Agency Information Collection Activities: Requests for Comments; Clearance of a New Information Collection(s): Airport Concession Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (ACDBE) Program Requirements, 15484-15487 [2022-05760]
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15484
Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 53 / Friday, March 18, 2022 / Notices
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
[Docket No. AB 1070 (Sub-No. 4X)]
Central Midland Railway Company—
Discontinuance of Service
Exemption—in Franklin County, Mo.
Central Midland Railway Company
(CMRC) has filed a verified notice of
exemption under 49 CFR. part 1152
subpart F—Exempt Abandonments and
Discontinuances of Service to
discontinue service over an
approximately 9.71-mile rail line in
Franklin County, Mo., between milepost
61.89 at Union and milepost 71.6 at
Beaufort (the Line). The Line traverses
U.S. Postal Service Zip Codes 63013 and
63084.
CMRC has certified that: (1) No local
traffic has moved over the Line for at
least two years; 1 (2) any overhead traffic
can be rerouted over other lines; (3) no
formal complaint filed by a user of rail
service on the Line (or a state or local
government entity acting on behalf of
such user) regarding cessation of service
over the Line either is pending with the
Surface Transportation Board or any
U.S. District Court or has been decided
in favor of a complainant within the
two-year period; and (4) the
requirements at 49 CFR 1105.12
(newspaper publication) and 49 CFR
1152.50(d)(1) (notice to governmental
agencies) have been met.
As a condition to this exemption, any
employee adversely affected by the
discontinuance of service shall be
protected under Oregon Short Line
Railroad—Abandonment Portion
Goshen Branch Between Firth &
Ammon, in Bingham & Bonneville
Counties, Idaho, 360 I.C.C. 91 (1979). To
address whether this condition
adequately protects affected employees,
a petition for partial revocation under
49 U.S.C. 10502(d) must be filed.
Provided no formal expression of
intent to file an offer of financial
assistance (OFA) 2 to subsidize
continued rail service has been
received, this exemption will be
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1 CMRC
states that, although it has used the Line
within the past two years for car storage for off-line
shippers, such usage does not constitute traffic for
purposes of qualification for the class exemption
under 49 CFR 1152.50(b), citing Union Pacific
Railroad—Abandonment Exemption—in Ada
County, Idaho, Docket No. AB 33 (Sub-No. 137X),
slip op. at 3 (STB served Aug. 6, 1999) (‘‘It is well
settled that use of a rail line to store rail cars for
the convenience of off-line shippers or the railroad
is not traffic originating or terminating on the line
within the meaning of 49 CFR 1152.50(b).’’).
2 Persons interested in submitting an OFA to
subsidize continued rail service must first file a
formal expression of intent to file an offer,
indicating the intent to file an OFA for subsidy and
demonstrating that they are preliminarily
financially responsible. See 49 CFR 1152.27(c)(2)(i).
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effective on April 17, 2022, unless
stayed pending reconsideration.3
Petitions to stay that do not involve
environmental issues and formal
expressions of intent to file an OFA to
subsidize continued rail service under
49 CFR 1152.27(c)(2) 4 must be filed by
March 28, 2022.5 Petitions for
reconsideration must be filed by April 7,
2022.
All pleadings, referring to Docket No.
AB 1070 (Sub-No. 4X), should be filed
with the Surface Transportation Board
via e-filing on the Board’s website.
Additionally, a copy of each pleading
filed with Board must be sent to CMRC’s
representative, Audrey E. Lane, Fletcher
& Sippel LLC, 29 North Wacker Drive,
Suite 800, Chicago, IL 60606–3208.
If the verified notice contains false or
misleading information, the exemption
is void ab initio.
Board decisions and notices are
available at www.stb.gov.
Decided: March 15, 2022.
By the Board, Scott M. Zimmerman, Acting
Director, Office of Proceedings.
Raina White,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2022–05741 Filed 3–17–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
[Docket No. EP 670 (Sub-No. 1)]
Notice of Rail Energy Transportation
Advisory Committee Meeting
Surface Transportation Board.
ACTION: Notice of meeting.
AGENCY:
Notice is hereby given of a
meeting of the Rail Energy
Transportation Advisory Committee
(RETAC), pursuant to the Federal
Advisory Committee Act.
DATES: The meeting will be held on
Wednesday, April 20, 2022, at 9:00 a.m.
E.D.T.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at
the Surface Transportation Board
headquarters at 395 E St. SW,
Washington, DC 20423.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kristen Nunnally at (202) 245–0312 or
Kristen.Nunnally@stb.gov. Assistance
for the hearing impaired is available
SUMMARY:
3 CMRC states that it intends to consummate the
discontinuance of the Line after April 19, 2022.
4 The filing fee for OFAs can be found at 49 CFR
1002.2(f)(25).
5 Because this is a discontinuance proceeding and
not an abandonment, interim trail use/rail banking
and public use conditions are not appropriate.
Because there will be an environmental review
during abandonment, this discontinuance does not
require environmental review.
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through the Federal Relay Service at
(800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: RETAC
was formed in 2007 to provide advice
and guidance to the Board, and to serve
as a forum for discussion of emerging
issues related to the transportation of
energy resources by rail. Establishment
of a Rail Energy Transp. Advisory
Comm., EP 670 (STB served July 17,
2007). The purpose of this meeting is to
facilitate discussions regarding issues
including rail service, infrastructure
planning and development, and
effective coordination among suppliers,
rail carriers, and users of energy
resources. Potential agenda items for
this meeting include a rail performance
measures review, industry segment
updates by RETAC members, and a
roundtable discussion.
The meeting, which is open to the
public, will be conducted in accordance
with the Federal Advisory Committee
Act, 5 U.S.C app. 2; Federal Advisory
Committee Management regulations, 41
CFR part 102–3; RETAC’s charter; and
Board procedures. Further
communications about this meeting may
be announced through the Board’s
website at www.stb.gov.
Written Comments: Members of the
public may submit written comments to
RETAC at any time. Comments should
be addressed to RETAC, c/o Kristen
Nunnally, at Kristen.Nunnally@stb.gov.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 1321, 49 U.S.C.
11101; 49 U.S.C. 11121.
Decided: March 15, 2022.
By the Board, Scott Zimmerman, Acting
Director, Office of Proceedings.
Regena Smith-Bernard,
Clearance Clerk.
[FR Doc. 2022–05747 Filed 3–17–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
[Docket No. DOT–OST–2022–0020]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Requests for Comments;
Clearance of a New Information
Collection(s): Airport Concession
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
(ACDBE) Program Requirements
AGENCY:
Office of the Secretary (OST),
DOT.
Notice and request for
comments.
ACTION:
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, FAA
invites public comments about our
intention to request the Office of
SUMMARY:
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Management and Budget (OMB)
approval for a new information
collection. The Federal Register Notice
with a 60-day comment period soliciting
comments on the following collection of
information was published on October
25, 2021. The deadline for submission
of public comments expired on
December 27, 2021. No public
comments were provided. The
Department of Transportation (DOT or
Department) further invites public
comments about our intention to request
the Office of Management and Budget’s
(OMB) approval for an information
collection for the Department’s Airport
Concession Disadvantaged Business
Enterprise (ACDBE) program. The DOT
has the important responsibility of
ensuring that firms competing for
concession opportunities are not
disadvantaged by unlawful
discrimination. The DOT’s most
important tool for meeting this
requirement has been its ACDBE
program which is regulated by 49 CFR
part 23 (ACDBE regulation) and is
mandated by 49 U.S.C. 47107(e),
originally enacted in 1987 and amended
in 1992. The information collections
described in this notice are necessary to
maintain successful implementation of
the ACDBE program, as it helps ensure
recipients that receive Federal financial
assistance from the Airport
Improvement Program (AIP) of the
Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
do not discriminate in the provision of
opportunities for disadvantaged
business enterprises in airport
concessions. We are required to publish
this notice in the Federal Register by
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13 (PRA).
DATES: Written comments should be
submitted by April 18, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
[identified by Docket No. DOT–OST–
2022–0020 through one of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: (202) 493–2251.
• Mail or Hand Delivery: Docket
Management Facility, U.S. Department
of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE, West Building, Room W12–
140, Washington, DC 20590, between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except on Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marcus England, (202) 267–0487,
marcus.england@faa.gov, Nicholas
Giles, (202) 267–0201, nicholas.giles@
faa.gov/Office of Civil Rights, National
Airport Civil Rights Policy and
Compliance (ACR–4C), Federal Aviation
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Administration, 600 Independence Ave.
SW, Washington, DC 20591, or Aarathi
Haig, (202–366–5990), aarathi.haig@
dot.gov/Departmental Office of Civil
Rights (OST–S–33), U. S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Ave.
SE, Washington, DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Comments Invited: You are
asked to comment on any aspect of this
information collection, including the
accuracy of the estimated burden. The
agency will summarize and/or include
your comments in the request for OMB’s
clearance of this information collection.
In preparing this notice, the
Department identified various aspects of
the ACDBE program that have existed as
requirements for a long period of time,
several decades in some cases, that
include information collections that
have not been appropriately accounted
for in the current collection. To assist in
estimating the potential paperwork
burden of these collections, the
Department reached out to a small
number of stakeholders to obtain
estimates of how much time they spend
each year responding to these
collections.
To help commenters provide
information that will better allow the
Department to include the appropriate
paperwork burden within this
collection, we offer the following
clarifications: A ‘‘collection of
information,’’ is defined as ‘‘the
obtaining, causing to be obtained,
soliciting, or requiring the disclosure to
an agency, third parties or the public of
information by or for an agency by
means of identical questions posed to,
or identical reporting, recordkeeping, or
disclosure requirements imposed on,
ten or more persons.’’ 5 CFR part 1320.
The activities that constitute the
‘‘burden’’ associated with a collection
are defined in 5 CFR part 1320 as ‘‘the
total time, effort, or financial resources
expended by persons to generate,
maintain, retain, or disclose or provide
information to or for a Federal agency.’’
Importantly, this burden is not
necessarily the same as the entire
regulatory burden for a program or an
aspect of a program. For example, if a
regulation requires an inspection and
the completion of a form documenting
the inspection, the full regulatory
burden would likely include both
actions, while the paperwork burden
would only include the time and other
resources needed to complete the form.
In addition, the Department believes
certain recordkeeping requirements
have not been adequately accounted for
in the current collection. As stated in 5
CFR part 1320, ‘‘Recordkeeping
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15485
requirement means a requirement
imposed by or for an agency on persons
to maintain specified records, including
a requirement to: (1) Retain such
records; (2) Notify third parties, the
Federal government, or the public of the
existence of such records; (3) Disclose
such records to third parties, the Federal
government, or the public; or (4) Report
to third parties, the Federal government,
or the public regarding such records.’’
Thus, recordkeeping requirements can
attach to records that are not necessarily
covered by the PRA itself if, as in the
ACDBE program, a requirement exists to
maintain a complete case file. In that
case, as the case file itself is not
standardized, it would not be
considered an information collection
and the burden associated with
developing the file would not be a
paperwork burden. However, the
requirement to keep that case file and,
upon request, submit it to the
Department, would be part of the
paperwork burden.
For purposes of this 30-day notice, we
have included the burden estimates we
received from the small number of
stakeholders we contacted. As noted
above, the Department is concerned that
at least several of these estimates
contain burdens associated with aspects
of the program that are not paperwork
burdens. To the extent feasible, the
Department requests that commenters
who provide burden estimates for
aspects of the program identified below
be as specific as possible, including
what amount of time each task takes and
what, if any, additional costs beyond
labor costs (e.g., copying, mailing,
storage, or other technology costs) are
associated with each aspect of the
collection.
OMB Control Number: N/A.
Title: Airport Concession
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
(ACDBE) Program Requirements.
Form Numbers: N/A.
Type of Review: Initial Approval of
Existing Information Collection.
1. Submission of ACDBE Program to the
FAA
Section 23.21 requires recipients to
submit an ACDBE program to the FAA
for approval. The FAA evaluates
submitted ACDBE programs to
determine whether they include all the
provisions and measures required by the
regulation. Timely submission and FAA
approval of a recipient’s ACDBE
program are conditions of eligibility for
FAA financial assistance.
Paragraph (d) of section 23.21 requires
recipients that make any significant
changes to their ACDBE programs to
provide an amended program to the
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2. Annual Report on ACBE
Participation
program during the period: (1) Firm
name; (2) Type of business; (3)
Beginning and expiration dates of the
agreement, including options to renew;
(4) Dates that material amendments
have been or will be made to the
agreement (if known); and (5) Estimated
gross receipts for the firm during the
reporting period.
The FAA received total annual
burden hours from eight recipients, two
of each hub size (nonhub, small,
medium and large), ranging from 15 to
96 hours. The total annual cost burden
was calculated based on the average of
two recipients (small and medium hub
size) responses ranging from $5,000–
$10,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA
grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 396.
Frequency: Once per year.
Number of Responses: 396.
Total Annual Burden: 22,176 hours
and $7,500 per respondent.
Section 23.27 requires recipients with
approved ACDBE programs to submit a
‘‘Uniform Report of ACDBE
Participation’’ (Uniform Report). The
Uniform Report is collected
electronically by the FAA from
recipients annually and assists the FAA
in conducting program oversight of
recipients’ ACDBE programs,
identifying trends or problem areas in
the program, and ensuring that the
ACDBE program is achieving its goal of
encouraging ACDBE participation in
concession-related opportunities.
The reporting requirements of the
Uniform Report include the following
information:
• Overall percentage goals of ACDBE
participation and their race-conscious
(RC) and race-neutral (RN) components;
• new and continuing car rental
concession opportunities and activity
under the ACDBE program during the
reporting period;
• total concession gross revenues for
concessionaires (prime and sub) and
purchases of goods and services at the
airport;
• number of lease agreements,
contracts, etc., in effect or taking place
during the reporting period in each
participation category for all
concessionaires and purchases of goods
and services;
• total gross revenues in each
participation category for ACDBEs;
• total gross revenues attributable to
race-conscious and race-neutral
measures, respectively;
• overall car rental percentage goal
and the race-conscious (RC) and raceneutral (RN) components of it; and
• The following information for each
ACDBE firm participating in the ACDBE
3. Monitoring and Compliance
Procedures
Section 23.29 requires recipients to
implement appropriate mechanisms to
ensure that all ACDBE program
participants comply with the
regulation’s requirements. Recipients
must include in their ACDBE programs
specific provisions to be inserted into
concession agreements and management
contracts setting forth the enforcement
mechanisms and other means the
recipient uses to ensure compliance.
These provisions must include a written
certification that recipients reviewed
records of all contracts, leases, joint
venture agreements, or other
concession-related agreements, and
monitored the work on-site at their
airport for this purpose. If the FAA, as
the Operating Administration, conducts
a compliance review or investigation, it
verifies whether the recipient has the
written certifications and has monitored
the work performed by ACDBEs;
recipients do not otherwise submit the
information. Recipients collect the
information during on-site reviews of
concession workplaces to determine
whether ACDBEs are actually
performing the work for which credit is
being claimed.
The FAA received total annual
burden hours from eight recipients, two
of each hub size (nonhub, small,
medium and large), ranging from 0 to
416 hours. The total annual cost burden
was calculated based on the average of
two recipients (small and medium hub
size) responses ranging from $20,000–
$25,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA
grants for Airport Development.
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FAA for approval before implementing
the changes.
The FAA received total annual
burden hours from eight recipients, two
of each hub size (nonhub, small,
medium and large), ranging from 19 to
40 hours. The total annual cost burden
was calculated based on the average of
two recipients (small and medium hub
size) responses ranging from $1,600–
$15,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA
grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 396.
Frequency: Once, unless the recipient
makes a significant change to its ACDBE
program and is required to submit an
amended program to the FAA for
approval.
Number of Responses: 396.
Total Annual Burden: 11,088 hours
and $8,300 per respondent.
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Number of Respondents: 396.
Frequency: 36 times per year (3 times
per month).
Number of Responses: 14,256.
Total Annual Burden: 60,588 hours
and $22,500 per respondent.
4. Requirements for Submitting Overall
Goal Information to the FAA
Congress carefully considered and
concluded that race-neutral means alone
are insufficient to remedy the effects of
discrimination in concession
opportunities. To meet Constitutional
strict scrutiny requirements, ACDBE
programs’ race-conscious means must
be narrowly tailored. Section 23.45
requires that recipients set and submit
to the FAA an overall goal for ACDBE
participation in concession
opportunities every three years. The
goal represents the ACDBE participation
that would be expected in the relevant
market area given the availability of
ACDBEs. Subparagraph (d)(5) of section
23.51 requires recipients to include with
their overall goal submission a
description of the methodology they
used to establish the goal. Recipients
must also include a projection of the
portions of the overall goal that they
expect to meet through race-neutral and
race-conscious means, respectively, and
the basis for the projection. Paragraph
(d) of section 23.25 requires recipients
to maximize the use of race-neutral
measures, obtaining as much as possible
of the ACDBE participation needed to
meet overall goals through such
measures.
The FAA received total annual
burden hours from eight recipients, two
of each hub size (nonhub, small,
medium and large), ranging from 0 to
120 hours. The total annual cost burden
was calculated based on the average of
two recipients (small and medium hub
size) responses ranging from $5,000–
$10,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA
grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 396.
Frequency: Annually.
Number of Responses: 396.
Total Annual Burden: 20,988 hours
and $7,500 per respondent.
5. Requirements Relating to Shortfalls
in Meeting Overall ACDBE Goals
Section 23.57 requires recipients that
do not meet their overall goal for
ACDBE awards and commitments
shown on their Uniform Report of
ACDBE Participation (found in
Appendix A to Part 23) at the end of any
fiscal year to take the following steps in
order to be regarded by the Department
as implementing their ACDBE programs
in good faith: (1) Analyze in detail the
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reasons for the difference between the
overall goal and the recipient’s awards
and commitments in that fiscal year;
and (2) establish specific steps and
milestones to correct the problems the
recipient identified in its analysis and to
enable the recipient to meet fully its
goal for the new fiscal year. CORE 30
airports or other airports designated by
the FAA must submit, within 90 days of
the end of the fiscal year, the analysis
and corrective actions developed under
section 23.57 to the FAA for approval
and must retain the analysis and
corrective actions for three years.
Recipients that are not a CORE 30
airport must retain the analysis and
corrective actions in their records for
three years and make them available to
the FAA, on request, for their review.
The FAA received total annual
burden hours from two recipients, one
small hub airport and another medium
hub size airport, ranging from 2 to 40
hours. The total annual cost burden was
calculated based on the average of these
two recipients (small and medium hub
size) responses, ranging from $80–
$2,800.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA
grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 90.
Frequency: Annually depending on if
the awards and commitments shown on
a recipient’s Uniform Report of ACDBE
Participation at the end of any fiscal
year are less than the overall goal
applicable to that fiscal year.
Number of Responses: 90.
Total Annual Burden: 1,890 hours
and $1,440 per respondent.
6. Requirements Relating to Approval
of Long-Term, Exclusive (LTE)
Agreements.
Paragraph (a) of section 23.75
prohibits recipients from entering into
‘‘long-term, exclusive agreements’’
(LTE) for concessions without prior
FAA approval, based on very limited
conditions which are outlined in the
regulation. This general prohibition is
designed to limit the situation where an
entire category of business activity is
not subject to competition for an
extended period of time through the use
of an LTE agreement. Paragraph (c) of
section 23.75 requires recipients to
submit to the FAA various documents
and information to obtain approval from
the FAA of a long-term exclusive (LTE)
agreement. The required information
includes the following items:
• A description of the special local
circumstances that warrant a long-term,
exclusive agreement;
• A copy of the draft and final leasing
and subleasing or other agreements with
specific provisions;
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• Assurances that any ACDBE
participant will be in an acceptable
form, such as a sublease, joint venture,
or partnership;
• Documentation that ACDBE
participants are properly certified;
• A description of the type of
business or businesses to be operated
e.g., location, storage and delivery
space, ‘‘back-of-the-house facilities’’
such as kitchens, window display space,
advertising space, and other amenities
that will increase the ACDBE’s chance
to succeed;
• Information on the investment
required on the part of the ACDBE and
any unusual management or financial
arrangements between the prime
concessionaire and ACDBE; and
• Information on the estimated gross
receipts and net profit to be earned by
the ACDBE.
The collection of information under
this section is necessary for FAA to
carry out oversight responsibilities in
determining whether special local
circumstances warrant approval of an
LTE agreement.
The FAA received total annual
burden hours from eight recipients, two
of each hub size (nonhub, small,
medium and large), ranging from 0 to 20
hours. The total annual cost burden was
calculated based on the average of two
recipients (small and medium hub size)
responses ranging from $2,000–$5,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA
grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 7.
Frequency: Annually depending on
the number of leases and/or contracts
with prime concessionaires that are
long-term, exclusive agreements and
require FAA approval.
Number of Responses: 7.
Total Annual Burden: 2,376 hours
and $3,500 per respondent.
Authority: The Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. chapter 35, as
amended; and 49 CFR 1:48.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 15,
2022.
Marc D. Pentino,
Associate Director, Disadvantaged Business
Enterprise Programs Division, Departmental
Office of Civil Rights, Office of the Secretary,
U.S. Department of Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2022–05760 Filed 3–17–22; 8:45 am]
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15487
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
[Docket No. FAA–2022–0357]
Agency Information Collection
Activities: Requests for Comments;
Clearance of a New Approval of
Information Collection
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, FAA
invites public comments about our
intention to request the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB)
approval for a new information
collection. The collection requires
responses to questions regarding an
individual’s identity in order to gain
access to U.S. Federal Government web
applications. The information to be
collected will be used to verify the
requestor’s identity and create a user
account.
SUMMARY:
Written comments should be
submitted by May 17, 2022.
ADDRESSES: Please send written
comments:
By Electronic Docket:
www.regulations.gov (Enter docket
number into search field).
By mail: Christopher K. Brimage, 6500
S MacArthur Boulevard, ARB–115,
Oklahoma City, OK 73169.
By fax: 405–954–5798.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Christopher K. Brimage by email at:
kyle.brimage@faa.gov; phone: 405–596–
9143.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Comments Invited: You are
asked to comment on any aspect of this
information collection, including (a)
Whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for FAA’s
performance; (b) the accuracy of the
estimated burden; (c) ways for FAA to
enhance the quality, utility and clarity
of the information collection; and (d)
ways that the burden could be
minimized without reducing the quality
of the collected information. The agency
will summarize and/or include your
comments in the request for OMB’s
clearance of this information collection.
OMB Control Number: 2120–XXXX.
Title: MyAccess Non-credentialed
User Access Requests.
Form Numbers: No forms.
Type of Review: New Collection.
Background: Uncredentialed users
requesting access to web-based
applications published by the Federal
DATES:
E:\FR\FM\18MRN1.SGM
18MRN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 53 (Friday, March 18, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 15484-15487]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-05760]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
[Docket No. DOT-OST-2022-0020]
Agency Information Collection Activities: Requests for Comments;
Clearance of a New Information Collection(s): Airport Concession
Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (ACDBE) Program Requirements
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary (OST), DOT.
ACTION: Notice and request for comments.
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SUMMARY: In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, FAA
invites public comments about our intention to request the Office of
[[Page 15485]]
Management and Budget (OMB) approval for a new information collection.
The Federal Register Notice with a 60-day comment period soliciting
comments on the following collection of information was published on
October 25, 2021. The deadline for submission of public comments
expired on December 27, 2021. No public comments were provided. The
Department of Transportation (DOT or Department) further invites public
comments about our intention to request the Office of Management and
Budget's (OMB) approval for an information collection for the
Department's Airport Concession Disadvantaged Business Enterprise
(ACDBE) program. The DOT has the important responsibility of ensuring
that firms competing for concession opportunities are not disadvantaged
by unlawful discrimination. The DOT's most important tool for meeting
this requirement has been its ACDBE program which is regulated by 49
CFR part 23 (ACDBE regulation) and is mandated by 49 U.S.C. 47107(e),
originally enacted in 1987 and amended in 1992. The information
collections described in this notice are necessary to maintain
successful implementation of the ACDBE program, as it helps ensure
recipients that receive Federal financial assistance from the Airport
Improvement Program (AIP) of the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA)
do not discriminate in the provision of opportunities for disadvantaged
business enterprises in airport concessions. We are required to publish
this notice in the Federal Register by the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995, Public Law 104-13 (PRA).
DATES: Written comments should be submitted by April 18, 2022.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments [identified by Docket No. DOT-OST-
2022-0020 through one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the online instructions for submitting comments.
Fax: (202) 493-2251.
Mail or Hand Delivery: Docket Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, West Building,
Room W12-140, Washington, DC 20590, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except on Federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Marcus England, (202) 267-0487,
[email protected], Nicholas Giles, (202) 267-0201,
[email protected]/Office of Civil Rights, National Airport Civil
Rights Policy and Compliance (ACR-4C), Federal Aviation Administration,
600 Independence Ave. SW, Washington, DC 20591, or Aarathi Haig, (202-
366-5990), [email protected]/Departmental Office of Civil Rights
(OST-S-33), U. S. Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Ave.
SE, Washington, DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Public Comments Invited: You are asked to comment on any aspect of
this information collection, including the accuracy of the estimated
burden. The agency will summarize and/or include your comments in the
request for OMB's clearance of this information collection.
In preparing this notice, the Department identified various aspects
of the ACDBE program that have existed as requirements for a long
period of time, several decades in some cases, that include information
collections that have not been appropriately accounted for in the
current collection. To assist in estimating the potential paperwork
burden of these collections, the Department reached out to a small
number of stakeholders to obtain estimates of how much time they spend
each year responding to these collections.
To help commenters provide information that will better allow the
Department to include the appropriate paperwork burden within this
collection, we offer the following clarifications: A ``collection of
information,'' is defined as ``the obtaining, causing to be obtained,
soliciting, or requiring the disclosure to an agency, third parties or
the public of information by or for an agency by means of identical
questions posed to, or identical reporting, recordkeeping, or
disclosure requirements imposed on, ten or more persons.'' 5 CFR part
1320. The activities that constitute the ``burden'' associated with a
collection are defined in 5 CFR part 1320 as ``the total time, effort,
or financial resources expended by persons to generate, maintain,
retain, or disclose or provide information to or for a Federal
agency.'' Importantly, this burden is not necessarily the same as the
entire regulatory burden for a program or an aspect of a program. For
example, if a regulation requires an inspection and the completion of a
form documenting the inspection, the full regulatory burden would
likely include both actions, while the paperwork burden would only
include the time and other resources needed to complete the form.
In addition, the Department believes certain recordkeeping
requirements have not been adequately accounted for in the current
collection. As stated in 5 CFR part 1320, ``Recordkeeping requirement
means a requirement imposed by or for an agency on persons to maintain
specified records, including a requirement to: (1) Retain such records;
(2) Notify third parties, the Federal government, or the public of the
existence of such records; (3) Disclose such records to third parties,
the Federal government, or the public; or (4) Report to third parties,
the Federal government, or the public regarding such records.'' Thus,
recordkeeping requirements can attach to records that are not
necessarily covered by the PRA itself if, as in the ACDBE program, a
requirement exists to maintain a complete case file. In that case, as
the case file itself is not standardized, it would not be considered an
information collection and the burden associated with developing the
file would not be a paperwork burden. However, the requirement to keep
that case file and, upon request, submit it to the Department, would be
part of the paperwork burden.
For purposes of this 30-day notice, we have included the burden
estimates we received from the small number of stakeholders we
contacted. As noted above, the Department is concerned that at least
several of these estimates contain burdens associated with aspects of
the program that are not paperwork burdens. To the extent feasible, the
Department requests that commenters who provide burden estimates for
aspects of the program identified below be as specific as possible,
including what amount of time each task takes and what, if any,
additional costs beyond labor costs (e.g., copying, mailing, storage,
or other technology costs) are associated with each aspect of the
collection.
OMB Control Number: N/A.
Title: Airport Concession Disadvantaged Business Enterprise (ACDBE)
Program Requirements.
Form Numbers: N/A.
Type of Review: Initial Approval of Existing Information
Collection.
1. Submission of ACDBE Program to the FAA
Section 23.21 requires recipients to submit an ACDBE program to the
FAA for approval. The FAA evaluates submitted ACDBE programs to
determine whether they include all the provisions and measures required
by the regulation. Timely submission and FAA approval of a recipient's
ACDBE program are conditions of eligibility for FAA financial
assistance.
Paragraph (d) of section 23.21 requires recipients that make any
significant changes to their ACDBE programs to provide an amended
program to the
[[Page 15486]]
FAA for approval before implementing the changes.
The FAA received total annual burden hours from eight recipients,
two of each hub size (nonhub, small, medium and large), ranging from 19
to 40 hours. The total annual cost burden was calculated based on the
average of two recipients (small and medium hub size) responses ranging
from $1,600-$15,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 396.
Frequency: Once, unless the recipient makes a significant change to
its ACDBE program and is required to submit an amended program to the
FAA for approval.
Number of Responses: 396.
Total Annual Burden: 11,088 hours and $8,300 per respondent.
2. Annual Report on ACBE Participation
Section 23.27 requires recipients with approved ACDBE programs to
submit a ``Uniform Report of ACDBE Participation'' (Uniform Report).
The Uniform Report is collected electronically by the FAA from
recipients annually and assists the FAA in conducting program oversight
of recipients' ACDBE programs, identifying trends or problem areas in
the program, and ensuring that the ACDBE program is achieving its goal
of encouraging ACDBE participation in concession-related opportunities.
The reporting requirements of the Uniform Report include the
following information:
Overall percentage goals of ACDBE participation and their
race-conscious (RC) and race-neutral (RN) components;
new and continuing car rental concession opportunities and
activity under the ACDBE program during the reporting period;
total concession gross revenues for concessionaires (prime
and sub) and purchases of goods and services at the airport;
number of lease agreements, contracts, etc., in effect or
taking place during the reporting period in each participation category
for all concessionaires and purchases of goods and services;
total gross revenues in each participation category for
ACDBEs;
total gross revenues attributable to race-conscious and
race-neutral measures, respectively;
overall car rental percentage goal and the race-conscious
(RC) and race-neutral (RN) components of it; and
The following information for each ACDBE firm
participating in the ACDBE program during the period: (1) Firm name;
(2) Type of business; (3) Beginning and expiration dates of the
agreement, including options to renew; (4) Dates that material
amendments have been or will be made to the agreement (if known); and
(5) Estimated gross receipts for the firm during the reporting period.
The FAA received total annual burden hours from eight recipients,
two of each hub size (nonhub, small, medium and large), ranging from 15
to 96 hours. The total annual cost burden was calculated based on the
average of two recipients (small and medium hub size) responses ranging
from $5,000-$10,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 396.
Frequency: Once per year.
Number of Responses: 396.
Total Annual Burden: 22,176 hours and $7,500 per respondent.
3. Monitoring and Compliance Procedures
Section 23.29 requires recipients to implement appropriate
mechanisms to ensure that all ACDBE program participants comply with
the regulation's requirements. Recipients must include in their ACDBE
programs specific provisions to be inserted into concession agreements
and management contracts setting forth the enforcement mechanisms and
other means the recipient uses to ensure compliance. These provisions
must include a written certification that recipients reviewed records
of all contracts, leases, joint venture agreements, or other
concession-related agreements, and monitored the work on-site at their
airport for this purpose. If the FAA, as the Operating Administration,
conducts a compliance review or investigation, it verifies whether the
recipient has the written certifications and has monitored the work
performed by ACDBEs; recipients do not otherwise submit the
information. Recipients collect the information during on-site reviews
of concession workplaces to determine whether ACDBEs are actually
performing the work for which credit is being claimed.
The FAA received total annual burden hours from eight recipients,
two of each hub size (nonhub, small, medium and large), ranging from 0
to 416 hours. The total annual cost burden was calculated based on the
average of two recipients (small and medium hub size) responses ranging
from $20,000-$25,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 396.
Frequency: 36 times per year (3 times per month).
Number of Responses: 14,256.
Total Annual Burden: 60,588 hours and $22,500 per respondent.
4. Requirements for Submitting Overall Goal Information to the FAA
Congress carefully considered and concluded that race-neutral means
alone are insufficient to remedy the effects of discrimination in
concession opportunities. To meet Constitutional strict scrutiny
requirements, ACDBE programs' race-conscious means must be narrowly
tailored. Section 23.45 requires that recipients set and submit to the
FAA an overall goal for ACDBE participation in concession opportunities
every three years. The goal represents the ACDBE participation that
would be expected in the relevant market area given the availability of
ACDBEs. Subparagraph (d)(5) of section 23.51 requires recipients to
include with their overall goal submission a description of the
methodology they used to establish the goal. Recipients must also
include a projection of the portions of the overall goal that they
expect to meet through race-neutral and race-conscious means,
respectively, and the basis for the projection. Paragraph (d) of
section 23.25 requires recipients to maximize the use of race-neutral
measures, obtaining as much as possible of the ACDBE participation
needed to meet overall goals through such measures.
The FAA received total annual burden hours from eight recipients,
two of each hub size (nonhub, small, medium and large), ranging from 0
to 120 hours. The total annual cost burden was calculated based on the
average of two recipients (small and medium hub size) responses ranging
from $5,000-$10,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 396.
Frequency: Annually.
Number of Responses: 396.
Total Annual Burden: 20,988 hours and $7,500 per respondent.
5. Requirements Relating to Shortfalls in Meeting Overall ACDBE Goals
Section 23.57 requires recipients that do not meet their overall
goal for ACDBE awards and commitments shown on their Uniform Report of
ACDBE Participation (found in Appendix A to Part 23) at the end of any
fiscal year to take the following steps in order to be regarded by the
Department as implementing their ACDBE programs in good faith: (1)
Analyze in detail the
[[Page 15487]]
reasons for the difference between the overall goal and the recipient's
awards and commitments in that fiscal year; and (2) establish specific
steps and milestones to correct the problems the recipient identified
in its analysis and to enable the recipient to meet fully its goal for
the new fiscal year. CORE 30 airports or other airports designated by
the FAA must submit, within 90 days of the end of the fiscal year, the
analysis and corrective actions developed under section 23.57 to the
FAA for approval and must retain the analysis and corrective actions
for three years. Recipients that are not a CORE 30 airport must retain
the analysis and corrective actions in their records for three years
and make them available to the FAA, on request, for their review.
The FAA received total annual burden hours from two recipients, one
small hub airport and another medium hub size airport, ranging from 2
to 40 hours. The total annual cost burden was calculated based on the
average of these two recipients (small and medium hub size) responses,
ranging from $80-$2,800.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 90.
Frequency: Annually depending on if the awards and commitments
shown on a recipient's Uniform Report of ACDBE Participation at the end
of any fiscal year are less than the overall goal applicable to that
fiscal year.
Number of Responses: 90.
Total Annual Burden: 1,890 hours and $1,440 per respondent.
6. Requirements Relating to Approval of Long-Term, Exclusive (LTE)
Agreements.
Paragraph (a) of section 23.75 prohibits recipients from entering
into ``long-term, exclusive agreements'' (LTE) for concessions without
prior FAA approval, based on very limited conditions which are outlined
in the regulation. This general prohibition is designed to limit the
situation where an entire category of business activity is not subject
to competition for an extended period of time through the use of an LTE
agreement. Paragraph (c) of section 23.75 requires recipients to submit
to the FAA various documents and information to obtain approval from
the FAA of a long-term exclusive (LTE) agreement. The required
information includes the following items:
A description of the special local circumstances that
warrant a long-term, exclusive agreement;
A copy of the draft and final leasing and subleasing or
other agreements with specific provisions;
Assurances that any ACDBE participant will be in an
acceptable form, such as a sublease, joint venture, or partnership;
Documentation that ACDBE participants are properly
certified;
A description of the type of business or businesses to be
operated e.g., location, storage and delivery space, ``back-of-the-
house facilities'' such as kitchens, window display space, advertising
space, and other amenities that will increase the ACDBE's chance to
succeed;
Information on the investment required on the part of the
ACDBE and any unusual management or financial arrangements between the
prime concessionaire and ACDBE; and
Information on the estimated gross receipts and net profit
to be earned by the ACDBE.
The collection of information under this section is necessary for
FAA to carry out oversight responsibilities in determining whether
special local circumstances warrant approval of an LTE agreement.
The FAA received total annual burden hours from eight recipients,
two of each hub size (nonhub, small, medium and large), ranging from 0
to 20 hours. The total annual cost burden was calculated based on the
average of two recipients (small and medium hub size) responses ranging
from $2,000-$5,000.
Respondents: Recipients of FAA grants for Airport Development.
Number of Respondents: 7.
Frequency: Annually depending on the number of leases and/or
contracts with prime concessionaires that are long-term, exclusive
agreements and require FAA approval.
Number of Responses: 7.
Total Annual Burden: 2,376 hours and $3,500 per respondent.
Authority: The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 44 U.S.C. chapter
35, as amended; and 49 CFR 1:48.
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 15, 2022.
Marc D. Pentino,
Associate Director, Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Programs
Division, Departmental Office of Civil Rights, Office of the Secretary,
U.S. Department of Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2022-05760 Filed 3-17-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-13-P