FY 2016 Railroad Safety Technology Grant Funds, 19705-19709 [2016-07780]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 65 / Tuesday, April 5, 2016 / Notices
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Mr. Vardis Gaus wrote ‘‘I believe this
extension to be valid.’’
Mr. Daniel Tucker commented ‘‘As a
CDL driver, instructor and state-certified
third-party evaluator I believe this
proposal/request makes all the sense in
the world. Allowing up-to a year
practice and development for an entry
level driver candidate or re-entering
driver allows them to take as much time
necessary to build (or rebuild) skills.’’
Four comments opposing the
exemption were from the Commercial
Vehicle Training Association (CVTA)
and three individuals.
The CVTA summarized its opposition
to the exemption by stating ‘‘We urge
FMCSA to deny ODOT’s request for an
exemption from the 180-day CLP
renewal requirement. Granting such an
exemption carries serious safety
concerns and sends the wrong message
regarding FMCSA’s willingness to
accommodate underfunded CDL
programs across the Country. Granting
this exemption would signal to states
that FMCSA will not only tolerate state
practices of underfunding CDL
programs, but will accommodate them.
Moreover, granting this exemption
would undercut Congress’ recent efforts
to put greater pressure on FMCSA and
states to ensure that state CDL programs
are more adequately funded and
efficiently administered.’’
Josh Anonymous wrote ‘‘Don’t do it.
Six months is plenty.’’
Mr. Roland Doe wrote ‘‘Send a
message to such an unfriendly
bureaucracy: NO dice on the waiver
request. If other states can meet the
Federal requirement—and the majority
of them are much easier to do business
with—even California—so can ODOT.’’
Mr. Gary Scott commented that ‘‘A
learner’s permit should only be valid for
6 months. If a person cannot achieve a
level of proficiency within that time
period to acquire a permanent CDL then
maybe they should consider another
line of work.’’
All comments are available for review
in the docket for this notice.
V. FMCSA Response and Decision
The FMCSA has evaluated ODOT’s
application on its merits following full
consideration of the comments
submitted to the docket, and has
decided to grant the exemption from 49
CFR 383.25(c) for a period of 2 years.
The exemption covers ODOT and all
SDLAs. Extending the exemption to
cover all SDLAs, at their discretion, will
preclude the need for other SDLAs
choosing to use the exemption to file
identical exemption requests. FMCSA
believes that safety would not be
diminished by allowing a validity
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period of one year for the CLP. The
maximum time allowed between taking
the knowledge tests and obtaining the
CDL is 12 months under the current rule
and under the exemption. The
exemption avoids the necessity of
obtaining a renewal of the CLP after 6
months if the State chooses to allow
that. FMCSA determined that the
exemption would maintain a level of
safety equivalent to, or greater than, the
level achieved without the exemption
(49 CFR 381.305(a)).
Issued on: March 25, 2016.
T.F. Scott Darling, III,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2016–07730 Filed 4–4–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–EX–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
FY 2016 Railroad Safety Technology
Grant Funds
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of Funding Opportunity
(NOFO).
AGENCY:
This notice details the
application requirements and
procedures for obtaining funding for
eligible Railroad Safety Technology
Grant projects. The opportunities
described in this notice are available
under Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance number 20.321, ‘‘Railroad
Safety Technology.’’
DATES: Applications for funding under
this solicitation are due no later than
5:00 p.m. DST May 20, 2016.
Applications for funding received after
5:00 p.m. DST on May 20, 2016 will not
be considered. See Section 4 of this
notice for additional information
regarding the application process.
ADDRESSES: Applications must be
submitted via Grants.gov. For any
required or supporting application
materials that an applicant is unable to
submit via Grants.gov (such as oversized
engineering drawings), an applicant
may submit an original and two (2)
copies to Mr. Marvin Winston, Office of
Program Delivery, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Room W36–440,
Washington, DC 20590; Email:
marvin.winston@dot.gov. However, due
to delays caused by enhanced screening
of mail delivered via the U.S. Postal
Service, applicants are advised to use
other means of conveyance (such as
courier service) to assure timely receipt
of materials.
SUMMARY:
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If
you have a project related question, you
may contact Dr. Mark Hartong,
Scientific and Technical Advisor
(Phone: (202) 493–1332; email:
Mark.Hartong@dot.gov), or Mr. Devin
Rouse, Program Manager (Phone: (202)
493–6185, email: devin.rouse@dot.gov).
Grant application submission and
processing questions should be
addressed to Mr. Marvin Winston,
Office of Program Delivery, Federal
Railroad Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Room W36–440,
Washington, DC 20590; Email:
marvin.winston@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice to applicants: FRA
recommends applicants read this notice
in its entirety prior to preparing
application materials. There are several
administrative prerequisites described
herein that applicants must comply
with in order to submit an application,
as well as specific eligibility
requirements that must be met.
Additionally, applicants should note
that the required Project Narrative
component of the application package
may not exceed 25 pages in length
(including any appendices).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Table of Contents
1. Funding Opportunity Description
2. Award Information
3. Eligibility and Review Criteria
4. Application and Submission Information
5. Award Administration Information
6. Agency Contact
Section 1: Funding Opportunity
Description
The purpose of this notice is to solicit
applications for grants for eligible
railroad safety technology projects.
Congress appropriated the funding
available under this NOFO, $25 million,
in the Consolidated Appropriations Act,
2016, Division L, Title I (Pub. L. 114–
113 (December 18, 2015)), to carry out
railroad safety technology grants as set
forth in 49 U.S.C. 20158. To maximize
the benefits of the funding available,
FRA is limiting the eligible projects to
those that implement a Positive Train
Control (PTC) system or, as described in
Section 3, will otherwise benefit overall
PTC system implementation on freight,
intercity passenger, and commuter
railroads.
Section 2: Award Information
FRA anticipates making multiple
awards from the funding made available
in this notice and is not predetermining
any minimum or maximum dollar
amounts for awards. However, given the
limited amount of funding currently
available, applicants are encouraged to
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limit their Federal funding requests to a
maximum of $3,000,000 per application.
While this $3,000,000 application limit
is a recommendation and not a firm
requirement, applicants exceeding this
$3,000,000 threshold must explain why
any requested funding over $3,000,000
is necessary to implement the proposed
project. Collaborative applicants
submitting a project that will benefit
more than five (5) entities (e.g., one
entity implementing back office systems
for multiple (five or more) railroads)
may request up to the authorized
appropriation limit of $25,000,000.
Additionally, FRA may choose to award
a grant for less than the amount
requested in the application. FRA will
make awards for projects selected under
this notice as grants with an 80%
federal/20% non-federal cost share. The
funding provided under these grants
will be made available to grantees on a
reimbursable basis.
Applications will proceed through a
three-part review process:
1. Screening for completeness and
eligibility;
2. Evaluation of eligible applications
by technical panels applying the
evaluation criteria; and
3. Project selection by the FRA
Administrator applying additional
selection criteria.
Each application will first be screened
for eligibility (requirements outlined in
Section 3 of this notice) and
completeness (containing all required
documentation outlined in Section 4 of
this notice).
A technical panel consisting of
subject-matter experts will evaluate
eligible and complete applications using
the evaluation criteria outlined in
Section 3 of this notice. FRA will award
funds to projects that are well-aligned
with one or more of the evaluation and
selection criteria. In addition, FRA will
consider whether a project has a
negative effect on any of the evaluation
and selection criteria, and any such
negative effect may reduce the
likelihood that it will select the project
for award.
Section 3: Eligibility and Review
Criteria
The following entities are eligible
applicants for PTC implementation
projects:
• Passenger and freight railroad
carriers;
• Railroad suppliers; and
• State and local governments for
projects that have a public benefit of
improved safety and network efficiency.
To be eligible for assistance, the above
entities subject to 49 U.S.C. 20157(a)
must have submitted a revised Positive
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Train Control Implementation Plan
(PTCIP) to FRA as required by 49 U.S.C.
20157(a). FRA considers the
development and submission of a
revised PTCIP under 49 U.S.C. 20157(a)
to meet the eligibility requirement
related to submitting a plan required
under 49 U.S.C. 20156(e)(2) containing
an analysis of the impact, feasibility,
costs and benefits of implementing PTC
system technology. FRA believes that
any submission connected to sec.
20156(e)(2), which has yet to be
incorporated into a Federal regulation,
would merely be duplicative of what a
railroad analyzed when it developed
and submitted a revised PTCIP. Thus,
FRA considers the submission of a
revised PTCIP to meet the eligibility
requirements in 49 U.S.C. 20158(b)(3)
for purposes of this NOFO. If an
applicant is not required to comply with
either sec. 20157(a) or sec. 20156(e)(2),
the applicant must demonstrate that to
FRA’s satisfaction in its NOFO
application.
The FRA is soliciting applications for
projects that will benefit overall PTC
system implementation on freight,
intercity passenger, and commuter
railroads. Under 49 U.S.C. 20158(b)(2),
the FRA shall give priority to projects
that (A) focus on making technologies
interoperable between railroad systems,
such as train control technologies; (B)
accelerate train control technology
deployment on high-risk corridors, such
as those that have high volumes of
hazardous materials shipments or over
which commuter or passenger trains
operate; or (C) benefit both passenger
and freight safety and efficiency. Given
that the amount of funding available is
not likely sufficient to cover the costs
necessary to deploy PTC on any given
railroad, FRA will further prioritize
projects that not only fall within these
areas but also involve:
1. An entity or entities that have
submitted a revised PTCIP and
demonstrated progress in implementing
PTC in accordance with its PTCIP and
have shown good faith in attempting to
timely complete PTC implementation;
2. Collaboration between freight and
passenger railroad carriers, railroad
suppliers, and State and local
governments, particularly related to
interoperability and other industry-wide
PTC technical and management issues;
3. The development and deployment
of technologies that will lower costs,
accelerate implementation, increase
interoperability between host and tenant
operations, and improve reliability of
PTC systems; and
4. The development and deployment
of technologies that will eliminate PTC
communications interference, provide
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solutions to configuration management
of multi-railroad PTC software and
firmware deployments, eliminate PTC
communications interference; provide
configuration management of multirailroad PTC software and firmware
deployments; and provide host-tenant
railroad PTC interoperability/system
certification.
Examples of eligible projects include
the following:
• Costs for implementation,
installation, and testing of PTC systems;
• Costs for shared PTC infrastructure
(e.g., back office systems, CAD systems);
and
• Costs to advance PTC
interoperability, such as pilot programs,
standardization committees,
development of standard processes, and
spectrum acquisition, sharing, and
desensitization.
Applicants should note that these
aspects represent suggested areas of
interest by the FRA, and any otherwise
eligible applications meeting the criteria
above will be evaluated and considered
for award.
By statute, 49 U.S.C. 20158 allows for
up to an 80 percent Federal share of
project costs. The required 20 percent
non-Federal match may be comprised of
public sector (state or local) or private
sector funding. However, the FRA
cannot consider any other Federal
funds, nor any non-Federal funds
already expended (or otherwise
encumbered), towards the matching
requirement. Additionally, FRA is
limiting the method for calculating the
non-Federal match to cash contributions
only—‘‘in-kind’’ contributions will not
be accepted. Matching funds provided
in excess of the minimum requirement
will be considered in evaluating the
merit of an application.
FRA intends to award funds to PTC
projects that achieve the maximum
public benefits possible. Analysis
provided by applicants that quantifies
the monetary value (whenever possible)
of the anticipated public benefits of the
proposed project will be particularly
relevant to the FRA in evaluating
applications. The systematic process of
comparing expected benefits and costs
helps decision-makers organize
information about, and evaluate
tradeoffs between, alternative
transportation investments. FRA will
consider benefits and costs using
standard data and qualitative
information provided by applicants and
will evaluate applications in a manner
consistent with Executive Order 12893
(Principles for Federal Infrastructure
Investments, 59 FR 4233), Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
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Circular A–94 (Guidelines and Discount
Rates for Benefit-Cost Analysis of
Federal Programs), and OMB Circular
A–4 (Regulatory Analysis). Applications
for PTC projects will be reviewed by
DOT subject matter experts against the
following three evaluation criteria:
• PTC Deployment Benefits;
• Technical Merit; and
• Project Development approach.
PTC Deployment Benefits
The following factors will be
considered in assessing a proposed
project’s achievement of PTC
deployment benefits:
• The degree to which the successful
implementation of the proposed project
would advance the technical
deployment of PTC, including
improvements to reliability, safety,
security, and maintainability;
• The degree to which the successful
implementation of the proposed project
would decrease PTC implementation
and maintenance costs; and
• The degree to which the project
maximizes the return on investment
(ROI) towards industry-wide
implementation efforts.
Technical Merit
The following factors will be
considered in assessing a proposed
project’s technical merit:
• The degree to which the proposed
project exhibits a sound scientific and
engineering basis;
• The degree to which the proposed
project could be practically applied in
and compatible with the railroad’s
operating environment and
infrastructure; and
• The perceived likelihood of
technical and practical success.
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Project Development Approach
The following factors will be
considered in assessing the proposed
project’s planning and development to
date:
• The technical qualifications and
demonstrated experience of key
personnel proposed to lead and perform
the technical efforts, and qualifications
of primary and supporting organizations
to fully and successfully execute the
proposal plan within the proposed
timeframe and budget;
• The degree to which proposed effort
is supported by multiple entities (letters
of support are encouraged);
• The affordability and degree to
which the proposed effort appears to be
a good value for the amount of funding
requested. Good value is defined as
believing or concluding that the goods/
services received were worth the price
paid. Examples of the types of factors
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that may be considered include, but are
not limited to, suitability, quality, skills,
price, and life-cycle cost. The mix of
these and other factors and the relevant
importance of each will vary on a case
by case basis;
• The reasonableness and realism of
the proposed costs;
• The extent of proposed cost sharing
or cost participation under the proposed
effort (exclusive of the applicant’s prior
investment); and
• Preference will be given to projects
that can demonstrate an ability to
substantially complete work, or
otherwise provide benefits to industry,
prior to December 31, 2018.
All evaluation criteria, when
combined, are significantly more
important than cost or price alone.
While cost or price will be a factor that
is considered, technical merit is
appreciably more important and, as
such, greater consideration will be given
to technical excellence. An offer must
be found acceptable under all applicable
evaluation factors to be considered
eligible for award.
Selection Criteria
In addition to the evaluation criteria
outlined above, the FRA Administrator
will apply the following selection
criteria to further ensure that the
projects selected for funding advance
FRA’s current mission and key
priorities:
Alignment with the DOT Strategic
Goals and Priorities
• Improving transportation safety;
• Maintaining transportation
infrastructure in a state of good repair;
• Promoting economic
competitiveness;
• Advancing environmentally
sustainable transportation policies;
• Enhancing quality of life; and
• Building ladders of opportunity to
expand the middle class.
Proposed projects that demonstrate
the ability to provide reliable, safe and
affordable transportation choices to
connect economically disadvantaged
populations, non-drivers, senior
citizens, and persons with disabilities in
disconnected communities with
employment, training and education
will receive particular consideration
during project selection.
Project Delivery Performance
• The applicant’s track record in
successfully delivering previous FRA
and DOT grants on time, on budget, and
for the full intended scope;
• The applicant’s means for achieving
satisfactory continuing control over
project assets in a timely manner,
including public ownership of project
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19707
assets or agreements with railroad
operators and infrastructure owners at
the time of application; and
• The extent to which the proposed
project complements previous FRA or
DOT awards.
Region/Location
• The extent to which the proposed
project increases the economic
productivity of land, capital, or labor at
specific locations, particularly in
economically distressed areas;
• Ensuring appropriate level of
regional balance across the country;
• Ensuring consistency with national
transportation and rail network
objectives; and
• Ensuring integration with other rail
services and transportation modes.
Innovation/Resource Development
• Pursuing new rail technologies that
result in favorable public return on
investment and ensure delivery of
project benefits; and
• Promoting innovations that
demonstrate the value of new
approaches to, among other things,
transportation funding and finance,
contracting, project delivery, congestion
management, safety management, asset
management, or long-term operations
and maintenance.
Federal Awardee Performance and
Integrity Information System (FAPIIS)
Review
Before making a Federal award with
a total amount of Federal share greater
than the simplified acquisition
threshold (see 2 CFR 200.88 Simplified
Acquisition Threshold), FRA will
review and consider any information
about the applicant that is in the
designated integrity and performance
system accessible through the System
for Award Management (SAM)
(currently the Federal Awardee
Performance and Integrity Information
System (FAPIIS)) (see 41 U.S.C. 2313).
An applicant, at its option, may
review information in the designated
integrity and performance systems
accessible through SAM and comment
on any information about itself that a
Federal awarding agency previously
entered and is currently in the
designated integrity and performance
system accessible through SAM.
FRA will consider any comments by
the applicant, in addition to the other
information in the designated integrity
and performance system, in making a
judgment about the applicant’s integrity,
business ethics, and record of
performance under Federal awards
when completing the review of risk
posed by applicants as described in 2
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CFR 200.205 (Federal Awarding Agency
Review of Risk Posed by Applicants).
Section 4: Application and Submission
Information
Complete applications must be
submitted to Grants.gov no later than
5:00 p.m. DST, May 20, 2016.
Applicants are strongly encouraged to
apply early to ensure that all materials
are received before this deadline.
To apply for funding through
Grants.gov, applicants must be properly
registered. Complete instructions on
how to register and submit an
application can be found at Grants. gov.
Registering with Grants.gov is a onetime
process; however, it can take up to
several weeks for first-time registrants to
receive confirmation and a user
password. FRA recommends that
applicants start the registration process
as early as possible to prevent delays
that may preclude submitting an
application package by the application
deadline. Applications will not be
accepted after the due date. Delayed
registration is not an acceptable
justification for an application
extension. (Please note that if a Dun
&Bradstreet (DUNS) number must be
obtained, this may take a significant
amount of time to complete.)
Required documents for the
application package are outlined in the
following paragraphs. Applicants must
complete and submit all components of
the application package. FRA welcomes
the submission of other relevant
supporting documentation that may
have been developed by the applicant
(planning, engineering and design
documentation, and letters of support).
In particular, applications accompanied
by completed feasibility studies and
cost estimates may be more favorably
considered during the evaluation
process, as they demonstrate that an
applicant has a greater understanding of
the scope and cost of the project.
Applicants should submit all
application materials through
Grants.gov. For any required or
supporting application materials that an
applicant is unable to submit via
Grants.gov (such as oversized
engineering drawings), an applicant
may submit an original and two (2)
copies to Mr. Marvin Winston, Office of
Program Delivery, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Room W36–440,
Washington, DC 20590; Email:
marvin.winston@dot.gov. However, due
to delays caused by enhanced screening
of mail delivered via the U.S. Postal
Service, applicants are advised to use
other means of conveyance (such as
courier service) to assure timely receipt
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of materials. Additionally, if documents
can be obtained online, direction to
access files on a referenced Web site
may also be sufficient.
The following points describe the
minimum content which are required in
the Project Narrative component of grant
applications (additionally, FRA
recommends that the Project Narrative
generally adhere to the following
outline). These requirements must be
satisfied through a narrative statement
submitted by the applicant, and may be
supported by spreadsheet documents,
tables, maps, drawings, and other
materials, as appropriate. The Project
Narrative may not exceed 25 pages in
length (including any appendices).
Applications containing Project
Narratives that exceed this 25 page
limitation will not be reviewed or
considered for award.
Applicants should read this section
carefully and must submit all required
information.
1. Include a title page that lists the
following elements in either a table or
formatted list: Project title, location (i.e.,
city, State, district), the applicant
organization name, the name of any coapplicants, and the amount of Federal
funding requested and the proposed
non-Federal match.
2. Designate a point of contact for the
applicant and provide his or her name
and contact information, including
phone number, mailing address and
email address. The point of contact
must be an employee of an eligible
applicant.
3. Indicate the amount of Federal
funding requested, the proposed nonFederal match, and total project cost.
Additionally, identify any other sources
of Federal funds committed to the
project, as well as any pending Federal
requests. Make sure to also note if the
requested Federal funding must be
obligated or expended by a certain date
due to dependencies or relationships
with other Federal or non-Federal
funding sources, related projects, or
other factors. Finally, specify whether
Federal funding has ever previously
been sought for the project and not
secured, and name the Federal program
and fiscal year for funding request.
4. Explain how the applicant meets
the applicant eligibility criteria, as
outlined in Section 3 of this notice.
5. Provide a brief 4–6 sentence
summary of the proposed project,
capturing the transportation challenges
the proposed project aims to address, as
well as the intended outcomes and
anticipated benefits that will result from
the proposed project.
6. Include a detailed project
description that expands upon the brief
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summary required above. This detailed
description should provide, at a
minimum, additional background on the
transportation challenges the project
aims to address, the expected users and
beneficiaries of the project, the specific
components and elements of the project,
and any other information the applicant
deems necessary to justify the proposed
project. The detailed description should
also clearly explain how the proposed
project meets the project eligibility
criteria, as outlined in Section 3 of this
notice.
7. Include a thorough discussion of
how the project meets all of the
evaluation criteria for the respective
project type, as outlined in Section 3 of
this notice. Applicants should note that
FRA reviews applications based upon
the evaluation criteria. If an application
does not sufficiently address the
evaluation criteria, it is unlikely to be a
competitive application. In responding
to the criteria, applicants are reminded
to clearly identify, quantify, and
compare expected benefits and costs of
proposed projects. The FRA
understands that the level of detail and
sophistication of analysis that should be
expected for relatively small projects
(i.e., those encouraged to be limited to
under $3,000,000 in this notice) is less
than for larger investments.
8. Describe proposed project
implementation and project
management arrangements. Include
descriptions of the expected
arrangements for project contracting,
contract oversight, change-order
management, risk management, and
conformance to Federal requirements
for project progress reporting.
Additional Application Elements
Applicants must:
Æ Submit a Statement of Work (SOW)
that addresses the scope, schedule, and
budget for the proposed project if it
were to be selected for award. The SOW
must contain sufficient detail so that
both FRA and the applicant can
understand the expected outcomes of
the proposed work to be performed and
monitor progress toward completing
project tasks and deliverables during a
prospective grant’s period of
performance. FRA has developed a
standard SOW template that applicants
must use to be considered for award.
The SOW templates and other required
forms are located at www.fra.dot.gov/
Page/P0701;
Æ Describe anticipated environmental
and historic preservation impacts
associated with the proposed project,
any environmental or historic
preservation analyses that have been
prepared, and progress toward
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completing any environmental
documentation or clearance required for
the proposed project under National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the
National Historic Preservation Act,
section 4(f) of the U.S. DOT Act, the
Clean Water Act, and other applicable
Federal or State laws. Applicants are
encouraged to contact FRA and obtain
preliminary direction regarding the
appropriate NEPA action and required
environmental documentation.
Generally, projects will be ineligible to
receive funding if they have begun
construction activities prior to the
applicant receiving written approval
from FRA that all environmental and
historical analyses have been
completed. Additional information
regarding FRA’s environmental
processes and requirements are located
at https://www.fra.dot.gov/eLib/Details/
L05286;
Æ Submit the FRA’s Additional
Assurances and Certifications;
Æ Submit an SF 424A—Budget
Information for Non-Construction or SF
424C—Budget Information for
Construction;
Æ Submit an SF 424B—Assurances
for Non-Construction or SF 424D—
Assurances for Construction; and
Æ Submit an SF LLL: Disclosure of
Lobbying Activities.
Section 5: Award Administration
Award Notices for applications
selected for funding will be announced
after the application review period. FRA
will contact successful applicants after
announcement with information and
instructions about the award process.
Notification of a selected application is
not an authorization to begin proposed
project activities. The period of
performance for grants awarded under
this notice is dependent upon the
project, and will be determined on a
grant-by-grant basis. Extensions to the
period of performance will be
considered only through written
requests to the FRA with specific and
compelling justifications for why an
extension is required. Any obligated
funding that has not been spent by the
grantee and reimbursed by the FRA
upon completion of the grant will be deobligated.
The grantee and any sub-grantee must
comply with all applicable laws and
regulations. A non-exclusive list of
administrative and national policy
requirements that grantees must follow
includes: 2 CFR part 200, procurement
standards, compliance with Federal
civil rights laws and regulations,
disadvantaged business enterprises
(DBE), debarment and suspension, drugfree workplace, FRA’s and OMB’s
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:18 Apr 04, 2016
Jkt 238001
Assurances and Certifications,
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA),
labor standards, safety oversight,
environmental protection, NEPA,
environmental justice, and Buy America
or Buy American provisions (as
applicable).
Reporting Requirements
The applicant will be required to
comply with all standard FRA reporting
requirements, including quarterly
progress reports, quarterly Federal
financial reports, and interim and final
performance reports. Reports may be
submitted electronically. The applicant
must comply with all relevant
requirements of 2 CFR 180.335 and
180.350.
The grantee must comply with all
post-award reporting, auditing,
monitoring, and close-out requirements.
Section 6: Agency Contact
If you have a project related question,
you may call Dr. Mark Hartong,
Scientific and Technical Advisor
(Phone: (202) 493–1332; email:
Mark.Hartong@dot.gov), or Mr. Devin
Rouse, Program Manager (Phone: (202)
493–6185, email: devin.rouse@dot.gov).
Grant application submission and
processing questions should be
addressed to Mr. Marvin Winston,
Office of Program Delivery, Federal
Railroad Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE., Room W36–440,
Washington, DC 20590; Email:
marvin.winston@dot.gov.
Information Collection: OMB has
approved the information collection
associated with the Rail Safety
Technology Grants Program. The
approval number for this collection of
information is OMB No. 2130–0587.
Issued in Washington, DC on March 31,
2016.
Mary Ann McNamara,
Chief, Grant Management Division.
[FR Doc. 2016–07780 Filed 4–4–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
[FTA Docket No. 2016–0018]
Notice of Request for Extension of a
Currently Approved Information
Collection
AGENCY:
Federal Transit Administration,
DOT.
ACTION:
Notice of request for comments.
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, this
notice announces the intention of the
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00161
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
19709
Federal Transit Administration (FTA) to
request the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) to approve the revision of
the currently approved information
collection:
49 U.S.C. Sections 5310 and 5311—Capital
Assistance Program for Elderly Persons and
Persons with Disabilities and Non-Urbanized
Area Formula Program
OMB Control No.: 2132–0500
Comments must be submitted
before June 6, 2016.
ADDRESSES: To ensure that your
comments are not entered more than
once into the docket, submit comments
identified by the docket number by only
one of the following methods:
1. Web site: www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments on the U.S. Government
electronic docket site. (Note: The U.S.
Department of Transportation’s (DOT’s)
electronic docket is no longer accepting
electronic comments.) All electronic
submissions must be made to the U.S.
Government electronic docket site at
www.regulations.gov. Commenters
should follow the directions below for
mailed and hand-delivered comments.
2. Fax: 202–493–2251.
3. Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Docket Operations, M–30,
West Building, Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, Washington, DC 20590–0001.
4. Hand Delivery: U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Docket Operations, M–30,
West Building, Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, Washington, DC 20590–0001
between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.,
Monday through Friday, except federal
holidays.
Instructions: You must include the
agency name and docket number for this
notice at the beginning of your
comments. Submit two copies of your
comments if you submit them by mail.
For confirmation that FTA has received
your comments, include a selfaddressed stamped postcard. Note that
all comments received, including any
personal information, will be posted
and will be available to Internet users,
without change, to www.regulations.gov.
You may review DOT’s complete
Privacy Act Statement in the Federal
Register published April 11, 2000, (65
FR 19477), or you may visit
www.regulations.gov. Docket: For access
to the docket to read background
documents and comments received, go
to www.regulations.gov at any time.
Background documents and comments
received may also be viewed at the U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Docket
Operations, M–30, West Building,
DATES:
E:\FR\FM\05APN1.SGM
05APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 65 (Tuesday, April 5, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 19705-19709]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-07780]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
FY 2016 Railroad Safety Technology Grant Funds
AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice details the application requirements and
procedures for obtaining funding for eligible Railroad Safety
Technology Grant projects. The opportunities described in this notice
are available under Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance number
20.321, ``Railroad Safety Technology.''
DATES: Applications for funding under this solicitation are due no
later than 5:00 p.m. DST May 20, 2016. Applications for funding
received after 5:00 p.m. DST on May 20, 2016 will not be considered.
See Section 4 of this notice for additional information regarding the
application process.
ADDRESSES: Applications must be submitted via Grants.gov. For any
required or supporting application materials that an applicant is
unable to submit via Grants.gov (such as oversized engineering
drawings), an applicant may submit an original and two (2) copies to
Mr. Marvin Winston, Office of Program Delivery, Federal Railroad
Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W36-440, Washington,
DC 20590; Email: marvin.winston@dot.gov. However, due to delays caused
by enhanced screening of mail delivered via the U.S. Postal Service,
applicants are advised to use other means of conveyance (such as
courier service) to assure timely receipt of materials.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have a project related
question, you may contact Dr. Mark Hartong, Scientific and Technical
Advisor (Phone: (202) 493-1332; email: Mark.Hartong@dot.gov), or Mr.
Devin Rouse, Program Manager (Phone: (202) 493-6185, email:
devin.rouse@dot.gov). Grant application submission and processing
questions should be addressed to Mr. Marvin Winston, Office of Program
Delivery, Federal Railroad Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Room W36-440, Washington, DC 20590; Email: marvin.winston@dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Notice to applicants: FRA recommends applicants read this notice in
its entirety prior to preparing application materials. There are
several administrative prerequisites described herein that applicants
must comply with in order to submit an application, as well as specific
eligibility requirements that must be met. Additionally, applicants
should note that the required Project Narrative component of the
application package may not exceed 25 pages in length (including any
appendices).
Table of Contents
1. Funding Opportunity Description
2. Award Information
3. Eligibility and Review Criteria
4. Application and Submission Information
5. Award Administration Information
6. Agency Contact
Section 1: Funding Opportunity Description
The purpose of this notice is to solicit applications for grants
for eligible railroad safety technology projects. Congress appropriated
the funding available under this NOFO, $25 million, in the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2016, Division L, Title I (Pub. L. 114-113
(December 18, 2015)), to carry out railroad safety technology grants as
set forth in 49 U.S.C. 20158. To maximize the benefits of the funding
available, FRA is limiting the eligible projects to those that
implement a Positive Train Control (PTC) system or, as described in
Section 3, will otherwise benefit overall PTC system implementation on
freight, intercity passenger, and commuter railroads.
Section 2: Award Information
FRA anticipates making multiple awards from the funding made
available in this notice and is not predetermining any minimum or
maximum dollar amounts for awards. However, given the limited amount of
funding currently available, applicants are encouraged to
[[Page 19706]]
limit their Federal funding requests to a maximum of $3,000,000 per
application. While this $3,000,000 application limit is a
recommendation and not a firm requirement, applicants exceeding this
$3,000,000 threshold must explain why any requested funding over
$3,000,000 is necessary to implement the proposed project.
Collaborative applicants submitting a project that will benefit more
than five (5) entities (e.g., one entity implementing back office
systems for multiple (five or more) railroads) may request up to the
authorized appropriation limit of $25,000,000. Additionally, FRA may
choose to award a grant for less than the amount requested in the
application. FRA will make awards for projects selected under this
notice as grants with an 80% federal/20% non-federal cost share. The
funding provided under these grants will be made available to grantees
on a reimbursable basis.
Applications will proceed through a three-part review process:
1. Screening for completeness and eligibility;
2. Evaluation of eligible applications by technical panels applying
the evaluation criteria; and
3. Project selection by the FRA Administrator applying additional
selection criteria.
Each application will first be screened for eligibility
(requirements outlined in Section 3 of this notice) and completeness
(containing all required documentation outlined in Section 4 of this
notice).
A technical panel consisting of subject-matter experts will
evaluate eligible and complete applications using the evaluation
criteria outlined in Section 3 of this notice. FRA will award funds to
projects that are well-aligned with one or more of the evaluation and
selection criteria. In addition, FRA will consider whether a project
has a negative effect on any of the evaluation and selection criteria,
and any such negative effect may reduce the likelihood that it will
select the project for award.
Section 3: Eligibility and Review Criteria
The following entities are eligible applicants for PTC
implementation projects:
Passenger and freight railroad carriers;
Railroad suppliers; and
State and local governments for projects that have a
public benefit of improved safety and network efficiency.
To be eligible for assistance, the above entities subject to 49
U.S.C. 20157(a) must have submitted a revised Positive Train Control
Implementation Plan (PTCIP) to FRA as required by 49 U.S.C. 20157(a).
FRA considers the development and submission of a revised PTCIP under
49 U.S.C. 20157(a) to meet the eligibility requirement related to
submitting a plan required under 49 U.S.C. 20156(e)(2) containing an
analysis of the impact, feasibility, costs and benefits of implementing
PTC system technology. FRA believes that any submission connected to
sec. 20156(e)(2), which has yet to be incorporated into a Federal
regulation, would merely be duplicative of what a railroad analyzed
when it developed and submitted a revised PTCIP. Thus, FRA considers
the submission of a revised PTCIP to meet the eligibility requirements
in 49 U.S.C. 20158(b)(3) for purposes of this NOFO. If an applicant is
not required to comply with either sec. 20157(a) or sec. 20156(e)(2),
the applicant must demonstrate that to FRA's satisfaction in its NOFO
application.
The FRA is soliciting applications for projects that will benefit
overall PTC system implementation on freight, intercity passenger, and
commuter railroads. Under 49 U.S.C. 20158(b)(2), the FRA shall give
priority to projects that (A) focus on making technologies
interoperable between railroad systems, such as train control
technologies; (B) accelerate train control technology deployment on
high-risk corridors, such as those that have high volumes of hazardous
materials shipments or over which commuter or passenger trains operate;
or (C) benefit both passenger and freight safety and efficiency. Given
that the amount of funding available is not likely sufficient to cover
the costs necessary to deploy PTC on any given railroad, FRA will
further prioritize projects that not only fall within these areas but
also involve:
1. An entity or entities that have submitted a revised PTCIP and
demonstrated progress in implementing PTC in accordance with its PTCIP
and have shown good faith in attempting to timely complete PTC
implementation;
2. Collaboration between freight and passenger railroad carriers,
railroad suppliers, and State and local governments, particularly
related to interoperability and other industry-wide PTC technical and
management issues;
3. The development and deployment of technologies that will lower
costs, accelerate implementation, increase interoperability between
host and tenant operations, and improve reliability of PTC systems; and
4. The development and deployment of technologies that will
eliminate PTC communications interference, provide solutions to
configuration management of multi-railroad PTC software and firmware
deployments, eliminate PTC communications interference; provide
configuration management of multi-railroad PTC software and firmware
deployments; and provide host-tenant railroad PTC interoperability/
system certification.
Examples of eligible projects include the following:
Costs for implementation, installation, and testing of PTC
systems;
Costs for shared PTC infrastructure (e.g., back office
systems, CAD systems); and
Costs to advance PTC interoperability, such as pilot
programs, standardization committees, development of standard
processes, and spectrum acquisition, sharing, and desensitization.
Applicants should note that these aspects represent suggested areas of
interest by the FRA, and any otherwise eligible applications meeting
the criteria above will be evaluated and considered for award.
By statute, 49 U.S.C. 20158 allows for up to an 80 percent Federal
share of project costs. The required 20 percent non-Federal match may
be comprised of public sector (state or local) or private sector
funding. However, the FRA cannot consider any other Federal funds, nor
any non-Federal funds already expended (or otherwise encumbered),
towards the matching requirement. Additionally, FRA is limiting the
method for calculating the non-Federal match to cash contributions
only--``in-kind'' contributions will not be accepted. Matching funds
provided in excess of the minimum requirement will be considered in
evaluating the merit of an application.
FRA intends to award funds to PTC projects that achieve the maximum
public benefits possible. Analysis provided by applicants that
quantifies the monetary value (whenever possible) of the anticipated
public benefits of the proposed project will be particularly relevant
to the FRA in evaluating applications. The systematic process of
comparing expected benefits and costs helps decision-makers organize
information about, and evaluate tradeoffs between, alternative
transportation investments. FRA will consider benefits and costs using
standard data and qualitative information provided by applicants and
will evaluate applications in a manner consistent with Executive Order
12893 (Principles for Federal Infrastructure Investments, 59 FR 4233),
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
[[Page 19707]]
Circular A-94 (Guidelines and Discount Rates for Benefit-Cost Analysis
of Federal Programs), and OMB Circular A-4 (Regulatory Analysis).
Applications for PTC projects will be reviewed by DOT subject matter
experts against the following three evaluation criteria:
PTC Deployment Benefits;
Technical Merit; and
Project Development approach.
PTC Deployment Benefits
The following factors will be considered in assessing a proposed
project's achievement of PTC deployment benefits:
The degree to which the successful implementation of the
proposed project would advance the technical deployment of PTC,
including improvements to reliability, safety, security, and
maintainability;
The degree to which the successful implementation of the
proposed project would decrease PTC implementation and maintenance
costs; and
The degree to which the project maximizes the return on
investment (ROI) towards industry-wide implementation efforts.
Technical Merit
The following factors will be considered in assessing a proposed
project's technical merit:
The degree to which the proposed project exhibits a sound
scientific and engineering basis;
The degree to which the proposed project could be
practically applied in and compatible with the railroad's operating
environment and infrastructure; and
The perceived likelihood of technical and practical
success.
Project Development Approach
The following factors will be considered in assessing the proposed
project's planning and development to date:
The technical qualifications and demonstrated experience
of key personnel proposed to lead and perform the technical efforts,
and qualifications of primary and supporting organizations to fully and
successfully execute the proposal plan within the proposed timeframe
and budget;
The degree to which proposed effort is supported by
multiple entities (letters of support are encouraged);
The affordability and degree to which the proposed effort
appears to be a good value for the amount of funding requested. Good
value is defined as believing or concluding that the goods/services
received were worth the price paid. Examples of the types of factors
that may be considered include, but are not limited to, suitability,
quality, skills, price, and life-cycle cost. The mix of these and other
factors and the relevant importance of each will vary on a case by case
basis;
The reasonableness and realism of the proposed costs;
The extent of proposed cost sharing or cost participation
under the proposed effort (exclusive of the applicant's prior
investment); and
Preference will be given to projects that can demonstrate
an ability to substantially complete work, or otherwise provide
benefits to industry, prior to December 31, 2018.
All evaluation criteria, when combined, are significantly more
important than cost or price alone. While cost or price will be a
factor that is considered, technical merit is appreciably more
important and, as such, greater consideration will be given to
technical excellence. An offer must be found acceptable under all
applicable evaluation factors to be considered eligible for award.
Selection Criteria
In addition to the evaluation criteria outlined above, the FRA
Administrator will apply the following selection criteria to further
ensure that the projects selected for funding advance FRA's current
mission and key priorities:
Alignment with the DOT Strategic Goals and Priorities
Improving transportation safety;
Maintaining transportation infrastructure in a state of
good repair;
Promoting economic competitiveness;
Advancing environmentally sustainable transportation
policies;
Enhancing quality of life; and
Building ladders of opportunity to expand the middle
class.
Proposed projects that demonstrate the ability to provide reliable,
safe and affordable transportation choices to connect economically
disadvantaged populations, non-drivers, senior citizens, and persons
with disabilities in disconnected communities with employment, training
and education will receive particular consideration during project
selection.
Project Delivery Performance
The applicant's track record in successfully delivering
previous FRA and DOT grants on time, on budget, and for the full
intended scope;
The applicant's means for achieving satisfactory
continuing control over project assets in a timely manner, including
public ownership of project assets or agreements with railroad
operators and infrastructure owners at the time of application; and
The extent to which the proposed project complements
previous FRA or DOT awards.
Region/Location
The extent to which the proposed project increases the
economic productivity of land, capital, or labor at specific locations,
particularly in economically distressed areas;
Ensuring appropriate level of regional balance across the
country;
Ensuring consistency with national transportation and rail
network objectives; and
Ensuring integration with other rail services and
transportation modes.
Innovation/Resource Development
Pursuing new rail technologies that result in favorable
public return on investment and ensure delivery of project benefits;
and
Promoting innovations that demonstrate the value of new
approaches to, among other things, transportation funding and finance,
contracting, project delivery, congestion management, safety
management, asset management, or long-term operations and maintenance.
Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity Information System (FAPIIS)
Review
Before making a Federal award with a total amount of Federal share
greater than the simplified acquisition threshold (see 2 CFR 200.88
Simplified Acquisition Threshold), FRA will review and consider any
information about the applicant that is in the designated integrity and
performance system accessible through the System for Award Management
(SAM) (currently the Federal Awardee Performance and Integrity
Information System (FAPIIS)) (see 41 U.S.C. 2313).
An applicant, at its option, may review information in the
designated integrity and performance systems accessible through SAM and
comment on any information about itself that a Federal awarding agency
previously entered and is currently in the designated integrity and
performance system accessible through SAM.
FRA will consider any comments by the applicant, in addition to the
other information in the designated integrity and performance system,
in making a judgment about the applicant's integrity, business ethics,
and record of performance under Federal awards when completing the
review of risk posed by applicants as described in 2
[[Page 19708]]
CFR 200.205 (Federal Awarding Agency Review of Risk Posed by
Applicants).
Section 4: Application and Submission Information
Complete applications must be submitted to Grants.gov no later than
5:00 p.m. DST, May 20, 2016. Applicants are strongly encouraged to
apply early to ensure that all materials are received before this
deadline.
To apply for funding through Grants.gov, applicants must be
properly registered. Complete instructions on how to register and
submit an application can be found at Grants.gov gov. Registering with
Grants.gov is a onetime process; however, it can take up to several
weeks for first-time registrants to receive confirmation and a user
password. FRA recommends that applicants start the registration process
as early as possible to prevent delays that may preclude submitting an
application package by the application deadline. Applications will not
be accepted after the due date. Delayed registration is not an
acceptable justification for an application extension. (Please note
that if a Dun &Bradstreet (DUNS) number must be obtained, this may take
a significant amount of time to complete.)
Required documents for the application package are outlined in the
following paragraphs. Applicants must complete and submit all
components of the application package. FRA welcomes the submission of
other relevant supporting documentation that may have been developed by
the applicant (planning, engineering and design documentation, and
letters of support). In particular, applications accompanied by
completed feasibility studies and cost estimates may be more favorably
considered during the evaluation process, as they demonstrate that an
applicant has a greater understanding of the scope and cost of the
project.
Applicants should submit all application materials through
Grants.gov. For any required or supporting application materials that
an applicant is unable to submit via Grants.gov (such as oversized
engineering drawings), an applicant may submit an original and two (2)
copies to Mr. Marvin Winston, Office of Program Delivery, Federal
Railroad Administration, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W36-440,
Washington, DC 20590; Email: marvin.winston@dot.gov. However, due to
delays caused by enhanced screening of mail delivered via the U.S.
Postal Service, applicants are advised to use other means of conveyance
(such as courier service) to assure timely receipt of materials.
Additionally, if documents can be obtained online, direction to access
files on a referenced Web site may also be sufficient.
The following points describe the minimum content which are
required in the Project Narrative component of grant applications
(additionally, FRA recommends that the Project Narrative generally
adhere to the following outline). These requirements must be satisfied
through a narrative statement submitted by the applicant, and may be
supported by spreadsheet documents, tables, maps, drawings, and other
materials, as appropriate. The Project Narrative may not exceed 25
pages in length (including any appendices). Applications containing
Project Narratives that exceed this 25 page limitation will not be
reviewed or considered for award.
Applicants should read this section carefully and must submit all
required information.
1. Include a title page that lists the following elements in either
a table or formatted list: Project title, location (i.e., city, State,
district), the applicant organization name, the name of any co-
applicants, and the amount of Federal funding requested and the
proposed non-Federal match.
2. Designate a point of contact for the applicant and provide his
or her name and contact information, including phone number, mailing
address and email address. The point of contact must be an employee of
an eligible applicant.
3. Indicate the amount of Federal funding requested, the proposed
non-Federal match, and total project cost. Additionally, identify any
other sources of Federal funds committed to the project, as well as any
pending Federal requests. Make sure to also note if the requested
Federal funding must be obligated or expended by a certain date due to
dependencies or relationships with other Federal or non-Federal funding
sources, related projects, or other factors. Finally, specify whether
Federal funding has ever previously been sought for the project and not
secured, and name the Federal program and fiscal year for funding
request.
4. Explain how the applicant meets the applicant eligibility
criteria, as outlined in Section 3 of this notice.
5. Provide a brief 4-6 sentence summary of the proposed project,
capturing the transportation challenges the proposed project aims to
address, as well as the intended outcomes and anticipated benefits that
will result from the proposed project.
6. Include a detailed project description that expands upon the
brief summary required above. This detailed description should provide,
at a minimum, additional background on the transportation challenges
the project aims to address, the expected users and beneficiaries of
the project, the specific components and elements of the project, and
any other information the applicant deems necessary to justify the
proposed project. The detailed description should also clearly explain
how the proposed project meets the project eligibility criteria, as
outlined in Section 3 of this notice.
7. Include a thorough discussion of how the project meets all of
the evaluation criteria for the respective project type, as outlined in
Section 3 of this notice. Applicants should note that FRA reviews
applications based upon the evaluation criteria. If an application does
not sufficiently address the evaluation criteria, it is unlikely to be
a competitive application. In responding to the criteria, applicants
are reminded to clearly identify, quantify, and compare expected
benefits and costs of proposed projects. The FRA understands that the
level of detail and sophistication of analysis that should be expected
for relatively small projects (i.e., those encouraged to be limited to
under $3,000,000 in this notice) is less than for larger investments.
8. Describe proposed project implementation and project management
arrangements. Include descriptions of the expected arrangements for
project contracting, contract oversight, change-order management, risk
management, and conformance to Federal requirements for project
progress reporting.
Additional Application Elements
Applicants must:
[cir] Submit a Statement of Work (SOW) that addresses the scope,
schedule, and budget for the proposed project if it were to be selected
for award. The SOW must contain sufficient detail so that both FRA and
the applicant can understand the expected outcomes of the proposed work
to be performed and monitor progress toward completing project tasks
and deliverables during a prospective grant's period of performance.
FRA has developed a standard SOW template that applicants must use to
be considered for award. The SOW templates and other required forms are
located at www.fra.dot.gov/Page/P0701;
[cir] Describe anticipated environmental and historic preservation
impacts associated with the proposed project, any environmental or
historic preservation analyses that have been prepared, and progress
toward
[[Page 19709]]
completing any environmental documentation or clearance required for
the proposed project under National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA),
the National Historic Preservation Act, section 4(f) of the U.S. DOT
Act, the Clean Water Act, and other applicable Federal or State laws.
Applicants are encouraged to contact FRA and obtain preliminary
direction regarding the appropriate NEPA action and required
environmental documentation. Generally, projects will be ineligible to
receive funding if they have begun construction activities prior to the
applicant receiving written approval from FRA that all environmental
and historical analyses have been completed. Additional information
regarding FRA's environmental processes and requirements are located at
https://www.fra.dot.gov/eLib/Details/L05286;
[cir] Submit the FRA's Additional Assurances and Certifications;
[cir] Submit an SF 424A--Budget Information for Non-Construction or
SF 424C--Budget Information for Construction;
[cir] Submit an SF 424B--Assurances for Non-Construction or SF
424D--Assurances for Construction; and
[cir] Submit an SF LLL: Disclosure of Lobbying Activities.
Section 5: Award Administration
Award Notices for applications selected for funding will be
announced after the application review period. FRA will contact
successful applicants after announcement with information and
instructions about the award process. Notification of a selected
application is not an authorization to begin proposed project
activities. The period of performance for grants awarded under this
notice is dependent upon the project, and will be determined on a
grant-by-grant basis. Extensions to the period of performance will be
considered only through written requests to the FRA with specific and
compelling justifications for why an extension is required. Any
obligated funding that has not been spent by the grantee and reimbursed
by the FRA upon completion of the grant will be de-obligated.
The grantee and any sub-grantee must comply with all applicable
laws and regulations. A non-exclusive list of administrative and
national policy requirements that grantees must follow includes: 2 CFR
part 200, procurement standards, compliance with Federal civil rights
laws and regulations, disadvantaged business enterprises (DBE),
debarment and suspension, drug-free workplace, FRA's and OMB's
Assurances and Certifications, Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA),
labor standards, safety oversight, environmental protection, NEPA,
environmental justice, and Buy America or Buy American provisions (as
applicable).
Reporting Requirements
The applicant will be required to comply with all standard FRA
reporting requirements, including quarterly progress reports, quarterly
Federal financial reports, and interim and final performance reports.
Reports may be submitted electronically. The applicant must comply with
all relevant requirements of 2 CFR 180.335 and 180.350.
The grantee must comply with all post-award reporting, auditing,
monitoring, and close-out requirements.
Section 6: Agency Contact
If you have a project related question, you may call Dr. Mark
Hartong, Scientific and Technical Advisor (Phone: (202) 493-1332;
email: Mark.Hartong@dot.gov), or Mr. Devin Rouse, Program Manager
(Phone: (202) 493-6185, email: devin.rouse@dot.gov). Grant application
submission and processing questions should be addressed to Mr. Marvin
Winston, Office of Program Delivery, Federal Railroad Administration,
1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Room W36-440, Washington, DC 20590; Email:
marvin.winston@dot.gov.
Information Collection: OMB has approved the information collection
associated with the Rail Safety Technology Grants Program. The approval
number for this collection of information is OMB No. 2130-0587.
Issued in Washington, DC on March 31, 2016.
Mary Ann McNamara,
Chief, Grant Management Division.
[FR Doc. 2016-07780 Filed 4-4-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-06-P