Demurrage Billing Requirements, 17735-17750 [2021-07000]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 64 / Tuesday, April 6, 2021 / Rules and Regulations
services are not used to originate illegal
traffic.
■ 5. Effective January 1, 2022, further
amend § 64.1200 by adding paragraph
(k)(9) to read as follows:
§ 64.1200
Delivery restrictions.
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(k) * * *
(9) Any terminating provider that
blocks calls, either itself or through a
third-party blocking service, must
immediately return, and all voice
service providers in the call path must
transmit, an appropriate response code
to the origination point of the call. For
purposes of this rule, an appropriate
response code is:
(i) In the case of a call terminating on
an IP network, the use of Session
Initiation Protocol (SIP) code 607 or
608;
(ii) In the case of a call terminating on
a non-IP network, the use of ISDN User
Part (ISUP) code 21 with the cause
location ‘‘user’’;
(iii) In the case of a code transmitting
from an IP network to a non-IP network,
SIP codes 607 and 608 must map to
ISUP code 21; and
(iv) In the case of a code transmitting
from a non-IP network to an IP network,
ISUP code 21 must map to SIP code 603,
607, or 608 where the cause location is
‘‘user.’’
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■ 6. Delayed indefinitely, further amend
§ 64.1200 by adding paragraphs (k)(10)
and (n)(2) to read as follows:
§ 64.1200
Delivery restrictions.
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(k) * * *
(10) Any terminating provider that
blocks calls on an opt-out or opt-in
basis, either itself or through a thirdparty blocking service, must provide, at
the request of the subscriber to a
number, at no additional charge and
within 3 business days of such a
request, a list of calls to that number,
including the date and time of the call
and the calling number, that the
terminating provider or its designee
blocked within the 28 days prior to the
request.
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(n) * * *
(2) Take steps to effectively mitigate
illegal traffic when it receives actual
written notice of such traffic from the
Commission through its Enforcement
Bureau. In providing notice, the
Enforcement Bureau shall identify with
as much particularity as possible the
suspected traffic; provide the basis for
the Enforcement Bureau’s reasonable
belief that the identified traffic is
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unlawful; cite the statutory or regulatory
provisions the suspected traffic appears
to violate; and direct the voice service
provider receiving the notice that it
must comply with this section. Each
notified provider must promptly
investigate the identified traffic. Each
notified provider must then promptly
report the results of its investigation to
the Enforcement Bureau, including any
steps the provider has taken to
effectively mitigate the identified traffic
or an explanation as to why the provider
has reasonably concluded that the
identified calls were not illegal and
what steps it took to reach that
conclusion. Should the notified
provider find that the traffic comes from
an upstream provider with direct access
to the U.S. Public Switched Telephone
Network, that provider must promptly
inform the Enforcement Bureau of the
source of the traffic and, if possible, take
steps to mitigate this traffic; and
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[FR Doc. 2021–04414 Filed 4–5–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
49 CFR Part 1333
[Docket No. EP 759]
Demurrage Billing Requirements
Surface Transportation Board.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Surface Transportation
Board (STB or Board) adopts a final rule
that requires Class I carriers to include
certain minimum information on or
with demurrage invoices and provide
machine-readable access to the
minimum information.
DATES: This rule is effective on October
6, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Sarah Fancher at (202) 245–0355.
Assistance for the hearing impaired is
available through the Federal Relay
Service at (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Board
issued a notice of proposed rulemaking
on October 7, 2019, to propose changes
to its existing demurrage regulations to
address several issues regarding carriers’
demurrage billing practices. Demurrage
Billing Requirements (NPRM), EP 759
(STB served Oct. 7, 2019).1 The Board
subsequently issued a supplemental
notice on April 30, 2020, seeking
comment on potential modifications
and additions to the proposal.
SUMMARY:
1 The NPRM was published in the Federal
Register, 84 FR 55109 (Oct. 15, 2019).
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17735
Demurrage Billing Requirements
(SNPRM), EP 759 (STB served Apr. 30,
2020).2 Demurrage is subject to Board
regulation under 49 U.S.C. 10702,
which requires railroads to establish
reasonable rates and transportationrelated rules and practices, and under
49 U.S.C. 10746, which requires
railroads to compute demurrage charges,
and establish rules related to those
charges, in a way that will fulfill the
national needs related to freight car use
and distribution and maintenance of an
adequate car supply.3 Demurrage is a
charge that serves principally as an
incentive to prevent undue car
detention and thereby encourage the
efficient use of rail cars in the rail
network, while also providing
compensation to rail carriers for the
expense incurred when rail cars are
unduly detained beyond a specified
period of time (i.e., ‘‘free time’’) for
loading and unloading. See Pa. R.R. v.
Kittaning Iron & Steel Mfg. Co., 253 U.S.
319, 323 (1920) (‘‘The purpose of
demurrage charges is to promote car
efficiency by penalizing undue
detention of cars.’’); 49 CFR 1333.1; see
also 49 CFR pt. 1201, category 106.
In the simplest demurrage case, a
railroad assesses demurrage on the
consignor (the shipper of the goods) for
delays in loading cars at origin and on
the consignee (the receiver of the goods)
for delays in unloading cars and
returning them to the rail carrier at
destination.4 Demurrage, however, can
also involve third-party intermediaries,
commonly known as warehousemen or
terminal operators, that accept freight
cars for loading and unloading but have
no property interest in the freight being
transported.5
2 The SNPRM was published in the Federal
Register, 85 FR. 26915 (May 6, 2020).
3 In Demurrage Liability, EP 707, slip op. at 15–
16 (STB served Apr. 11, 2014), the Board clarified
that private car storage is included in the definition
of demurrage for purposes of the demurrage
regulations established in that decision. The Board
uses the same definition of demurrage in this
decision.
4 As the Board noted in Demurrage Liability, EP
707, slip op. at 2 n.2, the Interstate Commerce Act,
as amended by the ICC Termination Act of 1995
(ICCTA), Public Law 104–88, 109 Stat. 803, does
not define ‘‘consignor’’ or ‘‘consignee,’’ though both
terms are commonly used in the demurrage context.
Black’s Law Dictionary defines ‘‘consignor’’ as
‘‘[o]ne who dispatches goods to another on
consignment,’’ and ‘‘consignee’’ ‘‘as [o]ne to whom
goods are consigned.’’ Demurrage Liability, EP 707,
slip op. at 2 n.2 (alterations in original) (citing
Black’s Law Dictionary 327 (8th ed. 2004)). The
Federal Bills of Lading Act defines these terms in
a similar manner. Id. (citing 49 U.S.C. 80101(1) &
(2)).
5 This decision uses ‘‘rail users’’ to broadly mean
any person or business that sends goods by rail or
receives rail cars for loading or unloading,
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In the NPRM, the Board proposed
requirements for minimum information
to be included on or with Class I
carriers’ demurrage invoices.6 NPRM, EP
759, slip op. at 8–11, 14–15. In
response, the Board received a
significant number of comments from
stakeholders, including requests for
additional and modified invoicing
requirements.7 The Board subsequently
issued a supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking to invite comment
on potential modifications and
additions to the proposed minimum
information requirements and format.
The Board received comments and
replies in response to the SNPRM.8
regardless of whether that person has a property
interest in the freight being transported.
6 In the NPRM, the Board also proposed that the
serving Class I carrier be required to directly bill the
shipper for demurrage (instead of the
warehouseman) when the shipper and
warehouseman agree to that arrangement and so
notify the rail carrier. See NPRM, EP 759, slip op.
at 11, 14–15. The Board subsequently adopted a
direct-billing final rule. See Demurrage Billing
Requirements, EP 759 (STB served Apr. 30, 2020).
The final rule was published in the Federal
Register, 85 FR 26858 (May 6, 2020).
7 In response to the NPRM, the Board received
comments and/or replies from the following:
American Chemistry Council (ACC); American
Forest & Paper Association; American Fuel &
Petrochemical Manufacturers (AFPM); American
Iron and Steel Institute; American Short Line and
Regional Railroad Association (ASLRRA);
ArcelorMittal USA LLC (AM); Association of
American Railroads; Barilla America, Inc.;
Canadian National Railway Company (CN);
Canadian Pacific Railway Company (CP); Corn
Refiners Association (CRA); CSX Transportation,
Inc. (CSXT); Daniel R. Elliott; Diversified CPC
International, Inc. (CPC); Dow, Inc. (Dow); The
Fertilizer Institute (TFI); Freight Rail Customer
Alliance (FRCA); Industrial Minerals Association—
North America; The Institute of Scrap Recycling
Industries, Inc. (ISRI); International Association of
Refrigerated Warehouses (IARW); International
Liquid Terminals Association (ILTA); International
Paper; International Warehouse Logistics
Association (IWLA); The Kansas City Southern
Railway Company (KCS); Kinder Morgan Terminals
(Kinder Morgan); Lansdale Warehouse Company
(Lansdale); National Association of Chemical
Distributors (NACD); The Mosaic Company;
National Coal Transportation Association (NCTA);
The National Industrial Transportation League
(NITL); North American Freight Car Association
(NAFCA); Norfolk Southern Railway Company
(NSR); Peabody Energy Corporation; The Portland
Cement Association (PCA); Private Railcar Food
and Beverage Association, Inc.; Quad, Inc.; Union
Pacific Railroad Company (UP); Valley Distributing
& Storage Company; Western Coal Traffic League
and Seminole Electric Cooperative, Inc. (WCTL &
SEC); and Yvette Longonje.
8 In response to the SNPRM, the Board received
comments and/or replies from the following: ACC;
AFPM; ASLRRA; BNSF Railway Company (BNSF);
CN; CP; The Chlorine Institute (TCI); CRA; CSXT;
Dow; TFI; FRCA; ISRI; ILTA; IWLA; Lansdale;
NACD; NCTA; The National Grain and Feed
Association (NGFA); NITL; NSR; PCA; San Jose
Distribution Services, Inc.; and UP.
After the record closed, CN submitted a sur-reply
to address claims that CN argued ‘‘could give a
misleading impression to CN customers about the
circumstances in which they could incur
demurrage.’’ (CN Reply 1–2, July 27, 2020; see also
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After considering the record in this
proceeding, the Board adopts a final
rule requiring Class I carriers to include
certain minimum information on or
with their demurrage invoices and
provide, in the format of their choosing,
machine-readable 9 access to the
required minimum information, as
discussed below.
Background
This proceeding arises, in part, as a
result of the testimony and comments
submitted in Oversight Hearing on
Demurrage & Accessorial Charges,10
Docket No. EP 754. In that proceeding,
parties from a broad range of industries
raised concerns about demurrage
invoicing practices, including issues
involving the receipt of invoices
containing insufficient information. See
NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 5–6
(providing overview of comments
received in Docket No. EP 754 related to
the adequacy of demurrage invoices).
After carefully considering the
comments and testimony in Docket No.
EP 754, the Board issued the NPRM in
this docket. As relevant here, the Board
proposed requirements for certain
minimum information to be included on
or with Class I carriers’ demurrage
invoices. Specifically, the Board
proposed the inclusion of:
• The unique identifying information
(e.g., reporting marks and number) of
each car involved;
• the following shipment
information, where applicable:
Æ The date the waybill was created;
Æ the status of each car as loaded or
empty;
Æ the commodity being shipped (if
the car is loaded);
Æ the identity of the shipper,
consignee, and/or care-of party, as
applicable; and
Æ the origin station and state of the
shipment;
• the dates and times of:
Æ Actual placement of each car;
Æ constructive placement of each car
(if applicable and different from actual
placement);
Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 9, July 6, 2020.)
Although a reply to a reply is not permitted, see 49
CFR 1104.13(c), due to the brevity and narrowness
of CN’s filing, and in the interest of a complete
record, the Board will accept this submission as
part of the record.
9 As discussed below, the Board will adopt a
definition for machine-readable data that is ‘‘data in
an open format that can be easily processed by
computer without human intervention while
ensuring no semantic meaning is lost.’’
10 Accessorial charges are not specifically defined
by statute or regulation but are generally
understood to include charges other than line-haul
and demurrage charges. See Revisions to Arbitration
Procedures, EP 730, slip op. at 7–8 (STB served
Sept. 30, 2016) (describing a variety of charges that
are considered accessorial charges).
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Æ notification of constructive
placement to the shipper, consignee, or
third-party intermediary (if applicable);
and
Æ release of each car; and
• the number of credits and debits
attributable to each car (if applicable).
NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9–10. The
Board also proposed to require Class I
carriers, prior to sending demurrage
invoices, to take ‘‘appropriate action to
ensure that the demurrage charges are
accurate and warranted, consistent with
the purpose of demurrage.’’ Id. at 10
(footnote omitted). The Board proposed
to add both the minimum information
requirements and the appropriate-action
requirement to a new regulation at 49
CFR 1333.4. Id. at 14. In the NPRM, the
Board invited stakeholders to comment
on the proposed rule, as well as any
additional information that Class I
carriers could reasonably provide on or
with demurrage invoices to help rail
users effectively evaluate those invoices.
Id. at 10.
In response to stakeholders’
comments, the Board issued the
SNPRM, which invited comments on
modifications and additions to proposed
section 1333.4(a) that the Board was
considering. The changes proposed in
the SNPRM would require that Class I
carriers provide certain additional
information on or with demurrage
invoices, including: (1) The billing cycle
covered by the invoice; (2) the original
estimated date and time of arrival (ETA)
of each car (as established by the
invoicing carrier) and the date and time
each car was received at interchange (if
applicable), either on or with each
invoice or, alternatively, upon
reasonable request from the invoiced
party; and (3) the date and time of each
car ordered in (if applicable). SNPRM,
EP 759, slip op. at 4–5. In the SNPRM,
the Board also asked for comment on a
requirement that Class I carriers provide
access to demurrage invoicing data in
machine-readable format and invited
further comment on the proposed
demurrage regulations at section
1333.4(b), which would require Class I
carriers to take appropriate action to
ensure that demurrage charges are
accurate and warranted prior to sending
demurrage invoices.11 Id. at 5, 9–11.
As discussed below, rail users express
broad support for the minimum
information proposed in the NPRM and
SNPRM, although many suggest
additions and modifications that they
argue would improve the rule. Rail
11 Due to changes adopted in the final rule as
discussed below, section 1333.4(b) has been
removed and proposed section 1333.4(a) is adopted,
with modifications, as section 1333.4.
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users also largely support a machinereadable data requirement and the
Board’s proposal to require Class I
carriers to ‘‘take appropriate action to
ensure that demurrage charges are
accurate and warranted.’’ Some rail
users argue that the rule should apply
to Class II and Class III carriers.
Class I carriers oppose the proposed
minimum information requirements but
argue that, if they are adopted, carriers
should be allowed to provide the
information on their existing online
platforms rather than on or with
invoices. Class I carriers also oppose the
Board’s proposed appropriate-action
requirement. ASLRRA supports the
proposed exclusion of Class II and Class
III carriers from the rule.
Final Rule
The Board now adopts a final rule
requiring Class I carriers to include
certain minimum information on or
with demurrage invoices and provide
machine-readable access to the
minimum information. The final rule is
below.
Minimum Information Requirements
1. General Comments on Minimum
Information Requirements
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Class I carriers argue generally that a
rule establishing any minimum
information requirements is
unnecessary; would lead to increased
litigation; contradicts Board precedent,
the rail transportation policy (RTP) of 49
U.S.C. 10101, and the purpose of
demurrage; and would restrict
innovation.12
CSXT and CN argue that rail users
have not shown that Class I carriers
have a systemwide problem with
demurrage invoicing sufficient to justify
the rule. (CSXT Comments 4, Nov. 6,
2019; CN Comments 4–5, Nov. 6, 2019;
CSXT Comments 3, June 5, 2020; CN
Comments 5–6, June 5, 2020.) CSXT,
CN, UP, and KCS assert that rail users’
12 In addition, NSR’s pleading contains a vague
reference to the Board’s authority to regulate this
aspect of demurrage. (NSR Comments 2 n.2, June
5, 2020 (‘‘It is not clear to [NSR] that the Board has
the authority to compel railroads to provide
particular information related to demurrage
invoices, and it is even less clear that the Board has
the authority to compel railroads to turn over
particular railroad records to its customers upon
request by those customers.’’).) NSR states,
however, that it ‘‘does not intend to formally raise
such an objection at this point in this process, but
reserves its right to do so depending on what the
Board ultimately attempts to require in this
docket.’’ (Id.) Given that NSR provides no
explanation or support for its passing assertion (and
that NSR itself disclaims an intent to raise it), the
Board need not address it here. In any event, the
NPRM discussed the statutory authority for the
Board’s regulation of demurrage. NPRM, EP 759,
slip op. at 3.
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complaints do not apply to them
because they already provide sufficient
information.13 To the extent some Class
I carriers do not provide sufficient
information, CP urges the Board to
‘‘defer to competitive market pressures
to provide the incentive for those
railroads to innovate and to catch up
with their peers.’’ (CP Comments 5,
Nov. 6, 2019.) CSXT suggests that any
problems with carriers’ invoicing
systems should be addressed on an
individualized basis through the Board’s
formal and informal complaint
procedures. (CSXT Comments 4, Nov. 6,
2019.)
CN and CSXT also express concerns
about the effect that minimum
information requirements would have
on demurrage litigation. CN argues that
the NPRM suggests that ‘‘invoices will
not be deemed valid unless they include
all eleven specific categories of
information,’’ which would lead to more
frequent and more complex litigation.
(CN Comments 7, Nov. 6, 2019; see also
CSXT Comments 4–5, June 5, 2020
(asserting that minimum information
requirements would lead to disputes
‘‘over purely technical issues’’).) For
example, CN suggests that an invoice
recipient could argue that an invoice is
invalid if ‘‘a waybilling error by the
originating shipper causes a demurrage
bill to show the wrong commodity for
a particular car’’ even if the error has
‘‘no material effect on the demurrage
billpayer’s ability to understand and
potentially dispute demurrage for that
car.’’ (CN Comments 7, Nov. 6, 2019; see
also CSXT Comments 4–5, June 5, 2020
(contending that under the Board’s
proposal, ‘‘shippers could challenge
invoices on the basis of missing or
incorrect information whether due to
carrier fault or otherwise’’).)
Furthermore, CSXT and CN argue that
minimum information requirements
contradict Maintenance of Records
Pertaining to Demurrage, Detention, &
Other Related Accessorial Charges by
Rail Common Carriers of Property
(Maintenance of Records), 367 I.C.C.
145 (1982). (CSXT Comments 3, Nov. 6,
2019; CN Comments 7, Nov. 6, 2019; CN
Comments 6, June 5, 2020.) CSXT
13 (CN Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019 (arguing that
rail users’ concerns have ‘‘no application to CN,
which already provides customers with each of the
eleven categories of information specified by the
proposed regulations’’); CSXT Comments 9, Nov. 6,
2019 (stating that complaints of inadequate
documentation ‘‘plainly [do] not describe the kind
of documentation that CSXT provides’’); UP
Comments 2, Nov. 6, 2019 (asserting that rail users
already have access to ‘‘the applicable minimum
data requirements’’); KCS Comments 6, Nov. 6,
2019 (requesting exclusion from the rule, in part,
because ‘‘KCS already provides accurate
information with few disputes’’).)
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17737
contends that the Board’s proposed rule
is contrary to Congressional policy and
‘‘would turn the clock back to longrejected policies that mandated
paperwork requirements for demurrage
bills and that prescribed inefficient
nationwide practices.’’ (CSXT
Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019; see also CN
Comments 7, Nov. 6, 2019 (arguing that
the Board should refrain from reversing
‘‘the principle underlying this
[Interstate Commerce Commission
(ICC)] decision by adopting
requirements for the content of
demurrage invoices that would bind all
Class I railroads’’).)
Additionally, CP and CN contend that
minimum information requirements
would contravene one of the goals of the
RTP at 49 U.S.C. 10101(2), specifically
‘‘to minimize the need for Federal
regulatory control over the rail
transportation system.’’ (CP Comments
5, Nov. 6, 2019; CN Comments 4, June
5, 2020.) CP also argues that the
proposed rule is inconsistent with one
of the objectives of demurrage—
encouraging the efficient use of rail
assets—because the proposal ‘‘places
the emphasis on empowering customers
in their ability to challenge invoiced
demurrage charges’’ after the fact
instead of focusing Board policy on
encouraging customers ‘‘to remain
actively engaged in monitoring and
managing their supply chains to . . .
avoid incurring demurrage charges in
the first place.’’ (CP Comments 4, June
5, 2020.)
Moreover, several carriers allege that
minimum information requirements
could stifle innovation and discourage
carriers from exploring other methods of
providing demurrage information to rail
users.14 (CP Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019;
CN Comments 9–10, Nov. 6, 2019; CSXT
Comments 1–2, Nov. 6, 2019.)
CN argues that, at most, the Board
should adopt a flexible, ‘‘performancebased’’ standard that would require
Class I carriers to ‘‘ensure that recipients
of demurrage invoices have access to
sufficient information to be able to
understand the basis for the charges and
to dispute charges believed to be
unwarranted,’’ which could be
‘‘provided either on or with the
demurrage invoice or through another
electronic means, including through a
software platform or portal.’’ (CN
Comments 14–15, June 5, 2020.) CSXT
and NSR also support this proposal.
14 Class I carriers also argue that the information
would be best provided on their online platforms
rather than on or with invoices, and that they
already provide much of the information on such
platforms. This argument is discussed below under
the ‘‘Alternative Visibility Platforms’’ heading.
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(CSXT Comments 5, June 5, 2020; NSR
Reply 2, July 6, 2020.)
In their replies, many rail users
counter that they are unable to
effectively review and understand the
demurrage invoices they receive from
Class I carriers because the carriers
either provide limited information or do
not format the information in ways that
enable efficient access and auditing.15
ISRI acknowledges that minimum
information requirements may increase
costs for carriers but contends that rail
users currently ‘‘bear the costs and
burdens associated with overtime and
additional staffing needed to verify the
accuracy of the invoices.’’ (ISRI Reply
10–11, Dec. 6, 2019; see also WCTL &
SEC Reply 9, Dec. 6, 2019 (arguing that
carriers ‘‘have effectively shifted the
time and costs for reviewing invoices to
shippers’’).)
With respect to Class I carriers’
concerns about increased litigation over
technical issues, joint commenters
(ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) 16 assert that
rail users will not be inclined to dispute
appropriate demurrage charges over
technical issues since demurrage
disputes are costly. (Joint Reply (ACC,
CRA, TCI, & TFI) 13, July 6, 2020.) In
addition, Dow argues that to the extent
Class I carriers face more demurrage
claims, those claims are likely to be
valid for charges that previously went
undetected. (Dow Reply 5, July 6, 2020.)
Several rail users counter CSXT’s and
CN’s argument that minimum
information requirements would
constitute a return to the ICC’s former
demurrage rules by arguing, among
other things, that unlike the former ICC
rules, the Board’s proposal would have
little, if any, impact on the day-to-day
operations of railroads because it would
not impose timing requirements,
content-organization requirements, or
recordkeeping or notification methods.
(Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TFI, & NITL) 7–
8, Dec. 6, 2019; see also ISRI Reply 12–
13, Dec. 6, 2019 (arguing that the
Board’s proposal is less stringent than
the rules the ICC removed); AM Reply
4, Dec. 6, 2019 (asserting that the
minimum information requirements
‘‘would not be ‘re-regulatory’ ’’).)
15 (See, e.g., Dow Reply 1, 3–6, Dec. 6, 2019; Joint
Reply (ACC, CRA, TFI, & NITL) 5–6, Dec. 6, 2019;
Kinder Morgan Reply 9, Dec. 6, 2019; WCTL & SEC
Reply 5, Dec. 6, 2019; ISRI Reply 10, Dec. 6, 2019;
NGFA Reply 5–6, July 6, 2020; see also Dow
Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019; IARW Comments 2,
Nov. 6, 2019.)
16 The Board received two sets of joint comments
in this proceeding. The first group, composed of
ACC, CRA, TFI, and NITL, filed reply comments on
December 6, 2019. The second group, composed of
ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI, filed comments on June
5, 2020, and reply comments on July 6, 2020.
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Additionally, joint commenters (ACC,
CRA, TCI, and TFI) and Dow dismiss
CP’s argument that minimum
information requirements would
discourage rail users from taking steps
to avoid demurrage charges, asserting
that rail users would not choose to incur
the time and expense of challenging
demurrage charges over preventing
them in the first place. (Joint Reply
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, July 6, 2020;
Dow Reply 5, July 6, 2020.) Joint
commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI)
and NGFA strongly object to carriers’
calls for an alternative performancebased standard because they argue it
would allow carriers to exclusively
determine the information rail users
need to assess the validity of demurrage
charges and permit carriers to present
the information in formats that would
limit rail users’ ability to use the
information to verify demurrage
charges. (Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, &
TFI) 14–15, July 6, 2020; NGFA Reply
12, July 6, 2020.)
The Board finds ample support in the
record for adoption of minimum
information requirements for demurrage
invoices. The Board received many
comments in this proceeding 17 and in
Oversight Hearing on Demurrage &
Accessorial Charges, Docket No. EP
754,18 from rail users asserting that
carriers either do not provide sufficient
information or do not present the
information in a format that allows rail
users to effectively verify demurrage
charges. The Board is particularly
concerned about rail users’ assertions
that even with significant time and
resources devoted to reviewing
demurrage invoices, they find erroneous
charges overly difficult to detect under
carriers’ present invoicing practices.
(See Dow Reply 2–3, Dec. 6, 2019; Joint
Reply (ACC, CRA, TFI, & NITL) 5–6,
Dec. 6, 2019; ISRI Reply 10–11, Dec. 6,
2019.) While it may be true that certain
Class I carriers provide more
information, or more accessible
information, than others, the Board
finds that the comments from a diverse
array of shippers served by different
carriers demonstrate a widespread issue
that justifies the imposition of a uniform
set of minimum requirements for all
Class I carriers. Because CN’s proposed
flexible ‘‘performance-based’’
alternative standard lacks objective
criteria, Class I carriers would be
responsible for determining the amount
of information sufficient for demurrage
invoices in a manner that would likely
continue to result in varied practices,
some of which may not provide rail
users with information sufficient for
them to readily assess the validity of
demurrage charges. Likewise, CP’s
argument that market pressure will
encourage carriers to provide better
information on demurrage invoices is
also unpersuasive because, if the
argument were correct, demurrage
invoices would already be more
complete and informative than they are,
and this proceeding would not have
been necessary in the first place.19
Regarding CN’s and CSXT’s concern
that minimum information requirements
will lead to increased demurrage
litigation because rail users will
challenge invoices based upon technical
issues unrelated to the validity of
demurrage charges, the Board clarifies
here that a carrier’s failure to comply
with the minimum information
requirements on a particular invoice
does not, by itself, establish that the
invoice is invalid. Rather, the Board
intends for the final rule to reduce
unnecessary litigation by providing rail
users with information that enables
them to readily assess the validity of
demurrage charges and determine when
to dispute or accept responsibly for
them. Indeed, rail users describe
demurrage litigation as a complicated
and time-consuming process that they
would prefer not to undertake. The
Board understands that carriers may
make occasional invoicing errors and
does not expect that an error would
conclusively invalidate an entire
demurrage invoice. The question of
whether specific demurrage charges are
lawful depends on an array of factspecific factors (including, for example,
documentation supporting the charges)
that would need to be determined in the
context of an individual dispute.
Nevertheless, the Board has made clear
that transparency and mutual
accountability in the billing process are
‘‘important factors’’ in the establishment
of reasonable demurrage charges. Pol’y
Statement on Demurrage & Accessorial
Rules & Charges (Pol’y Statement), EP
17 (See, e.g., Dow Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019;
IARW Comments 2, Nov. 6, 2019; Dow Reply 1,
3–6, Dec. 6, 2019; Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TFI, &
NITL) 5–6, Dec. 6, 2019; Kinder Morgan Reply 9,
Dec. 6, 2019; WCTL & SEC Reply 5, Dec. 6, 2019;
ISRI Reply 10, Dec. 6, 2019; NGFA Reply 5–6, July
6, 2020.)
18 See NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 5–6 (providing
overview of comments received in Docket No. EP
754 related to the adequacy of demurrage invoices).
19 Similarly, the existing case-by-case formal and
informal adjudicatory approach has not ensured
that rail users generally have easy access to the kind
of information needed to readily assess Class I
carrier demurrage charges. Rather, the record
establishes that access to information varies a great
deal depending on each carrier’s program and
practices. (See PCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020; Dow
Reply 3–6, Dec. 6, 2019; NGFA Reply 4, July 6,
2020.)
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757, slip op. at 15 (STB served Apr. 30,
2020). Although a carrier’s failure to
comply with the minimum invoicing
requirements to be set forth at section
1333.4 would not be conclusive in
litigation regarding a particular
demurrage invoice, such noncompliance
should be taken into account under 49
U.S.C. 10702 and 10746, along with all
other relevant evidence, in determining
the reasonableness and enforceability of
demurrage charges.20
Contrary to carriers’ arguments, the
final rule does not contradict Board
precedent, the RTP, or the purpose of
demurrage. First, the ICC’s decision in
Maintenance of Records, 367 I.C.C. 145
(1982), cited by CSXT and CN, does not
prevent the Board from adopting
minimum information requirements
here. As an initial matter, the Board may
modify its rules as long as its actions are
rational and fully explained.21
Maintenance of Records itself was a
modification based largely on changes
in carrier practices due to technological
advances. There, the ICC determined
that certain recordkeeping requirements,
such as those requiring carriers to
maintain separate records for each open
station, prepare daily car reports, and
forward the reports daily to
recordkeeping offices were unnecessary
because computers could retain the data
at a central location in a comparably
efficient and less expensive way.
Maintenance of Records, 367 I.C.C. at
146. As one rail user points out,
however, present rail industry practices
and technology are very different than
they were when the ICC decided
Maintenance of Records in 1982. (ISRI
Reply 11–12, Dec. 6, 2019.) Moreover, as
the Board observed, carriers use the
minimum information in the ordinary
course of business today and some
carriers already provide certain
demurrage information to rail users on
online platforms. See NPRM, EP 759,
slip op. at 10; SNPRM, EP 759, slip op.
at 4. Unlike the more prescriptive rules
that predated Maintenance of Records,
the Board’s final rule in this proceeding
gives Class I carriers the flexibility to
invoice in the format of their choosing,
20 Noncompliance could also be the subject of
complaints and/or investigation under 49 U.S.C.
11701 and 11704, and the nature of the invoicing
error would likely be a consideration in any such
proceeding (e.g., a one-time inaccuracy in the date
that a waybill was created is not the same as general
noncompliance or frequent or systemic errors).
21 See Nat’l Cable & Telecommc’ns Ass’n v. Brand
X Internet Servs., 545 U.S. 967, 981–82, 1001 (2005)
(finding that an agency ‘‘is free within the limits of
reasoned interpretation to change course if it
adequately justifies the change’’); Chevron, U.S.A.,
Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837,
863 (1984) (‘‘An initial agency interpretation is not
instantly carved in stone.’’).
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including electronic options, so long as
they include the minimum information
requirements on or with the invoices
and provide machine-readable access to
the minimum information. Accordingly,
the final rule does not, as CSXT argues,
‘‘turn the clock back to long-rejected
policies.’’ (CSXT Comments 3, Nov. 6,
2019.)
The Board also finds that the final
rule adopted here is consistent with the
provision of the RTP at section
10101(2), which focuses on minimizing
the need for Federal regulatory control
and ensuring expeditious Board
decisions when required. The record in
this proceeding and in Oversight
Hearing on Demurrage & Accessorial
Charges, Docket No. EP 754, supports
the conclusion that limited and focused
regulation would help parties resolve
future demurrage disputes more
efficiently and effectively without the
need for costly and time-consuming
litigation. Additionally, to the extent
that parties may need to litigate
demurrage disputes in the future, the
minimum information requirements
adopted here will facilitate expeditious
handling and resolution of those
disputes, consistent with section
10101(2), (15). Furthermore, by ensuring
that rail users have access to sufficient
information to understand demurrage
charges, the final rule serves important
goals of the RTP to meet the needs of the
public and for carriers to remain
competitive with other transportation
modes. See section 10101(4).
The Board rejects CP’s argument that
the rule contradicts the purpose of
demurrage because it encourages rail
users to challenge demurrage invoices
rather than avoid demurrage charges in
the first instance. The final rule
incentivizes efficient asset utilization
(and helps to ensure that carriers are
compensated when rail cars are unduly
detained) by requiring demurrage
invoices to contain sufficient
information to allow rail users to verify
the validity of those charges and modify
their own behavior when necessary to
avoid future demurrage charges. See
NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10; SNPRM,
EP 759, slip op. at 7. The final rule does
not encourage rail users to challenge
appropriately assessed demurrage
charges. Rather, it ensures that rail users
are provided sufficient information
about the charges to enable them to take
action to avoid future charges and,
indeed, rail users have confirmed that
incurring the time and expense of
demurrage litigation, rather than
avoiding the charges in the first place,
would not serve their interests. (See
Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7,
July 6, 2020; Dow Reply 5, July 6, 2020.)
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17739
Lastly, the Board is not persuaded by
the argument that minimum information
requirements will stifle innovation. To
the contrary, the final rule allows Class
I carriers to choose how to invoice rail
users, as long as they include the
minimum information required on or
with the invoices and provide machinereadable access to the minimum
information.22
Therefore, as discussed below, the
Board will adopt the minimum
information requirements proposed in
the NPRM and the SNPRM.
2. NPRM Proposed Information
Rail users generally support the
minimum information requirements
proposed in the NPRM, asserting that
the information would help rail users
audit invoices more effectively and
learn what actions to take to avoid
future demurrage charges. (See, e.g., TFI
Comments 3–4, Nov. 6, 2019; NACD
Comments 2–3, Nov. 6, 2019; NITL
Comments 9, Nov. 6, 2019.)
Additionally, two rail users submit
requests for clarification. First, ISRI asks
the Board to clarify its proposal that
Class I carriers be required to provide
‘‘[t]he number of credits and debits
attributable to each car (if applicable).’’
(ISRI Comments 4–5, June 5, 2020.)
Specifically, ISRI asks whether this
proposal would require carriers to
‘‘determine in advance for each car
included in an invoice whether credits
apply’’ or whether rail users would need
to apply for credits that would appear
on future invoices, if granted. (Id. at 5.)
ISRI requests that, if the Board did not
intend to require the former, then the
Board mandate that credits be carried
over for 30 to 60 days before expiring.
(Id.) Second, ILTA asks the Board to
change the ‘‘and/or’’ language in the
requirement that Class I carriers provide
‘‘the identity of the shipper, consignee,
and/or care-of party, as applicable’’ to
‘‘and’’ so that Class I carriers are
required to identify all applicable
parties. (ILTA Comments 4, June 4,
2020.) Class I carriers do not respond to
ISRI’s or ILTA’s requests for
clarification.
Several Class I carriers state that they
already provide rail users with most (or
all) of the information proposed in the
NPRM, either on invoices or their online
22 The Board notes that the information
requirements adopted here are minimum, not
maximum, requirements. To the extent that Class I
carriers, responding to the competitive market
pressures suggested by CP or for other reasons, wish
to provide rail users with information not specified
in the minimum information requirements in the
format of their choosing, the Board encourages them
to do so.
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platforms.23 However, KCS and CN
express concerns that handling carriers
may not always receive complete
waybill information from connecting
carriers and, therefore, may not have
access to the date the waybill was
created; the identity of the shipper,
consignee, and/or care-of party, as
applicable (if not the invoiced party);
and the origin station and state of the
shipment. (KCS Comments 5, Nov. 6,
2019; CN Comments 7–8, June 5, 2020.)
KCS states that it is ‘‘willing to work
with other carriers to try to obtain this
information on a regular basis in the
future, but currently does not always
have all of the information the Board’s
rules would require.’’ (KCS Comments
5, Nov. 6, 2019.) CN asks the Board to
specify that ‘‘a railroad is only required
to provide information that is available
to it.’’ (CN Comments 7, June 5, 2020.)
NGFA objects to CN’s proposal. NGFA
argues that the proposal would create an
incentive for carriers to avoid collecting
information needed by rail users so that
they would not have to provide the
information on demurrage invoices.
(NGFA Reply 13, July 6, 2020.)
The Board finds that adopting the
minimum information requirements
proposed in the NPRM will ensure that
rail users have access to information
that will help them readily assess the
validity of demurrage charges, properly
allocate demurrage responsibility, and
modify their own behavior, as
appropriate, to minimize future
demurrage charges. Such actions will
help provide for the efficient use of rail
assets, consistent with section 10746.
Accordingly, the Board will adopt the
minimum information requirements
proposed in the NPRM with the
following clarifications.
To address ISRI’s concern that the
Board’s proposal would require rail
users to apply for credits, the Board
clarifies that the final rule does not
create an obligation for rail users to
apply for credits. Rather, the Board
intends that Class I carriers will list the
number of credits and debits
attributable to each car on the invoice (if
applicable).24 Furthermore, the Board
declines ILTA’s request to change the
‘‘and/or’’ language in the requirement
that Class I carriers provide ‘‘the
23 (See KCS Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019; CSXT
Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019; UP Comments 2, Nov.
6, 2019; CP Comments, V.S. Melo 2, Nov. 6, 2019;
CN Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019; NSR Reply 1, Dec.
6, 2019; see also NSR Comments 1, Nov. 6, 2019
(stating that it does not oppose the specific
categories of information that the Board proposed
in the NPRM).)
24 The Board also clarifies that the final rule does
not prevent rail users from seeking additional
credits that were not discernable at the time the
invoice was issued.
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identity of the shipper, consignee, and/
or care-of party, as applicable’’ because
the ‘‘as applicable’’ language already
conveys that Class I carriers should
identify all applicable parties on the
invoice.
In response to KCS’s and CN’s
concerns about access to select waybill
information, the Board clarifies that
Class I carriers are not required to
provide rail users with information to
which the Class I carriers do not have
access in the normal course of business
from their partner carriers. Although CN
and KCS do not quantify the degree to
which they may lack information from
other rail carriers in a movement, the
Board would not expect this situation to
occur frequently because Class I carriers
have many reasons for collecting the
minimum information required by the
final rule, including for their own
performance metrics and to substantiate
demurrage charges should they be
challenged, and carriers share
information in the ordinary course of
business during interchange. Where a
carrier cannot provide information
required by the rule because it has not
received the information from another
carrier, the invoicing carrier should
make a note to that effect on the invoice.
In response to NGFA’s concern, the
Board observes that it expects that this
situation would arise infrequently, and
the Board will consider further
regulatory action if the situation is
becoming widespread.
3. Billing Cycle
In the SNPRM, the Board invited
comment on a proposal to require Class
I carriers to include on or with
demurrage invoices the billing cycle
covered by the invoice. SNPRM, EP 759,
slip op. at 5. Many rail users support the
inclusion of the billing cycle, asserting
that it would make invoices easier to
understand and validate.25 Dow argues
that this information would be
particularly useful when demurrage
events span more than one invoicing
period because some carriers bill
demurrage monthly by the date it
accrues rather than by the date the
demurrage event ends. (Dow Comments
2, June 5, 2020.) Dow also contends that
billing cycle information would
simplify research into invoice events
because many of the carriers’ online
25 (See ILTA Comments 2, June 4, 2020; AFPM
Comments 5, June 5, 2020; IWLA Comments 2; June
5, 2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI)
2, June 5, 2020; NACD Comments 3, June 5, 2020;
NITL Comments 3, June 5, 2020; PCA Comments 2,
June 5, 2020; FRCA Comments 1, June 5, 2020; ISRI
Comments 3, June 5, 2020.)
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platforms make demurrage event data
available only by billing cycle. (Id.)
CN opposes this requirement, arguing
that there is no basis in the record for
it. (CN Comments 10, June 5, 2020.)
NSR does not object, but requests
additional clarity about whether its
current process for providing billing
cycle information 26 would satisfy the
Board’s proposed requirement. (NSR
Comments 7, June 5, 2020.) In addition,
UP, CN, CSXT, and BNSF state that they
currently provide billing cycle
information on their invoices or online
platforms. (UP Comments, V.S. Prauner
2, June 5, 2020; CN Comments 10, June
5, 2020; CSXT Comments 3, June 5,
2020; BNSF Comments 2–3, June 5,
2020.)
The Board will include a billing cycle
requirement in the final rule. The billing
cycle information, which is a basic
feature on recurring invoices, would
help rail users verify demurrage charges
that span multiple invoicing periods
and compare invoiced charges to the
demurrage information available on
Class I carriers’ online platforms. (Dow
Comments 2, June 5, 2020.) Although
CN opposes the addition, the record
establishes that such information would
assist rail users in better understanding
their invoices; most carriers indicate
that they already provide this basic
information; and no carriers indicate
that this requirement would be
burdensome. In response to NSR’s
request, the Board clarifies here that
providing rail users with the dates of the
invoicing period over which rail cars
incurred demurrage would be sufficient
to satisfy the billing cycle requirement.
4. Original ETA and Interchange Date
and Time
As discussed in the SNPRM, several
commenters identified the original ETA
and, if applicable, the date and time that
cars are received at interchange, as
information that would give rail users
greater visibility into how carrier-caused
bunching 27 and other delays may affect
demurrage charges. See SNPRM, EP 759,
slip op. at 5–8 (describing comments
received in response to the NPRM
related to the original ETA and the date
26 NSR states that ‘‘[e]ach invoice indicates the
time period during which the car incurred
demurrage charges. If a railcar incurs charges over
multiple months, the customer will be charged
when the demurrage cycle has ended. The railcar
is summarized on a monthly invoice with other
equipment during the billing period. That single
invoice will reflect the billing cycle for that month.
Additionally, the customer will receive information
showing the full range of dates where that
particular car incurred charges.’’ (NSR Comments 7,
June 5, 2020.)
27 The Board has described bunching as ‘‘rail car
deliveries that are not reasonably timed or spaced.’’
See Demurrage Liability, EP 707, slip op. at 23.
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and time that cars are received at
interchange). In response, the Board
invited additional comment on
revisions to proposed section 1333.4
that would require Class I carriers to
provide on or with their demurrage
invoices (1) the original ETA of each car
(as established by the invoicing carrier);
and (2) the date and time that each car
was received at interchange, if
applicable. Id. For the former, the Board
invited comment on how to define
‘‘original ETA,’’ 28 and whether the
original ETA may differ depending on
whether the rail car is loaded or empty.
Id. at 7 n.12. For the latter, the Board
invited comment on whether the
requirement that Class I carriers provide
the date and time that cars are received
at interchange, if applicable, should be
limited to the last interchange with the
invoicing carrier. Id. at 7. Lastly, the
Board invited comment on whether
Class I carriers should be required to
provide these items to the invoiced
party upon reasonable request (rather
than on or with every invoice) and, if so,
what would constitute a reasonable
request. Id. at 7–8.
Original ETA. In response to the
SNPRM, rail users express additional
support for an original ETA
requirement. Several rail users contend
that by comparing the original ETA to
the car’s arrival time, rail users will be
better able to identify carrier-caused
bunching, verify credits when
applicable, and know when to dispute
demurrage charges.29 AFPM also
contends that this requirement would
encourage carriers to apply increased
scrutiny to their demurrage invoices
before sending them. (AFPM Comments
6, June 5, 2020.) Although several rail
users acknowledge that they would
need to consider other facts and
circumstances besides the original ETA
to determine whether demurrage
charges arise from carrier-caused
bunching, they argue that the original
ETA would help them determine when
to conduct further inquiries with the
carriers. (Dow Reply 3–4, July 6, 2020;
Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 3–
4, July 6, 2020; NITL Reply 6, July 6,
2020.) Dow and joint commenters (ACC,
CRA, TCI, and TFI) argue that the
28 The Board sought comment on whether, for
example, original ETA should be generated
promptly following interchange or release of
shipment to the invoicing carrier and be based on
the first movement of the invoicing carrier. SNPRM,
EP 759, slip op. at 7 n.12.
29 (See ILTA Comments 2, June 4, 2020; AFPM
Comments 6, June 5, 2020; FRCA Comments 1, June
5, 2020; ISRI Comments 4, June 5, 2020; IWLA
Comments 2, June 5, 2020; NACD Comments 4,
June 5, 2020; NITL Comments 3–4; June 5, 2020;
PCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020; Dow Reply 3, July
6, 2020; NGFA Reply 10, July 6, 2020.)
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original ETA and date and time of
interchange are the only metrics that
allow rail users to identify demurrage
charges that may arise from carriercaused bunching and other delays
beyond rail users’ reasonable control.
(Dow Reply 1, July 6, 2020; Joint Reply
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 3, July 6, 2020.)
Additionally, Dow contends that the
original ETA would help inform transit
variability so that rail users can ‘‘fine
tune [their] shipments and the number
of cars at a destination to better prevent
demurrage.’’ (Dow Reply 4, July 6,
2020.)
BNSF, CP, CN, UP, NSR, and CSXT
oppose an original ETA requirement,
although they state that they already
provide rail users with ETA
information.30 BNSF, CN, and UP argue
that ETAs are most useful when they are
consistently updated with current
information to account for the
variability of traffic movements across
the rail network. (BNSF Comments 16,
June 5, 2020; CN Comments 8–9, June
5, 2020; UP Comments, V.S. Prauner 2,
June 5, 2020.) BNSF asserts that rail
users may ‘‘keep a historical record of
the original ETA and any updates as a
car moves across the network, but that
original ETA is not meaningful to the
customer in its demurrage planning’’
because ‘‘actual events’’ are more
important than ‘‘historical estimates.’’
(BNSF Comments 16–17, June 5, 2020.)
BNSF and UP also contend that
original ETAs do not give rail users
meaningful information about the
causes of demurrage.31 CN asserts that
the relevant data for bunching is not the
original ETA but rather ‘‘the actual
arrival time of shipments, and whether
the arrival times for all of a receiver’s
inbound traffic are clustered in a way
that it could prevent the receiver from
loading or unloading the cars without
incurring demurrage.’’ (CN Comments 9,
June 5, 2020.) UP also argues that ‘‘[t]he
only way to identify whether and why
bunching occurred is through the
railroad and customer working
cooperatively.’’ (UP Comments 4, June
5, 2020.)
30 (See BNSF Comments 16–17, June 5, 2020; NSR
Comments 7, June 5, 2020; UP Comments 4, June
5, 2020; CP Comments 5, June 5, 2020; CSXT
Comments 3, June 5, 2020; CN Reply 5, July 6,
2020.)
31 (BNSF Comments 16–17, June 5, 2020 (arguing
that ‘‘[i]nnumerable circumstances could cause
changes to the original ETA of a particular
movement, including industry behavior at origin or
destination (if cars must be held en route)’’); UP
Comments 4, June 5, 2020 (noting that rail cars
could miss their estimated ETAs ‘‘because a surplus
of cars ordered by the customer caused congestion
in a yard or multiple shippers sent cars to the same
receiver facility and that facility’s capacity was
exceeded’’).)
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Additionally, Class I carriers assert
that an original ETA requirement would
create confusion about carriers’ service
obligations. CP and UP emphasize that
that they do not guarantee specific
transit times. (CP Comments 5, June 5,
2020; UP Comments 4, June 5, 2020.)
Likewise, NSR and BNSF argue that a
carrier’s common carrier obligation does
not require them to adhere to ETAs.
(NSR Comments 7–8, June 5, 2020;
BNSF Reply 2–3, July 6, 2020.) BNSF
also contends that the Board has
recognized in demurrage cases that
‘‘transit delays inherent in rail
operations do not, on their own, excuse
a shipper from demurrage.’’ (BNSF
Reply 3–4, July 6, 2020.) Furthermore,
CN argues that the Board’s proposal
could have unintended consequences,
such as disrupting private service
agreements between carriers and rail
users by suggesting that ‘‘failure to
deliver by an original ETA could be
indicative of service failure’’ and
incentivizing carriers to include a
‘‘sizeable cushion’’ rather than the most
accurate ETA forecasts to avoid
potential demurrage challenges. (CN
Comments 9–10, June 5, 2020; see also
BNSF Reply 5, July 6, 2020 (asserting
that carriers may change the way they
estimate ETAs to avoid litigation with
rail users).)
Rail users respond by arguing that an
original ETA requirement would not
cause the outcomes that carriers
describe. Several rail users contend that
an original ETA requirement would not
create transit-time guarantees since rail
users know, via carriers’ contracts and
tariffs, that carriers do not guarantee
transit times. (Dow Reply 4, July 6,
2020; ISRI Reply 4, July 6, 2020; Joint
Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, July 6,
2020; NITL Reply 5, July 6, 2020.) Dow
and joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI,
and TFI) suggest that the Board could
clarify in the final rule that the original
ETA is required for demurrage purposes
only and not to create a transit-time
guarantee. (Dow Reply 4–5, July 6, 2020;
Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7,
July 6, 2020.) However, joint
commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI)
also argue that ‘‘[i]f the railroad caused
the shipment to arrive late, even by a
day, it should not be entitled to penalize
the rail user with demurrage.’’ (Joint
Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, July 6,
2020.)
Dow and joint commenters (ACC,
CRA, TCI, and TFI) further argue that,
for private cars, original ETA should be
defined as ‘‘the estimated date and time
of constructive placement as determined
by the delivering carrier immediately
upon proper release of a car by the
shipper to the rail carrier (for single-line
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movements) or the carrier’s receipt of a
car in interchange (for joint-line
movements)’’ as ‘‘determined under
applicable AAR interchange rules.’’
(Dow Comments 3, June 5, 2020; see
also Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, &
TFI) 4, June 5, 2020 (proposing a similar
definition).) They contend that an
original ETA must be estimated
immediately upon the delivering carrier
receiving control of the car because
carrier-caused delays can occur at
origins and interchanges. (Dow
Comments 3, June 5, 2020; Joint
Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 5,
June 5, 2020; see also NGFA Reply 9,
July 6, 2020 (expressing concerns that a
rail car ‘‘could sit idle at origin for days
or a week or more due to missed pulls
with the original trip plan never
generated, creating bunching issues at
the origin shipper that are not
documented by the carrier’’).) 32
NSR states that it opposes a rule that
would require carriers to develop an
ETA immediately upon receipt of a car
in interchange, as this would require
‘‘the reconfiguration of [NSR’s] trip plan
software, an incredibly complicated
reconfiguration that would take years to
implement due to the legacy
infrastructure.’’ (NSR Reply 4–5, July 6,
2020.) CN opposes any definition that
would require it to provide an ETA
before a trip plan is created. (CN Reply
5, July 6, 2020.)
In the SNPRM, the Board invited
comment on whether the original ETA
may differ depending on whether the
rail car is loaded or empty. SNPRM, EP
759, slip op. at 7. In response, joint
commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI)
assert that different definitions are not
necessary because carriers’ demurrage
rules generally apply the same
calculation and constructive placement
methods to all private cars. (Joint
Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 5,
June 5, 2020.)
The Board is persuaded that the
original ETA provides useful
information to rail users for verifying
credits, when applicable, and
identifying delays that impact
demurrage. Although not dispositive as
to the cause of bunching, original ETAs
will allow rail users to better
understand whether there are delays in
shipment beyond carriers’ initial
32 In addition, ISRI requests that the Board require
Class I carriers to provide ETAs for all cars listed
in a pipeline report detailing the ‘‘cars in the system
for future deliveries,’’ because ‘‘[a]t least one Class
I railroad that provides its customers with a
pipeline report fails to consistently include an ETA
for the cars listed.’’ (ISRI Comments 4, June 5,
2020.) However, this proceeding focuses on the
information that Class I carriers must provide on or
with demurrage invoices and ISRI’s request is
beyond that scope.
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expectations and will lead to better
communication between carriers and
rail users about the causes of demurrage.
Likewise, original ETAs may give rail
users more insight into which
demurrage charges to probe further to
determine whether carrier-caused
bunching is present. Furthermore,
original ETAs will assist certain rail
users in verifying credits because at
least one Class I carrier issues credits
based on rail cars that do not meet their
original ETAs. (See NSR Reply 2–3, July
6, 2020.) Given these benefits and the
fact that carriers already generate
original ETAs in the ordinary course of
business, inclusion of the original ETA
as a minimum requirement is
appropriate.
The Board rejects the argument that
updated (or ‘‘real-time’’) ETAs render
original ETAs less useful. The Board
recognizes that updated ETAs help rail
users account for transit variability and
plan for rail cars’ arrival; however, they
may be less useful when rail users need
to verify demurrage charges on invoices
that may be issued weeks later. In
contrast, allowing rail users to readily
compare significant deviations between
original ETAs and car arrivals once
invoices are issued could lead to better
information exchange about the causes
of delay. BNSF states that rail users may
record original ETAs and updates as
needed from the information carriers
provide on their online platforms.
However, the Board finds it
unreasonable to expect rail users to keep
records of fluctuating ETAs for all rail
cars to prepare for the possibility that
some of those rail cars ultimately accrue
demurrage. As discussed in the NPRM,
minimum information requirements are
intended to ensure that rail users do not
need to undertake unreasonable efforts
to gather information that can be
provided by carriers in the first
instance. NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10.
The Board agrees with the Class I
carriers’ assertion that rail cars may not
be delivered by their original ETAs due
to a variety of causes, including rail
users’ behavior, carrier-caused delays,
or other variables. Accordingly, a
missed original ETA would not—
without more— establish that carriercaused bunching (or any other event)
occurred but rather would give rail
users information about delays that may
then prompt them to conduct further
investigations or adjust their own
conduct to better account for transit
variabilities and avoid future demurrage
charges. In any given case, additional
facts and circumstances would need to
be considered in determining whether
demurrage charges arise from carriercaused bunching. The fact-specific
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Sfmt 4700
nature of bunching issues is precisely
why the Board has determined that
demurrage disputes pertaining to
bunching are best addressed in
individual cases. See Demurrage
Liability, EP 707, slip op. at 23–24; see
also Pol’y Statement, EP 757, slip op. at
11–12.
The Board recognizes Class I carriers’
concern that rail users may misinterpret
original ETAs as guaranteed transit
times or as a service standard that
would override private agreements
between rail users and carriers, and
clarifies here that that is not the purpose
or effect of the original ETA
requirement. The requirement to
provide an original ETA established
here obligates carriers only to provide
rail users with this information on or
with demurrage invoices; it does not
constitute, or require carriers to provide,
service guarantees. The requirement
does not create a separate service
standard for carriers. Finally, inclusion
of an original ETA requirement in the
final rule does not change the fact that
the Board will determine whether
demurrage charges are reasonable under
section 10702 and comport with the
statutory requirements specified in
section 10746 in the context of casespecific facts and circumstances.
Accordingly, the existence of the
original ETA in the minimum
information requirements does not
establish whether a delay in shipment
renders a demurrage charge
unreasonable. (See Joint Reply (ACC,
CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, July 6, 2020.) 33
With respect to CN’s and BNSF’s
assertions that an original ETA
requirement would incentivize carriers
to cushion their ETA forecasts, the
Board expects that Class I carriers have
other motivations to give rail users
accurate estimates about rail car
arrivals, including to provide good
customer service, improve their
performance metrics,34 and ensure that
the rail network runs efficiently by
33 The Board rejects AFPM’s suggestion that
certain rail users who own or lease the cars they
use should be allowed to charge carriers demurrage
when they miss their original ETAs, as AFPM’s
request is beyond this scope of this proceeding,
which focuses on the information that Class I
carriers must provide on or with demurrage
invoices. (AFPM Comments 2, June 5, 2020.)
34 See, e.g., UP Comments 3, May 8, 2019,
Oversight Hearing on Demurrage & Accessorial
Charges, EP 754 (stating that its on-time delivery
rates were the best they had been in two years);
NSR Comments 3, May 8, 2019, Oversight Hearing
on Demurrage & Accessorial Charges, EP 754
(describing measures taken to improve on-time
delivery performance); CSXT Comments 3, May 8,
2019, Oversight Hearing on Demurrage &
Accessorial Charges, EP 754 (explaining that
bunching issues had decreased with continued
improvements to operating performance and
resulting transit times).
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giving rail users the best opportunity to
plan for the efficient use of rail assets.
Although it may be appropriate to make
adjustments to ETAs based on real-time
information, providing the most
accurate estimates available is in the
interest of both rail carriers and their
customers.
The Board will adopt the definition of
original ETA discussed in the SNPRM,
which will require Class I carriers to
generate ETAs promptly following
interchange or release of shipment to
the invoicing carrier based on the first
movement of the invoicing carrier.
SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 7. The Board
declines to adopt the proposal to require
carriers to generate ETAs ‘‘immediately’’
following interchange or release of
shipment since the inclusion of the
word ‘‘promptly’’ in the definition is
sufficient to ensure that there is not
undue delay at origin or interchange
before ETAs are created for rail cars.
The Board also expects that it would not
be in Class I carriers’ interests, from an
efficiency standpoint, to hold rail cars at
their yards without trip plans.35
Interchange Date and Time. Many rail
users also support a requirement that
Class I carriers provide the date and
time that cars are received at
interchange, asserting that such
information would be useful in
identifying upstream carrier-caused
bunching.36 ILTA argues that ‘‘having
the interchange information would
allow rail users to calculate transit time
on an upstream carrier’s line and allow
impacted users to credibly approach the
upstream carrier to take responsibility
for delays it may have caused.’’ (ILTA
Comments 2, June 4, 2020.) Dow asserts
that it would use the date and time of
interchange, along with the original
ETA, to ‘‘identify circumstances that
may warrant a deeper inquiry into
whether demurrage charges arise from
carrier-caused bunching and delays
beyond Dow’s reasonable control.’’
(Dow Reply 3–4, July 6, 2020.) NITL
acknowledges that ‘‘there can be
multiple factors causing car delays that
result in demurrage’’ and argues that
interchange information, along with
original ETAs, ‘‘would assist rail
customers and railroads in their
investigations of invoiced charges.’’
(NITL Reply 6, July 6, 2020.)
35 Because no commenter indicates that the
original ETA would differ depending on whether a
rail car is loaded or empty, the Board will make no
such distinction in the final rule.
36 (See AFPM Comments 6, June 5, 2020; FRCA
Comments 1, June 5, 2020; ISRI Comments 5, June
5, 2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI)
5, June 5, 2020; NACD Comments 4, June 5, 2020;
NITL Comments 4–5, June 5, 2020; PCA Comments
2, June 5, 2020.)
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Dow and joint commenters (ACC,
CRA, TCI, and TFI) contend that Class
I carriers should provide the date and
time for every interchange. (Dow
Comments 3, June 5, 2020; Joint
Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 5,
June 5, 2020.) ISRI and NITL state that
information about all interchanges
would be helpful but ask that, at a
minimum, the Board require Class I
carriers to provide information about
the last interchange with the invoicing
carrier. (ISRI Comments 6, June 5, 2020;
NITL Comments 4, June 5, 2020.)
BNSF, CSXT, and NSR state that they
provide rail users with the date and
time of interchange on their online
platforms. (BNSF Comments 18, June 5,
2020; CSXT Comments 3, June 5, 2020;
NSR Comments 8, June 5, 2020.)
However, BNSF argues that an invoice
requirement ‘‘would be
counterproductive as it would create
confusion over the relevance of such
data and potentially encourage
unnecessary disputes over appropriate
demurrage charges.’’ (BNSF Comments
16, 18, June 5, 2020.) BNSF, UP, and
NSR assert that they do not use
interchange information to calculate
demurrage. (BNSF Comments 18, June
5, 2020; UP Comments 4, June 5, 2020;
NSR Reply 2–3, July 6, 2020.)
Additionally, NSR argues that this
requirement, if adopted, should be
limited to the last interchange since it
‘‘has no visibility into the operations of
its interchange partners, and does not
have access to information regarding
any trip plan or ETA that may have been
generated upstream by other carriers.’’
(NSR Comments 8, June 5, 2020.)
The Board will require Class I carriers
to provide, on or with demurrage
invoices, the date and time they
received rail cars at interchange, if
applicable. The Board finds that
interchange information may assist rail
users in identifying where delays
occurred on joint-line movements,
which would in turn allow rail users to
know when to adjust their own conduct
to account for upstream transit
variabilities and conduct further
inquiries when necessary. These further
inquiries may be especially important
when demurrage disputes involve
concerns about upstream bunching. See
Pol’y Statement, EP 757, slip op. at 11–
12. As with the original ETA, however,
the Board clarifies that the date and
time of interchange does not establish
whether upstream bunching occurred
and, instead, must be considered in the
context of other relevant facts and
circumstances.
The Board will limit this requirement
to the last interchange with the
invoicing carrier. In the SNPRM, the
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17743
Board stated that Class I carriers would
likely have access to the date and time
of interchange because this information
is used in the ordinary course of
business to track car movement and
place cars. SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at
7. According to NSR, Class I carriers do
not have access to information about
upstream interchanges with other
carriers in the ordinary course of
business; accordingly, the Board will
limit this requirement to the
information that Class I carriers can
provide without the potential burden of
having to consult with other carriers.
Reasonable Request Proposal. Rail
users and rail carriers that commented
on the Board’s alternative proposal to
require carriers to provide original ETA
and date and time of interchange only
upon reasonable request oppose the
proposal. Several rail users argue that a
reasonable request provision would be
burdensome and cause unnecessary
delays in collecting information.37
CSXT and UP also contend that a
reasonable request provision is
unnecessary because rail users can
access the original ETA and date and
time of interchange on demand through
their online platforms. (CSXT
Comments 3, June 5, 2020; UP
Comments 5, June 5, 2020.) The Board
will not include a reasonable request
provision in the final rule because the
comments offer no indication that it
would benefit rail users or Class I
carriers.
5. Ordered-In Date and Time
Rail users identified the date and time
that cars are ordered into a rail user’s
facility as information that would help
them validate invoices more efficiently.
In response, the Board invited comment
in the SNPRM on a modification to
proposed section 1333.4 that would
require Class I carriers to provide the
ordered-in date and time on or with
demurrage invoices. SNPRM, EP 759,
slip op. at 8–9.
Rail users replied that access to the
ordered-in date and time would allow
them to verify demurrage invoices more
efficiently by comparing carriers’
information to their own records and
determining the basis for carriers’
demurrage assessments, understand
how their own actions impacted the
demurrage charges, and calculate
credits, if applicable.38 Dow also
37 (See Dow Comments 5, June 5, 2020; AFPM
Comments 6, June 5, 2020; ISRI Comments 6–7,
June 5, 2020; NGFA Comments 6, June 5, 2020;
NITL Comments 5, June 5, 2020; Joint Comments
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, June 5, 2020.)
38 (See ILTA Comments 3–4, June 4, 2020; IWLA
Comments 2, June 5, 2020; NACD Comments 4,
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emphasizes that this information is a
‘‘crucial demurrage metric because
demurrage stops accruing at that time’’
and reiterates that including this
information is consistent with the
Board’s proposal to require the date and
time of constructive placement, at
which the accrual of demurrage starts.
(Dow Comments 5, June 5, 2020.) Joint
commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI)
support this requirement but argue that
carriers should be required to provide
‘‘the actual date and time the carrier
receives the order to place the cars at
the receiving facility’’ since at least one
carrier ‘‘appears to purposefully record
a different ordered-in date and time in
its system.’’ (Joint Comments (ACC,
CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, June 5, 2020.)
In response, CP argues that the Board
should not require carriers to provide
the date and time the rail user places the
order in all circumstances because this
information would not always impact
the demurrage calculation and could
cause administrative confusion. (CP
Reply 4–5, July 6, 2020.) For example,
CP explains that it allows rail users that
operate closed-gate facilities to order in
cars while the cars are en route, for
which CP records the date that the cars
arrive at the serving yard and are
available for placement. (Id. at 3.) In this
scenario, CP states that the order for
placement upon arrival keeps the
demurrage clock from starting. (Id. at 3–
4.) Furthermore, CP states that it allows
certain rail users to order in cars for the
current day and up to three days in the
future and, in these circumstances,
records the date selected for car
placement because this date stops the
accrual of demurrage. (Id. at 4.)
Likewise, NSR states that it provides rail
users with the ‘‘effective order date’’ on
invoices, which is the date ‘‘selected by
the customer from their service
schedule’’ and ‘‘represents the date the
railcar is to be delivered.’’ (NSR
Comments 8, June 5, 2020.) NSR states
that the ordered-in date and time that a
rail user enters online is not used for
demurrage purposes but is provided in
an order confirmation email. (Id.)
CN states that it already provides rail
users with the ordered-in date and time
but objects to the inclusion of this
requirement because rail users would
already have this information in their
own records. (CN Comments 11, June 5,
2020.) CN also argues that the disputes
the Board references in the SNPRM 39
June 5, 2020; Dow Comments 5, June 5, 2020; ISRI
Comments 7, June 5, 2020; NITL Comments 5–6,
June 5, 2020; AFPM Comments 7–8, June 5, 2020.)
39 See SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9 (providing
examples of comments and testimony received in
Oversight Hearing on Demurrage & Accessorial
Charges, Docket No. 754, describing issues with
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Jkt 253001
would not be resolved by access to
ordered-in date and time information.
(Id.) CSXT, UP, and BNSF also indicate
that, if applicable, they provide the
ordered-in date and time on their
invoices or online platforms. (CSXT
Comments 3, June 5, 2020; UP
Comments, V.S. Prauner 2, June 5, 2020;
BNSF Comments 2–3, June 5, 2020.)
The comments received in response to
the SNPRM do not change the Board’s
view that the ordered-in date and time,
which is essential to the calculation of
demurrage at closed-gate facilities,
would be valuable on or with demurrage
invoices for both demurrage accrual and
verification purposes. See SNPRM, EP
759, slip op. at 8. Although, as CN
points out, rail users may record the
ordered-in date and time themselves,
the Board finds that documentation of
the ordered-in date and time, which
would stop the accrual of demurrage,
would be very useful when viewed
along with the other information on
demurrage invoices, including the event
that starts demurrage accrual and the
resulting credits and charges, as
applicable. Additionally, as rail users
explain, having access to the ordered-in
date and time recorded by Class I
carriers may help rail users identify
discrepancies between the carrier’s
records and the rail user’s records. CN
argues that the issues stakeholders
raised in comments and testimony in
Oversight Hearing on Demurrage &
Accessorial Charges, Docket No. EP 754,
which the Board referenced in the
SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9, would not
be resolved through the ordered-in date
and time, but the Board did not state
that the ordered-in date and time would
be dispositive in these or any other
specific disputes. Rather, as the Board
stated in the SNPRM, the ordered-in
date and time requirement is intended
to give rail users easier access to
information for their own verification
purposes. Id. Furthermore, the
comments from six Class I carriers
stating that they currently provide rail
users with the ordered-in date and time
confirm that providing this information
would not be overly burdensome for
Class I carriers.
Since Class I carriers’ comments
demonstrate that the date and time the
carrier receives the order from the rail
user to place the cars is not used to
calculate demurrage in all
circumstances, the Board will not define
the ordered-in date and time
requirement as narrowly as joint
commenters request. (See Joint
Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7,
demurrage accruing on rail cars that had been
ordered into a facility).
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Sfmt 4700
June 5, 2020.) Rather, the ordered-in
date and time will mean the date and
time at which demurrage first stops
accruing with respect to a closed-gate
facility. Depending on the carrier’s
individual system, this may be the date
and time the carrier receives the order
to place cars from the rail user, the date
selected by the rail user for car
placement, or another similar metric.40
6. Other Information Requirements
Proposed by Rail Users
In addition to the proposals discussed
above, rail users identify an array of
other information that they contend
would be useful on demurrage
invoices.41 In response, CSXT states its
general opposition to the additional
items. (CSXT Reply 2, Dec. 6, 2019.)
Moreover, CSXT, NSR, and UP argue
that online platforms are the best way to
provide an array of information. (See
CSXT Reply 4, Dec. 6, 2019 (stating that
CSXT already provides almost all of the
requested information ‘‘through one of
its various platforms’’); NSR Reply 1,
Dec. 6, 2019 (stating that NSR provides
most of the requested information
online); UP Reply 3, Dec. 6, 2019
(arguing that an online platform can
meet rail users’ needs in a ‘‘customized,
tailored way’’).)
The Board declines to incorporate
additional items beyond those discussed
in the NPRM and SNPRM into the final
40 As CP indicates, there are scenarios when an
ordered-in date and time does not have a bearing
on demurrage. For example, when a rail user orders
in a car when the car is still en route to CP’s serving
yard, CP states that it records the ordered-in date
and time based on when the car arrives in the
serving yard rather than when the rail user places
the order. (CP Reply 3, July 6, 2020.) Because CP
indicates that the demurrage clock would not start
in such a scenario, the Board would not expect such
instances to result in a demurrage charge.
41 This information includes: Dwell time, (ACC
Comments 2, Nov. 6, 2019; AFPM Comments 6–7,
Nov. 6, 2019); railroad service events or,
alternatively, those events that result in the
issuance of credits, (AFPM Comments 7, Nov. 6,
2019; ISRI Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019); car
inventory at open gate facilities, (ISRI Comments
10, Nov. 6, 2019); destination station, state of
shipment, and information to confirm that a carrier
has not issued overlapping charges, (AFPM
Comments 6–7, Nov. 6, 2019); date and time of
notification to the rail user if different than
constructive placement, car type and ownership,
the standard transportation commodity code of the
commodity shipped, payment information, and
station of constructive placement, (CPC Comments
4–5, Nov. 6, 2019); location, date, and time a train
is ‘‘laid down,’’ sequence number, monthly
summary listing all demurrage charges, and reasons
for the charges, (WCTL & SEC Comments 11–12,
Nov. 6, 2019); date and time that a car order is
placed with the carrier, information about whether
cars were spotted or pulled within the relevant
service window, and any missed switch dates and
scheduled non-switch dates, (NGFA Comments 5–
6, June 5, 2020); the time the waybill was created,
‘‘[r]ailcar origin railroad pick-up date/time,’’ and
original estimated transit time of each railcar, (ILTA
Comments 3–4, June 5, 2020).
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rule at this time. The Board’s minimum
information requirements are not
intended to encompass every piece of
information that may be useful to rail
users or that may bear on demurrage.
Rather, the minimum information
adopted in the final rule represents
what the Board has determined will
have the greatest impact on rail users’
ability to validate demurrage charges,
properly allocate demurrage
responsibility, and modify their
behavior if their own actions led to the
demurrage charges. Many of the other
items suggested by rail users would
provide additional detail about the
movement of rail cars but are not as
central to an initial assessment of
demurrage charges as the minimum
information requirements adopted here.
Moreover, in adjudicated cases, parties
may seek discovery to gain further
information about the causes of delays
and demurrage. Several Class I carriers
indicate that they provide, in some
format, much of the information rail
users identified in their comments, and
the Board encourages them to continue
to do so.
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Alternative Visibility Platforms
In the NPRM, the Board invited
comments on the adequacy of other
billing or supply chain visibility tools or
platforms (other than invoices or
accompanying documentation) to
provide rail users with access to the
proposed minimum information. NPRM,
EP 759, slip op. at 9 n.13. In response,
Class I carriers state that their existing
online platforms provide rail users with
most (or, in some cases, all) of the
information that the Board proposes.42
UP asserts that its online platform
benefits rail users by allowing them to
create custom reports with information
unique to their needs. (UP Comments 5,
Nov. 6, 2019.) CP indicates that its
online platform provides rail users with
access to current information as
shipments move across the rail network,
as well as the ability to log concerns in
real time, which obviates the need ‘‘to
review historical information to identify
improper demurrage charges due to
railroad-caused bunching.’’ (CP
Comments 3, June 5, 2020.)
Class I carriers ask that, if the Board
adopts minimum information
requirements, the Board allow them to
provide the information on their online
platforms, instead of on or with
42 (See KCS Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019; CSXT
Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019; UP Comments 2, Nov.
6, 2019; CP Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019; CN
Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019; BNSF Comments 2–3,
June 5, 2020; NSR Reply 1, Dec. 6, 2019.)
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17:01 Apr 05, 2021
Jkt 253001
invoices.43 CSXT argues that the
demurrage information currently on its
online platform is ‘‘easily accessible’’
and contends that if the Board were to
require carriers to provide all of the
required information on the invoice
itself or determine that ‘‘software
platforms are acceptable only if all
information is made available or
downloadable in one central location,’’
it would have to undertake a substantial
and costly software redesign. (CSXT
Comments 6, June 5, 2020.) UP also
argues that invoices with all of the
minimum information the Board
proposes would not be useful to rail
users since ‘‘[a] combination of too
many fields and fields that are irrelevant
to most customers will make invoices
cluttered and unreadable.’’ (UP
Comments 5, June 5, 2020.) Likewise,
CSXT objects to a rule that would
require it to compile the information
into one invoice document because its
physical invoice ‘‘is already challenged
in terms of available physical space’’
and ‘‘[i]t would be difficult to add
additional categories without rendering
the invoice unreadable.’’ (CSXT
Comments 8 & n.17, June 5, 2020.)
Conversely, several rail users describe
carriers’ current online platforms as
impractical and cumbersome. (WCTL &
SEC Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019; Joint
Reply (ACC, CRA, TFI, & NITL) 2, Dec.
6, 2019; Dow Reply 3, Dec. 6, 2019; ISRI
Reply 2, July 6, 2020.) Joint commenters
(ACC, CRA, TFI, and NITL) explain that
locating information is a ‘‘multistep
process’’ in which ‘‘[a] customer cannot
simply enter a demurrage invoice
number and download a report of all of
the car-event data for each car on the
invoice’’ but rather must access
information for each car separately and
often in multiple locations on the
carrier’s online platform. (Joint Reply
(ACC, CRA, TFI, & NITL) 3, Dec. 6,
2019.) Dow specifically describes online
portals belonging to four Class I carriers
as cumbersome and identifies obstacles
rail users may face in auditing
demurrage invoices on these platforms,
such as needing to search for certain
information on a car-by-car basis,
manually enter car marks, and navigate
through multiple pages on the portal to
access demurrage data. (Dow Reply 3–
6, Dec. 6, 2019.) Likewise, PCA argues
that since carriers are ‘‘far from
consistent in the level of information
provided, the ease of access of that
information, and the transparency of
their demurrage procedures,’’ rail users
43 (CN
Comments 7, June 5, 2020; CP Comments
6, June 5, 2020; CSXT Comments 2, June 5, 2020;
NSR Comments 2, June 5, 2020; BNSF Comments
19, June 5, 2020; UP Comments 7, June 5, 2020.)
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17745
are often forced to ‘‘cobble together’’ the
information on carriers’ online
platforms. (PCA Comments 2, June 5,
2020.) Nonetheless, certain rail users
state that they do not object to Class I
carriers providing the minimum
information on their online platforms if
they provide it in a format that rail users
can download into a single, machinereadable file. (Dow Reply 8, July 6,
2020; ISRI Reply 2, 5, July 6, 2020.)
The record belies Class I carriers’
claims that their current online
platforms are more useful to rail users
than invoices with minimum invoicing
requirements. Rail users state they must,
in many cases, search for, organize, and
consolidate the information themselves
from multiple locations on Class I
carriers’ online platforms. The final rule
will ensure that rail users need not
make unreasonable efforts to access
basic information necessary to
efficiently review and validate their
demurrage invoices. In addition, Class I
carriers will have flexibility to provide
the minimum information either on the
invoices or with the invoices as
accompanying documentation.
Furthermore, since demurrage issues
may not be apparent until rail cars are
delivered and demurrage is charged, the
Board is unconvinced by CP’s argument
that allowing rail users to submit
concerns on an online portal while
shipments are in transit eliminates the
need to review information on or with
demurrage invoices.
Accordingly, the Board determines
that Class I carriers must provide the
minimum information described in
section 1333.4 on demurrage invoices or
with demurrage invoices as
accompanying documentation. Class I
carriers may provide the invoices as
paper invoices, invoices attached to
emails, invoices that are accessible on
their online platforms, or other similar
formats where the information is
consolidated.44
Machine-Readable Data
In response to the NPRM, many rail
user commenters voiced a preference for
‘‘machine-readable’’ data containing the
minimum information. See SNPRM, EP
759, slip op. at 9–10 (describing
comments received in response to the
NPRM related to machine-readable
data). The Board, therefore, invited
additional comment on matters
associated with modifying its
regulations to require Class I carriers to
provide rail users access to machine44 The Board also clarifies that the final rule in
this proceeding is a default rule, and Class I carriers
and rail users may enter into separate agreements
about how to convey and receive demurrage
information.
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readable data in a format to be chosen
by the individual Class I carrier, such as
a machine-readable invoice, a separate
electronic file containing machinereadable data, or a customized link so
rail users could directly download data
in a machine-readable format. Id. at 10.
The Board also invited comment on
ways to prevent information
inaccessibility for rail users without
resources for coding or new upfront
costs, and on any other issues pertaining
to the accessibility of machine-readable
data for small rail users. Id. Finally, the
Board invited comment on how to
define ‘‘machine-readable,’’ including
the following definition proposed by
commenters: ‘‘A structured data file
format that is open and capable of being
easily processed by a computer. A
format is open if it is not limited to a
specific software platform and not
subject to restrictions on re-use.’’ Id.
In response to the SNPRM, rail users
broadly support a requirement for
machine-readable data, arguing that it
will allow rail users to analyze
demurrage invoices more efficiently and
effectively by reducing the need for
manual review, which is resourceintensive and imprecise.45 Moreover,
AFPM states that it supports the flexible
compliance options identified by the
Board, while other rail users request
specific formatting requirements.
(AFPM Comments 8, June 5, 2020; Joint
Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 9,
June 5, 2020 (requesting machinereadable invoices by email as
attachments or direct links); NGFA
Comments 7, June 5, 2020 (requesting
customized links to machine-readable
data); NITL Reply 7, July 6, 2020
(requesting machine-readable data in a
‘‘single centralized location’’).) In
addition to machine-readable data,
NGFA contends that rail users should be
able to request paper or PDF invoices,
(NGFA Comments 6, June 5, 2020), and
NACD argues that invoices should
‘‘continue to be available in standard
format’’ since small rail users would
find analyzing machine-readable data
difficult and costly, (NACD Comments
4–5, June 5, 2020).
BNSF, NSR, CP, CN, and UP state that
they already provide rail users with
some form of machine-readable data.46
45 (See ILTA Comments 1, 3, June 4, 2020; AFPM
Comments 8, June 5, 2020; Dow Comments 5–6,
June 5, 2020; IWLA Comments 2–3, June 5, 2020;
Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 8, June 5,
2020; Lansdale Comments 1, June 5, 2020; NGFA
Comments 6, June 5, 2020; NITL Comments 6, June
5, 2020; PCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020.) See also
SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9–10 (describing
comments received in response to the NPRM related
to machine-readable data).
46 BNSF states that rail users can sign up for
emailed reports in Excel format and export reports
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NSR states that it supports the use of
machine-readable data but urges the
Board not to make a requirement ‘‘so
prescriptive that it would stifle carrier
and technological innovation on
carriers’ online platforms.’’ (NSR
Comments 2, 6, June 5, 2020.) CSXT
states that it does not oppose providing
machine-readable data on its online
platform as long as ‘‘the Board does not
mandate any particular format or
require that the information be provided
in one place only or in a single data
file.’’ (CSXT Comments 6, June 5, 2020.)
UP also asks the Board to specify that
carriers can meet the machine-readable
data requirement by making data
available to rail users via their online
platforms. (UP Comments 5–6, June 5,
2020.)
Regarding the definition of ‘‘machinereadable,’’ joint commenters (ACC, CRA,
TCI, and TFI) and NITL support the
definition proposed by some
commenters in response to the NPRM: 47
‘‘a structured data file format that is
open and capable of being easily
processed by a computer. A format is
open if it is not limited to a specific
software platform and not subject to
restrictions on re-use.’’ (Joint Comments
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 8, June 5, 2020;
NITL Comments 6, June 5, 2020.) Joint
commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI)
contend that this definition would
obviate the need for special coding and,
therefore, ensure that small rail users
can access machine-readable data. (Joint
Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 8,
June 5, 2020.) NGFA agrees with this
definition but would add the condition
that a format is open if it ‘‘can be read
and interpreted automatically by a
computer program without the need for
manual intervention.’’ (NGFA
Comments 6–7, June 5, 2020.) In
response to the SNPRM, Dow proposes
in comma-separated values (CSV), Excel, and PDF
formats from its online platform. (BNSF Comments
5, June 5, 2020.) NSR states that rail users can
download spreadsheets, including Excel and CSV
files, with detailed supporting information for the
demurrage charges reflected on invoices. (NSR
Comments 3, June 5, 2020.) CP indicates that it
makes ‘‘a substantial amount’’ of the information
identified by the Board available in a spreadsheet.
(CP Comments 4–5, June 5, 2020.) CN states that it
currently provides machine-readable data ‘‘on
request to certain customers’’ and is working to
provide downloadable machine-readable data to all
customers. (CN Comments 12, June 5, 2020.)
According to UP, invoices can be downloaded as
CSV files on its online platform with additional
supporting information downloadable in Excel
format. (UP Comments 5, June 5, 2020.)
Additionally, CSXT currently provides access to
some downloadable machine-readable data,
according to one rail user’s comments. (See Dow
Reply 6, Dec. 6, 2019.)
47 See SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9 (referring to
proposal by joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TFI, and
NITL) and Dow).
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an alternative definition, suggesting that
the Board adopt a definition similar to
the one used for the Federal Information
Policy 48 and define machine-readable
as ‘‘an open format that can be easily
processed by computer without human
intervention while ensuring no semantic
meaning is lost.’’ (Dow Comments 6,
June 5, 2020.) UP argues that the Board
should specify that CSV and Excel files
meet the definition of machine-readable
data. (UP Comments 5–6, June 5, 2020.)
Rail users convincingly argue that
machine-readable data will facilitate
efficient auditing by allowing them to
validate invoices electronically, thereby
reducing the time and resources they
must dedicate to manual review.
Furthermore, Class I carriers appear to
recognize the benefits of machinereadable data, as most provide some
machine-readable data now or plan to
do so in the future. Accordingly, the
Board will adopt a machine-readable
data requirement to ensure that all rail
users have the option to access
machine-readable data containing the
minimum information discussed above.
As proposed in the SNPRM, the Board
will give Class I carriers the discretion
to determine how to provide rail users
with access to machine-readable data,
such as, for example, through a
machine-readable invoice, a separate
electronic file, a customized link, or
another similar option. SNPRM, EP 759,
slip op. at 10.
The Board will adopt a definition for
machine-readable data that is ‘‘data in
an open format that can be easily
processed by computer without human
intervention while ensuring no semantic
meaning is lost.’’ This definition, which
is similar to the definition referenced in
the SNPRM, is also consistent with the
definition adopted for the Federal
Information Policy at 44 U.S.C.
3502(18). However, unlike the Federal
Information Policy definition, the
Board’s definition specifies that the data
must be provided in an ‘‘open format,’’
to be defined as ‘‘a format that is not
limited to a specific software program
and not subject to restrictions on re-use’’
so that Class I carriers may choose the
program with which to provide
machine-readable data in an open
format (e.g., CSV). The open format will
also ensure that rail users will not need
access to specific software programs to
process the data. Moreover, to
accommodate those small rail users that
state that they would find machinereadable data difficult to manage, the
requirement for Class I carriers to
provide machine-readable data to rail
users will be in addition to, not in lieu
48 See
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of, the requirement to provide the
minimum information on or with their
standard invoices, as discussed above.49
The text is set forth in new section
1333.5.
Appropriate Action To Ensure
Demurrage Charges Are Accurate and
Warranted
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In the NPRM, the Board proposed to
require Class I carriers to ‘‘take
appropriate action to ensure that the
demurrage charges are accurate and
warranted’’ prior to sending demurrage
invoices. NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10.
In response to commenters’ concerns
that this provision would create more
uncertainty and potential litigation over
its meaning, the Board invited further
comment in the SNPRM from Class I
carriers about the actions they currently
take, and from all stakeholders about the
actions Class I carriers reasonably
should be required to take, to ensure
that demurrage invoices are accurate
and warranted. SNPRM, EP 759, slip op.
at 10–11.
In response to the SNPRM, rail users
propose a variety of actions that they
argue Class I carriers should be required
to take to ensure invoice accuracy, such
as establishing auditing procedures,50
showing how charges are calculated; 51
providing supporting documentation,52
offering concise explanations for the
charges,53 certifying practices to the
Board,54 consulting with rail users,55
and ensuring the accuracy of crew
reporting.56
49 As discussed above, Class I carriers and rail
users may enter into separate agreements to convey
and receive only machine-readable data without the
standard invoice option.
50 (See ILTA Comments 3, June 4, 2020; ISRI
Comments 10, June 5, 2020; NITL Comments 7,
June 5, 2020; Dow Comments 7, June 5, 2020; Joint
Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 9, June 5, 2020.)
51 (See Dow Comments 7, June 5, 2020; Joint
Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 9, June 5, 2020.)
52 (See AFPM Comments 9, June 5, 2020; IWLA
Comments 3, June 5, 2020; ILTA Comments 3, June
4, 2020; NGFA Comments 8, June 5, 2020; NITL
Reply 3, July 6, 2020.)
53 (See AFPM Comments 9–10, June 5, 2020;
NACD Comments 5, June 5, 2020; NGFA Comments
8, June 5, 2020.)
54 (See FRCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020 (arguing
that the Board should require carriers to ‘‘certify
that their rules and practices comply with the
Board’s standards’’); NGFA Comments 8, June 5,
2020 (asserting that carriers should be required to
‘‘inform the Board in writing of the specific steps
each one takes to ensure the accuracy of its
respective demurrage invoices, with the [Board]
subsequently making such carrier statements
publicly available on its website’’).)
55 (See NGFA Comments 3, June 5, 2020 (arguing
that prior to issuing invoices, carriers should
‘‘notify and consult with the affected rail customer
to validate the accuracy and legitimacy of the
charge’’).)
56 (Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 17, July
6, 2020.)
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Class I carriers continue to oppose the
appropriate-action proposal as
unnecessary and overly restrictive. CN
argues that the Board should not
mandate any minimum level of
appropriate action since carriers
‘‘should have flexibility to exercise
judgment to pursue an approach that
works for [their] particular
circumstances, including whether to
reasonably rely on technological
innovations to enhance accuracy or to
enlist more manual review.’’ (CN
Comments 13, June 5, 2020.) CSXT
contends that the proposed requirement
‘‘places carriers in an untenable
situation, as they may either fall short
of a vague standard of ‘appropriateness’
or be unable to utilize the prescribed
solutions that the Board mandates to
ensure accuracy.’’ (CSXT Comments 9,
June 5, 2020.) UP contends that an
appropriate-action requirement is
unnecessary since it already has
‘‘achieved a 95% accuracy rate.’’ (UP
Comments 7, June 5, 2020.)
Additionally, BNSF, CN, NSR, and UP
detail the actions they currently take to
ensure invoice accuracy. (BNSF
Comments 14–15, June 5, 2020; CN
Comments 12–13, June 5, 2020; NSR
Comments 9–10, June 5, 2020; UP
Comments 6, June 5, 2020.)
Upon considering the comments on
this issue, the Board is persuaded that
the proposed appropriate-action
requirement should not be adopted in
the final rule. Class I carriers
convincingly argue that the proposed
requirement lacks sufficient detail.
Because there are many different
reasonable ways to facilitate invoice
accuracy, and because deciding whether
a particular method is reasonable may
depend on a carrier’s individual systems
and procedures for auditing invoices
and potential future advancements in
technology, the Board also declines to
adopt the specific requirements
proposed by rail users.
For these reasons, the final rule
adopted in this decision will not
include the proposed appropriate-action
requirement. Nevertheless, existing
requirements, including those at 49
U.S.C. 10702 and 10746, continue to
apply to carriers’ demurrage invoicing
practices. As the Board has made clear
previously, it expects that all carriers
will take reasonable actions to ensure
the accuracy of their invoicing processes
and that their demurrage charges are
warranted. See Pol’y Statement, EP 757,
slip op. at 15–16 (emphasizing that the
Board expects rail carriers to ‘‘bill for
demurrage only when the charges are
accurate and warranted, consistent with
the purpose of demurrage,’’ and that rail
users should be able to review and
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17747
dispute charges without incurring
undue expense). That being so, the
Board strongly encourages carriers to
adopt rail users’ suggested actions
where warranted and practicable, such
as conducting regular audits, consulting
with rail users when necessary, and
providing additional information upon
reasonable request. Class I carriers’
invoicing protocols and procedures
should be considered, in the context of
all other relevant facts and
circumstances, when determining
whether demurrage charges are
reasonable and enforceable in
individual cases.
Other Requests for Board Action
Rail users make a variety of other
requests, including asking the Board to
set a timeframe for Class I carriers to
issue invoices, establish dispute
resolution procedures, impose penalties
for noncompliance with the rule, and
apply the rule to accessorial charges. In
addition, UP asks that the Board
establish a separate process by which
Class I carriers can obtain waivers from
the final rule. The Board will discuss
each of these requests below.
1. Time Limits for Invoice Issuance,
Dispute Resolution Procedures, and
Penalties
Several rail users ask the Board to set
time limits for invoice issuance, (see
NCTA Comments 3–4, Nov. 6, 2019;
FRCA Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019), take
further action with respect to dispute
resolution,57 and impose penalties for
carriers that issue demurrage invoices
that do not comply with the rule, (see
FRCA Comments 5–6, Nov. 6, 2019;
FRCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020). No
Class I carrier responds directly to these
requests.
The Board will not pursue these
requests at this time. The Board notes
that, by separate decision, it provided
guidance on the general principles it
expects to consider when evaluating the
reasonableness of carriers’ invoicing
timeframes in future cases and
discussed requests to establish
additional dispute resolution
procedures.58 See Pol’y Statement, EP
757, slip op. at 16 n.50, 17. With respect
to the issue of penalties, the Board
57 (See IWLA Comments 2, Nov. 4, 2019; ILTA
Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019; IARW Comments 2,
Nov. 6, 2019; NITL Comments 9–10, Nov. 6, 2019;
WCTL & SEC Comments 9, Nov. 6, 2019; NAFCA
Reply 2, Dec. 6, 2019; NGFA Reply 15, July 6,
2020.)
58 Parties currently have access to mediation,
arbitration, and assistance through the Board’s Rail
Customer and Public Assistance program, which
can be reached by telephone at 202–245–0238 or
email at rcpa@stb.gov, to resolve demurrage
disputes.
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expects that Class I carriers will make a
concerted effort to comply with the
requirements of the rule and finds that
it is premature to address specific
penalties for non-compliance at this
time.59
2. Accessorial Charges
NAFCA, AM, and NGFA ask the
Board to apply the minimum
information requirements to accessorial
charges. (NAFCA Comments 2, Nov. 6,
2019; AM Comments 7, Nov. 6, 2019;
NGFA Comments 2, June 5, 2020.) Class
I carriers did not comment on this issue.
The Board declines to extend the final
rule to accessorial charges at this time.
There are many kinds of accessorial
charges and some, such as those
imposed for weighing rail cars or
requests for special trains, do not serve
the same efficiency-enhancing purpose
as demurrage. In their comments, rail
users do not identify any specific
accessorial charges to which the
minimum information requirements
should apply, or otherwise justify the
extension of the final rule to accessorial
charges generally. The Board encourages
Class I carriers to provide the minimum
information for those accessorial
charges designed to enhance the
efficient use of rail assets to the extent
practicable. Should sufficient evidence
be presented in the future that invoicing
issues are arising with respect to
specific accessorial charges, the Board
can revisit this issue and propose any
warranted modifications to the rule.
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3. Waivers
UP requests that, if the Board adopts
minimum information requirements,
then it also establish a process whereby
carriers could obtain waivers from the
rule by ‘‘attesting that either all of the
required information is provided to
customers or explain why a particular
data set is not provided or unavailable.’’
(UP Comments 7, June 5, 2020.) UP
asserts that this process would need to
take place prior to the final rule’s
effective date so that carriers know
whether they need to reprogram their
systems. (Id.)
NGFA objects to this suggestion,
arguing that UP’s waiver idea is
impractical since it would require
extensive Board monitoring to ensure
that carriers’ online platforms do not
become noncompliant after waivers had
been granted. (NGFA Reply 14–15, July
6, 2020.)
The Board declines to adopt UP’s
proposal. Pursuant to 49 CFR 1110.9,
59 Violating a regulation or order of the Board
could subject a carrier to appropriate remedial
action. See, e.g., 49 U.S.C. 11701, 11704, 11901.
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‘‘[a]ny person may petition the Board for
a permanent or temporary waiver of any
rule,’’ and UP fails to explain why the
Board’s established waiver process is
not sufficient to address its concerns.
Furthermore, absent unique
circumstances, the Board does not
anticipate that the waiver process would
be used to allow Class I carriers to
provide the minimum information by
means other than on or with an invoice
as described above.
Time Frame for Compliance
Several Class I carriers request
specific amounts of time to comply with
the final rule. NSR asks for a minimum
of three months to complete its
reprogramming, and KCS requests at
least six months. (NSR Comments 1,
Nov. 6, 2019; KCS Comments 6–7, Nov.
6, 2019.) CSXT contends that if it is
required to implement a software
redesign ‘‘sooner than nine months from
the Board’s decision,’’ it will need to
delay or reprioritize current projects.
(CSXT Comments 7–8, June 5, 2020.) CP
likewise states that it could comply
within six months but requests at least
one year to ‘‘minimize disruption to
existing projects and allow CP to
prioritize its use of its resources
appropriately.’’ (CP Comments 6, June 5,
2020.)
The Board will allow Class I carriers
until October 6, 2021, to provide the
minimum information on or with
demurrage invoices and comply with
the machine-readable data requirement,
as this timeframe allows Class I carriers
a significant amount of time for
reprogramming while also ensuring that
rail users can benefit from improved
demurrage invoicing practices without
extended delay.
Exclusion of Class II and Class III
Carriers
In the NPRM, the Board explained
that it did not propose to require Class
II and Class III carriers to comply with
the rule because the demurrage issues
raised by stakeholders before the Board
predominantly pertained to Class I
carriers and compliance costs would be
more difficult for smaller carriers.
NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10. The Board
invited comment on the proposed
exclusion of Class II and Class III
carriers. Id.
Although some rail users recognize
that demurrage issues most frequently
involve Class I carriers, (see AFPM
Comments 8, Nov. 6, 2019; ISRI
Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019), several
express concerns about excluding Class
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II and Class III carriers,60 particularly
those with larger, more sophisticated
operations, (see FRCA Comments 5,
Nov. 6, 2019; AFPM Comments 8, Nov.
6, 2019). ISRI urges the inclusion of
Class II and Class III carriers for
uniformity across the industry, (see ISRI
Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019; ISRI
Comments 10–11, June 5, 2020), and
others fear that Class I carriers will seek
to evade the rule by tasking Class II and
Class III carriers with demurrage
invoicing where possible, (see NITL
Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019; AF&PA
Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019). ILTA
acknowledges that Class II and Class III
carriers have fewer resources to comply
with the rule but argues that small
carriers should nonetheless be required
to comply since small rail users must
pay demurrage charges. (ILTA
Comments 4, June 4, 2020.) Some rail
users suggest that the Board should
apply the rule to all carriers and grant
waivers on a case-by-case basis to
accommodate the smallest carriers.
(NITL Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019;
AF&PA Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019; AM
Reply 5–6, Dec. 6, 2019.) Others suggest
that the Board exclude some or all Class
III carriers from the rule, but not Class
II carriers. (AFPM Comments 8, Nov. 6,
2019 (exclude all Class III carriers, but
not Class II carriers); FRCA Comments
5, Nov. 6, 2019 (require Class II carriers
and Class III carriers affiliated with large
holding companies to comply).) 61
ASLRRA supports the Board’s
proposal to exclude Class II and Class III
carriers. (ASLRRA Comments 3, Nov. 6,
2019; ASLRRA Reply 4, July 6, 2020.) It
asserts that more than half of small
carriers operate as handling line carriers
and, as such, do not always receive all
of the information the Board would
propose to include in the minimum
information requirements from
connecting Class I carriers. (ASLRRA
Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019.) ASLRRA
further contends that rail users’
proposed additions ‘‘would place an
insurmountable burden on [small rail
carriers].’’ (ASLRRA Reply 4, Dec. 6,
2019.) ASLRRA argues that the
suggestion that small carriers could file
60 (See FRCA Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019; AFPM
Comments 8, Nov. 6, 2019; Barilla Comments 3,
Nov. 6, 2019; CPC Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019; IWLA
Comments 3, June 5, 2020.)
61 As the Board stated in the decision adopting
the direct-billing final rule, Demurrage Billing
Requirements, EP 759, slip op. at 14 n.29 (STB
served Apr. 30, 2020), it is unclear whether some
comments on this issue are intended to address
exclusion of Class II and III carriers from the
minimum information requirements aspect of the
rule, the direct-billing aspect, or both. For
completeness, all potentially applicable comments
are addressed both here and in the decision
adopting the direct-billing final rule.
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for individual waivers is unworkable
since the waiver process would be too
expensive and time-consuming for small
carriers with limited resources. (Id. at
7.) ASLRRA also dismisses rail users’
concerns that Class I carriers would
assign demurrage invoicing to small
carriers to avoid the rule, arguing that
Class I carriers will not ‘‘want to cede
the control of their operations or
practices to others or the compensation
they receive for the misuse of their rail
assets.’’ (Id. at 8.)
Nothing in this record undercuts the
Board’s initial view that the demurrage
issues raised by stakeholders in
Oversight Hearing on Demurrage &
Accessorial Charges, Docket No. EP 754,
predominantly pertain to Class I
carriers. See NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at
10, 11. Nor do the comments provide a
basis for concluding that Class I carriers
will seek to avoid the rule by assigning
their demurrage invoicing to small
carriers.62 The case-by-case waiver
approach for Class II and III carriers
suggested by some rail users could be
impractical and unduly burdensome for
small carriers (and may be problematic
for some Class II carriers, where there is
a range of capabilities). For these
reasons, the Board will not adopt the
proposals to make Class II carriers, and,
under some proposals, certain Class III
carriers, subject to the rule. The Board
does, however, strongly encourage Class
II and Class III carriers to comply with
the rule to the extent they are able to do
so.63
Conclusion
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Consistent with this decision, the
Board adopts a final rule that requires
Class I carriers to include certain
minimum information on or with
demurrage invoices and provide
machine-readable access to the
minimum information. The final rule is
set out in full below and will be
codified in the Code of Federal
Regulations.
62 Should sufficient evidence be presented in the
future that Class I carriers are attempting to avoid
the rule by assigning their demurrage claims
processing to small connecting carriers, the Board
can revisit this issue and propose any warranted
modifications to the rule.
63 Additionally, KCS requests that the Board
exclude it from the minimum information
requirements, along with Class II and Class III
carriers. (KCS Comments 6, Nov. 6, 2019.) The
Board declines to do so since KCS has not
demonstrated that the demurrage issues raised by
stakeholders in this proceeding and Docket No. EP
754 do not pertain to its demurrage practices.
Moreover, the Board does not have the same
concerns regarding the compliance costs for Class
I carriers, including KCS, as it does for Class II and
Class III carriers.
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Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601–612, generally
requires a description and analysis of
new rules that would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. In drafting a
rule, an agency is required to: (1) Assess
the effect that its regulation will have on
small entities, (2) analyze effective
alternatives that may minimize a
regulation’s impact, and (3) make the
analysis available for public comment.
Sections 601–604. In its final rule, the
agency must either include a final
regulatory flexibility analysis, section
604(a), or certify that the proposed rule
would not have a ‘‘significant impact on
a substantial number of small entities,’’
section 605(b). Because the goal of the
RFA is to reduce the cost to small
entities of complying with federal
regulations, the RFA requires an agency
to perform a regulatory flexibility
analysis of small entity impacts only
when a rule directly regulates those
entities. In other words, the impact must
be a direct impact on small entities
‘‘whose conduct is circumscribed or
mandated’’ by the proposed rule. White
Eagle Coop. v. Conner, 553 F.3d 467,
480 (7th Cir. 2009).
As discussed above, the final rule will
apply only to Class I carriers.
Accordingly, the Board again certifies
under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that this rule
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities as defined by the RFA.64 A copy
of this decision will be served upon the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Office of
Advocacy, U.S. Small Business
Administration, Washington, DC 20416.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In this proceeding, the Board is
modifying an existing collection of
information that is currently approved
by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under OMB Control No.
2140–0021. In the NPRM, the Board
sought comments pursuant to the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), 44
U.S.C. 3501–3521, and OMB regulations
64 For the purpose of RFA analysis, the Board
defines a ‘‘small business’’ as only including those
rail carriers classified as Class III carriers under 49
CFR 1201.1–1. See Small Entity Size Standards
Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, EP 719 (STB
served June 30, 2016) (with Board Member
Begeman dissenting). Class III carriers have annual
operating revenues of $20 million or less in 1991
dollars ($40,384,263 or less when adjusted for
inflation using 2019 data). Class II carriers have
annual operating revenues of less than $250 million
in 1991 dollars ($504,803,294 when adjusted for
inflation using 2019 data). The Board calculates the
revenue deflator factor annually and publishes the
railroad revenue thresholds on its website. 49 CFR
1201.1–1; Indexing the Annual Operating Revenues
of R.Rs., EP 748 (STB served June 10, 2020).
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Frm 00059
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
17749
at 5 CFR 1320.11, regarding: (1) Whether
the collection of information, as
modified, is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Board, including whether the collection
has practical utility; (2) the accuracy of
the Board’s burden estimates; (3) ways
to enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information collected; and
(4) ways to minimize the burden of the
collection of information on the
respondents, including the use of
automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
when appropriate.
The Board estimated in the NPRM
that the proposed requirements for
minimum information to be included on
or with Class I carriers’ demurrage
invoices would add a total one-time
hourly burden of 280 hours (93.3 hours
per year as amortized over three years
or 40 hours per respondent 65) because,
in most cases, those carriers would
likely need to modify their information
technology systems to implement some
or all of the proposed changes.66 NPRM,
EP 759, slip op. at 13. In response to
comments received from CSXT and CN
that this estimate was understated, the
Board increased the estimate in the
SNPRM to 560 hours (186.6 hours per
year as amortized over three years or 80
hours per respondent), which included
the time Class I carriers would need to
undertake the software redesign
necessary to incorporate both the
proposed minimum information
discussed in the NPRM and the
proposed additions discussed in the
SNPRM.67 SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at
14.
65 There
are seven Class I carrier respondents.
Board also provided an hourly burden
estimate for the proposal that Class I carriers
directly bill the shipper for demurrage when the
shipper and warehouseman agree to that
arrangement and so notify the rail carrier. NPRM,
EP 759, slip op. at 13. Comments pertaining to this
hourly burden estimate were addressed in a
separate decision. See Demurrage Billing
Requirements, EP 759, slip op. at 16–17 (STB served
Apr. 30, 2020).
67 In the NPRM, the Board estimated that the
proposed requirement that Class I carriers take
appropriate action to ensure that demurrage charges
are accurate and warranted would add a total onetime hourly burden of 560 hours (186.6 hours per
year as amortized over three years or 80 hours per
respondent) because Class I carriers would likely
need to establish or modify appropriate demurrage
invoicing protocols and procedures. NPRM, EP 759,
slip op. at 13. In the SNPRM, the Board increased
this estimate to 840 hours (280 hours per year as
amortized over three years or 120 hours per
respondent). SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 14.
Because the final rule adopted in this decision will
not include the proposed appropriate-action
requirement, the Board’s estimate of 840 hours (280
hours per year as amortized over three years or 120
hours per respondent) to establish or modify
appropriate demurrage invoicing protocols and
66 The
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In response to the SNPRM, CSXT filed
comments addressing the Board’s PRA
burden estimates. First, CSXT reiterates
its estimate offered in response to the
NPRM that it will take nine months to
implement a program redesign to
include the minimum information on or
with demurrage invoices. (CSXT
Comments 6–7, June 5, 2020.) However,
CSXT indicates that ‘‘its nine[-]month
estimate is not limited to actual
programming time.’’ (Id. at 8.) Instead,
CSXT explains that its estimate includes
scheduling delays due to other priority
software development projects in its
technology pipeline and programming
time for other unrelated software
development projects. (Id.) Thus,
CSXT’s nine-month estimate is not an
actual estimate of the time that Class I
carriers need to comply with the rule.
Without more support, CSXT does not
justify its nine-month estimate.68
Second, CSXT argues that the Board
should include additional burdens
under two potential scenarios. First, if
the Board requires ‘‘that all demurrage
information be downloadable to a single
machine-readable file, or be housed in
a central location within ShipCSX,’’
then CSXT estimates that it would need
approximately three months (or 955
hours). Second, if the Board requires
CSXT ‘‘[t]o include all of the proposed
data fields in the existing ShipCSX
demurrage module,’’ then CSXT
estimates it would need 1,680 hours,
over a period of four to five months
‘‘due to the multiple data programmers,
sources, and systems involved.’’ (Id. at
7–8 (footnote omitted).) 69
CSXT’s estimates of three months
(955 hours) and four to five months
(1,680 hours) appear to encompass the
time CSXT would need to provide
machine-readable data in various
specific formats or in a central location.
Although the final rule will not mandate
any particular format for machinereadable data and, instead, will allow
Class I carriers the discretion to select
how to provide access to machinereadable data, the Board recognizes
procedures will not be included in the final
estimate.
68 CSXT also asserts that it would need to ‘‘engage
an outside vendor, adding even further cost and
time’’ to provide the minimum information on
demurrage invoices, (CSXT Comments 8, June 5,
2020), but this argument lacks the specificity to
support additional burden hours or a non-hourly
dollar amount for additional costs.
69 Additionally, CSXT estimates that it would
need only two to three days (80 hours or less) of
programming time if Class I carriers have full
discretion to decide how to present the minimum
information, (CSXT Comments 7 & n.16, June 5,
2020), but the final rule does not allow this level
of discretion.
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17:01 Apr 05, 2021
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CSXT’s stated concern that it may need
more than 80 hours to modify its
invoicing systems to include the
required minimum information and
provide machine-readable access to
such information. Accordingly, the
Board will increase its estimate from
560 hours (186.6 hours per year as
amortized over three years or 80 hours
per respondent) to 1,120 hours (373.3
hours per year as amortized over three
years or 160 hours per respondent).
No other carriers commented on the
Board’s estimates.
This modification to an existing
collection, along with CSXT’s comment
and the Board’s response, will be
submitted to OMB for review as
required under the PRA, 44 U.S.C.
3507(d), and 5 CFR 1320.11.
Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act, 5 U.S.C. 801–808, the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has
designated this rule as non-major, as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 1333
Penalties, Railroads.
It is ordered:
1. The Board adopts the final rule as
set forth in this decision. Notice of the
final rule will be published in the
Federal Register.
2. The final rule is effective on
October 6, 2021, as set forth in this
decision.
3. A copy of this decision will be
served upon the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S.
Small Business Administration.
Decided: March 30, 2021.
By the Board, Board Members Begeman,
Fuchs, Oberman, Primus, and Schultz.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Surface Transportation
Board amends part 1333 of title 49,
chapter X, of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 1333—DEMURRAGE LIABILITY
1. The authority citation for part 1333
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 1321, 10702, and
10746.
■
2. Add § 1333.4 to read as follows:
§ 1333.4 Information Requirements for
Demurrage Invoices
The following information shall be
provided on or with any demurrage
invoices issued by Class I carriers:
PO 00000
Frm 00060
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
(a) The billing cycle covered by the
invoice;
(b) The unique identifying
information (e.g., reporting marks and
number) of each car involved;
(c) The following information, where
applicable:
(1) The date the waybill was created;
(2) The status of each car as loaded or
empty;
(3) The commodity being shipped (if
the car is loaded);
(4) The identity of the shipper,
consignee, and/or care-of party, as
applicable; and
(5) The origin station and state of the
shipment;
(d) The dates and times of:
(1) Original estimated arrival of each
car, as generated promptly following
interchange or release of shipment to
the invoicing carrier and as based on the
first movement of the invoicing carrier;
(2) Receipt of each car at the last
interchange with the invoicing carrier (if
applicable);
(3) Actual placement of each car;
(4) Constructive placement of each car
(if applicable and different from actual
placement);
(5) Notification of constructive
placement to the shipper or third-party
intermediary (if applicable);
(6) Each car ordered in (if applicable)
(i.e., the date and time demurrage first
stops accruing with respect to a closedgate facility);
(7) release of each car; and
(e) The number of credits and debits
attributable to each car (if applicable).
■
3. Add § 1333.5 to read as follows:
§ 1333.5 Machine-Readable Access to
Information Required for Demurrage
Invoices
In addition to providing the minimum
information on or with demurrage
invoices, Class I carriers shall provide
machine-readable access to the
information listed in § 1333.4. For
purposes of this part, ‘machinereadable’ means data in an open format
that can be easily processed by
computer without human intervention
while ensuring no semantic meaning is
lost. An ‘open format’ is a format that
is not limited to a specific software
program and not subject to restrictions
on re-use.
[FR Doc. 2021–07000 Filed 4–5–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
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06APR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 64 (Tuesday, April 6, 2021)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 17735-17750]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-07000]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
49 CFR Part 1333
[Docket No. EP 759]
Demurrage Billing Requirements
AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Surface Transportation Board (STB or Board) adopts a final
rule that requires Class I carriers to include certain minimum
information on or with demurrage invoices and provide machine-readable
access to the minimum information.
DATES: This rule is effective on October 6, 2021.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sarah Fancher at (202) 245-0355.
Assistance for the hearing impaired is available through the Federal
Relay Service at (800) 877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Board issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking on October 7, 2019, to propose changes to its existing
demurrage regulations to address several issues regarding carriers'
demurrage billing practices. Demurrage Billing Requirements (NPRM), EP
759 (STB served Oct. 7, 2019).\1\ The Board subsequently issued a
supplemental notice on April 30, 2020, seeking comment on potential
modifications and additions to the proposal. Demurrage Billing
Requirements (SNPRM), EP 759 (STB served Apr. 30, 2020).\2\ Demurrage
is subject to Board regulation under 49 U.S.C. 10702, which requires
railroads to establish reasonable rates and transportation-related
rules and practices, and under 49 U.S.C. 10746, which requires
railroads to compute demurrage charges, and establish rules related to
those charges, in a way that will fulfill the national needs related to
freight car use and distribution and maintenance of an adequate car
supply.\3\ Demurrage is a charge that serves principally as an
incentive to prevent undue car detention and thereby encourage the
efficient use of rail cars in the rail network, while also providing
compensation to rail carriers for the expense incurred when rail cars
are unduly detained beyond a specified period of time (i.e., ``free
time'') for loading and unloading. See Pa. R.R. v. Kittaning Iron &
Steel Mfg. Co., 253 U.S. 319, 323 (1920) (``The purpose of demurrage
charges is to promote car efficiency by penalizing undue detention of
cars.''); 49 CFR 1333.1; see also 49 CFR pt. 1201, category 106.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The NPRM was published in the Federal Register, 84 FR 55109
(Oct. 15, 2019).
\2\ The SNPRM was published in the Federal Register, 85 FR.
26915 (May 6, 2020).
\3\ In Demurrage Liability, EP 707, slip op. at 15-16 (STB
served Apr. 11, 2014), the Board clarified that private car storage
is included in the definition of demurrage for purposes of the
demurrage regulations established in that decision. The Board uses
the same definition of demurrage in this decision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the simplest demurrage case, a railroad assesses demurrage on
the consignor (the shipper of the goods) for delays in loading cars at
origin and on the consignee (the receiver of the goods) for delays in
unloading cars and returning them to the rail carrier at
destination.\4\ Demurrage, however, can also involve third-party
intermediaries, commonly known as warehousemen or terminal operators,
that accept freight cars for loading and unloading but have no property
interest in the freight being transported.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ As the Board noted in Demurrage Liability, EP 707, slip op.
at 2 n.2, the Interstate Commerce Act, as amended by the ICC
Termination Act of 1995 (ICCTA), Public Law 104-88, 109 Stat. 803,
does not define ``consignor'' or ``consignee,'' though both terms
are commonly used in the demurrage context. Black's Law Dictionary
defines ``consignor'' as ``[o]ne who dispatches goods to another on
consignment,'' and ``consignee'' ``as [o]ne to whom goods are
consigned.'' Demurrage Liability, EP 707, slip op. at 2 n.2
(alterations in original) (citing Black's Law Dictionary 327 (8th
ed. 2004)). The Federal Bills of Lading Act defines these terms in a
similar manner. Id. (citing 49 U.S.C. 80101(1) & (2)).
\5\ This decision uses ``rail users'' to broadly mean any person
or business that sends goods by rail or receives rail cars for
loading or unloading, regardless of whether that person has a
property interest in the freight being transported.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 17736]]
In the NPRM, the Board proposed requirements for minimum
information to be included on or with Class I carriers' demurrage
invoices.\6\ NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 8-11, 14-15. In response, the
Board received a significant number of comments from stakeholders,
including requests for additional and modified invoicing
requirements.\7\ The Board subsequently issued a supplemental notice of
proposed rulemaking to invite comment on potential modifications and
additions to the proposed minimum information requirements and format.
The Board received comments and replies in response to the SNPRM.\8\
After considering the record in this proceeding, the Board adopts a
final rule requiring Class I carriers to include certain minimum
information on or with their demurrage invoices and provide, in the
format of their choosing, machine-readable \9\ access to the required
minimum information, as discussed below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ In the NPRM, the Board also proposed that the serving Class
I carrier be required to directly bill the shipper for demurrage
(instead of the warehouseman) when the shipper and warehouseman
agree to that arrangement and so notify the rail carrier. See NPRM,
EP 759, slip op. at 11, 14-15. The Board subsequently adopted a
direct-billing final rule. See Demurrage Billing Requirements, EP
759 (STB served Apr. 30, 2020). The final rule was published in the
Federal Register, 85 FR 26858 (May 6, 2020).
\7\ In response to the NPRM, the Board received comments and/or
replies from the following: American Chemistry Council (ACC);
American Forest & Paper Association; American Fuel & Petrochemical
Manufacturers (AFPM); American Iron and Steel Institute; American
Short Line and Regional Railroad Association (ASLRRA); ArcelorMittal
USA LLC (AM); Association of American Railroads; Barilla America,
Inc.; Canadian National Railway Company (CN); Canadian Pacific
Railway Company (CP); Corn Refiners Association (CRA); CSX
Transportation, Inc. (CSXT); Daniel R. Elliott; Diversified CPC
International, Inc. (CPC); Dow, Inc. (Dow); The Fertilizer Institute
(TFI); Freight Rail Customer Alliance (FRCA); Industrial Minerals
Association--North America; The Institute of Scrap Recycling
Industries, Inc. (ISRI); International Association of Refrigerated
Warehouses (IARW); International Liquid Terminals Association
(ILTA); International Paper; International Warehouse Logistics
Association (IWLA); The Kansas City Southern Railway Company (KCS);
Kinder Morgan Terminals (Kinder Morgan); Lansdale Warehouse Company
(Lansdale); National Association of Chemical Distributors (NACD);
The Mosaic Company; National Coal Transportation Association (NCTA);
The National Industrial Transportation League (NITL); North American
Freight Car Association (NAFCA); Norfolk Southern Railway Company
(NSR); Peabody Energy Corporation; The Portland Cement Association
(PCA); Private Railcar Food and Beverage Association, Inc.; Quad,
Inc.; Union Pacific Railroad Company (UP); Valley Distributing &
Storage Company; Western Coal Traffic League and Seminole Electric
Cooperative, Inc. (WCTL & SEC); and Yvette Longonje.
\8\ In response to the SNPRM, the Board received comments and/or
replies from the following: ACC; AFPM; ASLRRA; BNSF Railway Company
(BNSF); CN; CP; The Chlorine Institute (TCI); CRA; CSXT; Dow; TFI;
FRCA; ISRI; ILTA; IWLA; Lansdale; NACD; NCTA; The National Grain and
Feed Association (NGFA); NITL; NSR; PCA; San Jose Distribution
Services, Inc.; and UP.
After the record closed, CN submitted a sur-reply to address
claims that CN argued ``could give a misleading impression to CN
customers about the circumstances in which they could incur
demurrage.'' (CN Reply 1-2, July 27, 2020; see also Joint Reply
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 9, July 6, 2020.) Although a reply to a reply
is not permitted, see 49 CFR 1104.13(c), due to the brevity and
narrowness of CN's filing, and in the interest of a complete record,
the Board will accept this submission as part of the record.
\9\ As discussed below, the Board will adopt a definition for
machine-readable data that is ``data in an open format that can be
easily processed by computer without human intervention while
ensuring no semantic meaning is lost.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Background
This proceeding arises, in part, as a result of the testimony and
comments submitted in Oversight Hearing on Demurrage & Accessorial
Charges,\10\ Docket No. EP 754. In that proceeding, parties from a
broad range of industries raised concerns about demurrage invoicing
practices, including issues involving the receipt of invoices
containing insufficient information. See NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 5-6
(providing overview of comments received in Docket No. EP 754 related
to the adequacy of demurrage invoices).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ Accessorial charges are not specifically defined by statute
or regulation but are generally understood to include charges other
than line-haul and demurrage charges. See Revisions to Arbitration
Procedures, EP 730, slip op. at 7-8 (STB served Sept. 30, 2016)
(describing a variety of charges that are considered accessorial
charges).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After carefully considering the comments and testimony in Docket
No. EP 754, the Board issued the NPRM in this docket. As relevant here,
the Board proposed requirements for certain minimum information to be
included on or with Class I carriers' demurrage invoices. Specifically,
the Board proposed the inclusion of:
The unique identifying information (e.g., reporting marks
and number) of each car involved;
the following shipment information, where applicable:
[cir] The date the waybill was created;
[cir] the status of each car as loaded or empty;
[cir] the commodity being shipped (if the car is loaded);
[cir] the identity of the shipper, consignee, and/or care-of party,
as applicable; and
[cir] the origin station and state of the shipment;
the dates and times of:
[cir] Actual placement of each car;
[cir] constructive placement of each car (if applicable and
different from actual placement);
[cir] notification of constructive placement to the shipper,
consignee, or third-party intermediary (if applicable); and
[cir] release of each car; and
the number of credits and debits attributable to each car
(if applicable). NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9-10. The Board also
proposed to require Class I carriers, prior to sending demurrage
invoices, to take ``appropriate action to ensure that the demurrage
charges are accurate and warranted, consistent with the purpose of
demurrage.'' Id. at 10 (footnote omitted). The Board proposed to add
both the minimum information requirements and the appropriate-action
requirement to a new regulation at 49 CFR 1333.4. Id. at 14. In the
NPRM, the Board invited stakeholders to comment on the proposed rule,
as well as any additional information that Class I carriers could
reasonably provide on or with demurrage invoices to help rail users
effectively evaluate those invoices. Id. at 10.
In response to stakeholders' comments, the Board issued the SNPRM,
which invited comments on modifications and additions to proposed
section 1333.4(a) that the Board was considering. The changes proposed
in the SNPRM would require that Class I carriers provide certain
additional information on or with demurrage invoices, including: (1)
The billing cycle covered by the invoice; (2) the original estimated
date and time of arrival (ETA) of each car (as established by the
invoicing carrier) and the date and time each car was received at
interchange (if applicable), either on or with each invoice or,
alternatively, upon reasonable request from the invoiced party; and (3)
the date and time of each car ordered in (if applicable). SNPRM, EP
759, slip op. at 4-5. In the SNPRM, the Board also asked for comment on
a requirement that Class I carriers provide access to demurrage
invoicing data in machine-readable format and invited further comment
on the proposed demurrage regulations at section 1333.4(b), which would
require Class I carriers to take appropriate action to ensure that
demurrage charges are accurate and warranted prior to sending demurrage
invoices.\11\ Id. at 5, 9-11.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Due to changes adopted in the final rule as discussed
below, section 1333.4(b) has been removed and proposed section
1333.4(a) is adopted, with modifications, as section 1333.4.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed below, rail users express broad support for the
minimum information proposed in the NPRM and SNPRM, although many
suggest additions and modifications that they argue would improve the
rule. Rail
[[Page 17737]]
users also largely support a machine-readable data requirement and the
Board's proposal to require Class I carriers to ``take appropriate
action to ensure that demurrage charges are accurate and warranted.''
Some rail users argue that the rule should apply to Class II and Class
III carriers.
Class I carriers oppose the proposed minimum information
requirements but argue that, if they are adopted, carriers should be
allowed to provide the information on their existing online platforms
rather than on or with invoices. Class I carriers also oppose the
Board's proposed appropriate-action requirement. ASLRRA supports the
proposed exclusion of Class II and Class III carriers from the rule.
Final Rule
The Board now adopts a final rule requiring Class I carriers to
include certain minimum information on or with demurrage invoices and
provide machine-readable access to the minimum information. The final
rule is below.
Minimum Information Requirements
1. General Comments on Minimum Information Requirements
Class I carriers argue generally that a rule establishing any
minimum information requirements is unnecessary; would lead to
increased litigation; contradicts Board precedent, the rail
transportation policy (RTP) of 49 U.S.C. 10101, and the purpose of
demurrage; and would restrict innovation.\12\
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\12\ In addition, NSR's pleading contains a vague reference to
the Board's authority to regulate this aspect of demurrage. (NSR
Comments 2 n.2, June 5, 2020 (``It is not clear to [NSR] that the
Board has the authority to compel railroads to provide particular
information related to demurrage invoices, and it is even less clear
that the Board has the authority to compel railroads to turn over
particular railroad records to its customers upon request by those
customers.'').) NSR states, however, that it ``does not intend to
formally raise such an objection at this point in this process, but
reserves its right to do so depending on what the Board ultimately
attempts to require in this docket.'' (Id.) Given that NSR provides
no explanation or support for its passing assertion (and that NSR
itself disclaims an intent to raise it), the Board need not address
it here. In any event, the NPRM discussed the statutory authority
for the Board's regulation of demurrage. NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at
3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CSXT and CN argue that rail users have not shown that Class I
carriers have a systemwide problem with demurrage invoicing sufficient
to justify the rule. (CSXT Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019; CN Comments 4-5,
Nov. 6, 2019; CSXT Comments 3, June 5, 2020; CN Comments 5-6, June 5,
2020.) CSXT, CN, UP, and KCS assert that rail users' complaints do not
apply to them because they already provide sufficient information.\13\
To the extent some Class I carriers do not provide sufficient
information, CP urges the Board to ``defer to competitive market
pressures to provide the incentive for those railroads to innovate and
to catch up with their peers.'' (CP Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019.) CSXT
suggests that any problems with carriers' invoicing systems should be
addressed on an individualized basis through the Board's formal and
informal complaint procedures. (CSXT Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ (CN Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019 (arguing that rail users'
concerns have ``no application to CN, which already provides
customers with each of the eleven categories of information
specified by the proposed regulations''); CSXT Comments 9, Nov. 6,
2019 (stating that complaints of inadequate documentation ``plainly
[do] not describe the kind of documentation that CSXT provides'');
UP Comments 2, Nov. 6, 2019 (asserting that rail users already have
access to ``the applicable minimum data requirements''); KCS
Comments 6, Nov. 6, 2019 (requesting exclusion from the rule, in
part, because ``KCS already provides accurate information with few
disputes'').)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CN and CSXT also express concerns about the effect that minimum
information requirements would have on demurrage litigation. CN argues
that the NPRM suggests that ``invoices will not be deemed valid unless
they include all eleven specific categories of information,'' which
would lead to more frequent and more complex litigation. (CN Comments
7, Nov. 6, 2019; see also CSXT Comments 4-5, June 5, 2020 (asserting
that minimum information requirements would lead to disputes ``over
purely technical issues'').) For example, CN suggests that an invoice
recipient could argue that an invoice is invalid if ``a waybilling
error by the originating shipper causes a demurrage bill to show the
wrong commodity for a particular car'' even if the error has ``no
material effect on the demurrage billpayer's ability to understand and
potentially dispute demurrage for that car.'' (CN Comments 7, Nov. 6,
2019; see also CSXT Comments 4-5, June 5, 2020 (contending that under
the Board's proposal, ``shippers could challenge invoices on the basis
of missing or incorrect information whether due to carrier fault or
otherwise'').)
Furthermore, CSXT and CN argue that minimum information
requirements contradict Maintenance of Records Pertaining to Demurrage,
Detention, & Other Related Accessorial Charges by Rail Common Carriers
of Property (Maintenance of Records), 367 I.C.C. 145 (1982). (CSXT
Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019; CN Comments 7, Nov. 6, 2019; CN Comments 6,
June 5, 2020.) CSXT contends that the Board's proposed rule is contrary
to Congressional policy and ``would turn the clock back to long-
rejected policies that mandated paperwork requirements for demurrage
bills and that prescribed inefficient nationwide practices.'' (CSXT
Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019; see also CN Comments 7, Nov. 6, 2019 (arguing
that the Board should refrain from reversing ``the principle underlying
this [Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC)] decision by adopting
requirements for the content of demurrage invoices that would bind all
Class I railroads'').)
Additionally, CP and CN contend that minimum information
requirements would contravene one of the goals of the RTP at 49 U.S.C.
10101(2), specifically ``to minimize the need for Federal regulatory
control over the rail transportation system.'' (CP Comments 5, Nov. 6,
2019; CN Comments 4, June 5, 2020.) CP also argues that the proposed
rule is inconsistent with one of the objectives of demurrage--
encouraging the efficient use of rail assets--because the proposal
``places the emphasis on empowering customers in their ability to
challenge invoiced demurrage charges'' after the fact instead of
focusing Board policy on encouraging customers ``to remain actively
engaged in monitoring and managing their supply chains to . . . avoid
incurring demurrage charges in the first place.'' (CP Comments 4, June
5, 2020.)
Moreover, several carriers allege that minimum information
requirements could stifle innovation and discourage carriers from
exploring other methods of providing demurrage information to rail
users.\14\ (CP Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019; CN Comments 9-10, Nov. 6,
2019; CSXT Comments 1-2, Nov. 6, 2019.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Class I carriers also argue that the information would be
best provided on their online platforms rather than on or with
invoices, and that they already provide much of the information on
such platforms. This argument is discussed below under the
``Alternative Visibility Platforms'' heading.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CN argues that, at most, the Board should adopt a flexible,
``performance-based'' standard that would require Class I carriers to
``ensure that recipients of demurrage invoices have access to
sufficient information to be able to understand the basis for the
charges and to dispute charges believed to be unwarranted,'' which
could be ``provided either on or with the demurrage invoice or through
another electronic means, including through a software platform or
portal.'' (CN Comments 14-15, June 5, 2020.) CSXT and NSR also support
this proposal.
[[Page 17738]]
(CSXT Comments 5, June 5, 2020; NSR Reply 2, July 6, 2020.)
In their replies, many rail users counter that they are unable to
effectively review and understand the demurrage invoices they receive
from Class I carriers because the carriers either provide limited
information or do not format the information in ways that enable
efficient access and auditing.\15\ ISRI acknowledges that minimum
information requirements may increase costs for carriers but contends
that rail users currently ``bear the costs and burdens associated with
overtime and additional staffing needed to verify the accuracy of the
invoices.'' (ISRI Reply 10-11, Dec. 6, 2019; see also WCTL & SEC Reply
9, Dec. 6, 2019 (arguing that carriers ``have effectively shifted the
time and costs for reviewing invoices to shippers'').)
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\15\ (See, e.g., Dow Reply 1, 3-6, Dec. 6, 2019; Joint Reply
(ACC, CRA, TFI, & NITL) 5-6, Dec. 6, 2019; Kinder Morgan Reply 9,
Dec. 6, 2019; WCTL & SEC Reply 5, Dec. 6, 2019; ISRI Reply 10, Dec.
6, 2019; NGFA Reply 5-6, July 6, 2020; see also Dow Comments 3, Nov.
6, 2019; IARW Comments 2, Nov. 6, 2019.)
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With respect to Class I carriers' concerns about increased
litigation over technical issues, joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and
TFI) \16\ assert that rail users will not be inclined to dispute
appropriate demurrage charges over technical issues since demurrage
disputes are costly. (Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 13, July 6,
2020.) In addition, Dow argues that to the extent Class I carriers face
more demurrage claims, those claims are likely to be valid for charges
that previously went undetected. (Dow Reply 5, July 6, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The Board received two sets of joint comments in this
proceeding. The first group, composed of ACC, CRA, TFI, and NITL,
filed reply comments on December 6, 2019. The second group, composed
of ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI, filed comments on June 5, 2020, and reply
comments on July 6, 2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several rail users counter CSXT's and CN's argument that minimum
information requirements would constitute a return to the ICC's former
demurrage rules by arguing, among other things, that unlike the former
ICC rules, the Board's proposal would have little, if any, impact on
the day-to-day operations of railroads because it would not impose
timing requirements, content-organization requirements, or
recordkeeping or notification methods. (Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TFI, &
NITL) 7-8, Dec. 6, 2019; see also ISRI Reply 12-13, Dec. 6, 2019
(arguing that the Board's proposal is less stringent than the rules the
ICC removed); AM Reply 4, Dec. 6, 2019 (asserting that the minimum
information requirements ``would not be `re-regulatory' '').)
Additionally, joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) and Dow
dismiss CP's argument that minimum information requirements would
discourage rail users from taking steps to avoid demurrage charges,
asserting that rail users would not choose to incur the time and
expense of challenging demurrage charges over preventing them in the
first place. (Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, July 6, 2020; Dow
Reply 5, July 6, 2020.) Joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) and
NGFA strongly object to carriers' calls for an alternative performance-
based standard because they argue it would allow carriers to
exclusively determine the information rail users need to assess the
validity of demurrage charges and permit carriers to present the
information in formats that would limit rail users' ability to use the
information to verify demurrage charges. (Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, &
TFI) 14-15, July 6, 2020; NGFA Reply 12, July 6, 2020.)
The Board finds ample support in the record for adoption of minimum
information requirements for demurrage invoices. The Board received
many comments in this proceeding \17\ and in Oversight Hearing on
Demurrage & Accessorial Charges, Docket No. EP 754,\18\ from rail users
asserting that carriers either do not provide sufficient information or
do not present the information in a format that allows rail users to
effectively verify demurrage charges. The Board is particularly
concerned about rail users' assertions that even with significant time
and resources devoted to reviewing demurrage invoices, they find
erroneous charges overly difficult to detect under carriers' present
invoicing practices. (See Dow Reply 2-3, Dec. 6, 2019; Joint Reply
(ACC, CRA, TFI, & NITL) 5-6, Dec. 6, 2019; ISRI Reply 10-11, Dec. 6,
2019.) While it may be true that certain Class I carriers provide more
information, or more accessible information, than others, the Board
finds that the comments from a diverse array of shippers served by
different carriers demonstrate a widespread issue that justifies the
imposition of a uniform set of minimum requirements for all Class I
carriers. Because CN's proposed flexible ``performance-based''
alternative standard lacks objective criteria, Class I carriers would
be responsible for determining the amount of information sufficient for
demurrage invoices in a manner that would likely continue to result in
varied practices, some of which may not provide rail users with
information sufficient for them to readily assess the validity of
demurrage charges. Likewise, CP's argument that market pressure will
encourage carriers to provide better information on demurrage invoices
is also unpersuasive because, if the argument were correct, demurrage
invoices would already be more complete and informative than they are,
and this proceeding would not have been necessary in the first
place.\19\
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\17\ (See, e.g., Dow Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019; IARW Comments 2,
Nov. 6, 2019; Dow Reply 1, 3-6, Dec. 6, 2019; Joint Reply (ACC, CRA,
TFI, & NITL) 5-6, Dec. 6, 2019; Kinder Morgan Reply 9, Dec. 6, 2019;
WCTL & SEC Reply 5, Dec. 6, 2019; ISRI Reply 10, Dec. 6, 2019; NGFA
Reply 5-6, July 6, 2020.)
\18\ See NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 5-6 (providing overview of
comments received in Docket No. EP 754 related to the adequacy of
demurrage invoices).
\19\ Similarly, the existing case-by-case formal and informal
adjudicatory approach has not ensured that rail users generally have
easy access to the kind of information needed to readily assess
Class I carrier demurrage charges. Rather, the record establishes
that access to information varies a great deal depending on each
carrier's program and practices. (See PCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020;
Dow Reply 3-6, Dec. 6, 2019; NGFA Reply 4, July 6, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding CN's and CSXT's concern that minimum information
requirements will lead to increased demurrage litigation because rail
users will challenge invoices based upon technical issues unrelated to
the validity of demurrage charges, the Board clarifies here that a
carrier's failure to comply with the minimum information requirements
on a particular invoice does not, by itself, establish that the invoice
is invalid. Rather, the Board intends for the final rule to reduce
unnecessary litigation by providing rail users with information that
enables them to readily assess the validity of demurrage charges and
determine when to dispute or accept responsibly for them. Indeed, rail
users describe demurrage litigation as a complicated and time-consuming
process that they would prefer not to undertake. The Board understands
that carriers may make occasional invoicing errors and does not expect
that an error would conclusively invalidate an entire demurrage
invoice. The question of whether specific demurrage charges are lawful
depends on an array of fact-specific factors (including, for example,
documentation supporting the charges) that would need to be determined
in the context of an individual dispute. Nevertheless, the Board has
made clear that transparency and mutual accountability in the billing
process are ``important factors'' in the establishment of reasonable
demurrage charges. Pol'y Statement on Demurrage & Accessorial Rules &
Charges (Pol'y Statement), EP
[[Page 17739]]
757, slip op. at 15 (STB served Apr. 30, 2020). Although a carrier's
failure to comply with the minimum invoicing requirements to be set
forth at section 1333.4 would not be conclusive in litigation regarding
a particular demurrage invoice, such noncompliance should be taken into
account under 49 U.S.C. 10702 and 10746, along with all other relevant
evidence, in determining the reasonableness and enforceability of
demurrage charges.\20\
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\20\ Noncompliance could also be the subject of complaints and/
or investigation under 49 U.S.C. 11701 and 11704, and the nature of
the invoicing error would likely be a consideration in any such
proceeding (e.g., a one-time inaccuracy in the date that a waybill
was created is not the same as general noncompliance or frequent or
systemic errors).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Contrary to carriers' arguments, the final rule does not contradict
Board precedent, the RTP, or the purpose of demurrage. First, the ICC's
decision in Maintenance of Records, 367 I.C.C. 145 (1982), cited by
CSXT and CN, does not prevent the Board from adopting minimum
information requirements here. As an initial matter, the Board may
modify its rules as long as its actions are rational and fully
explained.\21\ Maintenance of Records itself was a modification based
largely on changes in carrier practices due to technological advances.
There, the ICC determined that certain recordkeeping requirements, such
as those requiring carriers to maintain separate records for each open
station, prepare daily car reports, and forward the reports daily to
recordkeeping offices were unnecessary because computers could retain
the data at a central location in a comparably efficient and less
expensive way. Maintenance of Records, 367 I.C.C. at 146. As one rail
user points out, however, present rail industry practices and
technology are very different than they were when the ICC decided
Maintenance of Records in 1982. (ISRI Reply 11-12, Dec. 6, 2019.)
Moreover, as the Board observed, carriers use the minimum information
in the ordinary course of business today and some carriers already
provide certain demurrage information to rail users on online
platforms. See NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10; SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at
4. Unlike the more prescriptive rules that predated Maintenance of
Records, the Board's final rule in this proceeding gives Class I
carriers the flexibility to invoice in the format of their choosing,
including electronic options, so long as they include the minimum
information requirements on or with the invoices and provide machine-
readable access to the minimum information. Accordingly, the final rule
does not, as CSXT argues, ``turn the clock back to long-rejected
policies.'' (CSXT Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ See Nat'l Cable & Telecommc'ns Ass'n v. Brand X Internet
Servs., 545 U.S. 967, 981-82, 1001 (2005) (finding that an agency
``is free within the limits of reasoned interpretation to change
course if it adequately justifies the change''); Chevron, U.S.A.,
Inc. v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 863 (1984) (``An
initial agency interpretation is not instantly carved in stone.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board also finds that the final rule adopted here is consistent
with the provision of the RTP at section 10101(2), which focuses on
minimizing the need for Federal regulatory control and ensuring
expeditious Board decisions when required. The record in this
proceeding and in Oversight Hearing on Demurrage & Accessorial Charges,
Docket No. EP 754, supports the conclusion that limited and focused
regulation would help parties resolve future demurrage disputes more
efficiently and effectively without the need for costly and time-
consuming litigation. Additionally, to the extent that parties may need
to litigate demurrage disputes in the future, the minimum information
requirements adopted here will facilitate expeditious handling and
resolution of those disputes, consistent with section 10101(2), (15).
Furthermore, by ensuring that rail users have access to sufficient
information to understand demurrage charges, the final rule serves
important goals of the RTP to meet the needs of the public and for
carriers to remain competitive with other transportation modes. See
section 10101(4).
The Board rejects CP's argument that the rule contradicts the
purpose of demurrage because it encourages rail users to challenge
demurrage invoices rather than avoid demurrage charges in the first
instance. The final rule incentivizes efficient asset utilization (and
helps to ensure that carriers are compensated when rail cars are unduly
detained) by requiring demurrage invoices to contain sufficient
information to allow rail users to verify the validity of those charges
and modify their own behavior when necessary to avoid future demurrage
charges. See NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10; SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at
7. The final rule does not encourage rail users to challenge
appropriately assessed demurrage charges. Rather, it ensures that rail
users are provided sufficient information about the charges to enable
them to take action to avoid future charges and, indeed, rail users
have confirmed that incurring the time and expense of demurrage
litigation, rather than avoiding the charges in the first place, would
not serve their interests. (See Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7,
July 6, 2020; Dow Reply 5, July 6, 2020.)
Lastly, the Board is not persuaded by the argument that minimum
information requirements will stifle innovation. To the contrary, the
final rule allows Class I carriers to choose how to invoice rail users,
as long as they include the minimum information required on or with the
invoices and provide machine-readable access to the minimum
information.\22\
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\22\ The Board notes that the information requirements adopted
here are minimum, not maximum, requirements. To the extent that
Class I carriers, responding to the competitive market pressures
suggested by CP or for other reasons, wish to provide rail users
with information not specified in the minimum information
requirements in the format of their choosing, the Board encourages
them to do so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, as discussed below, the Board will adopt the minimum
information requirements proposed in the NPRM and the SNPRM.
2. NPRM Proposed Information
Rail users generally support the minimum information requirements
proposed in the NPRM, asserting that the information would help rail
users audit invoices more effectively and learn what actions to take to
avoid future demurrage charges. (See, e.g., TFI Comments 3-4, Nov. 6,
2019; NACD Comments 2-3, Nov. 6, 2019; NITL Comments 9, Nov. 6, 2019.)
Additionally, two rail users submit requests for clarification. First,
ISRI asks the Board to clarify its proposal that Class I carriers be
required to provide ``[t]he number of credits and debits attributable
to each car (if applicable).'' (ISRI Comments 4-5, June 5, 2020.)
Specifically, ISRI asks whether this proposal would require carriers to
``determine in advance for each car included in an invoice whether
credits apply'' or whether rail users would need to apply for credits
that would appear on future invoices, if granted. (Id. at 5.) ISRI
requests that, if the Board did not intend to require the former, then
the Board mandate that credits be carried over for 30 to 60 days before
expiring. (Id.) Second, ILTA asks the Board to change the ``and/or''
language in the requirement that Class I carriers provide ``the
identity of the shipper, consignee, and/or care-of party, as
applicable'' to ``and'' so that Class I carriers are required to
identify all applicable parties. (ILTA Comments 4, June 4, 2020.) Class
I carriers do not respond to ISRI's or ILTA's requests for
clarification.
Several Class I carriers state that they already provide rail users
with most (or all) of the information proposed in the NPRM, either on
invoices or their online
[[Page 17740]]
platforms.\23\ However, KCS and CN express concerns that handling
carriers may not always receive complete waybill information from
connecting carriers and, therefore, may not have access to the date the
waybill was created; the identity of the shipper, consignee, and/or
care-of party, as applicable (if not the invoiced party); and the
origin station and state of the shipment. (KCS Comments 5, Nov. 6,
2019; CN Comments 7-8, June 5, 2020.) KCS states that it is ``willing
to work with other carriers to try to obtain this information on a
regular basis in the future, but currently does not always have all of
the information the Board's rules would require.'' (KCS Comments 5,
Nov. 6, 2019.) CN asks the Board to specify that ``a railroad is only
required to provide information that is available to it.'' (CN Comments
7, June 5, 2020.)
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\23\ (See KCS Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019; CSXT Comments 5, Nov. 6,
2019; UP Comments 2, Nov. 6, 2019; CP Comments, V.S. Melo 2, Nov. 6,
2019; CN Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019; NSR Reply 1, Dec. 6, 2019; see
also NSR Comments 1, Nov. 6, 2019 (stating that it does not oppose
the specific categories of information that the Board proposed in
the NPRM).)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NGFA objects to CN's proposal. NGFA argues that the proposal would
create an incentive for carriers to avoid collecting information needed
by rail users so that they would not have to provide the information on
demurrage invoices. (NGFA Reply 13, July 6, 2020.)
The Board finds that adopting the minimum information requirements
proposed in the NPRM will ensure that rail users have access to
information that will help them readily assess the validity of
demurrage charges, properly allocate demurrage responsibility, and
modify their own behavior, as appropriate, to minimize future demurrage
charges. Such actions will help provide for the efficient use of rail
assets, consistent with section 10746. Accordingly, the Board will
adopt the minimum information requirements proposed in the NPRM with
the following clarifications.
To address ISRI's concern that the Board's proposal would require
rail users to apply for credits, the Board clarifies that the final
rule does not create an obligation for rail users to apply for credits.
Rather, the Board intends that Class I carriers will list the number of
credits and debits attributable to each car on the invoice (if
applicable).\24\ Furthermore, the Board declines ILTA's request to
change the ``and/or'' language in the requirement that Class I carriers
provide ``the identity of the shipper, consignee, and/or care-of party,
as applicable'' because the ``as applicable'' language already conveys
that Class I carriers should identify all applicable parties on the
invoice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ The Board also clarifies that the final rule does not
prevent rail users from seeking additional credits that were not
discernable at the time the invoice was issued.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to KCS's and CN's concerns about access to select
waybill information, the Board clarifies that Class I carriers are not
required to provide rail users with information to which the Class I
carriers do not have access in the normal course of business from their
partner carriers. Although CN and KCS do not quantify the degree to
which they may lack information from other rail carriers in a movement,
the Board would not expect this situation to occur frequently because
Class I carriers have many reasons for collecting the minimum
information required by the final rule, including for their own
performance metrics and to substantiate demurrage charges should they
be challenged, and carriers share information in the ordinary course of
business during interchange. Where a carrier cannot provide information
required by the rule because it has not received the information from
another carrier, the invoicing carrier should make a note to that
effect on the invoice. In response to NGFA's concern, the Board
observes that it expects that this situation would arise infrequently,
and the Board will consider further regulatory action if the situation
is becoming widespread.
3. Billing Cycle
In the SNPRM, the Board invited comment on a proposal to require
Class I carriers to include on or with demurrage invoices the billing
cycle covered by the invoice. SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 5. Many rail
users support the inclusion of the billing cycle, asserting that it
would make invoices easier to understand and validate.\25\ Dow argues
that this information would be particularly useful when demurrage
events span more than one invoicing period because some carriers bill
demurrage monthly by the date it accrues rather than by the date the
demurrage event ends. (Dow Comments 2, June 5, 2020.) Dow also contends
that billing cycle information would simplify research into invoice
events because many of the carriers' online platforms make demurrage
event data available only by billing cycle. (Id.)
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\25\ (See ILTA Comments 2, June 4, 2020; AFPM Comments 5, June
5, 2020; IWLA Comments 2; June 5, 2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA,
TCI, & TFI) 2, June 5, 2020; NACD Comments 3, June 5, 2020; NITL
Comments 3, June 5, 2020; PCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020; FRCA
Comments 1, June 5, 2020; ISRI Comments 3, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
CN opposes this requirement, arguing that there is no basis in the
record for it. (CN Comments 10, June 5, 2020.) NSR does not object, but
requests additional clarity about whether its current process for
providing billing cycle information \26\ would satisfy the Board's
proposed requirement. (NSR Comments 7, June 5, 2020.) In addition, UP,
CN, CSXT, and BNSF state that they currently provide billing cycle
information on their invoices or online platforms. (UP Comments, V.S.
Prauner 2, June 5, 2020; CN Comments 10, June 5, 2020; CSXT Comments 3,
June 5, 2020; BNSF Comments 2-3, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ NSR states that ``[e]ach invoice indicates the time period
during which the car incurred demurrage charges. If a railcar incurs
charges over multiple months, the customer will be charged when the
demurrage cycle has ended. The railcar is summarized on a monthly
invoice with other equipment during the billing period. That single
invoice will reflect the billing cycle for that month. Additionally,
the customer will receive information showing the full range of
dates where that particular car incurred charges.'' (NSR Comments 7,
June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board will include a billing cycle requirement in the final
rule. The billing cycle information, which is a basic feature on
recurring invoices, would help rail users verify demurrage charges that
span multiple invoicing periods and compare invoiced charges to the
demurrage information available on Class I carriers' online platforms.
(Dow Comments 2, June 5, 2020.) Although CN opposes the addition, the
record establishes that such information would assist rail users in
better understanding their invoices; most carriers indicate that they
already provide this basic information; and no carriers indicate that
this requirement would be burdensome. In response to NSR's request, the
Board clarifies here that providing rail users with the dates of the
invoicing period over which rail cars incurred demurrage would be
sufficient to satisfy the billing cycle requirement.
4. Original ETA and Interchange Date and Time
As discussed in the SNPRM, several commenters identified the
original ETA and, if applicable, the date and time that cars are
received at interchange, as information that would give rail users
greater visibility into how carrier-caused bunching \27\ and other
delays may affect demurrage charges. See SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 5-8
(describing comments received in response to the NPRM related to the
original ETA and the date
[[Page 17741]]
and time that cars are received at interchange). In response, the Board
invited additional comment on revisions to proposed section 1333.4 that
would require Class I carriers to provide on or with their demurrage
invoices (1) the original ETA of each car (as established by the
invoicing carrier); and (2) the date and time that each car was
received at interchange, if applicable. Id. For the former, the Board
invited comment on how to define ``original ETA,'' \28\ and whether the
original ETA may differ depending on whether the rail car is loaded or
empty. Id. at 7 n.12. For the latter, the Board invited comment on
whether the requirement that Class I carriers provide the date and time
that cars are received at interchange, if applicable, should be limited
to the last interchange with the invoicing carrier. Id. at 7. Lastly,
the Board invited comment on whether Class I carriers should be
required to provide these items to the invoiced party upon reasonable
request (rather than on or with every invoice) and, if so, what would
constitute a reasonable request. Id. at 7-8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ The Board has described bunching as ``rail car deliveries
that are not reasonably timed or spaced.'' See Demurrage Liability,
EP 707, slip op. at 23.
\28\ The Board sought comment on whether, for example, original
ETA should be generated promptly following interchange or release of
shipment to the invoicing carrier and be based on the first movement
of the invoicing carrier. SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 7 n.12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Original ETA. In response to the SNPRM, rail users express
additional support for an original ETA requirement. Several rail users
contend that by comparing the original ETA to the car's arrival time,
rail users will be better able to identify carrier-caused bunching,
verify credits when applicable, and know when to dispute demurrage
charges.\29\ AFPM also contends that this requirement would encourage
carriers to apply increased scrutiny to their demurrage invoices before
sending them. (AFPM Comments 6, June 5, 2020.) Although several rail
users acknowledge that they would need to consider other facts and
circumstances besides the original ETA to determine whether demurrage
charges arise from carrier-caused bunching, they argue that the
original ETA would help them determine when to conduct further
inquiries with the carriers. (Dow Reply 3-4, July 6, 2020; Joint Reply
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 3-4, July 6, 2020; NITL Reply 6, July 6, 2020.)
Dow and joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) argue that the
original ETA and date and time of interchange are the only metrics that
allow rail users to identify demurrage charges that may arise from
carrier-caused bunching and other delays beyond rail users' reasonable
control. (Dow Reply 1, July 6, 2020; Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI)
3, July 6, 2020.) Additionally, Dow contends that the original ETA
would help inform transit variability so that rail users can ``fine
tune [their] shipments and the number of cars at a destination to
better prevent demurrage.'' (Dow Reply 4, July 6, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ (See ILTA Comments 2, June 4, 2020; AFPM Comments 6, June
5, 2020; FRCA Comments 1, June 5, 2020; ISRI Comments 4, June 5,
2020; IWLA Comments 2, June 5, 2020; NACD Comments 4, June 5, 2020;
NITL Comments 3-4; June 5, 2020; PCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020; Dow
Reply 3, July 6, 2020; NGFA Reply 10, July 6, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
BNSF, CP, CN, UP, NSR, and CSXT oppose an original ETA requirement,
although they state that they already provide rail users with ETA
information.\30\ BNSF, CN, and UP argue that ETAs are most useful when
they are consistently updated with current information to account for
the variability of traffic movements across the rail network. (BNSF
Comments 16, June 5, 2020; CN Comments 8-9, June 5, 2020; UP Comments,
V.S. Prauner 2, June 5, 2020.) BNSF asserts that rail users may ``keep
a historical record of the original ETA and any updates as a car moves
across the network, but that original ETA is not meaningful to the
customer in its demurrage planning'' because ``actual events'' are more
important than ``historical estimates.'' (BNSF Comments 16-17, June 5,
2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ (See BNSF Comments 16-17, June 5, 2020; NSR Comments 7,
June 5, 2020; UP Comments 4, June 5, 2020; CP Comments 5, June 5,
2020; CSXT Comments 3, June 5, 2020; CN Reply 5, July 6, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
BNSF and UP also contend that original ETAs do not give rail users
meaningful information about the causes of demurrage.\31\ CN asserts
that the relevant data for bunching is not the original ETA but rather
``the actual arrival time of shipments, and whether the arrival times
for all of a receiver's inbound traffic are clustered in a way that it
could prevent the receiver from loading or unloading the cars without
incurring demurrage.'' (CN Comments 9, June 5, 2020.) UP also argues
that ``[t]he only way to identify whether and why bunching occurred is
through the railroad and customer working cooperatively.'' (UP Comments
4, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ (BNSF Comments 16-17, June 5, 2020 (arguing that
``[i]nnumerable circumstances could cause changes to the original
ETA of a particular movement, including industry behavior at origin
or destination (if cars must be held en route)''); UP Comments 4,
June 5, 2020 (noting that rail cars could miss their estimated ETAs
``because a surplus of cars ordered by the customer caused
congestion in a yard or multiple shippers sent cars to the same
receiver facility and that facility's capacity was exceeded'').)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, Class I carriers assert that an original ETA
requirement would create confusion about carriers' service obligations.
CP and UP emphasize that that they do not guarantee specific transit
times. (CP Comments 5, June 5, 2020; UP Comments 4, June 5, 2020.)
Likewise, NSR and BNSF argue that a carrier's common carrier obligation
does not require them to adhere to ETAs. (NSR Comments 7-8, June 5,
2020; BNSF Reply 2-3, July 6, 2020.) BNSF also contends that the Board
has recognized in demurrage cases that ``transit delays inherent in
rail operations do not, on their own, excuse a shipper from
demurrage.'' (BNSF Reply 3-4, July 6, 2020.) Furthermore, CN argues
that the Board's proposal could have unintended consequences, such as
disrupting private service agreements between carriers and rail users
by suggesting that ``failure to deliver by an original ETA could be
indicative of service failure'' and incentivizing carriers to include a
``sizeable cushion'' rather than the most accurate ETA forecasts to
avoid potential demurrage challenges. (CN Comments 9-10, June 5, 2020;
see also BNSF Reply 5, July 6, 2020 (asserting that carriers may change
the way they estimate ETAs to avoid litigation with rail users).)
Rail users respond by arguing that an original ETA requirement
would not cause the outcomes that carriers describe. Several rail users
contend that an original ETA requirement would not create transit-time
guarantees since rail users know, via carriers' contracts and tariffs,
that carriers do not guarantee transit times. (Dow Reply 4, July 6,
2020; ISRI Reply 4, July 6, 2020; Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7,
July 6, 2020; NITL Reply 5, July 6, 2020.) Dow and joint commenters
(ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) suggest that the Board could clarify in the
final rule that the original ETA is required for demurrage purposes
only and not to create a transit-time guarantee. (Dow Reply 4-5, July
6, 2020; Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, July 6, 2020.) However,
joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) also argue that ``[i]f the
railroad caused the shipment to arrive late, even by a day, it should
not be entitled to penalize the rail user with demurrage.'' (Joint
Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, July 6, 2020.)
Dow and joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) further argue
that, for private cars, original ETA should be defined as ``the
estimated date and time of constructive placement as determined by the
delivering carrier immediately upon proper release of a car by the
shipper to the rail carrier (for single-line
[[Page 17742]]
movements) or the carrier's receipt of a car in interchange (for joint-
line movements)'' as ``determined under applicable AAR interchange
rules.'' (Dow Comments 3, June 5, 2020; see also Joint Comments (ACC,
CRA, TCI, & TFI) 4, June 5, 2020 (proposing a similar definition).)
They contend that an original ETA must be estimated immediately upon
the delivering carrier receiving control of the car because carrier-
caused delays can occur at origins and interchanges. (Dow Comments 3,
June 5, 2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 5, June 5, 2020;
see also NGFA Reply 9, July 6, 2020 (expressing concerns that a rail
car ``could sit idle at origin for days or a week or more due to missed
pulls with the original trip plan never generated, creating bunching
issues at the origin shipper that are not documented by the
carrier'').) \32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ In addition, ISRI requests that the Board require Class I
carriers to provide ETAs for all cars listed in a pipeline report
detailing the ``cars in the system for future deliveries,'' because
``[a]t least one Class I railroad that provides its customers with a
pipeline report fails to consistently include an ETA for the cars
listed.'' (ISRI Comments 4, June 5, 2020.) However, this proceeding
focuses on the information that Class I carriers must provide on or
with demurrage invoices and ISRI's request is beyond that scope.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NSR states that it opposes a rule that would require carriers to
develop an ETA immediately upon receipt of a car in interchange, as
this would require ``the reconfiguration of [NSR's] trip plan software,
an incredibly complicated reconfiguration that would take years to
implement due to the legacy infrastructure.'' (NSR Reply 4-5, July 6,
2020.) CN opposes any definition that would require it to provide an
ETA before a trip plan is created. (CN Reply 5, July 6, 2020.)
In the SNPRM, the Board invited comment on whether the original ETA
may differ depending on whether the rail car is loaded or empty. SNPRM,
EP 759, slip op. at 7. In response, joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI,
and TFI) assert that different definitions are not necessary because
carriers' demurrage rules generally apply the same calculation and
constructive placement methods to all private cars. (Joint Comments
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 5, June 5, 2020.)
The Board is persuaded that the original ETA provides useful
information to rail users for verifying credits, when applicable, and
identifying delays that impact demurrage. Although not dispositive as
to the cause of bunching, original ETAs will allow rail users to better
understand whether there are delays in shipment beyond carriers'
initial expectations and will lead to better communication between
carriers and rail users about the causes of demurrage. Likewise,
original ETAs may give rail users more insight into which demurrage
charges to probe further to determine whether carrier-caused bunching
is present. Furthermore, original ETAs will assist certain rail users
in verifying credits because at least one Class I carrier issues
credits based on rail cars that do not meet their original ETAs. (See
NSR Reply 2-3, July 6, 2020.) Given these benefits and the fact that
carriers already generate original ETAs in the ordinary course of
business, inclusion of the original ETA as a minimum requirement is
appropriate.
The Board rejects the argument that updated (or ``real-time'') ETAs
render original ETAs less useful. The Board recognizes that updated
ETAs help rail users account for transit variability and plan for rail
cars' arrival; however, they may be less useful when rail users need to
verify demurrage charges on invoices that may be issued weeks later. In
contrast, allowing rail users to readily compare significant deviations
between original ETAs and car arrivals once invoices are issued could
lead to better information exchange about the causes of delay. BNSF
states that rail users may record original ETAs and updates as needed
from the information carriers provide on their online platforms.
However, the Board finds it unreasonable to expect rail users to keep
records of fluctuating ETAs for all rail cars to prepare for the
possibility that some of those rail cars ultimately accrue demurrage.
As discussed in the NPRM, minimum information requirements are intended
to ensure that rail users do not need to undertake unreasonable efforts
to gather information that can be provided by carriers in the first
instance. NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10.
The Board agrees with the Class I carriers' assertion that rail
cars may not be delivered by their original ETAs due to a variety of
causes, including rail users' behavior, carrier-caused delays, or other
variables. Accordingly, a missed original ETA would not--without more--
establish that carrier-caused bunching (or any other event) occurred
but rather would give rail users information about delays that may then
prompt them to conduct further investigations or adjust their own
conduct to better account for transit variabilities and avoid future
demurrage charges. In any given case, additional facts and
circumstances would need to be considered in determining whether
demurrage charges arise from carrier-caused bunching. The fact-specific
nature of bunching issues is precisely why the Board has determined
that demurrage disputes pertaining to bunching are best addressed in
individual cases. See Demurrage Liability, EP 707, slip op. at 23-24;
see also Pol'y Statement, EP 757, slip op. at 11-12.
The Board recognizes Class I carriers' concern that rail users may
misinterpret original ETAs as guaranteed transit times or as a service
standard that would override private agreements between rail users and
carriers, and clarifies here that that is not the purpose or effect of
the original ETA requirement. The requirement to provide an original
ETA established here obligates carriers only to provide rail users with
this information on or with demurrage invoices; it does not constitute,
or require carriers to provide, service guarantees. The requirement
does not create a separate service standard for carriers. Finally,
inclusion of an original ETA requirement in the final rule does not
change the fact that the Board will determine whether demurrage charges
are reasonable under section 10702 and comport with the statutory
requirements specified in section 10746 in the context of case-specific
facts and circumstances. Accordingly, the existence of the original ETA
in the minimum information requirements does not establish whether a
delay in shipment renders a demurrage charge unreasonable. (See Joint
Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, July 6, 2020.) \33\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ The Board rejects AFPM's suggestion that certain rail users
who own or lease the cars they use should be allowed to charge
carriers demurrage when they miss their original ETAs, as AFPM's
request is beyond this scope of this proceeding, which focuses on
the information that Class I carriers must provide on or with
demurrage invoices. (AFPM Comments 2, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
With respect to CN's and BNSF's assertions that an original ETA
requirement would incentivize carriers to cushion their ETA forecasts,
the Board expects that Class I carriers have other motivations to give
rail users accurate estimates about rail car arrivals, including to
provide good customer service, improve their performance metrics,\34\
and ensure that the rail network runs efficiently by
[[Page 17743]]
giving rail users the best opportunity to plan for the efficient use of
rail assets. Although it may be appropriate to make adjustments to ETAs
based on real-time information, providing the most accurate estimates
available is in the interest of both rail carriers and their customers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ See, e.g., UP Comments 3, May 8, 2019, Oversight Hearing on
Demurrage & Accessorial Charges, EP 754 (stating that its on-time
delivery rates were the best they had been in two years); NSR
Comments 3, May 8, 2019, Oversight Hearing on Demurrage &
Accessorial Charges, EP 754 (describing measures taken to improve
on-time delivery performance); CSXT Comments 3, May 8, 2019,
Oversight Hearing on Demurrage & Accessorial Charges, EP 754
(explaining that bunching issues had decreased with continued
improvements to operating performance and resulting transit times).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board will adopt the definition of original ETA discussed in
the SNPRM, which will require Class I carriers to generate ETAs
promptly following interchange or release of shipment to the invoicing
carrier based on the first movement of the invoicing carrier. SNPRM, EP
759, slip op. at 7. The Board declines to adopt the proposal to require
carriers to generate ETAs ``immediately'' following interchange or
release of shipment since the inclusion of the word ``promptly'' in the
definition is sufficient to ensure that there is not undue delay at
origin or interchange before ETAs are created for rail cars. The Board
also expects that it would not be in Class I carriers' interests, from
an efficiency standpoint, to hold rail cars at their yards without trip
plans.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ Because no commenter indicates that the original ETA would
differ depending on whether a rail car is loaded or empty, the Board
will make no such distinction in the final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interchange Date and Time. Many rail users also support a
requirement that Class I carriers provide the date and time that cars
are received at interchange, asserting that such information would be
useful in identifying upstream carrier-caused bunching.\36\ ILTA argues
that ``having the interchange information would allow rail users to
calculate transit time on an upstream carrier's line and allow impacted
users to credibly approach the upstream carrier to take responsibility
for delays it may have caused.'' (ILTA Comments 2, June 4, 2020.) Dow
asserts that it would use the date and time of interchange, along with
the original ETA, to ``identify circumstances that may warrant a deeper
inquiry into whether demurrage charges arise from carrier-caused
bunching and delays beyond Dow's reasonable control.'' (Dow Reply 3-4,
July 6, 2020.) NITL acknowledges that ``there can be multiple factors
causing car delays that result in demurrage'' and argues that
interchange information, along with original ETAs, ``would assist rail
customers and railroads in their investigations of invoiced charges.''
(NITL Reply 6, July 6, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ (See AFPM Comments 6, June 5, 2020; FRCA Comments 1, June
5, 2020; ISRI Comments 5, June 5, 2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA,
TCI, & TFI) 5, June 5, 2020; NACD Comments 4, June 5, 2020; NITL
Comments 4-5, June 5, 2020; PCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dow and joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) contend that
Class I carriers should provide the date and time for every
interchange. (Dow Comments 3, June 5, 2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA,
TCI, & TFI) 5, June 5, 2020.) ISRI and NITL state that information
about all interchanges would be helpful but ask that, at a minimum, the
Board require Class I carriers to provide information about the last
interchange with the invoicing carrier. (ISRI Comments 6, June 5, 2020;
NITL Comments 4, June 5, 2020.)
BNSF, CSXT, and NSR state that they provide rail users with the
date and time of interchange on their online platforms. (BNSF Comments
18, June 5, 2020; CSXT Comments 3, June 5, 2020; NSR Comments 8, June
5, 2020.) However, BNSF argues that an invoice requirement ``would be
counterproductive as it would create confusion over the relevance of
such data and potentially encourage unnecessary disputes over
appropriate demurrage charges.'' (BNSF Comments 16, 18, June 5, 2020.)
BNSF, UP, and NSR assert that they do not use interchange information
to calculate demurrage. (BNSF Comments 18, June 5, 2020; UP Comments 4,
June 5, 2020; NSR Reply 2-3, July 6, 2020.) Additionally, NSR argues
that this requirement, if adopted, should be limited to the last
interchange since it ``has no visibility into the operations of its
interchange partners, and does not have access to information regarding
any trip plan or ETA that may have been generated upstream by other
carriers.'' (NSR Comments 8, June 5, 2020.)
The Board will require Class I carriers to provide, on or with
demurrage invoices, the date and time they received rail cars at
interchange, if applicable. The Board finds that interchange
information may assist rail users in identifying where delays occurred
on joint-line movements, which would in turn allow rail users to know
when to adjust their own conduct to account for upstream transit
variabilities and conduct further inquiries when necessary. These
further inquiries may be especially important when demurrage disputes
involve concerns about upstream bunching. See Pol'y Statement, EP 757,
slip op. at 11-12. As with the original ETA, however, the Board
clarifies that the date and time of interchange does not establish
whether upstream bunching occurred and, instead, must be considered in
the context of other relevant facts and circumstances.
The Board will limit this requirement to the last interchange with
the invoicing carrier. In the SNPRM, the Board stated that Class I
carriers would likely have access to the date and time of interchange
because this information is used in the ordinary course of business to
track car movement and place cars. SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 7.
According to NSR, Class I carriers do not have access to information
about upstream interchanges with other carriers in the ordinary course
of business; accordingly, the Board will limit this requirement to the
information that Class I carriers can provide without the potential
burden of having to consult with other carriers.
Reasonable Request Proposal. Rail users and rail carriers that
commented on the Board's alternative proposal to require carriers to
provide original ETA and date and time of interchange only upon
reasonable request oppose the proposal. Several rail users argue that a
reasonable request provision would be burdensome and cause unnecessary
delays in collecting information.\37\ CSXT and UP also contend that a
reasonable request provision is unnecessary because rail users can
access the original ETA and date and time of interchange on demand
through their online platforms. (CSXT Comments 3, June 5, 2020; UP
Comments 5, June 5, 2020.) The Board will not include a reasonable
request provision in the final rule because the comments offer no
indication that it would benefit rail users or Class I carriers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ (See Dow Comments 5, June 5, 2020; AFPM Comments 6, June 5,
2020; ISRI Comments 6-7, June 5, 2020; NGFA Comments 6, June 5,
2020; NITL Comments 5, June 5, 2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI,
& TFI) 7, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Ordered-In Date and Time
Rail users identified the date and time that cars are ordered into
a rail user's facility as information that would help them validate
invoices more efficiently. In response, the Board invited comment in
the SNPRM on a modification to proposed section 1333.4 that would
require Class I carriers to provide the ordered-in date and time on or
with demurrage invoices. SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 8-9.
Rail users replied that access to the ordered-in date and time
would allow them to verify demurrage invoices more efficiently by
comparing carriers' information to their own records and determining
the basis for carriers' demurrage assessments, understand how their own
actions impacted the demurrage charges, and calculate credits, if
applicable.\38\ Dow also
[[Page 17744]]
emphasizes that this information is a ``crucial demurrage metric
because demurrage stops accruing at that time'' and reiterates that
including this information is consistent with the Board's proposal to
require the date and time of constructive placement, at which the
accrual of demurrage starts. (Dow Comments 5, June 5, 2020.) Joint
commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) support this requirement but argue
that carriers should be required to provide ``the actual date and time
the carrier receives the order to place the cars at the receiving
facility'' since at least one carrier ``appears to purposefully record
a different ordered-in date and time in its system.'' (Joint Comments
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ (See ILTA Comments 3-4, June 4, 2020; IWLA Comments 2, June
5, 2020; NACD Comments 4, June 5, 2020; Dow Comments 5, June 5,
2020; ISRI Comments 7, June 5, 2020; NITL Comments 5-6, June 5,
2020; AFPM Comments 7-8, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response, CP argues that the Board should not require carriers
to provide the date and time the rail user places the order in all
circumstances because this information would not always impact the
demurrage calculation and could cause administrative confusion. (CP
Reply 4-5, July 6, 2020.) For example, CP explains that it allows rail
users that operate closed-gate facilities to order in cars while the
cars are en route, for which CP records the date that the cars arrive
at the serving yard and are available for placement. (Id. at 3.) In
this scenario, CP states that the order for placement upon arrival
keeps the demurrage clock from starting. (Id. at 3-4.) Furthermore, CP
states that it allows certain rail users to order in cars for the
current day and up to three days in the future and, in these
circumstances, records the date selected for car placement because this
date stops the accrual of demurrage. (Id. at 4.) Likewise, NSR states
that it provides rail users with the ``effective order date'' on
invoices, which is the date ``selected by the customer from their
service schedule'' and ``represents the date the railcar is to be
delivered.'' (NSR Comments 8, June 5, 2020.) NSR states that the
ordered-in date and time that a rail user enters online is not used for
demurrage purposes but is provided in an order confirmation email.
(Id.)
CN states that it already provides rail users with the ordered-in
date and time but objects to the inclusion of this requirement because
rail users would already have this information in their own records.
(CN Comments 11, June 5, 2020.) CN also argues that the disputes the
Board references in the SNPRM \39\ would not be resolved by access to
ordered-in date and time information. (Id.) CSXT, UP, and BNSF also
indicate that, if applicable, they provide the ordered-in date and time
on their invoices or online platforms. (CSXT Comments 3, June 5, 2020;
UP Comments, V.S. Prauner 2, June 5, 2020; BNSF Comments 2-3, June 5,
2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ See SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9 (providing examples of
comments and testimony received in Oversight Hearing on Demurrage &
Accessorial Charges, Docket No. 754, describing issues with
demurrage accruing on rail cars that had been ordered into a
facility).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The comments received in response to the SNPRM do not change the
Board's view that the ordered-in date and time, which is essential to
the calculation of demurrage at closed-gate facilities, would be
valuable on or with demurrage invoices for both demurrage accrual and
verification purposes. See SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 8. Although, as
CN points out, rail users may record the ordered-in date and time
themselves, the Board finds that documentation of the ordered-in date
and time, which would stop the accrual of demurrage, would be very
useful when viewed along with the other information on demurrage
invoices, including the event that starts demurrage accrual and the
resulting credits and charges, as applicable. Additionally, as rail
users explain, having access to the ordered-in date and time recorded
by Class I carriers may help rail users identify discrepancies between
the carrier's records and the rail user's records. CN argues that the
issues stakeholders raised in comments and testimony in Oversight
Hearing on Demurrage & Accessorial Charges, Docket No. EP 754, which
the Board referenced in the SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9, would not be
resolved through the ordered-in date and time, but the Board did not
state that the ordered-in date and time would be dispositive in these
or any other specific disputes. Rather, as the Board stated in the
SNPRM, the ordered-in date and time requirement is intended to give
rail users easier access to information for their own verification
purposes. Id. Furthermore, the comments from six Class I carriers
stating that they currently provide rail users with the ordered-in date
and time confirm that providing this information would not be overly
burdensome for Class I carriers.
Since Class I carriers' comments demonstrate that the date and time
the carrier receives the order from the rail user to place the cars is
not used to calculate demurrage in all circumstances, the Board will
not define the ordered-in date and time requirement as narrowly as
joint commenters request. (See Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 7,
June 5, 2020.) Rather, the ordered-in date and time will mean the date
and time at which demurrage first stops accruing with respect to a
closed-gate facility. Depending on the carrier's individual system,
this may be the date and time the carrier receives the order to place
cars from the rail user, the date selected by the rail user for car
placement, or another similar metric.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ As CP indicates, there are scenarios when an ordered-in
date and time does not have a bearing on demurrage. For example,
when a rail user orders in a car when the car is still en route to
CP's serving yard, CP states that it records the ordered-in date and
time based on when the car arrives in the serving yard rather than
when the rail user places the order. (CP Reply 3, July 6, 2020.)
Because CP indicates that the demurrage clock would not start in
such a scenario, the Board would not expect such instances to result
in a demurrage charge.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Other Information Requirements Proposed by Rail Users
In addition to the proposals discussed above, rail users identify
an array of other information that they contend would be useful on
demurrage invoices.\41\ In response, CSXT states its general opposition
to the additional items. (CSXT Reply 2, Dec. 6, 2019.) Moreover, CSXT,
NSR, and UP argue that online platforms are the best way to provide an
array of information. (See CSXT Reply 4, Dec. 6, 2019 (stating that
CSXT already provides almost all of the requested information ``through
one of its various platforms''); NSR Reply 1, Dec. 6, 2019 (stating
that NSR provides most of the requested information online); UP Reply
3, Dec. 6, 2019 (arguing that an online platform can meet rail users'
needs in a ``customized, tailored way'').)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ This information includes: Dwell time, (ACC Comments 2,
Nov. 6, 2019; AFPM Comments 6-7, Nov. 6, 2019); railroad service
events or, alternatively, those events that result in the issuance
of credits, (AFPM Comments 7, Nov. 6, 2019; ISRI Comments 10, Nov.
6, 2019); car inventory at open gate facilities, (ISRI Comments 10,
Nov. 6, 2019); destination station, state of shipment, and
information to confirm that a carrier has not issued overlapping
charges, (AFPM Comments 6-7, Nov. 6, 2019); date and time of
notification to the rail user if different than constructive
placement, car type and ownership, the standard transportation
commodity code of the commodity shipped, payment information, and
station of constructive placement, (CPC Comments 4-5, Nov. 6, 2019);
location, date, and time a train is ``laid down,'' sequence number,
monthly summary listing all demurrage charges, and reasons for the
charges, (WCTL & SEC Comments 11-12, Nov. 6, 2019); date and time
that a car order is placed with the carrier, information about
whether cars were spotted or pulled within the relevant service
window, and any missed switch dates and scheduled non-switch dates,
(NGFA Comments 5-6, June 5, 2020); the time the waybill was created,
``[r]ailcar origin railroad pick-up date/time,'' and original
estimated transit time of each railcar, (ILTA Comments 3-4, June 5,
2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board declines to incorporate additional items beyond those
discussed in the NPRM and SNPRM into the final
[[Page 17745]]
rule at this time. The Board's minimum information requirements are not
intended to encompass every piece of information that may be useful to
rail users or that may bear on demurrage. Rather, the minimum
information adopted in the final rule represents what the Board has
determined will have the greatest impact on rail users' ability to
validate demurrage charges, properly allocate demurrage responsibility,
and modify their behavior if their own actions led to the demurrage
charges. Many of the other items suggested by rail users would provide
additional detail about the movement of rail cars but are not as
central to an initial assessment of demurrage charges as the minimum
information requirements adopted here. Moreover, in adjudicated cases,
parties may seek discovery to gain further information about the causes
of delays and demurrage. Several Class I carriers indicate that they
provide, in some format, much of the information rail users identified
in their comments, and the Board encourages them to continue to do so.
Alternative Visibility Platforms
In the NPRM, the Board invited comments on the adequacy of other
billing or supply chain visibility tools or platforms (other than
invoices or accompanying documentation) to provide rail users with
access to the proposed minimum information. NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9
n.13. In response, Class I carriers state that their existing online
platforms provide rail users with most (or, in some cases, all) of the
information that the Board proposes.\42\ UP asserts that its online
platform benefits rail users by allowing them to create custom reports
with information unique to their needs. (UP Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019.)
CP indicates that its online platform provides rail users with access
to current information as shipments move across the rail network, as
well as the ability to log concerns in real time, which obviates the
need ``to review historical information to identify improper demurrage
charges due to railroad-caused bunching.'' (CP Comments 3, June 5,
2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ (See KCS Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019; CSXT Comments 10, Nov.
6, 2019; UP Comments 2, Nov. 6, 2019; CP Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019;
CN Comments 4, Nov. 6, 2019; BNSF Comments 2-3, June 5, 2020; NSR
Reply 1, Dec. 6, 2019.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class I carriers ask that, if the Board adopts minimum information
requirements, the Board allow them to provide the information on their
online platforms, instead of on or with invoices.\43\ CSXT argues that
the demurrage information currently on its online platform is ``easily
accessible'' and contends that if the Board were to require carriers to
provide all of the required information on the invoice itself or
determine that ``software platforms are acceptable only if all
information is made available or downloadable in one central
location,'' it would have to undertake a substantial and costly
software redesign. (CSXT Comments 6, June 5, 2020.) UP also argues that
invoices with all of the minimum information the Board proposes would
not be useful to rail users since ``[a] combination of too many fields
and fields that are irrelevant to most customers will make invoices
cluttered and unreadable.'' (UP Comments 5, June 5, 2020.) Likewise,
CSXT objects to a rule that would require it to compile the information
into one invoice document because its physical invoice ``is already
challenged in terms of available physical space'' and ``[i]t would be
difficult to add additional categories without rendering the invoice
unreadable.'' (CSXT Comments 8 & n.17, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\43\ (CN Comments 7, June 5, 2020; CP Comments 6, June 5, 2020;
CSXT Comments 2, June 5, 2020; NSR Comments 2, June 5, 2020; BNSF
Comments 19, June 5, 2020; UP Comments 7, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Conversely, several rail users describe carriers' current online
platforms as impractical and cumbersome. (WCTL & SEC Comments 10, Nov.
6, 2019; Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TFI, & NITL) 2, Dec. 6, 2019; Dow Reply
3, Dec. 6, 2019; ISRI Reply 2, July 6, 2020.) Joint commenters (ACC,
CRA, TFI, and NITL) explain that locating information is a ``multistep
process'' in which ``[a] customer cannot simply enter a demurrage
invoice number and download a report of all of the car-event data for
each car on the invoice'' but rather must access information for each
car separately and often in multiple locations on the carrier's online
platform. (Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TFI, & NITL) 3, Dec. 6, 2019.) Dow
specifically describes online portals belonging to four Class I
carriers as cumbersome and identifies obstacles rail users may face in
auditing demurrage invoices on these platforms, such as needing to
search for certain information on a car-by-car basis, manually enter
car marks, and navigate through multiple pages on the portal to access
demurrage data. (Dow Reply 3-6, Dec. 6, 2019.) Likewise, PCA argues
that since carriers are ``far from consistent in the level of
information provided, the ease of access of that information, and the
transparency of their demurrage procedures,'' rail users are often
forced to ``cobble together'' the information on carriers' online
platforms. (PCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020.) Nonetheless, certain rail
users state that they do not object to Class I carriers providing the
minimum information on their online platforms if they provide it in a
format that rail users can download into a single, machine-readable
file. (Dow Reply 8, July 6, 2020; ISRI Reply 2, 5, July 6, 2020.)
The record belies Class I carriers' claims that their current
online platforms are more useful to rail users than invoices with
minimum invoicing requirements. Rail users state they must, in many
cases, search for, organize, and consolidate the information themselves
from multiple locations on Class I carriers' online platforms. The
final rule will ensure that rail users need not make unreasonable
efforts to access basic information necessary to efficiently review and
validate their demurrage invoices. In addition, Class I carriers will
have flexibility to provide the minimum information either on the
invoices or with the invoices as accompanying documentation.
Furthermore, since demurrage issues may not be apparent until rail cars
are delivered and demurrage is charged, the Board is unconvinced by
CP's argument that allowing rail users to submit concerns on an online
portal while shipments are in transit eliminates the need to review
information on or with demurrage invoices.
Accordingly, the Board determines that Class I carriers must
provide the minimum information described in section 1333.4 on
demurrage invoices or with demurrage invoices as accompanying
documentation. Class I carriers may provide the invoices as paper
invoices, invoices attached to emails, invoices that are accessible on
their online platforms, or other similar formats where the information
is consolidated.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\44\ The Board also clarifies that the final rule in this
proceeding is a default rule, and Class I carriers and rail users
may enter into separate agreements about how to convey and receive
demurrage information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Machine-Readable Data
In response to the NPRM, many rail user commenters voiced a
preference for ``machine-readable'' data containing the minimum
information. See SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9-10 (describing comments
received in response to the NPRM related to machine-readable data). The
Board, therefore, invited additional comment on matters associated with
modifying its regulations to require Class I carriers to provide rail
users access to machine-
[[Page 17746]]
readable data in a format to be chosen by the individual Class I
carrier, such as a machine-readable invoice, a separate electronic file
containing machine-readable data, or a customized link so rail users
could directly download data in a machine-readable format. Id. at 10.
The Board also invited comment on ways to prevent information
inaccessibility for rail users without resources for coding or new
upfront costs, and on any other issues pertaining to the accessibility
of machine-readable data for small rail users. Id. Finally, the Board
invited comment on how to define ``machine-readable,'' including the
following definition proposed by commenters: ``A structured data file
format that is open and capable of being easily processed by a
computer. A format is open if it is not limited to a specific software
platform and not subject to restrictions on re-use.'' Id.
In response to the SNPRM, rail users broadly support a requirement
for machine-readable data, arguing that it will allow rail users to
analyze demurrage invoices more efficiently and effectively by reducing
the need for manual review, which is resource-intensive and
imprecise.\45\ Moreover, AFPM states that it supports the flexible
compliance options identified by the Board, while other rail users
request specific formatting requirements. (AFPM Comments 8, June 5,
2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 9, June 5, 2020 (requesting
machine-readable invoices by email as attachments or direct links);
NGFA Comments 7, June 5, 2020 (requesting customized links to machine-
readable data); NITL Reply 7, July 6, 2020 (requesting machine-readable
data in a ``single centralized location'').) In addition to machine-
readable data, NGFA contends that rail users should be able to request
paper or PDF invoices, (NGFA Comments 6, June 5, 2020), and NACD argues
that invoices should ``continue to be available in standard format''
since small rail users would find analyzing machine-readable data
difficult and costly, (NACD Comments 4-5, June 5, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\45\ (See ILTA Comments 1, 3, June 4, 2020; AFPM Comments 8,
June 5, 2020; Dow Comments 5-6, June 5, 2020; IWLA Comments 2-3,
June 5, 2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 8, June 5, 2020;
Lansdale Comments 1, June 5, 2020; NGFA Comments 6, June 5, 2020;
NITL Comments 6, June 5, 2020; PCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020.) See
also SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9-10 (describing comments received
in response to the NPRM related to machine-readable data).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
BNSF, NSR, CP, CN, and UP state that they already provide rail
users with some form of machine-readable data.\46\ NSR states that it
supports the use of machine-readable data but urges the Board not to
make a requirement ``so prescriptive that it would stifle carrier and
technological innovation on carriers' online platforms.'' (NSR Comments
2, 6, June 5, 2020.) CSXT states that it does not oppose providing
machine-readable data on its online platform as long as ``the Board
does not mandate any particular format or require that the information
be provided in one place only or in a single data file.'' (CSXT
Comments 6, June 5, 2020.) UP also asks the Board to specify that
carriers can meet the machine-readable data requirement by making data
available to rail users via their online platforms. (UP Comments 5-6,
June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ BNSF states that rail users can sign up for emailed reports
in Excel format and export reports in comma-separated values (CSV),
Excel, and PDF formats from its online platform. (BNSF Comments 5,
June 5, 2020.) NSR states that rail users can download spreadsheets,
including Excel and CSV files, with detailed supporting information
for the demurrage charges reflected on invoices. (NSR Comments 3,
June 5, 2020.) CP indicates that it makes ``a substantial amount''
of the information identified by the Board available in a
spreadsheet. (CP Comments 4-5, June 5, 2020.) CN states that it
currently provides machine-readable data ``on request to certain
customers'' and is working to provide downloadable machine-readable
data to all customers. (CN Comments 12, June 5, 2020.) According to
UP, invoices can be downloaded as CSV files on its online platform
with additional supporting information downloadable in Excel format.
(UP Comments 5, June 5, 2020.) Additionally, CSXT currently provides
access to some downloadable machine-readable data, according to one
rail user's comments. (See Dow Reply 6, Dec. 6, 2019.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regarding the definition of ``machine-readable,'' joint commenters
(ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) and NITL support the definition proposed by
some commenters in response to the NPRM: \47\ ``a structured data file
format that is open and capable of being easily processed by a
computer. A format is open if it is not limited to a specific software
platform and not subject to restrictions on re-use.'' (Joint Comments
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 8, June 5, 2020; NITL Comments 6, June 5, 2020.)
Joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TCI, and TFI) contend that this definition
would obviate the need for special coding and, therefore, ensure that
small rail users can access machine-readable data. (Joint Comments
(ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 8, June 5, 2020.) NGFA agrees with this
definition but would add the condition that a format is open if it
``can be read and interpreted automatically by a computer program
without the need for manual intervention.'' (NGFA Comments 6-7, June 5,
2020.) In response to the SNPRM, Dow proposes an alternative
definition, suggesting that the Board adopt a definition similar to the
one used for the Federal Information Policy \48\ and define machine-
readable as ``an open format that can be easily processed by computer
without human intervention while ensuring no semantic meaning is
lost.'' (Dow Comments 6, June 5, 2020.) UP argues that the Board should
specify that CSV and Excel files meet the definition of machine-
readable data. (UP Comments 5-6, June 5, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\47\ See SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 9 (referring to proposal by
joint commenters (ACC, CRA, TFI, and NITL) and Dow).
\48\ See 44 U.S.C. 3502(18).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Rail users convincingly argue that machine-readable data will
facilitate efficient auditing by allowing them to validate invoices
electronically, thereby reducing the time and resources they must
dedicate to manual review. Furthermore, Class I carriers appear to
recognize the benefits of machine-readable data, as most provide some
machine-readable data now or plan to do so in the future. Accordingly,
the Board will adopt a machine-readable data requirement to ensure that
all rail users have the option to access machine-readable data
containing the minimum information discussed above. As proposed in the
SNPRM, the Board will give Class I carriers the discretion to determine
how to provide rail users with access to machine-readable data, such
as, for example, through a machine-readable invoice, a separate
electronic file, a customized link, or another similar option. SNPRM,
EP 759, slip op. at 10.
The Board will adopt a definition for machine-readable data that is
``data in an open format that can be easily processed by computer
without human intervention while ensuring no semantic meaning is
lost.'' This definition, which is similar to the definition referenced
in the SNPRM, is also consistent with the definition adopted for the
Federal Information Policy at 44 U.S.C. 3502(18). However, unlike the
Federal Information Policy definition, the Board's definition specifies
that the data must be provided in an ``open format,'' to be defined as
``a format that is not limited to a specific software program and not
subject to restrictions on re-use'' so that Class I carriers may choose
the program with which to provide machine-readable data in an open
format (e.g., CSV). The open format will also ensure that rail users
will not need access to specific software programs to process the data.
Moreover, to accommodate those small rail users that state that they
would find machine-readable data difficult to manage, the requirement
for Class I carriers to provide machine-readable data to rail users
will be in addition to, not in lieu
[[Page 17747]]
of, the requirement to provide the minimum information on or with their
standard invoices, as discussed above.\49\ The text is set forth in new
section 1333.5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\49\ As discussed above, Class I carriers and rail users may
enter into separate agreements to convey and receive only machine-
readable data without the standard invoice option.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Appropriate Action To Ensure Demurrage Charges Are Accurate and
Warranted
In the NPRM, the Board proposed to require Class I carriers to
``take appropriate action to ensure that the demurrage charges are
accurate and warranted'' prior to sending demurrage invoices. NPRM, EP
759, slip op. at 10. In response to commenters' concerns that this
provision would create more uncertainty and potential litigation over
its meaning, the Board invited further comment in the SNPRM from Class
I carriers about the actions they currently take, and from all
stakeholders about the actions Class I carriers reasonably should be
required to take, to ensure that demurrage invoices are accurate and
warranted. SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10-11.
In response to the SNPRM, rail users propose a variety of actions
that they argue Class I carriers should be required to take to ensure
invoice accuracy, such as establishing auditing procedures,\50\ showing
how charges are calculated; \51\ providing supporting
documentation,\52\ offering concise explanations for the charges,\53\
certifying practices to the Board,\54\ consulting with rail users,\55\
and ensuring the accuracy of crew reporting.\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\50\ (See ILTA Comments 3, June 4, 2020; ISRI Comments 10, June
5, 2020; NITL Comments 7, June 5, 2020; Dow Comments 7, June 5,
2020; Joint Comments (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 9, June 5, 2020.)
\51\ (See Dow Comments 7, June 5, 2020; Joint Comments (ACC,
CRA, TCI, & TFI) 9, June 5, 2020.)
\52\ (See AFPM Comments 9, June 5, 2020; IWLA Comments 3, June
5, 2020; ILTA Comments 3, June 4, 2020; NGFA Comments 8, June 5,
2020; NITL Reply 3, July 6, 2020.)
\53\ (See AFPM Comments 9-10, June 5, 2020; NACD Comments 5,
June 5, 2020; NGFA Comments 8, June 5, 2020.)
\54\ (See FRCA Comments 2, June 5, 2020 (arguing that the Board
should require carriers to ``certify that their rules and practices
comply with the Board's standards''); NGFA Comments 8, June 5, 2020
(asserting that carriers should be required to ``inform the Board in
writing of the specific steps each one takes to ensure the accuracy
of its respective demurrage invoices, with the [Board] subsequently
making such carrier statements publicly available on its
website'').)
\55\ (See NGFA Comments 3, June 5, 2020 (arguing that prior to
issuing invoices, carriers should ``notify and consult with the
affected rail customer to validate the accuracy and legitimacy of
the charge'').)
\56\ (Joint Reply (ACC, CRA, TCI, & TFI) 17, July 6, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Class I carriers continue to oppose the appropriate-action proposal
as unnecessary and overly restrictive. CN argues that the Board should
not mandate any minimum level of appropriate action since carriers
``should have flexibility to exercise judgment to pursue an approach
that works for [their] particular circumstances, including whether to
reasonably rely on technological innovations to enhance accuracy or to
enlist more manual review.'' (CN Comments 13, June 5, 2020.) CSXT
contends that the proposed requirement ``places carriers in an
untenable situation, as they may either fall short of a vague standard
of `appropriateness' or be unable to utilize the prescribed solutions
that the Board mandates to ensure accuracy.'' (CSXT Comments 9, June 5,
2020.) UP contends that an appropriate-action requirement is
unnecessary since it already has ``achieved a 95% accuracy rate.'' (UP
Comments 7, June 5, 2020.) Additionally, BNSF, CN, NSR, and UP detail
the actions they currently take to ensure invoice accuracy. (BNSF
Comments 14-15, June 5, 2020; CN Comments 12-13, June 5, 2020; NSR
Comments 9-10, June 5, 2020; UP Comments 6, June 5, 2020.)
Upon considering the comments on this issue, the Board is persuaded
that the proposed appropriate-action requirement should not be adopted
in the final rule. Class I carriers convincingly argue that the
proposed requirement lacks sufficient detail. Because there are many
different reasonable ways to facilitate invoice accuracy, and because
deciding whether a particular method is reasonable may depend on a
carrier's individual systems and procedures for auditing invoices and
potential future advancements in technology, the Board also declines to
adopt the specific requirements proposed by rail users.
For these reasons, the final rule adopted in this decision will not
include the proposed appropriate-action requirement. Nevertheless,
existing requirements, including those at 49 U.S.C. 10702 and 10746,
continue to apply to carriers' demurrage invoicing practices. As the
Board has made clear previously, it expects that all carriers will take
reasonable actions to ensure the accuracy of their invoicing processes
and that their demurrage charges are warranted. See Pol'y Statement, EP
757, slip op. at 15-16 (emphasizing that the Board expects rail
carriers to ``bill for demurrage only when the charges are accurate and
warranted, consistent with the purpose of demurrage,'' and that rail
users should be able to review and dispute charges without incurring
undue expense). That being so, the Board strongly encourages carriers
to adopt rail users' suggested actions where warranted and practicable,
such as conducting regular audits, consulting with rail users when
necessary, and providing additional information upon reasonable
request. Class I carriers' invoicing protocols and procedures should be
considered, in the context of all other relevant facts and
circumstances, when determining whether demurrage charges are
reasonable and enforceable in individual cases.
Other Requests for Board Action
Rail users make a variety of other requests, including asking the
Board to set a timeframe for Class I carriers to issue invoices,
establish dispute resolution procedures, impose penalties for
noncompliance with the rule, and apply the rule to accessorial charges.
In addition, UP asks that the Board establish a separate process by
which Class I carriers can obtain waivers from the final rule. The
Board will discuss each of these requests below.
1. Time Limits for Invoice Issuance, Dispute Resolution Procedures, and
Penalties
Several rail users ask the Board to set time limits for invoice
issuance, (see NCTA Comments 3-4, Nov. 6, 2019; FRCA Comments 5, Nov.
6, 2019), take further action with respect to dispute resolution,\57\
and impose penalties for carriers that issue demurrage invoices that do
not comply with the rule, (see FRCA Comments 5-6, Nov. 6, 2019; FRCA
Comments 2, June 5, 2020). No Class I carrier responds directly to
these requests.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\57\ (See IWLA Comments 2, Nov. 4, 2019; ILTA Comments 3, Nov.
6, 2019; IARW Comments 2, Nov. 6, 2019; NITL Comments 9-10, Nov. 6,
2019; WCTL & SEC Comments 9, Nov. 6, 2019; NAFCA Reply 2, Dec. 6,
2019; NGFA Reply 15, July 6, 2020.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board will not pursue these requests at this time. The Board
notes that, by separate decision, it provided guidance on the general
principles it expects to consider when evaluating the reasonableness of
carriers' invoicing timeframes in future cases and discussed requests
to establish additional dispute resolution procedures.\58\ See Pol'y
Statement, EP 757, slip op. at 16 n.50, 17. With respect to the issue
of penalties, the Board
[[Page 17748]]
expects that Class I carriers will make a concerted effort to comply
with the requirements of the rule and finds that it is premature to
address specific penalties for non-compliance at this time.\59\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\58\ Parties currently have access to mediation, arbitration,
and assistance through the Board's Rail Customer and Public
Assistance program, which can be reached by telephone at 202-245-
0238 or email at [email protected], to resolve demurrage disputes.
\59\ Violating a regulation or order of the Board could subject
a carrier to appropriate remedial action. See, e.g., 49 U.S.C.
11701, 11704, 11901.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Accessorial Charges
NAFCA, AM, and NGFA ask the Board to apply the minimum information
requirements to accessorial charges. (NAFCA Comments 2, Nov. 6, 2019;
AM Comments 7, Nov. 6, 2019; NGFA Comments 2, June 5, 2020.) Class I
carriers did not comment on this issue.
The Board declines to extend the final rule to accessorial charges
at this time. There are many kinds of accessorial charges and some,
such as those imposed for weighing rail cars or requests for special
trains, do not serve the same efficiency-enhancing purpose as
demurrage. In their comments, rail users do not identify any specific
accessorial charges to which the minimum information requirements
should apply, or otherwise justify the extension of the final rule to
accessorial charges generally. The Board encourages Class I carriers to
provide the minimum information for those accessorial charges designed
to enhance the efficient use of rail assets to the extent practicable.
Should sufficient evidence be presented in the future that invoicing
issues are arising with respect to specific accessorial charges, the
Board can revisit this issue and propose any warranted modifications to
the rule.
3. Waivers
UP requests that, if the Board adopts minimum information
requirements, then it also establish a process whereby carriers could
obtain waivers from the rule by ``attesting that either all of the
required information is provided to customers or explain why a
particular data set is not provided or unavailable.'' (UP Comments 7,
June 5, 2020.) UP asserts that this process would need to take place
prior to the final rule's effective date so that carriers know whether
they need to reprogram their systems. (Id.)
NGFA objects to this suggestion, arguing that UP's waiver idea is
impractical since it would require extensive Board monitoring to ensure
that carriers' online platforms do not become noncompliant after
waivers had been granted. (NGFA Reply 14-15, July 6, 2020.)
The Board declines to adopt UP's proposal. Pursuant to 49 CFR
1110.9, ``[a]ny person may petition the Board for a permanent or
temporary waiver of any rule,'' and UP fails to explain why the Board's
established waiver process is not sufficient to address its concerns.
Furthermore, absent unique circumstances, the Board does not anticipate
that the waiver process would be used to allow Class I carriers to
provide the minimum information by means other than on or with an
invoice as described above.
Time Frame for Compliance
Several Class I carriers request specific amounts of time to comply
with the final rule. NSR asks for a minimum of three months to complete
its reprogramming, and KCS requests at least six months. (NSR Comments
1, Nov. 6, 2019; KCS Comments 6-7, Nov. 6, 2019.) CSXT contends that if
it is required to implement a software redesign ``sooner than nine
months from the Board's decision,'' it will need to delay or
reprioritize current projects. (CSXT Comments 7-8, June 5, 2020.) CP
likewise states that it could comply within six months but requests at
least one year to ``minimize disruption to existing projects and allow
CP to prioritize its use of its resources appropriately.'' (CP Comments
6, June 5, 2020.)
The Board will allow Class I carriers until October 6, 2021, to
provide the minimum information on or with demurrage invoices and
comply with the machine-readable data requirement, as this timeframe
allows Class I carriers a significant amount of time for reprogramming
while also ensuring that rail users can benefit from improved demurrage
invoicing practices without extended delay.
Exclusion of Class II and Class III Carriers
In the NPRM, the Board explained that it did not propose to require
Class II and Class III carriers to comply with the rule because the
demurrage issues raised by stakeholders before the Board predominantly
pertained to Class I carriers and compliance costs would be more
difficult for smaller carriers. NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10. The Board
invited comment on the proposed exclusion of Class II and Class III
carriers. Id.
Although some rail users recognize that demurrage issues most
frequently involve Class I carriers, (see AFPM Comments 8, Nov. 6,
2019; ISRI Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019), several express concerns about
excluding Class II and Class III carriers,\60\ particularly those with
larger, more sophisticated operations, (see FRCA Comments 5, Nov. 6,
2019; AFPM Comments 8, Nov. 6, 2019). ISRI urges the inclusion of Class
II and Class III carriers for uniformity across the industry, (see ISRI
Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019; ISRI Comments 10-11, June 5, 2020), and
others fear that Class I carriers will seek to evade the rule by
tasking Class II and Class III carriers with demurrage invoicing where
possible, (see NITL Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019; AF&PA Comments 10, Nov.
6, 2019). ILTA acknowledges that Class II and Class III carriers have
fewer resources to comply with the rule but argues that small carriers
should nonetheless be required to comply since small rail users must
pay demurrage charges. (ILTA Comments 4, June 4, 2020.) Some rail users
suggest that the Board should apply the rule to all carriers and grant
waivers on a case-by-case basis to accommodate the smallest carriers.
(NITL Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019; AF&PA Comments 10, Nov. 6, 2019; AM
Reply 5-6, Dec. 6, 2019.) Others suggest that the Board exclude some or
all Class III carriers from the rule, but not Class II carriers. (AFPM
Comments 8, Nov. 6, 2019 (exclude all Class III carriers, but not Class
II carriers); FRCA Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019 (require Class II carriers
and Class III carriers affiliated with large holding companies to
comply).) \61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\60\ (See FRCA Comments 5, Nov. 6, 2019; AFPM Comments 8, Nov.
6, 2019; Barilla Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019; CPC Comments 5, Nov. 6,
2019; IWLA Comments 3, June 5, 2020.)
\61\ As the Board stated in the decision adopting the direct-
billing final rule, Demurrage Billing Requirements, EP 759, slip op.
at 14 n.29 (STB served Apr. 30, 2020), it is unclear whether some
comments on this issue are intended to address exclusion of Class II
and III carriers from the minimum information requirements aspect of
the rule, the direct-billing aspect, or both. For completeness, all
potentially applicable comments are addressed both here and in the
decision adopting the direct-billing final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
ASLRRA supports the Board's proposal to exclude Class II and Class
III carriers. (ASLRRA Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019; ASLRRA Reply 4, July 6,
2020.) It asserts that more than half of small carriers operate as
handling line carriers and, as such, do not always receive all of the
information the Board would propose to include in the minimum
information requirements from connecting Class I carriers. (ASLRRA
Comments 3, Nov. 6, 2019.) ASLRRA further contends that rail users'
proposed additions ``would place an insurmountable burden on [small
rail carriers].'' (ASLRRA Reply 4, Dec. 6, 2019.) ASLRRA argues that
the suggestion that small carriers could file
[[Page 17749]]
for individual waivers is unworkable since the waiver process would be
too expensive and time-consuming for small carriers with limited
resources. (Id. at 7.) ASLRRA also dismisses rail users' concerns that
Class I carriers would assign demurrage invoicing to small carriers to
avoid the rule, arguing that Class I carriers will not ``want to cede
the control of their operations or practices to others or the
compensation they receive for the misuse of their rail assets.'' (Id.
at 8.)
Nothing in this record undercuts the Board's initial view that the
demurrage issues raised by stakeholders in Oversight Hearing on
Demurrage & Accessorial Charges, Docket No. EP 754, predominantly
pertain to Class I carriers. See NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 10, 11. Nor
do the comments provide a basis for concluding that Class I carriers
will seek to avoid the rule by assigning their demurrage invoicing to
small carriers.\62\ The case-by-case waiver approach for Class II and
III carriers suggested by some rail users could be impractical and
unduly burdensome for small carriers (and may be problematic for some
Class II carriers, where there is a range of capabilities). For these
reasons, the Board will not adopt the proposals to make Class II
carriers, and, under some proposals, certain Class III carriers,
subject to the rule. The Board does, however, strongly encourage Class
II and Class III carriers to comply with the rule to the extent they
are able to do so.\63\
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\62\ Should sufficient evidence be presented in the future that
Class I carriers are attempting to avoid the rule by assigning their
demurrage claims processing to small connecting carriers, the Board
can revisit this issue and propose any warranted modifications to
the rule.
\63\ Additionally, KCS requests that the Board exclude it from
the minimum information requirements, along with Class II and Class
III carriers. (KCS Comments 6, Nov. 6, 2019.) The Board declines to
do so since KCS has not demonstrated that the demurrage issues
raised by stakeholders in this proceeding and Docket No. EP 754 do
not pertain to its demurrage practices. Moreover, the Board does not
have the same concerns regarding the compliance costs for Class I
carriers, including KCS, as it does for Class II and Class III
carriers.
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Conclusion
Consistent with this decision, the Board adopts a final rule that
requires Class I carriers to include certain minimum information on or
with demurrage invoices and provide machine-readable access to the
minimum information. The final rule is set out in full below and will
be codified in the Code of Federal Regulations.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601-612,
generally requires a description and analysis of new rules that would
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. In drafting a rule, an agency is required to: (1) Assess the
effect that its regulation will have on small entities, (2) analyze
effective alternatives that may minimize a regulation's impact, and (3)
make the analysis available for public comment. Sections 601-604. In
its final rule, the agency must either include a final regulatory
flexibility analysis, section 604(a), or certify that the proposed rule
would not have a ``significant impact on a substantial number of small
entities,'' section 605(b). Because the goal of the RFA is to reduce
the cost to small entities of complying with federal regulations, the
RFA requires an agency to perform a regulatory flexibility analysis of
small entity impacts only when a rule directly regulates those
entities. In other words, the impact must be a direct impact on small
entities ``whose conduct is circumscribed or mandated'' by the proposed
rule. White Eagle Coop. v. Conner, 553 F.3d 467, 480 (7th Cir. 2009).
As discussed above, the final rule will apply only to Class I
carriers. Accordingly, the Board again certifies under 5 U.S.C. 605(b)
that this rule would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities as defined by the RFA.\64\ A copy
of this decision will be served upon the Chief Counsel for Advocacy,
Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration, Washington, DC
20416.
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\64\ For the purpose of RFA analysis, the Board defines a
``small business'' as only including those rail carriers classified
as Class III carriers under 49 CFR 1201.1-1. See Small Entity Size
Standards Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, EP 719 (STB served
June 30, 2016) (with Board Member Begeman dissenting). Class III
carriers have annual operating revenues of $20 million or less in
1991 dollars ($40,384,263 or less when adjusted for inflation using
2019 data). Class II carriers have annual operating revenues of less
than $250 million in 1991 dollars ($504,803,294 when adjusted for
inflation using 2019 data). The Board calculates the revenue
deflator factor annually and publishes the railroad revenue
thresholds on its website. 49 CFR 1201.1-1; Indexing the Annual
Operating Revenues of R.Rs., EP 748 (STB served June 10, 2020).
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Paperwork Reduction Act
In this proceeding, the Board is modifying an existing collection
of information that is currently approved by the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under OMB Control No. 2140-0021. In the NPRM, the
Board sought comments pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), 44
U.S.C. 3501-3521, and OMB regulations at 5 CFR 1320.11, regarding: (1)
Whether the collection of information, as modified, is necessary for
the proper performance of the functions of the Board, including whether
the collection has practical utility; (2) the accuracy of the Board's
burden estimates; (3) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity
of the information collected; and (4) ways to minimize the burden of
the collection of information on the respondents, including the use of
automated collection techniques or other forms of information
technology, when appropriate.
The Board estimated in the NPRM that the proposed requirements for
minimum information to be included on or with Class I carriers'
demurrage invoices would add a total one-time hourly burden of 280
hours (93.3 hours per year as amortized over three years or 40 hours
per respondent \65\) because, in most cases, those carriers would
likely need to modify their information technology systems to implement
some or all of the proposed changes.\66\ NPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 13.
In response to comments received from CSXT and CN that this estimate
was understated, the Board increased the estimate in the SNPRM to 560
hours (186.6 hours per year as amortized over three years or 80 hours
per respondent), which included the time Class I carriers would need to
undertake the software redesign necessary to incorporate both the
proposed minimum information discussed in the NPRM and the proposed
additions discussed in the SNPRM.\67\ SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 14.
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\65\ There are seven Class I carrier respondents.
\66\ The Board also provided an hourly burden estimate for the
proposal that Class I carriers directly bill the shipper for
demurrage when the shipper and warehouseman agree to that
arrangement and so notify the rail carrier. NPRM, EP 759, slip op.
at 13. Comments pertaining to this hourly burden estimate were
addressed in a separate decision. See Demurrage Billing
Requirements, EP 759, slip op. at 16-17 (STB served Apr. 30, 2020).
\67\ In the NPRM, the Board estimated that the proposed
requirement that Class I carriers take appropriate action to ensure
that demurrage charges are accurate and warranted would add a total
one-time hourly burden of 560 hours (186.6 hours per year as
amortized over three years or 80 hours per respondent) because Class
I carriers would likely need to establish or modify appropriate
demurrage invoicing protocols and procedures. NPRM, EP 759, slip op.
at 13. In the SNPRM, the Board increased this estimate to 840 hours
(280 hours per year as amortized over three years or 120 hours per
respondent). SNPRM, EP 759, slip op. at 14. Because the final rule
adopted in this decision will not include the proposed appropriate-
action requirement, the Board's estimate of 840 hours (280 hours per
year as amortized over three years or 120 hours per respondent) to
establish or modify appropriate demurrage invoicing protocols and
procedures will not be included in the final estimate.
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[[Page 17750]]
In response to the SNPRM, CSXT filed comments addressing the
Board's PRA burden estimates. First, CSXT reiterates its estimate
offered in response to the NPRM that it will take nine months to
implement a program redesign to include the minimum information on or
with demurrage invoices. (CSXT Comments 6-7, June 5, 2020.) However,
CSXT indicates that ``its nine[-]month estimate is not limited to
actual programming time.'' (Id. at 8.) Instead, CSXT explains that its
estimate includes scheduling delays due to other priority software
development projects in its technology pipeline and programming time
for other unrelated software development projects. (Id.) Thus, CSXT's
nine-month estimate is not an actual estimate of the time that Class I
carriers need to comply with the rule. Without more support, CSXT does
not justify its nine-month estimate.\68\
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\68\ CSXT also asserts that it would need to ``engage an outside
vendor, adding even further cost and time'' to provide the minimum
information on demurrage invoices, (CSXT Comments 8, June 5, 2020),
but this argument lacks the specificity to support additional burden
hours or a non-hourly dollar amount for additional costs.
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Second, CSXT argues that the Board should include additional
burdens under two potential scenarios. First, if the Board requires
``that all demurrage information be downloadable to a single machine-
readable file, or be housed in a central location within ShipCSX,''
then CSXT estimates that it would need approximately three months (or
955 hours). Second, if the Board requires CSXT ``[t]o include all of
the proposed data fields in the existing ShipCSX demurrage module,''
then CSXT estimates it would need 1,680 hours, over a period of four to
five months ``due to the multiple data programmers, sources, and
systems involved.'' (Id. at 7-8 (footnote omitted).) \69\
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\69\ Additionally, CSXT estimates that it would need only two to
three days (80 hours or less) of programming time if Class I
carriers have full discretion to decide how to present the minimum
information, (CSXT Comments 7 & n.16, June 5, 2020), but the final
rule does not allow this level of discretion.
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CSXT's estimates of three months (955 hours) and four to five
months (1,680 hours) appear to encompass the time CSXT would need to
provide machine-readable data in various specific formats or in a
central location. Although the final rule will not mandate any
particular format for machine-readable data and, instead, will allow
Class I carriers the discretion to select how to provide access to
machine-readable data, the Board recognizes CSXT's stated concern that
it may need more than 80 hours to modify its invoicing systems to
include the required minimum information and provide machine-readable
access to such information. Accordingly, the Board will increase its
estimate from 560 hours (186.6 hours per year as amortized over three
years or 80 hours per respondent) to 1,120 hours (373.3 hours per year
as amortized over three years or 160 hours per respondent).
No other carriers commented on the Board's estimates.
This modification to an existing collection, along with CSXT's
comment and the Board's response, will be submitted to OMB for review
as required under the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3507(d), and 5 CFR 1320.11.
Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801-808, the
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs has designated this rule
as non-major, as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 1333
Penalties, Railroads.
It is ordered:
1. The Board adopts the final rule as set forth in this decision.
Notice of the final rule will be published in the Federal Register.
2. The final rule is effective on October 6, 2021, as set forth in
this decision.
3. A copy of this decision will be served upon the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration.
Decided: March 30, 2021.
By the Board, Board Members Begeman, Fuchs, Oberman, Primus, and
Schultz.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Surface
Transportation Board amends part 1333 of title 49, chapter X, of the
Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 1333--DEMURRAGE LIABILITY
0
1. The authority citation for part 1333 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 1321, 10702, and 10746.
0
2. Add Sec. 1333.4 to read as follows:
Sec. 1333.4 Information Requirements for Demurrage Invoices
The following information shall be provided on or with any
demurrage invoices issued by Class I carriers:
(a) The billing cycle covered by the invoice;
(b) The unique identifying information (e.g., reporting marks and
number) of each car involved;
(c) The following information, where applicable:
(1) The date the waybill was created;
(2) The status of each car as loaded or empty;
(3) The commodity being shipped (if the car is loaded);
(4) The identity of the shipper, consignee, and/or care-of party,
as applicable; and
(5) The origin station and state of the shipment;
(d) The dates and times of:
(1) Original estimated arrival of each car, as generated promptly
following interchange or release of shipment to the invoicing carrier
and as based on the first movement of the invoicing carrier;
(2) Receipt of each car at the last interchange with the invoicing
carrier (if applicable);
(3) Actual placement of each car;
(4) Constructive placement of each car (if applicable and different
from actual placement);
(5) Notification of constructive placement to the shipper or third-
party intermediary (if applicable);
(6) Each car ordered in (if applicable) (i.e., the date and time
demurrage first stops accruing with respect to a closed-gate facility);
(7) release of each car; and
(e) The number of credits and debits attributable to each car (if
applicable).
0
3. Add Sec. 1333.5 to read as follows:
Sec. 1333.5 Machine-Readable Access to Information Required for
Demurrage Invoices
In addition to providing the minimum information on or with
demurrage invoices, Class I carriers shall provide machine-readable
access to the information listed in Sec. 1333.4. For purposes of this
part, `machine-readable' means data in an open format that can be
easily processed by computer without human intervention while ensuring
no semantic meaning is lost. An `open format' is a format that is not
limited to a specific software program and not subject to restrictions
on re-use.
[FR Doc. 2021-07000 Filed 4-5-21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915-01-P