Final Offer Rate Review; Expanding Access to Rate Relief, 48872-48882 [2019-20093]
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minimum A-weighted overall ambient
identified in S6.7.2.
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PART 585—PHASE-IN REPORTING
REQUIREMENTS
3. The authority citation for part 585
continues to read/is revised to read as
follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 322, 30111, 30115,
30117, and 30166; delegation of authority at
49 CFR 1.95.
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4. Revise § 585.132 to read as follows:
§ 585.132
Response to Inquiries.
At any time during the production
year ending August 31, 2020, each
manufacturer shall, upon request from
the Office of Vehicle Safety Compliance,
provide information identifying the
vehicles (by make, model and vehicle
identification number) that have been
certified as complying with the
requirements of Standard No. 141,
Minimum Sound Requirements for
Hybrid and Electric Vehicles (49 CFR
571.141). The manufacturer’s
designation of a vehicle as a certified
vehicle is irrevocable.
■ 5. Amend § 585.133 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 585.133
Reporting requirements.
(a) Phase-in reporting requirements.
Within 60 days after the end of the
production year ending August 31,
2020, each manufacturer shall submit a
report to the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration concerning its
compliance with the requirements of
Standard No. 141 Minimum Sound
Requirements for Hybrid and Electric
Vehicles (49 CFR 571.141) for its
vehicles produced in that year. Each
report shall provide the information
specified in paragraph (b) of this section
and in § 585.2 of this part.
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Issued on September 10, 2019 in
Washington, DC, under authority delegated
in 49 CFR 1.95 and 501.5.
James Clayton Owens,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2019–19874 Filed 9–16–19; 8:45 am]
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SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
49 CFR Parts 1002, 1111, 1114, and
1115
[Docket Nos. EP 755; EP 665 (Sub-No. 2)]
Final Offer Rate Review; Expanding
Access to Rate Relief
AGENCY:
Surface Transportation Board.
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Notice of proposed rulemaking;
request for comments.
ACTION:
The Surface Transportation
Board (STB or Board) proposes a new
procedure for challenging the
reasonableness of railroad rates in
smaller cases. In this procedure, the
Board would decide a case by selecting
either the complainant’s or the
defendant’s final offer, subject to an
expedited procedural schedule that
adheres to firm deadlines.
DATES: Comments on the proposed rule
are due by November 12, 2019. Reply
comments are due by January 10, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Comments and replies in
either or both dockets may be filed with
the Board either via e-filing or in writing
addressed to: Surface Transportation
Board, Attn: Docket No. EP 755 and/or
Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), 395 E
Street SW, Washington, DC 20423–0001.
Comments and replies will be posted to
the Board’s website at www.stb.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amy Ziehm at (202) 245–0391.
Assistance for the hearing impaired is
available through the Federal Relay
Service at (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In January
2018,1 the Board established its Rate
Reform Task Force (RRTF), with the
objectives of developing
recommendations to reform and
streamline the Board’s rate review
processes for large cases, and
determining how to best provide a rate
review process for smaller cases. After
holding informal meetings throughout
2018, the RRTF issued a report on April
25, 2019 (RRTF Report).2 Among other
recommendations, the RRTF included a
proposal for a final offer procedure,
which it described as ‘‘an administrative
approach that would take advantage of
procedural limitations, rather than
substantive limitations, to constrain the
cost and complexity of a rate
reasonableness case.’’ RRTF Report 12.
Versions of a final offer process for rate
review have also been recommended by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture
(USDA) and a committee of the
Transportation Research Board (TRB).
The Board now proposes to build on the
RRTF recommendation and establish a
new rate case procedure for smaller
cases, the Final Offer Rate Review
(FORR) procedure.
SUMMARY:
1 These proceedings are not consolidated. A
single decision is being issued for administrative
convenience.
2 The RRTF Report was posted on the Board’s
website on April 29, 2019, and can be accessed at
https://www.stb.gov/stb/rail/Rate_Reform_Task_
Force_Report.pdf.
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Background
In the ICC Termination Act of 1995
(ICCTA), Congress directed the Board to
‘‘establish a simplified and expedited
method for determining the
reasonableness of challenged rail rates
in those cases in which a full standalone cost [(SAC)] presentation is too
costly, given the value of the case.’’
Public Law 104–88, 109 Stat. 803, 810.
In the Surface Transportation Board
Reauthorization Act of 2015 (STB
Reauthorization Act), Public Law 114–
110, 129 Stat. 2228, Congress revised
the text of this requirement so that it
currently reads: ‘‘[t]he Board shall
maintain 1 or more simplified and
expedited methods for determining the
reasonableness of challenged rates in
those cases in which a full [SAC]
presentation is too costly, given the
value of the case.’’ 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(3)
(emphasis added). In addition, section
11 of the STB Reauthorization Act
modified 49 U.S.C. 10704(d) to require
that the Board ‘‘maintain procedures to
ensure the expeditious handling of
challenges to the reasonableness of
railroad rates.’’ 3 More generally, the rail
transportation policy states that, in
regulating the railroad industry, it is the
policy of the United States Government
‘‘to provide for the expeditious handling
and resolution of all proceedings
required or permitted to be brought
under this part.’’ 49 U.S.C. 10101(15).
In 1996, the Board adopted a
simplified methodology, known as
Three-Benchmark, which determines
the reasonableness of a challenged rate
using three benchmark figures. Rate
Guidelines—Non-Coal Proceedings, 1
S.T.B. 1004 (1996), pet. to reopen
denied, 2 S.T.B. 619 (1997), appeal
dismissed sub nom. Ass’n of Am. R.Rs.
v. STB, 146 F.3d 942 (D.C. Cir. 1998). A
decade passed without any complainant
bringing a case under that methodology.
In 2007, the Board modified the ThreeBenchmark methodology and also
created another simplified methodology,
known as Simplified-SAC, which
determines whether a captive shipper is
being forced to cross-subsidize other
parts of the railroad’s network. See
Simplified Standards for Rail Rate
Cases, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1) (STB served
Sept. 5, 2007), aff’d sub nom. CSX
Transp., Inc. v. STB, 568 F.3d 236 (D.C.
Cir.), vacated in part on reh’g, 584 F.3d
1076 (D.C. Cir. 2009). In 2013, the Board
increased the relief available under the
3 Prior to the enactment of the STB
Reauthorization Act, section 10704(d) began with a
sentence stating that, ‘‘[w]ithin 9 months after
January 1, 1996, the Board shall establish
procedures to ensure expeditious handling of
challenges to the reasonableness of railroad rates.’’
See, e.g., 49 U.S.C. 10704(d) (2014).
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Three-Benchmark methodology and
removed the relief limit on the
Simplified-SAC methodology, among
other things. See Rate Regulation
Reforms, EP 715 (STB served July 18,
2013), remanded in part sub nom. CSX
Transp., Inc. v. STB, 754 F.3d 1056
(D.C. Cir. 2014). Notwithstanding the
Board’s efforts to improve its rate review
methodologies and make them more
accessible, only a few Three-Benchmark
cases have ever been brought to the
Board, and no complaint has been
litigated to completion under the
Simplified-SAC methodology.
The Board has recognized that, for
smaller disputes, the litigation costs
required to bring a case under the
Board’s existing rate reasonableness
methodologies can quickly exceed the
value of the case. Expanding Access to
Rate Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), slip op.
at 10 (STB served Aug. 31, 2016). As the
Board stated in Simplified Standards,
‘‘[f]or some shippers who have smaller
disputes with a carrier, even
[Simplified-SAC] would be too
expensive, given the smaller value of
their cases. These shippers must also
have an avenue to pursue relief.’’
Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No.
1), slip op. at 16. Along similar lines, as
the Board has previously stated,
simplified procedures ‘‘enable the
affected shippers to avail themselves of
their statutory right to challenge rates
charged on captive rail traffic regardless
of the size of the complaint.’’ Non-Coal
Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. at 1057.4
In public comments, shippers and
other interested parties have repeatedly
stated that the Board’s current options
for challenging the reasonableness of
rates do not meet their need for
expeditious resolution at a reasonable
cost.5 Moreover, because a contract rate
4 See also, e.g., Calculation of Variable Costs in
Rate Complaint Proceedings Involving Non-Class I
R.Rs., 6 S.T.B. 798, 803 & n.19 (2003) (‘‘We have
had to sacrifice some accuracy for simplicity where
necessary to ensure that our rate complaint
processes are accessible to shippers. . . . Towards
that end, we have adopted simplified evidentiary
procedures for adjudicating rate reasonableness in
those cases where more sophisticated procedures
are too costly or burdensome, ‘to ensure that no
shipper is foreclosed from exercising its statutory
right to challenge the reasonableness of rates
charged on its captive traffic.’ ’’) (quoting Non-Coal
Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. at 1008); Market Dominance
Determinations—Prod. & Geographic Competition,
3 S.T.B. 937, 949 (1998) (excluding product and
geographic competition from consideration in
market dominance determinations so as to ‘‘remove
a substantial obstacle to the shippers’ ability to
exercise their statutory rights.’’).
5 See, e.g., Alliance for Rail Competition Opening
Comments 22, June 26, 2014, Rail Transp. of Grain,
Rate Regulation Review, EP 665 (Sub-No. 1) (stating
that the Three-Benchmark methodology is too
costly and complex for grain shippers and
producers in its current form); W. Coal Traffic
League Opening Comments 74–76, Oct. 23, 2012,
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may not be challenged before the Board,
49 U.S.C. 10709(c)(1), some
complainants 6 shift from contract rates
to tariff rates before bringing a rate case,
and tariff rates may be higher than prior
contract rates.7 That factor gives
complainants a strong interest in having
a rate case decided quickly, from start
to finish.
Accordingly, the Board has continued
to explore ideas to improve the
accessibility of rate relief. See, e.g.,
Expanding Access to Rate Relief, EP 665
(Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 11–23. Among
the comments submitted in Docket No.
EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), the Board received
a suggestion from USDA that the Board
consider procedural limitations to
streamline and expedite its rate
reasonableness review as an alternative
to substantive limitations. See USDA
Reply Comments 5–6, Dec. 19, 2016,
Expanding Access to Rate Relief, EP 665
(Sub-No. 2). USDA specifically
recommended a short procedural
timeline as a means to make rate
reasonableness review accessible for
smaller disputes. See id. To implement
this recommendation, USDA suggested
that the Board adopt a final offer
procedure whereby parties would
submit market dominance and rate
reasonableness evidence in a single
package offer. See id. at 6–7.
The Board uses a final offer procedure
as part of the Three-Benchmark
Rate Regulation Reforms, EP 715 (the cost and
complexity of the Simplified-SAC methodology
discourage its use); Oversight of the STB
Reauthorization Act of 2015 Before the Subcomm.
on R.Rs., Pipelines, & Hazardous Materials of the
H. Comm. on Transp. & Infrastructure, 115th Cong.
(2018) (letter from Chris Jahn, President, The
Fertilizer Institute, submitted for the record) (due to
the time and expense needed to pursue a rate case,
it ‘‘does not work’’ for most complainants).
6 Paying a transportation rate is not the only way
to establish standing to bring a rate case, and the
Board has previously provided guidance in a policy
statement for ‘‘complainants that allege indirect
harm in rate complaints.’’ See Rail Transp. of Grain,
Rate Regulation Review, EP 665 (Sub-No. 1) et al.,
slip op. at 7–8 (STB served Dec. 29, 2016).
7 As an example, the most recent rate proceeding
involved a complainant that had been served
pursuant to contracts for many years and then filed
its complaint as soon as its contract expired. See
Consumers Energy Co. Complaint 4–5, Jan. 13,
2015, Consumers Energy Co. v. CSX Transp., Inc.,
NOR 42142; see also, e.g., Occidental Chem. Corp.
Comments 2–4, Oct. 23, 2012, Rate Regulation
Reforms, EP 715 (paying the tariff rate for extended
periods of time while a rate case is litigated—which
can add millions of dollars in costs beyond the
direct costs of litigation—undermines the utility of
a rate challenge, especially if the carrier requires
that all rates bundled with the challenged rate also
shift to tariff during the pendency of the case); PPG
Indus., Inc. Comments 3–4, Oct. 23, 2012, Rate
Regulation Reforms, EP 715 (noting the effect of
bundling and stating that tariff premium could
reach $20 million per year of rate litigation). The
latter two cites are simply to illustrate the need for
expedited rate reasonableness procedures, and not
to take a position—one way or another—on the
appropriateness of rate bundling.
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methodology, although it is only one
part of the rate reasonableness approach
as opposed to providing the overall
framework, as the Board is proposing
here.8 One of the benchmarks compares
the markup paid by the challenged
traffic to the average markup assessed
on similar traffic. See, e.g., Rate
Regulation Reforms, EP 715, slip op. at
11. To improve the efficiency of this
part of the Three-Benchmark
methodology and ‘‘enable a prompt,
expedited resolution of the comparison
group selection,’’ the Board requires
each party to submit its final offer
comparison group simultaneously, and
the Board chooses one of those groups
without modification. See Simplified
Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op.
at 18.
The Board has held that it may not
require arbitration of rate disputes
under current law,9 and it is not
proposing to do so here; instead, the
Board would make the determination of
rate reasonableness as it does under the
Board’s current options for challenging
the reasonableness of rates. However,
the benefits of final offer procedures
used in other settings offer support and
background for the Board’s proposal.
For example, final offer procedures are
used in commercial settings, including
the resolution of wage disputes in Major
League Baseball, and final offer
arbitration is therefore sometimes
referred to as ‘‘baseball arbitration.’’ See,
e.g., Josh Chetwynd, Play Ball? An
Analysis of Final-Offer Arbitration, Its
Use in Major League Baseball, & Its
Potential Applicability to European
Football Wage & Transfer Disputes, 20
Marq. Sports L. Rev. 109 (2009) (noting
the final offer procedure ‘‘can lead to a
win-win situation as it spurs negotiated
settlement at a very high rate’’); see also
Michael Carrell & Richard Bales,
8 The Three-Benchmark methodology also
includes more procedural steps and a longer
timeline than the FORR procedure proposed here.
See 49 CFR 1111.10(a)(2).
9 See Arbitration—Various Matters, EP 586, slip
op. at 3 n.7 (STB served Sept. 20, 2001); see also
49 U.S.C. 10704(a)(1) (rate prescriptions require an
order from the Board); 49 U.S.C. 11704(c)(2)
(reparations require an order from the Board). The
Board has had a voluntary arbitration process in
place for more than 20 years, and section 13 of the
STB Reauthorization Act required adjustments to
this process (including the addition of rate disputes
to the types of matters eligible for arbitration), but
to date parties have not agreed to arbitrate a dispute
brought before the Board. See Arbitration of Certain
Disputes, 2 S.T.B. 564 (1997) (adopting voluntary
arbitration program); Revisions to Arbitration
Procedures, EP 730 (STB served Sept. 30, 2016)
(making adjustments required by STB
Reauthorization Act). In addition to its
recommendation for a final offer procedure that
would culminate in a decision by the Board, the
RRTF recommended legislation that would permit
mandatory arbitration of smaller rate cases. See
RRTF Report 14–15.
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Considering Final Offer Arbitration to
Resolve Public Sector Impasses in Times
of Concession Bargaining, 28 Ohio St. J.
on Disp. Resol. 1, 3, 16, 23–24 (2012)
(noting that fourteen states had codified
some form of final offer arbitration for
certain labor disputes involving public
sector employees and noting that the
procedure ‘‘encourages the parties to
negotiate toward middle ground rather
than staking out polar positions’’ and
‘‘encourages the parties to settle before
arbitration’’).
Similarly, the Association of
American Railroads’ Circular No. OT–
10, ‘‘Code of Car Service Rules/Code of
Car Hire Rules,’’ sets forth a final offer
procedure for car hire arbitration, which
is included in Rule 25 (the Arbitration
Rule). See Circular No. OT–10, Rule 25,
https://www.railinc.com/rportal/
documents/18/260773/OT-10.pdf. The
Board has described the Arbitration
Rule as an ‘‘integral part’’ of its
deregulation of car hire rates. See Joint
Pet. for Rulemaking on R.R. Car Hire
Comp., EP 334 (Sub-No. 8) et al., slip
op. at 1 (STB served Apr. 22, 1997). And
as noted by the Board’s predecessor
agency, the Interstate Commerce
Commission (ICC), the Arbitration Rule
‘‘provides for negotiation and, when
that is not successful, ‘baseball style’
arbitration, by which the arbitrator will
select between the best final offers of the
parties.’’ Joint Pet. for Rulemaking on
R.R. Car Hire Comp., 9 I.C.C.2d 80, 88
(1992).
Finally in this regard, the Committee
for a Study of Freight Rail
Transportation and Regulation of the
TRB (TRB Committee) 10 released a
report in 2015 that described the
benefits of adopting ‘‘an independent
arbitration process similar to the one
long used for resolving rate disputes in
Canada.’’ 11 In particular, the TRB
10 In 2005, legislation was enacted directing the
Secretary of Transportation to enter into an
agreement with TRB ‘‘to conduct a comprehensive
study of the Nation’s railroad transportation
system.’’ See Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient
Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy for Users,
Public Law 109–59, section 9007, 119 Stat. 1144,
1925 (2005). The study was funded in 2011, H.R.
Rep. No. 112–284, at 287 (2011), and the TRB
Committee was formed, see Nat’l Acads. of
Sciences, Eng’g, & Med., Modernizing Freight Rail
Regulation (TRB Committee Report) at 12–13
(2015), https://nap.edu/21759.
11 In a well-known process used by Canadian
regulators, final offer procedures are administered
by an outside arbitrator or panel of arbitrators. In
Canada, a complainant may submit its rate dispute
to the Canadian Transportation Agency, which
refers the matter to an arbitrator or a panel of
arbitrators. Canada Transp. Act, S.C. 1996, c. 10, as
amended, sections 161(1), 162(1) (Can.). The
Canadian statute establishes a two-tiered structure:
If the matter involves freight charges of more than
$2 million CAD (subject to an inflation adjustment),
a 60-day procedure applies, and if the matter
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Committee recommended ‘‘a final-offer
rule,’’ set on a ‘‘strict time limit,’’
whereby ‘‘each side offers its evidence,
arguments, and possibly a changed rate
or other remedy in a complete and
unmodifiable form after a brief hearing.’’
TRB Committee Report 211–12.
According to the TRB Committee
Report, adoption of such a procedure
could enhance complainants’ access to
rate reasonableness protections, while
expediting dispute resolution and
encouraging settlements. Id. at 212.
Proposed Rule. The RRTF stated that
there is substantial merit to USDA’s
general recommendation to improve
access using procedural limitations,
RRTF Report 16, and the Board agrees.
USDA points out that, in addition to
reducing the length and cost of
litigation, ‘‘[a] limited amount of time to
collect and present evidence forces
parties to focus their time on only the
clearest and most important evidence,’’
and ‘‘the decision of what evidence to
use or leave out is contextualized within
each case.’’ USDA Reply Comments 6,
Dec. 19, 2016, Expanding Access to Rate
Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2).
The Board also agrees with the RRTF
and USDA that a final offer approach
could be an effective way to implement
procedural limitations. As USDA notes,
Dr. Richard L. Schmalensee, chair of the
TRB Committee, recommended that the
Board seek process improvements based
on the final offer arbitration procedure
used in Canada. See Tr. 24–25, Public
Roundtable, Oct. 25, 2016 (emphasizing
the importance of time limits and
raising the idea that, among other
things, the Board retain final authority
over the outcome of a proceeding).12
The TRB Committee Report also
outlined several advantages of a final
offer approach—for example, ‘‘[t]he
imposition of time limits is intended to
bring economy to the process and to
ensure that shippers are not precluded
involves freight charges of $2 million CAD or less
(subject to an inflation adjustment), a 30-day
procedure applies. Id. sections 164.1, 165(2)(b).
Among other things, the 60-day procedure allows
the parties to direct interrogatories to one another,
and the arbitrator may request written filings
beyond the final offers and information initially
submitted in support of final offers. See id. sections
163(4), 164(1). In the 30-day procedure, there is no
discovery, and the arbitrator may request oral
presentations from the parties but may not request
written submissions beyond the final offers and
replies. See id. section 164.1. The arbitrator’s
decision is issued within 60 days after the matter
was submitted for arbitration, or 30 days if the
further expedited procedure applies. Id. section
165(2)(b). Any resulting rate prescription is limited
to two years, unless the parties agree to a different
period. See id. section 165(2)(c).
12 A transcript of this public roundtable is
available on the Board’s website at https://
www.stb.gov/stb/docs/eLibrary/InterVISTAS
%20Economic%20Roundtable%20Transcript.pdf.
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from access to rate relief as a
consequence of slow processing and
high litigation costs,’’ and ‘‘the time
limit in conjunction with the final-offer
rule injects uncertainty into the process,
which limits the likelihood that any one
party will take an extreme position and
encourages the settlement of disputes.’’
TRB Committee Report 138. And the
Board stated in Simplified Standards
that ‘‘[a] final offer procedure for
determining the comparison group is in
the public interest because it will
encourage both parties to submit a
reasonable comparison group. Any final
tender that is skewed too far in one
direction might well result in the
selection of a more reasonable final
tender presented by the opposing
party.’’ Simplified Standards, EP 646
(Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 18; see also U.S.
Magnesium, L.L.C. v. Union Pac. R.R.,
NOR 42114, slip op. at 9–12 (STB
served Jan. 28, 2010) (selecting one
party’s comparison group as ‘‘more
reasonable’’ while also recognizing that
both parties’ submissions were
imperfect).
By lowering the costs of litigating
smaller rate cases, the Board expects
that complainants with smaller rate
cases, who otherwise might have been
deterred from challenging a rate due to
the cost of bringing a case under the
Board’s existing rate reasonableness
methodologies, would have a more
accessible avenue for rate
reasonableness review by the Board.
The Board also expects that reduced
litigation costs would make it possible
for such complainants to prove
meritorious cases. And, a final offer
procedure may help to encourage
private settlements of disputes, an
outcome that was similarly suggested in
the TRB Committee Report.
Accordingly, the Board proposes to
establish a procedure similar to the one
described by the RRTF: A final offer
procedure to determine rate
reasonableness for smaller cases,
thereby providing faster, less costly
review of claims of unreasonable
railroad rates.
I. Initiating a Proceeding and Discovery
Before the process formally begins,
the complainant would be required to
file with the Board and serve the
defendant with a notice of intent to
initiate a case, at least five days in
advance of filing its complaint.13 The
13 The Board would appoint a Board employee to
serve as a case liaison within five business days
after the pre-filing notification. See Expediting Rate
Cases, EP 733, slip op. at 15 (STB served Nov. 30,
2017) (explaining the role of a Board-appointed
liaison in rate cases). The liaison would be
appointed sooner than in cases under Three-
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proceeding would formally begin with
the filing of a complaint. At the time it
files its complaint, the complainant
would also be required to submit the
information listed in 49 CFR
1111.2(a)(1)–(11) 14 and provide to the
defendant the materials described in
§ 1111.2(b).15 The Board would not
require the defendant to file an answer
to the complaint 16 in cases under
FORR, in light of the expedited timeline
included in this procedure.
The filing of the complaint would also
mark the beginning of discovery. No
litigation over discovery disputes would
be permitted. Instead, if a party
unreasonably withholds information
that the Board subsequently deems to be
relevant, the Board would take that
withholding into account in making its
final decision.17 If a party believes that
relevant information was unreasonably
withheld during discovery, it could so
argue in the explanation accompanying
its final offer, as described further
below.
Parties should not expect to receive
(or produce) the volume or even
necessarily the types of discovery that
parties have received in SAC cases,
because the proposed time limits do not
provide for it. Parties would instead
submit narrowly tailored, targeted
discovery requests based on the
information that the other side could
reasonably be expected to provide in a
short period of time, focusing on the key
information needed to prove or defend
a rate case. Parties would be expected to
interpret such discovery requests
liberally to require the production of
readily available information (relative to
the discovery deadline) that they should
reasonably know to be material and
responsive to the request. If a party
Benchmark, Simplified-SAC, or SAC, consistent
with the expedited nature of the proposed FORR
procedure.
14 If the defendant disagrees with the calculation
of variable costs based on the complainant’s inputs
to the Uniform Railroad Costing System (URCS)
Phase III program (see 49 CFR 1111.2(a)(1)–(9)), it
could address this issue in its market dominance
presentation. As is the case with market dominance
determinations generally, movement-specific
adjustments to URCS would not be permitted. See,
e.g., Major Issues in Rail Rate Cases, EP 657 (SubNo. 1), slip op. at 50–52 (STB served Oct. 30, 2006),
aff’d sub nom. BNSF Ry. v. STB, 526 F.3d 770 (D.C.
Cir. 2008).
15 Section 1111.2(b) requires the complainant to
‘‘provide to the defendant all documents relied
upon in formulating its assessment of a feasible
transportation alternative and all documents relied
upon to determine the inputs to the URCS Phase
III program.’’
16 The defendant would have an opportunity to
file a reply to the complainant’s market dominance
presentation and final offer, as addressed below.
17 A similar approach is used in the Canadian
final offer procedure, discussed above. See Canada
Transp. Act, S.C. 1996, c. 10, as amended, section
163(5) (Can.).
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limits its requests as described above,
and the other side still does not comply,
as noted above, the requesting party
could argue in the explanation
accompanying its final offer that
relevant information was unreasonably
withheld. The Board would take that
unreasonable withholding of relevant
information into account in choosing
between the offers—for example, by
giving less weight to an argument that
could be undercut by the information
that was withheld or by making other
adverse inferences. Over time, the Board
anticipates that its decisions in FORR
cases would establish categories of
easily producible, core information that
each side could be expected to request
and produce within the truncated
discovery period.
Although this procedure would not
necessarily require the use of data from
the Board’s Waybill Sample, parties
would be able to seek access to waybill
data pursuant to the Board’s regulations
at 49 CFR 1244.9.18 Up to four years of
Waybill Sample data would be
available—specifically, the most recent
four years that can be provided as of the
date of the complaint. See Waybill Data
Released in Three-Benchmark Rail Rate
Proceedings, EP 646 (Sub-No. 3), slip
op. at 4–9 (STB served Mar. 12, 2012).
A complainant would be required to
submit its waybill data request pursuant
to 49 CFR 1244.9(b)(4), if it chooses to
make such a request, on the same day
it files its notice of intent to initiate a
case. See Simplified Standards, EP 646
(Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 78–80
(describing procedures for the release of
Waybill Sample data to rate case
litigants). A defendant would be
required to submit its waybill data
request pursuant to 49 CFR 1244.9(b)(4),
if it chooses to make such a request, no
later than one day after it is served with
the complaint. The defendant would
have the option of submitting its request
at any time after complainant’s filing of
the notice of intent to initiate a case,
until the deadline stated above—an
option which, in effect, provides at least
six days for a defendant to make a
request. Based on these deadlines, the
Board would process requests and
provide the data no later than five
business days after it receives the
request for waybill data.
II. Market Dominance Inquiry
In order to adjudicate the
reasonableness of a rate, the Board must
first find that the defendant rail carrier
has market dominance over the
18 The Board also intends to propose certain
changes to its regulations relating to the Waybill
Sample. See RRTF Report 47–49.
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48875
transportation to which the rate applies.
49 U.S.C. 10707(c). Market dominance
includes both a quantitative threshold
and a qualitative analysis. Total
Petrochems. & Ref. USA, Inc. v. CSX
Transp., Inc., NOR 42121, slip op. at 3
(STB served May 31, 2013). Under the
proposed FORR procedure, market
dominance would be evaluated
separately from the parties’ offers, as is
the case with other rate reasonableness
procedures. The Board proposes that the
FORR procedure may only be used if the
complainant also elects to use the
streamlined market dominance
approach proposed in Docket No. EP
756, Market Dominance Streamlined
Approach, served concurrently with
this decision. In that decision, the Board
is proposing a streamlined market
dominance approach for those cases in
which a complainant can establish a
prima facie case of market dominance
by demonstrating six specified factors.
See Market Dominance Streamlined
Approach, EP 756, slip op. at 6–7 (STB
served Sept. 12, 2019). Although the
RRTF suggested that a streamlined
market dominance approach may not be
necessary for a final offer procedure
given the time constraints that would
accompany such a procedure, RRTF
Report 17, the Board finds that the
streamlined market dominance
approach proposed in Docket No. EP
756 would complement and enhance
the streamlined rate reasonableness
procedure proposed here. Moreover, the
expedited timelines proposed here may
make it too difficult for parties to litigate
a non-streamlined market dominance
presentation.19 Nevertheless, because
there may be merit to giving
complainants the option of choosing
between streamlined and nonstreamlined market dominance in FORR
cases, parties may address this issue in
their comments.
In a FORR case, the complainant
would submit its showing as to the
relevant factors identified in the Board’s
proposal in Docket No. EP 756 in its
19 As discussed in Market Dominance
Streamlined Approach, the market dominance
inquiry is often a costly and time-consuming
undertaking, resulting in a significant burden on
rate case litigants. For example, given the
hypothetical nature of some competitive options
proposed by defendant railroads in past cases,
complainants essentially have to predict what a
defendant railroad might argue regarding potential,
but unused, competitive options—all without
knowing precisely what constitutes a prima facie
showing of an absence of effective competition.
Parties’ market dominance presentations in recent
cases (throughout their filings) have been hundreds
of pages long. See, e.g., Consumers Energy Co. v.
CSX Transp., Inc., Docket No. NOR 42142 (parties’
market dominance presentations alone (throughout
their filings) exceeded 200 pages of narrative
discussion and included multiple expert reports).
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market dominance presentation. The
defendant carrier, in its reply, could try
to refute any of the prima facie factors
or otherwise demonstrate that effective
competition exists for the traffic at
issue. At the complainant’s option,
further discussion of market dominance
could take place during a telephonic
hearing before an administrative law
judge (ALJ), as described below. In the
event that the complainant opts for such
a hearing, both sides would be
permitted to present their market
dominance positions at the hearing.
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III. Review Criteria for Final Offers
Following discovery, parties would
simultaneously submit their market
dominance presentations and final
offers, and each party would also submit
an analysis addressing the
reasonableness of the challenged rate
and support for the rate in the party’s
offer.20 Each party’s final offer should
reflect what it considers to be the
maximum reasonable rate. See 49 U.S.C.
10704(a)(1). The party submitting the
offer could choose how to present and
support its offer, including the
methodology it uses. The Board’s
criteria for determining rate
reasonableness of and choosing between
the offers 21 would be based on its
consideration of the rail transportation
policy in 49 U.S.C. 10101, the LongCannon factors in 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(2),
and appropriate economic principles.
Among other aspects of the rail
transportation policy, the Board would
take into account the policy ‘‘to allow,
to the maximum extent possible,
competition and the demand for
services to establish reasonable rates for
transportation by rail,’’ the policy ‘‘to
maintain reasonable rates where there is
an absence of effective competition and
where rail rates provide revenues which
exceed the amount necessary to
maintain the rail system and to attract
capital,’’ and the policy ‘‘to promote a
safe and efficient rail transportation
system by allowing rail carriers to earn
20 Given the expedited timelines provided, the
Board is not proposing to impose page limits at this
time, beyond the 50-page limit proposed for replies
in a streamlined market dominance presentation.
See Market Dominance Streamlined Approach, EP
756, slip op. at 12. Consistent with the findings of
the TRB Committee Report, the Board believes the
expedited timelines would serve to control
unnecessary submissions. Should the Board adopt
this proposal, and if expedited timelines prove
insufficient to control the scope of the issues
presented, the Board may consider page limits
either by rule or in individual proceedings at a later
time.
21 The Board ‘‘may not set the maximum
reasonable rate below the level at which the carrier
would recover 180% of its variable costs of
providing the service.’’ Major Issues in Rail Rate
Cases, EP 657 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 6.
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adequate revenues, as determined by the
Board.’’ 49 U.S.C. 10101(1), (3), (6).
Furthermore, pursuant to the LongCannon factors, the Board would give
due consideration to (i) the carrier’s
efforts to minimize traffic transported at
revenues that do not contribute to going
concern value, (ii) the carrier’s efforts to
maximize revenues from traffic that
contributes only marginally to fixed
costs, and (iii) whether one commodity
is paying an unreasonable share of the
carrier’s overall revenues, all the while
recognizing the policy that rail carriers
earn adequate revenues. 49 U.S.C.
10701(d)(2).22
Finally, the Board would consider
appropriate economic principles, and
this general criterion would allow the
Board to apply, among other things, the
agency’s expertise and general
principles developed in its rate case
precedent over decades. See, e.g., R.R.
Revitalization & Regulatory Reform Act
of 1976, Public Law 94–210, 90 Stat. 31
(directing the ICC to ‘‘give due
consideration to appropriate economic
principles’’ in adopting new accounting
system requirements relevant to its
authorities); see also Non-Coal
Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. at 1007 (‘‘Our
challenge is to reflect these economic
and equitable principles, as best we can,
in a practical, readily administrable
test.’’). As with the Board’s other rate
reasonableness procedures, the agency
would consider the defendant railroad’s
need for differential pricing to permit it
to collect adequate revenues. See
Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No.
1), slip op. at 73.
If a party adopts a position that is
contrary to these guiding criteria, it risks
the likelihood that the Board would
choose the other party’s offer. In
addition to the previously noted
benefits of a final offer procedure with
expedited time limits, most notably its
bringing economy to rate cases and
encouraging the parties to take
reasonable positions, the Board expects
that the criteria here—the rail
transportation policy, the Long-Cannon
factors, and appropriate economic
principles—allow for the parties to
submit final offers using their preferred
methodologies, including revised
versions of the Board’s existing rate
review methodologies or new
methodologies altogether. These
principle-based, non-prescriptive
22 See also, e.g., Simplified Standards for Rail
Rate Cases, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 22 (STB
served July 28, 2006) (discussing the first LongCannon factor); Major Issues in Rail Rate Cases, EP
657 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 18 (STB served Oct. 30,
2006) (discussing the second Long-Cannon factor);
Non-Coal Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. at 1038 (discussing
the third Long-Cannon factor).
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criteria are intended to allow for
innovation with respect to rate review
methodologies, and the use and creation
of precedent through an adversarial
process simultaneously creates
incentives for methodological
improvements over time (while overall
complexity is constrained by procedural
limitations and reasonableness is
encouraged by a final offer selection
structure).23
IV. Final Offers, Market Dominance
Presentations, Replies, and ALJ Hearing
With its final offer, each party would
be required to submit an analysis
addressing the reasonableness of the
challenged rate and support for the rate
in the party’s offer,24 including an
explanation of the methodology it used
and how it complies with the criteria
discussed above, as well as any
necessary supporting workpapers.25 Ten
days after submitting market dominance
presentations, rate reasonableness
analyses, and final offers, the parties
would simultaneously submit replies to
each other’s presentations. On reply,
parties would not be permitted to alter
their market dominance presentations,
rate reasonableness analyses, or final
offers but would have an opportunity to
argue against the other side’s
submission.
One week after the submission of
replies, at the complainant’s option, the
parties would participate in a telephone
hearing before an ALJ. The purpose of
this hearing would be to complete the
record regarding market dominance, and
the transcript of this hearing would be
part of the administrative record
submitted to the Board for decision. The
complainant, if it chooses, may limit its
written market dominance presentations
to the six factors required for the prima
facie showing—in that instance, at the
23 The Board also recognizes the expedited
timelines of the proposed FORR procedure and
accounts for that characteristic by setting a cap on
relief, as described in Section VII of this decision.
24 Since the parties’ final offers should reflect
what they each consider to be the maximum
reasonable rate, a party’s analysis regarding the
reasonableness of the challenged rate would likely
overlap with its support for its final offer.
25 If spreadsheets are submitted, links between
spreadsheets should be used to the maximum
extent possible. If links are not practicable, hardcoded numbers may be used, but parties should
include references to the relevant source document
or method of calculation. See, e.g., Gen. Procedures
for Presenting Evidence in Stand-Alone Cost Rate
Cases, EP 347 (Sub-No. 3) (STB served Mar. 12,
2001); see also Consumers Energy Co. v. CSX
Transp, Inc., NOR 42142 (STB served July 15, 2015)
(adopting requirements for submission of evidence
in that case). Under the proposed rule, if a party
fails to submit documentation in a form the Board
can use (for example, due to unlinked
spreadsheets), that failure could contribute to
rejection of that party’s offer.
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ALJ hearing, the complainant could
address any additional market
dominance arguments made by the
defendant. As noted above, if the
complainant opts for a hearing, both
sides would be permitted to present
their market dominance positions at the
hearing. Within four days of the
evidentiary hearing, a transcript of the
hearing would be entered into the
docket.
The Board would issue a decision no
later than 90 days after the deadline for
the parties’ replies. Petitions for
reconsideration would be due five days
after service of the Board’s decision;
replies to petitions for reconsideration
would be due 10 days after service of
the Board’s decision; and the Board
would issue its decision on
reconsideration expeditiously after
replies are filed.
V. Selection of an Offer
VI. Proposed Timeline
Pursuant to the Administrative
Procedure Act, ‘‘the proponent of a rule
or order has the burden of proof.’’ 5
U.S.C. 556(d). In a rate complaint
proceeding, the complainant is the
proponent of an order and therefore
bears the burden. Accordingly, the
complainant must demonstrate that (i)
the defendant carrier has market
dominance over the transportation to
which the rate applies; and (ii) the
challenged rate is unreasonable. See 49
U.S.C. 10701(d)(1), 10704(a)(1),
11704(b).
If the Board finds that the
complainant’s market dominance
presentation and rate reasonableness
analysis demonstrate that the defendant
carrier has market dominance over the
transportation to which the rate applies
and that the challenged rate is
unreasonable, the Board would then
choose between the parties’ final offers.
In making the rate reasonableness
finding and choosing between the offers,
the Board would take into account the
criteria described above.26 As in the
final offer procedure used as part of the
Three-Benchmark methodology, this
would be an ‘‘either/or’’ selection, with
no modifications by the Board. See
Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No.
1), slip op. at 18.27 This approach would
work as intended only if the parties
know that the agency would not attempt
to find a compromise position. Id. The
incentives created by a final offer
selection procedure could not be
preserved if the Board retained the
discretion to formulate its own ‘‘offer.’’
Id.28
The following is the proposed
timeline for this procedure.
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26 The
standard applying to market dominance
determinations would be as described in Market
Dominance Streamlined Approach, Docket No. EP
756, cited above.
27 Although the RRTF envisioned the possibility
of a scenario where the offers have equal merit,
RRTF Report 19, in fact, it is a defining
characteristic of a final offer procedure that the
decision-maker must choose between the offers. See
Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op.
at 18; see also, e.g., Carrell & Bales, supra
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION (‘‘the arbitrator must
choose the more reasonable of the parties’ final
proposals’’) (emphasis added).
28 See also Chetwynd, supra SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION (decision-makers’ tendency to ‘‘split
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Day 5 .........
Day
Day
Day
Day
0 .........
0 .........
21 .......
35 .......
Day 45 .......
Day 52 .......
Day 135 .....
Complainant files and serves notice of
intent to initiate case.
Complainant files complaint.
Discovery begins.
Discovery ends.
Simultaneous filing of market dominance presentations, rate reasonableness analyses, and final offers.
Simultaneous filing of replies.
Optional telephone hearing before administrative law judge (market dominance).
Board decision.
This proposed timeline attempts to
balance the need for due process—for
example, allowing parties to reply to
each other’s submissions—and the
Board’s underlying goal of constraining
the cost and complexity of rate litigation
by limiting the time available. The
Board specifically seeks comment on
whether the proposed timeline strikes
the appropriate balance.
To preserve the effects of the
procedural limitations described above,
requests for extensions of time would be
strongly disfavored, even if both parties
consented to the request. Therefore,
parties would be encouraged not to
spend the scarce time available under
this procedure on preparing extension
requests. Joint requests to allow time to
negotiate a settlement, including joint
requests for mediation, would be an
exception and would be considered by
the Board. A party would be permitted
to accept the other party’s final offer at
any time.
Mediation is mandatory as part of the
Board’s existing rate reasonableness
procedures. See 49 CFR 1109.4(a),
1111.10(a)(1), 1111.10(a)(2). The Board
does not propose to require mediation
as part of FORR because it would add
time and possibly expense, but the
Board would be prepared to facilitate
mediation if requested by the parties.
See 49 CFR 1109.2 (parties may request
Board-sponsored mediation).
the difference’’ creates incentives for parties to take
extreme positions).
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48877
VII. Relief
If the Board finds that the defendant
carrier has market dominance, finds the
challenged rate unreasonable, and
chooses the complainant’s offer (or the
defendant’s offer, if it is below the
challenged rate), it could award relief
based on the difference between the
challenged rate and the rate in that offer.
The proposed procedure would be
subject to a two-year limit on rate
prescriptions unless the parties agree to
a different limit on relief. Such a limit
would be one-fifth of the 10-year limit
applied in SAC cases and less than half
of the five-year limit applied in
Simplified-SAC and Three-Benchmark
cases (see Expanding Access to Rate
Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 6),
thereby accounting for the expedited
deadlines of the FORR procedure. The
Board could also award relief in the
form of reparations. See 49 U.S.C.
11704(b).29
For certain of its other options for
challenging the reasonableness of rates,
the Board has also previously imposed
monetary caps on relief. See Simplified
Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op.
at 27–28. Such caps apply to an award
of reparations, a rate prescription, or a
combination of the two. Thus, any rate
prescription automatically terminates
once the complainant has exhausted the
relief available, and the actual length of
the prescription may be less than the
period set by the Board if the relief is
used up in a shorter time. Under such
circumstances, the complainant would
be barred from bringing another
complaint against the same rate for the
remainder of the prescription period set
by the Board. Id.; see also Rate
Regulation Reforms, EP 715, slip op. at
11–12 (STB served July 18, 2013).30
The Board established its prior caps
based on the cost of litigating a case
using the next more complicated and
precise procedure: A cap on the
Simplified-SAC methodology (later
removed) was based on the cost to bring
a SAC case, and a lower cap for the
Three-Benchmark methodology was
29 The standard reparations period reaches back
to two years prior to the date of the complaint.
RRTF Report 30; see also 49 U.S.C. 11705(c)
(requiring that complaint to recover damages under
49 U.S.C. 11704(b) be filed with the Board within
two years after the claim accrues).
30 After the relief is exhausted, the carrier may
raise the rate, and that new rate may be challenged.
However, after the relief is exhausted, if the carrier
keeps the rate at the challenged level—with
appropriate adjustments for inflation using the rail
cost adjustment factor, adjusted for inflation and
productivity (RCAF–A)—the rate may not be
challenged under any of the Board’s rate
reasonableness options until the two-year
maximum prescription period has expired. See
Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op.
at 28.
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based on the cost to bring a SimplifiedSAC case. See Simplified Standards, EP
646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 28. In setting
these limits, the Board attempted to
strike a balance between providing
simplified methods that permit
complainants to seek protection from
unreasonable rates, while encouraging
use of the most precise approach
feasible for the amount in dispute. Id. at
35; see also id. at 52 (explaining that
this approach represents ‘‘sound
regulatory policy’’ by balancing the
impracticability of using a more
complicated procedure given its cost
against the impropriety of judging large
disputes under what might be
considered a less accurate
methodology). In addition, adoption of
the caps gave effect to Congress’s
directive that the Board weigh the
litigation cost of a SAC presentation
against the value of the case when
establishing a simplified and expedited
method for rate reasonableness
challenges. Id. at 34; see also id. at 52
(explaining that the best ‘‘method’’ is
the ‘‘creation of separate processes for
rail rate disputes of varying size’’).
In keeping with 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(3),
as well as the Board’s previously stated
interest in channeling higher-value
cases into appropriate procedures, there
is merit in setting a cap for FORR by
considering it within the framework of
pre-existing rate reasonableness
methodologies. Nevertheless, as
described above, because FORR does
not prescribe a particular
methodology—nor a methodology
necessarily less precise than any preexisting procedure—the Board’s prior
rationale for capping relief based on the
cost of the next more complicated
procedure does not necessarily or neatly
apply here.
Accordingly, the Board proposes to
establish a relief cap of $4 million, as
indexed annually using the Producer
Price Index, which is consistent with
the potential relief afforded under the
Three-Benchmark methodology.31
Applying a relief cap based on the
estimated cost to bring a SimplifiedSAC case would further the Board’s
intention that Three-Benchmark and
FORR be used in the smallest cases, and
applying the same $4 million relief cap,
as indexed, would provide consistency
in terms of defining that category of
case.
Although the proposed FORR
procedure is designed to apply to
smaller cases (i.e., proceedings for
31 The relief cap would incorporate indexing that
has previously been applied to the ThreeBenchmark cap, so that the cap for FORR is the
same as the cap for Three-Benchmark.
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which the value of the case is subject to
a certain relief cap), parties may wish to
generally address whether the Board
should establish different levels of relief
and provide supporting rationale for
such alternatives. As discussed above,
final offer arbitration in Canada
provides for two different procedural
tracks. If the matter involves freight
charges of $2 million CAD or less
(subject to an inflation adjustment), an
expedited ‘‘summary’’ procedure
applies, and if the matter involves
freight charges of greater than that
amount, a longer procedure applies. See
Canada Transp. Act, S.C. 1996, c. 10, as
amended, section 164.1 (Can.). The
Board might consider an approach that,
for example, would permit a
complainant submitting a FORR
complaint to use the procedure
described above if it seeks relief equal
to or less than the $4 million cap
proposed by the Board here. But, if the
complainant were to seek relief above
this amount (which, under the
procedure described here, would be
subject only to the two-year limit on rate
prescriptions), a somewhat longer
procedural schedule could apply. The
Board invites comment on the
advisability of such a two-tiered relief
procedure in which the top tier contains
no limit on the size of the relief, in total,
including both reparations and the twoyear prescription period.
Another alternative that parties may
wish to address in comments is a relief
cap based on record development time
and value of the case. For example, this
alternative could consider the potential
relief available in a SAC case, reduced
proportionally by the difference in
record development time between a case
brought under the proposed FORR
procedure and one brought under SAC.
The resultant proportionally reduced
amount could be the relief cap
applicable to cases under the FORR
procedure.
VIII. Other FORR Issues
The Board proposes that the FORR
procedure would not be available to
challenge purely local movements of a
Class II or Class III rail carrier.32 Rate
cases filed to date indicate that
32 Class III carriers have annual operating
revenues of $20 million or less in 1991 dollars, or
$39,194,876 or less when adjusted for inflation
using 2018 data. Class II rail carriers have annual
operating revenues of less than $250 million but in
excess of $20 million in 1991 dollars, or
$489,935,956 and $39,194,876 respectively, when
adjusted for inflation using 2018 data. The Board
calculates the revenue deflator factor annually and
publishes the railroad revenue thresholds in
decisions and on its website. 49 CFR 1201.1–1;
Indexing the Annual Operating Revenues of R.Rs.,
EP 748 (STB served June 14, 2019).
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complainants’ rate concerns relate
primarily to Class I carriers. As such,
the Board sees no reason to apply these
new rules to purely local movements of
smaller carriers. See, e.g., Am. Short
Line & Reg’l R.R. Ass’n Comment 4–5,
Feb. 26, 2007, Simplified Standards for
Rail Rate Cases, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1)
(describing the impacts new rate
reasonableness procedures would have
on small railroads in particular).
However, the FORR procedure would be
available in challenges where the
movement involves the participation of
a Class I railroad as well as a Class II
or Class III railroad. See Simplified
Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op.
at 101–02 (stating that excluding
combined movements would shut out a
significant portion of domestic rail
traffic and could create perverse routing
incentives). Parties may further address
in their comments the applicability of
this proposed rule to purely local
movements of a Class II or Class III rail
carrier.
Parties may also file comments as to
whether and how the Board might
provide assistance to parties—
particularly smaller entities—regarding
how best to utilize the proposed FORR
procedure.
The Board acknowledges that the
FORR procedure, by requiring that the
Board select one of the parties’ final
offers without modification, constrains
its flexibility in setting a maximum
lawful rate. See generally 49 U.S.C.
10704(a) (authorizing the Board to
‘‘prescribe’’ a maximum rate should it
find the rate charged by the carrier to be
unreasonable). Also, by prohibiting
litigation over discovery disputes, the
FORR procedure would constrain the
Board’s ability to separately resolve one
type of ancillary issue—although, as
noted above, these issues may be raised
in the explanations accompanying
parties’ final offers. The Board,
however, concludes that these
constraints would be justified by the
cost and time savings it expects would
be achieved through the use of the
proposed procedure to challenge rate
reasonableness for smaller cases, which
in turn would assist the Board in
maintaining reasonable rates. The
existing options to challenge the
reasonableness of rates (especially SAC),
which allow the Board to craft
individual responses to numerous
issues (hundreds of issues, in some
instances), are time-consuming and
costly.
Finally, the Board seeks additional
comments on Docket No. EP 665 (SubNo. 2), including whether to close that
docket. There, the Board provided
notice that it was considering a new
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methodology that would utilize a
comparison group approach to
determine the reasonableness of the
challenged traffic’s rate, like the
approach utilized by the ThreeBenchmark methodology but more
streamlined. Expanding Access to Rate
Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 12,
15, 23. As the RRTF explained,
however, the Board received a number
of negative comments regarding Docket
No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), including
arguments that the methodology
discussed in that docket could increase
the time and cost of litigation compared
to bringing a Three-Benchmark case.
See, e.g., Am. Chemistry Council
Opening Comments 7–9, Nov. 14, 2016,
Expanding Access to Rate Relief, EP 665
(Sub-No. 2).
Within the due dates for comments
set forth below, parties may also update
their comments or submit new
comments on Docket No. EP 665 (SubNo. 2). If parties choose to submit
comments that pertain both to Docket
No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2) and to the
proposal made in Docket No. EP 755,
they should submit those comments in
both dockets. Moreover, the Board is
aware that stakeholders have worked to
create additional rate reasonableness
methodologies. See, e.g., Nat’l Grain &
Feed Ass’n Opening Comments 27–35,
June 26, 2014, Rail Transp. of Grain,
Rate Regulation Review, EP 665 (SubNo. 1); Notice of Director’s Decision, WB
17–44 (STB served Apr. 17, 2018)
(granting access to Waybill Sample data
for the ‘‘development, evaluation, and
proposal’’ of new rate reasonableness
alternatives).
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601–612, generally
requires a description and analysis of
new rules that would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. In drafting a
rule, an agency is required to: (1) Assess
the effect that its regulation will have on
small entities, (2) analyze effective
alternatives that may minimize a
regulation’s impact, and (3) make the
analysis available for public comment.
Sections 601–604. In its notice of
proposed rulemaking, the agency must
either include an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis, section 603(a), or
certify that the proposed rule would not
have a ‘‘significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities,’’
section 605(b). Because the goal of the
RFA is to reduce the cost to small
entities of complying with federal
regulations, the RFA requires an agency
to perform a regulatory flexibility
analysis of small entity impacts only
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when a rule directly regulates those
entities. In other words, the impact must
be a direct impact on small entities
‘‘whose conduct is circumscribed or
mandated’’ by the proposed rule. White
Eagle Coop. v. Conner, 553 F.3d 467,
480 (7th Cir. 2009).
This proposal would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
within the meaning of the RFA.33 The
proposal imposes no additional recordkeeping by small railroads or any
reporting of additional information. Nor
does this proposed rule circumscribe or
mandate any conduct by small railroads
that is not already required by statute:
The establishment of reasonable
transportation rates when a carrier is
found to be market dominant. Although
the Board predicts that the
establishment of the FORR procedure
would result in the filing of several
additional complaints per year, small
railroads have always been subject to
rate reasonableness complaints and
their associated litigation costs, the
latter of which the Board expects would
be reduced through the use of this
proposed procedure. The new
procedure proposed here would exclude
purely local movements of Class III
carriers, affecting only movements that
also involve the participation of a Class
I railroad. Finally, as the Board has
previously concluded, the majority of
railroads involved in these rate
proceedings are not small entities
within the meaning of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act. Simplified Standards,
EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 33–34.
Since the inception of the Board in
1996, only three of the 51 cases filed
challenging the reasonableness of freight
rail rates have involved a Class III rail
carrier as a defendant. Those three cases
involved a total of 13 Class III rail
carriers. The Board estimates that there
are approximately 656 Class III rail
carriers. Therefore, the Board certifies
under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that this proposed
rule, if promulgated, would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities as
defined by the RFA.
This decision will be served upon the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Office of
Advocacy, U.S. Small Business
Administration, Washington, DC 20416.
33 For the purpose of RFA analysis for rail carriers
subject to Board jurisdiction, the Board defines a
‘‘small business’’ as only including those rail
carriers classified as Class III rail carriers under 49
CFR 1201.1–1. See Small Entity Size Standards
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, EP 719 (STB
served June 30, 2016) (with Board Member
Begeman dissenting).
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Paperwork Reduction Act
Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA), 44 U.S.C. 3501–3521, Office
of Management and Budget (OMB)
regulations at 5 CFR 1320.8(d)(3), and in
the Appendix, the Board seeks
comments about the revisions in the
proposed rule to the currently approved
collection of Complaints (OMB Control
No. 2140–0029) regarding: (1) Whether
the collection of information, as
modified in the proposed rule and
further described below, is necessary for
the proper performance of the functions
of the Board, including whether the
collection has practical utility; (2) the
accuracy of the Board’s burden
estimates; (3) ways to enhance the
quality, utility, and clarity of the
information collected; and (4) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents,
including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology, when
appropriate.
The Board believes that the proposed
procedure would provide a less
burdensome alternative to other rate
review options and estimates that it
would, on balance, result in four
additional complaints filed each year.
Filing a complaint, generally, has been
estimated to require an annual hour
burden of 469 hours and an annual
‘‘non-hour burden’’ cost of $1,462. See
Supporting Statement for Modification
& OMB Approval Under the Paperwork
Reduction Act & 5 CFR 1320, OMB
Control No. 2140–0029 (Jan. 2018),
available at https://www.reginfo.gov/
public/do/DownloadDocument?
objectID=78860402. For the reasons
discussed above, filing a FORR
complaint is likely to require less time
and expenditure than other complaints.
Accordingly, the Board estimates that
this proposed procedure would entail
an annual hour burden of 250 hours per
complaint and an annual ‘‘non-hour
burden’’ cost of $780 per complaint.
Accounting for the projected four
additional complaints per year, this
proposal would result in an additional
total annual hour burden of 1,000 hours
and $3,120 of total annual ‘‘non-hour
burden’’ cost under the PRA. The Board
welcomes comment on the estimates of
actual time and costs of the proposed
alternative complaint, as detailed below
in the Appendix. Other information
pertinent to the proposed alternative
complaint is also included in the
Appendix. The proposed rule will be
submitted to OMB for review as
required under 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5
CFR 1320.11. Comments received by the
Board regarding the information
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collection will also be forwarded to
OMB for its review when the final rule
is published.
It is ordered:
1. The Board proposes to amend its
rules as set forth in this decision. Notice
of the proposed rule will be published
in the Federal Register.
2. Comments are due by November
12, 2019. Reply comments are due by
January 10, 2020.
3. A copy of this decision will be
served upon the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S.
Small Business Administration.
4. This decision is effective on its
service date.
List of Subjects
49 CFR Part 1002
Administrative practice and
procedure, Common Carriers, Freedom
of information.
49 CFR Part 1111
Administrative practice and
procedure, Investigations.
PART 1002—FEES
1. The authority citation for part 1002
continues to read as follows:
■
49 CFR Part 1114
Administrative practice and
procedure.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(A), (a)(6)(B),
and 553; 31 U.S.C. 9701; and 49 U.S.C. 1321.
Section 1002.1(f)(11) is also issued under 5
U.S.C. 5514 and 31 U.S.C. 3717.
49 CFR Part 1115
Administrative practice and
procedure.
2. Amend § 1002.2 by revising
paragraph (f)(56) to read as follows:
■
Decided: September 11, 2019.
By the Board, Board Members Begeman,
Fuchs, and Oberman.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
§ 1002.2
*
Filing fees.
*
*
(f) * * *
*
*
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Surface Transportation
Board proposes to amend parts 1002,
1111, 1114, and 1115 of title 49, chapter
X, of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
Type of proceeding
Fee
*
*
*
*
*
*
PART V: Formal Proceedings:
(56) A formal complaint alleging unlawful rates or practices of carriers:
(i) A formal complaint filed under the coal rate guidelines (Stand-Alone Cost Methodology) alleging unlawful rates and/
or practices of rail carriers under 49 U.S.C. 10704(c)(1) ..................................................................................................
(ii) A formal complaint involving rail maximum rates filed under the Simplified-SAC methodology .....................................
(iii) A formal complaint involving rail maximum rates filed under the Three Benchmark methodology ...............................
(iv) A formal complaint involving rail maximum rates filed under the Final Offer Rate Review procedure .........................
(v) All other formal complaints (except competitive access complaints) ..............................................................................
(vi) Competitive access complaints .......................................................................................................................................
(vii) A request for an order compelling a rail carrier to establish a common carrier rate ....................................................
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1111—COMPLAINT AND
INVESTIGATION PROCEDURES
3. The authority citation for part 1111
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 10701, 10704, 11701,
and 1321.
4. Amend § 1111.3 by revising
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
■
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*
*
*
*
(c) Simplified Standards. A complaint
filed under Simplified-SAC or ThreeBenchmark may be amended once
before the filing of opening evidence to
opt for a different rate reasonableness
methodology, among Three-Benchmark,
Simplified-SAC, or stand-alone cost. If
so amended, the procedural schedule
begins again under the new
methodology as set forth at §§ 1111.9
and 1111.10. However, only one
mediation period per complaint shall be
required. A complaint filed under Final
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*
Offer Rate Review may not be amended
to opt for Three-Benchmark, SimplifiedSAC, or stand-alone cost, and a
complaint filed under ThreeBenchmark, Simplified-SAC, or standalone cost may not be amended to opt
for Final Offer Rate Review.
■ 5. Amend § 1111.5 by revising
paragraphs (a), (b), (c), and (e) to read as
follows:
§ 1111.5
§ 1111.3 Amended and supplemental
complaints.
*
*
Answers and cross complaints.
(a) Generally. Other than in cases
under Final Offer Rate Review, which
does not require the filing of an answer,
an answer shall be filed within the time
provided in paragraph (c) of this
section. An answer should be
responsive to the complaint and should
fully advise the Board and the parties of
the nature of the defense. In answering
a complaint challenging the
reasonableness of a rail rate, the
defendant should indicate whether it
will contend that the Board is deprived
of jurisdiction to hear the complaint
because the revenue-variable cost
percentage generated by the traffic is
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*
*
$350.
$350.
$150.
$150.
$350.
$150.
$350.
*
less than 180 percent, or the traffic is
subject to effective product or
geographic competition. In response to
a complaint filed under Simplified-SAC
or Three-Benchmark, the answer must
include the defendant’s preliminary
estimate of the variable cost of each
challenged movement calculated using
the unadjusted figures produced by the
URCS Phase III program.
(b) Disclosure with Simplified-SAC or
Three-Benchmark answer. The
defendant must provide to the
complainant all documents that it relied
upon to determine the inputs used in
the URCS Phase III program.
(c) Time for filing; copies; service.
Other than in cases under Final Offer
Rate Review, which does not require the
filing of an answer, an answer must be
filed with the Board within 20 days after
the service of the complaint or within
such additional time as the Board may
provide. The defendant must serve
copies of the answer upon the
complainant and any other defendants.
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*
*
*
*
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(e) Failure to answer complaint. Other
than in cases under Final Offer Rate
Review, which does not require the
filing of an answer, averments in a
complaint are admitted when not
denied in an answer to the complaint.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. Amend § 1111.10 by adding
paragraph (a)(3) to read as follows:
§ 1111.10 Procedural schedule in cases
using simplified standards.
(a) * * *
(3)(i) In cases relying upon the Final
Offer Rate Review procedure:
(A) Day 5—Complainant files notice
of intent to initiate case and serves
notice on defendant.
(B) Day 0—Complaint filed; discovery
begins.
(C) Day 21—Discovery closes.
(D) Day 35—Market dominance
filings, rate reasonableness analyses,
and final offers.
(E) Day 45—Replies.
(F) Day 52—Telephonic evidentiary
hearing before an administrative law
judge, as described in § 1111.12(e), at
the discretion of the complainant
(market dominance).
(G) Day 135—Board decision.
(ii) In addition, the Board will appoint
a liaison within five business days after
the Board receives the pre-filing
notification.
(iii) With its final offer, each party
must submit an explanation of the
methodology it used.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 7. Amend § 1111.11 by revising
paragraph (b) to read as follows:
§ 1111.11
matters.
Meeting to discuss procedural
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*
*
*
*
(b) Stand-alone cost or simplified
standards complaints.
(1) In complaints challenging the
reasonableness of a rail rate based on
stand-alone cost, Simplified-SAC, or
Three-Benchmark, the parties shall
meet, or discuss by telephone or
through email, discovery and
procedural matters within 7 days after
the complaint is filed in stand-alone
cost cases, and 7 days after the
mediation period ends in SimplifiedSAC or Three-Benchmark cases. The
parties should inform the Board as soon
as possible thereafter whether there are
unresolved disputes that require Board
intervention and, if so, the nature of
such disputes.
(2) In complaints challenging the
reasonableness of a rail rate under Final
Offer Rate Review, the parties may not
seek Board intervention in discovery
disputes, but the parties should discuss
discovery matters with one another to
the extent necessary.
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PART 1114—EVIDENCE; DISCOVERY
8. The authority citation for part 1114
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 559; 49 U.S.C. 1321.
9. Amend § 1114.21 by adding
paragraph (a)(4) to read as follows:
■
§ 1114.21 Applicability; general
provisions.
(a) * * *
(4) Time periods specified in this
subpart do not apply in cases under
Final Offer Rate Review. Instead, parties
in cases under Final Offer Rate Review
should serve requests, answers to
requests, objections, and other
discovery-related communications
within a reasonable time given the
length of the discovery period.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Amend § 1114.24 by revising
paragraph (h) to read as follows:
§ 1114.24
Depositions; procedures.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Return. The officer shall securely
seal the deposition in an envelope
endorsed with sufficient information to
identify the proceeding and marked
‘‘Deposition of (here insert name of
witness)’’ and shall either personally
deliver or promptly send the original
and one copy of all exhibits by e-filing
(provided the filing complies with 49
CFR 1104.1(e)) or registered mail to the
Office of Proceedings. A deposition to
be offered in evidence must reach the
Board not later than 5 days before the
date it is to be so offered.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Amend § 1114.31 by revising
paragraphs (a) and (d) to read as follows:
§ 1114.31
Failure to respond to discovery.
(a) Failure to answer. If a deponent
fails to answer or gives an evasive
answer or incomplete answer to a
question propounded under
§ 1114.24(a), or a party fails to answer
or gives evasive or incomplete answers
to written interrogatories served
pursuant to § 1114.26(a), the party
seeking discovery may apply for an
order compelling an answer by motion
filed with the Board and served on all
parties and deponents. Such motion to
compel an answer must be filed with
the Board and served on all parties and
deponents. Such motion to compel an
answer must be filed with the Board
within 10 days after the failure to obtain
a responsive answer upon deposition, or
within 10 days after expiration of the
period allowed for submission of
answers to interrogatories. On matters
relating to a deposition on oral
examination, the proponent of the
question may complete or adjourn the
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48881
examination before he applies for an
order. Motions to compel may not be
filed in cases under Final Offer Rate
Review.
(1) Reply to motion to compel
generally. Except in rate cases to be
considered under the stand-alone cost
methodology or simplified standards,
the time for filing a reply to a motion
to compel is governed by 49 CFR
1104.13.
(2) Motions to compel in stand-alone
cost and simplified standards rate
cases.
(i) Motions to compel in stand-alone
cost, Simplified-SAC, and ThreeBenchmark rate cases must include a
certification that the movant has in good
faith conferred or attempted to confer
with the person or party failing to
answer discovery to obtain it without
Board intervention.
(ii) In a rate case to be considered
under the stand-alone cost, SimplifiedSAC, or Three-Benchmark
methodologies, a reply to a motion to
compel must be filed with the Board
within 10 days of when the motion to
compel is filed.
(3) Conference with parties on motion
to compel. Within 5 business days after
the filing of a reply to a motion to
compel in a rate case to be considered
under the stand-alone cost
methodology, Simplified-SAC, or ThreeBenchmark, Board staff may convene a
conference with the parties to discuss
the dispute, attempt to narrow the
issues, and gather any further
information needed to render a ruling.
(4) Ruling on motion to compel in
stand-alone cost, Simplified-SAC, and
Three-Benchmark rate cases. Within 5
business days after a conference with
the parties convened pursuant to
paragraph (a)(3) of this section, the
Director of the Office of Proceedings
will issue a summary ruling on the
motion to compel discovery. If no
conference is convened, the Director of
the Office of Proceedings will issue this
summary ruling within 10 days after the
filing of the reply to the motion to
compel. Appeals of a Director’s ruling
will proceed under 49 CFR 1115.9, and
the Board will attempt to rule on such
appeals within 20 days after the filing
of the reply to the appeal.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Failure of party to attend or serve
answers. If a party or a person or an
officer, director, managing agent, or
employee of a party or person willfully
fails to appear before the officer who is
to take his deposition, after being served
with a proper notice, or fails to serve
answers to interrogatories submitted
under § 1114.26, after proper service of
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such interrogatories, the Board on
motion and notice may strike out all or
any part of any pleading of that party or
person, or dismiss the proceeding or any
part thereof. Such a motion may not be
filed in a case under Final Offer Rate
Review. In lieu of any such order or in
addition thereto, the Board shall require
the party failing to act or the attorney
advising that party or both to pay the
reasonable expenses, including
attorney’s fees, caused by the failure,
unless the Board finds that the failure
was substantially justified or that other
circumstances make an award of
expenses unjust.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1115—APPELLATE
PROCEDURES
12. The authority citation for part
1115 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 559; 49 U.S.C. 1321; 49
U.S.C. 11708.
13. Amend § 1115.3 by revising
paragraph (e) to read as follows:
■
§ 1115.3 Board actions other than initial
decisions.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Petitions must be filed within 20
days after the service of the action or
within any further period (not to exceed
20 days) as the Board may authorize.
However, in cases under Final Offer
Rate Review, petitions must be filed
within 5 days after the service of the
action, and replies to petitions must be
filed within 10 days after the service of
the action.
*
*
*
*
*
Note: The following appendix will not
appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
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Appendix
Information Collection Under the Paperwork
Reduction Act
Title: Complaints under 49 CFR 1111.
OMB Control Number: 2140–0029.
STB Form Number: None.
Type of Review: Revision of a currently
approved collection.
Summary: As part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork burdens, and as
required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501–3521 (PRA), the
Surface Transportation Board (Board) gives
notice that it is requesting from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) approval for
the revision of the currently approved
information collection, Complaints under 49
CFR part 1111, OMB Control No. 2140–0029,
as further described below. The requested
revision to the currently approved collection
is necessitated by this Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM), which proposes to add
an alternative (Final Offer Rate Review)
complaint to the types of complaints
collected by the Board in this information
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collection. All other information collected by
the Board in the currently approved
collection is without change from its
approval.
Respondents: Affected shippers, railroads,
and communities that seek redress for alleged
violations related to unreasonable rates,
unreasonable practices, service issues, and
other statutory claims.
Number of Respondents: Eight.
Frequency: On occasion. In recent years,
respondents have filed approximately four
complaints per year with the Board. It is
anticipated that four additional complaints
would be filed annually under the proposed
procedure. In Market Dominance
Streamlined Approach, EP 756 (STB served
September 12, 2019), the Board
simultaneously issued a separate NPRM that
also would impact the Board’s existing
collection of complaints. But that decision,
which expects to add an additional five
complaints a year (including the four
complaints estimated to filed under Final
Offer Rate Review), is being treated as
separate and subsequent—for the purposes of
estimation—to this NPRM’s modification of
the existing collection of complaints. The
decision in EP 756 will include the
modification here.
Total Burden Hours (annually including all
respondents): 2,876 (sum of (i) estimated
hours per complaint (469) × total number of
estimated, existing complaints (4) and (ii)
estimated hours per proposed alternative
complaint (250) × total number of those
complaints (4)).
Total ‘‘Non-Hour Burden’’ Cost (such as
start-up costs and mailing costs): $8,968 (sum
of (i) estimated non-hour burden cost per
complaint ($1,462) × total number of
estimated, existing complaints (4) and (ii)
estimated non-hour burden cost per proposed
alternative complaint ($780) × total number
of those complaints (4)).
Needs and Uses: Under the Board’s
regulations, persons may file complaints
before the Board pursuant to 49 CFR part
1111 seeking redress for alleged violations of
provisions of the Interstate Commerce Act,
Public Law 104–88, 109 Stat. 803 (1995). In
the last few years, the most significant
complaints filed at the Board allege that
railroads are charging unreasonable rates or
that they are engaging in unreasonable
practices. See, e.g., 49 U.S.C. 10701, 10704,
and 11701. As described in more detail above
in the NPRM, the Board is proposing to add
a new procedure to provide stakeholders
with a more streamlined option to challenge
rate reasonableness for smaller cases. The
collection by the Board of these complaints,
and the agency’s action in conducting
proceedings and ruling on the complaints,
enables the Board to meet its statutory duties.
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
49 CFR Parts 1011 and 1111
[Docket No. EP 756]
Market Dominance Streamlined
Approach
Surface Transportation Board.
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Surface Transportation
Board (STB or Board) proposes a
streamlined approach for pleading
market dominance in rate
reasonableness proceedings. The Board
expects that this streamlined approach
would reduce burdens on parties,
expedite proceedings, and make the
Board’s rate relief procedures more
accessible, especially for complainants
with smaller cases.
DATES: Comments are due by November
12, 2019; replies are due by January 10,
2020.
ADDRESSES: Comments and replies may
be filed with the Board either via efiling or in writing addressed to: Surface
Transportation Board, Attn: Docket No.
EP 756, 395 E Street SW, Washington,
DC 20423–0001. Comments and replies
will be posted on the Board’s website at
www.stb.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sarah Fancher at (202) 245–0355.
Assistance for the hearing impaired is
available through the Federal Relay
Service at (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In January
2018, the Board established its Rate
Reform Task Force (RRTF), with the
objectives of developing
recommendations to reform and
streamline the Board’s rate review
processes for large cases, and
determining how to best provide a rate
review process for smaller cases. After
holding informal meetings throughout
2018, the RRTF issued a report on April
25, 2019 (RRTF Report).1 Among other
recommendations, the RRTF Report
included a proposal that the Board
develop ‘‘a standard for pleading market
dominance that will reduce the cost and
time of bringing a rate case,’’ stating that
the market dominance inquiry for rate
reasonableness cases was a ‘‘costly and
time-consuming undertaking.’’ RRTF
Report 52–53. Moreover, the RRTF
concluded that an effort to streamline
the market dominance inquiry was a
necessary part of making rate relief
available for smaller rate disputes. Id. at
52. Having considered the
SUMMARY:
[FR Doc. 2019–20093 Filed 9–16–19; 8:45 am]
1 The RRTF Report was posted on the Board’s
website on April 29, 2019, and can be accessed at
https://www.stb.gov/stb/rail/Rate_Reform_Task_
Force_Report.pdf.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 180 (Tuesday, September 17, 2019)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 48872-48882]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-20093]
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SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
49 CFR Parts 1002, 1111, 1114, and 1115
[Docket Nos. EP 755; EP 665 (Sub-No. 2)]
Final Offer Rate Review; Expanding Access to Rate Relief
AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking; request for comments.
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SUMMARY: The Surface Transportation Board (STB or Board) proposes a new
procedure for challenging the reasonableness of railroad rates in
smaller cases. In this procedure, the Board would decide a case by
selecting either the complainant's or the defendant's final offer,
subject to an expedited procedural schedule that adheres to firm
deadlines.
DATES: Comments on the proposed rule are due by November 12, 2019.
Reply comments are due by January 10, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Comments and replies in either or both dockets may be filed
with the Board either via e-filing or in writing addressed to: Surface
Transportation Board, Attn: Docket No. EP 755 and/or Docket No. EP 665
(Sub-No. 2), 395 E Street SW, Washington, DC 20423-0001. Comments and
replies will be posted to the Board's website at www.stb.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Amy Ziehm at (202) 245-0391.
Assistance for the hearing impaired is available through the Federal
Relay Service at (800) 877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In January 2018,\1\ the Board established
its Rate Reform Task Force (RRTF), with the objectives of developing
recommendations to reform and streamline the Board's rate review
processes for large cases, and determining how to best provide a rate
review process for smaller cases. After holding informal meetings
throughout 2018, the RRTF issued a report on April 25, 2019 (RRTF
Report).\2\ Among other recommendations, the RRTF included a proposal
for a final offer procedure, which it described as ``an administrative
approach that would take advantage of procedural limitations, rather
than substantive limitations, to constrain the cost and complexity of a
rate reasonableness case.'' RRTF Report 12. Versions of a final offer
process for rate review have also been recommended by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) and a committee of the Transportation
Research Board (TRB). The Board now proposes to build on the RRTF
recommendation and establish a new rate case procedure for smaller
cases, the Final Offer Rate Review (FORR) procedure.
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\1\ These proceedings are not consolidated. A single decision is
being issued for administrative convenience.
\2\ The RRTF Report was posted on the Board's website on April
29, 2019, and can be accessed at https://www.stb.gov/stb/rail/Rate_Reform_Task_Force_Report.pdf.
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Background
In the ICC Termination Act of 1995 (ICCTA), Congress directed the
Board to ``establish a simplified and expedited method for determining
the reasonableness of challenged rail rates in those cases in which a
full stand-alone cost [(SAC)] presentation is too costly, given the
value of the case.'' Public Law 104-88, 109 Stat. 803, 810. In the
Surface Transportation Board Reauthorization Act of 2015 (STB
Reauthorization Act), Public Law 114-110, 129 Stat. 2228, Congress
revised the text of this requirement so that it currently reads:
``[t]he Board shall maintain 1 or more simplified and expedited methods
for determining the reasonableness of challenged rates in those cases
in which a full [SAC] presentation is too costly, given the value of
the case.'' 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(3) (emphasis added). In addition,
section 11 of the STB Reauthorization Act modified 49 U.S.C. 10704(d)
to require that the Board ``maintain procedures to ensure the
expeditious handling of challenges to the reasonableness of railroad
rates.'' \3\ More generally, the rail transportation policy states
that, in regulating the railroad industry, it is the policy of the
United States Government ``to provide for the expeditious handling and
resolution of all proceedings required or permitted to be brought under
this part.'' 49 U.S.C. 10101(15).
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\3\ Prior to the enactment of the STB Reauthorization Act,
section 10704(d) began with a sentence stating that, ``[w]ithin 9
months after January 1, 1996, the Board shall establish procedures
to ensure expeditious handling of challenges to the reasonableness
of railroad rates.'' See, e.g., 49 U.S.C. 10704(d) (2014).
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In 1996, the Board adopted a simplified methodology, known as
Three-Benchmark, which determines the reasonableness of a challenged
rate using three benchmark figures. Rate Guidelines--Non-Coal
Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. 1004 (1996), pet. to reopen denied, 2 S.T.B. 619
(1997), appeal dismissed sub nom. Ass'n of Am. R.Rs. v. STB, 146 F.3d
942 (D.C. Cir. 1998). A decade passed without any complainant bringing
a case under that methodology. In 2007, the Board modified the Three-
Benchmark methodology and also created another simplified methodology,
known as Simplified-SAC, which determines whether a captive shipper is
being forced to cross-subsidize other parts of the railroad's network.
See Simplified Standards for Rail Rate Cases, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1) (STB
served Sept. 5, 2007), aff'd sub nom. CSX Transp., Inc. v. STB, 568
F.3d 236 (D.C. Cir.), vacated in part on reh'g, 584 F.3d 1076 (D.C.
Cir. 2009). In 2013, the Board increased the relief available under the
[[Page 48873]]
Three-Benchmark methodology and removed the relief limit on the
Simplified-SAC methodology, among other things. See Rate Regulation
Reforms, EP 715 (STB served July 18, 2013), remanded in part sub nom.
CSX Transp., Inc. v. STB, 754 F.3d 1056 (D.C. Cir. 2014).
Notwithstanding the Board's efforts to improve its rate review
methodologies and make them more accessible, only a few Three-Benchmark
cases have ever been brought to the Board, and no complaint has been
litigated to completion under the Simplified-SAC methodology.
The Board has recognized that, for smaller disputes, the litigation
costs required to bring a case under the Board's existing rate
reasonableness methodologies can quickly exceed the value of the case.
Expanding Access to Rate Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 10
(STB served Aug. 31, 2016). As the Board stated in Simplified
Standards, ``[f]or some shippers who have smaller disputes with a
carrier, even [Simplified-SAC] would be too expensive, given the
smaller value of their cases. These shippers must also have an avenue
to pursue relief.'' Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op.
at 16. Along similar lines, as the Board has previously stated,
simplified procedures ``enable the affected shippers to avail
themselves of their statutory right to challenge rates charged on
captive rail traffic regardless of the size of the complaint.'' Non-
Coal Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. at 1057.\4\
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\4\ See also, e.g., Calculation of Variable Costs in Rate
Complaint Proceedings Involving Non-Class I R.Rs., 6 S.T.B. 798, 803
& n.19 (2003) (``We have had to sacrifice some accuracy for
simplicity where necessary to ensure that our rate complaint
processes are accessible to shippers. . . . Towards that end, we
have adopted simplified evidentiary procedures for adjudicating rate
reasonableness in those cases where more sophisticated procedures
are too costly or burdensome, `to ensure that no shipper is
foreclosed from exercising its statutory right to challenge the
reasonableness of rates charged on its captive traffic.' '')
(quoting Non-Coal Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. at 1008); Market Dominance
Determinations--Prod. & Geographic Competition, 3 S.T.B. 937, 949
(1998) (excluding product and geographic competition from
consideration in market dominance determinations so as to ``remove a
substantial obstacle to the shippers' ability to exercise their
statutory rights.'').
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In public comments, shippers and other interested parties have
repeatedly stated that the Board's current options for challenging the
reasonableness of rates do not meet their need for expeditious
resolution at a reasonable cost.\5\ Moreover, because a contract rate
may not be challenged before the Board, 49 U.S.C. 10709(c)(1), some
complainants \6\ shift from contract rates to tariff rates before
bringing a rate case, and tariff rates may be higher than prior
contract rates.\7\ That factor gives complainants a strong interest in
having a rate case decided quickly, from start to finish.
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\5\ See, e.g., Alliance for Rail Competition Opening Comments
22, June 26, 2014, Rail Transp. of Grain, Rate Regulation Review, EP
665 (Sub-No. 1) (stating that the Three-Benchmark methodology is too
costly and complex for grain shippers and producers in its current
form); W. Coal Traffic League Opening Comments 74-76, Oct. 23, 2012,
Rate Regulation Reforms, EP 715 (the cost and complexity of the
Simplified-SAC methodology discourage its use); Oversight of the STB
Reauthorization Act of 2015 Before the Subcomm. on R.Rs., Pipelines,
& Hazardous Materials of the H. Comm. on Transp. & Infrastructure,
115th Cong. (2018) (letter from Chris Jahn, President, The
Fertilizer Institute, submitted for the record) (due to the time and
expense needed to pursue a rate case, it ``does not work'' for most
complainants).
\6\ Paying a transportation rate is not the only way to
establish standing to bring a rate case, and the Board has
previously provided guidance in a policy statement for
``complainants that allege indirect harm in rate complaints.'' See
Rail Transp. of Grain, Rate Regulation Review, EP 665 (Sub-No. 1) et
al., slip op. at 7-8 (STB served Dec. 29, 2016).
\7\ As an example, the most recent rate proceeding involved a
complainant that had been served pursuant to contracts for many
years and then filed its complaint as soon as its contract expired.
See Consumers Energy Co. Complaint 4-5, Jan. 13, 2015, Consumers
Energy Co. v. CSX Transp., Inc., NOR 42142; see also, e.g.,
Occidental Chem. Corp. Comments 2-4, Oct. 23, 2012, Rate Regulation
Reforms, EP 715 (paying the tariff rate for extended periods of time
while a rate case is litigated--which can add millions of dollars in
costs beyond the direct costs of litigation--undermines the utility
of a rate challenge, especially if the carrier requires that all
rates bundled with the challenged rate also shift to tariff during
the pendency of the case); PPG Indus., Inc. Comments 3-4, Oct. 23,
2012, Rate Regulation Reforms, EP 715 (noting the effect of bundling
and stating that tariff premium could reach $20 million per year of
rate litigation). The latter two cites are simply to illustrate the
need for expedited rate reasonableness procedures, and not to take a
position--one way or another--on the appropriateness of rate
bundling.
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Accordingly, the Board has continued to explore ideas to improve
the accessibility of rate relief. See, e.g., Expanding Access to Rate
Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 11-23. Among the comments
submitted in Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), the Board received a
suggestion from USDA that the Board consider procedural limitations to
streamline and expedite its rate reasonableness review as an
alternative to substantive limitations. See USDA Reply Comments 5-6,
Dec. 19, 2016, Expanding Access to Rate Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2).
USDA specifically recommended a short procedural timeline as a means to
make rate reasonableness review accessible for smaller disputes. See
id. To implement this recommendation, USDA suggested that the Board
adopt a final offer procedure whereby parties would submit market
dominance and rate reasonableness evidence in a single package offer.
See id. at 6-7.
The Board uses a final offer procedure as part of the Three-
Benchmark methodology, although it is only one part of the rate
reasonableness approach as opposed to providing the overall framework,
as the Board is proposing here.\8\ One of the benchmarks compares the
markup paid by the challenged traffic to the average markup assessed on
similar traffic. See, e.g., Rate Regulation Reforms, EP 715, slip op.
at 11. To improve the efficiency of this part of the Three-Benchmark
methodology and ``enable a prompt, expedited resolution of the
comparison group selection,'' the Board requires each party to submit
its final offer comparison group simultaneously, and the Board chooses
one of those groups without modification. See Simplified Standards, EP
646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 18.
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\8\ The Three-Benchmark methodology also includes more
procedural steps and a longer timeline than the FORR procedure
proposed here. See 49 CFR 1111.10(a)(2).
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The Board has held that it may not require arbitration of rate
disputes under current law,\9\ and it is not proposing to do so here;
instead, the Board would make the determination of rate reasonableness
as it does under the Board's current options for challenging the
reasonableness of rates. However, the benefits of final offer
procedures used in other settings offer support and background for the
Board's proposal. For example, final offer procedures are used in
commercial settings, including the resolution of wage disputes in Major
League Baseball, and final offer arbitration is therefore sometimes
referred to as ``baseball arbitration.'' See, e.g., Josh Chetwynd, Play
Ball? An Analysis of Final-Offer Arbitration, Its Use in Major League
Baseball, & Its Potential Applicability to European Football Wage &
Transfer Disputes, 20 Marq. Sports L. Rev. 109 (2009) (noting the final
offer procedure ``can lead to a win-win situation as it spurs
negotiated settlement at a very high rate''); see also Michael Carrell
& Richard Bales,
[[Page 48874]]
Considering Final Offer Arbitration to Resolve Public Sector Impasses
in Times of Concession Bargaining, 28 Ohio St. J. on Disp. Resol. 1, 3,
16, 23-24 (2012) (noting that fourteen states had codified some form of
final offer arbitration for certain labor disputes involving public
sector employees and noting that the procedure ``encourages the parties
to negotiate toward middle ground rather than staking out polar
positions'' and ``encourages the parties to settle before
arbitration'').
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\9\ See Arbitration--Various Matters, EP 586, slip op. at 3 n.7
(STB served Sept. 20, 2001); see also 49 U.S.C. 10704(a)(1) (rate
prescriptions require an order from the Board); 49 U.S.C.
11704(c)(2) (reparations require an order from the Board). The Board
has had a voluntary arbitration process in place for more than 20
years, and section 13 of the STB Reauthorization Act required
adjustments to this process (including the addition of rate disputes
to the types of matters eligible for arbitration), but to date
parties have not agreed to arbitrate a dispute brought before the
Board. See Arbitration of Certain Disputes, 2 S.T.B. 564 (1997)
(adopting voluntary arbitration program); Revisions to Arbitration
Procedures, EP 730 (STB served Sept. 30, 2016) (making adjustments
required by STB Reauthorization Act). In addition to its
recommendation for a final offer procedure that would culminate in a
decision by the Board, the RRTF recommended legislation that would
permit mandatory arbitration of smaller rate cases. See RRTF Report
14-15.
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Similarly, the Association of American Railroads' Circular No. OT-
10, ``Code of Car Service Rules/Code of Car Hire Rules,'' sets forth a
final offer procedure for car hire arbitration, which is included in
Rule 25 (the Arbitration Rule). See Circular No. OT-10, Rule 25,
https://www.railinc.com/rportal/documents/18/260773/OT-10.pdf. The
Board has described the Arbitration Rule as an ``integral part'' of its
deregulation of car hire rates. See Joint Pet. for Rulemaking on R.R.
Car Hire Comp., EP 334 (Sub-No. 8) et al., slip op. at 1 (STB served
Apr. 22, 1997). And as noted by the Board's predecessor agency, the
Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC), the Arbitration Rule ``provides
for negotiation and, when that is not successful, `baseball style'
arbitration, by which the arbitrator will select between the best final
offers of the parties.'' Joint Pet. for Rulemaking on R.R. Car Hire
Comp., 9 I.C.C.2d 80, 88 (1992).
Finally in this regard, the Committee for a Study of Freight Rail
Transportation and Regulation of the TRB (TRB Committee) \10\ released
a report in 2015 that described the benefits of adopting ``an
independent arbitration process similar to the one long used for
resolving rate disputes in Canada.'' \11\ In particular, the TRB
Committee recommended ``a final-offer rule,'' set on a ``strict time
limit,'' whereby ``each side offers its evidence, arguments, and
possibly a changed rate or other remedy in a complete and unmodifiable
form after a brief hearing.'' TRB Committee Report 211-12. According to
the TRB Committee Report, adoption of such a procedure could enhance
complainants' access to rate reasonableness protections, while
expediting dispute resolution and encouraging settlements. Id. at 212.
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\10\ In 2005, legislation was enacted directing the Secretary of
Transportation to enter into an agreement with TRB ``to conduct a
comprehensive study of the Nation's railroad transportation
system.'' See Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation
Equity Act: A Legacy for Users, Public Law 109-59, section 9007, 119
Stat. 1144, 1925 (2005). The study was funded in 2011, H.R. Rep. No.
112-284, at 287 (2011), and the TRB Committee was formed, see Nat'l
Acads. of Sciences, Eng'g, & Med., Modernizing Freight Rail
Regulation (TRB Committee Report) at 12-13 (2015), https://nap.edu/21759.
\11\ In a well-known process used by Canadian regulators, final
offer procedures are administered by an outside arbitrator or panel
of arbitrators. In Canada, a complainant may submit its rate dispute
to the Canadian Transportation Agency, which refers the matter to an
arbitrator or a panel of arbitrators. Canada Transp. Act, S.C. 1996,
c. 10, as amended, sections 161(1), 162(1) (Can.). The Canadian
statute establishes a two-tiered structure: If the matter involves
freight charges of more than $2 million CAD (subject to an inflation
adjustment), a 60-day procedure applies, and if the matter involves
freight charges of $2 million CAD or less (subject to an inflation
adjustment), a 30-day procedure applies. Id. sections 164.1,
165(2)(b). Among other things, the 60-day procedure allows the
parties to direct interrogatories to one another, and the arbitrator
may request written filings beyond the final offers and information
initially submitted in support of final offers. See id. sections
163(4), 164(1). In the 30-day procedure, there is no discovery, and
the arbitrator may request oral presentations from the parties but
may not request written submissions beyond the final offers and
replies. See id. section 164.1. The arbitrator's decision is issued
within 60 days after the matter was submitted for arbitration, or 30
days if the further expedited procedure applies. Id. section
165(2)(b). Any resulting rate prescription is limited to two years,
unless the parties agree to a different period. See id. section
165(2)(c).
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Proposed Rule. The RRTF stated that there is substantial merit to
USDA's general recommendation to improve access using procedural
limitations, RRTF Report 16, and the Board agrees. USDA points out
that, in addition to reducing the length and cost of litigation, ``[a]
limited amount of time to collect and present evidence forces parties
to focus their time on only the clearest and most important evidence,''
and ``the decision of what evidence to use or leave out is
contextualized within each case.'' USDA Reply Comments 6, Dec. 19,
2016, Expanding Access to Rate Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2).
The Board also agrees with the RRTF and USDA that a final offer
approach could be an effective way to implement procedural limitations.
As USDA notes, Dr. Richard L. Schmalensee, chair of the TRB Committee,
recommended that the Board seek process improvements based on the final
offer arbitration procedure used in Canada. See Tr. 24-25, Public
Roundtable, Oct. 25, 2016 (emphasizing the importance of time limits
and raising the idea that, among other things, the Board retain final
authority over the outcome of a proceeding).\12\ The TRB Committee
Report also outlined several advantages of a final offer approach--for
example, ``[t]he imposition of time limits is intended to bring economy
to the process and to ensure that shippers are not precluded from
access to rate relief as a consequence of slow processing and high
litigation costs,'' and ``the time limit in conjunction with the final-
offer rule injects uncertainty into the process, which limits the
likelihood that any one party will take an extreme position and
encourages the settlement of disputes.'' TRB Committee Report 138. And
the Board stated in Simplified Standards that ``[a] final offer
procedure for determining the comparison group is in the public
interest because it will encourage both parties to submit a reasonable
comparison group. Any final tender that is skewed too far in one
direction might well result in the selection of a more reasonable final
tender presented by the opposing party.'' Simplified Standards, EP 646
(Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 18; see also U.S. Magnesium, L.L.C. v. Union
Pac. R.R., NOR 42114, slip op. at 9-12 (STB served Jan. 28, 2010)
(selecting one party's comparison group as ``more reasonable'' while
also recognizing that both parties' submissions were imperfect).
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\12\ A transcript of this public roundtable is available on the
Board's website at https://www.stb.gov/stb/docs/eLibrary/InterVISTAS%20Economic%20Roundtable%20Transcript.pdf.
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By lowering the costs of litigating smaller rate cases, the Board
expects that complainants with smaller rate cases, who otherwise might
have been deterred from challenging a rate due to the cost of bringing
a case under the Board's existing rate reasonableness methodologies,
would have a more accessible avenue for rate reasonableness review by
the Board. The Board also expects that reduced litigation costs would
make it possible for such complainants to prove meritorious cases. And,
a final offer procedure may help to encourage private settlements of
disputes, an outcome that was similarly suggested in the TRB Committee
Report.
Accordingly, the Board proposes to establish a procedure similar to
the one described by the RRTF: A final offer procedure to determine
rate reasonableness for smaller cases, thereby providing faster, less
costly review of claims of unreasonable railroad rates.
I. Initiating a Proceeding and Discovery
Before the process formally begins, the complainant would be
required to file with the Board and serve the defendant with a notice
of intent to initiate a case, at least five days in advance of filing
its complaint.\13\ The
[[Page 48875]]
proceeding would formally begin with the filing of a complaint. At the
time it files its complaint, the complainant would also be required to
submit the information listed in 49 CFR 1111.2(a)(1)-(11) \14\ and
provide to the defendant the materials described in Sec.
1111.2(b).\15\ The Board would not require the defendant to file an
answer to the complaint \16\ in cases under FORR, in light of the
expedited timeline included in this procedure.
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\13\ The Board would appoint a Board employee to serve as a case
liaison within five business days after the pre-filing notification.
See Expediting Rate Cases, EP 733, slip op. at 15 (STB served Nov.
30, 2017) (explaining the role of a Board-appointed liaison in rate
cases). The liaison would be appointed sooner than in cases under
Three-Benchmark, Simplified-SAC, or SAC, consistent with the
expedited nature of the proposed FORR procedure.
\14\ If the defendant disagrees with the calculation of variable
costs based on the complainant's inputs to the Uniform Railroad
Costing System (URCS) Phase III program (see 49 CFR 1111.2(a)(1)-
(9)), it could address this issue in its market dominance
presentation. As is the case with market dominance determinations
generally, movement-specific adjustments to URCS would not be
permitted. See, e.g., Major Issues in Rail Rate Cases, EP 657 (Sub-
No. 1), slip op. at 50-52 (STB served Oct. 30, 2006), aff'd sub nom.
BNSF Ry. v. STB, 526 F.3d 770 (D.C. Cir. 2008).
\15\ Section 1111.2(b) requires the complainant to ``provide to
the defendant all documents relied upon in formulating its
assessment of a feasible transportation alternative and all
documents relied upon to determine the inputs to the URCS Phase III
program.''
\16\ The defendant would have an opportunity to file a reply to
the complainant's market dominance presentation and final offer, as
addressed below.
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The filing of the complaint would also mark the beginning of
discovery. No litigation over discovery disputes would be permitted.
Instead, if a party unreasonably withholds information that the Board
subsequently deems to be relevant, the Board would take that
withholding into account in making its final decision.\17\ If a party
believes that relevant information was unreasonably withheld during
discovery, it could so argue in the explanation accompanying its final
offer, as described further below.
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\17\ A similar approach is used in the Canadian final offer
procedure, discussed above. See Canada Transp. Act, S.C. 1996, c.
10, as amended, section 163(5) (Can.).
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Parties should not expect to receive (or produce) the volume or
even necessarily the types of discovery that parties have received in
SAC cases, because the proposed time limits do not provide for it.
Parties would instead submit narrowly tailored, targeted discovery
requests based on the information that the other side could reasonably
be expected to provide in a short period of time, focusing on the key
information needed to prove or defend a rate case. Parties would be
expected to interpret such discovery requests liberally to require the
production of readily available information (relative to the discovery
deadline) that they should reasonably know to be material and
responsive to the request. If a party limits its requests as described
above, and the other side still does not comply, as noted above, the
requesting party could argue in the explanation accompanying its final
offer that relevant information was unreasonably withheld. The Board
would take that unreasonable withholding of relevant information into
account in choosing between the offers--for example, by giving less
weight to an argument that could be undercut by the information that
was withheld or by making other adverse inferences. Over time, the
Board anticipates that its decisions in FORR cases would establish
categories of easily producible, core information that each side could
be expected to request and produce within the truncated discovery
period.
Although this procedure would not necessarily require the use of
data from the Board's Waybill Sample, parties would be able to seek
access to waybill data pursuant to the Board's regulations at 49 CFR
1244.9.\18\ Up to four years of Waybill Sample data would be
available--specifically, the most recent four years that can be
provided as of the date of the complaint. See Waybill Data Released in
Three-Benchmark Rail Rate Proceedings, EP 646 (Sub-No. 3), slip op. at
4-9 (STB served Mar. 12, 2012). A complainant would be required to
submit its waybill data request pursuant to 49 CFR 1244.9(b)(4), if it
chooses to make such a request, on the same day it files its notice of
intent to initiate a case. See Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No.
1), slip op. at 78-80 (describing procedures for the release of Waybill
Sample data to rate case litigants). A defendant would be required to
submit its waybill data request pursuant to 49 CFR 1244.9(b)(4), if it
chooses to make such a request, no later than one day after it is
served with the complaint. The defendant would have the option of
submitting its request at any time after complainant's filing of the
notice of intent to initiate a case, until the deadline stated above--
an option which, in effect, provides at least six days for a defendant
to make a request. Based on these deadlines, the Board would process
requests and provide the data no later than five business days after it
receives the request for waybill data.
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\18\ The Board also intends to propose certain changes to its
regulations relating to the Waybill Sample. See RRTF Report 47-49.
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II. Market Dominance Inquiry
In order to adjudicate the reasonableness of a rate, the Board must
first find that the defendant rail carrier has market dominance over
the transportation to which the rate applies. 49 U.S.C. 10707(c).
Market dominance includes both a quantitative threshold and a
qualitative analysis. Total Petrochems. & Ref. USA, Inc. v. CSX
Transp., Inc., NOR 42121, slip op. at 3 (STB served May 31, 2013).
Under the proposed FORR procedure, market dominance would be evaluated
separately from the parties' offers, as is the case with other rate
reasonableness procedures. The Board proposes that the FORR procedure
may only be used if the complainant also elects to use the streamlined
market dominance approach proposed in Docket No. EP 756, Market
Dominance Streamlined Approach, served concurrently with this decision.
In that decision, the Board is proposing a streamlined market dominance
approach for those cases in which a complainant can establish a prima
facie case of market dominance by demonstrating six specified factors.
See Market Dominance Streamlined Approach, EP 756, slip op. at 6-7 (STB
served Sept. 12, 2019). Although the RRTF suggested that a streamlined
market dominance approach may not be necessary for a final offer
procedure given the time constraints that would accompany such a
procedure, RRTF Report 17, the Board finds that the streamlined market
dominance approach proposed in Docket No. EP 756 would complement and
enhance the streamlined rate reasonableness procedure proposed here.
Moreover, the expedited timelines proposed here may make it too
difficult for parties to litigate a non-streamlined market dominance
presentation.\19\ Nevertheless, because there may be merit to giving
complainants the option of choosing between streamlined and non-
streamlined market dominance in FORR cases, parties may address this
issue in their comments.
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\19\ As discussed in Market Dominance Streamlined Approach, the
market dominance inquiry is often a costly and time-consuming
undertaking, resulting in a significant burden on rate case
litigants. For example, given the hypothetical nature of some
competitive options proposed by defendant railroads in past cases,
complainants essentially have to predict what a defendant railroad
might argue regarding potential, but unused, competitive options--
all without knowing precisely what constitutes a prima facie showing
of an absence of effective competition. Parties' market dominance
presentations in recent cases (throughout their filings) have been
hundreds of pages long. See, e.g., Consumers Energy Co. v. CSX
Transp., Inc., Docket No. NOR 42142 (parties' market dominance
presentations alone (throughout their filings) exceeded 200 pages of
narrative discussion and included multiple expert reports).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In a FORR case, the complainant would submit its showing as to the
relevant factors identified in the Board's proposal in Docket No. EP
756 in its
[[Page 48876]]
market dominance presentation. The defendant carrier, in its reply,
could try to refute any of the prima facie factors or otherwise
demonstrate that effective competition exists for the traffic at issue.
At the complainant's option, further discussion of market dominance
could take place during a telephonic hearing before an administrative
law judge (ALJ), as described below. In the event that the complainant
opts for such a hearing, both sides would be permitted to present their
market dominance positions at the hearing.
III. Review Criteria for Final Offers
Following discovery, parties would simultaneously submit their
market dominance presentations and final offers, and each party would
also submit an analysis addressing the reasonableness of the challenged
rate and support for the rate in the party's offer.\20\ Each party's
final offer should reflect what it considers to be the maximum
reasonable rate. See 49 U.S.C. 10704(a)(1). The party submitting the
offer could choose how to present and support its offer, including the
methodology it uses. The Board's criteria for determining rate
reasonableness of and choosing between the offers \21\ would be based
on its consideration of the rail transportation policy in 49 U.S.C.
10101, the Long-Cannon factors in 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(2), and
appropriate economic principles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Given the expedited timelines provided, the Board is not
proposing to impose page limits at this time, beyond the 50-page
limit proposed for replies in a streamlined market dominance
presentation. See Market Dominance Streamlined Approach, EP 756,
slip op. at 12. Consistent with the findings of the TRB Committee
Report, the Board believes the expedited timelines would serve to
control unnecessary submissions. Should the Board adopt this
proposal, and if expedited timelines prove insufficient to control
the scope of the issues presented, the Board may consider page
limits either by rule or in individual proceedings at a later time.
\21\ The Board ``may not set the maximum reasonable rate below
the level at which the carrier would recover 180% of its variable
costs of providing the service.'' Major Issues in Rail Rate Cases,
EP 657 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Among other aspects of the rail transportation policy, the Board
would take into account the policy ``to allow, to the maximum extent
possible, competition and the demand for services to establish
reasonable rates for transportation by rail,'' the policy ``to maintain
reasonable rates where there is an absence of effective competition and
where rail rates provide revenues which exceed the amount necessary to
maintain the rail system and to attract capital,'' and the policy ``to
promote a safe and efficient rail transportation system by allowing
rail carriers to earn adequate revenues, as determined by the Board.''
49 U.S.C. 10101(1), (3), (6).
Furthermore, pursuant to the Long-Cannon factors, the Board would
give due consideration to (i) the carrier's efforts to minimize traffic
transported at revenues that do not contribute to going concern value,
(ii) the carrier's efforts to maximize revenues from traffic that
contributes only marginally to fixed costs, and (iii) whether one
commodity is paying an unreasonable share of the carrier's overall
revenues, all the while recognizing the policy that rail carriers earn
adequate revenues. 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(2).\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ See also, e.g., Simplified Standards for Rail Rate Cases,
EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 22 (STB served July 28, 2006)
(discussing the first Long-Cannon factor); Major Issues in Rail Rate
Cases, EP 657 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 18 (STB served Oct. 30, 2006)
(discussing the second Long-Cannon factor); Non-Coal Proceedings, 1
S.T.B. at 1038 (discussing the third Long-Cannon factor).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, the Board would consider appropriate economic principles,
and this general criterion would allow the Board to apply, among other
things, the agency's expertise and general principles developed in its
rate case precedent over decades. See, e.g., R.R. Revitalization &
Regulatory Reform Act of 1976, Public Law 94-210, 90 Stat. 31
(directing the ICC to ``give due consideration to appropriate economic
principles'' in adopting new accounting system requirements relevant to
its authorities); see also Non-Coal Proceedings, 1 S.T.B. at 1007
(``Our challenge is to reflect these economic and equitable principles,
as best we can, in a practical, readily administrable test.''). As with
the Board's other rate reasonableness procedures, the agency would
consider the defendant railroad's need for differential pricing to
permit it to collect adequate revenues. See Simplified Standards, EP
646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 73.
If a party adopts a position that is contrary to these guiding
criteria, it risks the likelihood that the Board would choose the other
party's offer. In addition to the previously noted benefits of a final
offer procedure with expedited time limits, most notably its bringing
economy to rate cases and encouraging the parties to take reasonable
positions, the Board expects that the criteria here--the rail
transportation policy, the Long-Cannon factors, and appropriate
economic principles--allow for the parties to submit final offers using
their preferred methodologies, including revised versions of the
Board's existing rate review methodologies or new methodologies
altogether. These principle-based, non-prescriptive criteria are
intended to allow for innovation with respect to rate review
methodologies, and the use and creation of precedent through an
adversarial process simultaneously creates incentives for
methodological improvements over time (while overall complexity is
constrained by procedural limitations and reasonableness is encouraged
by a final offer selection structure).\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ The Board also recognizes the expedited timelines of the
proposed FORR procedure and accounts for that characteristic by
setting a cap on relief, as described in Section VII of this
decision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Final Offers, Market Dominance Presentations, Replies, and ALJ
Hearing
With its final offer, each party would be required to submit an
analysis addressing the reasonableness of the challenged rate and
support for the rate in the party's offer,\24\ including an explanation
of the methodology it used and how it complies with the criteria
discussed above, as well as any necessary supporting workpapers.\25\
Ten days after submitting market dominance presentations, rate
reasonableness analyses, and final offers, the parties would
simultaneously submit replies to each other's presentations. On reply,
parties would not be permitted to alter their market dominance
presentations, rate reasonableness analyses, or final offers but would
have an opportunity to argue against the other side's submission.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Since the parties' final offers should reflect what they
each consider to be the maximum reasonable rate, a party's analysis
regarding the reasonableness of the challenged rate would likely
overlap with its support for its final offer.
\25\ If spreadsheets are submitted, links between spreadsheets
should be used to the maximum extent possible. If links are not
practicable, hard-coded numbers may be used, but parties should
include references to the relevant source document or method of
calculation. See, e.g., Gen. Procedures for Presenting Evidence in
Stand-Alone Cost Rate Cases, EP 347 (Sub-No. 3) (STB served Mar. 12,
2001); see also Consumers Energy Co. v. CSX Transp, Inc., NOR 42142
(STB served July 15, 2015) (adopting requirements for submission of
evidence in that case). Under the proposed rule, if a party fails to
submit documentation in a form the Board can use (for example, due
to unlinked spreadsheets), that failure could contribute to
rejection of that party's offer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One week after the submission of replies, at the complainant's
option, the parties would participate in a telephone hearing before an
ALJ. The purpose of this hearing would be to complete the record
regarding market dominance, and the transcript of this hearing would be
part of the administrative record submitted to the Board for decision.
The complainant, if it chooses, may limit its written market dominance
presentations to the six factors required for the prima facie showing--
in that instance, at the
[[Page 48877]]
ALJ hearing, the complainant could address any additional market
dominance arguments made by the defendant. As noted above, if the
complainant opts for a hearing, both sides would be permitted to
present their market dominance positions at the hearing. Within four
days of the evidentiary hearing, a transcript of the hearing would be
entered into the docket.
V. Selection of an Offer
Pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act, ``the proponent of a
rule or order has the burden of proof.'' 5 U.S.C. 556(d). In a rate
complaint proceeding, the complainant is the proponent of an order and
therefore bears the burden. Accordingly, the complainant must
demonstrate that (i) the defendant carrier has market dominance over
the transportation to which the rate applies; and (ii) the challenged
rate is unreasonable. See 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(1), 10704(a)(1), 11704(b).
If the Board finds that the complainant's market dominance
presentation and rate reasonableness analysis demonstrate that the
defendant carrier has market dominance over the transportation to which
the rate applies and that the challenged rate is unreasonable, the
Board would then choose between the parties' final offers. In making
the rate reasonableness finding and choosing between the offers, the
Board would take into account the criteria described above.\26\ As in
the final offer procedure used as part of the Three-Benchmark
methodology, this would be an ``either/or'' selection, with no
modifications by the Board. See Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No.
1), slip op. at 18.\27\ This approach would work as intended only if
the parties know that the agency would not attempt to find a compromise
position. Id. The incentives created by a final offer selection
procedure could not be preserved if the Board retained the discretion
to formulate its own ``offer.'' Id.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ The standard applying to market dominance determinations
would be as described in Market Dominance Streamlined Approach,
Docket No. EP 756, cited above.
\27\ Although the RRTF envisioned the possibility of a scenario
where the offers have equal merit, RRTF Report 19, in fact, it is a
defining characteristic of a final offer procedure that the
decision-maker must choose between the offers. See Simplified
Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 18; see also, e.g.,
Carrell & Bales, supra SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION (``the arbitrator
must choose the more reasonable of the parties' final proposals'')
(emphasis added).
\28\ See also Chetwynd, supra SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
(decision-makers' tendency to ``split the difference'' creates
incentives for parties to take extreme positions).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board would issue a decision no later than 90 days after the
deadline for the parties' replies. Petitions for reconsideration would
be due five days after service of the Board's decision; replies to
petitions for reconsideration would be due 10 days after service of the
Board's decision; and the Board would issue its decision on
reconsideration expeditiously after replies are filed.
VI. Proposed Timeline
The following is the proposed timeline for this procedure.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Day 5.................................... Complainant files and serves
notice of intent to initiate
case.
Day 0.................................... Complainant files complaint.
Day 0.................................... Discovery begins.
Day 21................................... Discovery ends.
Day 35................................... Simultaneous filing of market
dominance presentations,
rate reasonableness
analyses, and final offers.
Day 45................................... Simultaneous filing of
replies.
Day 52................................... Optional telephone hearing
before administrative law
judge (market dominance).
Day 135.................................. Board decision.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This proposed timeline attempts to balance the need for due
process--for example, allowing parties to reply to each other's
submissions--and the Board's underlying goal of constraining the cost
and complexity of rate litigation by limiting the time available. The
Board specifically seeks comment on whether the proposed timeline
strikes the appropriate balance.
To preserve the effects of the procedural limitations described
above, requests for extensions of time would be strongly disfavored,
even if both parties consented to the request. Therefore, parties would
be encouraged not to spend the scarce time available under this
procedure on preparing extension requests. Joint requests to allow time
to negotiate a settlement, including joint requests for mediation,
would be an exception and would be considered by the Board. A party
would be permitted to accept the other party's final offer at any time.
Mediation is mandatory as part of the Board's existing rate
reasonableness procedures. See 49 CFR 1109.4(a), 1111.10(a)(1),
1111.10(a)(2). The Board does not propose to require mediation as part
of FORR because it would add time and possibly expense, but the Board
would be prepared to facilitate mediation if requested by the parties.
See 49 CFR 1109.2 (parties may request Board-sponsored mediation).
VII. Relief
If the Board finds that the defendant carrier has market dominance,
finds the challenged rate unreasonable, and chooses the complainant's
offer (or the defendant's offer, if it is below the challenged rate),
it could award relief based on the difference between the challenged
rate and the rate in that offer. The proposed procedure would be
subject to a two-year limit on rate prescriptions unless the parties
agree to a different limit on relief. Such a limit would be one-fifth
of the 10-year limit applied in SAC cases and less than half of the
five-year limit applied in Simplified-SAC and Three-Benchmark cases
(see Expanding Access to Rate Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), slip op. at
6), thereby accounting for the expedited deadlines of the FORR
procedure. The Board could also award relief in the form of
reparations. See 49 U.S.C. 11704(b).\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ The standard reparations period reaches back to two years
prior to the date of the complaint. RRTF Report 30; see also 49
U.S.C. 11705(c) (requiring that complaint to recover damages under
49 U.S.C. 11704(b) be filed with the Board within two years after
the claim accrues).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For certain of its other options for challenging the reasonableness
of rates, the Board has also previously imposed monetary caps on
relief. See Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 27-
28. Such caps apply to an award of reparations, a rate prescription, or
a combination of the two. Thus, any rate prescription automatically
terminates once the complainant has exhausted the relief available, and
the actual length of the prescription may be less than the period set
by the Board if the relief is used up in a shorter time. Under such
circumstances, the complainant would be barred from bringing another
complaint against the same rate for the remainder of the prescription
period set by the Board. Id.; see also Rate Regulation Reforms, EP 715,
slip op. at 11-12 (STB served July 18, 2013).\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ After the relief is exhausted, the carrier may raise the
rate, and that new rate may be challenged. However, after the relief
is exhausted, if the carrier keeps the rate at the challenged
level--with appropriate adjustments for inflation using the rail
cost adjustment factor, adjusted for inflation and productivity
(RCAF-A)--the rate may not be challenged under any of the Board's
rate reasonableness options until the two-year maximum prescription
period has expired. See Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1),
slip op. at 28.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board established its prior caps based on the cost of
litigating a case using the next more complicated and precise
procedure: A cap on the Simplified-SAC methodology (later removed) was
based on the cost to bring a SAC case, and a lower cap for the Three-
Benchmark methodology was
[[Page 48878]]
based on the cost to bring a Simplified-SAC case. See Simplified
Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at 28. In setting these limits,
the Board attempted to strike a balance between providing simplified
methods that permit complainants to seek protection from unreasonable
rates, while encouraging use of the most precise approach feasible for
the amount in dispute. Id. at 35; see also id. at 52 (explaining that
this approach represents ``sound regulatory policy'' by balancing the
impracticability of using a more complicated procedure given its cost
against the impropriety of judging large disputes under what might be
considered a less accurate methodology). In addition, adoption of the
caps gave effect to Congress's directive that the Board weigh the
litigation cost of a SAC presentation against the value of the case
when establishing a simplified and expedited method for rate
reasonableness challenges. Id. at 34; see also id. at 52 (explaining
that the best ``method'' is the ``creation of separate processes for
rail rate disputes of varying size'').
In keeping with 49 U.S.C. 10701(d)(3), as well as the Board's
previously stated interest in channeling higher-value cases into
appropriate procedures, there is merit in setting a cap for FORR by
considering it within the framework of pre-existing rate reasonableness
methodologies. Nevertheless, as described above, because FORR does not
prescribe a particular methodology--nor a methodology necessarily less
precise than any pre-existing procedure--the Board's prior rationale
for capping relief based on the cost of the next more complicated
procedure does not necessarily or neatly apply here.
Accordingly, the Board proposes to establish a relief cap of $4
million, as indexed annually using the Producer Price Index, which is
consistent with the potential relief afforded under the Three-Benchmark
methodology.\31\ Applying a relief cap based on the estimated cost to
bring a Simplified-SAC case would further the Board's intention that
Three-Benchmark and FORR be used in the smallest cases, and applying
the same $4 million relief cap, as indexed, would provide consistency
in terms of defining that category of case.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ The relief cap would incorporate indexing that has
previously been applied to the Three-Benchmark cap, so that the cap
for FORR is the same as the cap for Three-Benchmark.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although the proposed FORR procedure is designed to apply to
smaller cases (i.e., proceedings for which the value of the case is
subject to a certain relief cap), parties may wish to generally address
whether the Board should establish different levels of relief and
provide supporting rationale for such alternatives. As discussed above,
final offer arbitration in Canada provides for two different procedural
tracks. If the matter involves freight charges of $2 million CAD or
less (subject to an inflation adjustment), an expedited ``summary''
procedure applies, and if the matter involves freight charges of
greater than that amount, a longer procedure applies. See Canada
Transp. Act, S.C. 1996, c. 10, as amended, section 164.1 (Can.). The
Board might consider an approach that, for example, would permit a
complainant submitting a FORR complaint to use the procedure described
above if it seeks relief equal to or less than the $4 million cap
proposed by the Board here. But, if the complainant were to seek relief
above this amount (which, under the procedure described here, would be
subject only to the two-year limit on rate prescriptions), a somewhat
longer procedural schedule could apply. The Board invites comment on
the advisability of such a two-tiered relief procedure in which the top
tier contains no limit on the size of the relief, in total, including
both reparations and the two-year prescription period.
Another alternative that parties may wish to address in comments is
a relief cap based on record development time and value of the case.
For example, this alternative could consider the potential relief
available in a SAC case, reduced proportionally by the difference in
record development time between a case brought under the proposed FORR
procedure and one brought under SAC. The resultant proportionally
reduced amount could be the relief cap applicable to cases under the
FORR procedure.
VIII. Other FORR Issues
The Board proposes that the FORR procedure would not be available
to challenge purely local movements of a Class II or Class III rail
carrier.\32\ Rate cases filed to date indicate that complainants' rate
concerns relate primarily to Class I carriers. As such, the Board sees
no reason to apply these new rules to purely local movements of smaller
carriers. See, e.g., Am. Short Line & Reg'l R.R. Ass'n Comment 4-5,
Feb. 26, 2007, Simplified Standards for Rail Rate Cases, EP 646 (Sub-
No. 1) (describing the impacts new rate reasonableness procedures would
have on small railroads in particular). However, the FORR procedure
would be available in challenges where the movement involves the
participation of a Class I railroad as well as a Class II or Class III
railroad. See Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No. 1), slip op. at
101-02 (stating that excluding combined movements would shut out a
significant portion of domestic rail traffic and could create perverse
routing incentives). Parties may further address in their comments the
applicability of this proposed rule to purely local movements of a
Class II or Class III rail carrier.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ Class III carriers have annual operating revenues of $20
million or less in 1991 dollars, or $39,194,876 or less when
adjusted for inflation using 2018 data. Class II rail carriers have
annual operating revenues of less than $250 million but in excess of
$20 million in 1991 dollars, or $489,935,956 and $39,194,876
respectively, when adjusted for inflation using 2018 data. The Board
calculates the revenue deflator factor annually and publishes the
railroad revenue thresholds in decisions and on its website. 49 CFR
1201.1-1; Indexing the Annual Operating Revenues of R.Rs., EP 748
(STB served June 14, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Parties may also file comments as to whether and how the Board
might provide assistance to parties--particularly smaller entities--
regarding how best to utilize the proposed FORR procedure.
The Board acknowledges that the FORR procedure, by requiring that
the Board select one of the parties' final offers without modification,
constrains its flexibility in setting a maximum lawful rate. See
generally 49 U.S.C. 10704(a) (authorizing the Board to ``prescribe'' a
maximum rate should it find the rate charged by the carrier to be
unreasonable). Also, by prohibiting litigation over discovery disputes,
the FORR procedure would constrain the Board's ability to separately
resolve one type of ancillary issue--although, as noted above, these
issues may be raised in the explanations accompanying parties' final
offers. The Board, however, concludes that these constraints would be
justified by the cost and time savings it expects would be achieved
through the use of the proposed procedure to challenge rate
reasonableness for smaller cases, which in turn would assist the Board
in maintaining reasonable rates. The existing options to challenge the
reasonableness of rates (especially SAC), which allow the Board to
craft individual responses to numerous issues (hundreds of issues, in
some instances), are time-consuming and costly.
Finally, the Board seeks additional comments on Docket No. EP 665
(Sub-No. 2), including whether to close that docket. There, the Board
provided notice that it was considering a new
[[Page 48879]]
methodology that would utilize a comparison group approach to determine
the reasonableness of the challenged traffic's rate, like the approach
utilized by the Three-Benchmark methodology but more streamlined.
Expanding Access to Rate Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 12,
15, 23. As the RRTF explained, however, the Board received a number of
negative comments regarding Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2), including
arguments that the methodology discussed in that docket could increase
the time and cost of litigation compared to bringing a Three-Benchmark
case. See, e.g., Am. Chemistry Council Opening Comments 7-9, Nov. 14,
2016, Expanding Access to Rate Relief, EP 665 (Sub-No. 2).
Within the due dates for comments set forth below, parties may also
update their comments or submit new comments on Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-
No. 2). If parties choose to submit comments that pertain both to
Docket No. EP 665 (Sub-No. 2) and to the proposal made in Docket No. EP
755, they should submit those comments in both dockets. Moreover, the
Board is aware that stakeholders have worked to create additional rate
reasonableness methodologies. See, e.g., Nat'l Grain & Feed Ass'n
Opening Comments 27-35, June 26, 2014, Rail Transp. of Grain, Rate
Regulation Review, EP 665 (Sub-No. 1); Notice of Director's Decision,
WB 17-44 (STB served Apr. 17, 2018) (granting access to Waybill Sample
data for the ``development, evaluation, and proposal'' of new rate
reasonableness alternatives).
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-612,
generally requires a description and analysis of new rules that would
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. In drafting a rule, an agency is required to: (1) Assess the
effect that its regulation will have on small entities, (2) analyze
effective alternatives that may minimize a regulation's impact, and (3)
make the analysis available for public comment. Sections 601-604. In
its notice of proposed rulemaking, the agency must either include an
initial regulatory flexibility analysis, section 603(a), or certify
that the proposed rule would not have a ``significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities,'' section 605(b). Because the
goal of the RFA is to reduce the cost to small entities of complying
with federal regulations, the RFA requires an agency to perform a
regulatory flexibility analysis of small entity impacts only when a
rule directly regulates those entities. In other words, the impact must
be a direct impact on small entities ``whose conduct is circumscribed
or mandated'' by the proposed rule. White Eagle Coop. v. Conner, 553
F.3d 467, 480 (7th Cir. 2009).
This proposal would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities within the meaning of the RFA.\33\
The proposal imposes no additional record-keeping by small railroads or
any reporting of additional information. Nor does this proposed rule
circumscribe or mandate any conduct by small railroads that is not
already required by statute: The establishment of reasonable
transportation rates when a carrier is found to be market dominant.
Although the Board predicts that the establishment of the FORR
procedure would result in the filing of several additional complaints
per year, small railroads have always been subject to rate
reasonableness complaints and their associated litigation costs, the
latter of which the Board expects would be reduced through the use of
this proposed procedure. The new procedure proposed here would exclude
purely local movements of Class III carriers, affecting only movements
that also involve the participation of a Class I railroad. Finally, as
the Board has previously concluded, the majority of railroads involved
in these rate proceedings are not small entities within the meaning of
the Regulatory Flexibility Act. Simplified Standards, EP 646 (Sub-No.
1), slip op. at 33-34. Since the inception of the Board in 1996, only
three of the 51 cases filed challenging the reasonableness of freight
rail rates have involved a Class III rail carrier as a defendant. Those
three cases involved a total of 13 Class III rail carriers. The Board
estimates that there are approximately 656 Class III rail carriers.
Therefore, the Board certifies under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that this proposed
rule, if promulgated, would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities as defined by the RFA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ For the purpose of RFA analysis for rail carriers subject
to Board jurisdiction, the Board defines a ``small business'' as
only including those rail carriers classified as Class III rail
carriers under 49 CFR 1201.1-1. See Small Entity Size Standards
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, EP 719 (STB served June 30,
2016) (with Board Member Begeman dissenting).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This decision will be served upon the Chief Counsel for Advocacy,
Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration, Washington, DC
20416.
Paperwork Reduction Act
Pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521,
Office of Management and Budget (OMB) regulations at 5 CFR
1320.8(d)(3), and in the Appendix, the Board seeks comments about the
revisions in the proposed rule to the currently approved collection of
Complaints (OMB Control No. 2140-0029) regarding: (1) Whether the
collection of information, as modified in the proposed rule and further
described below, is necessary for the proper performance of the
functions of the Board, including whether the collection has practical
utility; (2) the accuracy of the Board's burden estimates; (3) ways to
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information collected;
and (4) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information on
the respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information technology, when appropriate.
The Board believes that the proposed procedure would provide a less
burdensome alternative to other rate review options and estimates that
it would, on balance, result in four additional complaints filed each
year. Filing a complaint, generally, has been estimated to require an
annual hour burden of 469 hours and an annual ``non-hour burden'' cost
of $1,462. See Supporting Statement for Modification & OMB Approval
Under the Paperwork Reduction Act & 5 CFR 1320, OMB Control No. 2140-
0029 (Jan. 2018), available at https://www.reginfo.gov/public/do/DownloadDocument?objectID=78860402. For the reasons discussed above,
filing a FORR complaint is likely to require less time and expenditure
than other complaints. Accordingly, the Board estimates that this
proposed procedure would entail an annual hour burden of 250 hours per
complaint and an annual ``non-hour burden'' cost of $780 per complaint.
Accounting for the projected four additional complaints per year, this
proposal would result in an additional total annual hour burden of
1,000 hours and $3,120 of total annual ``non-hour burden'' cost under
the PRA. The Board welcomes comment on the estimates of actual time and
costs of the proposed alternative complaint, as detailed below in the
Appendix. Other information pertinent to the proposed alternative
complaint is also included in the Appendix. The proposed rule will be
submitted to OMB for review as required under 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5
CFR 1320.11. Comments received by the Board regarding the information
[[Page 48880]]
collection will also be forwarded to OMB for its review when the final
rule is published.
It is ordered:
1. The Board proposes to amend its rules as set forth in this
decision. Notice of the proposed rule will be published in the Federal
Register.
2. Comments are due by November 12, 2019. Reply comments are due by
January 10, 2020.
3. A copy of this decision will be served upon the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration.
4. This decision is effective on its service date.
List of Subjects
49 CFR Part 1002
Administrative practice and procedure, Common Carriers, Freedom of
information.
49 CFR Part 1111
Administrative practice and procedure, Investigations.
49 CFR Part 1114
Administrative practice and procedure.
49 CFR Part 1115
Administrative practice and procedure.
Decided: September 11, 2019.
By the Board, Board Members Begeman, Fuchs, and Oberman.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Surface
Transportation Board proposes to amend parts 1002, 1111, 1114, and 1115
of title 49, chapter X, of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 1002--FEES
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1. The authority citation for part 1002 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(4)(A), (a)(6)(B), and 553; 31 U.S.C.
9701; and 49 U.S.C. 1321. Section 1002.1(f)(11) is also issued under
5 U.S.C. 5514 and 31 U.S.C. 3717.
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2. Amend Sec. 1002.2 by revising paragraph (f)(56) to read as follows:
Sec. 1002.2 Filing fees.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Type of proceeding Fee
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * * * *
PART V: Formal Proceedings:
(56) A formal complaint alleging unlawful rates or
practices of carriers:
(i) A formal complaint filed under the coal rate $350.
guidelines (Stand-Alone Cost Methodology)
alleging unlawful rates and/or practices of
rail carriers under 49 U.S.C. 10704(c)(1)......
(ii) A formal complaint involving rail maximum $350.
rates filed under the Simplified-SAC
methodology....................................
(iii) A formal complaint involving rail maximum $150.
rates filed under the Three Benchmark
methodology....................................
(iv) A formal complaint involving rail maximum $150.
rates filed under the Final Offer Rate Review
procedure......................................
(v) All other formal complaints (except $350.
competitive access complaints).................
(vi) Competitive access complaints.............. $150.
(vii) A request for an order compelling a rail $350.
carrier to establish a common carrier rate.....
* * * * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
PART 1111--COMPLAINT AND INVESTIGATION PROCEDURES
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3. The authority citation for part 1111 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 10701, 10704, 11701, and 1321.
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4. Amend Sec. 1111.3 by revising paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 1111.3 Amended and supplemental complaints.
* * * * *
(c) Simplified Standards. A complaint filed under Simplified-SAC or
Three-Benchmark may be amended once before the filing of opening
evidence to opt for a different rate reasonableness methodology, among
Three-Benchmark, Simplified-SAC, or stand-alone cost. If so amended,
the procedural schedule begins again under the new methodology as set
forth at Sec. Sec. 1111.9 and 1111.10. However, only one mediation
period per complaint shall be required. A complaint filed under Final
Offer Rate Review may not be amended to opt for Three-Benchmark,
Simplified-SAC, or stand-alone cost, and a complaint filed under Three-
Benchmark, Simplified-SAC, or stand-alone cost may not be amended to
opt for Final Offer Rate Review.
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5. Amend Sec. 1111.5 by revising paragraphs (a), (b), (c), and (e) to
read as follows:
Sec. 1111.5 Answers and cross complaints.
(a) Generally. Other than in cases under Final Offer Rate Review,
which does not require the filing of an answer, an answer shall be
filed within the time provided in paragraph (c) of this section. An
answer should be responsive to the complaint and should fully advise
the Board and the parties of the nature of the defense. In answering a
complaint challenging the reasonableness of a rail rate, the defendant
should indicate whether it will contend that the Board is deprived of
jurisdiction to hear the complaint because the revenue-variable cost
percentage generated by the traffic is less than 180 percent, or the
traffic is subject to effective product or geographic competition. In
response to a complaint filed under Simplified-SAC or Three-Benchmark,
the answer must include the defendant's preliminary estimate of the
variable cost of each challenged movement calculated using the
unadjusted figures produced by the URCS Phase III program.
(b) Disclosure with Simplified-SAC or Three-Benchmark answer. The
defendant must provide to the complainant all documents that it relied
upon to determine the inputs used in the URCS Phase III program.
(c) Time for filing; copies; service. Other than in cases under
Final Offer Rate Review, which does not require the filing of an
answer, an answer must be filed with the Board within 20 days after the
service of the complaint or within such additional time as the Board
may provide. The defendant must serve copies of the answer upon the
complainant and any other defendants.
* * * * *
[[Page 48881]]
(e) Failure to answer complaint. Other than in cases under Final
Offer Rate Review, which does not require the filing of an answer,
averments in a complaint are admitted when not denied in an answer to
the complaint.
* * * * *
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6. Amend Sec. 1111.10 by adding paragraph (a)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 1111.10 Procedural schedule in cases using simplified standards.
(a) * * *
(3)(i) In cases relying upon the Final Offer Rate Review procedure:
(A) Day 5--Complainant files notice of intent to initiate case and
serves notice on defendant.
(B) Day 0--Complaint filed; discovery begins.
(C) Day 21--Discovery closes.
(D) Day 35--Market dominance filings, rate reasonableness analyses,
and final offers.
(E) Day 45--Replies.
(F) Day 52--Telephonic evidentiary hearing before an administrative
law judge, as described in Sec. 1111.12(e), at the discretion of the
complainant (market dominance).
(G) Day 135--Board decision.
(ii) In addition, the Board will appoint a liaison within five
business days after the Board receives the pre-filing notification.
(iii) With its final offer, each party must submit an explanation
of the methodology it used.
* * * * *
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7. Amend Sec. 1111.11 by revising paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 1111.11 Meeting to discuss procedural matters.
* * * * *
(b) Stand-alone cost or simplified standards complaints.
(1) In complaints challenging the reasonableness of a rail rate
based on stand-alone cost, Simplified-SAC, or Three-Benchmark, the
parties shall meet, or discuss by telephone or through email, discovery
and procedural matters within 7 days after the complaint is filed in
stand-alone cost cases, and 7 days after the mediation period ends in
Simplified-SAC or Three-Benchmark cases. The parties should inform the
Board as soon as possible thereafter whether there are unresolved
disputes that require Board intervention and, if so, the nature of such
disputes.
(2) In complaints challenging the reasonableness of a rail rate
under Final Offer Rate Review, the parties may not seek Board
intervention in discovery disputes, but the parties should discuss
discovery matters with one another to the extent necessary.
PART 1114--EVIDENCE; DISCOVERY
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8. The authority citation for part 1114 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 559; 49 U.S.C. 1321.
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9. Amend Sec. 1114.21 by adding paragraph (a)(4) to read as follows:
Sec. 1114.21 Applicability; general provisions.
(a) * * *
(4) Time periods specified in this subpart do not apply in cases
under Final Offer Rate Review. Instead, parties in cases under Final
Offer Rate Review should serve requests, answers to requests,
objections, and other discovery-related communications within a
reasonable time given the length of the discovery period.
* * * * *
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10. Amend Sec. 1114.24 by revising paragraph (h) to read as follows:
Sec. 1114.24 Depositions; procedures.
* * * * *
(h) Return. The officer shall securely seal the deposition in an
envelope endorsed with sufficient information to identify the
proceeding and marked ``Deposition of (here insert name of witness)''
and shall either personally deliver or promptly send the original and
one copy of all exhibits by e-filing (provided the filing complies with
49 CFR 1104.1(e)) or registered mail to the Office of Proceedings. A
deposition to be offered in evidence must reach the Board not later
than 5 days before the date it is to be so offered.
* * * * *
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11. Amend Sec. 1114.31 by revising paragraphs (a) and (d) to read as
follows:
Sec. 1114.31 Failure to respond to discovery.
(a) Failure to answer. If a deponent fails to answer or gives an
evasive answer or incomplete answer to a question propounded under
Sec. 1114.24(a), or a party fails to answer or gives evasive or
incomplete answers to written interrogatories served pursuant to Sec.
1114.26(a), the party seeking discovery may apply for an order
compelling an answer by motion filed with the Board and served on all
parties and deponents. Such motion to compel an answer must be filed
with the Board and served on all parties and deponents. Such motion to
compel an answer must be filed with the Board within 10 days after the
failure to obtain a responsive answer upon deposition, or within 10
days after expiration of the period allowed for submission of answers
to interrogatories. On matters relating to a deposition on oral
examination, the proponent of the question may complete or adjourn the
examination before he applies for an order. Motions to compel may not
be filed in cases under Final Offer Rate Review.
(1) Reply to motion to compel generally. Except in rate cases to be
considered under the stand-alone cost methodology or simplified
standards, the time for filing a reply to a motion to compel is
governed by 49 CFR 1104.13.
(2) Motions to compel in stand-alone cost and simplified standards
rate cases.
(i) Motions to compel in stand-alone cost, Simplified-SAC, and
Three-Benchmark rate cases must include a certification that the movant
has in good faith conferred or attempted to confer with the person or
party failing to answer discovery to obtain it without Board
intervention.
(ii) In a rate case to be considered under the stand-alone cost,
Simplified-SAC, or Three-Benchmark methodologies, a reply to a motion
to compel must be filed with the Board within 10 days of when the
motion to compel is filed.
(3) Conference with parties on motion to compel. Within 5 business
days after the filing of a reply to a motion to compel in a rate case
to be considered under the stand-alone cost methodology, Simplified-
SAC, or Three-Benchmark, Board staff may convene a conference with the
parties to discuss the dispute, attempt to narrow the issues, and
gather any further information needed to render a ruling.
(4) Ruling on motion to compel in stand-alone cost, Simplified-SAC,
and Three-Benchmark rate cases. Within 5 business days after a
conference with the parties convened pursuant to paragraph (a)(3) of
this section, the Director of the Office of Proceedings will issue a
summary ruling on the motion to compel discovery. If no conference is
convened, the Director of the Office of Proceedings will issue this
summary ruling within 10 days after the filing of the reply to the
motion to compel. Appeals of a Director's ruling will proceed under 49
CFR 1115.9, and the Board will attempt to rule on such appeals within
20 days after the filing of the reply to the appeal.
* * * * *
(d) Failure of party to attend or serve answers. If a party or a
person or an officer, director, managing agent, or employee of a party
or person willfully fails to appear before the officer who is to take
his deposition, after being served with a proper notice, or fails to
serve answers to interrogatories submitted under Sec. 1114.26, after
proper service of
[[Page 48882]]
such interrogatories, the Board on motion and notice may strike out all
or any part of any pleading of that party or person, or dismiss the
proceeding or any part thereof. Such a motion may not be filed in a
case under Final Offer Rate Review. In lieu of any such order or in
addition thereto, the Board shall require the party failing to act or
the attorney advising that party or both to pay the reasonable
expenses, including attorney's fees, caused by the failure, unless the
Board finds that the failure was substantially justified or that other
circumstances make an award of expenses unjust.
* * * * *
PART 1115--APPELLATE PROCEDURES
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12. The authority citation for part 1115 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 559; 49 U.S.C. 1321; 49 U.S.C. 11708.
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13. Amend Sec. 1115.3 by revising paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 1115.3 Board actions other than initial decisions.
* * * * *
(e) Petitions must be filed within 20 days after the service of the
action or within any further period (not to exceed 20 days) as the
Board may authorize. However, in cases under Final Offer Rate Review,
petitions must be filed within 5 days after the service of the action,
and replies to petitions must be filed within 10 days after the service
of the action.
* * * * *
Note: The following appendix will not appear in the Code of
Federal Regulations.
Appendix
Information Collection Under the Paperwork Reduction Act
Title: Complaints under 49 CFR 1111.
OMB Control Number: 2140-0029.
STB Form Number: None.
Type of Review: Revision of a currently approved collection.
Summary: As part of its continuing effort to reduce paperwork
burdens, and as required by the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44
U.S.C. 3501-3521 (PRA), the Surface Transportation Board (Board)
gives notice that it is requesting from the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) approval for the revision of the currently approved
information collection, Complaints under 49 CFR part 1111, OMB
Control No. 2140-0029, as further described below. The requested
revision to the currently approved collection is necessitated by
this Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM), which proposes to add an
alternative (Final Offer Rate Review) complaint to the types of
complaints collected by the Board in this information collection.
All other information collected by the Board in the currently
approved collection is without change from its approval.
Respondents: Affected shippers, railroads, and communities that
seek redress for alleged violations related to unreasonable rates,
unreasonable practices, service issues, and other statutory claims.
Number of Respondents: Eight.
Frequency: On occasion. In recent years, respondents have filed
approximately four complaints per year with the Board. It is
anticipated that four additional complaints would be filed annually
under the proposed procedure. In Market Dominance Streamlined
Approach, EP 756 (STB served September 12, 2019), the Board
simultaneously issued a separate NPRM that also would impact the
Board's existing collection of complaints. But that decision, which
expects to add an additional five complaints a year (including the
four complaints estimated to filed under Final Offer Rate Review),
is being treated as separate and subsequent--for the purposes of
estimation--to this NPRM's modification of the existing collection
of complaints. The decision in EP 756 will include the modification
here.
Total Burden Hours (annually including all respondents): 2,876
(sum of (i) estimated hours per complaint (469) x total number of
estimated, existing complaints (4) and (ii) estimated hours per
proposed alternative complaint (250) x total number of those
complaints (4)).
Total ``Non-Hour Burden'' Cost (such as start-up costs and
mailing costs): $8,968 (sum of (i) estimated non-hour burden cost
per complaint ($1,462) x total number of estimated, existing
complaints (4) and (ii) estimated non-hour burden cost per proposed
alternative complaint ($780) x total number of those complaints
(4)).
Needs and Uses: Under the Board's regulations, persons may file
complaints before the Board pursuant to 49 CFR part 1111 seeking
redress for alleged violations of provisions of the Interstate
Commerce Act, Public Law 104-88, 109 Stat. 803 (1995). In the last
few years, the most significant complaints filed at the Board allege
that railroads are charging unreasonable rates or that they are
engaging in unreasonable practices. See, e.g., 49 U.S.C. 10701,
10704, and 11701. As described in more detail above in the NPRM, the
Board is proposing to add a new procedure to provide stakeholders
with a more streamlined option to challenge rate reasonableness for
smaller cases. The collection by the Board of these complaints, and
the agency's action in conducting proceedings and ruling on the
complaints, enables the Board to meet its statutory duties.
[FR Doc. 2019-20093 Filed 9-16-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915-01-P