Solicitation for Annual Combating Human Trafficking in Transportation Impact Award, 16310-16312 [2022-05781]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 55 / Tuesday, March 22, 2022 / Notices
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hazardous material or its residue or if it is
represented and maintained as a Department
of Transportation (DOT) packaging usable for
hazmat transportation.
(8) Question: Are hazardous materials
being transported for personal use subject to
the HMR? For example, are pesticides that
are transported from a store by individuals to
treat their garden subject to the HMR?
Answer: The answer is no. Under part 171,
the phrase ‘‘in commerce’’ means in
furtherance of a commercial enterprise and
transportation in a private motor vehicle for
personal use is not considered in furtherance
of a commercial enterprise even when
transported in a leased or rented vehicle.
(9) Question: Are privately-owned SCUBA
tanks that are used for diving and marked as
DOT specification cylinders subject to the
HMR?
Answer: A SCUBA tank that is represented
as conforming to HMR requirements—i.e.,
marked with a DOT specification marking—
must be maintained by the owner of said
SCUBA tank in accordance with the
applicable specification requirements
whether or not it is in transportation in
commerce.
(10) Question: Are government-owned
hazardous materials transported for
government purposes by contractor
personnel subject to the HMR?
Answer: The answer is yes. As provided in
§ 171.1(d)(5), the HMR do not apply to
transportation of a hazardous material in a
motor vehicle, aircraft, or vessel operated by
a Federal, state, or local government
employee solely for noncommercial Federal,
state, or local government purposes.
However, contractor personnel are not
considered government employees and the
provisions of the HMR apply.
(11) Question: Are gasoline cans
transported by a landscaping company by
motor vehicle subject to the HMR?
Answer: Commercial businesses—such as
landscaping, swimming pool services, or
construction companies—transporting
hazardous materials are considered ‘‘in
commerce’’ and subject to the HMR.
However, when used in support of a
business, the HMR provides an exception in
§ 173.6 for the transport of ‘‘materials of
trade.’’
(12) Question: Are household hazardous
wastes that are transported by a private
person to a county drop-off facility subject to
the HMR?
Answer: The answer is no, provided the
household hazardous wastes are the
individual’s personal property and he or she
is not engaged in a commercial activity, such
as a landscaping company or carpentry
service.
IV. Notice Objectives
FAQ in this notice—and future FAQ
published on PHMSA’s website—will
help to reduce the volume of
duplicative requests for information
covered by the FAQ and will facilitate
faster processing of more complex and
novel LOI requests in the future.
Furthermore, in addition to publishing
the first set of FAQ in the Federal
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18:24 Mar 21, 2022
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Register, this notice seeks public input
specific to the anticipated benefits
provided by the FAQ initiative and
suggestions for future FAQ topics.
Signed in Washington, DC, on March 16,
2022, under authority delegated in 49 CFR
1.97.
William A. Quade,
Deputy Associate Administrator of Hazardous
Materials Safety, Pipeline and Hazardous
Materials Safety Administration.
[FR Doc. 2022–05958 Filed 3–21–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–60–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
[DOT–OST–2021–0009]
Solicitation for Annual Combating
Human Trafficking in Transportation
Impact Award
Office of the Secretary of
Transportation, U.S. Department of
Transportation.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The annual Combating
Human Trafficking in Transportation
Impact Award (the award) seeks to raise
awareness among transportation
stakeholders about human trafficking
and increase training and prevention to
combat it. The award is a component of
the Department of Transportation (DOT)
Transportation Leaders Against Human
Trafficking initiative. Additional
information regarding the Department’s
counter-trafficking activities can be
found at www.transportation.gov/
stophumantrafficking.
DATES: Submissions accepted March 22,
2022 through midnight PST on May 23,
2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
more information, and to register your
intent to compete individually or as part
of a team, visit www.transportation.gov/
stophumantrafficking, email
trafficking@dot.gov, or contact Maha
Alkhateeb in the Office of International
Transportation and Trade at (202) 366–
4398.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The award
serves as a platform for transportation
stakeholders to creatively develop
impactful and innovative countertrafficking tools, initiatives, campaigns,
and technologies that can help stop
these heinous crimes. The award is
open to individuals and entities,
including non-governmental
organizations, transportation industry
associations, research institutions, and
state and local government
organizations. Entrants compete for a
cash award of up to $50,000 to be
awarded to the individual(s) or entity
SUMMARY:
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selected for creating the most impactful
counter-trafficking initiative or
technology. DOT intends to incentivize
individuals and entities to think
creatively in developing innovative
solutions to combat human trafficking
in the transportation industry, and to
share those innovations with the
broader community.
Award Approving Official: The
Secretary of Transportation (Secretary).
Subject of Award Competition: The
Combating Human Trafficking in
Transportation Impact Award will
recognize impactful and innovative
approaches to combating human
trafficking in the transportation
industry.
Problem
As many as 25 million men, women,
and children are held against their will
and trafficked into forced labor and
prostitution. Transportation figures
prominently in human trafficking
enterprises when traffickers move
victims, which uniquely positions the
industry to combat the crime.
Challenge
The Combating Human Trafficking in
Transportation Impact Award is looking
for the best innovators to develop
original, impactful, and unique human
trafficking tools, initiatives, campaigns,
and technologies that can help stop
these heinous crimes in the
transportation industry.
Eligibility
To be eligible to participate in the
Combating Human Trafficking in
Transportation Impact Award
competition, private entities must be
incorporated in and maintain a primary
place of business in the United States,
and individuals must be citizens or
permanent residents of the United
States. There is no charge to enter the
competition.
Rules, Terms, and Conditions
The following additional rules apply:
1. Entrants shall submit a project to
the competition under the rules
promulgated by the Department in this
Notice;
2. Entrants must indemnify, defend,
and hold harmless the Federal
Government from and against all thirdparty claims, actions, or proceedings of
any kind and from any and all damages,
liabilities, costs, and expenses relating
to or arising from participant’s
submission or any breach or alleged
breach of any of the representations,
warranties, and covenants of participant
hereunder. Entrants are financially
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responsible for claims made by a third
party;
3. Entrants may not be a Federal
entity or Federal employee acting
within the scope of employment;
4. Entrants may not be an employee
of the U.S. Department of
Transportation;
5. Entrants shall not be deemed
ineligible because an individual used
Federal facilities or consulted with
Federal employees during a competition
if the facilities and employees are made
available to all individuals participating
in the competition on an equitable basis;
6. The entries cannot have been
submitted in the same or substantially
similar form in any other previous
Federally sponsored promotion or
Federally sponsored competition;
7. Entrants previously awarded first
place are not eligible to reenter for the
same or substantially similar project;
8. Entries which, in the Department’s
sole discretion, are determined to be
substantially similar to another entity’s
entry submitted to this competition may
be disqualified;
9. The competition is subject to all
applicable Federal laws and regulations.
Participation constitutes the entrants’
full and unconditional agreement to
these rules and to the Secretary’s
decisions, which are final and binding
in all matters related to this
competition;
10. Entries must be original, be the
work of the entrant and/or nominee, and
must not violate the rights of other
parties. All entries remain the property
of the entrant. Each entrant represents
and warrants that:
• Entrant is the sole author and
owner of the submission;
• The entry is not the subject of any
actual or threatened litigation or claim;
• The entry does not and will not
violate or infringe upon the intellectual
property rights, privacy rights, publicity
rights, or other legal rights of any third
party; and
• The entry does not and will not
contain any harmful computer code
(sometimes referred to as ‘‘malware,’’
‘‘viruses,’’ or, ‘‘worms’’).
11. By submitting an entry in this
competition, entrants agree to assume
any and all risks and waive any claims
against the Federal Government and its
related entities (except in the case of
willful misconduct) for any injury,
death, damage, or loss of property,
revenue or profits, whether direct,
indirect, or consequential, arising from
their participation in this competition,
whether the injury, death, damage, or
loss arises through negligence of
otherwise. Provided, however, that by
registering or submitting an entry,
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18:24 Mar 21, 2022
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entrants and/or nominees do not waive
claims against the Department arising
out of the unauthorized use or
disclosure by the agency of the
intellectual property, trade secrets, or
confidential information of the entrant;
12. The Secretary or the Secretary’s
designees have the right to request
additional supporting documentation
regarding the application from the
entrants and/or nominees;
13. Each entrant grants to the
Department, as well as other Federal
agencies with which it partners, the
right to use names, likeness, application
materials, photographs, voices,
opinions, and hometown and state for
the Department’s promotional purposes
in any media, in perpetuity, worldwide,
without further payment or
consideration;
14. If selected, the entrant and/or
nominee must provide written consent
granting the Department and any parties
acting on their behalf, a royalty-free,
non-exclusive, irrevocable, worldwide
license to display publicly and use for
promotional purposes the entry
(‘‘demonstration license’’). This
demonstration license includes posting
or linking to the entry on Department
websites, including the Competition
website, and partner websites, and
inclusion of the entry in any other
media, worldwide;
15. Applicants which are Federal
grant recipients may not use Federal
funds to develop submissions;
16. Federal contractors may not use
Federal funds from a contract to develop
applications or to fund efforts in
support of a submission; and
17. The submission period begins on
March 22, 2022. Submissions must be
sent by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Standard
Time on May 23, 2022. The timeliness
of submissions will be determined by
the postmark (if sent in hard copy) or
time stamp of the recipient (if emailed).
Competition administrators assume no
responsibility for lost or untimely
submissions for any reason.
Submission Requirements
Applicants must submit entries via
email or by mail. Electronic packages
may be transmitted by email to:
trafficking@dot.gov. Hard copies should
be forwarded with a cover letter to the
attention of: Combating Human
Trafficking in Transportation Impact
Award (Room W88–121), 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC
20590.
Expression of Interest: While not
required, entrants are strongly
encouraged to send brief expressions of
interest to the DOT prior to submitting
entries. The expressions of interest
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should be sent by April 21, 2022 to
trafficking@dot.gov, and include the
following elements: (1) Name of entrant/
s; (2) Telephone and email address; and
(3) A synopsis of the concept, limited to
no more than two pages.
Please ensure your submission
package includes ALL of the following
elements:
1. Entity
The (1) name of the submitting
individual(s) or organization, (2) their
title, (3) phone, (4) email, (5) website
URL, and (6) mailing address. If the
point of contact for the project is
different, also specify their name, title,
phone, and email.
2. Background
Brief background regarding the
submitting individual(s) or
organization(s) that includes projectrelated expertise.
3. Eligibility Statement
A statement of eligibility by private
entities indicating that they are
incorporated in and maintain a primary
place of business in the United States,
or a statement of eligibility by
individuals indicating that they citizens
or permanent residents of the United
States.
4. Mode(s)
Specify which transportation mode(s)
the project will focus on.
5. Title
The project title.
6. Project Summary and Overview (1–2
Pages)
A (1) one-paragraph synopsis of the
proposed project followed by a (2) 1–2
page overview of the project. Projects
should present a logical and workable
solution and approach to addressing the
issue of human trafficking in the
transportation industry. Questions to
consider include: Is the concept unique?
Are the anticipated beneficiaries clearly
identified? Were human trafficking
survivors consulted in the development
of the project and/or how will survivor
input be included in project
implementation? Are the anticipated
resources and costs outlined in detail?
Can the project be implemented in a
way requiring a finite amount of
resources (e.g., the submission has fixed
costs, low or no marginal costs, and a
clear path to implementation and scale
beyond an initial investment)?
7. Impact/Measurability
A description of how the project will
be evaluated, and its potential impact
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 55 / Tuesday, March 22, 2022 / Notices
on human trafficking in the
transportation industry. Questions to
consider include: How will the project’s
impact be measured? How will the
project contribute to counter-trafficking
efforts in the transportation sector? If
not a national project, can the project be
scaled nationally?
8. Partners
If applicable, list the partners who
will be engaged in project development
and/or implementation, including a
brief background for each.
9. Letters of Support
You may submit supporting letters,
which may be from subject matter
experts or industry, and may address
the technical merit of the concept,
originality, impact, practicality,
measurability and/or applicability.
10. Supporting Documents (no page
limit)
The paper(s) and/or technologies,
programs, video/audio files, and other
related materials, describing the project
and addressing the selection criteria. As
applicable, this can include a
description of success of a previous or
similar project and/or documentation of
impact. DOT may request additional
information, including supporting
documentation, more detailed contact
information, releases of liability, and
statements of authenticity to guarantee
the originality of the work. Failure to
respond in a timely manner may result
in disqualification.
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Initial Screening
The Office of International
Transportation and Trade will initially
review applications to determine that all
required submission elements are
included, and to determine compliance
with eligibility requirements.
Evaluation
After the Initial Screening, the Office
of International Transportation and
Trade, with input from the relevant
Operating Administrations, will judge
entries based on the factors described
below: Technical merit, originality,
impact, practicality, measurability, and
applicability. All factors are important
and will be given consideration.
The Secretary will make the final
selection.
The Department reserves the right to
not award the prize if the selecting
officials believe that no submission
demonstrates sufficient potential for
sufficient transformative impact.
Technical Merit
• Presents a clear understanding of
the issue of human trafficking in the
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18:24 Mar 21, 2022
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transportation industry and utilizes a
trauma-informed, victim-centered
approach.
• Presents a logical and workable
solution and approach to addressing
human trafficking in the transportation
industry.
• Survivors of human trafficking were
consulted in the development of the
project concept and survivor input is
outlined in the description of project
implementation.
(Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719 (America
COMPETES Act).
Originality
• The concept is new or a variation of
an existing idea.
• The concept possesses and clearly
describes its unique merits.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Impact/Measurability
• The project can make a significant
impact and/or contribution to the fight
against human trafficking in the
transportation industry.
• The project clearly describes the
breadth of impact.
• The submission clearly outlines
how the project will be measured.
• The project will result in
measurable improvements.
Practicality
• The project clearly identifies
anticipated beneficiaries of the project.
• The project clearly outlines
anticipated resources and all costs to be
incurred by executing the concept.
• The project can be implemented in
a way that requires a finite amount of
resources (specifically, the submission
has fixed costs, low or no marginal
costs, and a clear path to
implementation and scale beyond an
initial investment).
Applicability
• The project is national and/or can
be scaled nationally.
Award
Up to three winning entries are
expected to be announced. The firstplace winner will receive up to a
$50,000 cash prize. A plaque with the
first-place winner(s) name and the date
of the award will be on display at the
U.S. Department of Transportation, and
a display copy of the plaque(s) will be
sent to the first-place award winner’s
headquarters. At the discretion of the
Secretary, up to two additional plaques
may be awarded to recognize two
runners up. At the Department’s
discretion, DOT may pay for invitational
travel expenses to Washington, DC for
up to two individuals or representatives
of the first-place winning organization
and runners up organizations, should
selectees be invited to present their
project(s) for DOT officials.
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Issued in Washington, DC, on March 10,
2022.
Carol Annette Petsonk,
Deputy Assistant Secretary, Aviation and
International Affairs, U.S. Department of
Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2022–05781 Filed 3–21–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P
Internal Revenue Service
Proposed Extension of Information
Collection Request Submitted for
Public Comment; Comment Request
for Form 8844
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
The Internal Revenue Service,
as part of its continuing effort to reduce
paperwork and respondent burden,
invites the public and other Federal
agencies to take this opportunity to
comment on proposed and/or
continuing information collections, as
required by the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995. Currently, the IRS is
soliciting comments concerning Form
8844, Empowerment Zone Employment
Credit.
DATES: Written comments should be
received on or before May 23, 2022 to
be assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to Andre´s Garcia, Internal Revenue
Service, Room 6526, 1111 Constitution
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20224, or
by email to omb.unit@irs.gov. Please
include, ‘‘OMB Number: 1545–1444—
Public Comment Request Notice’’ in the
Subject line.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the form and instructions
should be directed to Ronald J. Durbala,
at (202) 317–5746, at Internal Revenue
Service, Room 6526, 1111 Constitution
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20224, or
through the internet at
RJoseph.Durbala@irs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Empowerment Zone
Employment Credit.
OMB Number: 1545–1444.
Project Number: Form 8844.
Abstract: Employers who hire
employees who live and work in one of
the eleven designated empowerment
zones can receive a tax credit for the
first $15,000 of wages paid to each
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 55 (Tuesday, March 22, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 16310-16312]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-05781]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
[DOT-OST-2021-0009]
Solicitation for Annual Combating Human Trafficking in
Transportation Impact Award
AGENCY: Office of the Secretary of Transportation, U.S. Department of
Transportation.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The annual Combating Human Trafficking in Transportation
Impact Award (the award) seeks to raise awareness among transportation
stakeholders about human trafficking and increase training and
prevention to combat it. The award is a component of the Department of
Transportation (DOT) Transportation Leaders Against Human Trafficking
initiative. Additional information regarding the Department's counter-
trafficking activities can be found at www.transportation.gov/stophumantrafficking.
DATES: Submissions accepted March 22, 2022 through midnight PST on May
23, 2022.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For more information, and to register
your intent to compete individually or as part of a team, visit
www.transportation.gov/stophumantrafficking, email [email protected],
or contact Maha Alkhateeb in the Office of International Transportation
and Trade at (202) 366-4398.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The award serves as a platform for
transportation stakeholders to creatively develop impactful and
innovative counter-trafficking tools, initiatives, campaigns, and
technologies that can help stop these heinous crimes. The award is open
to individuals and entities, including non-governmental organizations,
transportation industry associations, research institutions, and state
and local government organizations. Entrants compete for a cash award
of up to $50,000 to be awarded to the individual(s) or entity selected
for creating the most impactful counter-trafficking initiative or
technology. DOT intends to incentivize individuals and entities to
think creatively in developing innovative solutions to combat human
trafficking in the transportation industry, and to share those
innovations with the broader community.
Award Approving Official: The Secretary of Transportation
(Secretary).
Subject of Award Competition: The Combating Human Trafficking in
Transportation Impact Award will recognize impactful and innovative
approaches to combating human trafficking in the transportation
industry.
Problem
As many as 25 million men, women, and children are held against
their will and trafficked into forced labor and prostitution.
Transportation figures prominently in human trafficking enterprises
when traffickers move victims, which uniquely positions the industry to
combat the crime.
Challenge
The Combating Human Trafficking in Transportation Impact Award is
looking for the best innovators to develop original, impactful, and
unique human trafficking tools, initiatives, campaigns, and
technologies that can help stop these heinous crimes in the
transportation industry.
Eligibility
To be eligible to participate in the Combating Human Trafficking in
Transportation Impact Award competition, private entities must be
incorporated in and maintain a primary place of business in the United
States, and individuals must be citizens or permanent residents of the
United States. There is no charge to enter the competition.
Rules, Terms, and Conditions
The following additional rules apply:
1. Entrants shall submit a project to the competition under the
rules promulgated by the Department in this Notice;
2. Entrants must indemnify, defend, and hold harmless the Federal
Government from and against all third-party claims, actions, or
proceedings of any kind and from any and all damages, liabilities,
costs, and expenses relating to or arising from participant's
submission or any breach or alleged breach of any of the
representations, warranties, and covenants of participant hereunder.
Entrants are financially
[[Page 16311]]
responsible for claims made by a third party;
3. Entrants may not be a Federal entity or Federal employee acting
within the scope of employment;
4. Entrants may not be an employee of the U.S. Department of
Transportation;
5. Entrants shall not be deemed ineligible because an individual
used Federal facilities or consulted with Federal employees during a
competition if the facilities and employees are made available to all
individuals participating in the competition on an equitable basis;
6. The entries cannot have been submitted in the same or
substantially similar form in any other previous Federally sponsored
promotion or Federally sponsored competition;
7. Entrants previously awarded first place are not eligible to
reenter for the same or substantially similar project;
8. Entries which, in the Department's sole discretion, are
determined to be substantially similar to another entity's entry
submitted to this competition may be disqualified;
9. The competition is subject to all applicable Federal laws and
regulations. Participation constitutes the entrants' full and
unconditional agreement to these rules and to the Secretary's
decisions, which are final and binding in all matters related to this
competition;
10. Entries must be original, be the work of the entrant and/or
nominee, and must not violate the rights of other parties. All entries
remain the property of the entrant. Each entrant represents and
warrants that:
Entrant is the sole author and owner of the submission;
The entry is not the subject of any actual or threatened
litigation or claim;
The entry does not and will not violate or infringe upon
the intellectual property rights, privacy rights, publicity rights, or
other legal rights of any third party; and
The entry does not and will not contain any harmful
computer code (sometimes referred to as ``malware,'' ``viruses,'' or,
``worms'').
11. By submitting an entry in this competition, entrants agree to
assume any and all risks and waive any claims against the Federal
Government and its related entities (except in the case of willful
misconduct) for any injury, death, damage, or loss of property, revenue
or profits, whether direct, indirect, or consequential, arising from
their participation in this competition, whether the injury, death,
damage, or loss arises through negligence of otherwise. Provided,
however, that by registering or submitting an entry, entrants and/or
nominees do not waive claims against the Department arising out of the
unauthorized use or disclosure by the agency of the intellectual
property, trade secrets, or confidential information of the entrant;
12. The Secretary or the Secretary's designees have the right to
request additional supporting documentation regarding the application
from the entrants and/or nominees;
13. Each entrant grants to the Department, as well as other Federal
agencies with which it partners, the right to use names, likeness,
application materials, photographs, voices, opinions, and hometown and
state for the Department's promotional purposes in any media, in
perpetuity, worldwide, without further payment or consideration;
14. If selected, the entrant and/or nominee must provide written
consent granting the Department and any parties acting on their behalf,
a royalty-free, non-exclusive, irrevocable, worldwide license to
display publicly and use for promotional purposes the entry
(``demonstration license''). This demonstration license includes
posting or linking to the entry on Department websites, including the
Competition website, and partner websites, and inclusion of the entry
in any other media, worldwide;
15. Applicants which are Federal grant recipients may not use
Federal funds to develop submissions;
16. Federal contractors may not use Federal funds from a contract
to develop applications or to fund efforts in support of a submission;
and
17. The submission period begins on March 22, 2022. Submissions
must be sent by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Standard Time on May 23, 2022. The
timeliness of submissions will be determined by the postmark (if sent
in hard copy) or time stamp of the recipient (if emailed). Competition
administrators assume no responsibility for lost or untimely
submissions for any reason.
Submission Requirements
Applicants must submit entries via email or by mail. Electronic
packages may be transmitted by email to: [email protected]. Hard
copies should be forwarded with a cover letter to the attention of:
Combating Human Trafficking in Transportation Impact Award (Room W88-
121), 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590.
Expression of Interest: While not required, entrants are strongly
encouraged to send brief expressions of interest to the DOT prior to
submitting entries. The expressions of interest should be sent by April
21, 2022 to [email protected], and include the following elements:
(1) Name of entrant/s; (2) Telephone and email address; and (3) A
synopsis of the concept, limited to no more than two pages.
Please ensure your submission package includes ALL of the following
elements:
1. Entity
The (1) name of the submitting individual(s) or organization, (2)
their title, (3) phone, (4) email, (5) website URL, and (6) mailing
address. If the point of contact for the project is different, also
specify their name, title, phone, and email.
2. Background
Brief background regarding the submitting individual(s) or
organization(s) that includes project-related expertise.
3. Eligibility Statement
A statement of eligibility by private entities indicating that they
are incorporated in and maintain a primary place of business in the
United States, or a statement of eligibility by individuals indicating
that they citizens or permanent residents of the United States.
4. Mode(s)
Specify which transportation mode(s) the project will focus on.
5. Title
The project title.
6. Project Summary and Overview (1-2 Pages)
A (1) one-paragraph synopsis of the proposed project followed by a
(2) 1-2 page overview of the project. Projects should present a logical
and workable solution and approach to addressing the issue of human
trafficking in the transportation industry. Questions to consider
include: Is the concept unique? Are the anticipated beneficiaries
clearly identified? Were human trafficking survivors consulted in the
development of the project and/or how will survivor input be included
in project implementation? Are the anticipated resources and costs
outlined in detail? Can the project be implemented in a way requiring a
finite amount of resources (e.g., the submission has fixed costs, low
or no marginal costs, and a clear path to implementation and scale
beyond an initial investment)?
7. Impact/Measurability
A description of how the project will be evaluated, and its
potential impact
[[Page 16312]]
on human trafficking in the transportation industry. Questions to
consider include: How will the project's impact be measured? How will
the project contribute to counter-trafficking efforts in the
transportation sector? If not a national project, can the project be
scaled nationally?
8. Partners
If applicable, list the partners who will be engaged in project
development and/or implementation, including a brief background for
each.
9. Letters of Support
You may submit supporting letters, which may be from subject matter
experts or industry, and may address the technical merit of the
concept, originality, impact, practicality, measurability and/or
applicability.
10. Supporting Documents (no page limit)
The paper(s) and/or technologies, programs, video/audio files, and
other related materials, describing the project and addressing the
selection criteria. As applicable, this can include a description of
success of a previous or similar project and/or documentation of
impact. DOT may request additional information, including supporting
documentation, more detailed contact information, releases of
liability, and statements of authenticity to guarantee the originality
of the work. Failure to respond in a timely manner may result in
disqualification.
Initial Screening
The Office of International Transportation and Trade will initially
review applications to determine that all required submission elements
are included, and to determine compliance with eligibility
requirements.
Evaluation
After the Initial Screening, the Office of International
Transportation and Trade, with input from the relevant Operating
Administrations, will judge entries based on the factors described
below: Technical merit, originality, impact, practicality,
measurability, and applicability. All factors are important and will be
given consideration.
The Secretary will make the final selection.
The Department reserves the right to not award the prize if the
selecting officials believe that no submission demonstrates sufficient
potential for sufficient transformative impact.
Technical Merit
Presents a clear understanding of the issue of human
trafficking in the transportation industry and utilizes a trauma-
informed, victim-centered approach.
Presents a logical and workable solution and approach to
addressing human trafficking in the transportation industry.
Survivors of human trafficking were consulted in the
development of the project concept and survivor input is outlined in
the description of project implementation.
Originality
The concept is new or a variation of an existing idea.
The concept possesses and clearly describes its unique
merits.
Impact/Measurability
The project can make a significant impact and/or
contribution to the fight against human trafficking in the
transportation industry.
The project clearly describes the breadth of impact.
The submission clearly outlines how the project will be
measured.
The project will result in measurable improvements.
Practicality
The project clearly identifies anticipated beneficiaries
of the project.
The project clearly outlines anticipated resources and all
costs to be incurred by executing the concept.
The project can be implemented in a way that requires a
finite amount of resources (specifically, the submission has fixed
costs, low or no marginal costs, and a clear path to implementation and
scale beyond an initial investment).
Applicability
The project is national and/or can be scaled nationally.
Award
Up to three winning entries are expected to be announced. The
first-place winner will receive up to a $50,000 cash prize. A plaque
with the first-place winner(s) name and the date of the award will be
on display at the U.S. Department of Transportation, and a display copy
of the plaque(s) will be sent to the first-place award winner's
headquarters. At the discretion of the Secretary, up to two additional
plaques may be awarded to recognize two runners up. At the Department's
discretion, DOT may pay for invitational travel expenses to Washington,
DC for up to two individuals or representatives of the first-place
winning organization and runners up organizations, should selectees be
invited to present their project(s) for DOT officials.
(Authority: 15 U.S.C. 3719 (America COMPETES Act).
Issued in Washington, DC, on March 10, 2022.
Carol Annette Petsonk,
Deputy Assistant Secretary, Aviation and International Affairs, U.S.
Department of Transportation.
[FR Doc. 2022-05781 Filed 3-21-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-9X-P