Defining Unfair or Deceptive Practices, 78707-78718 [2020-26416]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 235 / Monday, December 7, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
(Lat. 46°36′24″ N, long. 111°59′0.0″ W)
That airspace extending upward from the
surface within an area bounded by a line
beginning at Lat. 46°34′18.57″ N, long.
111°51′30.319″ W, to Lat. 46°38′5.89″ N,
Long. 111°51′24.53 ″ W, to Lat. 46°37′12.53″
N, long. 111°45′24.67 ″ W, to Lat.
46°32′22.72″ N, Long. 111°46′31.44″ W, to
Lat. 46°33′24.13″ N, Long. 111°54′20.01″ W,
then counter-clockwise along the 4.4-mile
radius of the airport to Lat. 46°34′20.01″ N,
long. 111°53′22.03″ W, then to the point of
beginning, and within an area bounded by a
line beginning at Lat. 46°38′39.95″ N, long.
112°06′47.50″ W, to Lat. 46°36′47.49″ N, long.
112°07′53.41″ W, to Lat. 46°37′22.52″ N, long.
112°11′37.80″ W, to Lat. 46°39′19.40″ N, long.
112°10′58.64″ W, then to the point of
beginning west of Helena Regional Airport.
Paragraph 6005. Class E Airspace Areas
Extending Upward from 700 feet or more
above the Surface of the Earth.
*
*
*
*
*
ANM MT E5 Helena, MT [Amended]
Helena Regional Airport, MT
(Lat. 46°36′24″ N, long. 111°59′0.0″ W)
That airspace extending upward from 700
feet above the surface within an 8.3-mile
radius of the airport, and within 1 mile each
side of the 103° bearing from the airport,
extending from the 8.3-mile radius to 10.7
miles east of the airport, and within 1.8 miles
each side of the 281° bearing from the airport,
extending from the 8.3-mile radius to 18.1
miles west of the airport; and that airspace
extending upward from 1,200 feet above the
surface within a 36-mile radius of Helena
Regional Airport.
Issued in Seattle, Washington, on
December 1, 2020.
B. G. Chew,
Acting Group Manager, Operations Support
Group, Western Service Center.
[FR Doc. 2020–26816 Filed 12–4–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–13–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary
14 CFR Part 399
[Docket No. DOT–OST–2019–0182]
RIN 2105–AE72
Defining Unfair or Deceptive Practices
Office of the Secretary (OST),
U.S. Department of Transportation
(DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
The U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT or Department) is
issuing a final rule codifying its
longstanding definitions for the terms
‘‘unfair’’ and ‘‘deceptive’’ in the
Department’s regulations implementing
its aviation consumer protection statute.
The final rule also describes the
SUMMARY:
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Department’s procedural requirements
for its rulemaking and enforcement
actions when based on the Department’s
authority to prohibit unfair or deceptive
practices. Most of the Department’s
aviation consumer protection
regulations, such as the Department’s
rules on overbooking, are based on the
Department’s authority to prohibit
unfair or deceptive practices. This rule
is intended to provide regulated entities
and other stakeholders with greater
clarity and certainty about the
Department’s interpretation of unfair or
deceptive practices and the
Department’s process for making such
determinations in the context of
aviation consumer protection
rulemaking and enforcement actions.
DATES: Effective on January 6, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robert Gorman, Kimberly Graber, or
Blane Workie, Office of Aviation
Consumer Protection, U.S. Department
of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Ave.
SE, Washington, DC 20590, 202–366–
9342, 202–366–7152 (fax);
robert.gorman@dot.gov;
kimberly.graber@dot.gov; blane.workie@
dot.gov (email).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Rulemaking Background
Much of the background information
presented here also appears in the
preamble to the Department’s Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking on Defining
Unfair and Deceptive Practices
published on February 28, 2020.1 We
have presented background information
again here to assist the public in
understanding the issues involved.
A. The Department’s Unfair and
Deceptive Practices Statute
The Department’s authority to
regulate unfair and deceptive practices
in air transportation or the sale of air
transportation is found at 49 U.S.C.
41712 (‘‘Section 41712’’) in conjunction
with its rulemaking authority under 49
U.S.C. 40113, which states that the
Department may take action that it
considers necessary to carry out this
part, including prescribing regulations.
Section 41712 gives the Department the
authority to investigate and decide
whether an air carrier, foreign air
carrier, or ticket agent is engaged in an
unfair or deceptive practice in air
transportation or the sale of air
transportation. Under Section 41712,
after notice and an opportunity for a
hearing, the Department has the
authority to issue orders to stop an
unfair or deceptive practice. A different
1 ‘‘Defining Unfair or Deceptive Practices,’’ 85 FR
11881 (February 28, 2020).
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statute, 49 U.S.C. 46301, gives the
Department the authority to issue civil
penalties for violations of Section 41712
or for any regulation issued under the
authority of Section 41712.
B. Request for Regulatory Reform
On February 24, 2017, President
Trump signed Executive Order 13777,
Enforcing the Regulatory Reform
Agenda, which requires each Federal
agency to establish a Regulatory Reform
Task Force to evaluate existing
regulations, and make recommendations
for their repeal, replacement, or
modification. As part of this process, the
Department is directed to seek input
and assistance from entities
significantly affected by its regulations.
On October 1, 2017, the Department
issued a Notice of Regulatory Reform
seeking written input from the public on
existing regulations and other actions
that are good candidates for repeal,
replacement, or modification.2 In
response to the Notice, Airlines for
America (A4A), an airline trade
association, urged the Department to
adopt policies defining unfairness and
deception in Section 41712 consistent
with principles articulated in Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) and Federal
court precedent interpreting those
terms.3 A4A also urged the Department
to adopt various procedures which
would, in its view, ensure that the
Department’s enforcement and
rulemaking activities were rooted in
fairness, due process, and an adequate
factual foundation.
C. Department’s Comprehensive Update
of Rulemaking and Enforcement
Procedures
On December 27, 2019, the
Department issued a comprehensive
update and consolidation of its
procedural requirements for the
Department’s rulemaking and
enforcement actions.4 This update
reflects the Department’s policy that
regulations should be straightforward
and clear, incorporate best practices for
economic analyses, and provide for
appropriate public participation.5 It also
reflects the Department’s policy that
enforcement actions should satisfy
principles of due process and remain
2 ‘‘Notification of Regulatory Review,’’ 82 FR
45750 (October 1, 2017).
3 See Comment of A4A, Docket DOT–OST–2017–
0069–2753, available at www.regulations.gov.
4 ‘‘Administrative Rulemaking, Guidance, and
Enforcement Procedures,’’ 84 FR 71714 (December
27, 2019), amending 49 CFR part 5 and other
provisions.
5 84 FR 71718–71826.
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lawful, reasonable, and consistent with
Administration policy.6
D. Summary of Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPRM)
On February 28, 2020, the Department
published an NPRM proposing to define
the terms ‘‘unfair’’ and ‘‘deceptive’’
found in Section 41712, the
Department’s aviation consumer
protection statute. The NPRM also
proposed a series of amendments to the
Department’s aviation consumer
protection procedures with respect to
both regulation and enforcement. The
proposals were issued to provide greater
clarity, transparency, and due process in
future aviation consumer protection
rulemakings and enforcement actions.
By way of background, the
Department described the origin of
section 41712 and explained how it was
modeled on Section 5 of the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC) Act. The
Department explained that while
Section 5 vests the FTC with broad
authority to prohibit unfair or deceptive
practices in most industries, Congress
granted the Department the exclusive
authority to prohibit unfair or deceptive
practices of air carriers and foreign air
carriers. The Department noted that
DOT and FTC share the authority to
prohibit unfair or deceptive practices by
ticket agents in the sale of air
transportation.
Next, the Department explained that
in December 1980, the FTC issued a
Policy Statement to Congress, which
articulated general principles drawn
from FTC decisions and rulemakings
that the Commission applies in
enforcing its mandate to address
unfairness under the FTC Act.7 These
principles were applied in FTC
enforcement cases and rulemakings, and
approved by reviewing Federal courts.8
The FTC explained that unjustified
consumer injury is the primary focus of
the FTC Act. This concept contains
three basic elements. An act or practice
is unfair where it: (1) Causes or is likely
to cause substantial injury to
consumers; (2) cannot be reasonably
avoided by consumers; and (3) is not
outweighed by countervailing benefits
6 84
FR 71729–71733.
from the FTC to Hon. Wendell Ford and
Hon. John Danforth, Committee on Commerce,
Science and Transportation, United States Senate,
Commission Statement of Policy on the Scope of
Consumer Unfairness Jurisdiction (December 17,
1980), appended to International Harvester Co., 104
F.T.C. 949, 1070, 1073 (1984).
8 See, e.g., International Harvester, 104 F.T.C. 949
(1984); Credit Practices Rule, Statement of Basis
and Purpose, 49 FR 7740 (1984) (‘‘Credit Practices
Rule SBP’’); Orkin Exterminating Co., Inc., 108
F.T.C. 263 (1986); aff’d, FTC v. Orkin, 849 F.2d
1354 (11th Cir. 1988).
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to consumers or to competition. The
FTC also considers public policy, as
established by statute, regulation, or
judicial decisions, along with other
evidence in determining whether an act
or practice is unfair.
These principles are now reflected in
the FTC Act itself. In 1994, Congress
enacted 15 U.S.C. 45(n), which states
that the FTC shall have no enforcement
authority or rulemaking authority to
declare an act or practice unfair unless
it is likely to cause substantial injury to
consumers which is not reasonably
avoidable by consumers themselves and
not outweighed by countervailing
benefits to consumers or to competition.
Congress further provided in Section
45(n) that the FTC could rely on public
policy, along with other evidence, for
making a determination of unfairness,
but public policy may not be the
primary basis of its decision.
Next, the Department explained that
in 1983, the FTC issued a Policy
Statement on Deception.9 Like the 1980
Policy Statement on Unfairness, the
1983 Policy Statement clarified the
general principles that the FTC applies
in enforcing its mandate to address
deception under the FTC Act. As
explained in the Policy Statement, an
act or practice is deceptive where: (1) A
representation, omission, or practice
misleads or is likely to mislead the
consumer; (2) a consumer’s
interpretation of the representation,
omission, or practice is considered
reasonable under the circumstances;
and (3) the misleading representation,
omission, or practice is material.
In the NPRM, the Department
proposed to adopt definitions of
‘‘unfair’’ and ‘‘deceptive’’ that echo FTC
precedent. The Department explained
that adopting these definitions would
simply codify existing practice and
would not reflect a change of policy,
because the Department’s Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection (formerly
known as the Office of Aviation
Enforcement and Proceedings), a unit
within the Office of the General Counsel
that enforces aviation consumer
protection requirements, has often
explicitly relied on those definitions in
its enforcement orders.
Next, the Department proposed a set
of procedural rules that would govern
the Department’s future discretionary
rulemaking and enforcement efforts in
the area of aviation consumer
protection. With respect to rulemaking
actions, the Department proposed three
measures. First, future rulemakings
9 FTC Policy Statement on Deception (Oct. 14,
1983), 103 F.T.C. 174, 175 (1984) (appended to
Cliffdale Assocs., Inc., 103 F.T.C. 110 (1984)).
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declaring certain practices to be
‘‘unfair’’ or ‘‘deceptive’’ would use the
Department’s proposed definitions of
those terms.10 In prior rulemakings, the
Department tended to make a
conclusory statement that a practice was
unfair or deceptive and did not provide
its reasoning for that conclusion. In
arriving at these conclusions that certain
practices were unfair or deceptive, DOT
employed the same definitions that are
set forth in this rule, though that
analysis was done informally at the
Department and not further described in
rule preambles.
Second, future discretionary
rulemakings would be subject to a
hearing procedure. Specifically, if the
Department proposes that a practice was
unfair or deceptive in a rulemaking, and
that rulemaking raised scientific,
technical, economic, or other factual
issues that are genuinely in dispute,
then interested parties may request an
evidentiary hearing to gather evidence
on those disputed issues of fact. Third,
future rulemakings would explain the
Department’s basis for finding a practice
to be unfair or deceptive.
With respect to enforcement, the
Department proposed three measures.
First, when taking enforcement action
against an airline or ticket agent for
unfair or deceptive practices, the
Department would use the proposed
definitions of ‘‘unfair’’ and ‘‘deceptive’’
set forth above (unless a specific
regulation issued under the authority of
section 41712 applied to the practice in
question, in which case the terms of the
specific regulation would apply).
Second, in future enforcement actions,
the Department would provide the
airline or ticket agent with the
opportunity to be heard and to present
mitigating evidence. This final rule
codifies the longstanding practice of
allowing regulated entities to present
mitigating evidence during the course of
informal DOT enforcement actions. In a
typical enforcement action, the Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection issues an
investigation letter to an airline or ticket
agent, seeking information about the
extent and nature of the violations.
During that process, the Office also
allows airlines and ticket agents to
present mitigating evidence (e.g., that
consumer harm was low, or that the
airline or ticket agent has taken steps to
mitigate the harm to consumers). While
the rule now makes this process
explicit, we do not expect an expansion
in its usage; instead, we expect that it
10 The proposal recognized that if Congress
directed the Department to issue a rule declaring a
specific practice to be unfair or deceptive, then the
Department would do so without reference to the
Department’s own definitions.
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will continue unchanged after the
issuance of this final rule. Third, in
future enforcement orders, if a specific
regulation does not apply to the practice
in question, the Department would
explain the basis for its finding that a
practice was unfair or deceptive. The
Department is of the view that these
measures generally codify existing
practice.
In addition, the Department solicited
comment on related matters. For
example, the Department asked whether
the term ‘‘practice’’ should be defined.
The Department also noted that it relies
on its general unfair and deceptive
practices authority in certain
specialized areas (e.g., privacy, frequent
flyer programs, and air ambulance
service) and asked whether the
proposed general definitions of ‘‘unfair’’
or ‘‘deceptive’’ were sufficient to
provide stakeholders sufficient notice of
what constitutes an unfair or deceptive
practice in these or other subject areas.
The comment period for the NPRM
was originally scheduled to expire on
April 28, 2020. However, in response to
a request by consumer advocacy
organizations, the comment period was
extended to May 28, 2020.
II. Summary of NPRM Comments and
the Department’s Responses
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A. Overview
The Department received a total of
224 comments by the end of the
comment period. Approximately 180
comments were filed by individual
consumers, who almost uniformly
opposed the NPRM. Individual
consumers typically did not comment
on any specific provision, but instead
opposed the NPRM as a whole, viewing
it as a weakening of aviation consumer
protection. Many consumers noted with
disapproval that the NPRM was
initiated at the request of airlines, which
in their view engage in practices that are
anti-consumer.
Consumer advocacy organizations 11
and two FTC Commissioners 12
generally opposed the proposals on the
ground that they were either
unnecessary or weakened consumer
protection. Four Senators and one
Member of Congress 13 urged the
Department to discontinue the NPRM
11 Travelers United, Flyersrights.org, National
Consumers League, Consumer Action, American
Association for Justice (formerly American Trial
Lawyers’ Association), Travel Fairness Now,
Consumer Reports, Consumer Federation of
America, and US PIRG.
12 Commissioners Rebecca Kelly Slaughter and
Rohit Chopra.
13 Senators Edward J. Markey, Tammy Baldwin,
Maria Cantwell, and Richard Blumenthal and
Representative Katie Porter.
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for many of the same reasons identified
by consumer advocates and the FTC
Commissioners.
Airline associations, individual
airlines, and a nonprofit public policy
organization 14 broadly supported the
proposals in the NPRM on the ground
that they provided greater transparency
and due process in the Department’s
rulemaking and enforcement activities.
Airlines also suggested that the
Department adopt additional provisions,
which will be discussed in greater detail
below.
Travel agent representatives and a
large travel agency 15 generally
supported the NPRM for the reasons
expressed by airlines; however, they
opposed the proposal to adopt hearing
procedures relating to discretionary
aviation consumer protection
rulemakings.
We will discuss the comments in
further detail below.
B. Definitions
1. Definitions of ‘‘Unfair’’ and
‘‘Deceptive’’
Consumer advocacy organizations
generally recognized that the proposed
definitions of ‘‘unfair’’ and ‘‘deceptive’’
mirror the FTC’s interpretation of those
terms. They argued, however, that the
Department should not limit itself to
those specific definitions. They
contended that the flexibility of
undefined terms serves as a deterrent to
engaging in practices that do not fit
within the proposed definitions, but
which may nevertheless be unfair or
deceptive.
They argued that this flexibility is
especially important in the field of air
transportation because the Airline
Deregulation Act (ADA) prohibits States
from regulating the unfair and deceptive
practices of airlines. They contended
that outside of the field of aviation,
State consumer protection laws serve as
a backstop to the FTC’s authority, and
that many consumer protection agencies
take aggressive and successful action
under State law with respect to
practices that would not qualify as
unfair or deceptive under the FTC’s
definitions. They also observed that
because of ADA preemption, relief in
court is generally limited to Federal
class-actions or small claims. Consumer
organizations concluded that the FTC
definitions may be used for guidance,
14 Airlines for America (A4A), International Air
Transport Association (IATA), National Business
Aviation Association (NBAA), U.S. Tour Operators
Association (USTOA), Spirit Airlines, Southwest
Airlines, and the Competitive Enterprise Institute
(CEI).
15 Travel Tech and BCD Travel USA.
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but should not be transformed into
regulatory text.
FTC Commissioner Chopra urged the
Department not to adopt the FTC’s
definitions, for many of the reasons
identified by consumer advocacy
organizations. He also raised several
additional concerns. First, he argued
that after the FTC adopted its Policy
Statement on Unfairness in 1980, the
Commission’s ‘‘number of enforcement
actions and rulemakings plummeted,
leaving a vacuum that hobbled
development of the law.’’ 16
Commissioner Chopra also argued that
‘‘the key planks undergirding the FTC’s
unfairness definition—competitive
markets, consumer choice, and a deemphasis on public policy—are poorly
suited to airline regulation,’’ because the
aviation market is not competitive, in
his view, and because the
Transportation Code affirmatively
requires the Secretary to emphasize
certain public policies.17 He also argued
that the proposed definitions do not
adequately take these policies into
account.
Airlines and travel agents supported
the proposed definitions, arguing that
they provide much-needed transparency
and predictability to regulated
industries. Southwest Airlines argued
that the lack of clear definitions has led
DOT to overreach in certain past
rulemakings and enforcement actions.
Southwest also argued that the third
prong of the unfairness definition (i.e.,
that the harm of the practice ‘‘is not
outweighed by countervailing benefits
to consumers or to competition’’)
correctly reflects departmental policy to
place ‘‘maximum reliance on
competitive market forces and on actual
and potential competition.’’ 18 Spirit
Airlines suggested that the proposed
definition of ‘‘deceptive,’’ which
currently refers to misleading a singular
‘‘consumer’’ acting reasonably under the
circumstances, should be written in the
plural to reflect that the practice must
be misleading to ‘‘consumers’’ in the
aggregate. Travel agents argued that
because DOT and FTC share jurisdiction
over them, it is important for the two
regulatory standards to be harmonious.
16 Comment of Commissioner Chopra at 2. He
particularly noted that in the years after adoption
of the Policy Statement, the FTC failed to take
action against predatory lending and the deceptive
practices of the tobacco industry; instead, states
took the lead, and the FTC’s authority over
consumer lending practices was transferred to the
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB),
which has a broader standard for taking
enforcement action than the FTC. Id. at 6–8.
17 Id. at 10.
18 Southwest comment at 4, citing 49 U.S.C.
40101(a)(6), (12).
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responsibility to consider the public
policies enumerated by Congress. These
policies include safety, ensuring
economic competition, and preventing
unfair and deceptive practices.22
After reviewing the comments, the
Department remains of the view that it
should adopt the definitions of ‘‘unfair’’
and ‘‘deceptive’’ as proposed. We are
guided by the principles set forth in our
recent final rule, ‘‘Administrative
Rulemaking, Guidance, and
Enforcement Procedures,’’ which seeks
to provide greater transparency to
regulated entities when conducting
enforcement actions and
adjudications.19 Offering clear
definitions of ‘‘unfair’’ and ‘‘deceptive’’
will serve this goal. We note that
transparency and clarity is particularly
needed with respect to ticket agents,
which are subject to both FTC and DOT
jurisdiction.
We stress that the definitions that we
adopt do not reflect a substantive
departure from past DOT practice. As
we explained in the NPRM, DOT has
traditionally relied on these definitions
when taking enforcement and
discretionary rulemaking actions.
Therefore, the Department is not of the
view that codifying these definitions
will diminish the Department’s
authority to take enforcement action or
to regulate effectively.
We recognize the argument of
consumer advocacy organizations and
Commissioner Chopra that the ADA
preempts State consumer protection
agencies from acting as a more
aggressive backstop to DOT action. At
present, however, we are of the view
that the proposed definitions are
adequate to ensure regulations continue
to prohibit unfair and deceptive
practices while at the same time
providing necessary transparency to the
regulated industry. We also recognize
that under FTC practice, the role of
public policy is explicitly
deemphasized,20 while Congress has
directed the Department to take into
account a variety of policies in
conducting economic regulation of air
transportation.21 We are not convinced
that this distinction compels a different
result. While the definitions of ‘‘unfair’’
and ‘‘deceptive’’ will remain the guiding
principles for regulation and
enforcement, in doing so, the
Department recognizes its statutory
2. Intent as an Element of Unfairness or
Deception
The proposed rule would clarify that
intent is not an element of either
unfairness or deception. We received
relatively few comments on this issue.
FTC Commissioners Chopra and
Slaughter both expressed the view that
the Department’s position was legally
correct. A4A and IATA, however, urged
the Department to adopt an ‘‘intent to
deceive’’ standard for both unfairness
and deception. In the alternative, they
urged the Department to give lack of
intent ‘‘significant weight’’ when
exercising its enforcement discretion.
We remain of the view that intent is
not an element of either unfairness or
deception.23 We also reject A4A and
IATA’s suggestion to adopt an intent
requirement. Such a requirement would
place the Department’s view of
unfairness and deception substantially
out of step with FTC precedent. It
would also limit the Department’s
consumer protection actions to only
those matters where parties establish
and the Department can substantiate the
private intent of carriers and ticket
agents. In light of the revisions to the
Department’s rulemaking and
enforcement procedures adopted in this
final rule to enhance the justifications
for actions taken under the
Department’s statutory authority, we
view this as an unnecessary and
unacceptably high bar. We also decline
to include in the regulation the weight
that lack of intent should be given in
any future enforcement action, because
the proper exercise of enforcement
discretion generally involves an
individualized consideration of a
variety of factors.24
19 84 FR 71716, citing Executive Order 13892,
‘‘Promoting the Rule of Law Through Transparency
and Fairness in Civil Administrative Enforcement
and Adjudication’’ (October 9, 2019).
20 As noted above, pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 45(n),
the FTC may rely on public policy, along with other
evidence, for making a determination of unfairness,
but public policy may not be the primary basis of
its decision.
21 49 U.S.C. 40101 (directing the Department,
when engaging in economic regulation of air
transportation, to consider 16 matters, ‘‘among
others, as being in the public interest and consistent
with public convenience and necessity.’’)
22 See 49 U.S.C. 40101(a)(1), (4), (6), (7), (9), and
(12).
23 See 85 FR 11885 (intent is not required under
Federal case law interpreting the FTC Act, and
noting that the definition of ‘‘false advertisement’’
in the FTC Act makes no reference to intent to
deceive).
24 See 49 CFR 5.97 (‘‘Where applicable statutes
vest the agency with discretion with regard to the
amount or type of penalty sought or imposed, the
penalty should reflect due regard for fairness, the
scale of the violation, the violator’s knowledge and
intent, and any mitigating factors (such as whether
the violator is a small business)’’).
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3. Definition of Additional Terms
Airlines urged the Department to
define further the component elements
of unfairness and deception, such as
‘‘substantial harm,’’ ‘‘likely to mislead,’’
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‘‘reasonably avoidable,’’ and ‘‘acting
reasonably under the circumstances.’’ In
general, airlines asked the Department
to adapt into regulatory text certain
aspects (but not all of the aspects) of the
FTC’s guidance on these terms, as found
in the 1980 Policy Statement on
Unfairness and the 1983 Policy
Statement on Deception. We decline
this invitation, because the regulatory
text adequately explains the necessary
elements of unfairness and deception.25
The Department will continue to look to
the FTC Policy Statements, as well as
FTC precedent and the Department’s
own precedent, for guidance in
determining whether any specific
practice meets all of the component
elements of unfairness and deception.
4. Definition of ‘‘Practice’’
In the NPRM, the Department noted
that neither the DOT nor the FTC Act
defines ‘‘practice.’’ The Department
indicated that it did not believe that a
definition of ‘‘practice’’ was necessary,
because its aviation consumer
protection regulations are always
directed to ‘‘practices’’ rather than
individual acts. The Department also
explained that its enforcement efforts
include a determination that the
conduct in question reflects a practice
or policy affecting multiple consumers,
rather than an isolated incident. We
concluded that ‘‘in general, the
Department is of the view that proof of
a practice in the aviation consumer
25 For example, A4A/IATA asks the Department
to define ‘‘substantial harm’’ as not involving
merely trivial or speculative harm. A4A/IATA
comment at 6, citing 1980 FTC Policy Statement on
Unfairness. We are of the view that this clarification
is unnecessary because the term ‘‘substantial harm’’
would necessarily exclude ‘‘trivial or speculative
harm.’’ (We also observe, however, that in keeping
with 15 U.S.C. 45(n), a practice is unfair not only
if it causes substantial harm, but if also it is likely
to cause substantial harm.)
Similarly, A4A/IATA asks us to define ‘‘not
reasonably avoided’’ as excluding circumstances
where a consumer’s willful, intentional, or reckless
conduct leads to harm (for example, by
intentionally taking advantage of a mistakenly
published fare). We are of the view that in general,
the term ‘‘not reasonably avoided’’ would
necessarily exclude the types of self-imposed harms
described by A4A and IATA. We also note that
mistaken fares are governed by a specific regulation
relating to post-purchase price increases (14 CFR
399.88). The Department has issued guidance with
respect to mistaken fares at https://
www.transportation.gov/sites/dot.gov/files/docs/
Mistaken_Fare_Policy_Statement_05082015_0.pdf.
Finally, A4A, IATA, Southwest, and Spirit all
stress under the 1983 FTC Policy Statement on
Deception, deception should be judged by reference
to reasonable consumers as a whole, and that a
single consumer’s unreasonable interpretation of a
statement does not make it deceptive. We agree that
deception is judged in reference to a reasonable
consumer and believe that these concepts are
adequately reflected in the phrase ‘‘acting
reasonably under the circumstances,’’ regardless of
whether the word ‘‘consumer’’ is singular or plural.
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protection context requires more than a
single isolated incident. On the other
hand, even a single incident may be
indicative of a practice if it reflects
company policy, training, or lack of
training.’’ 26 We sought comment,
however, on whether a definition of
‘‘practice’’ was necessary.
We received relatively few comments
on this issue. Consumer advocacy
organizations largely did not address it.
Spirit, Travel Tech, and FTC
Commissioner Slaughter opined that a
definition was not necessary. The
NBAA and USTOA urged the
Department to adopt a definition that
reflected the Department’s current
understanding, described above. A4A
and IATA urged the Department to
define ‘‘practice’’ as ‘‘a pattern of
repetitive conduct that harmed multiple
consumers rather than a single act.’’ 27
A4A and IATA stated that under this
standard, one ‘‘mistaken advertisement’’
would not be a practice even if the same
advertisement runs multiple times.28
Relatedly, A4A and IATA urged the
Department to refrain from taking
enforcement action with respect to ‘‘a
single act or isolated acts by a carrier,’’
and instead take action only if the
conduct is repeated after a warning.29
After reviewing the comments on this
issue, we remain of the view that it is
not necessary to define ‘‘practice.’’ The
Department notes that this issue will
arise in relatively rare instances where
the Department seeks to take
enforcement action in an area where no
specific regulation applies, and where
there is a reasonable disagreement over
whether the conduct reflects a truly
isolated incident. In such cases,
regulated entities will have the
opportunity to be heard and to present
evidence that the conduct at issue does
not constitute a practice, as set forth in
this rule.
C. Rulemaking Proposals
In the NPRM, the Department
proposed a hearing procedure that
would be available when the
Department proposed a discretionary
aviation consumer protection
rulemaking declaring a practice to be
unfair or deceptive. To summarize, after
the issuance of an NPRM, interested
parties could request a formal hearing
on the ground that the proposed rule
raised one or more disputed technical,
scientific, economic, or other complex
factual issues. The General Counsel
would have the authority to grant or
26 85
30 See 15 U.S.C. 57a (codifying the MagnusonMoss Warranty—Federal Trade Commission
Improvement Act of 1975, Public Law 93–637
(‘‘Mag-Moss’’).
31 Comment of Commissioner Slaughter at 3.
FR 11885.
of A4A/IATA at 12.
27 Comment
28 Id.
29 Id.
at 13.
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deny the hearing using criteria set forth
in this rule. If the hearing is granted, an
Administrative Law Judge or other
neutral hearing officer would conduct
the formal hearing using procedures
adapted from the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA) or similar rules
adopted by the Secretary. The hearing
officer would issue a detailed report on
the disputed factual issue(s), after which
the General Counsel would determine
whether the proposed rule should be
continued, amended, or terminated.
Consumer advocacy organizations
strongly urged the Department not to
adopt these hearing procedures. They
argued that the Department did not
demonstrate that the typical notice-andcomment procedures of the APA were
inadequate to gather a proper factual
basis for discretionary rulemakings.
Some commenters noted that these
hearing procedures were unnecessary
given the updates to the Department’s
general rulemaking procedures in 49
CFR part 5. They also contended that
formal hearing procedures will
inevitably create lengthy delays and
numerous opportunities for regulated
entities to lobby against the proposed
rule. Some commenters argued that the
proposed rulemaking has more liberal
standards for granting a hearing than
there are for denying a hearing; as a
result, hearings will threaten to become
the norm. Other advocates observed that
the proposal does not have a clear
mechanism for consumers to argue that
a hearing is not necessary.
FTC Commissioner Slaughter
commented on the FTC’s own
experience with similar formal hearing
procedures, which were imposed by
Congress, known as ‘‘Mag-Moss’’
procedures.30 Commissioner Slaughter
argued that such hearing procedures do
not make rulemaking impossible, but
‘‘the great difficulty of undergoing a
Mag-Moss rulemaking compared with
rulemaking under the APA should not
be understated. The additional
procedural requirements represent an
enormous drain on staff resources, to
say nothing of the additional time and
effort they require of stakeholders.’’ 31
She argued that there is a growing
bipartisan consensus for the FTC to
issue privacy regulations not under
Mag-Moss, but instead under APA
procedures. Commissioner Slaughter
argued that if the Department issues its
own privacy regulations using the
proposed formal hearing procedures, the
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Department will ‘‘create a regulatory
incongruence in which the Department
is the slowest and least capable
regulator in the privacy arena.’’ 32
Ticket agents also urged the
Department not to adopt formal hearing
procedures, for many of the reasons
cited by consumer advocates and
Commissioner Slaughter. Travel Tech
noted the incongruity of the Department
requiring heightened hearing
procedures only for its highest-cost
rules and for discretionary aviation
consumer protection rules, which
generally do not impose nearly such a
high economic burden.33 Travel Tech
also argued that the Department’s
institutional expertise in aviation
consumer protection matters ensures
that formal hearing will generally not be
necessary. Travel Tech contended that
formal hearings should only be required
when directed by Congress or under
very limited and unusual
circumstances.34
Airlines generally favored the
proposal on the ground that it provides
regulated entities with an opportunity to
test thoroughly the factual assumptions
on which discretionary consumer
protections are based. They argued that
such hearings are helpful to determine
whether a market failure has taken place
such that regulation is necessary.35
After careful review of the comments
in this area, the Department has decided
to retain a hearing procedure that would
be available when the Department
proposes a discretionary aviation
consumer protection rulemaking
declaring a practice to be unfair or
deceptive. This is consistent with
section 41712, which requires notice
and an opportunity for a hearing before
a finding that an air carrier, foreign air
carrier, or ticket agent is engaged in an
32 Id.
at 4.
33 Comment
of Travel Tech at 6–7.
at 9 (‘‘Travel Tech thus proposes that a
formal fact-finding hearing would only be
appropriate in the very unusual circumstance when
either Congress directs that a specific rule be
adopted only after an on the record hearing or when
the agency’s General Counsel finds that a specific
factual issue critical to a claim that a particular
practice is unfair or deceptive (and not an economic
or policy consideration) is in dispute and cannot be
adequately resolved through the usual notice-andcomment process.)’’
35 A4A Comment at 16, citing 49 CFR 5.11 (before
initiating a rulemaking, the Department should
identify ‘‘the need for the regulation, including a
description of the market failure or statutory
mandate necessitating the rulemaking’’). See also
comment of Spirit Airlines (arguing that the
Department’s repealed NPRM on dissemination of
ancillary fees to third party ticket sellers was based
on conflicting/misleading information regarding
passengers’ ability to get this information). Spirit
also argued that the Department should engage in
Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (ANPRM)
to gather comment on whether practices are unfair
or deceptive.
34 Id.
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unfair or deceptive practice or an unfair
method of competition. The Department
sees value in offering additional hearing
procedures for low-cost discretionary
aviation consumer protection rules
where scientific, technical, economic, or
other factual issues are genuinely in
dispute. At the same time, the
Department recognizes the concerns
raised by commenters that formal
hearing procedures may add time to the
rulemaking process. As such, the
hearing procedures for discretionary
aviation consumer protection rules set
forth in this final rule differ from the
procedures set forth in the Department’s
general rulemaking procedures in 49
CFR part 5 for the Department’s highimpact or economically significant
rules. For example, under this final rule,
the General Counsel would be free to
adopt more flexible rules for the hearing
than would be required for a highimpact or economically significant
rulemaking. The General Counsel also
has more flexibility with respect to
appointing an appropriate hearing
officer for such hearings. Finally, the
presiding officer is not required to issue
a report; the officer need only place on
the docket minutes of the hearing with
sufficient detail as to reflect fully the
evidence and arguments presented on
the disputed issues of fact, along with
proposed findings addressing those
issues. By adopting hearing procedures
for discretionary aviation consumer
protection rulemakings that are less
stringent and more flexible than the
formal hearing procedures for high
impact or economically significant
rules, the Department ensures that
interested parties have an opportunity
to test factual assumptions on which
discretionary consumer protection
rulemaking actions are based, consistent
with the underlying statutory authority
under which the Department is
regulating, while minimizing the
likelihood of extensive delays or a drain
on staff resources.
These procedures, as modified, reflect
the Department’s continued view that
interested parties should have the
opportunity to be heard when the
Department proposes discretionary
rulemakings that may be based on
complex and disputed economic,
technical, or other factual issues. We
also note that the ordinary notice and
comment procedures of the APA remain
the default process: To obtain a hearing,
the party requesting the hearing has the
initial burden of showing that, among
other factors, the ordinary notice and
comment procedures are unlikely to
provide an adequate examination of the
issues to permit a fully informed
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judgment. The rule retains the safeguard
that the General Counsel may decline a
hearing if it would unreasonably delay
the rulemaking. We also generally
disagree with commenters who stated
that the standards for granting a hearing
are necessarily more lenient than the
standards for denying them.
We also note that the Department’s
use of similar procedures to supplement
traditional notice-and-comment is not
new.36 For example, in 2011, the
Department’s Bureau of Transportation
Statistics held a public meeting to
gather information about industry
practices for processing and accounting
for baggage and wheelchairs, in
connection with a pending
rulemaking.37 More recently, the
Department asked the Architectural and
Transportation Barriers Compliance
Board (Access Board) to hold a hearing
to gather public input on potential new
standards for on-board wheelchairs, also
in connection with a pending
rulemaking.38 The Department
recognizes certain differences between
the public meetings that sometimes
were held in the context of earlier
rulemakings 39 and the hearings
contemplated by this rule. For example,
hearings will be held before a neutral
officer, who must make findings on the
record, while public meetings were
previously led by staff from the
government office involved in the
rulemaking and findings were not
separately summarized and placed on
the record but rather were noted in the
preamble if they were relied on in the
rulemaking. Moreover, this rule clearly
identifies procedures to all interested
persons that hearings may be requested,
while previously there was no formal
process to request a public meeting so
they were more likely to have been
instituted by the Department or
requested only by those parties that
knew that the Department was open to
holding public meetings in appropriate
instances. In sum, while the hearing
procedures reflected in the final rule
may result in some additional delays to
the rulemaking process beyond what
36 See https://cms7.dot.gov/regulations/
rulemaking-process, under ‘‘May an agency
supplement the APA requirements?’’ (‘‘We may use
public meetings or hearings before or after a
proposal is issued for a variety of reasons. Public
meetings allow us to ask questions. They allow for
interaction among participants with different views
on the issues involved, and they provide a better
opportunity for members of the public who believe
they are more effective making oral presentations
than submitting written comments.’’)
37 See https://www.regulations.gov/
document?D=RITA-2011-0001-0280.
38 84 FR 43100 (August 20, 2019); see https://
www.regulations.gov/document?D=ATBCB-20190002-0001.
39 E.g., 77 FR 25105 (April 27, 2012).
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was experienced with public meetings,
on the whole the new procedures will
promote fairness, due process, and wellinformed rulemaking, without unduly
delaying the proceeding itself, and
represent a reasonable and balanced
approach consistent with the
Department’s rulemaking and
enforcement policies.
D. Enforcement Proposals
In the NPRM, the Department
proposed to codify certain enforcement
practices. First, the Department
proposed that before the Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection
determined how to resolve a matter
involving a potential unfair or deceptive
practice, it would provide an
opportunity for the alleged violator to be
heard and to present relevant evidence
in its defense. Such evidence would
include, but not be limited to, the
following: (1) Evidence that the
consumer protection regulation at issue
was not violated; (2) evidence that the
conduct was not unfair or deceptive (if
no specific regulation applied); and (3)
evidence that that consumer harm was
limited or that the alleged violator has
taken steps to mitigate the harm. The
Department also proposed that when the
Office issued a consent order declaring
that a practice was unfair or deceptive,
and no specific regulation applied to the
conduct at issue, then the Office would
explain the basis for its finding that the
conduct was unfair or deceptive, using
the definitions set forth in this rule.
Finally, the Department clarified that if
the Office took enforcement action
against a regulated entity by filing a
complaint with an Administrative Law
Judge, then the entity would have the
opportunity for notice and a hearing as
set forth in 14 CFR part 302. We noted
that these procedures reflected the
longstanding practices of the Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection.
We received few comments on this
element of the proposed rule. Most
consumer advocates did not opine on
the issue, while National Consumers
League and Consumer Action advised
that they were unnecessary. Travel
Fairness Now generally did not object to
the measures, but urged the Department
to declare that an unfair or deceptive
practice with limited consumer harm
would still be subject to enforcement
action. Airlines and ticket agents
generally supported these proposals.
In the final rule, we will adopt these
measures as proposed in the NPRM.
They reflect current practice, and afford
reasonable due process to regulated
entities. These specific measures are
also consistent with the general
principles set forth in the Department’s
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recent final rule relating to
enforcement.40
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E. Privacy, Air Ambulance, and
Frequent Flyer Programs
The Department solicited comment on
whether the general definitions of
‘‘unfair’’ or ‘‘deceptive’’ were sufficient
to give notice to stakeholders of what
constitutes unfair or deceptive practices
with respect to the specialized fields of
privacy, air ambulance service, and
frequent flyer programs. While we did
not receive specific comments related to
frequent flyer programs, we did receive
comment with respect to privacy and air
ambulance service.
A4A asked the Department to declare
that the Department has exclusive
jurisdiction over airlines with respect to
privacy practices. A4A also asked the
Department to adopt detailed privacy
regulations. A4A’s proposal would
declare that ‘‘mishandling private
information may be considered an
unfair or deceptive practice,’’ and that
‘‘specific examples of unfair or
deceptive practices with regard to the
private information of consumers
include’’ violating the terms of the
airline’s privacy policy, failing to
maintain reasonable data security
measures for passengers’ private
information, and violating various
privacy statutes.
We generally agree with the substance
of A4A’s proposal; indeed, it appears to
be adapted from the privacy page of the
Department’s consumer protection
website, which recites many of these
principles.41 Nevertheless, we decline
to adopt it for procedural reasons. As
noted above, one of the Department’s
stated policies is to improve
transparency and public participation in
the rulemaking process. If the
Department were to adopt detailed
privacy regulations affecting air
transportation and the sale of air
transportation, it should first engage in
the full notice-and-comment procedures
of the APA, as well as the procedures
set forth in this final rule.
Next, we received comments from
insurers, air ambulance providers, and
other interested parties about the
regulation of air ambulance providers.
The National Association of Insurance
40 See, e.g., 49 CFR 5.57 (‘‘Enforcement
adjudications require the opportunity for
participation by directly affected parties and the
right to present a response to a decision maker,
including relevant evidence and reasoned
arguments’’); 49 CFR 5.59 (Department’s
enforcement action should conclude with, among
other things, a ‘‘well-documented decision as to
violations alleged and any violations found to have
been committed.’’)
41 https://www.transportation.gov/individuals/
aviation-consumer-protection/privacy.
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Commissioners and nine researchers on
health law, economics, and policy 42
urged the Department to declare that
balance billing is an unfair practice
because it imposes substantial harm on
patients who had no ability to avoid the
charges, without countervailing benefits
to consumers or to competition.
Separately, the researchers urged the
Department to find that charging full
out-of-network prices for air ambulance
service is an unfair practice, in part
because of its effect on the private
insurance market. Air ambulance
operators 43 argued that specific
regulation of air ambulance providers in
this rulemaking would be premature at
best, because the Air Ambulance and
Patient Billing (AAPB) Advisory
Committee has been established to
address these issues comprehensively.
Air ambulance operators also argued
that balance billing should not be
considered an unfair or deceptive
practice. They contend that much of the
consumer harm from balance billing
arises from the practices of insurers,
rather than air ambulance providers (for
example, by under paying out-ofnetwork air ambulance bills, or denying
claims that were medically necessary).
They also argue that many patients who
receive a large balance bill ultimately
pay a small fraction of that amount outof-pocket.
After consideration of the comments
submitted on this issue, we decline to
adopt specific regulations relating to air
ambulance providers. Section 418 of the
FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 (FAA
Reauthorization Act) requires the
Secretary, in consultation with the
Secretary of Health and Human
Services, to establish an advisory
committee to review options to improve
the disclosure of charges and fees for air
medical services, better inform
consumers of insurance options for such
services, and protect consumers from
balance billing. The FAA
Reauthorization Act also contemplates
that the Advisory Committee’s report
and recommendations will serve as the
basis for future regulations or other
guidance as deemed necessary to
provide other consumer protections for
customers of air ambulance providers.44
We agree that the most prudent course
of action is to allow the work of the
42 See https://www.regulations.gov/
document?D=DOT-OST-2019-0182-0193.
43 Association of Air Medical Services, Air
Methods, and PHI Health, LLC.
44 For further information about the AAPB
Advisory Committee, see https://
www.transportation.gov/airconsumer/AAPB and
the Committee’s docket, available at https://
www.regulations.gov/docket?D=DOT-OST-20180206.
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AAPB Advisory Committee to run its
course, rather than to issue more
detailed regulations relating to air
ambulance providers in this final rule.
F. Other Comments
We will address briefly a number of
comments that do not fall squarely
within the categories described above.
First, A4A and IATA urge the
Department to adopt a ‘‘clear and
convincing evidence’’ standard for
enforcement of unfair and deceptive
practices. We decline to enact such a
burden of proof standard here,
particularly in light of the fact that most
enforcement cases are adjudicated not
through the courts, but rather through
voluntary consent orders. We also note
that during these informal proceedings,
regulated entities have the opportunity
to present mitigating evidence as set
forth above.
Next, A4A and IATA urge the
Department to require the Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection to
present evidence on all of the elements
of unfairness and deception, even in
cases where a specific regulation
enacted under the authority of section
41712 applies to the conduct in
question. We decline this request
because doing so would be unduly
burdensome with limited or no benefit.
By enacting a regulation under the
authority of section 41712, the
Department has already determined,
after notice and comment, that the
conduct in question is unfair or
deceptive; in such cases, it should be
sufficient to establish that the regulation
itself was violated.45 A4A and IATA
also urge that they should be able to
present mitigating evidence with respect
to all of the prongs of unfairness and
deception. We note that in informal
enforcement proceedings involving the
violation of specific regulations,
regulated entities would have the
opportunity to present relevant
evidence, including evidence that
consumer harm was limited.
Next, A4A and IATA argue that the
Office of Aviation Consumer Protection
should affirmatively furnish
‘‘exculpatory evidence’’ in its
possession. We agree with this practice,
and the Office is required to do so under
the Department’s existing enforcement
procedures, which are set forth in
another rule.46
45 See Comment of Travel Fairness Now (urging
the Department to clarify that it will not use this
final rule as a vehicle for repealing existing
regulations, because they were well justified).
46 49 CFR 5.89 (duty to disclose exculpatory
evidence).
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G. Formal Enforcement Proceedings
In the NPRM, the Department
proposed to clarify that if regulated
entities do not enter into a negotiated
settlement with the Office of Aviation
Consumer Protection with respect to
potential violations of section 41712,
then the Office may initiate a formal
enforcement proceeding, and that
hearings are available through this
process. The Department did not receive
comments on this provision, which
restates current procedures found in 14
CFR part 302. In this final rule, the
Department has made nonsubstantive
editorial changes to the regulatory text
such as adding a citation to a specific
section of part 302. The Department has
determined that good cause exists to
dispense with notice and comment for
these nonsubstantive editorial changes
because they are ministerial in nature;
therefore, public comment is
unnecessary under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B).
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III. Regulatory Analyses and Notices
A. Executive Order 13771 (Reducing
Regulation and Controlling Regulatory
Costs), Executive Order 12866
(Regulatory Planning and Review),
Executive Order 13563 (Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review), and
DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures
(49 CFR Part 5)
This final rule is a significant
regulatory action under section 3(f) of
E.O. 12866, ‘‘Regulatory Planning and
Review’’ (Oct. 4, 1993), supplemented
by E.O. 13563, ‘‘Improving Regulation
and Regulatory Review’’ (Jan. 21, 2011).
Accordingly, the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) has reviewed it
under that Order. This final rule is
issued in accordance with the
Department’s rulemaking procedures
found in 49 CFR part 5 and DOT Order
2100.6.
This rule primarily involves agency
procedure and interpretation. It clarifies
how the Department interprets the terms
‘‘unfair’’ and ‘‘deceptive’’ and requires
enhanced departmental procedures for
regulation and enforcement in the area
of aviation consumer protection.
Clarifying and explicitly defining
terminology advances the Department’s
goal of improved transparency.
Adopting enhanced procedures for
future rulemaking and enforcement
activities will help to ensure that the
activities are rooted in fairness, due
process, and an adequate factual
foundation. These goals are described in
the Department’s final rule,
‘‘Administrative Rulemaking, Guidance,
and Enforcement Procedures.’’ 47
This rule aligns the Department’s
policies and rules involving unfairness
and deception in aviation consumer
protection explicitly with principles
adopted by the FTC. In the Department’s
view, aligning the terms ‘‘unfair’’ and
‘‘deceptive’’ does not represent a
substantive departure from past DOT
practice. The definitions simply provide
additional clarification to the public and
regulated industries, and are not
expected to affect the Department’s
ability to prohibit unfair and deceptive
practices. While clarifying the terms is
not expected to lead to changes that
would impact the Department, public,
or any regulated entity, it provides a
foundation for the other elements of this
rule pertaining to future rulemaking and
enforcement actions.
Effects on Future Rulemakings
This final rule will require the
Department to use specific definitions of
the terms ‘‘unfair’’ and ‘‘deceptive’’
when declaring certain practices to be
unfair or deceptive in future
discretionary rulemakings.
Specifically, this final rule requires
the Department to support a finding of
an ‘‘unfair’’ practice by demonstrating
that the harm to consumers is (1)
substantial; (2) not reasonably
avoidable; and (3) not outweighed by
offsetting benefits to consumers or
competition. Similarly, it requires the
Department to support a finding that a
practice is ‘‘deceptive’’ by showing that:
(1) The practice actually misleads or is
likely to mislead consumers; (2) who are
acting reasonably under the
circumstances; (3) with respect to a
material matter.
The Department has declared certain
practices to be unfair or deceptive in
several prior rulemakings, including the
full fare advertising rule (14 CFR
399.84) and oversales rule (14 CFR part
250). In the supporting analysis for
these rulemakings, the Department
justified its finding of unfairness or
deception without using the full threepronged analysis for unfairness or
deception found in this final rule.48
In other instances, the Department has
based its discretionary regulations on
both section 41712 and other statutes.
For example, the rule requiring on-time
performance information during
booking (14 CFR 234.11(b)) was based
on both section 41712 and section
41702 (requiring carriers to provide safe
and adequate interstate air
transportation).49 While the Department
partly relied on a finding of consumer
48 See
76 FR 23110 (April 25, 2011).
73 FR 74586 (December 8, 2008) (NPRM:
‘‘Enhancing Passenger Airline Protections’’).
49 See
47 84
FR 71714 (Dec. 27, 2019).
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harm under section 41712 as the basis
for that requirement, it did not engage
in the full three-part analysis for
unfairness found in this final rule.
Demonstrating support for findings of
unfairness or deception requires an
analysis of data, which is generally
collected and organized as part of a
regulatory impact analysis (RIA).
Factors such as potential harm to
consumers, benefits to consumers or
competition, whether a consumer can
avoid harm, and whether a harm is
‘‘material’’ relate to the economic
benefits and costs of regulating a
practice. These benefits and costs are
analyzed in an RIA and offer a rationale
for finding a practice ‘‘unfair’’ or
‘‘deceptive.’’
The Department customarily prepares
a RIA or other regulatory evaluation as
part of the E.O. 12866 review process for
rulemakings involving aviation
consumer protection. Further, the
Department’s final rule on
‘‘Administrative Rulemaking, Guidance,
and Enforcement Procedures’’ requires
that all rulemakings including a
supporting economic analysis. The
Department will therefore need to
continue to collect, organize, and
analyze data and facts to address
economic impacts.
The Department’s current practice of
collecting and analyzing data, either for
E.O. 12866 or departmental review,
allows it to generate the necessary
factual basis to support an explicit
discussion of unfair or deceptive
findings with little additional effort.
While this final rule may result in the
Department expending additional
resources to prepare future discretionary
aviation consumer protection rules and
supporting analyses, the resources are
expected to be small and more than
justified by better, more deliberative
internal decisions. Better internal
decisions will improve rulemaking
efficiency by reducing the resources
needed to follow E.O. 12866 processes.
The additional procedures required by
this rule are expected to result in
improved regulations that achieve their
goals of protecting consumers without
imposing any more burdens on
regulated industry than necessary.
This rule does not require that the
Department review existing rules to
determine whether previous ‘‘unfair’’ or
‘‘deceptive’’ declarations would have
been supported by the criteria described
above. Existing rules are subject to
retrospective review requirements under
the Department’s rulemaking
procedures found in 49 CFR part 5, DOT
Order 2100.6, and other legal
requirements, as applicable. The
Department will consider whether
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existing discretionary aviation
consumer protection rules such as full
fare advertising, oversales and refunds
meet the standards found in this rule
when performing the retrospective
reviews, but it is not possible to judge
the impact of this rule on the rules until
the Department conducts the reviews.
The Department considers many factors
when conducting its retrospective
reviews, including the continuing need
for the rule and whether the rule has
achieved its intended outcomes. It is
unlikely that an existing rule would fail
the standards set forth in this rule
without failing existing standards that
would prompt the Department to revise
or rescind the rule. Judging the impact
of this rule is confounded further
because some existing rules do not rely
solely on section 41712, as is the case
with the rule requiring on-time
performance information during
booking noted above.
Under this rule, future discretionary
rulemakings could be subject to a
hearing procedure. The rule allows
interested parties to request a hearing
when the Department proposes a rule to
classify a practice as unfair or deceptive,
when the issuance of the NPRM raises
one or more disputed technical,
scientific, economic, or other complex
factual issues, or when the NPRM may
not satisfy the requirements of the
Information Quality Act. Allowing
interested parties an opportunity for a
hearing ensures that they can test the
information informing discretionary
consumer protection regulations.
However, following this rule’s
requirements to provide a sufficient
factual basis to support an ‘‘unfair’’ or
‘‘deceptive’’ finding should reduce the
need for the Department to hold such
hearings.
Nevertheless, requests for hearings are
expected to occur occasionally. While
the Department lacks data that would
allow it to distinguish the costs and
time of conducting the hearings from
the costs of conducting its normal
business operations, the Department
believes that any incremental costs and
time would be small relative to the
baseline scenario in which the
Department did not enact the rule.
Previous discretionary rulemakings
involving unfair and deceptive practices
in aviation consumer protection have
attracted substantial interest from
consumer advocates, airline industry
advocates, and the general public. The
Department engaged with these
interested parties without the benefit of
a formal process, and the engagements
required investments of time and
resources by the Department and
interested parties. Because these
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engagements were informal and with
uncertain scopes, they were not as
efficient as would be expected under a
more formal process as would be the
case under this rule. Without a formal
process, parties tend to overinvest in
preparation, incurring unnecessary
costs, or underinvest, leading to
additional engagements and
administrative costs. For future
rulemakings, establishing formal
hearing procedures may reduce costs
and time for both groups by increasing
certainty about opportunities for
engagement.
The hearing procedures established in
this final rule are less stringent and
more flexible than the hearing
procedures for high-impact or
economically significant rules detailed
in the Department’s general rulemaking
procedures in 49 CFR part 5 and DOT
Order 2100.6. In addition, the
Department has experience using
hearing procedures to supplement
traditional notice-and-comment
rulemaking, as described earlier for
baggage and wheelchair accounting and
for potential on-board wheelchair
standards. Finally, the hearing
procedures will provide consistency in
the Department’s exercise of its 41712
authority by mirroring the statute’s
hearing requirement to ensure
rulemakings enacted under the same
authority ensure due process, and are
grounded in fairness and supported by
an adequate factual foundation.
The Department believes that its
experience with hearings, coupled with
reduced complexity of the hearing
procedures, will limit the additional
staff resources needed to comply with
the requirement and prevent it from
leading to excessive delays in issuing
aviation consumer protection rules. The
General Counsel may also decline a
hearing request if following the
procedures would unreasonably delay
the rulemaking. When deciding to
decline a hearing request, the General
Counsel will balance the impact of the
hearing on departmental resources
against the potential value of any
information to be collected during the
hearing process, and consider the
quality of evidence presented, including
but not limited to that presented by
interested parties and in the
Department’s RIA and other supporting
analyses.
Effects on Future Enforcement Actions
This final rule adds requirements for
future enforcement actions analogous to
the requirements for discretionary
aviation consumer protection
rulemakings. The Department will use
the same definitions of unfair and
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78715
deceptive when taking enforcement
action against an airline or ticket agent
for unfair or deceptive practices. In
future enforcement actions, the
Department would also provide the
airline or ticket agent with the
opportunity to be heard and to present
mitigating evidence. The opportunity
for a hearing before a finding that any
air carrier, foreign air carrier, or ticket
agent is engaged in an unfair or
deceptive practice or an unfair method
of competition already exists under
section 41712. Finally, in future
enforcement orders, if a specific
regulation does not apply to the practice
in question, the Department would
explain the basis for its finding that a
practice was unfair or deceptive.
As explained in the NPRM, the
Department views these measures as a
codification of existing practice, rather
than a change in policy, because the
Department has typically relied on the
explicit definitions of ‘‘unfair’’ and
‘‘deceptive’’ in prior enforcement
orders. Applying these terms and
providing an opportunity for a hearing
in enforcement proceedings is largely
noncontroversial, and the Department
received few comments on this element
of the rule at the NPRM stage. The
Department does not expect to need to
expend additional resources in aviation
consumer protection proceedings due to
this rule, or expect that the rule will
increase the amount of time needed to
come to resolution. The Department
believes that regulated entities could see
some benefit, however, from upfront
clarification of the guidelines and
criteria that the Department follows
when enforcing aviation consumer
protection regulations involving unfair
and deceptive practices.
This rule is not an E.O. 13771
regulatory action because it is does not
impose any more than de minimis
regulatory costs. This final rule provides
an additional mechanism for industry to
provide input to the Department on its
discretionary aviation consumer
protection rulemakings. Private industry
should not experience more than
minimal additional costs relative to the
status quo because it already engages in
significant information exchange with
the Department. Industry has the option
of continuing use of historical
mechanisms for providing input to
discretionary aviation consumer
protection, and is not required to make
use of the alternatives set forth in this
rule. The Department should not
experience significant additional costs
because it has considerable experience
conducting analysis in support of
aviation consumer protection rules as
well as hearings analogous to those in
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this rule. Such efforts are consistent
with the Department’s normal business
operations, and any additional resources
needs could be accommodated through
a simple and temporary realignment of
internal resources.
(OMB) for each collection of
information it conducts, sponsors, or
requires through regulations. The DOT
has determined there are no new
information collection requirements
associated with this final rule.
necessary to carry out 49 U.S.C. Subtitle
VII (Aviation Programs), including
conducting investigations, prescribing
regulations, standards, and procedures,
and issuing orders.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires an agency to
review regulations to assess their impact
on small entities unless the agency
determines that a rule is not expected to
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities. A
direct air carrier or foreign air carrier is
a small business if it provides air
transportation only with small aircraft
(i.e., aircraft with up to 60 seats/18,000pound payload capacity). See 14 CFR
399.73. The Department has determined
that this rule does not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Department has determined that
the requirements of Title II of the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
do not apply to this rulemaking.
A Regulation Identifier Number (RIN)
is assigned to each regulatory action
listed in the Unified Agenda of Federal
Regulations. The Regulatory Information
Service Center publishes the Unified
Agenda in Spring and Fall of each year.
The RIN set forth in the heading of this
document can be used to cross-reference
this action with the Unified Agenda.
C. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
This final rule has been analyzed in
accordance with the principles and
criteria contained in Executive Order
13132 (‘‘Federalism’’). This final rule
does not include any provision that: (1)
Has substantial direct effects on the
States, the relationship between the
national government and the States, or
the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government; (2) imposes
substantial direct compliance costs on
State and local governments; or (3)
preempts State law. States are already
preempted from regulating in this area
by the Airline Deregulation Act, 49
U.S.C. 41713. Therefore, the
consultation and funding requirements
of Executive Order 13132 do not apply.
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D. Executive Order 13175
This final rule has been analyzed in
accordance with the principles and
criteria contained in Executive Order
13175 (‘‘Consultation and Coordination
with Indian Tribal Governments’’).
Because this final rule does not
significantly or uniquely affect the
communities of the Indian Tribal
governments or impose substantial
direct compliance costs on them, the
funding and consultation requirements
of Executive Order 13175 do not apply.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) requires
that DOT consider the impact of
paperwork and other information
collection burdens imposed on the
public and, under the provisions of PRA
section 3507(d), obtain approval from
the Office of Management and Budget
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G. National Environmental Policy Act
The Department has analyzed the
environmental impacts of this final rule
pursuant to the National Environmental
Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA) (42 U.S.C.
4321 et seq.) and has determined that it
is categorically excluded pursuant to
DOT Order 5610.1C, Procedures for
Considering Environmental Impacts (44
FR 56420, Oct. 1, 1979). Categorical
exclusions are actions identified in an
agency’s NEPA implementing
procedures that do not normally have a
significant impact on the environment
and therefore do not require either an
environmental assessment (EA) or
environmental impact statement (EIS).
See 40 CFR 1508.4. In analyzing the
applicability of a categorical exclusion,
the agency must also consider whether
extraordinary circumstances are present
that would warrant the preparation of
an EA or EIS. Id. Paragraph 10.c.16.h of
DOT Order 5610.1D categorically
excludes ‘‘[a]ctions relating to consumer
protection, including regulations.’’
Since this rulemaking relates to the
definition of unfair and deceptive
practices under Section 41712, the
Department’s central consumer
protection statute, this is a consumer
protection rulemaking. The Department
does not anticipate any environmental
impacts, and there are no extraordinary
circumstances present in connection
with this rulemaking.
H. Privacy Act
Anyone may search the electronic
form of all comments received into any
of OST’s dockets by the name of the
individual submitting the comment, or
signing the comment if submitted on
behalf of an association, business, labor
union, or any other entity. You may
review USDOT’s complete Privacy Act
Statement published in the Federal
Register on April 11, 2000, at 65 FR
19477–8.
I. Statutory/Legal Authority for This
Rulemaking
This rulemaking is issued under the
authority of 49 U.S.C. 40113(a), which
grants the Secretary the authority to take
action that the Secretary considers
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J. Regulation Identifier Number
List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 399
Consumer protection, Policies,
Rulemaking proceedings, Enforcement,
Unfair or deceptive practices.
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, the Department amends 14
CFR part 399 as follows:
PART 399—STATEMENTS OF
GENERAL POLICY
1. The authority citation for part 399
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 41712, 40113(a).
Subpart F—Policies Relating to
Rulemaking Proceedings
2. Section 399.75 is added to subpart
F to read as follows:
■
§ 399.75 Rulemakings relating to unfair
and deceptive practices.
(a) General. When issuing a proposed
or final regulation declaring a practice
in air transportation or the sale of air
transportation to be unfair or deceptive
to consumers under the authority of 49
U.S.C. 41712(a), unless the regulation is
specifically required by statute, the
Department shall employ the definitions
of ‘‘unfair’’ and ‘‘deceptive’’ set forth in
§ 399.79.
(b) Procedural requirements. When
issuing a proposed regulation under
paragraph (a) of this section that is
defined as high impact or economically
significant within the meaning of 49
CFR 5.17(a), the Department shall
follow the procedural requirements set
forth in 49 CFR 5.17. When issuing a
proposed regulation under paragraph (a)
of this section that is not defined as high
impact or economically significant
within the meaning of 49 CFR 5.17(a),
unless the regulation is specifically
required by statute, the Department
shall adhere to the following procedural
requirements:
(1) Request for a hearing. Following
publication of a proposed regulation,
and before the close of the comment
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period, any interested party may file in
the rulemaking docket a petition,
directed to the General Counsel, to hold
a hearing on the proposed regulation.
(2) Grant of petition for hearing.
Except as provided in paragraph (b)(3)
of this section, the petition shall be
granted if the petitioner makes a
plausible prima facie showing that:
(i) The proposed rule depends on
conclusions concerning one or more
specific scientific, technical, economic,
or other factual issues that are genuinely
in dispute or that may not satisfy the
requirements of the Information Quality
Act;
(ii) The ordinary public comment
process is unlikely to provide an
adequate examination of the issues to
permit a fully informed judgment; and
(iii) The resolution of the disputed
factual issues would likely have a
material effect on the costs and benefits
of the proposed rule.
(3) Denial of petition for hearing. A
petition meeting the requirements of
paragraph (b)(2) of this section may be
denied if the General Counsel
determines that:
(i) The requested hearing would not
advance the consideration of the
proposed rule and the General Counsel’s
ability to make the rulemaking
determinations required by this section;
or
(ii) The hearing would unreasonably
delay completion of the rulemaking.
(4) Explanation of denial. If a petition
is denied in whole or in part, the
General Counsel shall include a detailed
explanation of the factual basis for the
denial, including findings on each of the
relevant factors identified in paragraph
(b)(2) or (3) of this section.
(5) Hearing notice. If the General
Counsel grants the petition, the General
Counsel shall publish notification of the
hearing in the Federal Register. The
document shall specify the proposed
rule at issue and the specific factual
issues to be considered at the hearing.
The scope of the hearing shall be
limited to the factual issues specified in
the notice.
(6) Hearing process. (i) A hearing
under this section shall be conducted
using procedures approved by the
General Counsel, and interested parties
shall have a reasonable opportunity to
participate in the hearing through the
presentation of testimony and written
submissions.
(ii) The General Counsel shall arrange
for a neutral officer to preside over the
hearing and shall provide a reasonable
opportunity to question the presenters.
(iii) After the hearing and after the
record of the hearing is closed, the
hearing officer shall place on the docket
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21:21 Dec 04, 2020
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minutes of the hearing with sufficient
detail as to fully reflect the evidence
and arguments presented on the issues,
along with proposed findings
addressing the disputed issues of fact
identified in the hearing notice.
(iv) Interested parties who
participated in the hearing shall be
given an opportunity to file statements
of agreement or objection in response to
the hearing officer’s proposed findings.
The complete record of the hearing shall
be made part of the rulemaking record.
(7) Actions following hearing. (i)
Following the completion of the hearing
process, the General Counsel shall
consider the record of the hearing,
including the hearing officer’s proposed
findings, and shall make a reasoned
determination whether to terminate the
rulemaking; to proceed with the
rulemaking as proposed; or to modify
the proposed rule.
(ii) If the General Counsel decides to
terminate the rulemaking, the General
Counsel shall publish a document in the
Federal Register announcing the
decision and explaining the reasons for
the decision.
(iii) If the General Counsel decides to
finalize the proposed rule without
material modifications, the General
Counsel shall explain the reasons for the
decision and its responses to the hearing
record in the preamble to the final rule.
(iv) If the General Counsel decides to
modify the proposed rule in material
respects, the General Counsel shall
publish a new or supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking in the Federal
Register explaining the General
Counsel’s responses to and analysis of
the hearing record, setting forth the
modifications to the proposed rule, and
providing additional reasonable
opportunity for public comment on the
proposed modified rule.
(8) Interagency review process. The
hearing procedures under this
paragraph (b)(8) shall not impede or
interfere with the interagency review
process of the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs for the proposed
rulemaking.
(c) Basis for rulemaking. When
issuing a proposed or final regulation
declaring a practice in air transportation
or the sale of air transportation to be
unfair or deceptive to consumers under
the authority of 49 U.S.C. 41712(a),
unless the regulation is specifically
required by statute, the Department
shall articulate the basis for concluding
that the practice is unfair or deceptive
to consumers as defined in § 399.79.
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78717
Subpart G—Policies Relating to
Enforcement
3. Section 399.79 is added to subpart
G to read as follows:
■
§ 399.79 Policies relating to unfair and
deceptive practices.
(a) Applicability. This policy shall
apply to the Department’s aviation
consumer protection actions pursuant to
49 U.S.C. 41712(a).
(b) Definitions. (1) A practice is
‘‘unfair’’ to consumers if it causes or is
likely to cause substantial injury, which
is not reasonably avoidable, and the
harm is not outweighed by benefits to
consumers or competition.
(2) A practice is ‘‘deceptive’’ to
consumers if it is likely to mislead a
consumer, acting reasonably under the
circumstances, with respect to a
material matter. A matter is material if
it is likely to have affected the
consumer’s conduct or decision with
respect to a product or service.
(c) Intent. Proof of intent is not
necessary to establish unfairness or
deception for purposes of 49 U.S.C.
41712(a).
(d) Specific regulations prevail. Where
an existing regulation applies to the
practice of an air carrier, foreign air
carrier, or ticket agent, the terms of that
regulation apply rather than the general
definitions set forth in this section.
(e) Informal enforcement proceedings
(1) Informal enforcement proceedings
will be conducted pursuant to the
policies and procedures found in 49
CFR part 5, subpart D. Before any
determination is made on how to
resolve a matter involving a potential
unfair or deceptive practice, the U.S.
Department of Transportation’s Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection will
provide an opportunity for the alleged
violator to be heard and present relevant
evidence, including but not limited to:
(i) In cases where a specific regulation
applies, evidence tending to establish
that the regulation at issue was not
violated and, if applicable, that
mitigating circumstances apply;
(ii) In cases where a specific
regulation does not apply, evidence
tending to establish that the conduct at
issue was not unfair or deceptive as
defined in paragraph (b) of this section;
and
(iii) Evidence tending to establish that
consumer harm was limited, or that the
air carrier, foreign air carrier, or ticket
agent has taken steps to mitigate
consumer harm.
(2) During this informal process, if the
Office of Aviation Consumer Protection
reaches agreement with the alleged
violator to resolve the matter with the
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issuance of an order declaring a practice
in air transportation or the sale of air
transportation to be unfair or deceptive
to consumers under the authority of 49
U.S.C. 41712(a), and when a regulation
issued under the authority of section
41712 does not apply to the practice at
issue, then the Department shall
articulate in the order the basis for
concluding that the practice is unfair or
deceptive to consumers as defined in
this section.
(f) Formal enforcement proceedings.
When there are reasonable grounds to
believe that an airline or ticket agent has
violated 49 U.S.C. 41712, and efforts to
settle the matter have failed, the Office
of Aviation Consumer Protection may
issue a notice instituting an enforcement
proceeding before an administrative law
judge pursuant to 14 CFR 302.407. After
the issues have been formulated, if the
matter has not been resolved through
pleadings or otherwise, the parties will
receive reasonable written notice of the
time and place of the hearing as set forth
in 14 CFR 302.415.
Issued this 24th day of November, 2020, in
Washington, DC, under authority delegated
in 49 CFR 1.27(n).
Steven G. Bradbury,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2020–26416 Filed 12–4–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 3
RIN 3038–AE46
DATES:
Exemption From Registration for
Certain Foreign Intermediaries
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
The effective date for this Final
Rule is February 5, 2021.
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFTC or
Commission) is adopting amendments
(Final Rule) revising the conditions set
forth in the Commission regulation
under which a person located outside of
the United States (each, a foreign
located person) engaged in the activity
of a commodity pool operator (CPO) in
connection with commodity interest
transactions on behalf of persons
located outside the United States
(collectively, an offshore commodity
pool or offshore pool) would qualify for
an exemption from CPO registration and
regulation with respect to that offshore
pool. The Final Rule provides that the
exemption under the applicable
Commission regulation for foreign
SUMMARY:
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located persons acting as a CPO (a nonU.S. CPO) on behalf of offshore
commodity pools may be claimed by
such non-U.S. CPOs on a pool-by-pool
basis. The Commission is also adopting
a provision clarifying that a non-U.S.
CPO may claim an exemption from
registration under the applicable
Commission regulation with respect to a
qualifying offshore commodity pool,
while maintaining another exemption
from CPO registration, relying on a CPO
exclusion, or even registering as a CPO,
with respect to its operation of other
commodity pools. Additionally, the
Commission is adopting a safe harbor by
which a non-U.S. CPO of an offshore
pool may rely upon that exemption, if
it satisfies several enumerated factors
related to its operation of the offshore
commodity pool. The Commission is
also adopting an amendment permitting
U.S. affiliates of a non-U.S. CPO to
contribute initial capital to such nonU.S. CPO’s offshore pools, without
affecting the eligibility of the non-U.S.
CPO for an exemption from registration
under the applicable Commission
regulation. The Commission is also
adopting amendments to the applicable
Commission regulation originally
proposed in 2016 that clarify whether
clearing of commodity interest
transactions through a registered futures
commission merchant (FCM) is required
as a condition of the registration
exemptions for foreign intermediaries,
and whether such exemption is
available for foreign intermediaries
acting on behalf of international
financial institutions.
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Jkt 253001
Joshua B. Sterling, Director, at 202–418–
6056, jsterling@cftc.gov; with respect to
the finalization of the 2016 Proposal:
Frank N. Fisanich, Chief Counsel, at
202–418–5949 or ffisanich@cftc.gov;
with respect to all other aspects of this
release: Amanda Lesher Olear, Deputy
Director, at 202–418–5283 or aolear@
cftc.gov; Pamela Geraghty, Associate
Director, at 202–418–5634 or
pgeraghty@cftc.gov; Elizabeth Groover,
Special Counsel, at 202–418–5985 or
egroover@cftc.gov, Division of Swap
Dealer and Intermediary Oversight,
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, Three Lafayette Centre,
1151 21st Street NW, Washington, DC
20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
A. Statutory and Regulatory Background
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B. Recent Regulatory Proposals Related to
Commission Regulation 3.10(c)
C. The 2020 Proposal
II. Final Rule
A. General Comments in Response to the
2016 and 2020 Proposals
B. Reconsidering the 2016 Proposal and
Comments Received
1. The 2016 Proposal’s Amendments to
Commission Regulation 3.10(c)
2. Responsive Comments Received
Regarding the 2016 Proposal
3. Finalizing the 2016 Proposal
C. Pool-by-Pool Exemption
D. Utilizing the 3.10 Exemption Concurrent
With Other Regulatory Relief Available
to CPOs
E. The Safe Harbor for Non-U.S. CPOs With
Respect to Inadvertent U.S. Participants
in Their Offshore Pools
F. Exception for Initial Capital
Contributions by U.S. Affiliates of a NonU.S. CPO to Its Offshore Pools
1. U.S. ‘‘Controlling’’ Affiliates
2. The Timing of a U.S. Affiliate’s Capital
Contributions to an Offshore Pool
3. Additional Anti-Evasion Conditions:
The Marketing Prohibition and
Prohibiting ‘‘Bad Actor’’ U.S. Affiliates
4. Analysis Under Section 4(c) of the Act
G. Additional Relief for Commodity
Trading Advisors
H. Reorganization of Commission
Regulation 3.10(c)
III. Related Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Cost-Benefit Considerations
1. Costs and Benefits Related to Finalizing
the 2016 Proposal
2. Commission Regulation 3.10 (c)(5)(i):
Claiming the 3.10 Exemption on a Poolby-Pool Basis
3. Commission Regulation 3.10(c)(5)(iii):
Providing A Safe Harbor for Non-U.S.
CPOs Whose Offshore Pools May Have
Inadvertent U.S. Participants
4. Commission Regulation 3.10(c)(5)(iv):
Utilizing the 3.10 Exemption Concurrent
with Other Available Exclusions and
Exemptions
5. Commission Regulation 3.10(c)(5)(ii):
The Affiliate Contribution Exception
6. Section 15(a) Factors
D. Anti-Trust Considerations
I. Background
A. Statutory and Regulatory Background
Section 1a(11) of the Commodity
Exchange Act (CEA or Act) 1 defines the
term ‘‘commodity pool operator’’ as any
1 7 U.S.C. 1a(11). See also 17 CFR 1.3 (defining
‘‘commodity interest’’ to include, inter alia, any
contract for the purchase or sale of a commodity for
future delivery, and any swap as defined in the
CEA); Adaptation of Regulations to Incorporate
Swaps, 77 FR 66288, 66295 (Nov. 2, 2012)
(discussing the modification of the term
‘‘commodity interest’’ to include swaps). The Act is
found at 7 U.S.C. 1, et seq. (2018), and the
Commission’s regulations are found at 17 CFR Ch.
I (2020). Both are accessible through the
Commission’s website, https://www.cftc.gov.
E:\FR\FM\07DER1.SGM
07DER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 235 (Monday, December 7, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 78707-78718]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-26416]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary
14 CFR Part 399
[Docket No. DOT-OST-2019-0182]
RIN 2105-AE72
Defining Unfair or Deceptive Practices
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary (OST), U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT or Department) is
issuing a final rule codifying its longstanding definitions for the
terms ``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' in the Department's regulations
implementing its aviation consumer protection statute. The final rule
also describes the Department's procedural requirements for its
rulemaking and enforcement actions when based on the Department's
authority to prohibit unfair or deceptive practices. Most of the
Department's aviation consumer protection regulations, such as the
Department's rules on overbooking, are based on the Department's
authority to prohibit unfair or deceptive practices. This rule is
intended to provide regulated entities and other stakeholders with
greater clarity and certainty about the Department's interpretation of
unfair or deceptive practices and the Department's process for making
such determinations in the context of aviation consumer protection
rulemaking and enforcement actions.
DATES: Effective on January 6, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert Gorman, Kimberly Graber, or
Blane Workie, Office of Aviation Consumer Protection, U.S. Department
of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE, Washington, DC 20590, 202-
366-9342, 202-366-7152 (fax); [email protected];
[email protected]; [email protected] (email).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Rulemaking Background
Much of the background information presented here also appears in
the preamble to the Department's Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on
Defining Unfair and Deceptive Practices published on February 28,
2020.\1\ We have presented background information again here to assist
the public in understanding the issues involved.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ ``Defining Unfair or Deceptive Practices,'' 85 FR 11881
(February 28, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. The Department's Unfair and Deceptive Practices Statute
The Department's authority to regulate unfair and deceptive
practices in air transportation or the sale of air transportation is
found at 49 U.S.C. 41712 (``Section 41712'') in conjunction with its
rulemaking authority under 49 U.S.C. 40113, which states that the
Department may take action that it considers necessary to carry out
this part, including prescribing regulations. Section 41712 gives the
Department the authority to investigate and decide whether an air
carrier, foreign air carrier, or ticket agent is engaged in an unfair
or deceptive practice in air transportation or the sale of air
transportation. Under Section 41712, after notice and an opportunity
for a hearing, the Department has the authority to issue orders to stop
an unfair or deceptive practice. A different statute, 49 U.S.C. 46301,
gives the Department the authority to issue civil penalties for
violations of Section 41712 or for any regulation issued under the
authority of Section 41712.
B. Request for Regulatory Reform
On February 24, 2017, President Trump signed Executive Order 13777,
Enforcing the Regulatory Reform Agenda, which requires each Federal
agency to establish a Regulatory Reform Task Force to evaluate existing
regulations, and make recommendations for their repeal, replacement, or
modification. As part of this process, the Department is directed to
seek input and assistance from entities significantly affected by its
regulations. On October 1, 2017, the Department issued a Notice of
Regulatory Reform seeking written input from the public on existing
regulations and other actions that are good candidates for repeal,
replacement, or modification.\2\ In response to the Notice, Airlines
for America (A4A), an airline trade association, urged the Department
to adopt policies defining unfairness and deception in Section 41712
consistent with principles articulated in Federal Trade Commission
(FTC) and Federal court precedent interpreting those terms.\3\ A4A also
urged the Department to adopt various procedures which would, in its
view, ensure that the Department's enforcement and rulemaking
activities were rooted in fairness, due process, and an adequate
factual foundation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ ``Notification of Regulatory Review,'' 82 FR 45750 (October
1, 2017).
\3\ See Comment of A4A, Docket DOT-OST-2017-0069-2753, available
at www.regulations.gov.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Department's Comprehensive Update of Rulemaking and Enforcement
Procedures
On December 27, 2019, the Department issued a comprehensive update
and consolidation of its procedural requirements for the Department's
rulemaking and enforcement actions.\4\ This update reflects the
Department's policy that regulations should be straightforward and
clear, incorporate best practices for economic analyses, and provide
for appropriate public participation.\5\ It also reflects the
Department's policy that enforcement actions should satisfy principles
of due process and remain
[[Page 78708]]
lawful, reasonable, and consistent with Administration policy.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ ``Administrative Rulemaking, Guidance, and Enforcement
Procedures,'' 84 FR 71714 (December 27, 2019), amending 49 CFR part
5 and other provisions.
\5\ 84 FR 71718-71826.
\6\ 84 FR 71729-71733.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Summary of Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM)
On February 28, 2020, the Department published an NPRM proposing to
define the terms ``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' found in Section 41712,
the Department's aviation consumer protection statute. The NPRM also
proposed a series of amendments to the Department's aviation consumer
protection procedures with respect to both regulation and enforcement.
The proposals were issued to provide greater clarity, transparency, and
due process in future aviation consumer protection rulemakings and
enforcement actions.
By way of background, the Department described the origin of
section 41712 and explained how it was modeled on Section 5 of the
Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Act. The Department explained that while
Section 5 vests the FTC with broad authority to prohibit unfair or
deceptive practices in most industries, Congress granted the Department
the exclusive authority to prohibit unfair or deceptive practices of
air carriers and foreign air carriers. The Department noted that DOT
and FTC share the authority to prohibit unfair or deceptive practices
by ticket agents in the sale of air transportation.
Next, the Department explained that in December 1980, the FTC
issued a Policy Statement to Congress, which articulated general
principles drawn from FTC decisions and rulemakings that the Commission
applies in enforcing its mandate to address unfairness under the FTC
Act.\7\ These principles were applied in FTC enforcement cases and
rulemakings, and approved by reviewing Federal courts.\8\ The FTC
explained that unjustified consumer injury is the primary focus of the
FTC Act. This concept contains three basic elements. An act or practice
is unfair where it: (1) Causes or is likely to cause substantial injury
to consumers; (2) cannot be reasonably avoided by consumers; and (3) is
not outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or to
competition. The FTC also considers public policy, as established by
statute, regulation, or judicial decisions, along with other evidence
in determining whether an act or practice is unfair.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Letter from the FTC to Hon. Wendell Ford and Hon. John
Danforth, Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation, United
States Senate, Commission Statement of Policy on the Scope of
Consumer Unfairness Jurisdiction (December 17, 1980), appended to
International Harvester Co., 104 F.T.C. 949, 1070, 1073 (1984).
\8\ See, e.g., International Harvester, 104 F.T.C. 949 (1984);
Credit Practices Rule, Statement of Basis and Purpose, 49 FR 7740
(1984) (``Credit Practices Rule SBP''); Orkin Exterminating Co.,
Inc., 108 F.T.C. 263 (1986); aff'd, FTC v. Orkin, 849 F.2d 1354
(11th Cir. 1988).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
These principles are now reflected in the FTC Act itself. In 1994,
Congress enacted 15 U.S.C. 45(n), which states that the FTC shall have
no enforcement authority or rulemaking authority to declare an act or
practice unfair unless it is likely to cause substantial injury to
consumers which is not reasonably avoidable by consumers themselves and
not outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or to
competition. Congress further provided in Section 45(n) that the FTC
could rely on public policy, along with other evidence, for making a
determination of unfairness, but public policy may not be the primary
basis of its decision.
Next, the Department explained that in 1983, the FTC issued a
Policy Statement on Deception.\9\ Like the 1980 Policy Statement on
Unfairness, the 1983 Policy Statement clarified the general principles
that the FTC applies in enforcing its mandate to address deception
under the FTC Act. As explained in the Policy Statement, an act or
practice is deceptive where: (1) A representation, omission, or
practice misleads or is likely to mislead the consumer; (2) a
consumer's interpretation of the representation, omission, or practice
is considered reasonable under the circumstances; and (3) the
misleading representation, omission, or practice is material.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ FTC Policy Statement on Deception (Oct. 14, 1983), 103
F.T.C. 174, 175 (1984) (appended to Cliffdale Assocs., Inc., 103
F.T.C. 110 (1984)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the NPRM, the Department proposed to adopt definitions of
``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' that echo FTC precedent. The Department
explained that adopting these definitions would simply codify existing
practice and would not reflect a change of policy, because the
Department's Office of Aviation Consumer Protection (formerly known as
the Office of Aviation Enforcement and Proceedings), a unit within the
Office of the General Counsel that enforces aviation consumer
protection requirements, has often explicitly relied on those
definitions in its enforcement orders.
Next, the Department proposed a set of procedural rules that would
govern the Department's future discretionary rulemaking and enforcement
efforts in the area of aviation consumer protection. With respect to
rulemaking actions, the Department proposed three measures. First,
future rulemakings declaring certain practices to be ``unfair'' or
``deceptive'' would use the Department's proposed definitions of those
terms.\10\ In prior rulemakings, the Department tended to make a
conclusory statement that a practice was unfair or deceptive and did
not provide its reasoning for that conclusion. In arriving at these
conclusions that certain practices were unfair or deceptive, DOT
employed the same definitions that are set forth in this rule, though
that analysis was done informally at the Department and not further
described in rule preambles.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ The proposal recognized that if Congress directed the
Department to issue a rule declaring a specific practice to be
unfair or deceptive, then the Department would do so without
reference to the Department's own definitions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Second, future discretionary rulemakings would be subject to a
hearing procedure. Specifically, if the Department proposes that a
practice was unfair or deceptive in a rulemaking, and that rulemaking
raised scientific, technical, economic, or other factual issues that
are genuinely in dispute, then interested parties may request an
evidentiary hearing to gather evidence on those disputed issues of
fact. Third, future rulemakings would explain the Department's basis
for finding a practice to be unfair or deceptive.
With respect to enforcement, the Department proposed three
measures. First, when taking enforcement action against an airline or
ticket agent for unfair or deceptive practices, the Department would
use the proposed definitions of ``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' set forth
above (unless a specific regulation issued under the authority of
section 41712 applied to the practice in question, in which case the
terms of the specific regulation would apply). Second, in future
enforcement actions, the Department would provide the airline or ticket
agent with the opportunity to be heard and to present mitigating
evidence. This final rule codifies the longstanding practice of
allowing regulated entities to present mitigating evidence during the
course of informal DOT enforcement actions. In a typical enforcement
action, the Office of Aviation Consumer Protection issues an
investigation letter to an airline or ticket agent, seeking information
about the extent and nature of the violations. During that process, the
Office also allows airlines and ticket agents to present mitigating
evidence (e.g., that consumer harm was low, or that the airline or
ticket agent has taken steps to mitigate the harm to consumers). While
the rule now makes this process explicit, we do not expect an expansion
in its usage; instead, we expect that it
[[Page 78709]]
will continue unchanged after the issuance of this final rule. Third,
in future enforcement orders, if a specific regulation does not apply
to the practice in question, the Department would explain the basis for
its finding that a practice was unfair or deceptive. The Department is
of the view that these measures generally codify existing practice.
In addition, the Department solicited comment on related matters.
For example, the Department asked whether the term ``practice'' should
be defined. The Department also noted that it relies on its general
unfair and deceptive practices authority in certain specialized areas
(e.g., privacy, frequent flyer programs, and air ambulance service) and
asked whether the proposed general definitions of ``unfair'' or
``deceptive'' were sufficient to provide stakeholders sufficient notice
of what constitutes an unfair or deceptive practice in these or other
subject areas.
The comment period for the NPRM was originally scheduled to expire
on April 28, 2020. However, in response to a request by consumer
advocacy organizations, the comment period was extended to May 28,
2020.
II. Summary of NPRM Comments and the Department's Responses
A. Overview
The Department received a total of 224 comments by the end of the
comment period. Approximately 180 comments were filed by individual
consumers, who almost uniformly opposed the NPRM. Individual consumers
typically did not comment on any specific provision, but instead
opposed the NPRM as a whole, viewing it as a weakening of aviation
consumer protection. Many consumers noted with disapproval that the
NPRM was initiated at the request of airlines, which in their view
engage in practices that are anti-consumer.
Consumer advocacy organizations \11\ and two FTC Commissioners \12\
generally opposed the proposals on the ground that they were either
unnecessary or weakened consumer protection. Four Senators and one
Member of Congress \13\ urged the Department to discontinue the NPRM
for many of the same reasons identified by consumer advocates and the
FTC Commissioners.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Travelers United, Flyersrights.org, National Consumers
League, Consumer Action, American Association for Justice (formerly
American Trial Lawyers' Association), Travel Fairness Now, Consumer
Reports, Consumer Federation of America, and US PIRG.
\12\ Commissioners Rebecca Kelly Slaughter and Rohit Chopra.
\13\ Senators Edward J. Markey, Tammy Baldwin, Maria Cantwell,
and Richard Blumenthal and Representative Katie Porter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Airline associations, individual airlines, and a nonprofit public
policy organization \14\ broadly supported the proposals in the NPRM on
the ground that they provided greater transparency and due process in
the Department's rulemaking and enforcement activities. Airlines also
suggested that the Department adopt additional provisions, which will
be discussed in greater detail below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Airlines for America (A4A), International Air Transport
Association (IATA), National Business Aviation Association (NBAA),
U.S. Tour Operators Association (USTOA), Spirit Airlines, Southwest
Airlines, and the Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Travel agent representatives and a large travel agency \15\
generally supported the NPRM for the reasons expressed by airlines;
however, they opposed the proposal to adopt hearing procedures relating
to discretionary aviation consumer protection rulemakings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Travel Tech and BCD Travel USA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We will discuss the comments in further detail below.
B. Definitions
1. Definitions of ``Unfair'' and ``Deceptive''
Consumer advocacy organizations generally recognized that the
proposed definitions of ``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' mirror the FTC's
interpretation of those terms. They argued, however, that the
Department should not limit itself to those specific definitions. They
contended that the flexibility of undefined terms serves as a deterrent
to engaging in practices that do not fit within the proposed
definitions, but which may nevertheless be unfair or deceptive.
They argued that this flexibility is especially important in the
field of air transportation because the Airline Deregulation Act (ADA)
prohibits States from regulating the unfair and deceptive practices of
airlines. They contended that outside of the field of aviation, State
consumer protection laws serve as a backstop to the FTC's authority,
and that many consumer protection agencies take aggressive and
successful action under State law with respect to practices that would
not qualify as unfair or deceptive under the FTC's definitions. They
also observed that because of ADA preemption, relief in court is
generally limited to Federal class-actions or small claims. Consumer
organizations concluded that the FTC definitions may be used for
guidance, but should not be transformed into regulatory text.
FTC Commissioner Chopra urged the Department not to adopt the FTC's
definitions, for many of the reasons identified by consumer advocacy
organizations. He also raised several additional concerns. First, he
argued that after the FTC adopted its Policy Statement on Unfairness in
1980, the Commission's ``number of enforcement actions and rulemakings
plummeted, leaving a vacuum that hobbled development of the law.'' \16\
Commissioner Chopra also argued that ``the key planks undergirding the
FTC's unfairness definition--competitive markets, consumer choice, and
a de-emphasis on public policy--are poorly suited to airline
regulation,'' because the aviation market is not competitive, in his
view, and because the Transportation Code affirmatively requires the
Secretary to emphasize certain public policies.\17\ He also argued that
the proposed definitions do not adequately take these policies into
account.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Comment of Commissioner Chopra at 2. He particularly noted
that in the years after adoption of the Policy Statement, the FTC
failed to take action against predatory lending and the deceptive
practices of the tobacco industry; instead, states took the lead,
and the FTC's authority over consumer lending practices was
transferred to the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB),
which has a broader standard for taking enforcement action than the
FTC. Id. at 6-8.
\17\ Id. at 10.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Airlines and travel agents supported the proposed definitions,
arguing that they provide much-needed transparency and predictability
to regulated industries. Southwest Airlines argued that the lack of
clear definitions has led DOT to overreach in certain past rulemakings
and enforcement actions. Southwest also argued that the third prong of
the unfairness definition (i.e., that the harm of the practice ``is not
outweighed by countervailing benefits to consumers or to competition'')
correctly reflects departmental policy to place ``maximum reliance on
competitive market forces and on actual and potential competition.''
\18\ Spirit Airlines suggested that the proposed definition of
``deceptive,'' which currently refers to misleading a singular
``consumer'' acting reasonably under the circumstances, should be
written in the plural to reflect that the practice must be misleading
to ``consumers'' in the aggregate. Travel agents argued that because
DOT and FTC share jurisdiction over them, it is important for the two
regulatory standards to be harmonious.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Southwest comment at 4, citing 49 U.S.C. 40101(a)(6), (12).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 78710]]
After reviewing the comments, the Department remains of the view
that it should adopt the definitions of ``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' as
proposed. We are guided by the principles set forth in our recent final
rule, ``Administrative Rulemaking, Guidance, and Enforcement
Procedures,'' which seeks to provide greater transparency to regulated
entities when conducting enforcement actions and adjudications.\19\
Offering clear definitions of ``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' will serve
this goal. We note that transparency and clarity is particularly needed
with respect to ticket agents, which are subject to both FTC and DOT
jurisdiction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ 84 FR 71716, citing Executive Order 13892, ``Promoting the
Rule of Law Through Transparency and Fairness in Civil
Administrative Enforcement and Adjudication'' (October 9, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We stress that the definitions that we adopt do not reflect a
substantive departure from past DOT practice. As we explained in the
NPRM, DOT has traditionally relied on these definitions when taking
enforcement and discretionary rulemaking actions. Therefore, the
Department is not of the view that codifying these definitions will
diminish the Department's authority to take enforcement action or to
regulate effectively.
We recognize the argument of consumer advocacy organizations and
Commissioner Chopra that the ADA preempts State consumer protection
agencies from acting as a more aggressive backstop to DOT action. At
present, however, we are of the view that the proposed definitions are
adequate to ensure regulations continue to prohibit unfair and
deceptive practices while at the same time providing necessary
transparency to the regulated industry. We also recognize that under
FTC practice, the role of public policy is explicitly deemphasized,\20\
while Congress has directed the Department to take into account a
variety of policies in conducting economic regulation of air
transportation.\21\ We are not convinced that this distinction compels
a different result. While the definitions of ``unfair'' and
``deceptive'' will remain the guiding principles for regulation and
enforcement, in doing so, the Department recognizes its statutory
responsibility to consider the public policies enumerated by Congress.
These policies include safety, ensuring economic competition, and
preventing unfair and deceptive practices.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ As noted above, pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 45(n), the FTC may
rely on public policy, along with other evidence, for making a
determination of unfairness, but public policy may not be the
primary basis of its decision.
\21\ 49 U.S.C. 40101 (directing the Department, when engaging in
economic regulation of air transportation, to consider 16 matters,
``among others, as being in the public interest and consistent with
public convenience and necessity.'')
\22\ See 49 U.S.C. 40101(a)(1), (4), (6), (7), (9), and (12).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Intent as an Element of Unfairness or Deception
The proposed rule would clarify that intent is not an element of
either unfairness or deception. We received relatively few comments on
this issue. FTC Commissioners Chopra and Slaughter both expressed the
view that the Department's position was legally correct. A4A and IATA,
however, urged the Department to adopt an ``intent to deceive''
standard for both unfairness and deception. In the alternative, they
urged the Department to give lack of intent ``significant weight'' when
exercising its enforcement discretion.
We remain of the view that intent is not an element of either
unfairness or deception.\23\ We also reject A4A and IATA's suggestion
to adopt an intent requirement. Such a requirement would place the
Department's view of unfairness and deception substantially out of step
with FTC precedent. It would also limit the Department's consumer
protection actions to only those matters where parties establish and
the Department can substantiate the private intent of carriers and
ticket agents. In light of the revisions to the Department's rulemaking
and enforcement procedures adopted in this final rule to enhance the
justifications for actions taken under the Department's statutory
authority, we view this as an unnecessary and unacceptably high bar. We
also decline to include in the regulation the weight that lack of
intent should be given in any future enforcement action, because the
proper exercise of enforcement discretion generally involves an
individualized consideration of a variety of factors.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See 85 FR 11885 (intent is not required under Federal case
law interpreting the FTC Act, and noting that the definition of
``false advertisement'' in the FTC Act makes no reference to intent
to deceive).
\24\ See 49 CFR 5.97 (``Where applicable statutes vest the
agency with discretion with regard to the amount or type of penalty
sought or imposed, the penalty should reflect due regard for
fairness, the scale of the violation, the violator's knowledge and
intent, and any mitigating factors (such as whether the violator is
a small business)'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Definition of Additional Terms
Airlines urged the Department to define further the component
elements of unfairness and deception, such as ``substantial harm,''
``likely to mislead,'' ``reasonably avoidable,'' and ``acting
reasonably under the circumstances.'' In general, airlines asked the
Department to adapt into regulatory text certain aspects (but not all
of the aspects) of the FTC's guidance on these terms, as found in the
1980 Policy Statement on Unfairness and the 1983 Policy Statement on
Deception. We decline this invitation, because the regulatory text
adequately explains the necessary elements of unfairness and
deception.\25\ The Department will continue to look to the FTC Policy
Statements, as well as FTC precedent and the Department's own
precedent, for guidance in determining whether any specific practice
meets all of the component elements of unfairness and deception.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ For example, A4A/IATA asks the Department to define
``substantial harm'' as not involving merely trivial or speculative
harm. A4A/IATA comment at 6, citing 1980 FTC Policy Statement on
Unfairness. We are of the view that this clarification is
unnecessary because the term ``substantial harm'' would necessarily
exclude ``trivial or speculative harm.'' (We also observe, however,
that in keeping with 15 U.S.C. 45(n), a practice is unfair not only
if it causes substantial harm, but if also it is likely to cause
substantial harm.)
Similarly, A4A/IATA asks us to define ``not reasonably avoided''
as excluding circumstances where a consumer's willful, intentional,
or reckless conduct leads to harm (for example, by intentionally
taking advantage of a mistakenly published fare). We are of the view
that in general, the term ``not reasonably avoided'' would
necessarily exclude the types of self-imposed harms described by A4A
and IATA. We also note that mistaken fares are governed by a
specific regulation relating to post-purchase price increases (14
CFR 399.88). The Department has issued guidance with respect to
mistaken fares at https://www.transportation.gov/sites/dot.gov/files/docs/Mistaken_Fare_Policy_Statement_05082015_0.pdf.
Finally, A4A, IATA, Southwest, and Spirit all stress under the
1983 FTC Policy Statement on Deception, deception should be judged
by reference to reasonable consumers as a whole, and that a single
consumer's unreasonable interpretation of a statement does not make
it deceptive. We agree that deception is judged in reference to a
reasonable consumer and believe that these concepts are adequately
reflected in the phrase ``acting reasonably under the
circumstances,'' regardless of whether the word ``consumer'' is
singular or plural.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Definition of ``Practice''
In the NPRM, the Department noted that neither the DOT nor the FTC
Act defines ``practice.'' The Department indicated that it did not
believe that a definition of ``practice'' was necessary, because its
aviation consumer protection regulations are always directed to
``practices'' rather than individual acts. The Department also
explained that its enforcement efforts include a determination that the
conduct in question reflects a practice or policy affecting multiple
consumers, rather than an isolated incident. We concluded that ``in
general, the Department is of the view that proof of a practice in the
aviation consumer
[[Page 78711]]
protection context requires more than a single isolated incident. On
the other hand, even a single incident may be indicative of a practice
if it reflects company policy, training, or lack of training.'' \26\ We
sought comment, however, on whether a definition of ``practice'' was
necessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ 85 FR 11885.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We received relatively few comments on this issue. Consumer
advocacy organizations largely did not address it. Spirit, Travel Tech,
and FTC Commissioner Slaughter opined that a definition was not
necessary. The NBAA and USTOA urged the Department to adopt a
definition that reflected the Department's current understanding,
described above. A4A and IATA urged the Department to define
``practice'' as ``a pattern of repetitive conduct that harmed multiple
consumers rather than a single act.'' \27\ A4A and IATA stated that
under this standard, one ``mistaken advertisement'' would not be a
practice even if the same advertisement runs multiple times.\28\
Relatedly, A4A and IATA urged the Department to refrain from taking
enforcement action with respect to ``a single act or isolated acts by a
carrier,'' and instead take action only if the conduct is repeated
after a warning.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ Comment of A4A/IATA at 12.
\28\ Id.
\29\ Id. at 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After reviewing the comments on this issue, we remain of the view
that it is not necessary to define ``practice.'' The Department notes
that this issue will arise in relatively rare instances where the
Department seeks to take enforcement action in an area where no
specific regulation applies, and where there is a reasonable
disagreement over whether the conduct reflects a truly isolated
incident. In such cases, regulated entities will have the opportunity
to be heard and to present evidence that the conduct at issue does not
constitute a practice, as set forth in this rule.
C. Rulemaking Proposals
In the NPRM, the Department proposed a hearing procedure that would
be available when the Department proposed a discretionary aviation
consumer protection rulemaking declaring a practice to be unfair or
deceptive. To summarize, after the issuance of an NPRM, interested
parties could request a formal hearing on the ground that the proposed
rule raised one or more disputed technical, scientific, economic, or
other complex factual issues. The General Counsel would have the
authority to grant or deny the hearing using criteria set forth in this
rule. If the hearing is granted, an Administrative Law Judge or other
neutral hearing officer would conduct the formal hearing using
procedures adapted from the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) or
similar rules adopted by the Secretary. The hearing officer would issue
a detailed report on the disputed factual issue(s), after which the
General Counsel would determine whether the proposed rule should be
continued, amended, or terminated.
Consumer advocacy organizations strongly urged the Department not
to adopt these hearing procedures. They argued that the Department did
not demonstrate that the typical notice-and-comment procedures of the
APA were inadequate to gather a proper factual basis for discretionary
rulemakings. Some commenters noted that these hearing procedures were
unnecessary given the updates to the Department's general rulemaking
procedures in 49 CFR part 5. They also contended that formal hearing
procedures will inevitably create lengthy delays and numerous
opportunities for regulated entities to lobby against the proposed
rule. Some commenters argued that the proposed rulemaking has more
liberal standards for granting a hearing than there are for denying a
hearing; as a result, hearings will threaten to become the norm. Other
advocates observed that the proposal does not have a clear mechanism
for consumers to argue that a hearing is not necessary.
FTC Commissioner Slaughter commented on the FTC's own experience
with similar formal hearing procedures, which were imposed by Congress,
known as ``Mag-Moss'' procedures.\30\ Commissioner Slaughter argued
that such hearing procedures do not make rulemaking impossible, but
``the great difficulty of undergoing a Mag-Moss rulemaking compared
with rulemaking under the APA should not be understated. The additional
procedural requirements represent an enormous drain on staff resources,
to say nothing of the additional time and effort they require of
stakeholders.'' \31\ She argued that there is a growing bipartisan
consensus for the FTC to issue privacy regulations not under Mag-Moss,
but instead under APA procedures. Commissioner Slaughter argued that if
the Department issues its own privacy regulations using the proposed
formal hearing procedures, the Department will ``create a regulatory
incongruence in which the Department is the slowest and least capable
regulator in the privacy arena.'' \32\
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\30\ See 15 U.S.C. 57a (codifying the Magnuson-Moss Warranty--
Federal Trade Commission Improvement Act of 1975, Public Law 93-637
(``Mag-Moss'').
\31\ Comment of Commissioner Slaughter at 3.
\32\ Id. at 4.
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Ticket agents also urged the Department not to adopt formal hearing
procedures, for many of the reasons cited by consumer advocates and
Commissioner Slaughter. Travel Tech noted the incongruity of the
Department requiring heightened hearing procedures only for its
highest-cost rules and for discretionary aviation consumer protection
rules, which generally do not impose nearly such a high economic
burden.\33\ Travel Tech also argued that the Department's institutional
expertise in aviation consumer protection matters ensures that formal
hearing will generally not be necessary. Travel Tech contended that
formal hearings should only be required when directed by Congress or
under very limited and unusual circumstances.\34\
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\33\ Comment of Travel Tech at 6-7.
\34\ Id. at 9 (``Travel Tech thus proposes that a formal fact-
finding hearing would only be appropriate in the very unusual
circumstance when either Congress directs that a specific rule be
adopted only after an on the record hearing or when the agency's
General Counsel finds that a specific factual issue critical to a
claim that a particular practice is unfair or deceptive (and not an
economic or policy consideration) is in dispute and cannot be
adequately resolved through the usual notice-and-comment process.)''
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Airlines generally favored the proposal on the ground that it
provides regulated entities with an opportunity to test thoroughly the
factual assumptions on which discretionary consumer protections are
based. They argued that such hearings are helpful to determine whether
a market failure has taken place such that regulation is necessary.\35\
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\35\ A4A Comment at 16, citing 49 CFR 5.11 (before initiating a
rulemaking, the Department should identify ``the need for the
regulation, including a description of the market failure or
statutory mandate necessitating the rulemaking''). See also comment
of Spirit Airlines (arguing that the Department's repealed NPRM on
dissemination of ancillary fees to third party ticket sellers was
based on conflicting/misleading information regarding passengers'
ability to get this information). Spirit also argued that the
Department should engage in Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
(ANPRM) to gather comment on whether practices are unfair or
deceptive.
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After careful review of the comments in this area, the Department
has decided to retain a hearing procedure that would be available when
the Department proposes a discretionary aviation consumer protection
rulemaking declaring a practice to be unfair or deceptive. This is
consistent with section 41712, which requires notice and an opportunity
for a hearing before a finding that an air carrier, foreign air
carrier, or ticket agent is engaged in an
[[Page 78712]]
unfair or deceptive practice or an unfair method of competition. The
Department sees value in offering additional hearing procedures for
low-cost discretionary aviation consumer protection rules where
scientific, technical, economic, or other factual issues are genuinely
in dispute. At the same time, the Department recognizes the concerns
raised by commenters that formal hearing procedures may add time to the
rulemaking process. As such, the hearing procedures for discretionary
aviation consumer protection rules set forth in this final rule differ
from the procedures set forth in the Department's general rulemaking
procedures in 49 CFR part 5 for the Department's high-impact or
economically significant rules. For example, under this final rule, the
General Counsel would be free to adopt more flexible rules for the
hearing than would be required for a high-impact or economically
significant rulemaking. The General Counsel also has more flexibility
with respect to appointing an appropriate hearing officer for such
hearings. Finally, the presiding officer is not required to issue a
report; the officer need only place on the docket minutes of the
hearing with sufficient detail as to reflect fully the evidence and
arguments presented on the disputed issues of fact, along with proposed
findings addressing those issues. By adopting hearing procedures for
discretionary aviation consumer protection rulemakings that are less
stringent and more flexible than the formal hearing procedures for high
impact or economically significant rules, the Department ensures that
interested parties have an opportunity to test factual assumptions on
which discretionary consumer protection rulemaking actions are based,
consistent with the underlying statutory authority under which the
Department is regulating, while minimizing the likelihood of extensive
delays or a drain on staff resources.
These procedures, as modified, reflect the Department's continued
view that interested parties should have the opportunity to be heard
when the Department proposes discretionary rulemakings that may be
based on complex and disputed economic, technical, or other factual
issues. We also note that the ordinary notice and comment procedures of
the APA remain the default process: To obtain a hearing, the party
requesting the hearing has the initial burden of showing that, among
other factors, the ordinary notice and comment procedures are unlikely
to provide an adequate examination of the issues to permit a fully
informed judgment. The rule retains the safeguard that the General
Counsel may decline a hearing if it would unreasonably delay the
rulemaking. We also generally disagree with commenters who stated that
the standards for granting a hearing are necessarily more lenient than
the standards for denying them.
We also note that the Department's use of similar procedures to
supplement traditional notice-and-comment is not new.\36\ For example,
in 2011, the Department's Bureau of Transportation Statistics held a
public meeting to gather information about industry practices for
processing and accounting for baggage and wheelchairs, in connection
with a pending rulemaking.\37\ More recently, the Department asked the
Architectural and Transportation Barriers Compliance Board (Access
Board) to hold a hearing to gather public input on potential new
standards for on-board wheelchairs, also in connection with a pending
rulemaking.\38\ The Department recognizes certain differences between
the public meetings that sometimes were held in the context of earlier
rulemakings \39\ and the hearings contemplated by this rule. For
example, hearings will be held before a neutral officer, who must make
findings on the record, while public meetings were previously led by
staff from the government office involved in the rulemaking and
findings were not separately summarized and placed on the record but
rather were noted in the preamble if they were relied on in the
rulemaking. Moreover, this rule clearly identifies procedures to all
interested persons that hearings may be requested, while previously
there was no formal process to request a public meeting so they were
more likely to have been instituted by the Department or requested only
by those parties that knew that the Department was open to holding
public meetings in appropriate instances. In sum, while the hearing
procedures reflected in the final rule may result in some additional
delays to the rulemaking process beyond what was experienced with
public meetings, on the whole the new procedures will promote fairness,
due process, and well-informed rulemaking, without unduly delaying the
proceeding itself, and represent a reasonable and balanced approach
consistent with the Department's rulemaking and enforcement policies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ See https://cms7.dot.gov/regulations/rulemaking-process,
under ``May an agency supplement the APA requirements?'' (``We may
use public meetings or hearings before or after a proposal is issued
for a variety of reasons. Public meetings allow us to ask questions.
They allow for interaction among participants with different views
on the issues involved, and they provide a better opportunity for
members of the public who believe they are more effective making
oral presentations than submitting written comments.'')
\37\ See https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=RITA-2011-0001-0280.
\38\ 84 FR 43100 (August 20, 2019); see https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=ATBCB-2019-0002-0001.
\39\ E.g., 77 FR 25105 (April 27, 2012).
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D. Enforcement Proposals
In the NPRM, the Department proposed to codify certain enforcement
practices. First, the Department proposed that before the Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection determined how to resolve a matter
involving a potential unfair or deceptive practice, it would provide an
opportunity for the alleged violator to be heard and to present
relevant evidence in its defense. Such evidence would include, but not
be limited to, the following: (1) Evidence that the consumer protection
regulation at issue was not violated; (2) evidence that the conduct was
not unfair or deceptive (if no specific regulation applied); and (3)
evidence that that consumer harm was limited or that the alleged
violator has taken steps to mitigate the harm. The Department also
proposed that when the Office issued a consent order declaring that a
practice was unfair or deceptive, and no specific regulation applied to
the conduct at issue, then the Office would explain the basis for its
finding that the conduct was unfair or deceptive, using the definitions
set forth in this rule. Finally, the Department clarified that if the
Office took enforcement action against a regulated entity by filing a
complaint with an Administrative Law Judge, then the entity would have
the opportunity for notice and a hearing as set forth in 14 CFR part
302. We noted that these procedures reflected the longstanding
practices of the Office of Aviation Consumer Protection.
We received few comments on this element of the proposed rule. Most
consumer advocates did not opine on the issue, while National Consumers
League and Consumer Action advised that they were unnecessary. Travel
Fairness Now generally did not object to the measures, but urged the
Department to declare that an unfair or deceptive practice with limited
consumer harm would still be subject to enforcement action. Airlines
and ticket agents generally supported these proposals.
In the final rule, we will adopt these measures as proposed in the
NPRM. They reflect current practice, and afford reasonable due process
to regulated entities. These specific measures are also consistent with
the general principles set forth in the Department's
[[Page 78713]]
recent final rule relating to enforcement.\40\
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\40\ See, e.g., 49 CFR 5.57 (``Enforcement adjudications require
the opportunity for participation by directly affected parties and
the right to present a response to a decision maker, including
relevant evidence and reasoned arguments''); 49 CFR 5.59
(Department's enforcement action should conclude with, among other
things, a ``well-documented decision as to violations alleged and
any violations found to have been committed.'')
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E. Privacy, Air Ambulance, and Frequent Flyer Programs
The Department solicited comment on whether the general definitions
of ``unfair'' or ``deceptive'' were sufficient to give notice to
stakeholders of what constitutes unfair or deceptive practices with
respect to the specialized fields of privacy, air ambulance service,
and frequent flyer programs. While we did not receive specific comments
related to frequent flyer programs, we did receive comment with respect
to privacy and air ambulance service.
A4A asked the Department to declare that the Department has
exclusive jurisdiction over airlines with respect to privacy practices.
A4A also asked the Department to adopt detailed privacy regulations.
A4A's proposal would declare that ``mishandling private information may
be considered an unfair or deceptive practice,'' and that ``specific
examples of unfair or deceptive practices with regard to the private
information of consumers include'' violating the terms of the airline's
privacy policy, failing to maintain reasonable data security measures
for passengers' private information, and violating various privacy
statutes.
We generally agree with the substance of A4A's proposal; indeed, it
appears to be adapted from the privacy page of the Department's
consumer protection website, which recites many of these
principles.\41\ Nevertheless, we decline to adopt it for procedural
reasons. As noted above, one of the Department's stated policies is to
improve transparency and public participation in the rulemaking
process. If the Department were to adopt detailed privacy regulations
affecting air transportation and the sale of air transportation, it
should first engage in the full notice-and-comment procedures of the
APA, as well as the procedures set forth in this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ https://www.transportation.gov/individuals/aviation-consumer-protection/privacy.
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Next, we received comments from insurers, air ambulance providers,
and other interested parties about the regulation of air ambulance
providers. The National Association of Insurance Commissioners and nine
researchers on health law, economics, and policy \42\ urged the
Department to declare that balance billing is an unfair practice
because it imposes substantial harm on patients who had no ability to
avoid the charges, without countervailing benefits to consumers or to
competition. Separately, the researchers urged the Department to find
that charging full out-of-network prices for air ambulance service is
an unfair practice, in part because of its effect on the private
insurance market. Air ambulance operators \43\ argued that specific
regulation of air ambulance providers in this rulemaking would be
premature at best, because the Air Ambulance and Patient Billing (AAPB)
Advisory Committee has been established to address these issues
comprehensively. Air ambulance operators also argued that balance
billing should not be considered an unfair or deceptive practice. They
contend that much of the consumer harm from balance billing arises from
the practices of insurers, rather than air ambulance providers (for
example, by under paying out-of-network air ambulance bills, or denying
claims that were medically necessary). They also argue that many
patients who receive a large balance bill ultimately pay a small
fraction of that amount out-of-pocket.
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\42\ See https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=DOT-OST-2019-0182-0193.
\43\ Association of Air Medical Services, Air Methods, and PHI
Health, LLC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of the comments submitted on this issue, we
decline to adopt specific regulations relating to air ambulance
providers. Section 418 of the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 (FAA
Reauthorization Act) requires the Secretary, in consultation with the
Secretary of Health and Human Services, to establish an advisory
committee to review options to improve the disclosure of charges and
fees for air medical services, better inform consumers of insurance
options for such services, and protect consumers from balance billing.
The FAA Reauthorization Act also contemplates that the Advisory
Committee's report and recommendations will serve as the basis for
future regulations or other guidance as deemed necessary to provide
other consumer protections for customers of air ambulance
providers.\44\ We agree that the most prudent course of action is to
allow the work of the AAPB Advisory Committee to run its course, rather
than to issue more detailed regulations relating to air ambulance
providers in this final rule.
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\44\ For further information about the AAPB Advisory Committee,
see https://www.transportation.gov/airconsumer/AAPB and the
Committee's docket, available at https://www.regulations.gov/docket?D=DOT-OST-2018-0206.
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F. Other Comments
We will address briefly a number of comments that do not fall
squarely within the categories described above. First, A4A and IATA
urge the Department to adopt a ``clear and convincing evidence''
standard for enforcement of unfair and deceptive practices. We decline
to enact such a burden of proof standard here, particularly in light of
the fact that most enforcement cases are adjudicated not through the
courts, but rather through voluntary consent orders. We also note that
during these informal proceedings, regulated entities have the
opportunity to present mitigating evidence as set forth above.
Next, A4A and IATA urge the Department to require the Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection to present evidence on all of the elements
of unfairness and deception, even in cases where a specific regulation
enacted under the authority of section 41712 applies to the conduct in
question. We decline this request because doing so would be unduly
burdensome with limited or no benefit. By enacting a regulation under
the authority of section 41712, the Department has already determined,
after notice and comment, that the conduct in question is unfair or
deceptive; in such cases, it should be sufficient to establish that the
regulation itself was violated.\45\ A4A and IATA also urge that they
should be able to present mitigating evidence with respect to all of
the prongs of unfairness and deception. We note that in informal
enforcement proceedings involving the violation of specific
regulations, regulated entities would have the opportunity to present
relevant evidence, including evidence that consumer harm was limited.
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\45\ See Comment of Travel Fairness Now (urging the Department
to clarify that it will not use this final rule as a vehicle for
repealing existing regulations, because they were well justified).
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Next, A4A and IATA argue that the Office of Aviation Consumer
Protection should affirmatively furnish ``exculpatory evidence'' in its
possession. We agree with this practice, and the Office is required to
do so under the Department's existing enforcement procedures, which are
set forth in another rule.\46\
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\46\ 49 CFR 5.89 (duty to disclose exculpatory evidence).
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[[Page 78714]]
G. Formal Enforcement Proceedings
In the NPRM, the Department proposed to clarify that if regulated
entities do not enter into a negotiated settlement with the Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection with respect to potential violations of
section 41712, then the Office may initiate a formal enforcement
proceeding, and that hearings are available through this process. The
Department did not receive comments on this provision, which restates
current procedures found in 14 CFR part 302. In this final rule, the
Department has made nonsubstantive editorial changes to the regulatory
text such as adding a citation to a specific section of part 302. The
Department has determined that good cause exists to dispense with
notice and comment for these nonsubstantive editorial changes because
they are ministerial in nature; therefore, public comment is
unnecessary under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B).
III. Regulatory Analyses and Notices
A. Executive Order 13771 (Reducing Regulation and Controlling
Regulatory Costs), Executive Order 12866 (Regulatory Planning and
Review), Executive Order 13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review), and DOT Regulatory Policies and Procedures (49 CFR Part 5)
This final rule is a significant regulatory action under section
3(f) of E.O. 12866, ``Regulatory Planning and Review'' (Oct. 4, 1993),
supplemented by E.O. 13563, ``Improving Regulation and Regulatory
Review'' (Jan. 21, 2011). Accordingly, the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) has reviewed it under that Order. This final rule is
issued in accordance with the Department's rulemaking procedures found
in 49 CFR part 5 and DOT Order 2100.6.
This rule primarily involves agency procedure and interpretation.
It clarifies how the Department interprets the terms ``unfair'' and
``deceptive'' and requires enhanced departmental procedures for
regulation and enforcement in the area of aviation consumer protection.
Clarifying and explicitly defining terminology advances the
Department's goal of improved transparency. Adopting enhanced
procedures for future rulemaking and enforcement activities will help
to ensure that the activities are rooted in fairness, due process, and
an adequate factual foundation. These goals are described in the
Department's final rule, ``Administrative Rulemaking, Guidance, and
Enforcement Procedures.'' \47\
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\47\ 84 FR 71714 (Dec. 27, 2019).
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This rule aligns the Department's policies and rules involving
unfairness and deception in aviation consumer protection explicitly
with principles adopted by the FTC. In the Department's view, aligning
the terms ``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' does not represent a substantive
departure from past DOT practice. The definitions simply provide
additional clarification to the public and regulated industries, and
are not expected to affect the Department's ability to prohibit unfair
and deceptive practices. While clarifying the terms is not expected to
lead to changes that would impact the Department, public, or any
regulated entity, it provides a foundation for the other elements of
this rule pertaining to future rulemaking and enforcement actions.
Effects on Future Rulemakings
This final rule will require the Department to use specific
definitions of the terms ``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' when declaring
certain practices to be unfair or deceptive in future discretionary
rulemakings.
Specifically, this final rule requires the Department to support a
finding of an ``unfair'' practice by demonstrating that the harm to
consumers is (1) substantial; (2) not reasonably avoidable; and (3) not
outweighed by offsetting benefits to consumers or competition.
Similarly, it requires the Department to support a finding that a
practice is ``deceptive'' by showing that: (1) The practice actually
misleads or is likely to mislead consumers; (2) who are acting
reasonably under the circumstances; (3) with respect to a material
matter.
The Department has declared certain practices to be unfair or
deceptive in several prior rulemakings, including the full fare
advertising rule (14 CFR 399.84) and oversales rule (14 CFR part 250).
In the supporting analysis for these rulemakings, the Department
justified its finding of unfairness or deception without using the full
three-pronged analysis for unfairness or deception found in this final
rule.\48\
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\48\ See 76 FR 23110 (April 25, 2011).
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In other instances, the Department has based its discretionary
regulations on both section 41712 and other statutes. For example, the
rule requiring on-time performance information during booking (14 CFR
234.11(b)) was based on both section 41712 and section 41702 (requiring
carriers to provide safe and adequate interstate air
transportation).\49\ While the Department partly relied on a finding of
consumer harm under section 41712 as the basis for that requirement, it
did not engage in the full three-part analysis for unfairness found in
this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ See 73 FR 74586 (December 8, 2008) (NPRM: ``Enhancing
Passenger Airline Protections'').
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Demonstrating support for findings of unfairness or deception
requires an analysis of data, which is generally collected and
organized as part of a regulatory impact analysis (RIA). Factors such
as potential harm to consumers, benefits to consumers or competition,
whether a consumer can avoid harm, and whether a harm is ``material''
relate to the economic benefits and costs of regulating a practice.
These benefits and costs are analyzed in an RIA and offer a rationale
for finding a practice ``unfair'' or ``deceptive.''
The Department customarily prepares a RIA or other regulatory
evaluation as part of the E.O. 12866 review process for rulemakings
involving aviation consumer protection. Further, the Department's final
rule on ``Administrative Rulemaking, Guidance, and Enforcement
Procedures'' requires that all rulemakings including a supporting
economic analysis. The Department will therefore need to continue to
collect, organize, and analyze data and facts to address economic
impacts.
The Department's current practice of collecting and analyzing data,
either for E.O. 12866 or departmental review, allows it to generate the
necessary factual basis to support an explicit discussion of unfair or
deceptive findings with little additional effort. While this final rule
may result in the Department expending additional resources to prepare
future discretionary aviation consumer protection rules and supporting
analyses, the resources are expected to be small and more than
justified by better, more deliberative internal decisions. Better
internal decisions will improve rulemaking efficiency by reducing the
resources needed to follow E.O. 12866 processes. The additional
procedures required by this rule are expected to result in improved
regulations that achieve their goals of protecting consumers without
imposing any more burdens on regulated industry than necessary.
This rule does not require that the Department review existing
rules to determine whether previous ``unfair'' or ``deceptive''
declarations would have been supported by the criteria described above.
Existing rules are subject to retrospective review requirements under
the Department's rulemaking procedures found in 49 CFR part 5, DOT
Order 2100.6, and other legal requirements, as applicable. The
Department will consider whether
[[Page 78715]]
existing discretionary aviation consumer protection rules such as full
fare advertising, oversales and refunds meet the standards found in
this rule when performing the retrospective reviews, but it is not
possible to judge the impact of this rule on the rules until the
Department conducts the reviews. The Department considers many factors
when conducting its retrospective reviews, including the continuing
need for the rule and whether the rule has achieved its intended
outcomes. It is unlikely that an existing rule would fail the standards
set forth in this rule without failing existing standards that would
prompt the Department to revise or rescind the rule. Judging the impact
of this rule is confounded further because some existing rules do not
rely solely on section 41712, as is the case with the rule requiring
on-time performance information during booking noted above.
Under this rule, future discretionary rulemakings could be subject
to a hearing procedure. The rule allows interested parties to request a
hearing when the Department proposes a rule to classify a practice as
unfair or deceptive, when the issuance of the NPRM raises one or more
disputed technical, scientific, economic, or other complex factual
issues, or when the NPRM may not satisfy the requirements of the
Information Quality Act. Allowing interested parties an opportunity for
a hearing ensures that they can test the information informing
discretionary consumer protection regulations. However, following this
rule's requirements to provide a sufficient factual basis to support an
``unfair'' or ``deceptive'' finding should reduce the need for the
Department to hold such hearings.
Nevertheless, requests for hearings are expected to occur
occasionally. While the Department lacks data that would allow it to
distinguish the costs and time of conducting the hearings from the
costs of conducting its normal business operations, the Department
believes that any incremental costs and time would be small relative to
the baseline scenario in which the Department did not enact the rule.
Previous discretionary rulemakings involving unfair and deceptive
practices in aviation consumer protection have attracted substantial
interest from consumer advocates, airline industry advocates, and the
general public. The Department engaged with these interested parties
without the benefit of a formal process, and the engagements required
investments of time and resources by the Department and interested
parties. Because these engagements were informal and with uncertain
scopes, they were not as efficient as would be expected under a more
formal process as would be the case under this rule. Without a formal
process, parties tend to overinvest in preparation, incurring
unnecessary costs, or underinvest, leading to additional engagements
and administrative costs. For future rulemakings, establishing formal
hearing procedures may reduce costs and time for both groups by
increasing certainty about opportunities for engagement.
The hearing procedures established in this final rule are less
stringent and more flexible than the hearing procedures for high-impact
or economically significant rules detailed in the Department's general
rulemaking procedures in 49 CFR part 5 and DOT Order 2100.6. In
addition, the Department has experience using hearing procedures to
supplement traditional notice-and-comment rulemaking, as described
earlier for baggage and wheelchair accounting and for potential on-
board wheelchair standards. Finally, the hearing procedures will
provide consistency in the Department's exercise of its 41712 authority
by mirroring the statute's hearing requirement to ensure rulemakings
enacted under the same authority ensure due process, and are grounded
in fairness and supported by an adequate factual foundation.
The Department believes that its experience with hearings, coupled
with reduced complexity of the hearing procedures, will limit the
additional staff resources needed to comply with the requirement and
prevent it from leading to excessive delays in issuing aviation
consumer protection rules. The General Counsel may also decline a
hearing request if following the procedures would unreasonably delay
the rulemaking. When deciding to decline a hearing request, the General
Counsel will balance the impact of the hearing on departmental
resources against the potential value of any information to be
collected during the hearing process, and consider the quality of
evidence presented, including but not limited to that presented by
interested parties and in the Department's RIA and other supporting
analyses.
Effects on Future Enforcement Actions
This final rule adds requirements for future enforcement actions
analogous to the requirements for discretionary aviation consumer
protection rulemakings. The Department will use the same definitions of
unfair and deceptive when taking enforcement action against an airline
or ticket agent for unfair or deceptive practices. In future
enforcement actions, the Department would also provide the airline or
ticket agent with the opportunity to be heard and to present mitigating
evidence. The opportunity for a hearing before a finding that any air
carrier, foreign air carrier, or ticket agent is engaged in an unfair
or deceptive practice or an unfair method of competition already exists
under section 41712. Finally, in future enforcement orders, if a
specific regulation does not apply to the practice in question, the
Department would explain the basis for its finding that a practice was
unfair or deceptive.
As explained in the NPRM, the Department views these measures as a
codification of existing practice, rather than a change in policy,
because the Department has typically relied on the explicit definitions
of ``unfair'' and ``deceptive'' in prior enforcement orders. Applying
these terms and providing an opportunity for a hearing in enforcement
proceedings is largely noncontroversial, and the Department received
few comments on this element of the rule at the NPRM stage. The
Department does not expect to need to expend additional resources in
aviation consumer protection proceedings due to this rule, or expect
that the rule will increase the amount of time needed to come to
resolution. The Department believes that regulated entities could see
some benefit, however, from upfront clarification of the guidelines and
criteria that the Department follows when enforcing aviation consumer
protection regulations involving unfair and deceptive practices.
This rule is not an E.O. 13771 regulatory action because it is does
not impose any more than de minimis regulatory costs. This final rule
provides an additional mechanism for industry to provide input to the
Department on its discretionary aviation consumer protection
rulemakings. Private industry should not experience more than minimal
additional costs relative to the status quo because it already engages
in significant information exchange with the Department. Industry has
the option of continuing use of historical mechanisms for providing
input to discretionary aviation consumer protection, and is not
required to make use of the alternatives set forth in this rule. The
Department should not experience significant additional costs because
it has considerable experience conducting analysis in support of
aviation consumer protection rules as well as hearings analogous to
those in
[[Page 78716]]
this rule. Such efforts are consistent with the Department's normal
business operations, and any additional resources needs could be
accommodated through a simple and temporary realignment of internal
resources.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires an
agency to review regulations to assess their impact on small entities
unless the agency determines that a rule is not expected to have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
A direct air carrier or foreign air carrier is a small business if it
provides air transportation only with small aircraft (i.e., aircraft
with up to 60 seats/18,000-pound payload capacity). See 14 CFR 399.73.
The Department has determined that this rule does not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
C. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
This final rule has been analyzed in accordance with the principles
and criteria contained in Executive Order 13132 (``Federalism''). This
final rule does not include any provision that: (1) Has substantial
direct effects on the States, the relationship between the national
government and the States, or the distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various levels of government; (2) imposes
substantial direct compliance costs on State and local governments; or
(3) preempts State law. States are already preempted from regulating in
this area by the Airline Deregulation Act, 49 U.S.C. 41713. Therefore,
the consultation and funding requirements of Executive Order 13132 do
not apply.
D. Executive Order 13175
This final rule has been analyzed in accordance with the principles
and criteria contained in Executive Order 13175 (``Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments''). Because this final rule
does not significantly or uniquely affect the communities of the Indian
Tribal governments or impose substantial direct compliance costs on
them, the funding and consultation requirements of Executive Order
13175 do not apply.
E. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.)
requires that DOT consider the impact of paperwork and other
information collection burdens imposed on the public and, under the
provisions of PRA section 3507(d), obtain approval from the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) for each collection of information it
conducts, sponsors, or requires through regulations. The DOT has
determined there are no new information collection requirements
associated with this final rule.
F. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
The Department has determined that the requirements of Title II of
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 do not apply to this
rulemaking.
G. National Environmental Policy Act
The Department has analyzed the environmental impacts of this final
rule pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 (NEPA)
(42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.) and has determined that it is categorically
excluded pursuant to DOT Order 5610.1C, Procedures for Considering
Environmental Impacts (44 FR 56420, Oct. 1, 1979). Categorical
exclusions are actions identified in an agency's NEPA implementing
procedures that do not normally have a significant impact on the
environment and therefore do not require either an environmental
assessment (EA) or environmental impact statement (EIS). See 40 CFR
1508.4. In analyzing the applicability of a categorical exclusion, the
agency must also consider whether extraordinary circumstances are
present that would warrant the preparation of an EA or EIS. Id.
Paragraph 10.c.16.h of DOT Order 5610.1D categorically excludes
``[a]ctions relating to consumer protection, including regulations.''
Since this rulemaking relates to the definition of unfair and deceptive
practices under Section 41712, the Department's central consumer
protection statute, this is a consumer protection rulemaking. The
Department does not anticipate any environmental impacts, and there are
no extraordinary circumstances present in connection with this
rulemaking.
H. Privacy Act
Anyone may search the electronic form of all comments received into
any of OST's dockets by the name of the individual submitting the
comment, or signing the comment if submitted on behalf of an
association, business, labor union, or any other entity. You may review
USDOT's complete Privacy Act Statement published in the Federal
Register on April 11, 2000, at 65 FR 19477-8.
I. Statutory/Legal Authority for This Rulemaking
This rulemaking is issued under the authority of 49 U.S.C.
40113(a), which grants the Secretary the authority to take action that
the Secretary considers necessary to carry out 49 U.S.C. Subtitle VII
(Aviation Programs), including conducting investigations, prescribing
regulations, standards, and procedures, and issuing orders.
J. Regulation Identifier Number
A Regulation Identifier Number (RIN) is assigned to each regulatory
action listed in the Unified Agenda of Federal Regulations. The
Regulatory Information Service Center publishes the Unified Agenda in
Spring and Fall of each year. The RIN set forth in the heading of this
document can be used to cross-reference this action with the Unified
Agenda.
List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 399
Consumer protection, Policies, Rulemaking proceedings, Enforcement,
Unfair or deceptive practices.
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, the Department amends 14
CFR part 399 as follows:
PART 399--STATEMENTS OF GENERAL POLICY
0
1. The authority citation for part 399 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 41712, 40113(a).
Subpart F--Policies Relating to Rulemaking Proceedings
0
2. Section 399.75 is added to subpart F to read as follows:
Sec. 399.75 Rulemakings relating to unfair and deceptive practices.
(a) General. When issuing a proposed or final regulation declaring
a practice in air transportation or the sale of air transportation to
be unfair or deceptive to consumers under the authority of 49 U.S.C.
41712(a), unless the regulation is specifically required by statute,
the Department shall employ the definitions of ``unfair'' and
``deceptive'' set forth in Sec. 399.79.
(b) Procedural requirements. When issuing a proposed regulation
under paragraph (a) of this section that is defined as high impact or
economically significant within the meaning of 49 CFR 5.17(a), the
Department shall follow the procedural requirements set forth in 49 CFR
5.17. When issuing a proposed regulation under paragraph (a) of this
section that is not defined as high impact or economically significant
within the meaning of 49 CFR 5.17(a), unless the regulation is
specifically required by statute, the Department shall adhere to the
following procedural requirements:
(1) Request for a hearing. Following publication of a proposed
regulation, and before the close of the comment
[[Page 78717]]
period, any interested party may file in the rulemaking docket a
petition, directed to the General Counsel, to hold a hearing on the
proposed regulation.
(2) Grant of petition for hearing. Except as provided in paragraph
(b)(3) of this section, the petition shall be granted if the petitioner
makes a plausible prima facie showing that:
(i) The proposed rule depends on conclusions concerning one or more
specific scientific, technical, economic, or other factual issues that
are genuinely in dispute or that may not satisfy the requirements of
the Information Quality Act;
(ii) The ordinary public comment process is unlikely to provide an
adequate examination of the issues to permit a fully informed judgment;
and
(iii) The resolution of the disputed factual issues would likely
have a material effect on the costs and benefits of the proposed rule.
(3) Denial of petition for hearing. A petition meeting the
requirements of paragraph (b)(2) of this section may be denied if the
General Counsel determines that:
(i) The requested hearing would not advance the consideration of
the proposed rule and the General Counsel's ability to make the
rulemaking determinations required by this section; or
(ii) The hearing would unreasonably delay completion of the
rulemaking.
(4) Explanation of denial. If a petition is denied in whole or in
part, the General Counsel shall include a detailed explanation of the
factual basis for the denial, including findings on each of the
relevant factors identified in paragraph (b)(2) or (3) of this section.
(5) Hearing notice. If the General Counsel grants the petition, the
General Counsel shall publish notification of the hearing in the
Federal Register. The document shall specify the proposed rule at issue
and the specific factual issues to be considered at the hearing. The
scope of the hearing shall be limited to the factual issues specified
in the notice.
(6) Hearing process. (i) A hearing under this section shall be
conducted using procedures approved by the General Counsel, and
interested parties shall have a reasonable opportunity to participate
in the hearing through the presentation of testimony and written
submissions.
(ii) The General Counsel shall arrange for a neutral officer to
preside over the hearing and shall provide a reasonable opportunity to
question the presenters.
(iii) After the hearing and after the record of the hearing is
closed, the hearing officer shall place on the docket minutes of the
hearing with sufficient detail as to fully reflect the evidence and
arguments presented on the issues, along with proposed findings
addressing the disputed issues of fact identified in the hearing
notice.
(iv) Interested parties who participated in the hearing shall be
given an opportunity to file statements of agreement or objection in
response to the hearing officer's proposed findings. The complete
record of the hearing shall be made part of the rulemaking record.
(7) Actions following hearing. (i) Following the completion of the
hearing process, the General Counsel shall consider the record of the
hearing, including the hearing officer's proposed findings, and shall
make a reasoned determination whether to terminate the rulemaking; to
proceed with the rulemaking as proposed; or to modify the proposed
rule.
(ii) If the General Counsel decides to terminate the rulemaking,
the General Counsel shall publish a document in the Federal Register
announcing the decision and explaining the reasons for the decision.
(iii) If the General Counsel decides to finalize the proposed rule
without material modifications, the General Counsel shall explain the
reasons for the decision and its responses to the hearing record in the
preamble to the final rule.
(iv) If the General Counsel decides to modify the proposed rule in
material respects, the General Counsel shall publish a new or
supplemental notice of proposed rulemaking in the Federal Register
explaining the General Counsel's responses to and analysis of the
hearing record, setting forth the modifications to the proposed rule,
and providing additional reasonable opportunity for public comment on
the proposed modified rule.
(8) Interagency review process. The hearing procedures under this
paragraph (b)(8) shall not impede or interfere with the interagency
review process of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs for
the proposed rulemaking.
(c) Basis for rulemaking. When issuing a proposed or final
regulation declaring a practice in air transportation or the sale of
air transportation to be unfair or deceptive to consumers under the
authority of 49 U.S.C. 41712(a), unless the regulation is specifically
required by statute, the Department shall articulate the basis for
concluding that the practice is unfair or deceptive to consumers as
defined in Sec. 399.79.
Subpart G--Policies Relating to Enforcement
0
3. Section 399.79 is added to subpart G to read as follows:
Sec. 399.79 Policies relating to unfair and deceptive practices.
(a) Applicability. This policy shall apply to the Department's
aviation consumer protection actions pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 41712(a).
(b) Definitions. (1) A practice is ``unfair'' to consumers if it
causes or is likely to cause substantial injury, which is not
reasonably avoidable, and the harm is not outweighed by benefits to
consumers or competition.
(2) A practice is ``deceptive'' to consumers if it is likely to
mislead a consumer, acting reasonably under the circumstances, with
respect to a material matter. A matter is material if it is likely to
have affected the consumer's conduct or decision with respect to a
product or service.
(c) Intent. Proof of intent is not necessary to establish
unfairness or deception for purposes of 49 U.S.C. 41712(a).
(d) Specific regulations prevail. Where an existing regulation
applies to the practice of an air carrier, foreign air carrier, or
ticket agent, the terms of that regulation apply rather than the
general definitions set forth in this section.
(e) Informal enforcement proceedings (1) Informal enforcement
proceedings will be conducted pursuant to the policies and procedures
found in 49 CFR part 5, subpart D. Before any determination is made on
how to resolve a matter involving a potential unfair or deceptive
practice, the U.S. Department of Transportation's Office of Aviation
Consumer Protection will provide an opportunity for the alleged
violator to be heard and present relevant evidence, including but not
limited to:
(i) In cases where a specific regulation applies, evidence tending
to establish that the regulation at issue was not violated and, if
applicable, that mitigating circumstances apply;
(ii) In cases where a specific regulation does not apply, evidence
tending to establish that the conduct at issue was not unfair or
deceptive as defined in paragraph (b) of this section; and
(iii) Evidence tending to establish that consumer harm was limited,
or that the air carrier, foreign air carrier, or ticket agent has taken
steps to mitigate consumer harm.
(2) During this informal process, if the Office of Aviation
Consumer Protection reaches agreement with the alleged violator to
resolve the matter with the
[[Page 78718]]
issuance of an order declaring a practice in air transportation or the
sale of air transportation to be unfair or deceptive to consumers under
the authority of 49 U.S.C. 41712(a), and when a regulation issued under
the authority of section 41712 does not apply to the practice at issue,
then the Department shall articulate in the order the basis for
concluding that the practice is unfair or deceptive to consumers as
defined in this section.
(f) Formal enforcement proceedings. When there are reasonable
grounds to believe that an airline or ticket agent has violated 49
U.S.C. 41712, and efforts to settle the matter have failed, the Office
of Aviation Consumer Protection may issue a notice instituting an
enforcement proceeding before an administrative law judge pursuant to
14 CFR 302.407. After the issues have been formulated, if the matter
has not been resolved through pleadings or otherwise, the parties will
receive reasonable written notice of the time and place of the hearing
as set forth in 14 CFR 302.415.
Issued this 24th day of November, 2020, in Washington, DC, under
authority delegated in 49 CFR 1.27(n).
Steven G. Bradbury,
General Counsel.
[FR Doc. 2020-26416 Filed 12-4-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-9X-P