21st Century U.S. Port Competitiveness Initiative: Request for Public Comment, 33657-33658 [2016-12551]
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Agenda
Welcome
Norma Bixby, Chair
Roll Call and Introductions
Malee V. Craft, Regional Director and
Designated Federal Official (DFO)
Discussion to Reset Date and Timeline
for Community Forum in Billings
Next Steps
Wednesday, June 8, 2016, at
10:00 a.m. (MDT)
DATES:
To be held via
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ADDRESSES:
sradovich on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Malee V. Craft, Regional Director,
mcraft@usccr.gov, 303–866–1040.
Dated: May 23, 2016.
David Mussatt,
Chief, Regional Programs Unit.
[FR Doc. 2016–12548 Filed 5–26–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6335–01–P
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18:00 May 26, 2016
Jkt 238001
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
[Docket No.: 160511417–6417–01]
RIN 0690–XC004
21st Century U.S. Port
Competitiveness Initiative: Request for
Public Comment
U.S. Department of Commerce.
Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The U.S. Department of
Commerce (Department) is seeking
public input on U.S. seaport efficiency
and competitiveness issues for its 21st
Century U.S. Port Competitiveness
Initiative. In this effort, the Department
is working with seaports, stakeholders,
and port users to identify and share best
practices in port-stakeholder-user
coordination, collaboration, and
information-sharing that are being used
to resolve operational and infrastructure
issues that affect freight flows and
increase port and supply chain
congestion. The Department’s goal is to
ensure that U.S. seaports and their
supply chains have the tools they need
to strengthen U.S. port and supply chain
competitiveness, facilitate international
trade, and catalyze local, regional,
national economic growth and job
creation. We welcome input from all
interested parties.
DATES: Submit written comments on or
before 5 p.m. Eastern time on July 11,
2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on this notice by any of the following
methods:
• Electronic Submissions: Submit
your comments via the Federal
eRulemaking Portal. Go to https://
www.regulations.gov/
#!docketDetail;D=DOC-2016-0003, click
the ‘‘Comment Now!’’ icon, complete
the required fields, and enter or attach
your comments.
• Mail: Russell Adise, U.S.
Department of Commerce, 1401
Constitution Avenue NW., Room 11018,
Washington, DC 20230. Include on the
envelope the following identifier ‘‘Attn:
21st Century U.S. Port Competitiveness
Initiative.’’
Comments submitted by email should
be machine-readable and should not be
copy-protected. Responders should
include the name of the person or
organization filing the comment, as well
as a page number on each page of their
submissions. Paper submissions should
also include a CD or DVD with an
electronic version of the document,
which should be labeled with the name
and organization of the filer. Please do
not include in your comments
SUMMARY:
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33657
information of a confidential nature,
such as sensitive personal information
or proprietary information. All
comments received are a part of the
public record and will generally be
posted to regulations.gov without
change. All personal identifying
information (e.g., name, address)
voluntarily submitted by the commenter
may be publicly accessible. Information
obtained as a result of this notice may
be used by the Federal Government for
program planning on a non-attribution
basis.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Russell Adise, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue
NW., Room 11018, Washington, DC
20230; telephone: (202) 482–5086;
email: Russell.Adise@trade.gov. Please
direct media inquiries to the
Department’s Office of Public Affairs,
(202) 482–4883.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The U.S. marine transportation
system is an essential driver of the U.S.
economy. Every day, U.S. ports and
waterways handle millions of tons of
domestic and international cargo,
ranging from retail and agricultural
products to finished goods and
components, coal, petrochemicals,
heating oil and automobiles. Those
ports support more than 23 million
American jobs throughout the supply
chain, including the local economy in
and around port communities.
America’s seaports are crucial
generators of economic development
and well-paying jobs, both regionally
and nationally, and throughout the
supply chains that use the ports. They
are also crucial to our nation’s ability to
take advantage of the leveled playing
field and increased market access being
enabled by Administration trade
initiatives, including the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP). Approximately 75
percent of U.S. international
merchandise exports and imports flow
through our seaports including Made in
America exports and the intermediate
goods and components used in them.
Long-term port congestion and
efficiency problems remain a major
systemic threat that creates a drag on
local, regional, and national economic
growth and employment.1 According to
a recent Journal of Commerce seaport
berth productivity report, U.S. West
Coast container ports may be as much
1 Please see Federal Maritime Commission, ‘‘U.S.
Container Port Congestion & Related International
Supply Chain Issues: Causes, Consequences &
Challenges,’’ June 2015 https://www.fmc.gov/NR1511/.
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sradovich on DSK3TPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
33658
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 103 / Friday, May 27, 2016 / Notices
as 25 to 48 percent less productive than
the world’s most efficient container
ports. As the nationwide port
congestion and slowdown in 2014 and
2015 demonstrated, what happens at
any one port, or group of ports, can have
far-reaching and nationwide impacts on
all U.S. ports and the companies and
stakeholders that use and rely on them.
Port congestion and efficiency
problems stem from a variety of factors,
only some of which are directly under
a seaport’s control. Larger vessels,
growing trade volumes, insufficient
infrastructure, operating inefficiencies,
poor labor-management relations, and
lack of communication and
collaboration among ports, stakeholders,
and users can result in inefficient cargo
movement and congestion that can
dramatically slow the movement of
trade to and through America’s seaports,
ultimately resulting in lost sales,
markets, and jobs across the nation, and
the loss of U.S. port and supply chain
competitiveness in the global
marketplace. U.S. seaports’ inability to
respond quickly enough to rapidlychanging industry and cargo flow
demands further compromises U.S.
trade, competitiveness, and resiliency.
In the U.S., most of the elements of
these port-related challenges are owned
by local government entities and
domestic and foreign companies, with
limited communication across the full
range of ports, users, and stakeholders
affected by these challenges. To address
these issues comprehensively and
nationally, the U.S. Department of
Commerce is playing a convening role
for seaports, stakeholders, and users to
help them work together to identify how
they can cooperate, collaborate, and
share information more effectively and
efficiently in order to achieve mutually
beneficial improvements, and how the
Federal Government can help spur
increasing public-private partnerships
and investment that can improve portrelated operations, data-sharing
technology, and infrastructure.
Under this initiative, the Department
of Commerce has launched a series of
regional port and supply chain
competitiveness roundtables at key
ports across the U.S., similar to the
Administration’s 21st Century Ports
Roundtable in Baltimore in March 2016.
Through these roundtables, the
Department is learning what leading
U.S. seaports are doing, together with
their stakeholders, to improve their
ability to coordinate, collaborate, and
share information towards identifying
and resolving operational port and
infrastructure inefficiencies that
negatively impact trade flows and cause
congestion. The Department is also
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:00 May 26, 2016
Jkt 238001
learning what additional steps could be
taken to improve port/stakeholder
collaboration and partnerships, as well
as to improve investment in port
infrastructure, equipment, and
technology.
This Notice is intended to supplement
the Department’s roundtables by
soliciting public comment on the issues
described below. The information
gained through these roundtables and
this Notice will be used to develop a
report on best practices that U.S.
seaports, stakeholders, and users can
use as appropriate as a tool to help
develop and implement mutually
beneficial congestion relief and
efficiency improvement measures
through coordination, collaboration, and
information sharing. The report is
intended to be released in December
2016.
II. Objectives of This Notice
This Notice offers an opportunity for
all interested parties to share their
perspectives and recommend actions
that the Federal Government, state and
local governments, and port users and
stakeholders—individually and
together—can take to help address U.S.
port congestion and efficiency
challenges, improve U.S. port and
supply chain competitiveness, and
enhance the role of ports as engines and
catalysts of local, regional, and national
economic development and job growth.
III. Questions
Commenters are encouraged to
address any or all of the following
questions. Please note in the response
the number corresponding to the
question(s). For any response,
commenters may wish to consider
describing specific goals; actions and
roles that the United States Government,
ports, stakeholders, and users might
take to achieve these goals; evidence
that demonstrates the benefits and costs
associated with the action; and whether
the proposal is inter-agency or agencyspecific. Specific, actionable proposals
for action and for policy mechanisms
directed to the relevant government
agencies are most useful.
The Department seeks public
comment on the following questions:
1. What are the most important
challenges and opportunities facing U.S.
port-related operations and efficiency?
2. What are best practices for
improving port-related operations? How
can the Federal Government help to
share these best practices nationwide?
3. How can the Federal Government
best promote the coordinated use of
public funds for the development of
port-related infrastructure? What can
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
the Federal Government do, that it is not
doing now, to stimulate and/or leverage
private funding for port-related
infrastructure?
4. What Federal policies should be
modernized to promote U.S. port-related
investment and operational
performance?
5. How can the Federal Government
best collaborate with stakeholders (state,
local, labor, industry, port authorities,
academia, financial institutions, etc.) to
enhance U.S. port-related
competitiveness?
6. What can the Federal Government
do—on its own or in coordination and
collaboration with state and local
governments and the private sector—to
enhance the value of ports as engines of
economic growth and job creation?
7. How can technology and data be
used to improve U.S. port and supply
chain performance? What mechanisms,
if any, should the Federal Government
deploy to promote information sharing
and develop a common technology
platform?
8. Are there actions that have been
taken by specific U.S. or foreign ports or
other nations that should be highlighted
as best practices for ports? If so, please
describe.
Dated: May 20, 2016.
Bruce H. Andrews,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–12551 Filed 5–26–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510–17–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Economic Analysis
Proposed Information Collection;
Comment Request; Direct Investment
Surveys: BE–577, Quarterly Survey of
U.S. Direct Investment Abroad—
Transactions of U.S. Reporter With
Foreign Affiliate, and Changes to
Private Fund Reporting on Direct
Investment Surveys
ACTION:
Notice.
The Department of
Commerce, as part of its continuing
effort to reduce paperwork and
respondent burden, invites the general
public and other Federal agencies to
comment on proposed and/or
continuing information collections, as
required by the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995, Public Law 104–13 (44
U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)).
DATES: Written comments must be
submitted on or before July 26, 2016
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to Jennifer Jessup, Departmental
Paperwork Clearance Officer,
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\27MYN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 103 (Friday, May 27, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 33657-33658]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-12551]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
[Docket No.: 160511417-6417-01]
RIN 0690-XC004
21st Century U.S. Port Competitiveness Initiative: Request for
Public Comment
AGENCY: U.S. Department of Commerce.
ACTION: Notice and request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Commerce (Department) is seeking public
input on U.S. seaport efficiency and competitiveness issues for its
21st Century U.S. Port Competitiveness Initiative. In this effort, the
Department is working with seaports, stakeholders, and port users to
identify and share best practices in port-stakeholder-user
coordination, collaboration, and information-sharing that are being
used to resolve operational and infrastructure issues that affect
freight flows and increase port and supply chain congestion. The
Department's goal is to ensure that U.S. seaports and their supply
chains have the tools they need to strengthen U.S. port and supply
chain competitiveness, facilitate international trade, and catalyze
local, regional, national economic growth and job creation. We welcome
input from all interested parties.
DATES: Submit written comments on or before 5 p.m. Eastern time on July
11, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments on this notice by any of the
following methods:
Electronic Submissions: Submit your comments via the
Federal eRulemaking Portal. Go to https://www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=DOC-2016-0003, click the ``Comment Now!'' icon,
complete the required fields, and enter or attach your comments.
Mail: Russell Adise, U.S. Department of Commerce, 1401
Constitution Avenue NW., Room 11018, Washington, DC 20230. Include on
the envelope the following identifier ``Attn: 21st Century U.S. Port
Competitiveness Initiative.''
Comments submitted by email should be machine-readable and should
not be copy-protected. Responders should include the name of the person
or organization filing the comment, as well as a page number on each
page of their submissions. Paper submissions should also include a CD
or DVD with an electronic version of the document, which should be
labeled with the name and organization of the filer. Please do not
include in your comments information of a confidential nature, such as
sensitive personal information or proprietary information. All comments
received are a part of the public record and will generally be posted
to regulations.gov without change. All personal identifying information
(e.g., name, address) voluntarily submitted by the commenter may be
publicly accessible. Information obtained as a result of this notice
may be used by the Federal Government for program planning on a non-
attribution basis.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Russell Adise, U.S. Department of
Commerce, 1401 Constitution Avenue NW., Room 11018, Washington, DC
20230; telephone: (202) 482-5086; email: Russell.Adise@trade.gov.
Please direct media inquiries to the Department's Office of Public
Affairs, (202) 482-4883.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The U.S. marine transportation system is an essential driver of the
U.S. economy. Every day, U.S. ports and waterways handle millions of
tons of domestic and international cargo, ranging from retail and
agricultural products to finished goods and components, coal,
petrochemicals, heating oil and automobiles. Those ports support more
than 23 million American jobs throughout the supply chain, including
the local economy in and around port communities.
America's seaports are crucial generators of economic development
and well-paying jobs, both regionally and nationally, and throughout
the supply chains that use the ports. They are also crucial to our
nation's ability to take advantage of the leveled playing field and
increased market access being enabled by Administration trade
initiatives, including the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP).
Approximately 75 percent of U.S. international merchandise exports and
imports flow through our seaports including Made in America exports and
the intermediate goods and components used in them.
Long-term port congestion and efficiency problems remain a major
systemic threat that creates a drag on local, regional, and national
economic growth and employment.\1\ According to a recent Journal of
Commerce seaport berth productivity report, U.S. West Coast container
ports may be as much
[[Page 33658]]
as 25 to 48 percent less productive than the world's most efficient
container ports. As the nationwide port congestion and slowdown in 2014
and 2015 demonstrated, what happens at any one port, or group of ports,
can have far-reaching and nationwide impacts on all U.S. ports and the
companies and stakeholders that use and rely on them.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Please see Federal Maritime Commission, ``U.S. Container
Port Congestion & Related International Supply Chain Issues: Causes,
Consequences & Challenges,'' June 2015 https://www.fmc.gov/NR15-11/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Port congestion and efficiency problems stem from a variety of
factors, only some of which are directly under a seaport's control.
Larger vessels, growing trade volumes, insufficient infrastructure,
operating inefficiencies, poor labor-management relations, and lack of
communication and collaboration among ports, stakeholders, and users
can result in inefficient cargo movement and congestion that can
dramatically slow the movement of trade to and through America's
seaports, ultimately resulting in lost sales, markets, and jobs across
the nation, and the loss of U.S. port and supply chain competitiveness
in the global marketplace. U.S. seaports' inability to respond quickly
enough to rapidly-changing industry and cargo flow demands further
compromises U.S. trade, competitiveness, and resiliency.
In the U.S., most of the elements of these port-related challenges
are owned by local government entities and domestic and foreign
companies, with limited communication across the full range of ports,
users, and stakeholders affected by these challenges. To address these
issues comprehensively and nationally, the U.S. Department of Commerce
is playing a convening role for seaports, stakeholders, and users to
help them work together to identify how they can cooperate,
collaborate, and share information more effectively and efficiently in
order to achieve mutually beneficial improvements, and how the Federal
Government can help spur increasing public-private partnerships and
investment that can improve port-related operations, data-sharing
technology, and infrastructure.
Under this initiative, the Department of Commerce has launched a
series of regional port and supply chain competitiveness roundtables at
key ports across the U.S., similar to the Administration's 21st Century
Ports Roundtable in Baltimore in March 2016. Through these roundtables,
the Department is learning what leading U.S. seaports are doing,
together with their stakeholders, to improve their ability to
coordinate, collaborate, and share information towards identifying and
resolving operational port and infrastructure inefficiencies that
negatively impact trade flows and cause congestion. The Department is
also learning what additional steps could be taken to improve port/
stakeholder collaboration and partnerships, as well as to improve
investment in port infrastructure, equipment, and technology.
This Notice is intended to supplement the Department's roundtables
by soliciting public comment on the issues described below. The
information gained through these roundtables and this Notice will be
used to develop a report on best practices that U.S. seaports,
stakeholders, and users can use as appropriate as a tool to help
develop and implement mutually beneficial congestion relief and
efficiency improvement measures through coordination, collaboration,
and information sharing. The report is intended to be released in
December 2016.
II. Objectives of This Notice
This Notice offers an opportunity for all interested parties to
share their perspectives and recommend actions that the Federal
Government, state and local governments, and port users and
stakeholders--individually and together--can take to help address U.S.
port congestion and efficiency challenges, improve U.S. port and supply
chain competitiveness, and enhance the role of ports as engines and
catalysts of local, regional, and national economic development and job
growth.
III. Questions
Commenters are encouraged to address any or all of the following
questions. Please note in the response the number corresponding to the
question(s). For any response, commenters may wish to consider
describing specific goals; actions and roles that the United States
Government, ports, stakeholders, and users might take to achieve these
goals; evidence that demonstrates the benefits and costs associated
with the action; and whether the proposal is inter-agency or agency-
specific. Specific, actionable proposals for action and for policy
mechanisms directed to the relevant government agencies are most
useful.
The Department seeks public comment on the following questions:
1. What are the most important challenges and opportunities facing
U.S. port-related operations and efficiency?
2. What are best practices for improving port-related operations?
How can the Federal Government help to share these best practices
nationwide?
3. How can the Federal Government best promote the coordinated use
of public funds for the development of port-related infrastructure?
What can the Federal Government do, that it is not doing now, to
stimulate and/or leverage private funding for port-related
infrastructure?
4. What Federal policies should be modernized to promote U.S. port-
related investment and operational performance?
5. How can the Federal Government best collaborate with
stakeholders (state, local, labor, industry, port authorities,
academia, financial institutions, etc.) to enhance U.S. port-related
competitiveness?
6. What can the Federal Government do--on its own or in
coordination and collaboration with state and local governments and the
private sector--to enhance the value of ports as engines of economic
growth and job creation?
7. How can technology and data be used to improve U.S. port and
supply chain performance? What mechanisms, if any, should the Federal
Government deploy to promote information sharing and develop a common
technology platform?
8. Are there actions that have been taken by specific U.S. or
foreign ports or other nations that should be highlighted as best
practices for ports? If so, please describe.
Dated: May 20, 2016.
Bruce H. Andrews,
Deputy Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-12551 Filed 5-26-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3510-17-P