``Buy American'' Requirement, 60729-60732 [2018-25815]
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60729
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 83, No. 228
Tuesday, November 27, 2018
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
titled Department Programs and
Activities Excluded from Executive
Order 12372 (50 FR 47034) exempts
RUS loans and loan guarantees to
governmental and nongovernmental
entities from coverage under this Order.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents.
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Planning and Review
This final rule has been determined to
be not significant for the purposes of
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Planning and Review, and therefore has
not been reviewed by the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
7 CFR Part 1787
RIN 0572–AC42
‘‘Buy American’’ Requirement
Rural Utilities Service, USDA.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Rural Utilities Service
(RUS), a Rural Development Agency of
the United States Department of
Agriculture (USDA), hereinafter referred
to as RUS or the Agency, is issuing a
final rule to amend its regulations to
address its ‘‘Buy American’’
requirement. This will codify longstanding RUS requirements which
Agency borrowers have been required to
follow pursuant to statute, bulletin, and
contract as early as the 1950s. RUS will
rescind Bulletin 43–9:344–3, ‘‘ ‘Buy
American’ Requirement,’’ when this
regulation becomes effective.
DATES: This rule is effective November
27, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Norris Nicholson, Electric Program,
Rural Utilities Service, U.S. Department
of Agriculture, 1400 Independence Ave.
SW, Washington, DC 20250, Email:
Norris.Nicholson@wdc.usda.gov;
telephone number: (202) 720–1979.
Kenneth Kuchno, Telecommunications
Program, Rural Utilities Service, U.S.
Department of Agriculture, 1400
Independence Ave. SW, Washington,
DC 20250, email: Kenneth.Kuchno@
wdc.usda.gov, phone number: 202–720–
9424.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
Executive Order 12372,
Intergovernmental Consultation
This final rule is excluded from the
scope of Executive Order 12372,
Intergovernmental Consultation, which
may require consultation with State and
local officials. A Notice of Final Rule
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Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice
Reform
This final rule has been reviewed
under Executive Order 12988, Civil
Justice Reform. RUS has determined
that this final rule meets the applicable
standards provided in section 3 of the
Executive Order. In addition, all State
and local laws and regulations that are
in conflict with this rule will be
preempted, no retroactive effort will be
given to this rule, and, in accordance
with Sec. 212(e) of the Department of
Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994
(7 U.S.C. Sec. 6912(e)), administrative
appeal procedures, if any, must be
exhausted before an action against the
Department or its agencies may be
initiated.
Executive Order 13175, Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This final rule has been reviewed in
accordance with the requirements of
Executive Order 13175, ‘‘Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribal
Governments.’’ Executive Order 13175
requires Federal agencies to consult and
coordinate with tribes on a governmentto-government basis on policies that
have tribal implications, including
regulations, legislative comments or
proposed legislation, and other policy
statements or actions that have
substantial direct effects on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes.
The policies contained in this final rule
do not have Tribal implications that
preempt Tribal law. The Agency will
continue to work directly with Tribes
and Tribal applicants to improve access
to Agency programs. This includes
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providing focused outreach to Tribes
regarding implementation of this rule
change. Additionally, the Agency will
respond in a timely and meaningful
manner to all Tribal government
requests for consultation concerning
this rule. For further information on the
Agency’s Tribal consultation efforts,
please contact Rural Development’s
Native American Coordinator at (720)
544–2911 or AIAN@wdc.usda.gov.
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
The Agency has determined that this
final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, as defined in
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
601 et seq.), given that the amendment
is only an administrative act on the
government’s part to codify a statute
with respect to obligation of funds.
Information Collection and
Recordkeeping Requirements
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act, the paperwork burden
associated with this final rule has been
approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under the currently
approved OMB Control Numbers 0572–
0107. The Agency has determined that
this regulatory action does not change
any current data collection that would
require approval under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35).
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The programs described by this rule
are listed in the Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance programs under
No. 10.850, Rural Electrification Loans
and Loan Guarantees; No. 10.851, Rural
Telephone Loans and Loan Guarantees;
and No. 10.852, Rural Telephone Bank
Loans and No. 10.886, Rural Broadband
Access Loans and Loan Guarantees. All
active CFDA programs can be found at
www.cfda.gov. The Catalog is available
on the internet at https://www.cfda.gov
and the General Services
Administration’s (GSA’s) free CFDA
website at https://www.cfda.gov. The
CFDA website also contains a PDF file
version of the Catalog that, when
printed, has the same layout as the
printed document that the Government
Publishing Office (GPO) provides. GPO
prints and sells the CFDA to interested
buyers. For information about
purchasing the Catalog of Federal
Domestic Assistance from GPO, call the
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Superintendent of Documents at 202–
512–1800 or toll free at 866–512–1800,
or access GPO’s online bookstore at
https://bookstore.gpo.gov.
Unfunded Mandate
This final rule contains no Federal
mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995) for state,
local, and tribal governments or the
private sector. Therefore, this final rule
is not subject to the requirements of
sections 202 and 205 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995.
National Environmental Policy Act
Certification
The Administrator of RUS has
determined that this final rule will not
significantly affect the quality of the
human environment as defined by the
National Environmental Policy Act of
1969 (42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.). Therefore,
this action does not require an
environmental impact statement or
assessment.
E-Government Act Compliance
The Agency is committed to the EGovernment Act, which requires
Government agencies in general to
provide the public the option of
submitting information or transacting
business electronically to the maximum
extent possible.
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USDA Non-Discrimination Policy
In accordance with Federal civil
rights law and U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) civil rights
regulations and policies, the USDA, its
Agencies, offices, and employees, and
institutions participating in or
administering USDA programs are
prohibited from discriminating based on
race, color, national origin, religion, sex,
gender identity (including gender
expression), sexual orientation,
disability, age, marital status, family/
parental status, income derived from a
public assistance program, political
beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior
civil rights activity, in any program or
activity conducted or funded by USDA
(not all bases apply to all programs).
Remedies and complaint filing
deadlines vary by program or incident.
Persons with disabilities who require
alternative means of communication for
program information (e.g., Braille, large
print, audiotape, American Sign
Language, etc.) should contact the
responsible Agency or USDA’s TARGET
Center at (202) 720–2600 (voice and
TTY) or contact USDA through the
Federal Relay Service at (800) 877–8339.
Additionally, program information may
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be made available in languages other
than English.
To file a program discrimination
complaint, complete the USDA Program
Discrimination Complaint Form, AD–
3027, found online at https://
www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_
cust.html and at any USDA office or
write a letter addressed to USDA and
provide in the letter all of the
information requested in the form. To
request a copy of the complaint form,
call (866) 632–9992. Submit your
completed form or letter to USDA by: (1)
Mail: U.S. Department of Agriculture,
Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Civil Rights, 1400 Independence
Avenue SW, Washington, DC 20250–
9410; (2) fax: (202) 690–7442; or (3)
email: program.intake@usda.gov.
USDA is an equal opportunity
provider, employer, and lender.
Background
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1787
Communications equipment, Electric
power, Loan programs—
communications, Loan programs—
energy, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rural areas, Telephone.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, RUS amends 7 CFR chapter
■
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PART 1787—THE ‘‘BUY AMERICAN’’
REQUIREMENT
Sec.
1787.1 General.
1787.2 Definitions.
1787.3 Products constituting a portion of a
purchase order or contract.
1787.4 Unmanufactured articles, materials,
and supplies.
1787.5 Eligible countries.
1787.6 Nondomestic products.
1787.7 Components.
1787.8 Purchase of nondomestic products.
1787.9 Waivers.
1787.10 Application for specific waivers.
1787.11 Cost differential.
1787.12 Non-availability or shortages.
1787.13 Public interest or impracticality.
1787.14 General waivers.
Appendix A to Part 1787—Product
Procurement
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 903.
The Rural Electrification Act requires
that in making loans pursuant to the
Rural Electrification Act of 1936, the
Secretary of Agriculture shall require
that, to the extent practicable and the
cost of which is not unreasonable, the
borrower agrees to use in connection
with the expenditure of such funds only
such unmanufactured articles,
materials, and supplies, as have been
mined or produced in the United States
or in any eligible country, and only such
manufactured articles, materials, and
supplies as have been manufactured in
the United States or in any eligible
country, substantially all from articles,
materials, or supplies mined, produced
or manufactured, as the case may be, in
the United States or any eligible
country. This regulation will codify
long-standing RUS requirements which
Agency borrowers have been required to
follow pursuant to statute, bulletin, and
contract as early as the 1950s, but which
were inadvertently never codified when
all existing RUS bulletins were
incorporated into regulation. Nothing in
this regulation will change or modify
those procedures with respect to
borrowers’ responsibilities in complying
with the Buy American requirement,
such as the waiver process, but will
simplify compliance by compiling all
such existing requirements into a single
document.
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follows:
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§ 1787.1
General.
(a) The ‘‘Buy American’’ provision of
the Rural Electrification Act of 1936 (RE
Act) requires, to the extent practicable
and the cost of which is not
unreasonable, that RUS Borrowers use
loan funds only for such manufactured
articles, materials, and supplies as have
been manufactured in the United States
or in any eligible country, substantially
all from articles, materials, or supplies
mined, produced or manufactured, as
the case may be, in the United States or
any eligible country.
(b) Each RUS Borrower is responsible
for assuring that its use of loan funds
complies with this requirement, and
that the contracts it enters into for
construction, materials and equipment,
and purchases with vendors contain the
Buy American requirement, along with
certification as to compliance, made
through RUS Form 213.
§ 1787.2
Definitions.
For purpose of this part, the following
terms have the following meanings:
Administrator. The Administrator of
the RUS, or his/her designee.
Buy American. A provision of the RE
Act requiring that loan funds only be
used to purchase products made in the
U.S. or an eligible country.
Component. Any article, material, or
supply, whether manufactured or
unmanufactured, that is directly
incorporated into the end product at the
final assembly location.
Domestic product. A product or like
product which both:
(1) Is manufactured in the United
States or in any eligible country; and
(2) Contains components
manufactured in the United States or in
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any eligible country consisting of more
than 50 percent of the total cost of all
components used in the product.
Eligible country. Any country that the
United States Trade Representative
determines as having corporations
located therein, as eligible to enter into
contract with an RUS Borrower, under
which loan funds will be provided for
unmanufactured and manufactured
goods.
Loan funds. Funds provided under an
RUS direct or guaranteed loan.
Manufactured. The application of
processes to alter the form or function
of materials or of elements of the
product such that value is added or the
materials or elements are transformed
into a new end product functionally
different from that which would result
from mere assembly of the materials or
elements.
Nondomestic bid. An offer to sell a
nondomestic product to an RUS
borrower.
Nondomestic product. Any product
other than a domestic product or
product from an eligible country.
Product. An item of manufactured
material or assembled components,
which is complete and capable of
performing an intended practical
purpose.
RE Act. Rural Electrification Act of
1936, as amended (7 U.S.C. 901 et seq.).
RUS. The Rural Utilities Service.
RUS Borrower. Any organization that
has an outstanding RUS loan made or
guaranteed by RUS pursuant to the RE
Act.
Telecommunications. Any
communication service for the
transmission or reception of voice, data,
sounds, signals, pictures, writings, or
signs of all kinds, by wire, fiber, radio,
light, or other visual or electromagnetic
means, including all telephone lines,
facilities, or systems used in the
rendition of such service; but shall not
be deemed to mean message telegram
service or community antenna
television system services or
broadcasting facilities other than those
intended exclusively for educational
purposes, or radio broadcasting services
or facilities within the meaning of
section 3(o) of the Communications Act
of 1934, as amended.
Unmanufactured. With respect to
articles, materials, or supplies, refers to
such goods that have not been
manufactured.
§ 1787.3 Products constituting a portion of
a purchase order or contract.
Where a supplier or contractor offers
or furnishes several products under a
purchase order or contract, the
provisions of this part apply to each
product individually.
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§ 1787.4 Unmanufactured articles,
materials, and supplies.
The Buy American requirement also
applies to unmanufactured articles,
materials, and supplies to be financed
with RUS loan funds, and will be
considered domestic if mined or
produced in the United States or in an
eligible country.
§ 1787.5
Eligible countries.
any other place of fabrication in the
United States or any eligible country;
(ii) Testing costs at the assembly plant
or at the installation site;
(iii) Direct profit, overhead, and
commissions of the domestic
distributor; and
(iv) Cost of transportation from the
domestic assembly point to the
installation site.
The United State Trade
Representative (USTR) determines what
countries are eligible countries with
respect to purchases made by electric
borrowers or telecommunications
borrowers. A particular country may be
determined to be an eligible country for
purchases made by telecommunications
borrowers, for electric borrowers, or
both. RUS maintains the latest Federal
Register notice on its website which sets
out the list of Eligible Countries for each
RUS program at https://
www.rd.usda.gov/files/UEP_
Engineering_EligibleCountries.pdf.
§ 1787.7
§ 1787.6
§ 1787.8 Purchase of nondomestic
products.
Nondomestic products.
A product is considered to be
nondomestic for the purpose of
compliance with the ‘‘Buy American’’
requirement if:
(a) The product is manufactured
outside the United States or any eligible
country; or
(b) The product is manufactured in
the United States or in any eligible
country, but the cost of nondomestic
components used therein constitutes 50
percent or more of the cost of all
components. The cost of components
shall be determined on a comparable
basis, so that only the cost of domestic
and nondomestic components, up to the
point where they are combined and
manufactured into a complete product
shall be considered.
(1) The determination of the cost of
the nondomestic components of a
product shall include:
(i) The price paid to the nondomestic
source;
(ii) The cost of shipment to the port
of entry into the United States;
(iii) Applicable tariffs or duties;
(iv) The cost of transportation from
the port of entry to the distributor’s
plant or warehouse; and
(v) Profit, overhead, and commissions
of domestic and nondomestic suppliers
and subcontractors of the components.
(2) The following items shall not be
considered in determining the cost of
components, although they are proper
elements in the determination of the
final selling price of the product:
(i) Fabrication or processing costs, if
any, of nondomestic or domestic
components at the assembly plant, or
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Components.
Where a component is manufactured
only determines whether the component
is classified as domestic or nondomestic
even if all the materials and
subcomponents comprising the
component are manufactured in
ineligible countries. A component
manufactured in the United States or in
an eligible country shall be considered
domestic when determining whether a
product is classified as domestic or
nondomestic. A component
manufactured in an ineligible country
shall be considered nondomestic.
An RUS Borrower may only use loan
funds to purchase a nondomestic
product if a waiver pursuant to
§ 1787.10 has been received by the
Administrator before entering into a
contract with the vendor. Should the
Administrator deny the waiver request,
the RUS Borrower must use its own
funds for the expenditure.
§ 1787.9
Waivers.
Under limited circumstances the
Administrator may waive the Buy
American requirement with respect to a
specific contract entered into between
an RUS Borrower and a third party
which will be paid for with loan funds,
subject to §§ 1787.10 through 1787.14.
§ 1787.10
waivers.
Applications for specific
RUS borrowers may request a specific
waiver of the Buy American
requirement through a written, detailed
explanation showing that:
(a) The cost between the nondomestic
product and domestic product is
unreasonable;
(b) There is a non-availability of
domestic products; or
(c) It is not in the public interest or
impractical for the RUS Borrower to
purchase a domestic product.
§ 1787.11
Cost differential.
By application pursuant to § 1787.10,
the Administrator may waive the Buy
American requirement if the cost of the
domestic product is unreasonable.
Given that RUS loans terms normally
range from 20 to 35 years, and that
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additional costs will be magnified with
interest over these terms, the
Administrator has determined that if the
lowest bid or offered price is a
nondomestic bid that is at least 6percent
lower than the next lowest bid or
offered price, the RUS Borrower may
request a cost differential waiver. With
respect to contracts that are not required
to be bid, prices of market-available,
domestic products must be used for
comparison in a request for waiver.
§ 1787.12
Non-availability or shortages.
By application pursuant to § 1787.10,
the Administrator may waive the Buy
American requirement upon a showing
that there is no domestic product
available in the market in sufficient and
reasonable quantities and of satisfactory
quality, and that such shortage of
suitable domestic alternatives
jeopardizes the project being completed
on budget and/or according to
scheduled planning. A lack of
responsive and responsible bids to a
well-publicized request for bids will be
presumed to meet the conditions of a
non-availability waiver. With respect to
contracts that are not required to be bid,
sufficient evidence must be presented to
the Administrator in order to make a
determination.
§ 1787.13
Public interest or impracticality.
(a) By application pursuant to
§ 1787.10, the Administrator may waive
the Buy American requirement upon a
showing that application of the
requirement would be inconsistent with
the public interest or impractical for the
RUS Borrower. With respect to
impracticality, an RUS Borrower may
request a waiver upon a showing that
the domestic product is incompatible or
impractical to integrate with existing,
significant capital infrastructure or
existing, critical software already in use.
Notwithstanding, the burden shall rest
with the RUS Borrower to present how
the use of the domestic product would
create a hardship or negatively impact
its project.
(b) With respect to contracts that were
approved by RUS based on a bidder or
offer that originally certified compliance
with the Buy America requirements, but
which can no longer comply with such
certification, the Administrator may
grant an impracticality waiver based on
a showing that the original certification
was made in good faith and that the
product cannot now be obtained
domestically due to commercial
impossibility or impracticability, or
without undue hardship or a negative
impact to the project.
(c) In determining whether to issue
any public interest waiver, the
Administrator will consider all
appropriate factors on a case-by-case
basis, unless a general waiver has
already been issued by the
Administrator with respect to the
product.
§ 1787.14
General waivers.
(a) The Administrator may issue a
general waiver for all RUS Borrowers for
a determinate period, if the
Administrator finds that such
manufactured or unmanufactured goods
are in shortage regionally or nationally,
so as to avoid the administrative burden
of issuing individual, specific waivers.
(b) The Administrator has determined
that it is in the best interest of RUS to
issue a permanent general public
interest waiver from the Buy America
requirements for ‘‘small purchases,’’
which shall be published in the Federal
Register for each program under the RE
Act and amended as needed from time
to time. In carrying out this exception,
however, the Administrator shall ensure
that contracts are not artificially
fragmented.
Appendix A to Part 1787—Product
Procurement
This appendix shows an example of
how the 6 percent differential is applied
to determine award of a bid. In response
to a request for bids for a digital central
office a borrower receives four
responsive bids to the specification,
three domestic bids and one
nondomestic bid. The nondomestic bid
is the apparent low bid. We will
consider in our analysis the
nondomestic bid and the lowest
domestic bid as shown in the following
table.
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Nondomestic
bid
Domestic
bid
Total materials .........................................................................................................................................................
Installation ................................................................................................................................................................
Freight ......................................................................................................................................................................
$895,000
155,000
+1,000
$920,000
177,000
+1,500
Total bid ............................................................................................................................................................
$1,051,000
$1,098,500
Please note that once the product has
been determined as nondomestic, the 6
percent cost differential shall be applied
to all the material content in the
nondomestic bid, even if the
nondomestic product includes domestic
components.
In this example, 6 percent of the total
material content in the nondomestic bid
($895,000) equals $53,700. This cost
differential is added to the total
nondomestic bid as shown in the
following table.
of its material content), is compared
with all the domestic bids for award of
the bid. In our example the domestic bid
($1,098,500) is lower than the
nondomestic evaluated bid ($1,104,700).
The domestic bid becomes the low
bid and the domestic bidder gets award
of the bid. This product is classified as
domestic since the cost of the domestic
components used in the product
constitutes more than 50 percent of the
cost of all the components used.
Total of the nondomestic bid
6% of the all material cost ....
$1,051,000
+53,000
Dated: November 6, 2018.
Christopher A. McLean,
Acting Administrator, Rural Utilities Service.
Total evaluated bid ........
$1,104,700
[FR Doc. 2018–25815 Filed 11–26–18; 8:45 am]
This total evaluated bid, (that is the
nondomestic bid plus the 6% of the cost
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Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 13
Office of the Secretary
14 CFR Part 383
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 406
Saint Lawrence Seaway Development
Corporation
33 CFR Part 401
BILLING CODE 3410–15–P
PO 00000
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 228 (Tuesday, November 27, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 60729-60732]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-25815]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 228 / Tuesday, November 27, 2018 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 60729]]
DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Rural Utilities Service
7 CFR Part 1787
RIN 0572-AC42
``Buy American'' Requirement
AGENCY: Rural Utilities Service, USDA.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Rural Utilities Service (RUS), a Rural Development Agency
of the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), hereinafter
referred to as RUS or the Agency, is issuing a final rule to amend its
regulations to address its ``Buy American'' requirement. This will
codify long-standing RUS requirements which Agency borrowers have been
required to follow pursuant to statute, bulletin, and contract as early
as the 1950s. RUS will rescind Bulletin 43-9:344-3, `` `Buy American'
Requirement,'' when this regulation becomes effective.
DATES: This rule is effective November 27, 2018.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Norris Nicholson, Electric Program,
Rural Utilities Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1400
Independence Ave. SW, Washington, DC 20250, Email:
[email protected]; telephone number: (202) 720-1979.
Kenneth Kuchno, Telecommunications Program, Rural Utilities Service,
U.S. Department of Agriculture, 1400 Independence Ave. SW, Washington,
DC 20250, email: [email protected], phone number: 202-720-
9424.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Executive Order 12372, Intergovernmental Consultation
This final rule is excluded from the scope of Executive Order
12372, Intergovernmental Consultation, which may require consultation
with State and local officials. A Notice of Final Rule titled
Department Programs and Activities Excluded from Executive Order 12372
(50 FR 47034) exempts RUS loans and loan guarantees to governmental and
nongovernmental entities from coverage under this Order.
Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review
This final rule has been determined to be not significant for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review, and
therefore has not been reviewed by the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB).
Executive Order 12988, Civil Justice Reform
This final rule has been reviewed under Executive Order 12988,
Civil Justice Reform. RUS has determined that this final rule meets the
applicable standards provided in section 3 of the Executive Order. In
addition, all State and local laws and regulations that are in conflict
with this rule will be preempted, no retroactive effort will be given
to this rule, and, in accordance with Sec. 212(e) of the Department of
Agriculture Reorganization Act of 1994 (7 U.S.C. Sec. 6912(e)),
administrative appeal procedures, if any, must be exhausted before an
action against the Department or its agencies may be initiated.
Executive Order 13175, Consultation and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This final rule has been reviewed in accordance with the
requirements of Executive Order 13175, ``Consultation and Coordination
with Indian Tribal Governments.'' Executive Order 13175 requires
Federal agencies to consult and coordinate with tribes on a government-
to-government basis on policies that have tribal implications,
including regulations, legislative comments or proposed legislation,
and other policy statements or actions that have substantial direct
effects on one or more Indian tribes, on the relationship between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities between the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
The policies contained in this final rule do not have Tribal
implications that preempt Tribal law. The Agency will continue to work
directly with Tribes and Tribal applicants to improve access to Agency
programs. This includes providing focused outreach to Tribes regarding
implementation of this rule change. Additionally, the Agency will
respond in a timely and meaningful manner to all Tribal government
requests for consultation concerning this rule. For further information
on the Agency's Tribal consultation efforts, please contact Rural
Development's Native American Coordinator at (720) 544-2911 or
[email protected].
Regulatory Flexibility Act Certification
The Agency has determined that this final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities,
as defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.),
given that the amendment is only an administrative act on the
government's part to codify a statute with respect to obligation of
funds.
Information Collection and Recordkeeping Requirements
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, the paperwork
burden associated with this final rule has been approved by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) under the currently approved OMB Control
Numbers 0572-0107. The Agency has determined that this regulatory
action does not change any current data collection that would require
approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. Chapter
35).
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance
The programs described by this rule are listed in the Catalog of
Federal Domestic Assistance programs under No. 10.850, Rural
Electrification Loans and Loan Guarantees; No. 10.851, Rural Telephone
Loans and Loan Guarantees; and No. 10.852, Rural Telephone Bank Loans
and No. 10.886, Rural Broadband Access Loans and Loan Guarantees. All
active CFDA programs can be found at www.cfda.gov. The Catalog is
available on the internet at https://www.cfda.gov and the General
Services Administration's (GSA's) free CFDA website at https://www.cfda.gov. The CFDA website also contains a PDF file version of the
Catalog that, when printed, has the same layout as the printed document
that the Government Publishing Office (GPO) provides. GPO prints and
sells the CFDA to interested buyers. For information about purchasing
the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance from GPO, call the
[[Page 60730]]
Superintendent of Documents at 202-512-1800 or toll free at 866-512-
1800, or access GPO's online bookstore at https://bookstore.gpo.gov.
Unfunded Mandate
This final rule contains no Federal mandates (under the regulatory
provisions of Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995) for
state, local, and tribal governments or the private sector. Therefore,
this final rule is not subject to the requirements of sections 202 and
205 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995.
National Environmental Policy Act Certification
The Administrator of RUS has determined that this final rule will
not significantly affect the quality of the human environment as
defined by the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.). Therefore, this action does not require an environmental
impact statement or assessment.
E-Government Act Compliance
The Agency is committed to the E-Government Act, which requires
Government agencies in general to provide the public the option of
submitting information or transacting business electronically to the
maximum extent possible.
USDA Non-Discrimination Policy
In accordance with Federal civil rights law and U.S. Department of
Agriculture (USDA) civil rights regulations and policies, the USDA, its
Agencies, offices, and employees, and institutions participating in or
administering USDA programs are prohibited from discriminating based on
race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including
gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital
status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance
program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil
rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA
(not all bases apply to all programs). Remedies and complaint filing
deadlines vary by program or incident.
Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of
communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print,
audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.) should contact the responsible
Agency or USDA's TARGET Center at (202) 720-2600 (voice and TTY) or
contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at (800) 877-8339.
Additionally, program information may be made available in languages
other than English.
To file a program discrimination complaint, complete the USDA
Program Discrimination Complaint Form, AD-3027, found online at https://www.ascr.usda.gov/complaint_filing_cust.html and at any USDA office or
write a letter addressed to USDA and provide in the letter all of the
information requested in the form. To request a copy of the complaint
form, call (866) 632-9992. Submit your completed form or letter to USDA
by: (1) Mail: U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Civil Rights, 1400 Independence Avenue SW, Washington, DC
20250-9410; (2) fax: (202) 690-7442; or (3) email:
[email protected].
USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer, and lender.
Background
The Rural Electrification Act requires that in making loans
pursuant to the Rural Electrification Act of 1936, the Secretary of
Agriculture shall require that, to the extent practicable and the cost
of which is not unreasonable, the borrower agrees to use in connection
with the expenditure of such funds only such unmanufactured articles,
materials, and supplies, as have been mined or produced in the United
States or in any eligible country, and only such manufactured articles,
materials, and supplies as have been manufactured in the United States
or in any eligible country, substantially all from articles, materials,
or supplies mined, produced or manufactured, as the case may be, in the
United States or any eligible country. This regulation will codify
long-standing RUS requirements which Agency borrowers have been
required to follow pursuant to statute, bulletin, and contract as early
as the 1950s, but which were inadvertently never codified when all
existing RUS bulletins were incorporated into regulation. Nothing in
this regulation will change or modify those procedures with respect to
borrowers' responsibilities in complying with the Buy American
requirement, such as the waiver process, but will simplify compliance
by compiling all such existing requirements into a single document.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1787
Communications equipment, Electric power, Loan programs--
communications, Loan programs--energy, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Rural areas, Telephone.
0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, RUS amends 7 CFR chapter XVII
by adding part 1787 to reads as follows:
PART 1787--THE ``BUY AMERICAN'' REQUIREMENT
Sec.
1787.1 General.
1787.2 Definitions.
1787.3 Products constituting a portion of a purchase order or
contract.
1787.4 Unmanufactured articles, materials, and supplies.
1787.5 Eligible countries.
1787.6 Nondomestic products.
1787.7 Components.
1787.8 Purchase of nondomestic products.
1787.9 Waivers.
1787.10 Application for specific waivers.
1787.11 Cost differential.
1787.12 Non-availability or shortages.
1787.13 Public interest or impracticality.
1787.14 General waivers.
Appendix A to Part 1787--Product Procurement
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 903.
Sec. 1787.1 General.
(a) The ``Buy American'' provision of the Rural Electrification Act
of 1936 (RE Act) requires, to the extent practicable and the cost of
which is not unreasonable, that RUS Borrowers use loan funds only for
such manufactured articles, materials, and supplies as have been
manufactured in the United States or in any eligible country,
substantially all from articles, materials, or supplies mined, produced
or manufactured, as the case may be, in the United States or any
eligible country.
(b) Each RUS Borrower is responsible for assuring that its use of
loan funds complies with this requirement, and that the contracts it
enters into for construction, materials and equipment, and purchases
with vendors contain the Buy American requirement, along with
certification as to compliance, made through RUS Form 213.
Sec. 1787.2 Definitions.
For purpose of this part, the following terms have the following
meanings:
Administrator. The Administrator of the RUS, or his/her designee.
Buy American. A provision of the RE Act requiring that loan funds
only be used to purchase products made in the U.S. or an eligible
country.
Component. Any article, material, or supply, whether manufactured
or unmanufactured, that is directly incorporated into the end product
at the final assembly location.
Domestic product. A product or like product which both:
(1) Is manufactured in the United States or in any eligible
country; and
(2) Contains components manufactured in the United States or in
[[Page 60731]]
any eligible country consisting of more than 50 percent of the total
cost of all components used in the product.
Eligible country. Any country that the United States Trade
Representative determines as having corporations located therein, as
eligible to enter into contract with an RUS Borrower, under which loan
funds will be provided for unmanufactured and manufactured goods.
Loan funds. Funds provided under an RUS direct or guaranteed loan.
Manufactured. The application of processes to alter the form or
function of materials or of elements of the product such that value is
added or the materials or elements are transformed into a new end
product functionally different from that which would result from mere
assembly of the materials or elements.
Nondomestic bid. An offer to sell a nondomestic product to an RUS
borrower.
Nondomestic product. Any product other than a domestic product or
product from an eligible country.
Product. An item of manufactured material or assembled components,
which is complete and capable of performing an intended practical
purpose.
RE Act. Rural Electrification Act of 1936, as amended (7 U.S.C. 901
et seq.).
RUS. The Rural Utilities Service.
RUS Borrower. Any organization that has an outstanding RUS loan
made or guaranteed by RUS pursuant to the RE Act.
Telecommunications. Any communication service for the transmission
or reception of voice, data, sounds, signals, pictures, writings, or
signs of all kinds, by wire, fiber, radio, light, or other visual or
electromagnetic means, including all telephone lines, facilities, or
systems used in the rendition of such service; but shall not be deemed
to mean message telegram service or community antenna television system
services or broadcasting facilities other than those intended
exclusively for educational purposes, or radio broadcasting services or
facilities within the meaning of section 3(o) of the Communications Act
of 1934, as amended.
Unmanufactured. With respect to articles, materials, or supplies,
refers to such goods that have not been manufactured.
Sec. 1787.3 Products constituting a portion of a purchase order or
contract.
Where a supplier or contractor offers or furnishes several products
under a purchase order or contract, the provisions of this part apply
to each product individually.
Sec. 1787.4 Unmanufactured articles, materials, and supplies.
The Buy American requirement also applies to unmanufactured
articles, materials, and supplies to be financed with RUS loan funds,
and will be considered domestic if mined or produced in the United
States or in an eligible country.
Sec. 1787.5 Eligible countries.
The United State Trade Representative (USTR) determines what
countries are eligible countries with respect to purchases made by
electric borrowers or telecommunications borrowers. A particular
country may be determined to be an eligible country for purchases made
by telecommunications borrowers, for electric borrowers, or both. RUS
maintains the latest Federal Register notice on its website which sets
out the list of Eligible Countries for each RUS program at https://www.rd.usda.gov/files/UEP_Engineering_EligibleCountries.pdf.
Sec. 1787.6 Nondomestic products.
A product is considered to be nondomestic for the purpose of
compliance with the ``Buy American'' requirement if:
(a) The product is manufactured outside the United States or any
eligible country; or
(b) The product is manufactured in the United States or in any
eligible country, but the cost of nondomestic components used therein
constitutes 50 percent or more of the cost of all components. The cost
of components shall be determined on a comparable basis, so that only
the cost of domestic and nondomestic components, up to the point where
they are combined and manufactured into a complete product shall be
considered.
(1) The determination of the cost of the nondomestic components of
a product shall include:
(i) The price paid to the nondomestic source;
(ii) The cost of shipment to the port of entry into the United
States;
(iii) Applicable tariffs or duties;
(iv) The cost of transportation from the port of entry to the
distributor's plant or warehouse; and
(v) Profit, overhead, and commissions of domestic and nondomestic
suppliers and subcontractors of the components.
(2) The following items shall not be considered in determining the
cost of components, although they are proper elements in the
determination of the final selling price of the product:
(i) Fabrication or processing costs, if any, of nondomestic or
domestic components at the assembly plant, or any other place of
fabrication in the United States or any eligible country;
(ii) Testing costs at the assembly plant or at the installation
site;
(iii) Direct profit, overhead, and commissions of the domestic
distributor; and
(iv) Cost of transportation from the domestic assembly point to the
installation site.
Sec. 1787.7 Components.
Where a component is manufactured only determines whether the
component is classified as domestic or nondomestic even if all the
materials and subcomponents comprising the component are manufactured
in ineligible countries. A component manufactured in the United States
or in an eligible country shall be considered domestic when determining
whether a product is classified as domestic or nondomestic. A component
manufactured in an ineligible country shall be considered nondomestic.
Sec. 1787.8 Purchase of nondomestic products.
An RUS Borrower may only use loan funds to purchase a nondomestic
product if a waiver pursuant to Sec. 1787.10 has been received by the
Administrator before entering into a contract with the vendor. Should
the Administrator deny the waiver request, the RUS Borrower must use
its own funds for the expenditure.
Sec. 1787.9 Waivers.
Under limited circumstances the Administrator may waive the Buy
American requirement with respect to a specific contract entered into
between an RUS Borrower and a third party which will be paid for with
loan funds, subject to Sec. Sec. 1787.10 through 1787.14.
Sec. 1787.10 Applications for specific waivers.
RUS borrowers may request a specific waiver of the Buy American
requirement through a written, detailed explanation showing that:
(a) The cost between the nondomestic product and domestic product
is unreasonable;
(b) There is a non-availability of domestic products; or
(c) It is not in the public interest or impractical for the RUS
Borrower to purchase a domestic product.
Sec. 1787.11 Cost differential.
By application pursuant to Sec. 1787.10, the Administrator may
waive the Buy American requirement if the cost of the domestic product
is unreasonable. Given that RUS loans terms normally range from 20 to
35 years, and that
[[Page 60732]]
additional costs will be magnified with interest over these terms, the
Administrator has determined that if the lowest bid or offered price is
a nondomestic bid that is at least 6percent lower than the next lowest
bid or offered price, the RUS Borrower may request a cost differential
waiver. With respect to contracts that are not required to be bid,
prices of market-available, domestic products must be used for
comparison in a request for waiver.
Sec. 1787.12 Non-availability or shortages.
By application pursuant to Sec. 1787.10, the Administrator may
waive the Buy American requirement upon a showing that there is no
domestic product available in the market in sufficient and reasonable
quantities and of satisfactory quality, and that such shortage of
suitable domestic alternatives jeopardizes the project being completed
on budget and/or according to scheduled planning. A lack of responsive
and responsible bids to a well-publicized request for bids will be
presumed to meet the conditions of a non-availability waiver. With
respect to contracts that are not required to be bid, sufficient
evidence must be presented to the Administrator in order to make a
determination.
Sec. 1787.13 Public interest or impracticality.
(a) By application pursuant to Sec. 1787.10, the Administrator may
waive the Buy American requirement upon a showing that application of
the requirement would be inconsistent with the public interest or
impractical for the RUS Borrower. With respect to impracticality, an
RUS Borrower may request a waiver upon a showing that the domestic
product is incompatible or impractical to integrate with existing,
significant capital infrastructure or existing, critical software
already in use. Notwithstanding, the burden shall rest with the RUS
Borrower to present how the use of the domestic product would create a
hardship or negatively impact its project.
(b) With respect to contracts that were approved by RUS based on a
bidder or offer that originally certified compliance with the Buy
America requirements, but which can no longer comply with such
certification, the Administrator may grant an impracticality waiver
based on a showing that the original certification was made in good
faith and that the product cannot now be obtained domestically due to
commercial impossibility or impracticability, or without undue hardship
or a negative impact to the project.
(c) In determining whether to issue any public interest waiver, the
Administrator will consider all appropriate factors on a case-by-case
basis, unless a general waiver has already been issued by the
Administrator with respect to the product.
Sec. 1787.14 General waivers.
(a) The Administrator may issue a general waiver for all RUS
Borrowers for a determinate period, if the Administrator finds that
such manufactured or unmanufactured goods are in shortage regionally or
nationally, so as to avoid the administrative burden of issuing
individual, specific waivers.
(b) The Administrator has determined that it is in the best
interest of RUS to issue a permanent general public interest waiver
from the Buy America requirements for ``small purchases,'' which shall
be published in the Federal Register for each program under the RE Act
and amended as needed from time to time. In carrying out this
exception, however, the Administrator shall ensure that contracts are
not artificially fragmented.
Appendix A to Part 1787--Product Procurement
This appendix shows an example of how the 6 percent differential is
applied to determine award of a bid. In response to a request for bids
for a digital central office a borrower receives four responsive bids
to the specification, three domestic bids and one nondomestic bid. The
nondomestic bid is the apparent low bid. We will consider in our
analysis the nondomestic bid and the lowest domestic bid as shown in
the following table.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nondomestic
bid Domestic bid
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total materials......................... $895,000 $920,000
Installation............................ 155,000 177,000
Freight................................. +1,000 +1,500
-------------------------------
Total bid........................... $1,051,000 $1,098,500
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Please note that once the product has been determined as
nondomestic, the 6 percent cost differential shall be applied to all
the material content in the nondomestic bid, even if the nondomestic
product includes domestic components.
In this example, 6 percent of the total material content in the
nondomestic bid ($895,000) equals $53,700. This cost differential is
added to the total nondomestic bid as shown in the following table.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total of the nondomestic bid............................ $1,051,000
6% of the all material cost............................. +53,000
---------------
Total evaluated bid................................. $1,104,700
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This total evaluated bid, (that is the nondomestic bid plus the 6%
of the cost of its material content), is compared with all the domestic
bids for award of the bid. In our example the domestic bid ($1,098,500)
is lower than the nondomestic evaluated bid ($1,104,700).
The domestic bid becomes the low bid and the domestic bidder gets
award of the bid. This product is classified as domestic since the cost
of the domestic components used in the product constitutes more than 50
percent of the cost of all the components used.
Dated: November 6, 2018.
Christopher A. McLean,
Acting Administrator, Rural Utilities Service.
[FR Doc. 2018-25815 Filed 11-26-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-15-P