Notice of Submission of Proposed Information Collection to OMB; Agency Request for Revision of BTS Form 251 and Renewal of OMB Control Number 2138-0018: Part 250 of the Department's Economic Regulations-Oversales, 86990-86995 [2020-28798]
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86990
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 251 / Thursday, December 31, 2020 / Notices
Issued in Washington, DC, on December
17, 2020.
Elaine L. Chao,
Secretary of Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2020–28284 Filed 12–30–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary
[OST Docket No. DOT–OST–2011–0170]
Notice of Submission of Proposed
Information Collection to OMB; Agency
Request for Revision of BTS Form 251
and Renewal of OMB Control Number
2138–0018: Part 250 of the
Department’s Economic Regulations—
Oversales
Office of the Secretary,
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), this Notice confirms the
Department of Transportation’s
(Department) intention to renew and
revise an Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) control number as related
to the Department’s Bureau of
Transportation Statistics (BTS) Form
251, Report of Passengers Denied
Confirmed Space. A 60-day comment
period soliciting comments on the
information collection was published on
March 3, 2020. Three comments were
received. The Department addresses
those comments in this Notice and is
seeking to renew the current OMB
control number by forwarding the
Information Collection Request (ICR)
abstracted below to OMB. The ICR
renames Form 251 to Form 250 and
revises the form to reduce the burden on
airlines, better clarify the instructions
for completing the form, and provide
more relevant information to
consumers.
SUMMARY:
Comments on this Notice must
be received by February 1, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Send comments regarding
the burden estimate, including
suggestions for reducing the burden, to
the Office of Management and Budget,
Attention: Desk Officer for the Office of
the Secretary of Transportation, 725
17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20503.
Comments may also be sent via email to
OMB at the following address: oira_
submissions@omb.eop.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Stuart Hindman, (202) 366–9342,
Stuart.Hindman@dot.gov, Office of
Aviation Consumer Protection (C–70),
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200
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20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
OMB Control Number: 2138–0018.
Title: Report of Passengers Denied
Confirmed Space Due to an Oversale
Situation.
Type of Request: Request to Revise
and Rename Form 251 and Renew OMB
Control Number.
Abstract/Background: BTS Form 251
is a one-page report that U.S. reporting
carriers submit to the Department on a
quarterly basis. Among other things, the
form contains the following
information: (1) The number of
passengers denied seats on flights that
they hold confirmed spaces, either
voluntarily or involuntarily, (2) the
numbers of passengers involuntarily
denied boarding (bumped passengers)
who qualified for compensation and
were or were not provided alternate
transportation, (3) the number of
passengers voluntarily or involuntarily
denied boarding who received
compensation and the amounts of the
compensation paid to them, and (4) the
total number of enplanements at a U.S.
airport relating to flights that are subject
to the oversales rule. For the purpose of
Form 251, reporting carriers are U.S. air
carriers that account for at least 0.5
percent of domestic scheduled-service
passenger revenues. These reporting
carriers must submit Form 251 for all
flights operated on aircraft with a
designed passenger capacity of 30 or
more seats which depart a U.S. airport.
Carriers do not report data from
inbound international flights to the
United States because the protections of
14 CFR part 250 Oversales do not apply
to these flights. In addition, reporting
carriers must file a separate form for all
scheduled flight segments originating in
the United States that are operated by a
codeshare partner of the reporting
carrier that is a certificated air carrier or
commuter air carrier using aircraft that
have a designed passenger capacity of
30 or more seats, and marketed only
under one U.S. carrier’s code. As of
January 1, 2020, there are 5 such
reporting carriers.
The Department uses Form 251 to
monitor the level of oversales activity by
each reporting carrier, the impact on
passengers, and the effectiveness of the
Department’s oversales rule. Certain
information collected from Form 251 is
made available to the public in the
Department’s monthly publication, the
Air Travel Consumer Report (ATCR), at:
https://www.transportation.gov/
individuals/aviation-consumerprotection/air-travel-consumer-reports.
The ATCR is a widely cited source of
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information for newspapers, magazines
and trade journals. A review of the Form
251 data reveals that the overall
involuntarily denied-boarding rate has
consistently decreased in recent years,
while passenger enplanements are
increasing. For example, compared to
the annual involuntary denied boarding
rate of 4.38 per 10,000 passengers in
1980, this rate has been reduced to 0.24
per 10,000 passengers in 2019.
Publishing individual carrier’s denied
boarding rates publicly serves to
diminish the need for more intrusive
regulations by disincentivizing carriers
from setting unreasonable overbooking
rates—resulting in a market based
mechanism that is more efficient than
direct regulation. In addition, a carrier’s
denied boarding rate provides an insight
into that carrier’s operational principles
and customer service practices. For
instance, a rapid sustained increase in
the rate of denied boarding may indicate
operational difficulties. Because the rate
of denied boarding is released quarterly,
travelers and travel agents concerned
about being bumped can select carriers
with lower incidences of denied
boardings.
In 2016, the Department issued a final
rule that, in part, revised the oversales
reporting requirements. In conjunction
with that rulemaking, on May 23, 2014
the Department published a 60-day FR
Notice (79 FR 29970), and, on November
3, 2016, a 30-day FR Notice (81 FR
76800) to renew and revise the OMB
control number regarding oversales
information collection (2138–0018). On
October 12, 2017, OMB approved the
control number authorizing these new
collections of information until October
31, 2020. The Department received an
emergency extension of the current
OMB control number until December
31, 2020.
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) (PRA) and its
implementing regulations, 5 CFR part
1320, require Federal agencies to issue
two notices seeking public comment on
information collection activities before
OMB may approve paperwork packages.
44 U.S.C. 3506, 3507; 5 CFR 1320.5,
1320.8(d)(1), 1320.12. On March 3,
2020, the Department published a 60day Notice in the Federal Register
soliciting comment on ICRs for which
the agency was seeking OMB approval
(85 FR 12664). A line-by-line summary
of the proposed changes to the form
with an explanation for each change
was published in the 60-day Notice. The
Department received three comments,
one from an industry trade organization,
one from a U.S. airline, and one from a
member of the public. The Department’s
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response to the comments on each
change is below:
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Form 250
• Title
A. Change: The current title of the
form—‘‘Report of Passengers Denied
Confirmed Space’’—is revised to
‘‘Report of Passengers Denied
Confirmed Space Due to an Oversale
Situation’’ and renamed to be ‘‘Form
250.’’ This revision is intended to clarify
that the form is meant to capture data
relating to passengers denied boarding
due to an oversale situation and not for
other reasons such as safety, security, or
health related reasons. Renaming the
form to ‘‘Form 250’’ is intended to
clarify further the applicability of the
data to oversale situations and
correspond to the appropriate part of
Title 14 of the Code of Federal
Regulations which addresses oversales,
Part 250.
Comments: No comments were
received on the title change.
• Line 1
A. Change: Added ‘‘from flights that
were oversold’’ to the leading sentence
to reinforce that the form is intended to
capture data from oversold flights.
Comments: No comments were
received on this change
B. Change: In order to provide more
complete and accurate regulation
citations, changed the regulation
citation in line 1(a) to ‘‘§ 250.5(a)(2) or
(b)(2)’’ and added a regulation citation
in lines 1(b) of ‘‘§ 250.5(a)(3) or (b)(3).’’
Comment: Revert to previous
language to match regulatory text and
add definition of ‘‘oversold’’ to form’s
instructions.
Response: The Department accepts
this comment. The Department has
reworded the language in lines 1(a) and
1(b), added a clarifying language in
Instruction (B), and added the definition
of ‘‘oversold flight’’ which is found in
14 CFR 250.9 to Instruction (A).
C. Comment: Combine the data in
lines 1(a) and 1(b).
Response: The Department rejects this
comment. The data contained in lines
1(a) and 1(b) are distinct from each
other, thus combining the lines would
result in the publication of misleading
information. Moreover, keeping the data
separate allows the Department to more
accurately monitor airline oversales and
accommodation practices.
• Line 2
A. Change: Added ‘‘from flights that
were oversold’’ in the leading sentence
to reinforce that the form is intended to
capture data from oversold flights.
Comment: No comments were
received on this change.
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B. Change: Reworded the contents in
lines 2(a), 2(b), and 2(c) to ensure that
the language on the form matches the
regulatory text, listed order of
exceptions to the denied boarding
compensation rule found in 14 CFR
250.6, and included the applicable
citation to section 250.6.
Comment: Add clarifying language to
line 2(a) to ensure consistency in
reporting by carriers.
Response: The Department concurs
with this suggestion and has added
clarifying language to Instruction (C).
C. Change: Moved the content of line
6 to line 2; reordered lines 2(a), 2(b),
2(c), and 2(d).
Two Comments: (1) Remove all data
in line 2 because the data is not
published by the Department and the
reported data is not related to denied
boardings in an oversales situation. (2)
In the alternative, the Department
should remove data collection related to
upgrades and downgrades (line 2(c)).
Response: The Department rejects the
comment to remove all collection in line
2. Keeping data collection related to the
exceptions for denied boarding
compensation allows the Department to
monitor and track overall compliance
with the denied boarding compensation
rules. However, the Department accepts
the suggestion to remove data related to
upgrades and downgrades. If a
passenger is ultimately accommodated
on the flight but in a different section of
the aircraft, the passenger was not
denied boarding due to the entire flight
being ‘‘oversold.’’
• Line 3—no change was proposed
A. Comment: Remove line 3 as data
contained in this line is duplicative of
line 1 if line 2 is deleted.
Response: The Department rejects the
deletion of all of the information in line
2; therefore, the data contained in line
3 is not duplicative of other collected
data.
• Line 4
A. Changes: Added ‘‘from an oversold
flight’’ to reinforce that the form is
intended to capture data from oversold
flights. Added ‘‘regardless of the type of
compensation (e.g., voucher, cash)’’ to
clarify that reporting carriers must
report the actual number of all
passengers who receive any type of
compensation as a result of being
denied boarding involuntarily.
Comment: Remove line 4 as the data
collected is duplicative of Line 1.
Response: The Department rejects this
comment. The data collected in lines 1
and 4 are distinct. Line 1 collects the
number of passengers entitled to denied
boarding compensation, while line 4
collects the number of passengers that
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actually received denied boarding
compensation. The collection of the
data in line 4 enables the Department to
monitor carriers’ compliance with the
denied boarding compensation
requirements, especially with regard to
the proper payment of owed denied
boarding compensation. A discrepancy
in the data contained in lines 1 and 4
is an indication that a carrier may not
be properly compensating all passengers
who are entitled to denied boarding
compensation.
• Line 5
A. Change: Added ‘‘due to a potential
oversale situation’’ to reinforce that the
form is intended to capture data from
oversold flights.
Comment: Remove the word
‘‘potential’’ as it could place an
excessive burden on reporting carriers
and could result in overreporting of
data.
Response: The Department accepts
the comment in part and has substituted
new language in line 5 to now read:
Number of passengers who voluntarily
accepted a carrier’s offer to give up
reserved space due to a potential
oversale situation and did not travel on
their original flight in exchange for a
payment of the carrier’s choosing. In the
60-day notice, line 5 stated: Number of
passengers who volunteered to give up
reserved space due to a potential
oversale situation in exchange for a
payment of the carrier’s choosing. The
Department believes that adding the
phrase ‘‘and did not travel on their
original flight’’ will prevent
overreporting of potential oversale
situation and any undue burden for
reporting carriers as the carrier would
only report the number of passengers
who volunteer to be denied boarding
after solicitation by the carrier and
ultimately give up a reserved space.
• Line 6
A. Changes: Moved the text in line 6
regarding upgrades and downgrades to
line 2 so that all data relating to
exceptions to the denied boarding
compensation rule is on one line.
Moved the text from line 7 regarding
total boardings to line 6 without any
change.
Comments: No comments were
received on this change.
• Line 7
A. Change: Moved the text from line
8 up to line 7 and added the regulation
citation to ‘‘§ 250.5(a)(2) or (b)(2)’’ to
line 7(a) and ‘‘§ 250.5(a)(3) or (b)(3)’’ to
line 7(b) to complete the applicable
regulatory citation.
Comment: Remove lines 7(a) and 7(b)
as requiring the reporting of aggregate
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data does not provide the Department or
the public with usable information.
Response: The Department accepts
the suggestion to remove lines 7(a) and
7(b). Instead, the Department will
rename and reword proposed line 7 to
read: Amount of compensation paid to
passengers who voluntarily accepted a
carrier’s offer to give up reserved space
on an oversold flight that received cash
or cash equivalent payment. This
change allows the Department to
monitor industry practice regarding
payment of voluntary denied boarding
compensation for potential regulatory
changes in the future.
Instructions to Form 250
No Comments were received on the
changes proposed in the Instructions.
• Instruction (A)
Æ Added clarifying language to
ensure reporting carriers are only
reporting data relating to oversold
flights operated by covered aircraft (i.e.,
aircraft with 30 or more seats).
Æ Added language related to the
requirement for reporting carriers to
submit a separate Form 250 for flights
operated by a reporting marketing
carrier’s code-share partner if the codeshare partner is also a reporting carrier.
• Instruction (B)
Æ Added clarifying language to
include the full citation to the
applicable regulation to ensure that
reporting carriers are properly reporting
data on lines 1(a) and 1(b).
• Instruction (C)—no change.
• Instruction (D)
Æ Added a new Instruction D to
clarify that reporting carriers must
include on line 4 passengers who
receive any type of compensation as a
result of being denied boarding
involuntarily from an oversold flight.
• Instruction (E)
Æ Moved text from previous
Instruction (D) to Instruction (E) without
additional change.
• Instruction (F)
Æ Moved text from previous
Instruction (E) to Instruction (F) without
additional change.
• Instruction (G)
Æ Moved text from previous
Instruction (F) to Instruction (G) and
added clarifying language to ensure
reporting carriers properly report only
the amount of cash or cash-equivalent
compensation provided to passengers
denied boarding either voluntarily or
involuntarily.
• Instruction (H)
Æ Moved text from previous
Instruction (G) to Instruction (H)
without additional change.
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• Instruction (I)
Æ Moved text from previous
Instruction (H) to Instruction (I) and
include a new submission email
address.
Copies of the revised form and
accompanying instructions reflecting
the changes are included in this Notice.
Accordingly, the Department
announces that these information
collection activities have been reevaluated and certified under 5 CFR.
1320.5(a) and forwarded to OMB for
review and approval pursuant to 5 CFR
1320.12(c). Before OMB decides
whether to approve these proposed
collections of information, it must
provide 30 days for public comment.,
see 44 U.S.C. 3507(b); 5 CFR 1320.12(d).
Federal law requires OMB to approve or
disapprove paperwork packages
between 30 and 60 days after the 30-day
Notice is published, see 44 U.S.C.
3507(b)–(c); 5 CFR 1320.12(d); see also
60 FR 44978, 44983 (Aug. 29, 1995). The
30-day Notice informs the regulated
community to file relevant comments to
OMB and affords the Agency adequate
time to review and respond to public
comments before rendering a decision.
See 60 FR 44983 (Aug. 29, 1995).
Therefore, respondents should submit
any comments to OMB within 30 days
of publication to best ensure their full
consideration. 5 CFR 1320.12(c); see
also 60 FR 44983 (Aug. 29, 1995).
This Notice addresses the information
collection requirements set forth in the
Department’s regulation mandating
reporting of oversales data, 14 CFR
250.10. The renewed OMB control
number will be applicable to all the
provisions set forth in this Notice.
The PRA and its implementing
regulations, 5 CFR part 1320, require
Federal agencies to issue two notices
seeking public comment on information
collection activities before OMB may
approve paperwork packages. A Federal
agency generally cannot conduct or
sponsor a collection of information, and
the public is generally not required to
respond to an information collection,
unless it is approved by the OMB under
the PRA and displays a currently valid
OMB Control Number. In addition, as a
general matter, notwithstanding any
other provisions of law, no person shall
be subject to monetary penalty for
failing to comply with a collection of
information if the collection of
information does not display a valid
OMB Control Number. See 5 CFR
1320.5(a) and 1320.6.
For each of these information
collections, the title, a description of the
respondents, and an estimate of the
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annual recordkeeping and periodic
reporting burden are set forth below:
The Confidential Information
Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act
of 2002 (44 U.S.C. 3501) requires a
statistical agency to clearly identify
information it collects for non-statistical
purposes. The Departments hereby
notifies the respondents and the public
that it uses the information it collects
under this OMB approval for nonstatistical purposes including, but not
limited to, publication of the data in the
Department’s Air Travel Consumer
Report and submission of the
information to DOT agencies outside
BTS for review, analysis, and possible
use in regulatory, enforcement, and
other administrative matters.
Requirement to Submit BTS Form 250
as related to oversold flights.
Respondents: U.S. air carriers that
account for 0.5 percent of domestic
scheduled-service passenger revenues
for all flights operated on aircraft with
a designed passenger capacity of 30 or
more seats which depart a U.S. airport.
We have identified 16 carriers meeting
this threshold in 2020. Additionally, out
of the 16 carriers, five reporting carriers
must file a separate form for all
scheduled flight segments originating in
the United States which are operated by
a codeshare partner of the reporting
carrier that is a certificated air carrier or
commuter air carrier using aircraft that
have a designed passenger capacity of
30 or more seats, and marketed only
under one U.S. carrier’s code.
Number of Respondents: 16 (effective
January 1, 2020).
Frequency: Four times a year.
Estimated Total Burden on
Respondents: 1,144 hours.
This estimate is based on the
following information: 1
FLIGHTS OPERATED BY REPORTING
CARRIERS
[Form 250 for flights they operate]
Respondents .........................
Quarterly Reports .................
Total Reports ........................
Hours per Reports ................
Burden Hours .......................
16
4
64
16
1,024
1 The burden estimate was based on a cost/
benefits analysis conducted in 2016 as part of the
Department’s Final Rule on Enhancing Airline
Passenger Protections III. See, Regulatory Impact
Analysis for Final Rule Enhancing Airline
Passenger Protection III, October 18, 2016. https://
www.regulations.gov/document?D=DOT-OST-20140056-0792.
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All responses to this Notice will be
summarized and included in the request
for OMB approval. All comments will
also become a matter of public record on
the docket.
Authority: The Paperwork Reduction Act
of 1995; 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35, as amended;
and 49 CFR 1.49.
Blane A. Workie,
Assistant General Counsel for Aviation
Consumer Protection.
BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P
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information collection, including (a)
whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the
[Form 250 for codeshare flights they market]
Department’s performance; (b) the
Respondents .........................
5 accuracy of the estimated burden; (c)
Quarterly Reports .................
4 ways for the Department to enhance the
Total Reports ........................
20 quality, utility, and clarity of the
Hours per Reports ................
6 information collection; and (d) ways
Burden Hours .......................
120 that the burden could be minimized
without reducing the quality of the
collected information.
Public Comments Invited: You are
asked to comment on any aspect of this
CODESHARE FLIGHTS MARKETED BY
REPORTING CARRIER
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BILLING CODE 4910–9X–C
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request; Internal
Revenue Service Interim Final Rules
for Group Health Plans and Health
Insurance Coverage Relating to Status
as a Grandfathered Health Plan Under
the Patient Protection and Affordable
Care Act
Departmental Offices,
Department of the Treasury.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
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The Department of the
Treasury will submit the following
information collection requests to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and clearance in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995, on or after the
date of publication of this notice. The
public is invited to submit comments on
these requests.
SUMMARY:
Comments should be received on
or before February 1, 2021 to be assured
of consideration.
DATES:
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[FR Doc. 2020–28798 Filed 12–30–20; 8:45 am]
86995
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 251 (Thursday, December 31, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 86990-86995]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-28798]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Office of the Secretary
[OST Docket No. DOT-OST-2011-0170]
Notice of Submission of Proposed Information Collection to OMB;
Agency Request for Revision of BTS Form 251 and Renewal of OMB Control
Number 2138-0018: Part 250 of the Department's Economic Regulations--
Oversales
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA),
this Notice confirms the Department of Transportation's (Department)
intention to renew and revise an Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
control number as related to the Department's Bureau of Transportation
Statistics (BTS) Form 251, Report of Passengers Denied Confirmed Space.
A 60-day comment period soliciting comments on the information
collection was published on March 3, 2020. Three comments were
received. The Department addresses those comments in this Notice and is
seeking to renew the current OMB control number by forwarding the
Information Collection Request (ICR) abstracted below to OMB. The ICR
renames Form 251 to Form 250 and revises the form to reduce the burden
on airlines, better clarify the instructions for completing the form,
and provide more relevant information to consumers.
DATES: Comments on this Notice must be received by February 1, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Send comments regarding the burden estimate, including
suggestions for reducing the burden, to the Office of Management and
Budget, Attention: Desk Officer for the Office of the Secretary of
Transportation, 725 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20503. Comments may
also be sent via email to OMB at the following address:
[email protected].
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stuart Hindman, (202) 366-9342,
[email protected], Office of Aviation Consumer Protection (C-70),
U.S. Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
Washington, DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
OMB Control Number: 2138-0018.
Title: Report of Passengers Denied Confirmed Space Due to an
Oversale Situation.
Type of Request: Request to Revise and Rename Form 251 and Renew
OMB Control Number.
Abstract/Background: BTS Form 251 is a one-page report that U.S.
reporting carriers submit to the Department on a quarterly basis. Among
other things, the form contains the following information: (1) The
number of passengers denied seats on flights that they hold confirmed
spaces, either voluntarily or involuntarily, (2) the numbers of
passengers involuntarily denied boarding (bumped passengers) who
qualified for compensation and were or were not provided alternate
transportation, (3) the number of passengers voluntarily or
involuntarily denied boarding who received compensation and the amounts
of the compensation paid to them, and (4) the total number of
enplanements at a U.S. airport relating to flights that are subject to
the oversales rule. For the purpose of Form 251, reporting carriers are
U.S. air carriers that account for at least 0.5 percent of domestic
scheduled-service passenger revenues. These reporting carriers must
submit Form 251 for all flights operated on aircraft with a designed
passenger capacity of 30 or more seats which depart a U.S. airport.
Carriers do not report data from inbound international flights to the
United States because the protections of 14 CFR part 250 Oversales do
not apply to these flights. In addition, reporting carriers must file a
separate form for all scheduled flight segments originating in the
United States that are operated by a codeshare partner of the reporting
carrier that is a certificated air carrier or commuter air carrier
using aircraft that have a designed passenger capacity of 30 or more
seats, and marketed only under one U.S. carrier's code. As of January
1, 2020, there are 5 such reporting carriers.
The Department uses Form 251 to monitor the level of oversales
activity by each reporting carrier, the impact on passengers, and the
effectiveness of the Department's oversales rule. Certain information
collected from Form 251 is made available to the public in the
Department's monthly publication, the Air Travel Consumer Report
(ATCR), at: https://www.transportation.gov/individuals/aviation-consumer-protection/air-travel-consumer-reports. The ATCR is a widely
cited source of information for newspapers, magazines and trade
journals. A review of the Form 251 data reveals that the overall
involuntarily denied-boarding rate has consistently decreased in recent
years, while passenger enplanements are increasing. For example,
compared to the annual involuntary denied boarding rate of 4.38 per
10,000 passengers in 1980, this rate has been reduced to 0.24 per
10,000 passengers in 2019. Publishing individual carrier's denied
boarding rates publicly serves to diminish the need for more intrusive
regulations by disincentivizing carriers from setting unreasonable
overbooking rates--resulting in a market based mechanism that is more
efficient than direct regulation. In addition, a carrier's denied
boarding rate provides an insight into that carrier's operational
principles and customer service practices. For instance, a rapid
sustained increase in the rate of denied boarding may indicate
operational difficulties. Because the rate of denied boarding is
released quarterly, travelers and travel agents concerned about being
bumped can select carriers with lower incidences of denied boardings.
In 2016, the Department issued a final rule that, in part, revised
the oversales reporting requirements. In conjunction with that
rulemaking, on May 23, 2014 the Department published a 60-day FR Notice
(79 FR 29970), and, on November 3, 2016, a 30-day FR Notice (81 FR
76800) to renew and revise the OMB control number regarding oversales
information collection (2138-0018). On October 12, 2017, OMB approved
the control number authorizing these new collections of information
until October 31, 2020. The Department received an emergency extension
of the current OMB control number until December 31, 2020.
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) (PRA)
and its implementing regulations, 5 CFR part 1320, require Federal
agencies to issue two notices seeking public comment on information
collection activities before OMB may approve paperwork packages. 44
U.S.C. 3506, 3507; 5 CFR 1320.5, 1320.8(d)(1), 1320.12. On March 3,
2020, the Department published a 60-day Notice in the Federal Register
soliciting comment on ICRs for which the agency was seeking OMB
approval (85 FR 12664). A line-by-line summary of the proposed changes
to the form with an explanation for each change was published in the
60-day Notice. The Department received three comments, one from an
industry trade organization, one from a U.S. airline, and one from a
member of the public. The Department's
[[Page 86991]]
response to the comments on each change is below:
Form 250
Title
A. Change: The current title of the form--``Report of Passengers
Denied Confirmed Space''--is revised to ``Report of Passengers Denied
Confirmed Space Due to an Oversale Situation'' and renamed to be ``Form
250.'' This revision is intended to clarify that the form is meant to
capture data relating to passengers denied boarding due to an oversale
situation and not for other reasons such as safety, security, or health
related reasons. Renaming the form to ``Form 250'' is intended to
clarify further the applicability of the data to oversale situations
and correspond to the appropriate part of Title 14 of the Code of
Federal Regulations which addresses oversales, Part 250.
Comments: No comments were received on the title change.
Line 1
A. Change: Added ``from flights that were oversold'' to the leading
sentence to reinforce that the form is intended to capture data from
oversold flights.
Comments: No comments were received on this change
B. Change: In order to provide more complete and accurate
regulation citations, changed the regulation citation in line 1(a) to
``Sec. 250.5(a)(2) or (b)(2)'' and added a regulation citation in
lines 1(b) of ``Sec. 250.5(a)(3) or (b)(3).''
Comment: Revert to previous language to match regulatory text and
add definition of ``oversold'' to form's instructions.
Response: The Department accepts this comment. The Department has
reworded the language in lines 1(a) and 1(b), added a clarifying
language in Instruction (B), and added the definition of ``oversold
flight'' which is found in 14 CFR 250.9 to Instruction (A).
C. Comment: Combine the data in lines 1(a) and 1(b).
Response: The Department rejects this comment. The data contained
in lines 1(a) and 1(b) are distinct from each other, thus combining the
lines would result in the publication of misleading information.
Moreover, keeping the data separate allows the Department to more
accurately monitor airline oversales and accommodation practices.
Line 2
A. Change: Added ``from flights that were oversold'' in the leading
sentence to reinforce that the form is intended to capture data from
oversold flights.
Comment: No comments were received on this change.
B. Change: Reworded the contents in lines 2(a), 2(b), and 2(c) to
ensure that the language on the form matches the regulatory text,
listed order of exceptions to the denied boarding compensation rule
found in 14 CFR 250.6, and included the applicable citation to section
250.6.
Comment: Add clarifying language to line 2(a) to ensure consistency
in reporting by carriers.
Response: The Department concurs with this suggestion and has added
clarifying language to Instruction (C).
C. Change: Moved the content of line 6 to line 2; reordered lines
2(a), 2(b), 2(c), and 2(d).
Two Comments: (1) Remove all data in line 2 because the data is not
published by the Department and the reported data is not related to
denied boardings in an oversales situation. (2) In the alternative, the
Department should remove data collection related to upgrades and
downgrades (line 2(c)).
Response: The Department rejects the comment to remove all
collection in line 2. Keeping data collection related to the exceptions
for denied boarding compensation allows the Department to monitor and
track overall compliance with the denied boarding compensation rules.
However, the Department accepts the suggestion to remove data related
to upgrades and downgrades. If a passenger is ultimately accommodated
on the flight but in a different section of the aircraft, the passenger
was not denied boarding due to the entire flight being ``oversold.''
Line 3--no change was proposed
A. Comment: Remove line 3 as data contained in this line is
duplicative of line 1 if line 2 is deleted.
Response: The Department rejects the deletion of all of the
information in line 2; therefore, the data contained in line 3 is not
duplicative of other collected data.
Line 4
A. Changes: Added ``from an oversold flight'' to reinforce that the
form is intended to capture data from oversold flights. Added
``regardless of the type of compensation (e.g., voucher, cash)'' to
clarify that reporting carriers must report the actual number of all
passengers who receive any type of compensation as a result of being
denied boarding involuntarily.
Comment: Remove line 4 as the data collected is duplicative of Line
1.
Response: The Department rejects this comment. The data collected
in lines 1 and 4 are distinct. Line 1 collects the number of passengers
entitled to denied boarding compensation, while line 4 collects the
number of passengers that actually received denied boarding
compensation. The collection of the data in line 4 enables the
Department to monitor carriers' compliance with the denied boarding
compensation requirements, especially with regard to the proper payment
of owed denied boarding compensation. A discrepancy in the data
contained in lines 1 and 4 is an indication that a carrier may not be
properly compensating all passengers who are entitled to denied
boarding compensation.
Line 5
A. Change: Added ``due to a potential oversale situation'' to
reinforce that the form is intended to capture data from oversold
flights.
Comment: Remove the word ``potential'' as it could place an
excessive burden on reporting carriers and could result in
overreporting of data.
Response: The Department accepts the comment in part and has
substituted new language in line 5 to now read: Number of passengers
who voluntarily accepted a carrier's offer to give up reserved space
due to a potential oversale situation and did not travel on their
original flight in exchange for a payment of the carrier's choosing. In
the 60-day notice, line 5 stated: Number of passengers who volunteered
to give up reserved space due to a potential oversale situation in
exchange for a payment of the carrier's choosing. The Department
believes that adding the phrase ``and did not travel on their original
flight'' will prevent overreporting of potential oversale situation and
any undue burden for reporting carriers as the carrier would only
report the number of passengers who volunteer to be denied boarding
after solicitation by the carrier and ultimately give up a reserved
space.
Line 6
A. Changes: Moved the text in line 6 regarding upgrades and
downgrades to line 2 so that all data relating to exceptions to the
denied boarding compensation rule is on one line. Moved the text from
line 7 regarding total boardings to line 6 without any change.
Comments: No comments were received on this change.
Line 7
A. Change: Moved the text from line 8 up to line 7 and added the
regulation citation to ``Sec. 250.5(a)(2) or (b)(2)'' to line 7(a) and
``Sec. 250.5(a)(3) or (b)(3)'' to line 7(b) to complete the applicable
regulatory citation.
Comment: Remove lines 7(a) and 7(b) as requiring the reporting of
aggregate
[[Page 86992]]
data does not provide the Department or the public with usable
information.
Response: The Department accepts the suggestion to remove lines
7(a) and 7(b). Instead, the Department will rename and reword proposed
line 7 to read: Amount of compensation paid to passengers who
voluntarily accepted a carrier's offer to give up reserved space on an
oversold flight that received cash or cash equivalent payment. This
change allows the Department to monitor industry practice regarding
payment of voluntary denied boarding compensation for potential
regulatory changes in the future.
Instructions to Form 250
No Comments were received on the changes proposed in the
Instructions.
Instruction (A)
[cir] Added clarifying language to ensure reporting carriers are
only reporting data relating to oversold flights operated by covered
aircraft (i.e., aircraft with 30 or more seats).
[cir] Added language related to the requirement for reporting
carriers to submit a separate Form 250 for flights operated by a
reporting marketing carrier's code-share partner if the code-share
partner is also a reporting carrier.
Instruction (B)
[cir] Added clarifying language to include the full citation to the
applicable regulation to ensure that reporting carriers are properly
reporting data on lines 1(a) and 1(b).
Instruction (C)--no change.
Instruction (D)
[cir] Added a new Instruction D to clarify that reporting carriers
must include on line 4 passengers who receive any type of compensation
as a result of being denied boarding involuntarily from an oversold
flight.
Instruction (E)
[cir] Moved text from previous Instruction (D) to Instruction (E)
without additional change.
Instruction (F)
[cir] Moved text from previous Instruction (E) to Instruction (F)
without additional change.
Instruction (G)
[cir] Moved text from previous Instruction (F) to Instruction (G)
and added clarifying language to ensure reporting carriers properly
report only the amount of cash or cash-equivalent compensation provided
to passengers denied boarding either voluntarily or involuntarily.
Instruction (H)
[cir] Moved text from previous Instruction (G) to Instruction (H)
without additional change.
Instruction (I)
[cir] Moved text from previous Instruction (H) to Instruction (I)
and include a new submission email address.
Copies of the revised form and accompanying instructions reflecting
the changes are included in this Notice.
Accordingly, the Department announces that these information
collection activities have been re-evaluated and certified under 5 CFR.
1320.5(a) and forwarded to OMB for review and approval pursuant to 5
CFR 1320.12(c). Before OMB decides whether to approve these proposed
collections of information, it must provide 30 days for public
comment., see 44 U.S.C. 3507(b); 5 CFR 1320.12(d). Federal law requires
OMB to approve or disapprove paperwork packages between 30 and 60 days
after the 30-day Notice is published, see 44 U.S.C. 3507(b)-(c); 5 CFR
1320.12(d); see also 60 FR 44978, 44983 (Aug. 29, 1995). The 30-day
Notice informs the regulated community to file relevant comments to OMB
and affords the Agency adequate time to review and respond to public
comments before rendering a decision. See 60 FR 44983 (Aug. 29, 1995).
Therefore, respondents should submit any comments to OMB within 30 days
of publication to best ensure their full consideration. 5 CFR
1320.12(c); see also 60 FR 44983 (Aug. 29, 1995).
This Notice addresses the information collection requirements set
forth in the Department's regulation mandating reporting of oversales
data, 14 CFR 250.10. The renewed OMB control number will be applicable
to all the provisions set forth in this Notice.
The PRA and its implementing regulations, 5 CFR part 1320, require
Federal agencies to issue two notices seeking public comment on
information collection activities before OMB may approve paperwork
packages. A Federal agency generally cannot conduct or sponsor a
collection of information, and the public is generally not required to
respond to an information collection, unless it is approved by the OMB
under the PRA and displays a currently valid OMB Control Number. In
addition, as a general matter, notwithstanding any other provisions of
law, no person shall be subject to monetary penalty for failing to
comply with a collection of information if the collection of
information does not display a valid OMB Control Number. See 5 CFR
1320.5(a) and 1320.6.
For each of these information collections, the title, a description
of the respondents, and an estimate of the annual recordkeeping and
periodic reporting burden are set forth below:
The Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency
Act of 2002 (44 U.S.C. 3501) requires a statistical agency to clearly
identify information it collects for non-statistical purposes. The
Departments hereby notifies the respondents and the public that it uses
the information it collects under this OMB approval for non-statistical
purposes including, but not limited to, publication of the data in the
Department's Air Travel Consumer Report and submission of the
information to DOT agencies outside BTS for review, analysis, and
possible use in regulatory, enforcement, and other administrative
matters.
Requirement to Submit BTS Form 250 as related to oversold flights.
Respondents: U.S. air carriers that account for 0.5 percent of
domestic scheduled-service passenger revenues for all flights operated
on aircraft with a designed passenger capacity of 30 or more seats
which depart a U.S. airport. We have identified 16 carriers meeting
this threshold in 2020. Additionally, out of the 16 carriers, five
reporting carriers must file a separate form for all scheduled flight
segments originating in the United States which are operated by a
codeshare partner of the reporting carrier that is a certificated air
carrier or commuter air carrier using aircraft that have a designed
passenger capacity of 30 or more seats, and marketed only under one
U.S. carrier's code.
Number of Respondents: 16 (effective January 1, 2020).
Frequency: Four times a year.
Estimated Total Burden on Respondents: 1,144 hours.
This estimate is based on the following information: \1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The burden estimate was based on a cost/benefits analysis
conducted in 2016 as part of the Department's Final Rule on
Enhancing Airline Passenger Protections III. See, Regulatory Impact
Analysis for Final Rule Enhancing Airline Passenger Protection III,
October 18, 2016. https://www.regulations.gov/document?D=DOT-OST-2014-0056-0792.
Flights Operated by Reporting Carriers
[Form 250 for flights they operate]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Respondents............................................. 16
Quarterly Reports....................................... 4
Total Reports........................................... 64
Hours per Reports....................................... 16
Burden Hours............................................ 1,024
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 86993]]
Codeshare Flights Marketed by Reporting Carrier
[Form 250 for codeshare flights they market]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Respondents............................................. 5
Quarterly Reports....................................... 4
Total Reports........................................... 20
Hours per Reports....................................... 6
Burden Hours............................................ 120
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Public Comments Invited: You are asked to comment on any aspect of
this information collection, including (a) whether the proposed
collection of information is necessary for the Department's
performance; (b) the accuracy of the estimated burden; (c) ways for the
Department to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information collection; and (d) ways that the burden could be minimized
without reducing the quality of the collected information.
All responses to this Notice will be summarized and included in the
request for OMB approval. All comments will also become a matter of
public record on the docket.
Authority: The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995; 44 U.S.C.
Chapter 35, as amended; and 49 CFR 1.49.
Blane A. Workie,
Assistant General Counsel for Aviation Consumer Protection.
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[FR Doc. 2020-28798 Filed 12-30-20; 8:45 am]
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