stop as a percentage of the sum of
manually counted on and offs).
FTA would certify APC systems
where the passenger count comparison,
passenger mile comparison, and
unbalanced error over all benchmark
trips are each less than five percent
(5%). Reporters that file a reduced
report (formerly called a small systems
waiver) do not need to meet the
standards for passenger miles or
unbalanced error.
We propose to eliminate the
maintenance plan requirement and
replace it with a repetition of the
benchmarking test in every fiscal year
that is evenly divisible by three. APC
systems already approved for NTD
reporting would need to be retested in
the next fiscal year that is evenly
divisible by three.
Transit agencies that collect this
ridership data on all (>98 percent) of
their vehicle trips may correct for
missing trips using average values.
However, if the vehicle trips with
missing data exceed two percent (2%) of
all trips, agencies would need to have a
qualified statistician approve the
correction (or expansion) method. This
is consistent with our treatment of
manual counting methods and does not
represent a change in policy. Thus an
agency that does not have a fleet that is
fully-equipped with APCs could use
APC data in any NTD-approved
sampling plan.
IV. Additional Comment Request
Additionally, FTA considered
requiring transit systems to report their
police force expense as a separate nonadd item in the F–30 Operating
Expenses form in addition to reporting
it in the appropriate operating expense
object classes (e.g., Salaries and Wages
and Fringe Benefits). This change would
have enabled a transit system with its
own independent police force to
subtract the police force expense from
total operating expenses in order to
perform a fair peer evaluation against
another entity without its own police
force. However, FTA decided against
this change, as there are other types of
police or security force arrangements
that are not included in this
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consideration (e.g., municipal police
force). Additionally, employing an
independent police force is an
operational decision and the related
expenses are justifiable operating cost.
FTA suggests that data users consider
security arrangements when selecting
peer groups for comparison in order to
control for differences in operating cost.
FTA seeks comment from transit
systems on this decision.
FTA thanks our stakeholders in
advance for providing comment on the
above proposed changes to the NTD
reporting requirement.
Therese W. McMillan,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2016–01941 Filed 2–2–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
[Docket No. DOT–OST–2016–0007]
Notice of Request for Clearance of a
Revision of a Currently Approved
Information Collection: National
Census of Ferry Operators
Bureau of Transportation
Statistics (BTS), Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Research and Technology
(OST–R), DOT.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
requirements of section 3506(c)(2)(A) of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
this notice announces the intention of
the BTS to request the Office of
Management and Budget’s (OMB’s)
approval for an information collection
related to the nation’s ferry operations.
The information collected will be used
to produce a descriptive database of
existing ferry operations. A summary
report of survey findings will also be
published by BTS on the BTS Web page.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before April 4, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
identified by DOT Docket ID Number
DOT–OST–2016–0007 to the U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT),
Dockets Management System (DMS).
You may submit your comments by mail
or in person to the Docket Clerk, Docket
No., U.S. Department of Transportation,
1200 New Jersey Ave. SE., West
Building, Room W12–140, Washington,
DC 20590. Comments should identify
the docket number as indicated above.
Paper comments should be submitted
in duplicate. The DMS is open for
examination and copying, at the above
address, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except federal holidays.
SUMMARY:
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5819
If you wish to receive confirmation of
receipt of your written comments,
please include a self-addressed,
stamped postcard with the following
statement: ‘‘Comments on Docket DOT–
OST–2016–0007.’’
The Docket Clerk will date stamp the
postcard prior to returning it to you via
the U.S. mail. Please note that due to
delays in the delivery of U.S. mail to
Federal offices in Washington, DC, we
recommend that persons consider an
alternative method (the Internet, fax, or
professional delivery service) to submit
comments to the docket and ensure
their timely receipt at U.S. DOT. You
may fax your comments to the DMS at
(202) 493–2251. Comments can also be
viewed and/or submitted via the Federal
Rulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov.
Please note that anyone is able to
electronically search all comments
received into our docket management
system by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the
comment if submitted on behalf of an
association, business, labor union, etc.).
You may review DOT’s complete
Privacy Act Statement in the Federal
Register published on April 11, 2000
(Volume 65, Number 70; pages 19475–
19570) or you may review the Privacy
Act Statement at https://
www.gpoaccess.gov/fr/.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Janine L. Bonner, (202) 366–2468, NCFO
Project Manager, BTS, OST–R,
Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Ave. SE., Room E34–411,
Washington, DC 20590. Office hours are
from 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., E.T.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: National Census of Ferry
Operators (NCFO).
Background: The Transportation
Equity Act for the 21st Century (TEA–
21) (P.L. 105–178), section 1207(c),
directed the Secretary of Transportation
to conduct a study of ferry
transportation in the United States and
its possessions. In 2000, the Federal
Highway Administration (FHWA) Office
of Intermodal and Statewide Planning
conducted a survey of approximately
250 ferry operators to identify: (1)
Existing ferry operations including the
location and routes served; (2) source
and amount, if any, of funds derived
from Federal, State, or local
governments supporting ferry
construction or operations; (3) potential
domestic ferry routes in the United
States and its possessions; and (4)
potential for use of high speed ferry
services and alternative-fueled ferry
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 22 (Wednesday, February 3, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 5816-5819]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-01941]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
[Docket No. FTA-2016-0009]
Notice of Request for Comments on Update to the Uniform System of
Accounts (USOA) and Changes to the National Transit Database (NTD)
Reporting Requirements
AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration (FTA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice; request for comments on updates to the USOA and changes
to the NTD reporting requirements.
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SUMMARY: The Federal Transit Administration is updating the Uniform
System of Accounts (USOA). The proposed updates are prompted by the
outdated nature of the 1995 USOA. FTA is seeking public comment on
these proposed changes before releasing the updated USOA and
implementing the associated changes to 49 U.S.C. 5335, National Transit
Database.
DATES: Comments must be received by April 4, 2016. Any comments filed
after this deadline will be considered to the extent practicable.
ADDRESSES: Please submit your comments by only one of the following
methods, identifying your submission by Docket Number FTA-2016-0009
Federal eRulemaking Portal: Submit electronic comments and
other data to https://www.regulations.gov.
U.S. Mail: Send comments to Docket Operations; U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., West Building
Room W12-140, Washington, DC 20590-0001.
Hand Delivery or Courier: Take comments to Docket
Operations in Room W12-140 of the West Building, Ground Floor, at 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC, between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Fax: Fax comments to Docket Operations, U.S. Department of
Transportation, at (202) 493-2251.
Instructions: You must include the agency name (Federal Transit
Administration) and Docket Number (FTA-2016-0009) for this notice, at
the beginning of your comments. If sent by mail, submit two copies of
your comments. Due to security procedures in effect since October 2001,
mail received through the U.S. Postal Service may be subject to delays.
Parties submitting comments should consider using an express mail firm
to ensure their prompt filing of any submissions not filed
electronically or by hand. If you wish to get confirmation that FTA
received your comments, you must include a self-addressed stamped
postcard. All comments received will be posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information provided. You
may review U.S. DOT's complete Privacy Act Statement published in the
Federal Register on April 11, 2000, at 65 FR 19476 or https://DocketsInfo.dot.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Margaret Schilling, National Transit
Database Program Manager, Office of Budget and Policy, (202) 366-2054,
or email: margaret.schilling@dot.gov. Office hours are from 8:30 a.m.
to 5:00 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Introduction
The National Transit Database (NTD) is the Federal Transit
Administration's (FTA) primary database for statistics on the transit
industry. Congress established the NTD to ``help meet the needs of . .
. the public for information on which to base public transportation
service planning . . .'' (49 U.S.C 5335). Currently, 821 transit
providers in urbanized areas report to the NTD through its online
reporting system. Each year, performance data from these submissions
are used to apportion over $7 billion of FTA funds for Urbanized Area
Formula (section 5307) grants, Rural Area Formula (section 5311)
grants, Tribal Transit Formula grants, Bus and Bus Facilities Formula
(section 5339) grants, and State of Good Repair (section 5337) grants.
The data is made available on the NTD Web site at www.ntdprogram.gov
for the benefit of the public, transit systems, and all levels of
government. The data is also used in the annual National Transit
Summaries and Trends report, the biennial Conditions and Performance
Report to Congress, and in meeting FTA's obligations under the
Government Performance and Results Act. Reporting requirements are
governed by a Uniform System of Accounts (USOA) and Reporting Manuals
that are issued each year. The USOA is the chart of accounts and
accounting manual that describes how transit agencies are to report to
the NTD. The USOA was originally published in 1977 when NTD reporting
began. While the NTD has undergone numerous and substantial changes in
the past 38 years, the USOA was last updated for minor changes in 1995.
This notice proposes updates to the USOA to better align with today's
NTD and accounting practices and to address FTA data needs and common
questions among NTD reporters.
II. Background
This notice proposes changes to the USOA that impact NTD reporting
requirements. FTA proposes that changes A-J below take effect starting
with the FY17 data reporting cycle. Change K below, the revised APC
certification policy, would take effect when changes are proposed in
the Federal Register. Following is a summary of proposed changes:
A. Separation of ``Passenger-Paid Fares'' and ``Organization-Paid
Fares''
B. Separation of ``Paid Absences'' From ``Fringe Benefits''
C. Consolidation of ``Casualty and Liability Costs'' Under General
Administration Function
D. Expansion of Assets and Liabilities Object Classes (F-60)
E. Addition of ``Voluntary Non-Exchange Transactions''
F. Addition of ``Sales and Disposals of Assets''
G. Simplification of State Fund Reporting
H. Reorganization of B-30 Contractual Relationship
Additionally, this notice proposes the following changes to the NTD
reporting requirements that are not directly addressed in the updated
USOA:
I. Separation of Operators' and Non-Operators' Work Hours and Counts
J. Enhanced Auditor's Review
K. Revised APC Certification Policy
Finally, FTA seeks comments on the decision to not require a
separate non-add item for police force expenses.
III. Proposed Changes to the National Transit Database Reporting
Requirements
A. Separation of ``Passenger-Paid Fares'' and ``Organization-Paid
Fares''
Currently, the NTD category ``Passenger Fares'' includes both
directly paid fares collected via standard methods such as a farebox or
purchase of monthly passes and less direct fares--for example, where a
university pays the transit agency to provide fare-free service to
students. This combination of revenue sources has been confusing to
some reporters.
[[Page 5817]]
There are examples where guidance is ambiguous, including when another
entity pays the transit agency for service but does not pay the full
cost of the service.
In order to address these issues and clarify reporting
requirements, FTA proposes the separation of Passenger Fares into two
categories: ``Passenger-Paid Fares'' and ``Organization-Paid Fares.''
Traditional fare revenue would be captured as ``Passenger-Paid Fares'',
while other ``farelike'' revenue would be ``Organization-Paid Fares.''
This proposed update provides additional insight into the sources of
revenues and helps the reporters identify peers with similar operating
models.
B. Separation of ``Paid Absences'' From ``Fringe Benefits''
Currently the NTD includes employees' paid absences, e.g., vacation
time, holidays, and sick leave, as ``Fringe Benefits.'' However, this
differs from many reporters' internal accounts; many reporters classify
these expenses as salaries and wages.
In order to resolve this discrepancy, FTA proposes the creation of
a new category ``Paid Absences.'' This category would be further
divided between operators and non-operators, to align with the way
salaries and wages are reported in NTD. FTA considered simply moving
paid absences from ``Fringe Benefits'' to ``Salaries and Wages,'' but
did not propose this change because it would produce a discontinuity in
the data over time.
C. Consolidation of ``Casualty and Liability Costs'' Under General
Administration Function
Currently the NTD captures ``Casualty and Liability Costs''
expenses under three functions: Vehicle Maintenance, Non-Vehicle
Maintenance, and General Administration. However, these expenses are
reported under these functions inconsistently across reporters. Some
reporters divide the expenses among the three functions according to
the type of expense, while others report all ``Casualty and Liability
Costs'' under General Administration.
Due to the intricacy and variety of expenses classified as
``Casualty and Liability Costs,'' it may be impractical to provide
classifications for all possible ``Casualty and Liability Costs'' by
function. Therefore, FTA proposes that reporters consolidate all
``Casualty and Liability Costs'' under the General Administration
function. While this would produce a one-time discontinuity in the data
for some reporters, it would improve comparability of data across
reporters in the future and reduce reporting burden.
D. Expansion of Assets and Liabilities Object Classes (F-60)
The current F-60 Statement of Finances form was instituted with the
purpose of providing a transit agency's financial status at a glance.
However the required fields in the current form do not provide a
comprehensive insight into the agency's financial status. Its limited
nature makes it only marginally useful for this purpose while creating
confusion for reporters in determining what information to report.
FTA proposes expanding the form to resemble an agency's published
balance sheet at the summary level. FTA initially considered requiring
agencies to upload their published balanced sheets to NTD but decided
against this because it would not provide uniform categories with which
to facilitate fair peer comparisons and calculation of financial
metrics. FTA proposes the following categories:
Assets
[cir] Current Assets
[ssquf] Cash and Cash Equivalents
[ssquf] Accounts Receivable
[ssquf] Inventory
[ssquf] Prepaid Expenses
[ssquf] Current Investments and Current Portions of Long-Term
Investments
[ssquf] Other Current Assets
[cir] Noncurrent Assets
[ssquf] Capital Assets
[ssquf] Intangible Assets
[ssquf] Capital Leases Receivable
[ssquf] Pension Funds
[ssquf] Special Funds
[ssquf] Work in Process
[ssquf] Investments
Liabilities
[cir] Current Liabilities
[ssquf] Current Accounts Payable
[ssquf] Short-Term Debt and Current Portions of Long-Term Debt
[ssquf] Accrued Liabilities
[ssquf] Other Current Liabilities
[cir] Noncurrent Liabilities
[ssquf] Long-Term Debt
[ssquf] Noncurrent Accounts Payable
[ssquf] Capital Lease Obligations
[ssquf] Long-Term Pension Liabilities
[ssquf] Estimated Liabilities
[ssquf] Other Noncurrent Liabilities
E. Addition of ``Voluntary Non-Exchange Transactions''
The existing USOA did not provide guidance on how agencies should
report transaction in which an entity does not receive equal return for
what it provides. For example, if one agency constructs a new fixed
rail line and transfers ownership to another agency, this transaction
is called a ``Voluntary Non-Exchange Transaction.''
FTA proposes the addition of revenue and expense fields for
``Voluntary Non-Exchange Transactions'' on the F-10 Sources of Funds:
Non-Added Revenue and F-40 Operating Expenses Summary and Reconciling
Items forms. The reporter providing the asset or service would record
the value of the asset as a reconciling item expense, while the
receiving reporter would record its value as non-added revenue, which
means it would not be included in the reporter's revenue total
alongside cash revenues like fares, local funds, and federal grants.
This would provide explanation for the sudden decrease/increase in
assets.
F. Addition of Sales and Disposals of Assets
Currently, the USOA includes funds received from selling or
disposing capital assets in directly generated funds. In most cases
this activity is not considered a revenue, since the agency is simply
converting an asset from one form to another (e.g., capital asset to
cash) rather than increasing its total assets. FTA proposes to add an
object class called ``Sales and Disposals of Assets'' under the
category Non-Added Revenues on the F-10 Sources of Funds to capture
funds earned from sales and disposals of capital assets. When the
agency recognizes a gain on such a sale by selling the asset for more
than its book value, the gain would be reported as revenue.
G. Simplification of State Fund Reporting
All State funding comes either from the General Fund or the
Transportation Fund. Currently, the NTD requires transit agencies to
report the Transportation Fund at the original dedicated sources of
funds level such as fuel taxes, income taxes, and vehicle registration
fees. However, it has proved impractical for reporters to separate
their Transportation Funds into these categories, since the proportion
of the Transportation Funds provided by each funding source changes
from year to year, and in many cases, occurs before the funding ever
reaches the transit agency.
FTA proposes to consolidate all Dedicated Funds and Other Funds
under the State section on the F-10 Sources of Funds form into a single
category called ``State Transportation Funds.'' Rather than gathering
inaccurate or inconsistent data, NTD will simply collect whether state
funding comes from the General Fund or the Transportation Fund.
[[Page 5818]]
H. Reorganization of B-30 Contractual Relationship
At present, the B-30 Contractual Relationship form requires
agencies to perform counterintuitive calculations and report data in
fields with names that are difficult to understand. As a result,
agencies may report inaccurate and inconsistent data into the NTD and
data users have difficulty interpreting NTD data.
FTA proposes to have three different versions of this form,
customized based on whether the fare revenues are retained by the
contractor or by the reporter, and whether the purchased transportation
mode is Vanpool. The customized forms will reduce confusion regarding
the calculation that must be performed to report data into the form.
In the new scheme, there would be separate versions of the form for
the case where the contractor retains the fare revenue, and the case
where the agency retains the fare revenue. The reporter would complete
fields called ``Purchased Transportation Fare Revenue,'' ``Direct
Payment,'' ``Capital Leasing,'' ``Other Operating Expenses Incurred by
the Buyer,'' and ``Other Reconciling Item Expenses Incurred by the
Buyer.''
In addition, FTA proposes that Vanpool mode should have its own
version of the B-30 form. This will reflect the ways Vanpool contracts
usually differ from other purchased transportation contracts. Vanpool
reporters would complete fields called ``Passenger Fees,'' ``Passenger
Out-of-Pocket Expenses,'' ``Agency Subsidy,'' ``Capital Leasing,''
``Other Operating Expenses Incurred by the Buyer,'' and ``Other
Reconciling Item Expenses Incurred by the Buyer.''
I. Separation of Operators' and Non-Operators' Work Hours and Counts
On the F-30 Operating Expenses form, NTD collects data on salaries
and wages for operators and non-operators separately. However, on the
R-10 Employees form, NTD currently collects data on hours worked and
employee counts for these categories combined.
FTA proposes that NTD collect data on hours worked and employee
counts for operators and non-operators separately. This would allow
calculation of separate wage rates and hours per employee for these two
categories, which would be useful data to any user interested in labor
costs. The data should be readily available in most agencies' payroll
systems and thus a marginal increase in burden.
J. Enhanced Auditor's Review
Currently FTA requires NTD reporters to undergo a one-time
auditor's review at the commencement of reporting. The agency must file
an Independent Auditor's Statement for Financial Data. The purpose of
this review is to ensure that the reporter is equipped to report to the
NTD according to FTA's requirements, using accrual accounting and the
USOA. There is currently little guidance on when, if ever, an agency
must obtain a new Auditor's Statement. In addition, Reduced Reporters
(Small Systems) are not required to perform this review.
FTA proposes that Reduced Reporters be required to undergo this
review, and further, that all NTD reporters be required to undergo a
new review once every ten years. This would provide additional
confidence that all reporters are conforming to FTA's reporting
requirements. Due to the limited nature and infrequency of this review,
this new requirement should not be overly burdensome to reporters.
K. Revised APC Certification Policy
The NTD requires the reporting of ridership data, both unlinked
passenger trips (UPT) and passenger miles traveled (PMT), by mode and
type of service. These two data items are important measures of service
consumed and are used by many analysts to assess the effectiveness of
transit services. PMT is also used in the annual formula allocation of
federal transit funds for the Urbanized Area Formula Program (Sec.
5307) and the Bus and Bus Facilities Grants (Sec. 5339).
Some transit agencies use automatic passenger counters (APCs) for
collecting UPT and PMT. This requires prior FTA approval. If a transit
agency fails to obtain FTA approval in advance, the NTD will not accept
the reported APC-derived data.
In the current certification process FTA requires agencies to
submit the following plans:
An APC benchmarking plan for the first year and,
AN APC maintenance plan for subsequent years.
The APC benchmarking plan must include a validation of the APC
measuring process for UPT and PMT data against a separate manual sample
covering a full year. The maintenance plan includes an annual checkup
to insure that the APC system continues to function correctly.
We propose to revise the certification requirements for new APC
systems and for maintenance testing of all APC systems. FTA believes
that APC technologies have advanced to the point where they produce
better data than sampling with manual counts and, as such, we no longer
need the extensive comparisons we have required in the past. The goal
of the new certification procedures proposed here is to insure that APC
data collection systems are implemented correctly while reducing the
time and effort required for reporters to demonstrate this.
We propose to revise the benchmarking test by eliminating the full
year comparison of manual and APC counts on randomly-selected trips and
replacing it with a more comprehensive comparison of a much smaller
number of trips. Reporters with fewer than 30 APC-equipped vehicles
would need to evaluate fifteen trips. Reporters with more than 30 APC-
equipped vehicles would need to evaluate a number of trips equivalent
to half their number of APC-equipped vehicles, up to a maximum of 50
trips. The trips selected for evaluation must meet the following
requirements:
The trips must include some of the reporter's heaviest
passenger loads,
The trips must be distributed over as much of the agency's
fleet of APC-equipped vehicles as possible, and
Manual and APC data sets must be collected for each trip.
Trips do not have to be selected randomly. They can be spread over
any convenient period of time. They no longer need to be distributed
over an entire year.
Manual counts can be made using data collection staff or on-board
cameras. To insure accurate counts we recommend using a data collector
at each door on heavily-loaded trips. APC data should be processed to
correct for anomalies as it would be in the reporter's normal data
collection process. The objective is to compare manually-collected data
with processed APC data and demonstrate that they are equivalent or
that any differences are justifiable.
Reporters would be required to analyze the manual and APC data on a
side-by-side basis to identify and explain inconsistencies. APC and
manual counts of passengers getting on and off at each stop should be
compared for each trip. FTA may ask to see this data as part of our
certification review. A report on the results of the analysis must be
submitted to FTA with the certification request. This report would
include:
Description of the APC system(s) used,
Description of the benchmarking procedure,
[[Page 5819]]
Description of trips that were eliminated due to APC data
that failed diagnostic tests,
Comparison of distances between stops used by the two
methods,
Passenger count comparison (% difference),
Passenger miles comparison (% difference), and
Calculation of unbalanced error over all trips (sum of
magnitude of differences in on and off counts at each stop as a
percentage of the sum of manually counted on and offs).
FTA would certify APC systems where the passenger count comparison,
passenger mile comparison, and unbalanced error over all benchmark
trips are each less than five percent (5%). Reporters that file a
reduced report (formerly called a small systems waiver) do not need to
meet the standards for passenger miles or unbalanced error.
We propose to eliminate the maintenance plan requirement and
replace it with a repetition of the benchmarking test in every fiscal
year that is evenly divisible by three. APC systems already approved
for NTD reporting would need to be retested in the next fiscal year
that is evenly divisible by three.
Transit agencies that collect this ridership data on all (>98
percent) of their vehicle trips may correct for missing trips using
average values. However, if the vehicle trips with missing data exceed
two percent (2%) of all trips, agencies would need to have a qualified
statistician approve the correction (or expansion) method. This is
consistent with our treatment of manual counting methods and does not
represent a change in policy. Thus an agency that does not have a fleet
that is fully-equipped with APCs could use APC data in any NTD-approved
sampling plan.
IV. Additional Comment Request
Additionally, FTA considered requiring transit systems to report
their police force expense as a separate non-add item in the F-30
Operating Expenses form in addition to reporting it in the appropriate
operating expense object classes (e.g., Salaries and Wages and Fringe
Benefits). This change would have enabled a transit system with its own
independent police force to subtract the police force expense from
total operating expenses in order to perform a fair peer evaluation
against another entity without its own police force. However, FTA
decided against this change, as there are other types of police or
security force arrangements that are not included in this consideration
(e.g., municipal police force). Additionally, employing an independent
police force is an operational decision and the related expenses are
justifiable operating cost. FTA suggests that data users consider
security arrangements when selecting peer groups for comparison in
order to control for differences in operating cost. FTA seeks comment
from transit systems on this decision.
FTA thanks our stakeholders in advance for providing comment on the
above proposed changes to the NTD reporting requirement.
Therese W. McMillan,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2016-01941 Filed 2-2-16; 8:45 am]
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