Safety Glazing Standards, 6775-6790 [2016-02524]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 26 / Tuesday, February 9, 2016 / Rules and Regulations
The documents that the EPA relied on
for the partial deletion of OU1 and OU3
from the California Gulch Superfund
Site are in the docket and are available
to the public in the information
repositories. A notice of availability of
the Notice of Intent for Partial Deletion
has been published in the Leadville
Herald Democrat to satisfy public
participation procedures required by 40
CFR 300.425 (e) (4).
The State, the Lake County
Commissioners, the City of Leadville are
supportive of the partial deletion of
OU1 and OU3. The State signed a letter
of concurrence on October 7, 2015.
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Determination That the Criteria for
Deletion Have Been Met
EPA has consulted with the State,
Lake County Commissioners, and the
City of Leadville on the proposed partial
deletion of OU1 and OU3 of the
California Gulch Site from the NPL prior
to developing this Notice of Partial
Deletion. Through the five-year reviews,
EPA has also determined that the
response actions taken are protective of
public health or the environment and,
therefore, taking of additional remedial
measures is not appropriate.
The implemented remedies achieve
the degree of cleanup or protection
specified in: for OU1, the 1988 OU1
ROD, 1989 OU1 AROD, the 1991 OU1
ESD and 2013 OU1 ESD; and for OU3,
the 1998 OU3 ROD and the 2014 OU3
ESD.
All selected removal and remedial
action objectives and associated cleanup
goals for OU1 and OU3 are consistent
with agency policy and guidance. This
partial deletion meets the completion
requirements as specified in OSWER
Directive 9320.2–22, Close Out
Procedures for National Priority List
Sites. All response activities at OU1 and
OU3 of the Site are complete and the
two operable units pose no
unacceptable risk to human health or
the environment. Therefore, EPA and
CDPHE have determined that no further
response is necessary at OU1 and OU3
of the Site.
V. Partial Deletion Action
The EPA, with concurrence of the
State through the CDPHE has
determined that all appropriate
response actions under CERCLA, other
than operation, maintenance,
monitoring and five-year reviews, have
been completed. Therefore, EPA is
deleting all of OU1, Yak Tunnel/Water
Treatment Plant; and OU3, D&RGW Slag
Easement/Railroad Yard, of the Site.
Because EPA considers this action to
be non-controversial and routine, EPA is
taking it without prior publication. This
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action will be effective April 11, 2016
unless EPA receives adverse comments
by March 10, 2016. If adverse comments
are received within the 30-day public
comment period, EPA will publish a
timely withdrawal of this direct final
notice of partial deletion before the
effective date of the partial deletion and
it will not take effect. EPA will prepare
a response to comments and continue
with the deletion process on the basis of
the notice of intent to partially delete
and the comments already received.
There will be no additional opportunity
to comment.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 300
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Chemicals, Hazardous
waste, Hazardous substances,
Intergovernmental relations, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Superfund, Water
pollution control, Water supply.
Dated: January 15, 2016.
Shaun L. McGrath,
Regional Administrator, Region 8.
[FR Doc. 2016–02601 Filed 2–8–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 223
[Docket No. FRA–2012–0103, Notice No. 2]
RIN 2130–AC43
Safety Glazing Standards
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
In this final rule, FRA is
revising and clarifying existing
regulations related to the use of glazing
materials in the windows of
locomotives, passenger cars, and
cabooses. This final rule reduces
paperwork and other economic burdens
on the rail industry by removing a
stenciling requirement for locomotives,
passenger cars, and cabooses that are
required to be equipped with glazing.
This final rule also clarifies the
application of the regulations to older
equipment and to the end locations of
all equipment to provide more certainty
to the rail industry and more narrowly
address FRA’s safety concerns. In
addition, this final rule clarifies the
definition of passenger car, updates the
rule by removing certain compliance
dates that are no longer necessary, and,
in response to comments on the
SUMMARY:
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proposed rule, modifies the application
of the regulations to passenger cars and
cabooses in a railroad’s fleet that are
used only for private transportation
purposes and to older locomotives used
in incidental freight service.
DATES: This final rule is effective April
11, 2016. Petitions for reconsideration
must be received on or before April 11,
2016. Comments in response to
petitions for reconsideration must be
received on or before May 24, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Petitions for reconsideration
and comments on petitions for
reconsideration: Petitions for
reconsideration or comments on
petitions for reconsideration related to
Docket No. FRA–2012–0103, Notice No.
2, may be submitted by any of the
following methods:
• Web site: The Federal eRulemaking
Portal, https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the Web site’s online
instructions for submitting comments,
to include petitions for reconsideration.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
• Mail: Docket Management Facility,
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W12–
140, Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: Docket Management
Facility, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Room W12–140 on the
Ground level of the West Building,
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name and docket
number or Regulatory Identification
Number (RIN) for this rulemaking
(2130–AC43). Note that all petitions and
comments received will be posted
without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. Please
see the Privacy Act heading in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document for Privacy Act
information related to any submitted
comments, petitions, or materials.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents, any
petition for reconsideration submitted,
or comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov at any time or visit
the Docket Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W12–140
on the Ground level of the West
Building, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except Federal
holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Steve Zuiderveen, Railroad Safety
Specialist, Motive Power & Equipment
Division, Office of Safety Assurance and
Compliance, Mail Stop 25, Federal
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Railroad Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Room W35–216,
Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 202–
493–6337); or Michael Masci, Trial
Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, Mail
Stop 10, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Room W31–115,
Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 202–
493–6037).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Table of Contents for Supplementary
Information
I. Executive Summary
II. NPRM Background
A. Executive Orders 13563 and 13610
B. RSAC End Facing Glazing
Recommendation
III. Discussion of Specific Comments and
Conclusions
A. AAR’s Comments
B. ATRRM’s Comments
IV. General Overview of the Final Rule
A. Removal of the Requirement To Stencil
Certified Glazing Compliance on Inside
Walls of Locomotive Cabs, Passenger
Cars, and Cabooses
B. Clarification of the Term ‘‘Antiquated
Equipment’’
C. Exclusion of Older Locomotives Used in
Incidental Freight Service
D. Clarification of the Terms ‘‘Private Car’’
and ‘‘Passenger Car’’
E. Modification of the Application of the
Safety Glazing Standards to Passenger
Cars and Cabooses in a Railroad’s Fleet
That Are Used Only for Private Business
Purposes
F. Emergency Windows for Occupied
Passenger Cars That Are More Than 50
Years Old But Built After 1945 and
Operated in an Intercity Passenger or
Commuter Train
G. Locomotives, Passenger Cars, and
Cabooses That Are More Than 50 Years
Old But Built After 1945 and Equipped
With Compliant Glazing
H. Clarification of the Term ‘‘End Facing
Glazing Location’’
I. Removal of Compliance Phase-In Dates
That Have Passed and Are No Longer
Applicable
V. Section-by-Section Analysis
VI. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 and
DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive
Order 13272
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Federalism Implications
E. Environmental Impact
F. Executive Order 12898 (Environmental
Justice)
G. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal
Consultation)
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
I. Privacy Act
I. Executive Summary
Beginning on January 18, 2011, the
President issued a set of Executive
Orders which require Federal agencies
to review existing regulations and
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reduce the regulatory burden on
industry, when appropriate. (See
Executive Orders 13563 and 13610,
discussed in more detail in section II of
this preamble). During FRA’s review of
its Safety Glazing Standards in 49 CFR
part 223 1 (part 223), FRA identified
potential changes to requirements for
stenciling and ‘‘antiquated equipment’’
as opportunities to reduce paperwork
and other economic burdens on the rail
industry without adversely impacting
safety. On September 26, 2014, FRA
issued its proposed changes to these
requirements in a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM). See 79 FR 57856.
After considering the comments
received on the NPRM, FRA modifies
these requirements in this final rule.
Specifically, this final rule eliminates
as unnecessary the requirement to
stencil inside walls of locomotive cabs,
passenger cars, and cabooses to indicate
that the equipment contains window
glazing certified in compliance with the
Safety Glazing Standards. Further, this
final rule uses a rolling, 50-year
calculation to determine whether
equipment is ‘‘antiquated’’ based on its
build date—rather than a fixed date of
1945 or earlier—thereby eliminating the
cost of fitting equipment more than 50
years old and used only for certain
purposes with compliant glazing. To
maintain safety in connection with the
change to the application of the term
‘‘antiquated equipment,’’ FRA is
clarifying requirements for emergency
windows in occupied passenger cars
operated in intercity passenger or
commuter trains, and clarifying
requirements for locomotives,
passengers, and cabooses currently
equipped with compliant glazing.
Separately, this final rule makes
changes based on a Railroad Safety
Advisory Committee (RSAC)
recommendation. In 2013, FRA’s RSAC
recommended that FRA clarify the
application of the glazing requirements
in part 223 to address requirements for
the next generation of high-speed
trainsets. FRA agrees that aspects of the
RSAC recommendation are appropriate
to adopt generally for all equipment,
and is therefore doing so in this final
rule. Specifically, FRA believes that
amending application of the phrase
‘‘end facing glazing location’’ in part
223 reduces the economic burden on the
rail industry without adversely
impacting safety.
In addition, FRA is clarifying the
application of requirements for private
cars, and eliminating compliance phase1 Unless otherwise specified, all references to CFR
sections and parts in this document refer to title 49
of the CFR.
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in dates that are no longer necessary.
Also, in response to comments on the
NPRM, this final rule modifies
application of the safety glazing
requirements to passenger cars and
cabooses in a railroad’s fleet used only
for private transportation purposes and
to older locomotives used in incidental
freight service.
Economic Impact
FRA believes this final rule is
consistent with current industry
practices and reduces the regulatory
burden on the rail industry.
The estimated quantified benefits or
cost savings of this rule total $1,088,489.
The present value (PV), discounted at 7
percent, of the estimated quantified
benefits is approximately $819,479. FRA
concludes that the industry incurs only
a minimal cost of approximately $6,000
to take advantage of the flexibilities in
this rule. Therefore, FRA estimates the
net benefit (cost savings) of this rule is
approximately $813,479 (PV, 7 percent).
II. NPRM Background
Under its general statutory
rulemaking authority, FRA promulgates
and enforces rules as part of a
comprehensive regulatory program to
address all areas of railroad safety. See
49 U.S.C. 20103 and 49 CFR 1.89. In the
area of safety glazing, FRA has issued
regulations generally found at part 223.
FRA continually reviews its regulations
and revises them as needed to: (1)
Ensure the regulatory burden on the rail
industry is not excessive; (2) clarify the
application of existing requirements and
remove requirements that are no longer
necessary; and (3) keep pace with
emerging technology, changing
operational realities, and safety
concerns. FRA’s review of part 223
identified several compliance phase-in
dates in the regulation that have passed
and are no longer necessary. To improve
the plain language and make the
regulation more clear and concise, FRA
proposed to remove the dates that have
passed. Further, FRA specifically
proposed amending the safety glazing
requirements based on FRA’s detailed
analyses of the requirements and a
recommendation from FRA’s RSAC,
discussed below.
A. Executive Orders 13563 and 13610
On January 18, 2011, the President
issued Executive Order 13563
(Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review). Executive Order 13563
requires agencies to periodically
conduct retrospective analyses of their
existing rules to identify requirements
that may be outmoded, ineffective,
insufficient, or excessively burdensome.
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The Executive Order further requires
that agencies modify, streamline,
expand, or repeal any problematic
regulatory provisions identified during
their review. During FRA’s retrospective
analysis of part 223, the agency
identified requirements for antiquated
equipment in particular as being
potentially burdensome to the regulated
community. Specifically, the term
‘‘antiquated equipment’’ was not
explicitly defined in the rule text, and
FRA’s interpretive guidance had the
potential of imposing a progressively
larger burden on a small segment of the
industry over time. Accordingly, this
final rule clarifies the application of
these requirements and reduces their
potential economic burden on the rail
industry.
Further, on May 10, 2012, the
President issued Executive Order 13610
(Identifying and Reducing Regulatory
Burdens). Executive Order 13610
requires agencies to take continuing
steps to reassess regulatory
requirements, and where appropriate, to
streamline, improve, or eliminate those
requirements. Executive Order 13610
emphasizes that agencies should
prioritize ‘‘initiatives that will produce
significant quantifiable monetary
savings or significant quantifiable
reductions in paperwork burdens.’’ In
response to these instructions, DOT
carried out a Paperwork Reduction Act
initiative that focused on identifying
and eliminating paperwork burdens on
the rail industry as appropriate. FRA
conducted a comprehensive review of
its regulations based on the guidance
provided in Executive Order 13610 and
determined that eliminating the
stenciling requirement in § 223.17 was
an opportunity to reduce the paperwork
burden on the rail industry without
adversely impacting safety. (FRA’s
Executive Order 13563 review also
identified § 223.17 as a candidate for
elimination.) This final rule eliminates
this stenciling requirement.
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B. RSAC End Facing Glazing
Recommendation
In addition to the changes FRA
proposed in response to these Executive
Orders, FRA’s proposal was also based
on an RSAC recommendation
addressing the application of the
regulations for the next generation of
high-speed trainsets. RSAC is a forum
for collaborative rulemaking and
program development that FRA
established in March 1996. RSAC
includes representation from all of the
agency’s major stakeholder groups,
including railroads, labor organizations,
suppliers and manufacturers, and other
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interested parties.2 When appropriate,
FRA assigns a task to RSAC, and after
consideration and debate, RSAC may
accept or reject the task. If accepted,
RSAC establishes a working group that
possesses the appropriate expertise and
representation of interests to develop
recommendations to FRA for action on
the task. These recommendations are
developed by consensus. A working
group may establish one or more task
forces and task groups to develop facts
and options on a particular aspect of a
given task. When a working group
comes to unanimous consensus on
recommendations for action, the
package is presented to the full
Committee for a vote. If RSAC is unable
to reach consensus on a
recommendation for action, the task is
withdrawn and FRA determines the best
course of action. If the proposal is
accepted by a simple majority of RSAC,
the proposal is formally recommended
to the Administrator of FRA. FRA then
determines what action to take on the
recommendation.
In March 2013, after RSAC’s
Passenger Safety Working Group 3
2 A list of RSAC member groups includes the
following: American Association of Private Railroad
Car Owners (AAPRCO); American Association of
State Highway and Transportation Officials
(AASHTO); American Chemistry Council;
American Petroleum Institute; American Public
Transportation Association (APTA); American
Short Line and Regional Railroad Association
(ASLRRA); American Train Dispatchers Association
(ATDA); Association of American Railroads (AAR);
Association of State Rail Safety Managers (ASRSM);
Association of Tourist Railroads and Railway
Museums (ATRRM); Brotherhood of Locomotive
Engineers and Trainmen (BLET); Brotherhood of
Maintenance of Way Employes Division;
Brotherhood of Railroad Signalmen (BRS); Chlorine
Institute; Federal Transit Administration (FTA); *
Fertilizer Institute; Institute of Makers of
Explosives; International Association of Machinists
and Aerospace Workers; International Brotherhood
of Electrical Workers; Labor Council for Latin
American Advancement; * League of Railway
Industry Women; * National Association of Railroad
Passengers (NARP); National Association of
Railway Business Women; * National Conference of
Firemen & Oilers; National Railroad Construction
and Maintenance Association (NRCMA); National
Railroad Passenger Corporation (Amtrak); National
Transportation Safety Board (NTSB); * Railway
Supply Institute (RSI); Safe Travel America (STA);
Secretaria de Comunicaciones y Transporte; * Sheet
Metal Workers International Association (SMWIA);
Transport Canada; * Transport Workers Union of
America (TWU); Transportation Communications
International Union/BRC (TCIU/BRC);
Transportation Security Administration (TSA); *
and United Transportation Union (UTU).
* Indicates associate, non-voting membership.
3 Members of the Working Group, in addition to
FRA, include the following: AAR, including
members from BNSF Railway Company, CSX
Transportation, Inc., and Union Pacific Railroad
Company; AAPRCO; AASHTO; Amtrak; APTA,
including members from Bombardier, Inc., Herzog
Transit Services, Inc., Interfleet Technology, Inc.
(Interfleet, formerly LDK Engineering, Inc.), Long
Island Rail Road (LIRR), Maryland Transit
Administration, Metro-North Commuter Railroad
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accepted a task related to high-speed
rail safety, the Working Group’s
Engineering Task Force 4 established the
Tier III Cab Glazing Task Group (Task
Group) to focus on issues concerning
safety glazing. The Task Group
discussed glazing during four meetings
held between March and May 2013.
During the Task Group’s last meeting,
the Group reached consensus on a
recommendation to apply FRA’s Safety
Glazing Standards to trainsets operating
at speeds up to 220 miles per hour,
including requirements applicable to
end facing glazing locations that focus
on the exposed exterior of the trainsets.
On June 14, 2013, the full Committee
adopted the Task Group’s
recommendation and presented it to
FRA for consideration. Based on FRA’s
experience enforcing glazing
requirements, FRA believes that the
RSAC Task Group’s approach to
identifying end facing glazing locations
is appropriate to adopt generally for all
equipment, not only high-speed
trainsets, and is therefore doing so in
this final rule. FRA believes it is helpful
to clarify for equipment operating at
conventional speeds what exterior
locations are end facing glazing
locations, to reduce the economic
burden on the rail industry without
adversely impacting safety.
III. Discussion of Specific Comments
and Conclusions
The NPRM solicited written
comments from the public under the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5
U.S.C. 553). FRA also invited comment
on a number of specific issues related to
the proposed rule to develop the final
Company (Metro-North), Northeast Illinois Regional
Commuter Railroad Corporation, Southern
California Regional Rail Authority (Metrolink), and
Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation
Authority (SEPTA); ASLRRA; BLET; BRS; FTA;
NARP; NTSB; RSI; SMWIA; STA; TCIU/BRC; TSA;
TWU; and UTU.
4 Members of the Engineering Task Force, in
addition to FRA, include the following: AAR;
AAPRCO; AASHTO, including California
Department of Transportation, and Interfleet;
APTA, including Alstom, Ansaldo Breda,
Bombardier, Central Japan Railway Company,
China South Locomotive and Rolling Stock
Corporation, Denver Regional Transportation
District, East Japan Railway Company, Faiveley
Transport, GE Transportation, Japan International
Transport Institute, Japan’s Ministry of Land,
Infrastructure, Transport and Tourism, Kawasaki,
Keolis, KPS N.A., LIRR, LTK Engineering Services,
Marsh, Metrolink, Metro-North, Nippon Sharyo,
Parsons Brinckerhoff, PS Consulting, Safetran
Systems, SEPTA, Sharma & Associates, Siemens,
Stadler, STV, Talgo, Texas Central Railway, Veolia,
Voith Turbo, and Wabtec; Amtrak; ASLRRA; BLET;
European Railway Agency; International
Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and
Transportation Workers (SMART), including
SMWIA and UTU; NTSB; RSI, including Battelle
Memorial Institute, and ENSCO; TCIU/BRC; and
Transport Canada.
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rule. Consideration of public comment
is valuable, as it allows FRA to access
additional viewpoints from interested
parties and include them in the final
rule when appropriate. By the close of
the comment period on November 25,
2014, FRA received two sets of
comments. AAR and ATRRM each
submitted comments.
A. AAR’s Comments
AAR requested two changes in the
final rule: (1) Confirm and clarify the
glazing requirements do not apply to
business cars; and (2) remove the noise
emissions testing decal requirement in
part 210. In response to AAR’s first
comment, this final rule excludes
certain cars in a railroad’s fleet that are
used only for private transportation
purposes from the glazing requirements.
After reviewing favorable safety data,
FRA believes the glazing requirements
should not apply to these cars used only
for private transportation. A fuller
discussion of this issue is provided in
section IV.E. of this final rule.
AAR’s request to remove the noise
decal required in part 210 is outside the
scope of this rulemaking. Therefore FRA
cannot properly adopt it in this final
rule. Under the APA, a final rule must
be based on the subjects and issues
identified in the NPRM. See 5 U.S.C.
553. The purpose for this requirement is
to provide sufficient notice and
opportunity for meaningful public
participation in the rulemaking. The
subjects and issues raised in the NPRM
alert interested parties that rule changes
are being considered so they can take
full advantage of the opportunity to
comment on them. The NPRM did not
raise any issues related to existing noise
emissions testing requirements. Because
FRA did not provide sufficient notice
for this issue, FRA cannot make any
changes in the final rule based on this
comment. Nevertheless, FRA continues
to consider the merits of AAR’s
comment and will evaluate how to best
address this issue in the future.
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B. ATRRM’s Comments
ATRRM expressed support for FRA’s
proposal and requested two
modifications in the final rule: (1)
Exclude historic or antiquated
locomotives that are used primarily in
excursion, educational, recreational, or
private passenger service and also used
in other limited types of service from
the glazing requirements; and (2)
confirm and clarify that § 223.3(c)(1)
would not require an ‘‘open window’’
passenger car with windows that open
wide enough to permit egress to also be
equipped with a tool or implement to
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use to break or remove a window during
an emergency.
In response to ATRRM’s first
comment, this final rule excludes from
the glazing requirements a small
number of primarily excursion
locomotives that are used in incidental
freight service when no other power is
available. Based on its thorough review
of the issue, FRA believes it can provide
this relief without having an adverse
impact on rail safety. A fuller discussion
of this issue is provided in section IV.C.
of this final rule.
In response to ATRRM’s second
comment, FRA confirms that
§ 223.3(c)(1) does not require a
passenger car with windows that open
wide enough to permit egress to be
equipped with a tool or implement to
use to break or remove a window during
an emergency. FRA believes the plain
language of § 223.3(c)(1) is clear, and
read in conjunction with §§ 223.9(c) and
223.15(c), communicates that no tool or
implement is required in such a case.
Therefore, FRA believes that no change
is necessary and is adopting
§ 223.3(c)(1) as proposed. Nevertheless,
FRA takes this opportunity to clarify the
language and intent of this paragraph to
avoid any confusion. The purpose for
requiring an emergency window exit is
to help ensure passengers are not sealed
inside the car during an emergency
when they need to exit rapidly. If the
window is open or can be opened wide
enough to permit egress, passengers
should be able to exit the car through
that window as rapidly as they would
if the window were removed by a tool
or other implement. Specifically, if a
window frame does not contain glass, as
in an ‘‘open air car,’’ there is no need
for a tool or implement to clear the
space inside the window frame where
the glass would otherwise be. Therefore,
no tool or implement is required.
FRA carefully considered both sets of
comments on the NPRM while
developing this final rule. To further
clarify written comments, FRA
discussed the comments with the RSAC
Tourist and Historic Railroads and
Private Passenger Car Working Group 5
during a meeting on December 3, 2014.
The discussion, although limited in
scope, helped FRA understand the
written comments. FRA added a copy of
the meeting minutes to the docket for
this proceeding. The final rule text
differs from the NPRM text in part
because of issues AAR and ATRRM
raised in their comments. For changes to
5 Members of the Working Group, in addition to
FRA, include the following: AAR; AAPRCO;
Amtrak; ASLRRA; ATRRM; NRCMA; NTSB;
Railway Passenger Car Alliance; and SMART.
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the rule text, FRA addresses each of the
relevant comments in the corresponding
regulatory paragraphs of the section-bysection analysis provided below.
IV. General Overview of the Final Rule
A. Removal of the Requirement To
Stencil Certified Glazing Compliance on
Inside Walls of Locomotive Cabs,
Passenger Cars, and Cabooses
As noted above, FRA’s review of its
regulations under Executive Order
13563 and Executive Order 13610
identified as a candidate for elimination
§ 223.17, which provided that
locomotive cabs, passenger cars, and
cabooses be stenciled inside on an
interior wall with the type of glazing
present in the equipment. In particular,
Executive Order 13610 requires agencies
to take continuing steps to reassess
regulatory requirements and, where
appropriate, to streamline, improve, or
eliminate those requirements. Executive
Order 13610 emphasizes that agencies
should prioritize ‘‘initiatives that will
produce significant quantifiable
monetary savings or significant
quantifiable reductions in paperwork
burdens.’’ In 2012, FRA conducted a
comprehensive review of its regulations
based on the guidance in Executive
Order 13610 and determined removal of
the certified glazing stenciling
requirement inside of locomotive cabs,
passenger cars, and cabooses is an
opportunity to reduce the paperwork
burden on the rail industry without
adversely impacting safety. The certified
glazing stencil was originally intended
as an easily identifiable method for
railroads to demonstrate compliance
with the safety glazing requirements
contained in part 223 when large
numbers of affected equipment were not
equipped with part 223 glazing.
However, the need for this requirement
has diminished since compliance was
phased in for equipment existing at the
time part 223 was promulgated. (See the
discussion below on removing
compliance phase-in dates from part
223.) Moreover, in practice, FRA has
found the stencil is not always accurate,
and that each window needs to be
examined to determine whether proper
glazing has been applied. An easy and
reliable way to determine the
compliance of each window
individually is to read the permanent
marking on each window panel required
by part 223, appendix A. Each window
that is equipped with certified glazing
must be permanently marked by the
manufacturer to indicate the type of
glazing applied, which remains
unchanged for each glazing panel’s
service life. Appendix A requires
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glazing to be tested and then marked
according to the tests passed as either
‘‘FRA Type I’’ or ‘‘FRA Type II’’ glazing,
depending on its location. By
considering the location of the window
and examining the marking, FRA
inspectors can apply the requirements
and determine whether the glazing use
is compliant.
FRA believes the markings on the
windows are more reliable than the
stenciling located inside the equipment
in which they are installed, and that the
markings provide sufficient information
to determine compliance. Therefore,
FRA concludes that the § 223.17
stenciling requirement is no longer
necessary, and this rule eliminates the
requirement for a certified glazing
stencil located inside locomotive cabs,
passenger cars, and cabooses.
B. Clarification of the Term ‘‘Antiquated
Equipment’’
Part 223 uses the term ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ to identify equipment
excluded from the application of part
223, if the equipment is operated in
only specified types of service
(excursion, educational, recreational or
private transportation). However, part
223 did not define the term ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ and the context in which
the term was used in the regulation did
not clearly indicate its meaning. During
implementation of part 223, FRA
identified the need to clarify the term
‘‘antiquated equipment’’ to ensure its
consistent application. FRA developed
guidance interpreting the term in 1989,
and FRA’s Associate Administrator for
Safety provided it to the agency’s
regional safety management.
Subsequently, FRA made the
interpretation part of a 1990 FRA
technical bulletin. For purposes of this
final rule, FRA references the 1990 FRA
technical bulletin (1990 Technical
Bulletin) and has included it in the
public docket for this rulemaking.
The 1990 Technical Bulletin stated
‘‘antiquated equipment,’’ as used in part
223, meant equipment built in 1945 or
earlier. However, FRA did not explain
why it distinguished between
equipment built in 1945 or earlier from
equipment built after 1945. FRA
believes it chose 1945 as the cut-off date
because it was the end of World War II,
the date was approaching approximately
50 years before the date the guidance
was issued, and the approaching 50-year
difference in time was consistent with
FRA’s treatment of other older
equipment. Based on FRA’s experience,
after 50 years certain equipment
becomes antiquated and justifies
distinct treatment due to significant
changes in technology, including design
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standards and the materials used for
construction. For example, FRA uses
this distinction in the Freight Car Safety
Standards in 49 CFR part 215. Part 215
restricts the operation of freight cars that
are more than 50 years old, measured by
the date of original construction, unless
the operating railroad successfully
petitions FRA for continued use. This
requirement reflects FRA’s general
belief that after 50 years, freight
equipment is typically outdated and
often not in the best condition given its
years of service. Accordingly, for
purposes of safety, FRA believes that
after 50 years of age, it should not treat
freight equipment the same as newer
equipment when used in certain types
of service. As an industry practice, cars
more than 50 years old are generally
used only in limited freight service.
However, passenger cars more than 50
years old have been successfully used
for commuter service, which, to be
clear, is not the type of service
identified in part 223 as service for an
educational, excursion, recreational, or
private transportation purpose.
FRA has applied the term ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ in the enforcement of part
223 consistent with FRA’s 1990
Technical Bulletin without significant
opposition until industry’s response to
FRA’s implementation of section 415 of
the Rail Safety Improvement Act of 2008
(section 415), Public Law 110–432,
Division A. Section 415 required the
Secretary of Transportation 6 to conduct
a study of tourist and historical
railroads for compliance with Federal
rail safety laws. While conducting the
section 415 study, FRA utilized the year
1945 as a reference point in applying
the glazing requirements. Because the
1990 Technical Bulletin did not clearly
specify that the term ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ could be subject to a rolling
50-year calculation, an equitable reading
of that technical bulletin could
conclude FRA intended for the year
1945 to be a fixed date for determining
whether equipment is antiquated. In
other words, a person could reasonably
understand that all equipment built in
1945 or earlier is antiquated, while all
built after 1945 is not.
Following the section 415 study, FRA
initiated several enforcement actions
against owners of equipment in service
that was more than 50 years old, but
built after 1945. Many in the rail
industry expressed surprise at these
enforcement actions and, as a result,
filed approximately 175 petitions for
waiver from the relevant requirements
contained in part 223 with FRA for
6 The Secretary delegated the responsibility to
carry out this mandate to FRA. See 49 CFR 1.89(b).
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equipment built after 1945. In addition
to requesting relief from part 223, many
petitioners argued that based on their
understanding of the term ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ as used in part 223 and
FRA’s enforcement history (i.e., they
had not previously received notice of
non-compliance from FRA), they
believed their equipment was
antiquated and therefore not subject to
part 223. Many of the petitioners were
represented by AAPRCO, which
submitted a letter to FRA in 2009, on
behalf of its members expressing
concern over FRA’s interpretation of the
term ‘‘antiquated equipment.’’ FRA
responded to AAPRCO, explaining that
use of the fixed date of 1945 to
determine whether equipment was
antiquated was consistent with the
guidance in FRA’s 1990 Technical
Bulletin.
Subsequently, Executive Order 13563
was issued requiring agencies to
conduct a retrospective analysis of their
existing rules. As noted above, that
analysis was intended to identify
requirements that may be outmoded,
ineffective, insufficient, or excessively
burdensome, and lead agencies to
modify, streamline, expand, or repeal
such rules based on that analysis.
During FRA’s retrospective analysis of
the Safety Glazing Standards, FRA
identified the application of its existing
interpretation of ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ as potentially creating an
unnecessary burden on the industry.
The cost of retrofitting all noncompliant equipment built more than 50
years before the current date but after
1945 with compliant glazing would
result in a considerable expense to the
rail industry, would likely be too costly
for some small businesses to continue
operating, and would provide a nominal
safety benefit. Based on this
information, FRA is modifying the term
‘‘antiquated equipment’’ to reduce the
burden on the rail industry. FRA
believes the use of a rolling 50-year
period to determine whether equipment
is antiquated significantly reduces the
burden on the rail industry by
eliminating the cost of fitting equipment
that is more than 50 years old and used
only for certain purposes with
compliant glazing. In other words, FRA
believes that the term ‘‘antiquated
equipment,’’ for purposes of part 223,
should mean equipment that is more
than 50 years old, not equipment that
was more than 50 years old as of a
certain, fixed date.
This clarification also better aligns
FRA’s Safety Glazing Standards with
other Federal rail safety requirements
that address older equipment. For
example, because of its age and
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technology, a caboose built more than
50 years ago receives special treatment
as older equipment under § 215.203 of
the Freight Car Safety Standards, but
that same caboose was essentially
treated by the Safety Glazing Standards
the same as newer equipment. This rule
helps classify equipment more
consistently because of its age and
ATRRM believes this will eliminate the
need for most waivers of the glazing
requirements, and waiver renewals, and
remove a substantial burden on the
industry.
C. Exclusion of Older Locomotives Used
in Incidental Freight Service
In addition to clarifying the term
‘‘antiquated equipment,’’ in its
comments, ATTRM also states FRA
should clarify that the service historic or
antiquated equipment operates in may
exclude that equipment from the glazing
requirements. Specifically, rather than
exclude historic or antiquated
locomotives used only for excursion,
educational, recreational, or private
transportation purposes, ATTRM
requested that FRA exclude historic or
antiquated locomotives that are used
primarily in excursion, educational,
recreational, or private passenger
service and also in other limited types
of service. For example, ATTRM stated
that a steam locomotive normally used
exclusively in mainline excursion
service will sometimes be ‘‘broken in’’
in freight service after major mechanical
work, to allow problems to be identified
and corrected before the locomotive is
used for a passenger train. According to
ATTRM, a general system tourist
railroad might also occasionally use a
passenger locomotive on a nonexcursion freight train if the railroad’s
normal freight power is temporarily out
of service or unavailable. ATTRM made
clear it is not seeking exclusion for
locomotives used regularly in freight
service but rather for ‘‘occasional and
irregular’’ use.
FRA understands that all locomotives
(except for a handful of newly built
steam locomotives, less than ten total)
currently used in excursion service
would be considered antiquated based
on the revised definition because they
are more than 50 years old. However,
many locomotives more than 50 years
old used in excursion service are also
used in other limited types of service
but would not be excluded under the
proposed rule. As a result, to comply
with the proposed rule, affected
railroads would need to either equip
these locomotives with compliant
certified glazing at a significant cost, or
forgo using the locomotives for certain
types of service and risk losing revenue.
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FRA believes the Safety Glazing
Standards should not apply to these
small number of excursion locomotives
that are used for limited non-excursion
service when no other power is
available. This is a current industry
practice for approximately 120
locomotives. FRA’s review of its
enforcement data confirms that FRA has
used its enforcement discretion
consistently to permit limited use of
such excursion locomotives in nonexcursion service without compliant
certified glazing. It also reveals that no
accidents or incidents have been
reported to FRA for the lack of
compliant certified glazing materials in
these locomotives. Based on a thorough
review of this issue, FRA believes the
rule can allow this current industry
practice without having an adverse
impact on rail safety. Therefore, this
final rule provides the relief needed to
permit these excursion locomotives to
operate in incidental freight service,
which includes the two specific
scenarios ATRRM’s comments
identified for ‘‘antiquated’’ locomotives
otherwise used only for excursion,
educational, recreational, or private
transportation purposes.
In this final rule, FRA makes clear
that incidental freight service would
include when an excursion locomotive
that is more than 50 years old has
finished hauling an excursion train for
the day, a couple of freight cars need to
be switched on the railroad’s property,
and no other locomotive is ready to
switch the cars. Current industry
practice is for the excursion locomotive
to switch the freight cars. The
alternative would be to start a freight
locomotive not in use, conduct the
required safety inspection to run it in
service, and then use it to switch the
freight cars. FRA believes this
alternative is too burdensome for
industry compared to the low safety risk
incurred by using such an excursion
locomotive to switch the freight cars—
typically short moves conducted at
fairly low speeds. This final rule allows
the flexibility to use these small number
of excursion locomotives as additional
power in freight service under such
limited circumstances. However, FRA
emphasizes that these circumstances are
limited. If a freight locomotive is in use
and available for service on the
property, the exception would not
apply. Moreover, FRA expects railroads
to have a sufficient number of
locomotives available to satisfy their
operational needs under ordinary
circumstances.
FRA also makes clear that another
example of incidental freight service
would be breaking-in a steam
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locomotive more than 50 years old in
freight service after major repairs are
completed as described by ATRRM.
This conditioning service is an
opportunity to stress the steam
locomotive to ensure the repairs are
effective. Excursion operations provide
few opportunities for conditioning such
locomotives in higher tonnage trains.
Moreover, these operations typically
have fairly regimented schedules due to
seasonal considerations and customer
demands. Using these excursion
locomotives in freight service for
conditioning in this limited manner is
also advantageous because freight
service is more frequently available.
Consequently, FRA is excluding this
conditioning service for these older
locomotives from the glazing
requirements in this final rule.
However, FRA intends for the period to
be limited to only the time necessary to
condition the locomotive for excursion
service.
D. Clarification of the Terms ‘‘Private
Car’’ and ‘‘Passenger Car’’
Previous amendments to part 223,
which revised the definition of
‘‘passenger car’’ to clarify
contemporaneous revisions to the
regulation, may have caused some
unintentional confusion regarding
application of the glazing requirements
to ‘‘private cars.’’ In 1998 and 1999,
FRA issued comprehensive regulations
for intercity passenger and commuter
train safety, amending part 223 among
other things to add requirements for
emergency windows in intercity
passenger and commuter trains, which
part 223 has long required for passenger
cars with certified glazing to facilitate
occupant egress. See 63 FR 24630 (May
4, 1998, final rule on Passenger Train
Emergency Preparedness) and 64 FR
25540 (May 12, 1999, final rule on
Passenger Equipment Safety Standards),
as amended at 73 FR 6370 (February 1,
2008, final rule on Passenger Train
Emergency Systems). The amendments
to part 223 included revising the
definition of the term ‘‘passenger car’’
by specifically excluding from the
definition a ‘‘private car.’’ 63 FR 24675.
FRA intended for this revision of the
term ‘‘passenger car’’ to clarify that
requirements being established for
passenger cars in intercity passenger
and commuter train service only, such
as new requirements in former
§ 223.9(d) for marking emergency
windows, did not apply to private cars.
See 63 FR 24675. It was not intended to
change the existing application of the
rest of part 223 to private cars. Yet, the
substantive requirements contained in
§§ 223.9 and 223.15 specify they apply
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to ‘‘passenger cars,’’ which by a literal
reading of the definition of ‘‘passenger
car’’ in § 223.5 would have seemingly
excluded private cars.
However, as evidenced by the
‘‘Application’’ section of part 223
(particularly § 223.3(b)(3)), FRA’s intent
was to continue to apply the glazing
requirements of part 223 to private cars
as previously specified, as no general
exclusion was suggested or made. See
63 FR 24675. FRA believes that the rail
industry has the same understanding.
The application of the glazing
requirements to private cars is clear, as
provided in § 223.3. Section 223.3(a)
states that the requirements in part 223
apply to any railroad rolling equipment
operated on standard gauge track that is
a part of the general railroad system of
transportation. Section 223.3(b)
excludes equipment used for private
transportation purposes, but only if it is
historical or antiquated. Nonetheless, to
alleviate any confusion, FRA is
amending the definition of ‘‘passenger
car,’’ in § 223.5 by removing the last
sentence of the existing definition that
indicates ‘‘[t]his term does not include
a private car.’’
E. Modification of the Application of the
Safety Glazing Standards to Passenger
Cars and Cabooses in a Railroad’s Fleet
That Are Used Only for Private
Transportation Purposes
As discussed above, AAR’s comments
request FRA to confirm the glazing
requirements in part 223 do not apply
to railroad private business cars. Part
223 has not specifically used the term
‘‘railroad private business cars,’’ and
AAR’s comment does not provide a
definition for the term. Based on FRA’s
experience and discussions with AAR
during the Working Group meeting on
December 3, 2014, FRA understands
that a railroad private business car is a
specially modified passenger car or
caboose a railroad uses to conduct
business and entertain colleagues and
guests during transport. Further, FRA
understands all but a small handful of
railroad private business cars are more
than 50 years old. Therefore, based on
their age and use, almost all these cars
will be excluded from the glazing
requirements because of this final rule’s
clarification of the term ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ discussed in section IV.B,
above. Nonetheless, FRA understands
AAR’s comment to also request that the
remaining small handful of cars be
excluded from the glazing requirements.
FRA agrees that the remaining
railroad private business cars should be
excluded from the glazing requirements
due to the limited safety risk. Only a
small number of invited guests and
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employees ride these cars and FRA has
no record of any accidents or incidents
(including injuries) due to the lack of
certified glazing materials in these cars.
FRA has exercised its discretion to
allow railroad private business cars that
are not antiquated to operate without
certified glazing. Its use of discretion
has not had an adverse impact on safety.
Based on a thorough review of this
issue, FRA agrees with AAR’s comment
and in this final rule is excluding from
the glazing requirements the remaining
small handful of private business cars
currently held by railroads that are not
equipped with certified glazing.
However, railroad private business cars
that are currently equipped with
certified glazing are required to
continue to be equipped with certified
glazing to maintain the current level of
safety. In addition, all new railroad
private business cars must be equipped
with certified glazing. Furthermore, if a
railroad’s private car is used in public
service, the exclusion does not apply
and the car must be equipped with
certified glazing. FRA continues to
believe the cost of equipping a new car
with certified glazing is worth the safety
benefit, including new railroad private
business cars.
F. Emergency Windows for Occupied
Passenger Cars That Are More Than 50
Years Old But Built After 1945 and
Operated in an Intercity Passenger or
Commuter Train
This rule clarifies application of the
emergency window requirements in part
223 to passenger cars more than 50
years old, but built after 1945, by
incorporating provisions in waivers
FRA’s Railroad Safety Board grated (see,
e.g., FRA–2010–0080), without changing
the existing regulatory framework for
the emergency window requirements.
Both parts 223 and 238 of this chapter
contain requirements for emergency
windows that apply to various types of
passenger vehicles (see, e.g., §§ 223.8,
223.9, 223.15, and 238.113). For the
purposes of emergency window and
other requirements, part 238
distinguishes between categories of
passenger vehicles—namely, ‘‘passenger
cars’’ and ‘‘passenger equipment.’’
Under § 238.5, the definition of
‘‘passenger car’’ is a subset of
‘‘passenger equipment’’ and must
comply with the emergency window
exit requirements in § 238.113. By
contrast, the part 238 emergency
window exit requirements in § 238.113
do not apply to all passenger equipment
as defined by § 238.5. Instead, passenger
equipment not subject to § 238.113,
including a private car, must be
equipped with emergency windows as
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provided in § 223.9(c) or § 223.15(c), as
appropriate. In this rule, the application
of the emergency window requirements
to passenger equipment and passenger
cars in part 238 is unchanged. However,
a change to part 223 is needed to
incorporate existing waivers of the
requirements of part 223 that require
emergency windows, in light of the
change concerning ‘‘antiquated
equipment,’’ discussed above.
Specifically, in connection with the
change to the application of the term
‘‘antiquated equipment,’’ FRA is
revising the language in § 223.3(b) to
expressly state the exclusion provided
in § 223.3(b)(3) for ‘‘antiquated
equipment,’’ for purposes of emergency
windows, does not apply to occupied
passenger cars built after 1945 when
they operate in intercity passenger or
commuter train service covered by part
238 (part 238 train). See 49 CFR 238.3.
An occupied private car operated in a
train covered by the requirements of
part 238 is not required to be equipped
with emergency windows under part
238; these cars must be equipped with
emergency windows under § 223.9(c) or
§ 223.15(c) of part 223, if they are not
‘‘historical or antiquated equipment’’
and are not used for solely an excursion,
educational, recreational, or private
purpose as applicable under
§ 223.3(b)(3). See, e.g., 73 FR 6378.
However, FRA’s Railroad Safety Board
has granted a series of waivers that
permit such cars that are neither
‘‘historical or antiquated’’ to operate in
a part 238 train without certified
glazing. As a condition to the waivers,
such cars must be equipped with at least
four emergency windows consistent
with § 223.9(c) or § 223.15(c). The
waivers make clear that the minimum of
four emergency windows (two on each
side) must be clearly marked. As
specified in § 223.5, an ‘‘emergency
window’’ means a segment of a side
facing glazing panel designed to permit
rapid and easy removal from inside the
car during an emergency. The waivers
further make clear that any tool required
to remove or break the window must be
provided and clearly marked, with
legible and understandable instructions
for its use. This final rule revises part
223 to be consistent with the conditions
of the waivers FRA has granted and the
proposed change to application of the
term ‘‘antiquated equipment.’’
FRA notes that passenger cars that are
not covered by the requirements of part
238 but are occupied for an excursion,
educational, recreational, or private
purpose, and operate in a passenger
train covered by the requirements of
part 238, are subject to the same
conditions as the train to which they are
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coupled. Such cars are exposed to high
speeds over long distances the same as
the other cars in the passenger train. In
addition, the end frame doors of such
cars may not line up with the end frame
doors on some passenger cars subject to
the requirements of part 238 to which
they are coupled (e.g., an Amtrak
Superliner). Consequently, during an
accident or incident, emergency
windows may be required as a primary
means of egress, due to a lack of endof-car egress. Yet, passenger cars
occupied for an excursion, educational,
recreational, or private use not equipped
with part 223 compliant glazing and
emergency windows might only be
equipped with safety glass that cannot
easily shatter or otherwise be easily
removed without the use of a tool or
other instrument, and therefore may not
permit effective egress for occupants
during an emergency. Such occupied
cars, built after 1945, and more than 50
years old, that operate in a part 238
train, must have emergency windows to
maintain the level of safety currently
provided.
Consequently, in clarifying the
application of part 223 to ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ by using a rolling 50-year
date, rather than a fixed date, FRA
believes it must continue requiring
passenger cars built after 1945 and more
than 50 years old to comply with the
emergency window requirements in
§ 223.9(c) or § 223.15(c) if they are
occupied and operate in an intercity or
commuter passenger train subject to part
238. FRA does not believe it is
appropriate to remove the current
requirement that such cars be equipped
with these emergency windows,
especially as the number of such cars
considered ‘‘antiquated’’ will increase
due to this rulemaking. However,
consistent with the conditions of the
waivers FRA has granted, a tool or other
instrument may be used to remove or
break the window if the tool or other
instrument is clearly marked, and
legible and understandable instructions
are provided for its use. Nonetheless, as
discussed in section III.B in response to
ATRRM’s comment, this final rule does
not require a passenger car with
windows that open wide enough to
permit egress to also be equipped with
a tool or implement to use to break or
remove a window during an emergency.
G. Locomotives, Passenger Cars, and
Cabooses That Are More Than 50 Years
Old But Built After 1945 and Equipped
With Compliant Glazing
In connection with the changes to
application of the term ‘‘antiquated
equipment,’’ all locomotives, passenger
cars, and cabooses more than 50 years
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old, but built after 1945 and equipped
with glazing that complies with the
glazing test standards in appendix A to
part 223, must continue to comply with
those standards. Broadening the
definition of the term ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ in this rule does not
diminish the level of safety currently
required. Accordingly, FRA does not
intend for windows currently
complying with the impact test
standards in appendix A to part 223 to
be replaced with windows that are not.
Moreover, given that such equipment
would already have the necessary
framing arrangements in place to
support part 223-compliant glazing,
FRA expects the window panels to be
replaced with like window glazing. Of
course, if equipment built after 1945
that is more than 50 years old is not
already fitted with compliant window
glazing, then such window panels
(along with their supporting, framing
arrangements) do not have to be
installed.
H. Clarification of the Term ‘‘End
Facing Glazing Location’’
Consistent with the RSAC Task
Group’s recommendation and to ensure
consistent application of the relevant
requirements, this rule revises the
definition of ‘‘end facing glazing
location’’ to clarify that the location
means an ‘‘exterior’’ location. It also
expressly identifies locations not
considered to be ‘‘end facing glazing
location[s]’’—namely, the coupled ends
of multiple-unit (MU) locomotives or
other equipment that is semipermanently connected to each other in
a train consist; and end doors at
locations other than the cab end of a cab
car of MU locomotive.
The former definition of ‘‘end facing
glazing location’’ in § 223.5 does not
specify that ‘‘end facing’’ means only a
location at the exterior of a piece of
equipment. As a result, the final rule
clarifies that FRA does not consider
windows facing an open end of a car,
but located in the interior of the car, to
be end facing. Thus, they do not require
Type I glazing. For example, a vestibule
door set back from the end frame and
corner structure of a passenger car that
contains a window does not require
Type I glazing for the window. In this
example, even if the vestibule window
is exposed to the outside of the car,
Type I glazing is not required. Type I
glazing is not needed because the angle
of incidence of a projectile to that
window is significantly reduced by the
presence of the structures at the end of
the car located ahead of the plane of the
glazing material, compared to a window
aligned with the end frame of the car.
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Therefore, the likelihood of projectile
contact is minimized.
Further, the former definition of ‘‘end
facing glazing location’’ contains no
qualification on the forward or rear end
or the direction of travel of the
equipment. In other words, all forward
and all rearward facing windows could
be considered end facing. This
application of the term may have
resulted in some confusion about FRA’s
enforcement of relevant glazing
requirements, which FRA intends to
clarify in this final rule. Accordingly,
this rule revises the definition to clarify
the term ‘‘end facing glazing location’’
does not apply to the coupled ends of
MU locomotives or other equipment
that is semi-permanently connected to
each other in a train consist, nor does
it apply to end doors at locations other
than the cab end of a cab car or MU
locomotive. The most notable example
of an end door at a location other than
the cab end of a cab car or MU
locomotive is an end frame door on an
Amfleet passenger car. The rule makes
clear that windows in such doors do not
require Type I glazing.
At the same time, this rule also
revises the existing definition of ‘‘side
facing glazing location’’ to clarify those
locations are excluded from the
definition of ‘‘end facing glazing
location’’ and require Type II glazing.
The former Safety Glazing Standards
require that all side facing glazing
locations be equipped with Type II
glazing. See appendix A to part 223.
Because the coupled ends of MU
locomotives or other equipment that is
semi-permanently connected to each
other in a train consist, and end doors
at locations other than the cab end of a
cab car or MU locomotive are
specifically excluded from the
definition of ‘‘end facing glazing
location,’’ those locations do not require
Type I glazing. By specifically including
them in the definition for ‘‘side facing
glazing location,’’ the rule makes clear
those locations require Type II glazing at
a minimum. Thus, for example,
locomotives, cabooses, and passenger
cars built or rebuilt after June 30, 1980,
must be equipped with certified glazing
in all windows under § 223.9. The term
‘‘certified glazing’’ refers to Type I and
Type II glazing, as specified in appendix
A to part 223. Accordingly, for such
equipment locations where certified
glazing is required, either Type I or
Type II glazing must be present.
This final rule also clarifies that any
location which, due to curvature of the
glazing material, can meet the criteria
for either an end facing location or a
side facing location shall be considered
an end facing location. This is a
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clarification that FRA identified when
preparing the final rule, noting that FRA
had inadvertently omitted this
longstanding rule text from the
proposed rule. The revised language
clarifies the continued application of
the regulation to equipment that
contains curved glazing material that
extends beyond its side or end.
I. Removal of Compliance Phase-In
Dates That Have Passed and Are No
Longer Applicable
This final rule removes outdated,
compliance phase-in dates and related
language to make the regulation clearer.
When the Safety Glazing Standards
were published on December 31, 1979,
the regulation included compliance
dates to phase-in requirements for
equipment in existence at the time, in
addition to requirements for new
equipment. See 44 FR 77328, 77353–
77354. As amended by final rule on
December 27, 1983, the regulation
included those compliance dates. See 48
FR 56955–56955. For example in
§ 223.15, ‘‘Requirements for existing
passenger cars,’’ the regulation provided
that certain passenger cars have until
June 30, 1984, to comply with the
requirements for certified glazing and
emergency windows. Because the
compliance phase-in period has long
passed, FRA can remove the phase-in
dates from part 223 without changing
the substantive effect of the
requirements.
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V. Section-by-Section Analysis
This section-by-section analysis of
this final rule explains the rationale for
each section of the rule, together with
the above discussion. The regulatory
changes are organized by section
number.
Section 223.3 Application
As discussed in section IV.B of this
final rule, FRA is revising paragraph
(b)(3) to clarify the meaning of the term
‘‘antiquated equipment.’’ Paragraph
(b)(3)(i) clarifies the meaning of
‘‘antiquated equipment’’ by replacing
the term ‘‘antiquated’’ with the phrase
‘‘more than 50 years old.’’ This change
clarifies that the exclusion from the
application of the rule for ‘‘antiquated
equipment’’ in this section applies to
equipment more than 50 years old
measured from the time of original
construction. This is a rolling, 50-year
calculation, and no longer the fixed date
of 1945 or earlier. As such, some of the
equipment that was subject to the full
requirements of part 223 before this
final rule takes effect (because it is not
yet more than 50 years old) is excluded
from certain requirements when the
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equipment becomes more than 50 years
old. To qualify for the exclusion under
paragraph (b)(3)(i), when the equipment
becomes more than 50 years old, the
rule continues to require that the
equipment be used only for excursion,
educational, recreational, or private
transportation purposes.
As discussed in section IV.C of this
final rule, FRA is also revising
paragraph (b)(3) to provide some
flexibility in application of the glazing
requirements to older locomotives used
primarily in excursion service.
Paragraph (b)(3)(i) also excludes from
the glazing requirements locomotives
that are historical or more than 50 years
old and are used in incidental freight
service. Incidental freight service
includes operating a steam locomotive
for conditioning purposes following
major mechanical work and limited use
of a passenger locomotive in freight
service only when no other locomotive
is available. Please note that paragraph
(c), discussed below, qualifies the
exclusion available under this
paragraph (b)(3); both paragraphs must
be read together.
As discussed in section IV.E of this
final rule, FRA is also revising
paragraph (b)(3) to allow existing
‘‘business cars’’ to continue to operate
without certified glazing. Paragraph
(b)(3)(ii) is added to exclude existing
cabooses and passenger cars in a
railroad’s fleet on April 11, 2016 that are
used only for private transportation
purposes and are not currently
equipped with certified glazing. This
change effectively makes the exclusion
in paragraph (b)(3)(i) for cabooses and
passenger cars that are historic or more
than 50 years old and used only for the
railroad’s private transportation
purposes available to all of the railroad’s
existing cabooses and passenger cars
used only for private transportation
purposes.
In addition, as FRA proposed in the
NPRM, FRA is revising paragraph (b)(4)
to correct the reference to § 223.5.
Paragraph (b)(4) formerly contained an
exclusion for ‘‘[l]ocomotives that are
used exclusively in designated service
as defined in § 223.5(m).’’ The reference
to § 223.5(m) is outdated, as paragraph
lettering was removed from § 223.5,
Definitions, when that section was
reorganized and revised by the May 4,
1998 Passenger Train Emergency
Preparedness final rule. See 63 FR
24630, 24642. Removing the reference to
paragraph (m) of § 223.5 for internal
consistency has no substantive effect on
the application of the rule, as the
definition of ‘‘designated service’’ in
§ 223.5 remains unchanged.
Accordingly, this final rule removes the
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reference to paragraph (m) of § 223.5 so
that paragraph (b)(4) instead refers to
§ 223.5 generally.
FRA is adding paragraph (c) to clarify
the requirements applicable to
equipment subject to the exclusion in
paragraph (b)(3) of this section for
‘‘antiquated equipment,’’ to maintain
safety in connection with the change to
the application of this term for
equipment built after 1945 but more
than 50 years old. As discussed in
sections IV.F and IV.H of this final rule,
FRA is clarifying requirements for
emergency windows in occupied
passenger cars operated in intercity
passenger or commuter trains, as well as
clarifying requirements for locomotives,
passenger cars, and cabooses currently
equipped with compliant glazing.
Paragraph (c) applies, as specified, to
each locomotive, passenger car, and
caboose built after 1945 more than 50
years old and used only for excursion,
educational, recreational, or private
transportation purposes. Specifically,
paragraph (c)(1) requires each such
passenger car to comply with the
emergency window requirements
contained in § 223.9(c) or § 223.15(c), as
appropriate, when it is occupied and
operates in an intercity passenger or
commuter train subject to part 238 of
this chapter. A tool or other instrument
may be used to remove or break an
emergency window if the tool or other
instrument is clearly marked and legible
and understandable instructions are
provided for its use. Paragraph (c)(2)
requires each such locomotive,
passenger car, and caboose that is
equipped with glazing that complies
with the glazing requirements contained
in appendix A to this part as of February
9, 2016, to remain in compliance with
those requirements. Accordingly, the
final rule will not diminish the level of
safety the regulation currently provides.
Section 223.5 Definitions
FRA is revising three terms in this
section: ‘‘end facing glazing location,’’
‘‘passenger car,’’ and ‘‘side facing
glazing location.’’ FRA is also defining
‘‘incidental freight service.’’
Specifically, FRA is revising the
definition of ‘‘end facing glazing
location’’ by making clear the location
means an ‘‘exterior’’ location and that
dome and observation cars are included
in the category of cars subject to the
application of this definition, and by
expressly identifying locations not
considered ‘‘end facing glazing
location[s].’’ The definition clearly
excludes the coupled ends of MU
locomotives or other equipment that is
semi-permanently connected to each
other in a train consist, and end doors
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at locations other than the cab end of a
cab car of MU locomotive. Instead of
considering such locations to be end
facing glazing locations requiring Type
I glazing, these locations are considered
side facing glazing locations requiring
only Type II glazing, as noted below.
Please see section IV.H of this final rule
for a fuller discussion of the change to
the definition of ‘‘end facing glazing
location.’’
FRA is adopting the changes to this
definition as proposed in the NPRM but
also makes clear the definition
continues to provide that any location
which, due to curvature of the glazing
material, can meet the criteria for either
an end facing location or a side facing
location is considered an end facing
location. This provision applies unless
the location is otherwise excluded from
this definition. FRA also notes that in
the final rule this provision uses the
more general term ‘‘end facing’’ location
rather than ‘‘front facing’’ location
consistent with the use of ‘‘end facing’’
glazing location in this final rule.
In addition, this rule revises the
definition of ‘‘side facing glazing
location.’’ The definition now includes
the coupled ends of MU locomotives or
other equipment that is semipermanently connected to each other in
a train consist, and end doors at
locations other than the cab end of a cab
car or MU locomotive. Instead of
considering such locations to be end
facing glazing locations requiring Type
I glazing, these locations are considered
side facing glazing locations requiring
only Type II glazing due to the generally
lower risk of an exterior projectile
impacting the window surface.
In addition, this rule revises the
definition of ‘‘passenger car’’ by
removing the statement that ‘‘[t]his term
does not include a private car.’’ The
revision clarifies that a private car can
be considered a passenger car. Please
see section IV.D of this final rule for a
full discussion of this change.
Finally, FRA is adding the term
‘‘incidental freight service’’ to mean the
occasional and irregular use of a
locomotive in freight service that is
more than 50 years old and used
primarily for excursion, educational,
recreational, or private transportation
purposes. Please see the discussion in
section III.B and IV.C of this final rule,
above.
Section 223.11 Requirements for
Existing Locomotives
As discussed in section IV.I of this
final rule, the amendments to this
section remove the compliance phase-in
dates and related language from the
glazing requirements for existing
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locomotives. As noted above, part 223
phased in requirements for glazing
standards by generally allowing the rail
industry until June 30, 1984, to fit their
existing locomotives with compliant
glazing. The rule included an exception
for locomotives that had their windows
damaged by vandalism. Windows
damaged due to vandalism were
required to be replaced with compliant
glazing sooner than the 1984
compliance phase-in date.
Paragraph (c) removes the compliance
phase-in date, June 30, 1984. This date
is no longer needed now that it has long
passed. Paragraph (d) removes the
language that required windows
damaged by vandalism to be replaced
with compliant glazing sooner than the
1984 compliance phase-in date. This
requirement is no longer needed
because the compliance phase-in period
has long passed and all existing
locomotives, other than yard
locomotives excluded by this section or
locomotives that satisfy the limited
exclusions provided in § 223.3, are
required to be equipped with compliant
glazing.
No comments were received on this
section and FRA accordingly adopts the
changes to this section as proposed but
further clarifies that existing yard
locomotives continue to be excluded
from the section’s requirements. FRA’s
proposal may have inadvertently
created an ambiguity whether this
section’s longstanding exception for
existing yard locomotives continues to
apply.
Section 223.13 Requirements for
Existing Cabooses
As discussed in section IV.I of this
final rule, the amendments to this
section remove the compliance phase-in
dates and related language from the
glazing requirements related to existing
cabooses. As noted above, part 223
phased in requirements for glazing
standards by generally allowing the rail
industry until June 30, 1984, to fit their
existing cabooses with compliant
glazing. The rule included an exception
for cabooses that had their windows
damaged by vandalism. Windows
damaged by vandalism were required to
be replaced with compliant glazing
sooner than the 1984 compliance phasein date.
Paragraph (c) removes the compliance
phase-in date, June 30, 1984. This date
is no longer needed now that it has long
passed. Paragraph (d) removes the
language that required windows
damaged by vandalism to be replaced
with compliant glazing sooner than the
1984 compliance phase-in date. This
requirement is no longer needed
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because the compliance phase-in period
has long passed and all cabooses, other
than yard cabooses excluded by this
section or those that satisfy the limited
exclusions provided in § 223.3, are
required to be equipped with compliant
glazing.
FRA expressly invited comment on
the NPRM on whether it needed to
retain this section in the final rule and
specifically whether its requirements
could be consolidated with those for
new cabooses in § 223.9(b) in a revised
or new section. No comments were
received on this issue and this final rule
makes no change to § 223.9(b). No
comments were received on § 223.13
and FRA accordingly adopts the
changes to § 223.13 as proposed but
clarifies that existing yard cabooses
continue to be excluded from § 223.13’s
requirements. FRA’s proposal may have
inadvertently created an ambiguity
whether § 223.13’s longstanding
exception for existing yard cabooses
continues to apply.
Section 223.15 Requirements for
Existing Passenger Cars
As discussed in section IV.I of this
final rule, the amendments to this
section remove the compliance phase-in
dates and related language from the
glazing requirements for existing
passenger cars. As noted above, before
these changes the rule generally allowed
the rail industry until June 30, 1984, to
fit their existing passenger cars with
compliant glazing. Windows damaged
by vandalism were required to be
replaced with compliant glazing sooner
than the 1984 compliance phase-in date.
Paragraph (c) removes the compliance
phase-in date, June 30, 1984. This date
is no longer needed now that it has long
passed. Paragraph (d) removes the
language that required windows
damaged by vandalism to be replaced
with compliant glazing sooner than the
1984 compliance phase-in date. This
requirement is no longer needed
because the compliance phase-in period
has long passed and all passenger cars,
other than those that satisfy the limited
exclusions provided in § 223.3, are
required to be equipped with compliant
glazing.
FRA expressly invited comment on
the NPRM on whether it needed to
retain this section needed in the final
rule and specifically whether its
requirements could be consolidated
with those for new passenger cars in
§ 223.9(c) in a revised or new section.
No comments were received on this
issue and this final rule makes no
change to § 223.9(c). No comments were
received on § 223.15 and FRA
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accordingly adopts the changes to
§ 223.15 as proposed.
Section 223.17 Identification of
Equipped Locomotives, Passenger Cars
and Cabooses
Section § 223.17 required stenciling
on the interior wall of each locomotive
cab, passenger car, and caboose to
identify that the equipment is fully
equipped with glazing material that
complies with part 223. This
requirement is no longer necessary, and
the final rule removes this entire
section. As a result, this type of
stenciling is no longer required. For a
full discussion of this change, please see
section IV.A of this final rule.
Appendix B to Part 223—Schedule of
Civil Penalties
Appendix B to part 223 contains a
schedule of civil penalties for FRA to
use to enforce this part. FRA is revising
the schedule of civil penalties in this
final rule to reflect revisions made to
part 223. Because such penalty
schedules are statements of agency
policy, notice and comment are not
required before they are issued. See 5
U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(A). Nevertheless, FRA
invited comments on the penalty
schedule in the NPRM. However, FRA
did not receive any comments.
Accordingly, FRA is revising the
penalty schedule to reflect the removal
of § 223.17, Identification of Equipped
Locomotives, Passenger Cars and
Cabooses, from this part.
VI. Regulatory Impact and Notices
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A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
This final rule has been evaluated
consistent with Executive Order 12866
(Regulatory Planning and Review),
Executive Order 13563 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review), and
DOT policies and procedures. FRA has
prepared and placed in the docket a
regulatory analysis addressing the
economic impact of this final rule. FRA
believes this final rule is consistent with
current industry practices and reduces
the regulatory burden on the rail
industry.
The analysis includes a quantitative
evaluation of the benefits of this final
rule. For entities choosing to take
advantage of the new flexibilities and
cost savings provided in this final rule,
FRA estimates there may be a minimal
cost burden associated with this rule.
Specifically, railroads or car owners or
operators may need to purchase small
hammers or other tools for occupants to
use to break windows for emergency
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egress in passenger cars now considered
‘‘antiquated equipment,’’ because they
were built after 1945 and are more than
50 years old, when these passenger cars
are operated in intercity passenger or
commuter trains. Additionally, railroads
will probably modify existing
specifications for new equipment orders
to remove the requirement to stencil
interior walls of the equipment as
containing window glazing in full
compliance with part 223. The present
value of total voluntary costs affected
entities may incur is estimated to be
approximately $6,000 over a 10-year
period.
Overall, the benefits of this rule
greatly outweigh any costs that may be
incurred. The revisions specified in this
final rule eliminate the cost of
stenciling, reduce the cost of certain
new passenger cars, and reduce the
number of waivers requested by the
railroad industry. Over a 10-year period,
this analysis finds that $1,088,489 in
cost savings will accrue due to the
changes. The present value of this
amount is $819,479 (discounted at 7
percent). Therefore, accounting for the
$6,000 in voluntarily-incurred costs to
take advantage of the flexibilities
provided in this final rule, the net
savings of this rule is approximately
$813,479.
FRA is eliminating the requirement to
stencil the inside walls of locomotives,
passenger cars, and cabooses as fully
equipped with compliant glazing. This
requirement was necessary during the
implementation phase-in period of part
223 (in the 1980s), when large numbers
of affected equipment were not
equipped with glazing required by part
223. The stencil was a clear and easy
way to determine whether compliant
glazing was installed. Because the
phase-in period for fitting equipment
with certified glazing under part 223 has
long passed, the required certification
markings on the window panels have
become more useful and reliable for
FRA to determine compliance with part
223. The total annual cost for all
affected entities to comply with the
stenciling requirement is from $74,170
(Year 1) to $80,820 (Year 10) (nondiscounted). This variability is due to
the increase in real wages discussed in
section 6 of the accompanying analysis
in the docket for this rulemaking.
Consequently, over a 10-year period, the
analysis finds that a total of $773,841 in
cost savings will accrue through the
elimination of this requirement. The
present value of this amount is $578,494
(discounted at 7 percent).
This rule revises definitions to help
provide clarity to the rail industry and
also greater consistency with other FRA
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regulations. Antiquated equipment will
now be defined as equipment that is
more than 50 years old. This
significantly reduces the number of
waiver petitions submitted to exclude
from the glazing requirements
equipment that is more than 50 years
old but built after 1945 and operated in
a train for an excursion, educational,
recreational, or private transportation
purpose. Based on past practice, FRA
estimates it would have received
approximately 140 initial waiver
requests over the next five years (28 per
year) if this rule were not issued. FRA
is estimating the potential waivers that
will no longer be needed over a fiveyear period because renewal waivers
would have been needed every five
years to avoid installing certified
glazing. Therefore, no additional waiver
applications would be expected after the
fifth year. In years when the initial
waiver petitions would have been
submitted if this rule were not issued,
the total annual cost for all affected
entities would have been from $16,507
(Year 1) to $16,921 (Year 10) (nondiscounted). This variability is due to
the increase in real wages as discussed
in section 6 of the accompanying
analysis in the docket for this
rulemaking. Accordingly, a total of
$83,563 in cost savings will accrue over
10 years due to the reduction of initial
waiver requests. The present value of
this amount is $73,260 (discounted at 7
percent).
FRA has approved approximately 310
waivers of glazing requirements for
equipment more than 50 years old but
manufactured after 1945 and operated
in a train for an excursion, educational,
recreational, or private transportation
purpose. If the final rule was not issued,
renewal waivers would be required to
be submitted every five years to
continue operations. Under this final
rule, these waivers are no longer
necessary, saving the labor cost of
preparing and submitting each waiver
renewal request. The total annual cost
for all affected entities to submit
renewal waiver petitions would have
increased from $18,275 (Year 1) to
$28,066 (Year 10) (non-discounted) if
this rule were not issued. This
variability is due to the rise in real
wages discussed in section 6 of the
accompanying analysis this
rulemaking’s docket. Over a 10-year
period, a total of $231,084 in cost
savings will therefore accrue due to the
reduction of renewal waivers. The
present value of this amount is $167,725
(discounted at 7 percent).
FRA notes it is revising the definition
of the term ‘‘end facing glazing
location’’ to clarify the location means
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an ‘‘exterior’’ location and expressly
identify locations not considered ‘‘end
facing glazing location[s]’’—namely, the
coupled ends of MU locomotives or
other equipment that is semipermanently connected to each other in
a train consist; and end doors at
locations other than the cab end of a cab
car of MU locomotive. However, FRA
did not evaluate any cost savings as a
result of this clarification, because FRA
has generally enforced the regulation
consistent with this clarification.
FRA expressly requested comments
on all aspects of the regulatory
evaluation and its conclusions. No
comments were received in response to
FRA’s request.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and
Executive Order 13272
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(RFA), Public Law 96–354, as amended,
and codified as amended at 5 U.S.C.
601–612, and Executive Order 13272
(Proper Consideration of Small Entities
in Agency Rulemaking), 67 FR 53461,
Aug. 16, 2002, require agency review of
proposed and final rules to assess their
impact on ‘‘small entities’’ for purposes
of the RFA. An agency must prepare a
regulatory flexibility analysis unless it
determines and certifies that a rule is
not expected to have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Pursuant to
the RFA, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the
Administrator of FRA certifies that this
final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. This rule will
affect small entities. However, the effect
on these entities will be purely
beneficial other than for a nominal cost
savings offset, as it will reduce their
costs and labor burden particularly by
narrowing the class of equipment
subject to the full requirements of the
Safety Glazing Standards regulation.
The term ‘‘small entity’’ is defined in
5 U.S.C. 601 (section 601). Section
601(6) defines ‘‘small entity’’ as having
the same meaning as ‘‘the terms ‘small
business’, ‘small organization’ and
‘small governmental jurisdiction’
defined in paragraphs (3), (4), and (5) of
this section.’’ In turn, section 601(3)
defines a ‘‘small business’’ as generally
having the same meaning as ‘‘small
business concern’’ under section 3 of
the Small Business Act. This includes
any small business concern that is
independently owned and operated, and
is not dominant in its field of operation.
Next, section 601(4) defines ‘‘small
organization’’ as generally meaning any
not-for-profit enterprise that is
independently owned and operated, and
not dominant in its field of operations.
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Additionally, section 601(5) defines
‘‘small governmental jurisdiction’’ in
general to include governments of cities,
counties, towns, townships, villages,
school districts, or special districts with
populations less than 50,000.
The U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) stipulates ‘‘size
standards’’ for small entities. A forprofit railroad business firm may be
considered a small entity if it has less
than 1,500 employees for ‘‘Line-Haul
Operating’’ railroads, and 500
employees for ‘‘Short-Line Operating’’
railroads. See ‘‘Size Eligibility
Provisions and Standards,’’ 13 CFR part
121, subpart A.
Under exceptions provided in section
601, Federal agencies may adopt their
own size standards for small entities in
consultation with SBA, and in
conjunction with public comment.
Under the authority provided to it by
SBA, FRA has published a ‘‘Final Policy
Statement Concerning Small Entities
Subject to the Railroad Safety Laws,’’
which formally establishes small
entities as including, among others, the
following: (1) The railroads classified by
the Surface Transportation Board as
Class III; and (2) commuter railroads
‘‘that serve populations of 50,000 or
less.’’ 7 See 68 FR 24891, May 9, 2003,
codified at appendix C to 49 CFR part
209. Currently, the revenue
requirements are $20 million or less in
annual operating revenue, adjusted
annually for inflation. The $20 million
limit (adjusted annually for inflation) is
based on the Surface Transportation
Board’s threshold of a Class III railroad,
which is adjusted by applying the
railroad revenue deflator adjustment.8
7 In the Interim Policy Statement, 62 FR 43024,
Aug. 11, 1997:
FRA defined ‘small entity,’ for the purpose of
communication and enforcement policies, the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., and
the Equal Access for Justice Act, 5 U.S.C. 501 et
seq., to include only railroads which are classified
as Class III. FRA further clarified the definition to
include, in addition to Class III railroads, hazardous
materials shippers that meet the income level
established for Class III railroads (those with annual
operating revenues of $20 million per year or less,
as set forth in 49 CFR 1201.1–1); railroad
contractors that meet the income level established
for Class III railroads; and those commuter railroads
or small governmental jurisdictions that serve
populations of 50,000 or less.
68 FR 24892, May 9, 2003. ‘‘The Final Policy
Statement issued today is substantially the same as
the Interim Policy Statement.’’ 68 FR 24894.
8 In general, under 49 CFR 1201.1–1, the class
into which a railroad carrier falls is determined by
comparing the carrier’s annual inflation-adjusted
operating revenues for three consecutive years to
the following scale after the dollar figures in the
scale are adjusted by applying the railroad revenue
deflator formula:
Class I—$250 million or more;
Class II—more than $20 million, but less than
$250 million; and
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Frm 00042
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
For further information on the
calculation of the specific dollar limit,
please see 49 CFR part 1201. FRA is
using this definition of ‘‘small entity’’
for this final rule.
FRA estimates that there are 726
railroads that operate on standard gage
track that is part of the general railroad
system of transportation and are,
therefore, subject to part 223, see 49
CFR 223.3. Of these railroads, 44 are
Class I freight railroads, Class II freight
railroads, commuter railroads serving
populations of 50,000 or more, or
intercity passenger railroads (i.e.,
Amtrak, a Class I railroad, and the
Alaska Railroad, a Class II railroad). The
remaining 681 railroads are therefore
assumed to be small railroads for the
purpose of this assessment. However,
this final rule will not impact most of
these railroads because locomotives
acquired by small railroads are typically
older Class I locomotives already
equipped with compliant glazing and
stenciling. Similarly, any passenger cars
acquired by small railroads from
intercity passenger or commuter
railroads will already be equipped with
compliant glazing and stenciling.
Small railroads and private car
owners will likely be affected by the
clarification that certain equipment
more than 50 years old is considered
antiquated and thereby excluded from
part 223’s requirements when operated
in specified service. As a result of this
change, the economic burden of
preparing and submitting waiver
petitions will be reduced for railroads
and private car owners for equipment
that is more than 50 years old but built
after 1945 and operated in a train for an
excursion, educational, recreational, or
private transportation purpose. As noted
above, FRA estimates that it would
Class III—$20 million or less.
49 CFR 1201.1–1(a), (b)(1). STB’s General
Instructions at 1–1 state that carriers are grouped
into three classes for purposes of accounting and
reporting. The three classes are as follows:
Class I: These carriers have annual carrier
operating revenues of $250 million or more after
applying STB’s railroad revenue deflator formula.
Class II: These carriers have annual carrier
operating revenues of less than $250 million but in
excess of $20 million after applying STB’s railroad
revenue deflator formula.
Class III: These carriers have annual carrier
operating revenues of $20 million or less after
applying STB’s railroad revenue deflator formula.
See also 78 FR 21007, Apr. 8, 2013. It should be
noted that there are some exceptions to this general
definition of the three classes of carriers. As one
important example, STB treats families of railroads
as a single carrier for classification purposes when
those families operate within the United States as
a single, integrated rail system. 49 CFR 1201–
1.1(b)(1). As another example, STB considers all
switching and terminal companies to be Class III
carriers, regardless of their operating revenues. 49
CFR 1201–1.1(d).
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receive approximately 140 initial
requests for waiver of the glazing
requirements over the next five years
(28 per year) if this change were not
made, and the approximately 310
approved waivers of glazing
requirements would also have to be
renewed every five years if this change
were not made. When including the
avoided cost of renewing the additional
140 initial waiver requests by making
this change—a total of approximately
900 9 avoided waiver petitions—the
total cost savings is $240,985 over 10
years, discounted at 7 percent. Of
course, the individually allocated
savings to each affected railroad or
private car owner will be a
comparatively smaller portion of the
total cost savings.
Further, for entities choosing to take
advantage of the regulatory relief
permitted by this change to the
definition of ‘‘antiquated equipment,’’
FRA estimates that there may be a
minimal cost burden associated with
operation of such passenger cars in
intercity passenger or commuter service,
because they will continue to be
required to have emergency windows.
Some affected entities may choose to
install small hammers or other small
tools or implements to allow for
emergency egress from passenger car
windows when operated in an intercity
passenger or commuter train. Hammers
may be used to break these windows in
case of an emergency. The population of
private cars that operate in Amtrak
trains is approximately 125 cars. FRA
estimates that 80 percent of these cars
will not have hammers or other tools
already on board to facilitate emergency
egress through windows. Therefore, for
100 of those private cars, car owners
will have to purchase four hammers or
other tools per car. That total cost will
be approximately $5,000. Additionally,
a minimal cost to copy and laminate
instructions to use the hammers or other
tools will also be incurred. FRA
estimates this total cost to be $1,000
(approximately $10 per car). All these
costs will be incurred during the first
year. Therefore, the present value of all
total costs is approximately $6,000. This
$6,000 cost will easily be offset by the
total cost savings of $240,985 from
changing the definition of ‘‘antiquated
equipment,’’ which is shared among all
small entities. Consequently, FRA
concludes this final rule will not have
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CFR section
9 A total of approximately 900 waiver petitions
will be avoided: 140 initial petitions in the first five
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FRA is submitting the information
collection requirements in this final rule
for review and approval to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). The sections
that contain the new information and
current information collection
requirements and the estimated time to
fulfill each requirement are as follows:
Average time
per response
Total annual
burden hours
673 railroads (100 passenger cars with minimum of 4 emergency
windows).
400 marked tools with legible & clear instructions.
30 minutes ...
200 hours.
673 railroads .....................
Already compliant/Already
have FRA approved
waivers.
15 designations .................
N/A ...............
N/A.
30 seconds ..
0.125 hour.
Certification done instantly
at time of window manufacture.
Already compliant/Already
have FRA approved
waivers.
Certification done instantly
at time of window manufacture.
Already compliant/Already
have FRA approved
waivers.
N/A ...............
N/A.
N/A ...............
N/A.
N/A ...............
N/A.
N/A ...............
N/A.
Certification done instantly
at time of window manufacture.
10 requests .......................
N/A ...............
N/A.
15 minutes ...
3 hours.
480 pieces
per hour.
52 hours.
673 railroads .....................
673 railroads .....................
673 railroads .....................
673 railroads .....................
673 railroads .....................
673 railroads .....................
5 Glass/Glazing Manufacturers.
5 Glass/Glazing Manufacturers.
25,000 pieces of glazing ...
years + 140 initial petitions renewed in the next
five years + 310 approved waiver petitions renewed
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C. Paperwork Reduction Act
Total annual responses
Respondent universe
223.3(c)—Application: Passenger car emergency windows—marked tools with legible and understandable instructions near them to remove/break window for passenger cars built after 1945 that are
more than 50 years old and operated in intercity
passenger or commuter train (new requirement).
223.11—Existing Locomotives: Built or rebuilt prior to
July 1, 1980, equipped with certified glazing in all
locomotive cab windows (revised requirement).
—Locomotives with cab windows broken or damaged—placed in designated service (revised requirement).
—Locomotives removed from service until broken/
damaged windows are replaced with certified glazing (revised requirement).
223.13—Existing Cabooses: Built or rebuilt prior to
July 1, 1980, equipped with certified glazing in all
windows (revised requirement).
—Cabooses removed from service until broken/damaged windows are replaced with certified glazing
(revised requirement).
223.15—Existing Passenger Cars: Built or rebuilt prior
to July 1, 1980, equipped with certified glazing in all
windows plus four emergency windows (revised requirement).
—Passenger cars removed from service until broken/
damaged windows are replaced with certified glazing (revised requirement).
Appendix A—Requests to glass/glazing manufacturers for glazing certification information (current requirement).
—Identification of each individual unit of glazing material (current requirement).
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
FRA certifies that this final rule is not
expected to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities under the RFA or Executive
Order 13272. Although a substantial
number of small entities will be affected
by this rule, none of these entities will
be significantly impacted. In order to
determine the significance of the
economic impact for the final rule’s
RFA requirements, FRA expressly
invited comments on the NPRM from all
interested parties concerning the
potential economic impact on small
entities resulting from the rule. FRA did
not receive comments on this issue.
Frm 00043
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in the first five years + 310 approved waiver
petitions renewed in the next five years.
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CFR section
Respondent universe
Total annual responses
Average time
per response
Total annual
burden hours
—Testing of new material (current requirement) .........
5 Glass/Glazing Manufacturers.
1 test .................................
14 hours ......
14 hours.
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All estimates include the time for
reviewing instructions; searching
existing data sources; gathering or
maintaining the needed data; and
reviewing the information. For
information or a copy of the paperwork
package submitted to OMB, contact Mr.
Robert Brogan, Information Clearance
Officer, Office of Railroad Safety, FRA,
at 202–493–6292, or Ms. Kimberly
Toone, FRA Records Management
Officer, Office of Information
Technology, FRA, at 202–493–6132, or
via email at the following addresses:
Robert.Brogan@dot.gov; Kim.Toone@
dot.gov.
Organizations and individuals
desiring to submit comments on the
collection of information requirements
should send them directly to the Office
of Management and Budget, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, DC 20503, Attention: FRA
Desk Officer. Comments may also be
sent via email to the Office of
Management and Budget at the
following address: oira_submissions@
omb.eop.gov.
OMB is required to make a decision
concerning the collection of information
requirements contained in this final rule
between 30 and 60 days after
publication of this document in the
Federal Register. Therefore, a comment
to OMB is best assured of having its full
effect if OMB receives it within 30 days
of publication.
FRA cannot impose a penalty on
persons for violating information
collection requirements which do not
display a current OMB control number,
if required. FRA intends to obtain
current OMB control numbers for new
information collection requirements
resulting from this rulemaking action
prior to the effective date of this final
rule. The OMB control number, when
assigned, will be announced by separate
notice in the Federal Register.
D. Federalism Implications
Executive Order 13132, ‘‘Federalism’’
(64 FR 43255, Aug. 10, 1999), requires
FRA to develop an accountable process
to ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input
by State and local officials in the
development of regulatory policies that
have federalism implications.’’ ‘‘Policies
that have federalism implications’’ are
defined in the Executive Order to
include regulations that have
‘‘substantial direct effects on the States,
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16:23 Feb 08, 2016
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on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’ Under Executive
Order 13132, an agency may not issue
a regulation with federalism
implications that imposes substantial
direct compliance costs and that is not
required by statute, unless the Federal
government provides the funds
necessary to pay the direct compliance
costs incurred by State and local
governments, or the agency consults
with State and local government
officials early in the process of
developing the regulation. Where a
regulation has federalism implications
and preempts State law, the agency
seeks to consult with State and local
officials in the process of developing the
regulation.
FRA has analyzed this rule under the
principles and criteria in Executive
Order 13132. This rule will not have a
substantial effect on the States or their
political subdivisions, and it will not
affect the relationships between the
Federal government and the States or
their political subdivisions, or the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. In addition, FRA
determined this regulatory action will
not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on States or their
political subdivisions. Therefore, the
consultation and funding requirements
of Executive Order 13132 do not apply.
Nevertheless, State and local officials
were involved in developing
recommendations that are addressed in
this rule through the RSAC, which has
as permanent members two
organizations directly representing State
and local interests, AASHTO and
ASRSM.
However, this rule could have
preemptive effect by operation of law
under certain provisions of the Federal
railroad safety statutes, specifically the
former Federal Railroad Safety Act of
1970, repealed and re-codified at 49
U.S.C 20106, and the former Locomotive
Boiler Inspection Act (LIA) at 45 U.S.C.
22–34, repealed and re-codified at 49
U.S.C. 20701–20703. Section 20106
provides that States may not adopt or
continue in effect any law, regulation, or
order related to railroad safety or
security that covers the subject matter of
a regulation prescribed or order issued
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Frm 00044
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
by the Secretary of Transportation (with
respect to railroad safety matters) or the
Secretary of Homeland Security (with
respect to railroad security matters),
except when the State law, regulation,
or order qualifies under the ‘‘essentially
local safety or security hazard’’
exception to section 20106. Moreover,
the Supreme Court has interpreted the
former LIA to preempt the field of
locomotive safety. See Napier v.
Atlantic Coast Line R.R., 272 U.S. 605
(1926) and Kurns v. Railroad Friction
Products Corp., 132 S. Ct. 1261 (2012).
E. Environmental Impact
FRA has evaluated this final rule
under the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.), other environmental statutes,
related regulatory requirements, and its
‘‘Procedures for Considering
Environmental Impacts’’ (FRA’s
Procedures) (64 FR 28545, May 26,
1999). FRA has determined this final
rule is categorically excluded from
detailed environmental review under
section 4(c)(20) of FRA’s Procedures,
‘‘Promulgation of railroad safety rules
and policy statements that do not result
in significantly increased emissions of
air or water pollutants or noise or
increased traffic congestion in any mode
of transportation.’’ See 64 FR 28547,
May 26, 1999. Categorical exclusions
(CEs) are actions identified in an
agency’s NEPA implementing
procedures that do not normally have a
significant impact on the environment
and therefore do not require either an
environmental assessment (EA) or
environmental impact statement (EIS).
See 40 CFR 1508.4.
In analyzing the applicability of a CE,
the agency must also consider whether
extraordinary circumstances are present
that would warrant a more detailed
environmental review through the
preparation of an EA or EIS. Id. Under
section 4(c) and (e) of FRA’s Procedures,
FRA has further concluded that no
extraordinary circumstances exist with
respect to this regulation that might
trigger the need for a more detailed
environmental review. The purpose of
this rulemaking is to revise and clarify
existing regulations related to the use of
glazing materials in the windows of
locomotives, passenger cars, and
cabooses. FRA does not anticipate any
environmental impacts from these
requirements and finds that there are no
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extraordinary circumstances present in
connection with this final rule.
F. Executive Order 12898
(Environmental Justice)
Executive Order 12898, Federal
Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations, and DOT
Order 5610.2(a) (91 FR 27534, May 10,
2012) require DOT agencies to achieve
environmental justice as part of their
mission by identifying and addressing,
as appropriate, disproportionately high
and adverse human health or
environmental effects, including
interrelated social and economic effects,
of their programs, policies, and
activities on minority populations and
low-income populations. The DOT
Order instructs DOT agencies to address
compliance with Executive Order 12898
and requirements within the DOT Order
in rulemaking activities, as appropriate.
FRA has evaluated this final rule under
Executive Order 12898 and the DOT
Order and determined it will not cause
disproportionately high and adverse
human health and environmental effects
on minority populations or low-income
populations.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with RULES
G. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal
Consultation)
FRA has evaluated this final rule
under the principles and criteria
contained in Executive Order 13175,
Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments, dated
November 6, 2000. This final rule will
not have a substantial direct effect on
one or more Indian tribes, will not
impose substantial direct compliance
costs on Indian tribal governments, and
will not preempt tribal laws. Therefore,
the funding and consultation
requirements of Executive Order 13175
do not apply, and a tribal summary
impact statement is not required.
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Under Section 201 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Public
Law 104–4, 2 U.S.C. 1531), each Federal
agency ‘‘shall, unless otherwise
prohibited by law, assess the effects of
Federal regulatory actions on State,
local, and tribal governments, and the
private sector (other than to the extent
that such regulations incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in
law).’’ Section 202 of the Act (2 U.S.C.
1532) further requires that ‘‘before
promulgating any general notice of
proposed rulemaking that is likely to
result in the promulgation of any rule
that includes any Federal mandate that
may result in expenditure by State,
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local, and tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100,000,000 or more (adjusted
annually for inflation) in any 1 year, and
before promulgating any final rule for
which a general notice of proposed
rulemaking was published, the agency
shall prepare a written statement’’
detailing the effect on State, local, and
tribal governments and the private
sector. When adjusted for inflation
using the Consumer Price Index for All
Urban Consumers as published by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, the
equivalent value of $100,000,000 in year
2014 dollars is $155,000,000.10 The
final rule will not result in the
expenditure, in the aggregate, of
$100,000,000 or more in any one year,
and thus preparation of such a
statement is not required.
I. Privacy Act
FRA wishes to inform all interested
parties that anyone is able to search the
electronic form of any written
communications and comments
received into any of our dockets by the
name of the individual submitting the
comment (or signing the comment, if
submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.). See https://
www.regulations.gov/#!privacyNotice
for the privacy notice of regulations.gov
or interested parties may review DOT’s
complete Privacy Act Statement in the
Federal Register published on April 11,
2000, 65 FR 19477.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 223
Glazing standards, Penalties, Railroad
safety, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
The Final Rule
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, FRA amends part 223 of
chapter II, subtitle B of title 49, Code of
Federal Regulations, as follows:
PART 223 [AMENDED]
1. Revise the authority citation for part
223 to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20102–20103, 20133,
20701–20702, 21301–21302, 21304; 28 U.S.C.
2461, note; and 49 CFR 1.89.
2. In § 223.3, revise paragraphs (b)(3)
and (4) and add paragraph (c) to read as
follows:
■
§ 223.3
*
*
Application.
*
*
*
10 See DOT guidance ‘‘2015 Threshold of
Significant Regulatory Actions Under the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995,’’ May 6, 2015
(update), available electronically at https://www.
transportation.gov/office-policy/transportationpolicy/2015-threshold-significant-regulatoryactions-under-unfunded.
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Frm 00045
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
6789
(b) * * *
(3) Except as provided in paragraph
(c) of this section:
(i) Locomotives, cabooses, and
passenger cars that are historic or more
than 50 years old and, except for
incidental freight service, are used only
for excursion, educational, recreational,
or private transportation purposes; and
(ii) Cabooses and passenger cars in a
railroad’s fleet on April 11, 2016 that are
used only for the railroad’s private
transportation purposes. Each such
railroad caboose or car that is equipped
with glazing that complies with the
glazing requirements contained in
appendix A to this part as of February
9, 2016, must remain in compliance
with those requirements.
(4) Locomotives that are used
exclusively in designated service as
defined in § 223.5.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph
(b)(3) of this section, this paragraph (c)
applies, as specified, to each
locomotive, passenger car, and caboose
built after 1945 that is more than 50
years old and is used only for excursion,
educational, recreational, or private
transportation purposes.
(1) Each such passenger car must
comply with the emergency window
requirements contained in § 223.9(c) or
§ 223.15(c), as appropriate, when it is
occupied and operates in an intercity
passenger or commuter train subject to
part 238 of this chapter. A tool or other
instrument may be used to remove or
break an emergency window if the tool
or other instrument is clearly marked
and legible and understandable
instructions are provided for its use.
(2) Each such locomotive, passenger
car, and caboose that is equipped with
glazing that complies with the glazing
requirements contained in appendix A
to this part as of February 9, 2016, must
remain in compliance with those
requirements.
■ 3. In § 223.5, revise the definitions for
‘‘End facing glazing location’’,
‘‘Passenger car’’, and ‘‘Side facing
glazing location’’ and add the definition
for ‘‘Incidental freight service’’ in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
§ 223.5
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
End facing glazing location means any
exterior location where a line
perpendicular to the plane of the glazing
material makes a horizontal angle of 50
degrees or less with the centerline of the
locomotive, caboose, or passenger car,
including a dome or observation car,
except for: The coupled ends of
multiple-unit (MU) locomotives or other
equipment that is semi-permanently
connected to each other in a train
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consist; and end doors of passenger cars
at locations other than the cab end of a
cab car or MU locomotive. Any location
which, due to curvature of the glazing
material, can meet the criteria for either
an end facing location or a side facing
location shall be considered an end
facing location.
*
*
*
*
*
Incidental freight service means the
occasional and irregular use of a
locomotive in freight service that is
more than 50 years old and used
primarily for excursion, educational,
recreational, or private transportation
purposes.
*
*
*
*
*
Passenger car means a unit of rail
rolling equipment intended to provide
transportation for members of the
general public and includes selfpropelled cars designed to carry
baggage, mail, express or passengers.
This term includes a passenger coach,
cab car, and an MU locomotive.
*
*
*
*
*
Side facing glazing location means
any location where a line perpendicular
to any plane of the glazing material
makes an angle of more than 50 degrees
with the centerline of the locomotive,
caboose or passenger car. A side facing
glazing location also means a location at
the coupled ends of MU locomotives or
other equipment that is semipermanently connected to each other in
a train consist, and a location at end
doors other than at the cab end of a cab
car or MU locomotive.
*
*
*
*
*
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4. In § 223.11, revise paragraphs (c)
and (d) to read as follows:
■
§ 223.11 Requirements for existing
locomotives.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Except for yard locomotives and
locomotives equipped as described in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section,
locomotives built or rebuilt prior to July
1, 1980, shall be equipped with certified
glazing in all locomotive cab windows.
(d) Except for yard locomotives, each
locomotive that has a locomotive cab
window that is broken or damaged so
that the window fails to permit good
visibility shall be—
(1) Placed in Designated Service
within 48 hours of the time of breakage
or damage; or
(2) Removed from service until the
broken or damaged window is replaced
with certified glazing.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 223.13, revise paragraphs (c)
and (d) to read as follows:
§ 223.13 Requirements for existing
cabooses.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Except for yard cabooses and
cabooses equipped as described in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section,
cabooses built or rebuilt prior to July 1,
1980, shall be equipped with certified
glazing in all windows.
(d) Except for yard cabooses, each
caboose that has a window that is
broken or damaged so that the window
fails to permit good visibility shall be
removed from service until the broken
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Frm 00046
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
or damaged window is replaced with
certified glazing.
*
*
*
*
*
6. In § 223.15, revise paragraphs (c)
and (d) to read as follows:
■
§ 223.15 Requirements for existing
passenger cars.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Except for passenger cars
described in paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section, passenger cars built or
rebuilt prior to July 1, 1980, shall be
equipped with certified glazing in all
windows and a minimum of four
emergency windows.
(d) Each passenger car that has a
window that is broken or damaged so
that the window fails to permit good
visibility shall be removed from service
until the broken or damaged window is
replaced with certified glazing.
*
*
*
*
*
§ 223.17
■
[Removed and Reserved]
7. Remove and reserve § 223.17.
Appendix B to Part 223—[Amended]
8. In appendix B to part 223, remove
the entry for § 223.17.
■
Issued in Washington, DC, on February 1,
2016.
Sarah Feinberg,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2016–02524 Filed 2–8–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
E:\FR\FM\09FER1.SGM
09FER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 26 (Tuesday, February 9, 2016)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 6775-6790]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-02524]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 223
[Docket No. FRA-2012-0103, Notice No. 2]
RIN 2130-AC43
Safety Glazing Standards
AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: In this final rule, FRA is revising and clarifying existing
regulations related to the use of glazing materials in the windows of
locomotives, passenger cars, and cabooses. This final rule reduces
paperwork and other economic burdens on the rail industry by removing a
stenciling requirement for locomotives, passenger cars, and cabooses
that are required to be equipped with glazing. This final rule also
clarifies the application of the regulations to older equipment and to
the end locations of all equipment to provide more certainty to the
rail industry and more narrowly address FRA's safety concerns. In
addition, this final rule clarifies the definition of passenger car,
updates the rule by removing certain compliance dates that are no
longer necessary, and, in response to comments on the proposed rule,
modifies the application of the regulations to passenger cars and
cabooses in a railroad's fleet that are used only for private
transportation purposes and to older locomotives used in incidental
freight service.
DATES: This final rule is effective April 11, 2016. Petitions for
reconsideration must be received on or before April 11, 2016. Comments
in response to petitions for reconsideration must be received on or
before May 24, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Petitions for reconsideration and comments on petitions for
reconsideration: Petitions for reconsideration or comments on petitions
for reconsideration related to Docket No. FRA-2012-0103, Notice No. 2,
may be submitted by any of the following methods:
Web site: The Federal eRulemaking Portal, https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the Web site's online instructions for
submitting comments, to include petitions for reconsideration.
Fax: 202-493-2251.
Mail: Docket Management Facility, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W12-140, Washington,
DC 20590.
Hand Delivery: Docket Management Facility, U.S. Department
of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W12-140 on the
Ground level of the West Building, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except Federal holidays.
Instructions: All submissions must include the agency name and
docket number or Regulatory Identification Number (RIN) for this
rulemaking (2130-AC43). Note that all petitions and comments received
will be posted without change to https://www.regulations.gov, including
any personal information provided. Please see the Privacy Act heading
in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document for Privacy
Act information related to any submitted comments, petitions, or
materials.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents, any
petition for reconsideration submitted, or comments received, go to
https://www.regulations.gov at any time or visit the Docket Management
Facility, U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue
SE., Room W12-140 on the Ground level of the West Building, between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steve Zuiderveen, Railroad Safety
Specialist, Motive Power & Equipment Division, Office of Safety
Assurance and Compliance, Mail Stop 25, Federal
[[Page 6776]]
Railroad Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W35-216,
Washington, DC 20590 (telephone 202-493-6337); or Michael Masci, Trial
Attorney, Office of Chief Counsel, Mail Stop 10, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W31-115, Washington,
DC 20590 (telephone 202-493-6037).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Supplementary Information
I. Executive Summary
II. NPRM Background
A. Executive Orders 13563 and 13610
B. RSAC End Facing Glazing Recommendation
III. Discussion of Specific Comments and Conclusions
A. AAR's Comments
B. ATRRM's Comments
IV. General Overview of the Final Rule
A. Removal of the Requirement To Stencil Certified Glazing
Compliance on Inside Walls of Locomotive Cabs, Passenger Cars, and
Cabooses
B. Clarification of the Term ``Antiquated Equipment''
C. Exclusion of Older Locomotives Used in Incidental Freight
Service
D. Clarification of the Terms ``Private Car'' and ``Passenger
Car''
E. Modification of the Application of the Safety Glazing
Standards to Passenger Cars and Cabooses in a Railroad's Fleet That
Are Used Only for Private Business Purposes
F. Emergency Windows for Occupied Passenger Cars That Are More
Than 50 Years Old But Built After 1945 and Operated in an Intercity
Passenger or Commuter Train
G. Locomotives, Passenger Cars, and Cabooses That Are More Than
50 Years Old But Built After 1945 and Equipped With Compliant
Glazing
H. Clarification of the Term ``End Facing Glazing Location''
I. Removal of Compliance Phase-In Dates That Have Passed and Are
No Longer Applicable
V. Section-by-Section Analysis
VI. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 and DOT Regulatory Policies
and Procedures
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Federalism Implications
E. Environmental Impact
F. Executive Order 12898 (Environmental Justice)
G. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal Consultation)
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
I. Privacy Act
I. Executive Summary
Beginning on January 18, 2011, the President issued a set of
Executive Orders which require Federal agencies to review existing
regulations and reduce the regulatory burden on industry, when
appropriate. (See Executive Orders 13563 and 13610, discussed in more
detail in section II of this preamble). During FRA's review of its
Safety Glazing Standards in 49 CFR part 223 \1\ (part 223), FRA
identified potential changes to requirements for stenciling and
``antiquated equipment'' as opportunities to reduce paperwork and other
economic burdens on the rail industry without adversely impacting
safety. On September 26, 2014, FRA issued its proposed changes to these
requirements in a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM). See 79 FR
57856. After considering the comments received on the NPRM, FRA
modifies these requirements in this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Unless otherwise specified, all references to CFR sections
and parts in this document refer to title 49 of the CFR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, this final rule eliminates as unnecessary the
requirement to stencil inside walls of locomotive cabs, passenger cars,
and cabooses to indicate that the equipment contains window glazing
certified in compliance with the Safety Glazing Standards. Further,
this final rule uses a rolling, 50-year calculation to determine
whether equipment is ``antiquated'' based on its build date--rather
than a fixed date of 1945 or earlier--thereby eliminating the cost of
fitting equipment more than 50 years old and used only for certain
purposes with compliant glazing. To maintain safety in connection with
the change to the application of the term ``antiquated equipment,'' FRA
is clarifying requirements for emergency windows in occupied passenger
cars operated in intercity passenger or commuter trains, and clarifying
requirements for locomotives, passengers, and cabooses currently
equipped with compliant glazing.
Separately, this final rule makes changes based on a Railroad
Safety Advisory Committee (RSAC) recommendation. In 2013, FRA's RSAC
recommended that FRA clarify the application of the glazing
requirements in part 223 to address requirements for the next
generation of high-speed trainsets. FRA agrees that aspects of the RSAC
recommendation are appropriate to adopt generally for all equipment,
and is therefore doing so in this final rule. Specifically, FRA
believes that amending application of the phrase ``end facing glazing
location'' in part 223 reduces the economic burden on the rail industry
without adversely impacting safety.
In addition, FRA is clarifying the application of requirements for
private cars, and eliminating compliance phase-in dates that are no
longer necessary. Also, in response to comments on the NPRM, this final
rule modifies application of the safety glazing requirements to
passenger cars and cabooses in a railroad's fleet used only for private
transportation purposes and to older locomotives used in incidental
freight service.
Economic Impact
FRA believes this final rule is consistent with current industry
practices and reduces the regulatory burden on the rail industry.
The estimated quantified benefits or cost savings of this rule
total $1,088,489. The present value (PV), discounted at 7 percent, of
the estimated quantified benefits is approximately $819,479. FRA
concludes that the industry incurs only a minimal cost of approximately
$6,000 to take advantage of the flexibilities in this rule. Therefore,
FRA estimates the net benefit (cost savings) of this rule is
approximately $813,479 (PV, 7 percent).
II. NPRM Background
Under its general statutory rulemaking authority, FRA promulgates
and enforces rules as part of a comprehensive regulatory program to
address all areas of railroad safety. See 49 U.S.C. 20103 and 49 CFR
1.89. In the area of safety glazing, FRA has issued regulations
generally found at part 223. FRA continually reviews its regulations
and revises them as needed to: (1) Ensure the regulatory burden on the
rail industry is not excessive; (2) clarify the application of existing
requirements and remove requirements that are no longer necessary; and
(3) keep pace with emerging technology, changing operational realities,
and safety concerns. FRA's review of part 223 identified several
compliance phase-in dates in the regulation that have passed and are no
longer necessary. To improve the plain language and make the regulation
more clear and concise, FRA proposed to remove the dates that have
passed. Further, FRA specifically proposed amending the safety glazing
requirements based on FRA's detailed analyses of the requirements and a
recommendation from FRA's RSAC, discussed below.
A. Executive Orders 13563 and 13610
On January 18, 2011, the President issued Executive Order 13563
(Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review). Executive Order 13563
requires agencies to periodically conduct retrospective analyses of
their existing rules to identify requirements that may be outmoded,
ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome.
[[Page 6777]]
The Executive Order further requires that agencies modify, streamline,
expand, or repeal any problematic regulatory provisions identified
during their review. During FRA's retrospective analysis of part 223,
the agency identified requirements for antiquated equipment in
particular as being potentially burdensome to the regulated community.
Specifically, the term ``antiquated equipment'' was not explicitly
defined in the rule text, and FRA's interpretive guidance had the
potential of imposing a progressively larger burden on a small segment
of the industry over time. Accordingly, this final rule clarifies the
application of these requirements and reduces their potential economic
burden on the rail industry.
Further, on May 10, 2012, the President issued Executive Order
13610 (Identifying and Reducing Regulatory Burdens). Executive Order
13610 requires agencies to take continuing steps to reassess regulatory
requirements, and where appropriate, to streamline, improve, or
eliminate those requirements. Executive Order 13610 emphasizes that
agencies should prioritize ``initiatives that will produce significant
quantifiable monetary savings or significant quantifiable reductions in
paperwork burdens.'' In response to these instructions, DOT carried out
a Paperwork Reduction Act initiative that focused on identifying and
eliminating paperwork burdens on the rail industry as appropriate. FRA
conducted a comprehensive review of its regulations based on the
guidance provided in Executive Order 13610 and determined that
eliminating the stenciling requirement in Sec. 223.17 was an
opportunity to reduce the paperwork burden on the rail industry without
adversely impacting safety. (FRA's Executive Order 13563 review also
identified Sec. 223.17 as a candidate for elimination.) This final
rule eliminates this stenciling requirement.
B. RSAC End Facing Glazing Recommendation
In addition to the changes FRA proposed in response to these
Executive Orders, FRA's proposal was also based on an RSAC
recommendation addressing the application of the regulations for the
next generation of high-speed trainsets. RSAC is a forum for
collaborative rulemaking and program development that FRA established
in March 1996. RSAC includes representation from all of the agency's
major stakeholder groups, including railroads, labor organizations,
suppliers and manufacturers, and other interested parties.\2\ When
appropriate, FRA assigns a task to RSAC, and after consideration and
debate, RSAC may accept or reject the task. If accepted, RSAC
establishes a working group that possesses the appropriate expertise
and representation of interests to develop recommendations to FRA for
action on the task. These recommendations are developed by consensus. A
working group may establish one or more task forces and task groups to
develop facts and options on a particular aspect of a given task. When
a working group comes to unanimous consensus on recommendations for
action, the package is presented to the full Committee for a vote. If
RSAC is unable to reach consensus on a recommendation for action, the
task is withdrawn and FRA determines the best course of action. If the
proposal is accepted by a simple majority of RSAC, the proposal is
formally recommended to the Administrator of FRA. FRA then determines
what action to take on the recommendation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ A list of RSAC member groups includes the following:
American Association of Private Railroad Car Owners (AAPRCO);
American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials
(AASHTO); American Chemistry Council; American Petroleum Institute;
American Public Transportation Association (APTA); American Short
Line and Regional Railroad Association (ASLRRA); American Train
Dispatchers Association (ATDA); Association of American Railroads
(AAR); Association of State Rail Safety Managers (ASRSM);
Association of Tourist Railroads and Railway Museums (ATRRM);
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET); Brotherhood
of Maintenance of Way Employes Division; Brotherhood of Railroad
Signalmen (BRS); Chlorine Institute; Federal Transit Administration
(FTA); * Fertilizer Institute; Institute of Makers of Explosives;
International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers;
International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers; Labor Council for
Latin American Advancement; * League of Railway Industry Women; *
National Association of Railroad Passengers (NARP); National
Association of Railway Business Women; * National Conference of
Firemen & Oilers; National Railroad Construction and Maintenance
Association (NRCMA); National Railroad Passenger Corporation
(Amtrak); National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB); * Railway
Supply Institute (RSI); Safe Travel America (STA); Secretaria de
Comunicaciones y Transporte; * Sheet Metal Workers International
Association (SMWIA); Transport Canada; * Transport Workers Union of
America (TWU); Transportation Communications International Union/BRC
(TCIU/BRC); Transportation Security Administration (TSA); * and
United Transportation Union (UTU).
* Indicates associate, non-voting membership.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In March 2013, after RSAC's Passenger Safety Working Group \3\
accepted a task related to high-speed rail safety, the Working Group's
Engineering Task Force \4\ established the Tier III Cab Glazing Task
Group (Task Group) to focus on issues concerning safety glazing. The
Task Group discussed glazing during four meetings held between March
and May 2013. During the Task Group's last meeting, the Group reached
consensus on a recommendation to apply FRA's Safety Glazing Standards
to trainsets operating at speeds up to 220 miles per hour, including
requirements applicable to end facing glazing locations that focus on
the exposed exterior of the trainsets. On June 14, 2013, the full
Committee adopted the Task Group's recommendation and presented it to
FRA for consideration. Based on FRA's experience enforcing glazing
requirements, FRA believes that the RSAC Task Group's approach to
identifying end facing glazing locations is appropriate to adopt
generally for all equipment, not only high-speed trainsets, and is
therefore doing so in this final rule. FRA believes it is helpful to
clarify for equipment operating at conventional speeds what exterior
locations are end facing glazing locations, to reduce the economic
burden on the rail industry without adversely impacting safety.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Members of the Working Group, in addition to FRA, include
the following: AAR, including members from BNSF Railway Company, CSX
Transportation, Inc., and Union Pacific Railroad Company; AAPRCO;
AASHTO; Amtrak; APTA, including members from Bombardier, Inc.,
Herzog Transit Services, Inc., Interfleet Technology, Inc.
(Interfleet, formerly LDK Engineering, Inc.), Long Island Rail Road
(LIRR), Maryland Transit Administration, Metro-North Commuter
Railroad Company (Metro-North), Northeast Illinois Regional Commuter
Railroad Corporation, Southern California Regional Rail Authority
(Metrolink), and Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority
(SEPTA); ASLRRA; BLET; BRS; FTA; NARP; NTSB; RSI; SMWIA; STA; TCIU/
BRC; TSA; TWU; and UTU.
\4\ Members of the Engineering Task Force, in addition to FRA,
include the following: AAR; AAPRCO; AASHTO, including California
Department of Transportation, and Interfleet; APTA, including
Alstom, Ansaldo Breda, Bombardier, Central Japan Railway Company,
China South Locomotive and Rolling Stock Corporation, Denver
Regional Transportation District, East Japan Railway Company,
Faiveley Transport, GE Transportation, Japan International Transport
Institute, Japan's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and
Tourism, Kawasaki, Keolis, KPS N.A., LIRR, LTK Engineering Services,
Marsh, Metrolink, Metro-North, Nippon Sharyo, Parsons Brinckerhoff,
PS Consulting, Safetran Systems, SEPTA, Sharma & Associates,
Siemens, Stadler, STV, Talgo, Texas Central Railway, Veolia, Voith
Turbo, and Wabtec; Amtrak; ASLRRA; BLET; European Railway Agency;
International Association of Sheet Metal, Air, Rail and
Transportation Workers (SMART), including SMWIA and UTU; NTSB; RSI,
including Battelle Memorial Institute, and ENSCO; TCIU/BRC; and
Transport Canada.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Discussion of Specific Comments and Conclusions
The NPRM solicited written comments from the public under the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA) (5 U.S.C. 553). FRA also invited
comment on a number of specific issues related to the proposed rule to
develop the final
[[Page 6778]]
rule. Consideration of public comment is valuable, as it allows FRA to
access additional viewpoints from interested parties and include them
in the final rule when appropriate. By the close of the comment period
on November 25, 2014, FRA received two sets of comments. AAR and ATRRM
each submitted comments.
A. AAR's Comments
AAR requested two changes in the final rule: (1) Confirm and
clarify the glazing requirements do not apply to business cars; and (2)
remove the noise emissions testing decal requirement in part 210. In
response to AAR's first comment, this final rule excludes certain cars
in a railroad's fleet that are used only for private transportation
purposes from the glazing requirements. After reviewing favorable
safety data, FRA believes the glazing requirements should not apply to
these cars used only for private transportation. A fuller discussion of
this issue is provided in section IV.E. of this final rule.
AAR's request to remove the noise decal required in part 210 is
outside the scope of this rulemaking. Therefore FRA cannot properly
adopt it in this final rule. Under the APA, a final rule must be based
on the subjects and issues identified in the NPRM. See 5 U.S.C. 553.
The purpose for this requirement is to provide sufficient notice and
opportunity for meaningful public participation in the rulemaking. The
subjects and issues raised in the NPRM alert interested parties that
rule changes are being considered so they can take full advantage of
the opportunity to comment on them. The NPRM did not raise any issues
related to existing noise emissions testing requirements. Because FRA
did not provide sufficient notice for this issue, FRA cannot make any
changes in the final rule based on this comment. Nevertheless, FRA
continues to consider the merits of AAR's comment and will evaluate how
to best address this issue in the future.
B. ATRRM's Comments
ATRRM expressed support for FRA's proposal and requested two
modifications in the final rule: (1) Exclude historic or antiquated
locomotives that are used primarily in excursion, educational,
recreational, or private passenger service and also used in other
limited types of service from the glazing requirements; and (2) confirm
and clarify that Sec. 223.3(c)(1) would not require an ``open window''
passenger car with windows that open wide enough to permit egress to
also be equipped with a tool or implement to use to break or remove a
window during an emergency.
In response to ATRRM's first comment, this final rule excludes from
the glazing requirements a small number of primarily excursion
locomotives that are used in incidental freight service when no other
power is available. Based on its thorough review of the issue, FRA
believes it can provide this relief without having an adverse impact on
rail safety. A fuller discussion of this issue is provided in section
IV.C. of this final rule.
In response to ATRRM's second comment, FRA confirms that Sec.
223.3(c)(1) does not require a passenger car with windows that open
wide enough to permit egress to be equipped with a tool or implement to
use to break or remove a window during an emergency. FRA believes the
plain language of Sec. 223.3(c)(1) is clear, and read in conjunction
with Sec. Sec. 223.9(c) and 223.15(c), communicates that no tool or
implement is required in such a case. Therefore, FRA believes that no
change is necessary and is adopting Sec. 223.3(c)(1) as proposed.
Nevertheless, FRA takes this opportunity to clarify the language and
intent of this paragraph to avoid any confusion. The purpose for
requiring an emergency window exit is to help ensure passengers are not
sealed inside the car during an emergency when they need to exit
rapidly. If the window is open or can be opened wide enough to permit
egress, passengers should be able to exit the car through that window
as rapidly as they would if the window were removed by a tool or other
implement. Specifically, if a window frame does not contain glass, as
in an ``open air car,'' there is no need for a tool or implement to
clear the space inside the window frame where the glass would otherwise
be. Therefore, no tool or implement is required.
FRA carefully considered both sets of comments on the NPRM while
developing this final rule. To further clarify written comments, FRA
discussed the comments with the RSAC Tourist and Historic Railroads and
Private Passenger Car Working Group \5\ during a meeting on December 3,
2014. The discussion, although limited in scope, helped FRA understand
the written comments. FRA added a copy of the meeting minutes to the
docket for this proceeding. The final rule text differs from the NPRM
text in part because of issues AAR and ATRRM raised in their comments.
For changes to the rule text, FRA addresses each of the relevant
comments in the corresponding regulatory paragraphs of the section-by-
section analysis provided below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Members of the Working Group, in addition to FRA, include
the following: AAR; AAPRCO; Amtrak; ASLRRA; ATRRM; NRCMA; NTSB;
Railway Passenger Car Alliance; and SMART.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. General Overview of the Final Rule
A. Removal of the Requirement To Stencil Certified Glazing Compliance
on Inside Walls of Locomotive Cabs, Passenger Cars, and Cabooses
As noted above, FRA's review of its regulations under Executive
Order 13563 and Executive Order 13610 identified as a candidate for
elimination Sec. 223.17, which provided that locomotive cabs,
passenger cars, and cabooses be stenciled inside on an interior wall
with the type of glazing present in the equipment. In particular,
Executive Order 13610 requires agencies to take continuing steps to
reassess regulatory requirements and, where appropriate, to streamline,
improve, or eliminate those requirements. Executive Order 13610
emphasizes that agencies should prioritize ``initiatives that will
produce significant quantifiable monetary savings or significant
quantifiable reductions in paperwork burdens.'' In 2012, FRA conducted
a comprehensive review of its regulations based on the guidance in
Executive Order 13610 and determined removal of the certified glazing
stenciling requirement inside of locomotive cabs, passenger cars, and
cabooses is an opportunity to reduce the paperwork burden on the rail
industry without adversely impacting safety. The certified glazing
stencil was originally intended as an easily identifiable method for
railroads to demonstrate compliance with the safety glazing
requirements contained in part 223 when large numbers of affected
equipment were not equipped with part 223 glazing. However, the need
for this requirement has diminished since compliance was phased in for
equipment existing at the time part 223 was promulgated. (See the
discussion below on removing compliance phase-in dates from part 223.)
Moreover, in practice, FRA has found the stencil is not always
accurate, and that each window needs to be examined to determine
whether proper glazing has been applied. An easy and reliable way to
determine the compliance of each window individually is to read the
permanent marking on each window panel required by part 223, appendix
A. Each window that is equipped with certified glazing must be
permanently marked by the manufacturer to indicate the type of glazing
applied, which remains unchanged for each glazing panel's service life.
Appendix A requires
[[Page 6779]]
glazing to be tested and then marked according to the tests passed as
either ``FRA Type I'' or ``FRA Type II'' glazing, depending on its
location. By considering the location of the window and examining the
marking, FRA inspectors can apply the requirements and determine
whether the glazing use is compliant.
FRA believes the markings on the windows are more reliable than the
stenciling located inside the equipment in which they are installed,
and that the markings provide sufficient information to determine
compliance. Therefore, FRA concludes that the Sec. 223.17 stenciling
requirement is no longer necessary, and this rule eliminates the
requirement for a certified glazing stencil located inside locomotive
cabs, passenger cars, and cabooses.
B. Clarification of the Term ``Antiquated Equipment''
Part 223 uses the term ``antiquated equipment'' to identify
equipment excluded from the application of part 223, if the equipment
is operated in only specified types of service (excursion, educational,
recreational or private transportation). However, part 223 did not
define the term ``antiquated equipment'' and the context in which the
term was used in the regulation did not clearly indicate its meaning.
During implementation of part 223, FRA identified the need to clarify
the term ``antiquated equipment'' to ensure its consistent application.
FRA developed guidance interpreting the term in 1989, and FRA's
Associate Administrator for Safety provided it to the agency's regional
safety management. Subsequently, FRA made the interpretation part of a
1990 FRA technical bulletin. For purposes of this final rule, FRA
references the 1990 FRA technical bulletin (1990 Technical Bulletin)
and has included it in the public docket for this rulemaking.
The 1990 Technical Bulletin stated ``antiquated equipment,'' as
used in part 223, meant equipment built in 1945 or earlier. However,
FRA did not explain why it distinguished between equipment built in
1945 or earlier from equipment built after 1945. FRA believes it chose
1945 as the cut-off date because it was the end of World War II, the
date was approaching approximately 50 years before the date the
guidance was issued, and the approaching 50-year difference in time was
consistent with FRA's treatment of other older equipment. Based on
FRA's experience, after 50 years certain equipment becomes antiquated
and justifies distinct treatment due to significant changes in
technology, including design standards and the materials used for
construction. For example, FRA uses this distinction in the Freight Car
Safety Standards in 49 CFR part 215. Part 215 restricts the operation
of freight cars that are more than 50 years old, measured by the date
of original construction, unless the operating railroad successfully
petitions FRA for continued use. This requirement reflects FRA's
general belief that after 50 years, freight equipment is typically
outdated and often not in the best condition given its years of
service. Accordingly, for purposes of safety, FRA believes that after
50 years of age, it should not treat freight equipment the same as
newer equipment when used in certain types of service. As an industry
practice, cars more than 50 years old are generally used only in
limited freight service. However, passenger cars more than 50 years old
have been successfully used for commuter service, which, to be clear,
is not the type of service identified in part 223 as service for an
educational, excursion, recreational, or private transportation
purpose.
FRA has applied the term ``antiquated equipment'' in the
enforcement of part 223 consistent with FRA's 1990 Technical Bulletin
without significant opposition until industry's response to FRA's
implementation of section 415 of the Rail Safety Improvement Act of
2008 (section 415), Public Law 110-432, Division A. Section 415
required the Secretary of Transportation \6\ to conduct a study of
tourist and historical railroads for compliance with Federal rail
safety laws. While conducting the section 415 study, FRA utilized the
year 1945 as a reference point in applying the glazing requirements.
Because the 1990 Technical Bulletin did not clearly specify that the
term ``antiquated equipment'' could be subject to a rolling 50-year
calculation, an equitable reading of that technical bulletin could
conclude FRA intended for the year 1945 to be a fixed date for
determining whether equipment is antiquated. In other words, a person
could reasonably understand that all equipment built in 1945 or earlier
is antiquated, while all built after 1945 is not.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ The Secretary delegated the responsibility to carry out this
mandate to FRA. See 49 CFR 1.89(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Following the section 415 study, FRA initiated several enforcement
actions against owners of equipment in service that was more than 50
years old, but built after 1945. Many in the rail industry expressed
surprise at these enforcement actions and, as a result, filed
approximately 175 petitions for waiver from the relevant requirements
contained in part 223 with FRA for equipment built after 1945. In
addition to requesting relief from part 223, many petitioners argued
that based on their understanding of the term ``antiquated equipment''
as used in part 223 and FRA's enforcement history (i.e., they had not
previously received notice of non-compliance from FRA), they believed
their equipment was antiquated and therefore not subject to part 223.
Many of the petitioners were represented by AAPRCO, which submitted a
letter to FRA in 2009, on behalf of its members expressing concern over
FRA's interpretation of the term ``antiquated equipment.'' FRA
responded to AAPRCO, explaining that use of the fixed date of 1945 to
determine whether equipment was antiquated was consistent with the
guidance in FRA's 1990 Technical Bulletin.
Subsequently, Executive Order 13563 was issued requiring agencies
to conduct a retrospective analysis of their existing rules. As noted
above, that analysis was intended to identify requirements that may be
outmoded, ineffective, insufficient, or excessively burdensome, and
lead agencies to modify, streamline, expand, or repeal such rules based
on that analysis. During FRA's retrospective analysis of the Safety
Glazing Standards, FRA identified the application of its existing
interpretation of ``antiquated equipment'' as potentially creating an
unnecessary burden on the industry. The cost of retrofitting all non-
compliant equipment built more than 50 years before the current date
but after 1945 with compliant glazing would result in a considerable
expense to the rail industry, would likely be too costly for some small
businesses to continue operating, and would provide a nominal safety
benefit. Based on this information, FRA is modifying the term
``antiquated equipment'' to reduce the burden on the rail industry. FRA
believes the use of a rolling 50-year period to determine whether
equipment is antiquated significantly reduces the burden on the rail
industry by eliminating the cost of fitting equipment that is more than
50 years old and used only for certain purposes with compliant glazing.
In other words, FRA believes that the term ``antiquated equipment,''
for purposes of part 223, should mean equipment that is more than 50
years old, not equipment that was more than 50 years old as of a
certain, fixed date.
This clarification also better aligns FRA's Safety Glazing
Standards with other Federal rail safety requirements that address
older equipment. For example, because of its age and
[[Page 6780]]
technology, a caboose built more than 50 years ago receives special
treatment as older equipment under Sec. 215.203 of the Freight Car
Safety Standards, but that same caboose was essentially treated by the
Safety Glazing Standards the same as newer equipment. This rule helps
classify equipment more consistently because of its age and ATRRM
believes this will eliminate the need for most waivers of the glazing
requirements, and waiver renewals, and remove a substantial burden on
the industry.
C. Exclusion of Older Locomotives Used in Incidental Freight Service
In addition to clarifying the term ``antiquated equipment,'' in its
comments, ATTRM also states FRA should clarify that the service
historic or antiquated equipment operates in may exclude that equipment
from the glazing requirements. Specifically, rather than exclude
historic or antiquated locomotives used only for excursion,
educational, recreational, or private transportation purposes, ATTRM
requested that FRA exclude historic or antiquated locomotives that are
used primarily in excursion, educational, recreational, or private
passenger service and also in other limited types of service. For
example, ATTRM stated that a steam locomotive normally used exclusively
in mainline excursion service will sometimes be ``broken in'' in
freight service after major mechanical work, to allow problems to be
identified and corrected before the locomotive is used for a passenger
train. According to ATTRM, a general system tourist railroad might also
occasionally use a passenger locomotive on a non-excursion freight
train if the railroad's normal freight power is temporarily out of
service or unavailable. ATTRM made clear it is not seeking exclusion
for locomotives used regularly in freight service but rather for
``occasional and irregular'' use.
FRA understands that all locomotives (except for a handful of newly
built steam locomotives, less than ten total) currently used in
excursion service would be considered antiquated based on the revised
definition because they are more than 50 years old. However, many
locomotives more than 50 years old used in excursion service are also
used in other limited types of service but would not be excluded under
the proposed rule. As a result, to comply with the proposed rule,
affected railroads would need to either equip these locomotives with
compliant certified glazing at a significant cost, or forgo using the
locomotives for certain types of service and risk losing revenue.
FRA believes the Safety Glazing Standards should not apply to these
small number of excursion locomotives that are used for limited non-
excursion service when no other power is available. This is a current
industry practice for approximately 120 locomotives. FRA's review of
its enforcement data confirms that FRA has used its enforcement
discretion consistently to permit limited use of such excursion
locomotives in non-excursion service without compliant certified
glazing. It also reveals that no accidents or incidents have been
reported to FRA for the lack of compliant certified glazing materials
in these locomotives. Based on a thorough review of this issue, FRA
believes the rule can allow this current industry practice without
having an adverse impact on rail safety. Therefore, this final rule
provides the relief needed to permit these excursion locomotives to
operate in incidental freight service, which includes the two specific
scenarios ATRRM's comments identified for ``antiquated'' locomotives
otherwise used only for excursion, educational, recreational, or
private transportation purposes.
In this final rule, FRA makes clear that incidental freight service
would include when an excursion locomotive that is more than 50 years
old has finished hauling an excursion train for the day, a couple of
freight cars need to be switched on the railroad's property, and no
other locomotive is ready to switch the cars. Current industry practice
is for the excursion locomotive to switch the freight cars. The
alternative would be to start a freight locomotive not in use, conduct
the required safety inspection to run it in service, and then use it to
switch the freight cars. FRA believes this alternative is too
burdensome for industry compared to the low safety risk incurred by
using such an excursion locomotive to switch the freight cars--
typically short moves conducted at fairly low speeds. This final rule
allows the flexibility to use these small number of excursion
locomotives as additional power in freight service under such limited
circumstances. However, FRA emphasizes that these circumstances are
limited. If a freight locomotive is in use and available for service on
the property, the exception would not apply. Moreover, FRA expects
railroads to have a sufficient number of locomotives available to
satisfy their operational needs under ordinary circumstances.
FRA also makes clear that another example of incidental freight
service would be breaking-in a steam locomotive more than 50 years old
in freight service after major repairs are completed as described by
ATRRM. This conditioning service is an opportunity to stress the steam
locomotive to ensure the repairs are effective. Excursion operations
provide few opportunities for conditioning such locomotives in higher
tonnage trains. Moreover, these operations typically have fairly
regimented schedules due to seasonal considerations and customer
demands. Using these excursion locomotives in freight service for
conditioning in this limited manner is also advantageous because
freight service is more frequently available. Consequently, FRA is
excluding this conditioning service for these older locomotives from
the glazing requirements in this final rule. However, FRA intends for
the period to be limited to only the time necessary to condition the
locomotive for excursion service.
D. Clarification of the Terms ``Private Car'' and ``Passenger Car''
Previous amendments to part 223, which revised the definition of
``passenger car'' to clarify contemporaneous revisions to the
regulation, may have caused some unintentional confusion regarding
application of the glazing requirements to ``private cars.'' In 1998
and 1999, FRA issued comprehensive regulations for intercity passenger
and commuter train safety, amending part 223 among other things to add
requirements for emergency windows in intercity passenger and commuter
trains, which part 223 has long required for passenger cars with
certified glazing to facilitate occupant egress. See 63 FR 24630 (May
4, 1998, final rule on Passenger Train Emergency Preparedness) and 64
FR 25540 (May 12, 1999, final rule on Passenger Equipment Safety
Standards), as amended at 73 FR 6370 (February 1, 2008, final rule on
Passenger Train Emergency Systems). The amendments to part 223 included
revising the definition of the term ``passenger car'' by specifically
excluding from the definition a ``private car.'' 63 FR 24675. FRA
intended for this revision of the term ``passenger car'' to clarify
that requirements being established for passenger cars in intercity
passenger and commuter train service only, such as new requirements in
former Sec. 223.9(d) for marking emergency windows, did not apply to
private cars. See 63 FR 24675. It was not intended to change the
existing application of the rest of part 223 to private cars. Yet, the
substantive requirements contained in Sec. Sec. 223.9 and 223.15
specify they apply
[[Page 6781]]
to ``passenger cars,'' which by a literal reading of the definition of
``passenger car'' in Sec. 223.5 would have seemingly excluded private
cars.
However, as evidenced by the ``Application'' section of part 223
(particularly Sec. 223.3(b)(3)), FRA's intent was to continue to apply
the glazing requirements of part 223 to private cars as previously
specified, as no general exclusion was suggested or made. See 63 FR
24675. FRA believes that the rail industry has the same understanding.
The application of the glazing requirements to private cars is clear,
as provided in Sec. 223.3. Section 223.3(a) states that the
requirements in part 223 apply to any railroad rolling equipment
operated on standard gauge track that is a part of the general railroad
system of transportation. Section 223.3(b) excludes equipment used for
private transportation purposes, but only if it is historical or
antiquated. Nonetheless, to alleviate any confusion, FRA is amending
the definition of ``passenger car,'' in Sec. 223.5 by removing the
last sentence of the existing definition that indicates ``[t]his term
does not include a private car.''
E. Modification of the Application of the Safety Glazing Standards to
Passenger Cars and Cabooses in a Railroad's Fleet That Are Used Only
for Private Transportation Purposes
As discussed above, AAR's comments request FRA to confirm the
glazing requirements in part 223 do not apply to railroad private
business cars. Part 223 has not specifically used the term ``railroad
private business cars,'' and AAR's comment does not provide a
definition for the term. Based on FRA's experience and discussions with
AAR during the Working Group meeting on December 3, 2014, FRA
understands that a railroad private business car is a specially
modified passenger car or caboose a railroad uses to conduct business
and entertain colleagues and guests during transport. Further, FRA
understands all but a small handful of railroad private business cars
are more than 50 years old. Therefore, based on their age and use,
almost all these cars will be excluded from the glazing requirements
because of this final rule's clarification of the term ``antiquated
equipment'' discussed in section IV.B, above. Nonetheless, FRA
understands AAR's comment to also request that the remaining small
handful of cars be excluded from the glazing requirements.
FRA agrees that the remaining railroad private business cars should
be excluded from the glazing requirements due to the limited safety
risk. Only a small number of invited guests and employees ride these
cars and FRA has no record of any accidents or incidents (including
injuries) due to the lack of certified glazing materials in these cars.
FRA has exercised its discretion to allow railroad private business
cars that are not antiquated to operate without certified glazing. Its
use of discretion has not had an adverse impact on safety.
Based on a thorough review of this issue, FRA agrees with AAR's
comment and in this final rule is excluding from the glazing
requirements the remaining small handful of private business cars
currently held by railroads that are not equipped with certified
glazing. However, railroad private business cars that are currently
equipped with certified glazing are required to continue to be equipped
with certified glazing to maintain the current level of safety. In
addition, all new railroad private business cars must be equipped with
certified glazing. Furthermore, if a railroad's private car is used in
public service, the exclusion does not apply and the car must be
equipped with certified glazing. FRA continues to believe the cost of
equipping a new car with certified glazing is worth the safety benefit,
including new railroad private business cars.
F. Emergency Windows for Occupied Passenger Cars That Are More Than 50
Years Old But Built After 1945 and Operated in an Intercity Passenger
or Commuter Train
This rule clarifies application of the emergency window
requirements in part 223 to passenger cars more than 50 years old, but
built after 1945, by incorporating provisions in waivers FRA's Railroad
Safety Board grated (see, e.g., FRA-2010-0080), without changing the
existing regulatory framework for the emergency window requirements.
Both parts 223 and 238 of this chapter contain requirements for
emergency windows that apply to various types of passenger vehicles
(see, e.g., Sec. Sec. 223.8, 223.9, 223.15, and 238.113). For the
purposes of emergency window and other requirements, part 238
distinguishes between categories of passenger vehicles--namely,
``passenger cars'' and ``passenger equipment.'' Under Sec. 238.5, the
definition of ``passenger car'' is a subset of ``passenger equipment''
and must comply with the emergency window exit requirements in Sec.
238.113. By contrast, the part 238 emergency window exit requirements
in Sec. 238.113 do not apply to all passenger equipment as defined by
Sec. 238.5. Instead, passenger equipment not subject to Sec. 238.113,
including a private car, must be equipped with emergency windows as
provided in Sec. 223.9(c) or Sec. 223.15(c), as appropriate. In this
rule, the application of the emergency window requirements to passenger
equipment and passenger cars in part 238 is unchanged. However, a
change to part 223 is needed to incorporate existing waivers of the
requirements of part 223 that require emergency windows, in light of
the change concerning ``antiquated equipment,'' discussed above.
Specifically, in connection with the change to the application of
the term ``antiquated equipment,'' FRA is revising the language in
Sec. 223.3(b) to expressly state the exclusion provided in Sec.
223.3(b)(3) for ``antiquated equipment,'' for purposes of emergency
windows, does not apply to occupied passenger cars built after 1945
when they operate in intercity passenger or commuter train service
covered by part 238 (part 238 train). See 49 CFR 238.3. An occupied
private car operated in a train covered by the requirements of part 238
is not required to be equipped with emergency windows under part 238;
these cars must be equipped with emergency windows under Sec. 223.9(c)
or Sec. 223.15(c) of part 223, if they are not ``historical or
antiquated equipment'' and are not used for solely an excursion,
educational, recreational, or private purpose as applicable under Sec.
223.3(b)(3). See, e.g., 73 FR 6378. However, FRA's Railroad Safety
Board has granted a series of waivers that permit such cars that are
neither ``historical or antiquated'' to operate in a part 238 train
without certified glazing. As a condition to the waivers, such cars
must be equipped with at least four emergency windows consistent with
Sec. 223.9(c) or Sec. 223.15(c). The waivers make clear that the
minimum of four emergency windows (two on each side) must be clearly
marked. As specified in Sec. 223.5, an ``emergency window'' means a
segment of a side facing glazing panel designed to permit rapid and
easy removal from inside the car during an emergency. The waivers
further make clear that any tool required to remove or break the window
must be provided and clearly marked, with legible and understandable
instructions for its use. This final rule revises part 223 to be
consistent with the conditions of the waivers FRA has granted and the
proposed change to application of the term ``antiquated equipment.''
FRA notes that passenger cars that are not covered by the
requirements of part 238 but are occupied for an excursion,
educational, recreational, or private purpose, and operate in a
passenger train covered by the requirements of part 238, are subject to
the same conditions as the train to which they are
[[Page 6782]]
coupled. Such cars are exposed to high speeds over long distances the
same as the other cars in the passenger train. In addition, the end
frame doors of such cars may not line up with the end frame doors on
some passenger cars subject to the requirements of part 238 to which
they are coupled (e.g., an Amtrak Superliner). Consequently, during an
accident or incident, emergency windows may be required as a primary
means of egress, due to a lack of end-of-car egress. Yet, passenger
cars occupied for an excursion, educational, recreational, or private
use not equipped with part 223 compliant glazing and emergency windows
might only be equipped with safety glass that cannot easily shatter or
otherwise be easily removed without the use of a tool or other
instrument, and therefore may not permit effective egress for occupants
during an emergency. Such occupied cars, built after 1945, and more
than 50 years old, that operate in a part 238 train, must have
emergency windows to maintain the level of safety currently provided.
Consequently, in clarifying the application of part 223 to
``antiquated equipment'' by using a rolling 50-year date, rather than a
fixed date, FRA believes it must continue requiring passenger cars
built after 1945 and more than 50 years old to comply with the
emergency window requirements in Sec. 223.9(c) or Sec. 223.15(c) if
they are occupied and operate in an intercity or commuter passenger
train subject to part 238. FRA does not believe it is appropriate to
remove the current requirement that such cars be equipped with these
emergency windows, especially as the number of such cars considered
``antiquated'' will increase due to this rulemaking. However,
consistent with the conditions of the waivers FRA has granted, a tool
or other instrument may be used to remove or break the window if the
tool or other instrument is clearly marked, and legible and
understandable instructions are provided for its use. Nonetheless, as
discussed in section III.B in response to ATRRM's comment, this final
rule does not require a passenger car with windows that open wide
enough to permit egress to also be equipped with a tool or implement to
use to break or remove a window during an emergency.
G. Locomotives, Passenger Cars, and Cabooses That Are More Than 50
Years Old But Built After 1945 and Equipped With Compliant Glazing
In connection with the changes to application of the term
``antiquated equipment,'' all locomotives, passenger cars, and cabooses
more than 50 years old, but built after 1945 and equipped with glazing
that complies with the glazing test standards in appendix A to part
223, must continue to comply with those standards. Broadening the
definition of the term ``antiquated equipment'' in this rule does not
diminish the level of safety currently required. Accordingly, FRA does
not intend for windows currently complying with the impact test
standards in appendix A to part 223 to be replaced with windows that
are not. Moreover, given that such equipment would already have the
necessary framing arrangements in place to support part 223-compliant
glazing, FRA expects the window panels to be replaced with like window
glazing. Of course, if equipment built after 1945 that is more than 50
years old is not already fitted with compliant window glazing, then
such window panels (along with their supporting, framing arrangements)
do not have to be installed.
H. Clarification of the Term ``End Facing Glazing Location''
Consistent with the RSAC Task Group's recommendation and to ensure
consistent application of the relevant requirements, this rule revises
the definition of ``end facing glazing location'' to clarify that the
location means an ``exterior'' location. It also expressly identifies
locations not considered to be ``end facing glazing location[s]''--
namely, the coupled ends of multiple-unit (MU) locomotives or other
equipment that is semi-permanently connected to each other in a train
consist; and end doors at locations other than the cab end of a cab car
of MU locomotive.
The former definition of ``end facing glazing location'' in Sec.
223.5 does not specify that ``end facing'' means only a location at the
exterior of a piece of equipment. As a result, the final rule clarifies
that FRA does not consider windows facing an open end of a car, but
located in the interior of the car, to be end facing. Thus, they do not
require Type I glazing. For example, a vestibule door set back from the
end frame and corner structure of a passenger car that contains a
window does not require Type I glazing for the window. In this example,
even if the vestibule window is exposed to the outside of the car, Type
I glazing is not required. Type I glazing is not needed because the
angle of incidence of a projectile to that window is significantly
reduced by the presence of the structures at the end of the car located
ahead of the plane of the glazing material, compared to a window
aligned with the end frame of the car. Therefore, the likelihood of
projectile contact is minimized.
Further, the former definition of ``end facing glazing location''
contains no qualification on the forward or rear end or the direction
of travel of the equipment. In other words, all forward and all
rearward facing windows could be considered end facing. This
application of the term may have resulted in some confusion about FRA's
enforcement of relevant glazing requirements, which FRA intends to
clarify in this final rule. Accordingly, this rule revises the
definition to clarify the term ``end facing glazing location'' does not
apply to the coupled ends of MU locomotives or other equipment that is
semi-permanently connected to each other in a train consist, nor does
it apply to end doors at locations other than the cab end of a cab car
or MU locomotive. The most notable example of an end door at a location
other than the cab end of a cab car or MU locomotive is an end frame
door on an Amfleet passenger car. The rule makes clear that windows in
such doors do not require Type I glazing.
At the same time, this rule also revises the existing definition of
``side facing glazing location'' to clarify those locations are
excluded from the definition of ``end facing glazing location'' and
require Type II glazing. The former Safety Glazing Standards require
that all side facing glazing locations be equipped with Type II
glazing. See appendix A to part 223. Because the coupled ends of MU
locomotives or other equipment that is semi-permanently connected to
each other in a train consist, and end doors at locations other than
the cab end of a cab car or MU locomotive are specifically excluded
from the definition of ``end facing glazing location,'' those locations
do not require Type I glazing. By specifically including them in the
definition for ``side facing glazing location,'' the rule makes clear
those locations require Type II glazing at a minimum. Thus, for
example, locomotives, cabooses, and passenger cars built or rebuilt
after June 30, 1980, must be equipped with certified glazing in all
windows under Sec. 223.9. The term ``certified glazing'' refers to
Type I and Type II glazing, as specified in appendix A to part 223.
Accordingly, for such equipment locations where certified glazing is
required, either Type I or Type II glazing must be present.
This final rule also clarifies that any location which, due to
curvature of the glazing material, can meet the criteria for either an
end facing location or a side facing location shall be considered an
end facing location. This is a
[[Page 6783]]
clarification that FRA identified when preparing the final rule, noting
that FRA had inadvertently omitted this longstanding rule text from the
proposed rule. The revised language clarifies the continued application
of the regulation to equipment that contains curved glazing material
that extends beyond its side or end.
I. Removal of Compliance Phase-In Dates That Have Passed and Are No
Longer Applicable
This final rule removes outdated, compliance phase-in dates and
related language to make the regulation clearer. When the Safety
Glazing Standards were published on December 31, 1979, the regulation
included compliance dates to phase-in requirements for equipment in
existence at the time, in addition to requirements for new equipment.
See 44 FR 77328, 77353-77354. As amended by final rule on December 27,
1983, the regulation included those compliance dates. See 48 FR 56955-
56955. For example in Sec. 223.15, ``Requirements for existing
passenger cars,'' the regulation provided that certain passenger cars
have until June 30, 1984, to comply with the requirements for certified
glazing and emergency windows. Because the compliance phase-in period
has long passed, FRA can remove the phase-in dates from part 223
without changing the substantive effect of the requirements.
V. Section-by-Section Analysis
This section-by-section analysis of this final rule explains the
rationale for each section of the rule, together with the above
discussion. The regulatory changes are organized by section number.
Section 223.3 Application
As discussed in section IV.B of this final rule, FRA is revising
paragraph (b)(3) to clarify the meaning of the term ``antiquated
equipment.'' Paragraph (b)(3)(i) clarifies the meaning of ``antiquated
equipment'' by replacing the term ``antiquated'' with the phrase ``more
than 50 years old.'' This change clarifies that the exclusion from the
application of the rule for ``antiquated equipment'' in this section
applies to equipment more than 50 years old measured from the time of
original construction. This is a rolling, 50-year calculation, and no
longer the fixed date of 1945 or earlier. As such, some of the
equipment that was subject to the full requirements of part 223 before
this final rule takes effect (because it is not yet more than 50 years
old) is excluded from certain requirements when the equipment becomes
more than 50 years old. To qualify for the exclusion under paragraph
(b)(3)(i), when the equipment becomes more than 50 years old, the rule
continues to require that the equipment be used only for excursion,
educational, recreational, or private transportation purposes.
As discussed in section IV.C of this final rule, FRA is also
revising paragraph (b)(3) to provide some flexibility in application of
the glazing requirements to older locomotives used primarily in
excursion service. Paragraph (b)(3)(i) also excludes from the glazing
requirements locomotives that are historical or more than 50 years old
and are used in incidental freight service. Incidental freight service
includes operating a steam locomotive for conditioning purposes
following major mechanical work and limited use of a passenger
locomotive in freight service only when no other locomotive is
available. Please note that paragraph (c), discussed below, qualifies
the exclusion available under this paragraph (b)(3); both paragraphs
must be read together.
As discussed in section IV.E of this final rule, FRA is also
revising paragraph (b)(3) to allow existing ``business cars'' to
continue to operate without certified glazing. Paragraph (b)(3)(ii) is
added to exclude existing cabooses and passenger cars in a railroad's
fleet on April 11, 2016 that are used only for private transportation
purposes and are not currently equipped with certified glazing. This
change effectively makes the exclusion in paragraph (b)(3)(i) for
cabooses and passenger cars that are historic or more than 50 years old
and used only for the railroad's private transportation purposes
available to all of the railroad's existing cabooses and passenger cars
used only for private transportation purposes.
In addition, as FRA proposed in the NPRM, FRA is revising paragraph
(b)(4) to correct the reference to Sec. 223.5. Paragraph (b)(4)
formerly contained an exclusion for ``[l]ocomotives that are used
exclusively in designated service as defined in Sec. 223.5(m).'' The
reference to Sec. 223.5(m) is outdated, as paragraph lettering was
removed from Sec. 223.5, Definitions, when that section was
reorganized and revised by the May 4, 1998 Passenger Train Emergency
Preparedness final rule. See 63 FR 24630, 24642. Removing the reference
to paragraph (m) of Sec. 223.5 for internal consistency has no
substantive effect on the application of the rule, as the definition of
``designated service'' in Sec. 223.5 remains unchanged. Accordingly,
this final rule removes the reference to paragraph (m) of Sec. 223.5
so that paragraph (b)(4) instead refers to Sec. 223.5 generally.
FRA is adding paragraph (c) to clarify the requirements applicable
to equipment subject to the exclusion in paragraph (b)(3) of this
section for ``antiquated equipment,'' to maintain safety in connection
with the change to the application of this term for equipment built
after 1945 but more than 50 years old. As discussed in sections IV.F
and IV.H of this final rule, FRA is clarifying requirements for
emergency windows in occupied passenger cars operated in intercity
passenger or commuter trains, as well as clarifying requirements for
locomotives, passenger cars, and cabooses currently equipped with
compliant glazing. Paragraph (c) applies, as specified, to each
locomotive, passenger car, and caboose built after 1945 more than 50
years old and used only for excursion, educational, recreational, or
private transportation purposes. Specifically, paragraph (c)(1)
requires each such passenger car to comply with the emergency window
requirements contained in Sec. 223.9(c) or Sec. 223.15(c), as
appropriate, when it is occupied and operates in an intercity passenger
or commuter train subject to part 238 of this chapter. A tool or other
instrument may be used to remove or break an emergency window if the
tool or other instrument is clearly marked and legible and
understandable instructions are provided for its use. Paragraph (c)(2)
requires each such locomotive, passenger car, and caboose that is
equipped with glazing that complies with the glazing requirements
contained in appendix A to this part as of February 9, 2016, to remain
in compliance with those requirements. Accordingly, the final rule will
not diminish the level of safety the regulation currently provides.
Section 223.5 Definitions
FRA is revising three terms in this section: ``end facing glazing
location,'' ``passenger car,'' and ``side facing glazing location.''
FRA is also defining ``incidental freight service.''
Specifically, FRA is revising the definition of ``end facing
glazing location'' by making clear the location means an ``exterior''
location and that dome and observation cars are included in the
category of cars subject to the application of this definition, and by
expressly identifying locations not considered ``end facing glazing
location[s].'' The definition clearly excludes the coupled ends of MU
locomotives or other equipment that is semi-permanently connected to
each other in a train consist, and end doors
[[Page 6784]]
at locations other than the cab end of a cab car of MU locomotive.
Instead of considering such locations to be end facing glazing
locations requiring Type I glazing, these locations are considered side
facing glazing locations requiring only Type II glazing, as noted
below. Please see section IV.H of this final rule for a fuller
discussion of the change to the definition of ``end facing glazing
location.''
FRA is adopting the changes to this definition as proposed in the
NPRM but also makes clear the definition continues to provide that any
location which, due to curvature of the glazing material, can meet the
criteria for either an end facing location or a side facing location is
considered an end facing location. This provision applies unless the
location is otherwise excluded from this definition. FRA also notes
that in the final rule this provision uses the more general term ``end
facing'' location rather than ``front facing'' location consistent with
the use of ``end facing'' glazing location in this final rule.
In addition, this rule revises the definition of ``side facing
glazing location.'' The definition now includes the coupled ends of MU
locomotives or other equipment that is semi-permanently connected to
each other in a train consist, and end doors at locations other than
the cab end of a cab car or MU locomotive. Instead of considering such
locations to be end facing glazing locations requiring Type I glazing,
these locations are considered side facing glazing locations requiring
only Type II glazing due to the generally lower risk of an exterior
projectile impacting the window surface.
In addition, this rule revises the definition of ``passenger car''
by removing the statement that ``[t]his term does not include a private
car.'' The revision clarifies that a private car can be considered a
passenger car. Please see section IV.D of this final rule for a full
discussion of this change.
Finally, FRA is adding the term ``incidental freight service'' to
mean the occasional and irregular use of a locomotive in freight
service that is more than 50 years old and used primarily for
excursion, educational, recreational, or private transportation
purposes. Please see the discussion in section III.B and IV.C of this
final rule, above.
Section 223.11 Requirements for Existing Locomotives
As discussed in section IV.I of this final rule, the amendments to
this section remove the compliance phase-in dates and related language
from the glazing requirements for existing locomotives. As noted above,
part 223 phased in requirements for glazing standards by generally
allowing the rail industry until June 30, 1984, to fit their existing
locomotives with compliant glazing. The rule included an exception for
locomotives that had their windows damaged by vandalism. Windows
damaged due to vandalism were required to be replaced with compliant
glazing sooner than the 1984 compliance phase-in date.
Paragraph (c) removes the compliance phase-in date, June 30, 1984.
This date is no longer needed now that it has long passed. Paragraph
(d) removes the language that required windows damaged by vandalism to
be replaced with compliant glazing sooner than the 1984 compliance
phase-in date. This requirement is no longer needed because the
compliance phase-in period has long passed and all existing
locomotives, other than yard locomotives excluded by this section or
locomotives that satisfy the limited exclusions provided in Sec.
223.3, are required to be equipped with compliant glazing.
No comments were received on this section and FRA accordingly
adopts the changes to this section as proposed but further clarifies
that existing yard locomotives continue to be excluded from the
section's requirements. FRA's proposal may have inadvertently created
an ambiguity whether this section's longstanding exception for existing
yard locomotives continues to apply.
Section 223.13 Requirements for Existing Cabooses
As discussed in section IV.I of this final rule, the amendments to
this section remove the compliance phase-in dates and related language
from the glazing requirements related to existing cabooses. As noted
above, part 223 phased in requirements for glazing standards by
generally allowing the rail industry until June 30, 1984, to fit their
existing cabooses with compliant glazing. The rule included an
exception for cabooses that had their windows damaged by vandalism.
Windows damaged by vandalism were required to be replaced with
compliant glazing sooner than the 1984 compliance phase-in date.
Paragraph (c) removes the compliance phase-in date, June 30, 1984.
This date is no longer needed now that it has long passed. Paragraph
(d) removes the language that required windows damaged by vandalism to
be replaced with compliant glazing sooner than the 1984 compliance
phase-in date. This requirement is no longer needed because the
compliance phase-in period has long passed and all cabooses, other than
yard cabooses excluded by this section or those that satisfy the
limited exclusions provided in Sec. 223.3, are required to be equipped
with compliant glazing.
FRA expressly invited comment on the NPRM on whether it needed to
retain this section in the final rule and specifically whether its
requirements could be consolidated with those for new cabooses in Sec.
223.9(b) in a revised or new section. No comments were received on this
issue and this final rule makes no change to Sec. 223.9(b). No
comments were received on Sec. 223.13 and FRA accordingly adopts the
changes to Sec. 223.13 as proposed but clarifies that existing yard
cabooses continue to be excluded from Sec. 223.13's requirements.
FRA's proposal may have inadvertently created an ambiguity whether
Sec. 223.13's longstanding exception for existing yard cabooses
continues to apply.
Section 223.15 Requirements for Existing Passenger Cars
As discussed in section IV.I of this final rule, the amendments to
this section remove the compliance phase-in dates and related language
from the glazing requirements for existing passenger cars. As noted
above, before these changes the rule generally allowed the rail
industry until June 30, 1984, to fit their existing passenger cars with
compliant glazing. Windows damaged by vandalism were required to be
replaced with compliant glazing sooner than the 1984 compliance phase-
in date.
Paragraph (c) removes the compliance phase-in date, June 30, 1984.
This date is no longer needed now that it has long passed. Paragraph
(d) removes the language that required windows damaged by vandalism to
be replaced with compliant glazing sooner than the 1984 compliance
phase-in date. This requirement is no longer needed because the
compliance phase-in period has long passed and all passenger cars,
other than those that satisfy the limited exclusions provided in Sec.
223.3, are required to be equipped with compliant glazing.
FRA expressly invited comment on the NPRM on whether it needed to
retain this section needed in the final rule and specifically whether
its requirements could be consolidated with those for new passenger
cars in Sec. 223.9(c) in a revised or new section. No comments were
received on this issue and this final rule makes no change to Sec.
223.9(c). No comments were received on Sec. 223.15 and FRA
[[Page 6785]]
accordingly adopts the changes to Sec. 223.15 as proposed.
Section 223.17 Identification of Equipped Locomotives, Passenger Cars
and Cabooses
Section Sec. 223.17 required stenciling on the interior wall of
each locomotive cab, passenger car, and caboose to identify that the
equipment is fully equipped with glazing material that complies with
part 223. This requirement is no longer necessary, and the final rule
removes this entire section. As a result, this type of stenciling is no
longer required. For a full discussion of this change, please see
section IV.A of this final rule.
Appendix B to Part 223--Schedule of Civil Penalties
Appendix B to part 223 contains a schedule of civil penalties for
FRA to use to enforce this part. FRA is revising the schedule of civil
penalties in this final rule to reflect revisions made to part 223.
Because such penalty schedules are statements of agency policy, notice
and comment are not required before they are issued. See 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(3)(A). Nevertheless, FRA invited comments on the penalty
schedule in the NPRM. However, FRA did not receive any comments.
Accordingly, FRA is revising the penalty schedule to reflect the
removal of Sec. 223.17, Identification of Equipped Locomotives,
Passenger Cars and Cabooses, from this part.
VI. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 and DOT Regulatory Policies and
Procedures
This final rule has been evaluated consistent with Executive Order
12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review), Executive Order 13563
(Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review), and DOT policies and
procedures. FRA has prepared and placed in the docket a regulatory
analysis addressing the economic impact of this final rule. FRA
believes this final rule is consistent with current industry practices
and reduces the regulatory burden on the rail industry.
The analysis includes a quantitative evaluation of the benefits of
this final rule. For entities choosing to take advantage of the new
flexibilities and cost savings provided in this final rule, FRA
estimates there may be a minimal cost burden associated with this rule.
Specifically, railroads or car owners or operators may need to purchase
small hammers or other tools for occupants to use to break windows for
emergency egress in passenger cars now considered ``antiquated
equipment,'' because they were built after 1945 and are more than 50
years old, when these passenger cars are operated in intercity
passenger or commuter trains. Additionally, railroads will probably
modify existing specifications for new equipment orders to remove the
requirement to stencil interior walls of the equipment as containing
window glazing in full compliance with part 223. The present value of
total voluntary costs affected entities may incur is estimated to be
approximately $6,000 over a 10-year period.
Overall, the benefits of this rule greatly outweigh any costs that
may be incurred. The revisions specified in this final rule eliminate
the cost of stenciling, reduce the cost of certain new passenger cars,
and reduce the number of waivers requested by the railroad industry.
Over a 10-year period, this analysis finds that $1,088,489 in cost
savings will accrue due to the changes. The present value of this
amount is $819,479 (discounted at 7 percent). Therefore, accounting for
the $6,000 in voluntarily-incurred costs to take advantage of the
flexibilities provided in this final rule, the net savings of this rule
is approximately $813,479.
FRA is eliminating the requirement to stencil the inside walls of
locomotives, passenger cars, and cabooses as fully equipped with
compliant glazing. This requirement was necessary during the
implementation phase-in period of part 223 (in the 1980s), when large
numbers of affected equipment were not equipped with glazing required
by part 223. The stencil was a clear and easy way to determine whether
compliant glazing was installed. Because the phase-in period for
fitting equipment with certified glazing under part 223 has long
passed, the required certification markings on the window panels have
become more useful and reliable for FRA to determine compliance with
part 223. The total annual cost for all affected entities to comply
with the stenciling requirement is from $74,170 (Year 1) to $80,820
(Year 10) (non-discounted). This variability is due to the increase in
real wages discussed in section 6 of the accompanying analysis in the
docket for this rulemaking. Consequently, over a 10-year period, the
analysis finds that a total of $773,841 in cost savings will accrue
through the elimination of this requirement. The present value of this
amount is $578,494 (discounted at 7 percent).
This rule revises definitions to help provide clarity to the rail
industry and also greater consistency with other FRA regulations.
Antiquated equipment will now be defined as equipment that is more than
50 years old. This significantly reduces the number of waiver petitions
submitted to exclude from the glazing requirements equipment that is
more than 50 years old but built after 1945 and operated in a train for
an excursion, educational, recreational, or private transportation
purpose. Based on past practice, FRA estimates it would have received
approximately 140 initial waiver requests over the next five years (28
per year) if this rule were not issued. FRA is estimating the potential
waivers that will no longer be needed over a five-year period because
renewal waivers would have been needed every five years to avoid
installing certified glazing. Therefore, no additional waiver
applications would be expected after the fifth year. In years when the
initial waiver petitions would have been submitted if this rule were
not issued, the total annual cost for all affected entities would have
been from $16,507 (Year 1) to $16,921 (Year 10) (non-discounted). This
variability is due to the increase in real wages as discussed in
section 6 of the accompanying analysis in the docket for this
rulemaking. Accordingly, a total of $83,563 in cost savings will accrue
over 10 years due to the reduction of initial waiver requests. The
present value of this amount is $73,260 (discounted at 7 percent).
FRA has approved approximately 310 waivers of glazing requirements
for equipment more than 50 years old but manufactured after 1945 and
operated in a train for an excursion, educational, recreational, or
private transportation purpose. If the final rule was not issued,
renewal waivers would be required to be submitted every five years to
continue operations. Under this final rule, these waivers are no longer
necessary, saving the labor cost of preparing and submitting each
waiver renewal request. The total annual cost for all affected entities
to submit renewal waiver petitions would have increased from $18,275
(Year 1) to $28,066 (Year 10) (non-discounted) if this rule were not
issued. This variability is due to the rise in real wages discussed in
section 6 of the accompanying analysis this rulemaking's docket. Over a
10-year period, a total of $231,084 in cost savings will therefore
accrue due to the reduction of renewal waivers. The present value of
this amount is $167,725 (discounted at 7 percent).
FRA notes it is revising the definition of the term ``end facing
glazing location'' to clarify the location means
[[Page 6786]]
an ``exterior'' location and expressly identify locations not
considered ``end facing glazing location[s]''--namely, the coupled ends
of MU locomotives or other equipment that is semi-permanently connected
to each other in a train consist; and end doors at locations other than
the cab end of a cab car of MU locomotive. However, FRA did not
evaluate any cost savings as a result of this clarification, because
FRA has generally enforced the regulation consistent with this
clarification.
FRA expressly requested comments on all aspects of the regulatory
evaluation and its conclusions. No comments were received in response
to FRA's request.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), Public Law 96-354, as
amended, and codified as amended at 5 U.S.C. 601-612, and Executive
Order 13272 (Proper Consideration of Small Entities in Agency
Rulemaking), 67 FR 53461, Aug. 16, 2002, require agency review of
proposed and final rules to assess their impact on ``small entities''
for purposes of the RFA. An agency must prepare a regulatory
flexibility analysis unless it determines and certifies that a rule is
not expected to have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Pursuant to the RFA, 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the
Administrator of FRA certifies that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
This rule will affect small entities. However, the effect on these
entities will be purely beneficial other than for a nominal cost
savings offset, as it will reduce their costs and labor burden
particularly by narrowing the class of equipment subject to the full
requirements of the Safety Glazing Standards regulation.
The term ``small entity'' is defined in 5 U.S.C. 601 (section 601).
Section 601(6) defines ``small entity'' as having the same meaning as
``the terms `small business', `small organization' and `small
governmental jurisdiction' defined in paragraphs (3), (4), and (5) of
this section.'' In turn, section 601(3) defines a ``small business'' as
generally having the same meaning as ``small business concern'' under
section 3 of the Small Business Act. This includes any small business
concern that is independently owned and operated, and is not dominant
in its field of operation. Next, section 601(4) defines ``small
organization'' as generally meaning any not-for-profit enterprise that
is independently owned and operated, and not dominant in its field of
operations. Additionally, section 601(5) defines ``small governmental
jurisdiction'' in general to include governments of cities, counties,
towns, townships, villages, school districts, or special districts with
populations less than 50,000.
The U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) stipulates ``size
standards'' for small entities. A for-profit railroad business firm may
be considered a small entity if it has less than 1,500 employees for
``Line-Haul Operating'' railroads, and 500 employees for ``Short-Line
Operating'' railroads. See ``Size Eligibility Provisions and
Standards,'' 13 CFR part 121, subpart A.
Under exceptions provided in section 601, Federal agencies may
adopt their own size standards for small entities in consultation with
SBA, and in conjunction with public comment. Under the authority
provided to it by SBA, FRA has published a ``Final Policy Statement
Concerning Small Entities Subject to the Railroad Safety Laws,'' which
formally establishes small entities as including, among others, the
following: (1) The railroads classified by the Surface Transportation
Board as Class III; and (2) commuter railroads ``that serve populations
of 50,000 or less.'' \7\ See 68 FR 24891, May 9, 2003, codified at
appendix C to 49 CFR part 209. Currently, the revenue requirements are
$20 million or less in annual operating revenue, adjusted annually for
inflation. The $20 million limit (adjusted annually for inflation) is
based on the Surface Transportation Board's threshold of a Class III
railroad, which is adjusted by applying the railroad revenue deflator
adjustment.\8\ For further information on the calculation of the
specific dollar limit, please see 49 CFR part 1201. FRA is using this
definition of ``small entity'' for this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ In the Interim Policy Statement, 62 FR 43024, Aug. 11, 1997:
FRA defined `small entity,' for the purpose of communication and
enforcement policies, the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601
et seq., and the Equal Access for Justice Act, 5 U.S.C. 501 et seq.,
to include only railroads which are classified as Class III. FRA
further clarified the definition to include, in addition to Class
III railroads, hazardous materials shippers that meet the income
level established for Class III railroads (those with annual
operating revenues of $20 million per year or less, as set forth in
49 CFR 1201.1-1); railroad contractors that meet the income level
established for Class III railroads; and those commuter railroads or
small governmental jurisdictions that serve populations of 50,000 or
less.
68 FR 24892, May 9, 2003. ``The Final Policy Statement issued
today is substantially the same as the Interim Policy Statement.''
68 FR 24894.
\8\ In general, under 49 CFR 1201.1-1, the class into which a
railroad carrier falls is determined by comparing the carrier's
annual inflation-adjusted operating revenues for three consecutive
years to the following scale after the dollar figures in the scale
are adjusted by applying the railroad revenue deflator formula:
Class I--$250 million or more;
Class II--more than $20 million, but less than $250 million; and
Class III--$20 million or less.
49 CFR 1201.1-1(a), (b)(1). STB's General Instructions at 1-1
state that carriers are grouped into three classes for purposes of
accounting and reporting. The three classes are as follows:
Class I: These carriers have annual carrier operating revenues
of $250 million or more after applying STB's railroad revenue
deflator formula.
Class II: These carriers have annual carrier operating revenues
of less than $250 million but in excess of $20 million after
applying STB's railroad revenue deflator formula.
Class III: These carriers have annual carrier operating revenues
of $20 million or less after applying STB's railroad revenue
deflator formula.
See also 78 FR 21007, Apr. 8, 2013. It should be noted that
there are some exceptions to this general definition of the three
classes of carriers. As one important example, STB treats families
of railroads as a single carrier for classification purposes when
those families operate within the United States as a single,
integrated rail system. 49 CFR 1201-1.1(b)(1). As another example,
STB considers all switching and terminal companies to be Class III
carriers, regardless of their operating revenues. 49 CFR 1201-
1.1(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA estimates that there are 726 railroads that operate on standard
gage track that is part of the general railroad system of
transportation and are, therefore, subject to part 223, see 49 CFR
223.3. Of these railroads, 44 are Class I freight railroads, Class II
freight railroads, commuter railroads serving populations of 50,000 or
more, or intercity passenger railroads (i.e., Amtrak, a Class I
railroad, and the Alaska Railroad, a Class II railroad). The remaining
681 railroads are therefore assumed to be small railroads for the
purpose of this assessment. However, this final rule will not impact
most of these railroads because locomotives acquired by small railroads
are typically older Class I locomotives already equipped with compliant
glazing and stenciling. Similarly, any passenger cars acquired by small
railroads from intercity passenger or commuter railroads will already
be equipped with compliant glazing and stenciling.
Small railroads and private car owners will likely be affected by
the clarification that certain equipment more than 50 years old is
considered antiquated and thereby excluded from part 223's requirements
when operated in specified service. As a result of this change, the
economic burden of preparing and submitting waiver petitions will be
reduced for railroads and private car owners for equipment that is more
than 50 years old but built after 1945 and operated in a train for an
excursion, educational, recreational, or private transportation
purpose. As noted above, FRA estimates that it would
[[Page 6787]]
receive approximately 140 initial requests for waiver of the glazing
requirements over the next five years (28 per year) if this change were
not made, and the approximately 310 approved waivers of glazing
requirements would also have to be renewed every five years if this
change were not made. When including the avoided cost of renewing the
additional 140 initial waiver requests by making this change--a total
of approximately 900 \9\ avoided waiver petitions--the total cost
savings is $240,985 over 10 years, discounted at 7 percent. Of course,
the individually allocated savings to each affected railroad or private
car owner will be a comparatively smaller portion of the total cost
savings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ A total of approximately 900 waiver petitions will be
avoided: 140 initial petitions in the first five years + 140 initial
petitions renewed in the next five years + 310 approved waiver
petitions renewed in the first five years + 310 approved waiver
petitions renewed in the next five years.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Further, for entities choosing to take advantage of the regulatory
relief permitted by this change to the definition of ``antiquated
equipment,'' FRA estimates that there may be a minimal cost burden
associated with operation of such passenger cars in intercity passenger
or commuter service, because they will continue to be required to have
emergency windows. Some affected entities may choose to install small
hammers or other small tools or implements to allow for emergency
egress from passenger car windows when operated in an intercity
passenger or commuter train. Hammers may be used to break these windows
in case of an emergency. The population of private cars that operate in
Amtrak trains is approximately 125 cars. FRA estimates that 80 percent
of these cars will not have hammers or other tools already on board to
facilitate emergency egress through windows. Therefore, for 100 of
those private cars, car owners will have to purchase four hammers or
other tools per car. That total cost will be approximately $5,000.
Additionally, a minimal cost to copy and laminate instructions to use
the hammers or other tools will also be incurred. FRA estimates this
total cost to be $1,000 (approximately $10 per car). All these costs
will be incurred during the first year. Therefore, the present value of
all total costs is approximately $6,000. This $6,000 cost will easily
be offset by the total cost savings of $240,985 from changing the
definition of ``antiquated equipment,'' which is shared among all small
entities. Consequently, FRA concludes this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
FRA certifies that this final rule is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
under the RFA or Executive Order 13272. Although a substantial number
of small entities will be affected by this rule, none of these entities
will be significantly impacted. In order to determine the significance
of the economic impact for the final rule's RFA requirements, FRA
expressly invited comments on the NPRM from all interested parties
concerning the potential economic impact on small entities resulting
from the rule. FRA did not receive comments on this issue.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
FRA is submitting the information collection requirements in this
final rule for review and approval to the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.). The sections that contain the new information and current
information collection requirements and the estimated time to fulfill
each requirement are as follows:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Respondent Total annual Average time per Total annual
CFR section universe responses response burden hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
223.3(c)--Application: Passenger 673 railroads (100 400 marked tools 30 minutes........ 200 hours.
car emergency windows--marked passenger cars with legible &
tools with legible and with minimum of 4 clear
understandable instructions emergency instructions.
near them to remove/break windows).
window for passenger cars built
after 1945 that are more than
50 years old and operated in
intercity passenger or commuter
train (new requirement).
223.11--Existing Locomotives: 673 railroads..... Already compliant/ N/A............... N/A.
Built or rebuilt prior to July Already have FRA
1, 1980, equipped with approved waivers.
certified glazing in all
locomotive cab windows (revised
requirement).
--Locomotives with cab windows 673 railroads..... 15 designations... 30 seconds........ 0.125 hour.
broken or damaged--placed in
designated service (revised
requirement).
--Locomotives removed from 673 railroads..... Certification done N/A............... N/A.
service until broken/damaged instantly at time
windows are replaced with of window
certified glazing (revised manufacture.
requirement).
223.13--Existing Cabooses: Built 673 railroads..... Already compliant/ N/A............... N/A.
or rebuilt prior to July 1, Already have FRA
1980, equipped with certified approved waivers.
glazing in all windows (revised
requirement).
--Cabooses removed from service 673 railroads..... Certification done N/A............... N/A.
until broken/damaged windows instantly at time
are replaced with certified of window
glazing (revised requirement). manufacture.
223.15--Existing Passenger Cars: 673 railroads..... Already compliant/ N/A............... N/A.
Built or rebuilt prior to July Already have FRA
1, 1980, equipped with approved waivers.
certified glazing in all
windows plus four emergency
windows (revised requirement).
--Passenger cars removed from 673 railroads..... Certification done N/A............... N/A.
service until broken/damaged instantly at time
windows are replaced with of window
certified glazing (revised manufacture.
requirement).
Appendix A--Requests to glass/ 5 Glass/Glazing 10 requests....... 15 minutes........ 3 hours.
glazing manufacturers for Manufacturers.
glazing certification
information (current
requirement).
--Identification of each 5 Glass/Glazing 25,000 pieces of 480 pieces per 52 hours.
individual unit of glazing Manufacturers. glazing. hour.
material (current requirement).
[[Page 6788]]
--Testing of new material 5 Glass/Glazing 1 test............ 14 hours.......... 14 hours.
(current requirement). Manufacturers.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All estimates include the time for reviewing instructions;
searching existing data sources; gathering or maintaining the needed
data; and reviewing the information. For information or a copy of the
paperwork package submitted to OMB, contact Mr. Robert Brogan,
Information Clearance Officer, Office of Railroad Safety, FRA, at 202-
493-6292, or Ms. Kimberly Toone, FRA Records Management Officer, Office
of Information Technology, FRA, at 202-493-6132, or via email at the
following addresses: Robert.Brogan@dot.gov; Kim.Toone@dot.gov.
Organizations and individuals desiring to submit comments on the
collection of information requirements should send them directly to the
Office of Management and Budget, Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Washington, DC 20503, Attention: FRA Desk Officer. Comments
may also be sent via email to the Office of Management and Budget at
the following address: oira_submissions@omb.eop.gov.
OMB is required to make a decision concerning the collection of
information requirements contained in this final rule between 30 and 60
days after publication of this document in the Federal Register.
Therefore, a comment to OMB is best assured of having its full effect
if OMB receives it within 30 days of publication.
FRA cannot impose a penalty on persons for violating information
collection requirements which do not display a current OMB control
number, if required. FRA intends to obtain current OMB control numbers
for new information collection requirements resulting from this
rulemaking action prior to the effective date of this final rule. The
OMB control number, when assigned, will be announced by separate notice
in the Federal Register.
D. Federalism Implications
Executive Order 13132, ``Federalism'' (64 FR 43255, Aug. 10, 1999),
requires FRA to develop an accountable process to ensure ``meaningful
and timely input by State and local officials in the development of
regulatory policies that have federalism implications.'' ``Policies
that have federalism implications'' are defined in the Executive Order
to include regulations that have ``substantial direct effects on the
States, on the relationship between the national government and the
States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government.'' Under Executive Order 13132, an agency
may not issue a regulation with federalism implications that imposes
substantial direct compliance costs and that is not required by
statute, unless the Federal government provides the funds necessary to
pay the direct compliance costs incurred by State and local
governments, or the agency consults with State and local government
officials early in the process of developing the regulation. Where a
regulation has federalism implications and preempts State law, the
agency seeks to consult with State and local officials in the process
of developing the regulation.
FRA has analyzed this rule under the principles and criteria in
Executive Order 13132. This rule will not have a substantial effect on
the States or their political subdivisions, and it will not affect the
relationships between the Federal government and the States or their
political subdivisions, or the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government. In addition,
FRA determined this regulatory action will not impose substantial
direct compliance costs on States or their political subdivisions.
Therefore, the consultation and funding requirements of Executive Order
13132 do not apply. Nevertheless, State and local officials were
involved in developing recommendations that are addressed in this rule
through the RSAC, which has as permanent members two organizations
directly representing State and local interests, AASHTO and ASRSM.
However, this rule could have preemptive effect by operation of law
under certain provisions of the Federal railroad safety statutes,
specifically the former Federal Railroad Safety Act of 1970, repealed
and re-codified at 49 U.S.C 20106, and the former Locomotive Boiler
Inspection Act (LIA) at 45 U.S.C. 22-34, repealed and re-codified at 49
U.S.C. 20701-20703. Section 20106 provides that States may not adopt or
continue in effect any law, regulation, or order related to railroad
safety or security that covers the subject matter of a regulation
prescribed or order issued by the Secretary of Transportation (with
respect to railroad safety matters) or the Secretary of Homeland
Security (with respect to railroad security matters), except when the
State law, regulation, or order qualifies under the ``essentially local
safety or security hazard'' exception to section 20106. Moreover, the
Supreme Court has interpreted the former LIA to preempt the field of
locomotive safety. See Napier v. Atlantic Coast Line R.R., 272 U.S. 605
(1926) and Kurns v. Railroad Friction Products Corp., 132 S. Ct. 1261
(2012).
E. Environmental Impact
FRA has evaluated this final rule under the National Environmental
Policy Act (NEPA; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.), other environmental
statutes, related regulatory requirements, and its ``Procedures for
Considering Environmental Impacts'' (FRA's Procedures) (64 FR 28545,
May 26, 1999). FRA has determined this final rule is categorically
excluded from detailed environmental review under section 4(c)(20) of
FRA's Procedures, ``Promulgation of railroad safety rules and policy
statements that do not result in significantly increased emissions of
air or water pollutants or noise or increased traffic congestion in any
mode of transportation.'' See 64 FR 28547, May 26, 1999. Categorical
exclusions (CEs) are actions identified in an agency's NEPA
implementing procedures that do not normally have a significant impact
on the environment and therefore do not require either an environmental
assessment (EA) or environmental impact statement (EIS). See 40 CFR
1508.4.
In analyzing the applicability of a CE, the agency must also
consider whether extraordinary circumstances are present that would
warrant a more detailed environmental review through the preparation of
an EA or EIS. Id. Under section 4(c) and (e) of FRA's Procedures, FRA
has further concluded that no extraordinary circumstances exist with
respect to this regulation that might trigger the need for a more
detailed environmental review. The purpose of this rulemaking is to
revise and clarify existing regulations related to the use of glazing
materials in the windows of locomotives, passenger cars, and cabooses.
FRA does not anticipate any environmental impacts from these
requirements and finds that there are no
[[Page 6789]]
extraordinary circumstances present in connection with this final rule.
F. Executive Order 12898 (Environmental Justice)
Executive Order 12898, Federal Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations, and DOT
Order 5610.2(a) (91 FR 27534, May 10, 2012) require DOT agencies to
achieve environmental justice as part of their mission by identifying
and addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects, including interrelated social
and economic effects, of their programs, policies, and activities on
minority populations and low-income populations. The DOT Order
instructs DOT agencies to address compliance with Executive Order 12898
and requirements within the DOT Order in rulemaking activities, as
appropriate. FRA has evaluated this final rule under Executive Order
12898 and the DOT Order and determined it will not cause
disproportionately high and adverse human health and environmental
effects on minority populations or low-income populations.
G. Executive Order 13175 (Tribal Consultation)
FRA has evaluated this final rule under the principles and criteria
contained in Executive Order 13175, Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribal Governments, dated November 6, 2000. This final rule will
not have a substantial direct effect on one or more Indian tribes, will
not impose substantial direct compliance costs on Indian tribal
governments, and will not preempt tribal laws. Therefore, the funding
and consultation requirements of Executive Order 13175 do not apply,
and a tribal summary impact statement is not required.
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Under Section 201 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Public Law 104-4, 2 U.S.C. 1531), each Federal agency ``shall, unless
otherwise prohibited by law, assess the effects of Federal regulatory
actions on State, local, and tribal governments, and the private sector
(other than to the extent that such regulations incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in law).'' Section 202 of the Act
(2 U.S.C. 1532) further requires that ``before promulgating any general
notice of proposed rulemaking that is likely to result in the
promulgation of any rule that includes any Federal mandate that may
result in expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100,000,000 or more (adjusted
annually for inflation) in any 1 year, and before promulgating any
final rule for which a general notice of proposed rulemaking was
published, the agency shall prepare a written statement'' detailing the
effect on State, local, and tribal governments and the private sector.
When adjusted for inflation using the Consumer Price Index for All
Urban Consumers as published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the
equivalent value of $100,000,000 in year 2014 dollars is
$155,000,000.\10\ The final rule will not result in the expenditure, in
the aggregate, of $100,000,000 or more in any one year, and thus
preparation of such a statement is not required.
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\10\ See DOT guidance ``2015 Threshold of Significant Regulatory
Actions Under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995,'' May 6,
2015 (update), available electronically at https://www.transportation.gov/office-policy/transportation-policy/2015-threshold-significant-regulatory-actions-under-unfunded.
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I. Privacy Act
FRA wishes to inform all interested parties that anyone is able to
search the electronic form of any written communications and comments
received into any of our dockets by the name of the individual
submitting the comment (or signing the comment, if submitted on behalf
of an association, business, labor union, etc.). See https://www.regulations.gov/#!privacyNotice for the privacy notice of
regulations.gov or interested parties may review DOT's complete Privacy
Act Statement in the Federal Register published on April 11, 2000, 65
FR 19477.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 223
Glazing standards, Penalties, Railroad safety, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
The Final Rule
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, FRA amends part 223 of
chapter II, subtitle B of title 49, Code of Federal Regulations, as
follows:
PART 223 [AMENDED]
0
1. Revise the authority citation for part 223 to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20102-20103, 20133, 20701-20702, 21301-
21302, 21304; 28 U.S.C. 2461, note; and 49 CFR 1.89.
0
2. In Sec. 223.3, revise paragraphs (b)(3) and (4) and add paragraph
(c) to read as follows:
Sec. 223.3 Application.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) Except as provided in paragraph (c) of this section:
(i) Locomotives, cabooses, and passenger cars that are historic or
more than 50 years old and, except for incidental freight service, are
used only for excursion, educational, recreational, or private
transportation purposes; and
(ii) Cabooses and passenger cars in a railroad's fleet on April 11,
2016 that are used only for the railroad's private transportation
purposes. Each such railroad caboose or car that is equipped with
glazing that complies with the glazing requirements contained in
appendix A to this part as of February 9, 2016, must remain in
compliance with those requirements.
(4) Locomotives that are used exclusively in designated service as
defined in Sec. 223.5.
(c) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(3) of this section, this
paragraph (c) applies, as specified, to each locomotive, passenger car,
and caboose built after 1945 that is more than 50 years old and is used
only for excursion, educational, recreational, or private
transportation purposes.
(1) Each such passenger car must comply with the emergency window
requirements contained in Sec. 223.9(c) or Sec. 223.15(c), as
appropriate, when it is occupied and operates in an intercity passenger
or commuter train subject to part 238 of this chapter. A tool or other
instrument may be used to remove or break an emergency window if the
tool or other instrument is clearly marked and legible and
understandable instructions are provided for its use.
(2) Each such locomotive, passenger car, and caboose that is
equipped with glazing that complies with the glazing requirements
contained in appendix A to this part as of February 9, 2016, must
remain in compliance with those requirements.
0
3. In Sec. 223.5, revise the definitions for ``End facing glazing
location'', ``Passenger car'', and ``Side facing glazing location'' and
add the definition for ``Incidental freight service'' in alphabetical
order to read as follows:
Sec. 223.5 Definitions.
* * * * *
End facing glazing location means any exterior location where a
line perpendicular to the plane of the glazing material makes a
horizontal angle of 50 degrees or less with the centerline of the
locomotive, caboose, or passenger car, including a dome or observation
car, except for: The coupled ends of multiple-unit (MU) locomotives or
other equipment that is semi-permanently connected to each other in a
train
[[Page 6790]]
consist; and end doors of passenger cars at locations other than the
cab end of a cab car or MU locomotive. Any location which, due to
curvature of the glazing material, can meet the criteria for either an
end facing location or a side facing location shall be considered an
end facing location.
* * * * *
Incidental freight service means the occasional and irregular use
of a locomotive in freight service that is more than 50 years old and
used primarily for excursion, educational, recreational, or private
transportation purposes.
* * * * *
Passenger car means a unit of rail rolling equipment intended to
provide transportation for members of the general public and includes
self-propelled cars designed to carry baggage, mail, express or
passengers. This term includes a passenger coach, cab car, and an MU
locomotive.
* * * * *
Side facing glazing location means any location where a line
perpendicular to any plane of the glazing material makes an angle of
more than 50 degrees with the centerline of the locomotive, caboose or
passenger car. A side facing glazing location also means a location at
the coupled ends of MU locomotives or other equipment that is semi-
permanently connected to each other in a train consist, and a location
at end doors other than at the cab end of a cab car or MU locomotive.
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 223.11, revise paragraphs (c) and (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 223.11 Requirements for existing locomotives.
* * * * *
(c) Except for yard locomotives and locomotives equipped as
described in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, locomotives built
or rebuilt prior to July 1, 1980, shall be equipped with certified
glazing in all locomotive cab windows.
(d) Except for yard locomotives, each locomotive that has a
locomotive cab window that is broken or damaged so that the window
fails to permit good visibility shall be--
(1) Placed in Designated Service within 48 hours of the time of
breakage or damage; or
(2) Removed from service until the broken or damaged window is
replaced with certified glazing.
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 223.13, revise paragraphs (c) and (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 223.13 Requirements for existing cabooses.
* * * * *
(c) Except for yard cabooses and cabooses equipped as described in
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section, cabooses built or rebuilt prior
to July 1, 1980, shall be equipped with certified glazing in all
windows.
(d) Except for yard cabooses, each caboose that has a window that
is broken or damaged so that the window fails to permit good visibility
shall be removed from service until the broken or damaged window is
replaced with certified glazing.
* * * * *
0
6. In Sec. 223.15, revise paragraphs (c) and (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 223.15 Requirements for existing passenger cars.
* * * * *
(c) Except for passenger cars described in paragraphs (a) and (b)
of this section, passenger cars built or rebuilt prior to July 1, 1980,
shall be equipped with certified glazing in all windows and a minimum
of four emergency windows.
(d) Each passenger car that has a window that is broken or damaged
so that the window fails to permit good visibility shall be removed
from service until the broken or damaged window is replaced with
certified glazing.
* * * * *
Sec. 223.17 [Removed and Reserved]
0
7. Remove and reserve Sec. 223.17.
Appendix B to Part 223--[Amended]
0
8. In appendix B to part 223, remove the entry for Sec. 223.17.
Issued in Washington, DC, on February 1, 2016.
Sarah Feinberg,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2016-02524 Filed 2-8-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-06-P