Training, Qualification, and Oversight for Safety-Related Railroad Employees, 59749-59769 [2022-21277]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 190 / Monday, October 3, 2022 / Proposed Rules
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Authority: This proposed action is issued
under the authority of sections 2002(a), 3006
and 7004(b) of the Solid Waste Disposal Act,
as amended, 42 U.S.C. 6912(a), 6926, 6974(b).
Dated: September 23, 2022.
David W. Cash,
Regional Administrator, U.S. EPA Region I.
[FR Doc. 2022–21320 Filed 9–30–22; 8:45 am]
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Table of Contents for Supplementary
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 243
[Docket No. FRA–2020–0017, Notice No. 1]
RIN 2130–AC87
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In response to petitions for
rulemaking, FRA proposes amending its
regulation on Training, Qualification,
and Oversight for Safety-Related
Railroad Employees (Training Rule) to
codify agency guidance and clarify
existing requirements.
DATES: Written comments on the
proposed rule must be received by
December 2, 2022. FRA will consider
comments received after that date to the
extent practicable.
ADDRESSES:
Comments: Comments related to
Docket No. FRA–2020–0017 may be
submitted by going to https://www.
regulations.gov and following the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Instructions: All submissions must
include the agency name, docket
number (FRA–2020–0017), and
Regulatory Identification Number (RIN)
for this rulemaking (2130–AC87). All
comments received will be posted
without change to https://www.
regulations.gov; this includes any
personal information. Please see the
Privacy Act Statement heading in
Section IV of this document for Privacy
Act information related to any
submitted comments or materials.
Docket: For access to the docket to
read background documents or
comments received, go to https://
www.regulations.gov and follow the
online instructions for accessing the
docket.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robert J. Castiglione, Staff Director,
Safety Partnerships Division, Office of
Railroad Safety, FRA, telephone: 817–
247–3707, email: robert.castiglione@
dot.gov; or Alan H. Nagler, Senior
Attorney, Office of the Chief Counsel,
FRA, telephone: 202–493–6038, email:
alan.nagler@dot.gov.
SUMMARY:
Sharon Leitch, RCRA Waste
Management, UST and Pesticides
Section; Land, Chemicals and
Redevelopment Division; EPA Region 1,
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code 07–1), Boston, MA 02109–3912;
phone: (617) 918–1647; email:
leitch.sharon@epa.gov.
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so at this time. For additional
information, please see the direct final
rule published in the ‘‘Rules and
Regulations’’ section in this issue of the
Federal Register.
Training, Qualification, and Oversight
for Safety-Related Railroad Employees
Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
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I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Petition Requests FRA Proposes
Adopting
B. Petition Requests FRA Does Not Propose
Adopting
C. Summary of FRA Guidance to the
Regulated Community
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
IV. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive
Order 13272
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Federalism Implications
E. International Trade Impact Assessment
F. Environmental Impact
G. Executive Order 12898 (Environmental
Justice)
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H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
I. Energy Impact
I. Executive Summary
Purpose of the Regulatory Action and
Legal Authority
In response to the mandate of section
401(a) of the Rail Safety Improvement
Act of 2008 (RSIA),1 on November 7,
2014, FRA published a final rule (2014
Final Rule) establishing minimum
training standards for safety-related
railroad employees and requiring
railroad carriers, contractors, and
subcontractors to develop and submit
certain training programs to FRA for
approval.2
On May 3, 2017, FRA published a
final rule which delayed
implementation dates in the 2014 Final
Rule by one year.3 The delay was
necessary to help model training
program developers and other regulated
entities comply with the rule.4 On April
27, 2018, FRA published a final rule in
response to a petition for
reconsideration of that May 2017 rule by
granting the American Short Line and
Regional Railroad Association’s
(ASLRRA) request to delay the
implementation dates by an additional
year.5 FRA determined that the delay
was necessary to improve compliance,
reduce significant cost impacts
associated with the rule, and prevent
complicating the approval process.6
On June 27 and July 31, 2019, FRA
received joint petitions for rulemaking
filed by ASLRRA and the National
Railroad Construction and Maintenance
Association, Inc. (NRC) (collectively,
‘‘Associations’’) requesting additional
implementation delays and other
changes to the 2014 Final Rule; these
petitions were docketed in DOT’s
Docket Management System as FRA–
2019–0050. On January 2, 2020, FRA
responded to the Associations’ petitions
for rulemaking by issuing a final rule
delaying the regulation’s
implementation dates for all contractors,
1 Public Law 110–432, 122 Stat. 4883 (Oct. 16,
2008), codified at 49 U.S.C. 20162. The Secretary
of Transportation delegated the authority to carry
out this mandate to the the Federal Railroad
Administrator. 49 CFR 1.89(b).
2 79 FR 66459.
3 82 FR 20549.
4 82 FR 20550. In December 2016, FRA completed
sharing training documents FRA uses to train the
agency’s personnel on Federal rail safety
requirements with model program developers and
made those documents available on FRA’s website.
However, even after FRA produced those
documents and performed significant outreach to
educate the regulated community, one association
(considered a major model program developer)
informed FRA it found certain aspects of the rule
confusing to implement and difficult for contractors
to apply in practice.
5 83 FR 18455.
6 83 FR 18456.
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 190 / Monday, October 3, 2022 / Proposed Rules
and those Class II and III railroads that
are not intercity or commuter passenger
railroads with 400,000 total employee
work hours annually or more.7
Regarding the Associations’ remaining
requests in the petitions for rulemaking,
FRA’s January 2, 2020, final rule stated
that FRA was considering addressing
the Associations’ remaining requests in
a separate rulemaking.8 This proposed
rulemaking would address the
remaining requests in the Associations’
2019 petitions for rulemaking, clarify
current requirements, and remove
regulatory provisions that are obsolete.
Costs and Benefits
FRA has examined the proposed
rulemaking and finds that any
associated costs and benefits would be
de minimis. It is expected that the
railroad industry and FRA would
experience several qualitative benefits,
which are fully discussed in the
Regulatory Impact section of this
proposed rule. These benefits include:
(1) providing clarity to the regulated
community, thereby facilitating
compliance with the regulatory
requirements; (2) making it easier for
FRA to administer the Training Rule’s
requirements; and (3) removing certain
regulatory provisions that are obsolete.
II. Background
In the 2014 Final Rule, FRA stated its
intention to issue a compliance guide
with a primary emphasis on assisting
small entities, but which could also be
used by any employer.9 FRA anticipated
that the compliance guide would also
help model program developers in
drafting programs to be adopted by
small railroads and contractors. FRA
issued an interim compliance guide and
made it available for immediate
effectiveness in the 2014 Final Rule
docket 10 on April 21, 2015, but
provided a comment period in
anticipation that the regulated
7 85
FR 10 (Jan. 2, 2020).
FR 10 (stating FRA’s intent to initiate a
separate rulemaking which would be limited to
amending FRA’s training regulation so that the
regulatory text includes the latest guidance
intended to help small entities and other users of
model programs). FRA’s response to address the
Associations’ remaining requests in a separate
rulemaking was consistent with its previous
statement on the subject. 84 FR 64447, 64449 (Nov.
22, 2019).
9 79 FR 66474.
10 Document number FRA–2009–0033–0031.
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community might have additional
comments or concerns.
On May 25, 2016, FRA responded to
the comments and posted its first
version of the final compliance guide.11
On November 30, 2016, FRA posted a
second version of the final compliance
guide,12 largely to publish FRA’s
answers to questions received from the
regulated community that broad
dissemination would benefit. When
FRA amended the implementation dates
by final rules published on May 3, 2017,
and April 27, 2018, FRA made
conforming changes to the final
compliance guide and posted the
revised version on FRA’s website at
https://railroads.dot.gov/divisions/
safety-partnerships/training-standardsrule. The same location on FRA’s
website contains the following
additional guidance: (1) an ASLRRA
Q&A Document, which contains FRA’s
answers to 11 questions concerning part
243 posed by ASLRRA; (2) an On the
Job Training (OJT) matrix, which shows
the minimum type of training (i.e.,
formal training, OJT training, or briefing
only) that FRA expects to see in a
program covering each specific rail
safety requirement under most
circumstances; (3) OJT templates that
serve as examples of OJT training
standards for some types of employees;
and (4) various resource documents to
assist employers with training in the
areas of equipment maintenance,
passenger equipment requirements,
brake systems, engineering and track
maintenance, and signal and train
control requirements.
This NPRM proposes addressing two
of the Associations’ overarching
concerns: first, that FRA provide
sufficient certainty as to how the agency
will apply the requirements of part 243
in the future by converting existing
guidance applicable to part 243 into
regulatory text; second, that FRA adopt
specific regulatory text changes so as to
facilitate compliance with the Training
Rule.13 In this Background section, FRA
11 Document
number FRA–2009–0033–0035.
number FRA–2009–0033–0036.
13 FRA notes that representatives of the
Associations met with FRA on January 17, 2020, to
discuss their requests for greater clarity pertaining
to the requirements for refresher training, program
submission, model program adoption, and periodic
oversight. A follow-up meeting with the
Associations was held by phone on December 4,
2020, so that FRA could express its continuing
12 Document
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details the petition requests made by the
Associations that FRA proposes to
address and those it does not.
Additionally, this Background section
provides a summary of other guidance
FRA has provided to the regulated
community that is not addressed by the
petitions for rulemaking.
A. Petition Requests FRA Proposes
Adopting
Through their petitions for
rulemaking and informal discussions
with FRA, the Associations requested
that FRA amend part 243 to codify the
guidance, thereby providing certainty to
the regulated community as to how the
agency will apply part 243’s
requirements in the future. In making
this request, the Associations express
concern that agency guidance is subject
to change without rulemaking. To the
extent possible, the Associations ask
that FRA convert the information in
guidance documents into regulatory text
so that the regulated community only
needs to consult the regulatory
requirements to understand the part 243
regulation. FRA agrees with this request
and intends this proposed rule to
convert the guidance into regulatory
text, to the extent possible.
Definition of Refresher Training
FRA is proposing to revise the
definition of ‘‘refresher training’’
because the Associations’ request for
clarification in their petitions for
rulemaking express confusion and
request clarification. FRA currently
defines ‘‘refresher training’’ as meaning
periodic retraining required by an
employer for each safety-related railroad
employee to remain qualified. Because
refresher training is already required in
other FRA regulations, albeit under
different names, FRA believed the
general meaning of the term was
understood throughout the regulated
railroad community. However, in
reviewing FRA’s other refresher training
requirements, and the Associations’ and
other industry members’questions about
refresher training, FRA recognizes that
clarifying the term would be helpful—
especially for small entities.
interest to respond to the petitions for rulemaking
and the Associations could emphasize concerns of
greatest interest to their members.
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Accordingly, FRA proposes to revise
the definition of the term ‘‘refresher
training’’ in part 243 to, among other
things: (1) acknowledge that FRA refers
to refresher training in its other
regulations with a variety of terms (e.g.,
‘‘recurrent training,’’ ‘‘re-training,’’
‘‘periodic training,’’ ‘‘training that
occurs periodically,’’ or ‘‘training that is
required within defined intervals’’); and
(2) state that those refresher training
programs or plans required by FRA’s
other regulations need not be submitted
to FRA for review under § 243.103(b).14
FRA’s proposed definition of refresher
training explains that the purpose of
this type of training is to improve the
job performance of existing employees
by acquainting them with any
problematic issues or new skills,
methods, and processes. In conjunction
with the proposed revisions to the
definition of ‘‘refresher training,’’ FRA
is also proposing revisions to the
refresher training requirements and
options in § 243.201(e) to clarify what
employers need to include, at a
minimum, to complete acceptable
refresher training.
Definition of Training Organizations or
Learning Institutions
FRA is proposing to add a definition
of ‘‘training organizations or learning
institutions’’ to address an issue FRA is
currently answering through guidance.
FRA has been asked several times
whether certain small- and mediumsized businesses that provide training to
employers are ‘‘training organizations or
learning institutions’’ for purposes of
part 243. Because part 243 currently
lacks a definition, some businesses were
confused about their need to comply
with the rule. To provide clarity, and as
explained in more detail in the sectionby-section analysis, FRA is proposing a
definition that identifies four
characteristics of a training organization
or learning institution.
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Model Program Developer or Employer
With an Approved Program Wants To
Be Treated as a Training Organization or
Learning Institution
FRA has received inquiries from
entities with FRA-approved programs
(either model programs under § 243.105
or employer programs under § 243.101)
asking whether they need additional
14 FRA published a chart identifying those
already-maintained training programs that FRA
expects will not be submitted as initial or refresher
training under part 243. Although FRA does not
intend to maintain this chart, as FRA is perpetually
removing, revising, or adding regulatory
requirements, the chart published on May 1, 2019,
in the compliance guide can be found at https://
railroads.dot.gov/divisions/safety-partnerships/
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FRA-approval to provide training
services to employers as a training
organization or learning institution. In
conformance with verbal guidance that
FRA has previously provided, this
NPRM would clarify that such entities
need not resubmit an approved model
or employer program to be recognized
under part 243 as a training organization
or learning institution. Rather, such
entities would only need to submit an
informational filing for FRA-approval
containing the information required
§ 243.111(c).
Section 243.101 Employer Program
Required
FRA is proposing to revise this
section to remove requirements that are
obsolete and to clarify and incorporate
guidance. Among other things, FRA is
proposing to delete the effective date of
January 1, 2020, as that implementation
deadline has already passed and is now
unnecessary.
In addition, this NPRM would
incorporate guidance that FRA has
previously provided in response to
industry stakeholders’ questions
regarding the ability of employers to
classify their safety-related railroad
employees based on the FRA regulations
the employees are required to comply
with for their work, rather than
traditional craft terminology.
Specifically, this NPRM would clarify
that it is permissible for an employer to
classify its safety-related railroad
employees by listing the Federal
railroad safety laws, regulations, and
orders that the employee is required to
comply with to complete the employee’s
assignments and duties.
Further, the NPRM would incorporate
FRA guidance to employers on how
training is required to be structured,
developed, and delivered. Specifically,
OJT is required when tasks require
neuromuscular coordination to learn,
unless FRA approves alternative, formal
training that addresses the need to
practice safety-related tasks, with the
ability to objectively measure task
completion proficiency. Examples of
alternative, formal training could
include: training facilities that permit
students to practice tasks that require
neuromuscular coordination to learn in
a controlled environment with minimal
or no risk of personal injury; classroom
practical exercises; role play; lab
simulation; or virtual reality (VR) and
other emerging technologies.
In addition, this NPRM would
incorporate FRA guidance regarding
contractor employers. Currently,
§ 243.101(e) requires a contractor that
chooses to train its own safety-related
railroad employees to provide each
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59751
railroad that utilizes its services with a
document indicating that the
contractor’s program of training was
approved by FRA. However, the existing
paragraph does not consider that some
similar training programs or plans,
pursuant to other regulatory
requirements contained elsewhere in
this chapter, are not required to be
submitted in accordance with this part
and, therefore, the contractor would not
have a document that it could show a
railroad validating FRA’s approval of its
program. For this reason, FRA is
proposing to clarify that the requirement
does not apply when the contractor is
not required to submit a training
program to FRA or retain a document
indicating FRA’s approval of the
program.
Section 243.103 Training Components
Identified in Program
FRA is proposing three clarifying
revisions to the requirements of
§ 243.103. First, existing paragraph
(a)(1) requires each employer’s program
to include a unique name and identifier
for each formal course of study. The
proposed revision to this requirement
clarifies that the types of formal courses
needing a unique name and identifier
include both initial and refresher
training. An initial or refresher training
course that FRA has previously
approved would not need a new unique
name and identifier each time it is
revised.
Second, existing paragraph (a)(2)(v)
requires each employer’s program to
include a course outline, and the outline
to include the anticipated course
duration. However, the existing
requirement does not specify whether
the anticipated course duration includes
OJT. To address that gap, FRA proposes
to revise the requirement to state that
the employer’s course outline for each
course must include the anticipated
course duration for all formal training
combined, apart from OJT. Because OJT
is rarely scheduled for a specific time
duration, FRA proposes that any
estimate of OJT duration be excluded
from the formal training duration
estimate.
Third, as discussed in the definition
of Refresher Training section above, this
NPRM would clarify that similar
training programs or plans, currently
required by other FRA regulations, do
not have to be submitted to FRA under
part 243. As noted in footnote 13 above,
FRA has published a chart identifying
those already-maintained training
programs that FRA expects will not be
submitted as initial or refresher training
under part 243.
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Additional Changes to Miscellaneous
Sections
As described in the section-by-section
analysis below, FRA has identified a
number of additional requirements that
can be eliminated as obsolete or revised
to add regulatory certainty and clarity.
Those changes that can be found in the
proposed requirements for Training
Components Identified in Program
(§ 243.103), Optional Model Program
Development (§ 243.105), Training
Program Submission, Introductory
Information Required (§ 243.107),
Approval of Programs Filed by Training
Organizations or Learning Institutions
(§ 243.111), Records (§ 243.203), and
Periodic Oversight (§ 243.205).
In addition, the Associations’
petitions requested that FRA revise
§ 243.113 to allow any employer, not
just small employers with less than
400,000 total employee work hours
annually, to have the option to submit
a training program by a method other
than electronic submission. However,
during subsequent communications, the
Associations retracted that request and
told FRA that they would not object to
FRA proposing mandatory submission
electronically for all employers through
FRA’s part 243 web portal. Accordingly,
this NPRM proposes that change in
§ 243.113, Electronic and Written
Program Submission Requirements.
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B. Petition Requests FRA Does Not
Propose Adopting
Although FRA is proposing to adopt
many of the recommendations the
Associations suggested in their petitions
for rulemaking, there are several items
that FRA is not.
FRA is not proposing any additional
implementation date delays. The
implementation dates in the existing
rule have come due with the exception
of those for implementing the refresher
training requirements (December 31,
2024, for each Class I railroad and each
intercity or commuter passenger
railroad conducting operations subject
to this part with 400,000 total employee
work hours annually or more, or
December 31, 2025, for each employer
conducting operations subject to this
part that is not covered by the earlier
implementation date). Thus, the need
for implementation date delays appears
to have passed or is not yet ripe for
review.
Neither is FRA proposing a different
set of training requirements for the Class
II and III freight railroads and
contractors compared to the Class I
railroads. Because the work of each
safety-related railroad employee must
comply with the same Federal railroad
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safety laws, regulations, and orders, and
the consequences for failing to comply
with those laws can be just as dangerous
regardless of the size or type of
operation of the employer, it is FRA’s
position that safety-related railroad
employees should not be held to
different training standards based on the
size or type of their employer. Instead,
FRA’s existing regulation and the
proposed changes in this rulemaking
provide for differences in employer size
or type by allowing employers to draft
their own programs or use model
programs to develop training in ways
that are tailored to smaller entities, or
contract for training services from one
or more training organizations or
learning institutions.
Additionally, for the same reasons,
FRA is not proposing relief for Class II
and III freight railroads and contractors
to have a different set of qualification
requirements versus Class I railroads
when an employee is qualified by an
entity other than the employee’s current
employer and the previous qualification
records are unavailable under
§ 243.201(d)(1). Likewise, FRA is not
proposing relief for Class II and III
freight railroads and contractors to have
a different refresher training period than
the three-year period in the existing
regulation.
FRA is also declining the
Associations’ suggestions to add a
definition of ‘‘program’’ that would
mean the written and electronic
instructional and testing materials, and
add a definition of ‘‘template’’ that
would mean an outline of the training
program, and then allow employers to
submit either one. However, FRA’s
approach to a training program goes
more to the employer describing the
methodology of determining how safetyrelated railroad employees are to be
trained and how the employer can
determine that the training is effective.
Because the Associations’ proposed
definitions would impair that approach,
FRA is declining to propose adding
these two terms to the definitions
section of this NPRM.
The Associations petitioned FRA to
propose removing the burden on an
employer to affirmatively state that it
has chosen to use an FRA-approved
model program, contending that the
burden is unnecessary. FRA declines to
propose this revision. Although the
Associations acknowledge the burden is
relatively small on each employer, they
state that the cumulative burden on
small employers is relatively large.
FRA’s decision to decline adopting this
revision is based on the statutory
requirement for the submission of
‘‘training and qualification plans to the
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Secretary for approval, including
training programs and information
deemed necessary by the Secretary to
ensure that all safety-related railroad
employees receive appropriate training
in a timely manner.’’ 15 It would be
difficult for FRA to ensure that an
employer’s safety-related railroad
employees were being trained as
statutorily required without an
affirmative submission from the
employer. Meanwhile, FRA is proposing
revisions to § 243.105(b) to help
employers conceptualize the steps
necessary to learn about what model
programs are available and how they
can obtain the model programs they
need. Thus, this proposed rulemaking is
targeted to easing the burden raised by
the Associations in their petitions for
rulemaking, even if it does not remove
the burden.
The Associations’ petitions suggest
that FRA propose revising the records
requirement in § 243.203 to eliminate
the specific requirements and allow
their members to keep whatever records
the Class II and III railroads and
contractors believe are necessary to
demonstrate compliance with part 243.
FRA declines to propose this suggestion
because it would eliminate objective
recordkeeping requirements in exchange
for an unknown, subjective, and
variable response.
The Associations’ petitions suggest
that FRA propose revising the periodic
oversight requirements in § 243.205 to
require a contractor that employs
supervisory safety-related railroad
employees to perform oversight only
when those supervisory employees are
available to perform it. FRA is not
proposing this suggestion because the
Associations’ recommendation
regarding a contractor’s supervisory
employees would likely render that
requirement unenforceable as FRA
would expect any employer could make
a reasonable argument that its
supervisors were too busy to perform
the oversight required.
Finally, the Associations’ petitions
suggest that FRA propose to exclude
Class II and III railroads from the
requirement to conduct annual reviews.
This would be an expansion of the
existing exclusion which covers a
railroad with less than 400,000 total
employee work hours annually. FRA is
not proposing this revision because the
exclusion was purposely designed to
exclude only the smallest Class III
railroads. A railroad with at least
400,000 total employee work hours
annually is large enough that it should
be expected to have the resources to
15 49
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effectively evaluate its training
programs on a regular basis. Annual
reviews help ensure that a railroad is
updating the program as needed and
addressing rising systemic safety
concerns through targeted training
program changes.
C. Summary of FRA Guidance to the
Regulated Community
Since the effective date of the 2014
Final Rule, FRA has received questions
from the regulated community regarding
the agency’s plans for auditing program
implementation and enforcement. The
following background reiterates
guidance FRA provided on these
subjects in response to questions
received. Please note that these issues
are matters of agency discretion, policy,
or rules of agency organization,
procedure, or practice that are exempt
from notice and comment rulemaking.16
Nevertheless, FRA will consider any
comments on its procedures or practices
filed in response to this proposed rule.
One question FRA answered in the
compliance guide asked what an FRA
audit will include. FRA understands
that each employer, organization, or
business required to comply with part
243 wants this information so that it can
best ensure that FRA will continue to
find its program, records, and activities
in compliance. In the compliance guide,
FRA explained that agency personnel
will likely engage in the following audit
activities: (1) attend classes and observe
different types of training; (2) review
periodic oversight records; (3) review
annual review records; (4) review
employee training records; (5) review
training evaluation methods; and (6)
confirm that each employer is
complying with its training program.
While FRA provided this list of
standard audit activities to inform the
regulated community of the general
direction of most part 243 audits, the
list was not intended to be exhaustive,
and certainly FRA could conduct
additional audit activities, including
conducting interviews of relevant
personnel, and conducting site visits, if
applicable.
Also, in the compliance guide, FRA
answered a question regarding whether
the agency would provide a grace period
before taking enforcement action. FRA’s
answer in the compliance guide
reflected the agency’s understanding
that, as with all new regulations, it will
take some time for employers to learn
how to comply fully with part 243, and
potentially 12 to 18 months after
training program implementation for
FRA to begin scheduling routine audits.
16 5
U.S.C. 553(b).
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Consequently, FRA’s response in the
compliance guide explained how FRA
expects to help employers, particularly
small entities, comply with part 243,
albeit without a grace period. In
addition, FRA clarified that it reserves
the right to use its full enforcement
authority to ensure compliance,
especially in cases where gross
disregard for compliance is observed.
In reviewing the guidance in the
compliance guide regarding FRA
enforcement, FRA adds that regulated
entities should expect FRA’s audits will
focus on both compliance and
performance. If a training program is not
effective, FRA will address those
performance objectives with the
regulated entity. After all, the purpose
of part 243 is to ensure safety-related
railroad employees are properly trained
and qualified so as to improve rail safety
generally. To achieve that purpose, FRA
expects each regulated entity to
continuously look for and consider
implementing industry best practices.
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
Subpart A—General
Section 243.1
Purpose and Scope
Section 243.1 sets forth the purpose
and scope of part 243. This NPRM
proposes to add two new paragraphs,
paragraphs (f) and (g), to this section to
incorporate existing guidance related to
railroad bridge engineers and nonrailroad employees who perform
elective audits or assessments.
Proposed paragraph (f) codifies
guidance in the compliance guide,
which explains that part 243 does not
apply when the training required under
FRA’s regulations is obtained through
earning a college degree or certification
from an accredited training organization
or learning institution.17 For example,
part 243 does not require railroad bridge
engineers to receive ‘‘in-house’’ training
when an individual qualifies as a bridge
engineer under 49 CFR 237.51(b). That
section provides that an individual may
qualify as a bridge engineer based on a
degree in engineering from an
accredited school or organization.
Employers are not required to provide
or duplicate the same types of classes a
person might need to earn a college
degree or certification from a college or
university. However, if a railroad bridge
engineer is conducting a bridge
inspection as required by 49 CFR part
237, an employer is required to provide
training on how to conduct a proper
17 Compliance Guide at 49–50 located at https://
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bridge inspection safely as required by
49 CFR part 214. Not only is it unlikely
that a college engineering course would
cover railroad bridge safety rules for
inspections, but each railroad is likely
to have its own unique combination of
rules.
Proposed paragraph (g) codifies
guidance in the compliance guide
clarifying that employers are not
required to train non-railroad employees
who perform audits or assessments that
are not required by Federal railroad
safety laws, regulations, or orders.18
FRA is proposing this change in
response to the Associations’ concerns
specifically pertaining to employees of
the Short Line Safety Institute (SLSI)
who conduct safety audits and provide
recommendations to short line railroads
on ways to improve safety. The
Associations assert in their petitions
that SLSI employees are not conducting
‘‘oversight inspections or testing’’ and
‘‘do not train railroad employees in
specific tasks.’’ FRA agrees with the
Associations’ position on this issue and
notes that, although the Associations
suggest in their petitions that FRA
amend the definition of ‘‘safety-related
railroad employee’’ to exclude these
types of non-railroad employees and
SLSI employees specifically, FRA finds
that the exclusion is better placed in
§ 243.1. FRA also finds that specifically
excluding SLSI employees is
unnecessary as SLSI employees clearly
fall within the revised language as
proposed.
Section 243.3 Application and
Responsibility for Compliance
Section 243.3 provides that, with
certain exceptions, part 243 applies to
all railroads, contractors of railroads,
and training organizations or learning
institutions that train safety-related
railroad employees. The section further
makes clear that any person, including
a railroad or a contractor for a railroad,
that performs any duty covered by part
243 is responsible for performing that
duty in accordance with part 243. In
response to industry’s request that a
parent or holding company be able to
submit a part 243 training program on
behalf of its subsidiaries, FRA has
allowed parent and holding companies
to submit training programs on behalf of
their subsidiaries as long as the filing
thoroughly describes which companies
are covered by the submission and how
each company is covered. The current
regulation, however, is silent on this
issue and FRA has not issued guidance
on the issue.
18 Id.
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To address this issue in a clearer,
more transparent manner, FRA proposes
adding paragraph (c) to this section to
clarify how a parent or holding
company may comply with the
requirements of this part on behalf of
one or more subsidiaries. In paragraph
(c)(1), FRA proposes a requirement that
the arrangement be specified and
submitted as other programs are
required in subpart B. Paragraph (c)(1)(i)
proposes that the arrangement may be
used to fulfill all or a portion of a
subsidiary’s responsibility for
compliance required by part 243. This
proposed provision is intended to allow
flexibility for each subsidiary to opt out
of a parent or holding company’s
program when the subsidiary’s training
needs are different.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1)(ii) would
require that a parent or holding
company that submits a training
program on behalf of one or more
subsidiaries must initially and
continually maintain in its submission a
list of the subsidiaries covered and the
extent to which each subsidiary is
adopting a parent or holding company’s
training program.
Recognizing that the efficiencies of a
joint filing arrangement would be lost if
a subsidiary were to duplicate a parent
or holding company’s filing on its
behalf, paragraph (c)(2) proposes to
prohibit a subsidiary from filing a
duplicate of any training program a
parent or holding company submitted
on its behalf.
Proposed paragraph (c)(3) would
provide that each railroad, even if it is
a subsidiary of a parent or holding
company, is responsible for compliance
with the training program submission
requirements in subpart B. A subsidiary
should not presume that the parent or
holding company will fulfill the
program submission requirements
without confirming the arrangement.
FRA reserves the right to take
enforcement action against each
‘‘person,’’ as defined in § 243.5, that
fails to comply with the program
submission requirements of subpart B.
Proposed paragraph (c)(4) would
require that when a parent or holding
company’s training program submission
is filed on behalf of the parent or
holding company’s subsidiaries, each
subsidiary is required to comply with
that training program submission unless
the subsidiary files its own program
with FRA. The existing and proposed
requirements in part 243 are predicated
on each employer submitting a training
program and complying with that
training program submission. This
proposed requirement ensures that a
subsidiary understands that it would
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have an obligation to comply with the
parent or holding company submission
unless it takes the affirmative step to file
its own training program submission.
FRA’s decision to accept programs
filed by parent or holding companies on
behalf of their subsidiaries is based on
the recognition that companies that are
legally related may often share company
rules or operating practices that make it
possible to share a training program.
Meanwhile, there are legal
considerations that parent companies,
holding companies, and their subsidiary
companies must consider before filing a
program under part 243 and FRA
expects that all companies involved will
discuss and agree to the submission as
represented to FRA. For instance, there
is a legal difference between a holding
company, which has a passive
relationship with its subsidiaries
because, in general, it does not
participate in the daily decision making
of the subsidiaries and each subsidiary
has its own management running those
day-to-day operations, and a parent
company. A parent company typically
has its own business operations and will
choose whether to be actively or directly
involved in managing its subsidiaries.
Accordingly, FRA’s proposed revisions
to this section are intended to ensure
that all companies covered by a
submission are legally bound and accept
the submission, and that subsidiaries
may opt out of a parent or holding
company’s submission, in whole or in
part.
Section 243.5 Definitions
To codify existing guidance and
respond to questions from industry,
FRA is proposing to revise two
definitions and add one new definition
to part 243. Specifically, FRA proposes
to revise the existing definitions of the
terms ‘‘designated instructor’’ and
‘‘refresher training,’’ and add a
definition for the term ‘‘training
organizations or learning institutions.’’
First, FRA proposes to revise the
definition of ‘‘designated instructor.’’ As
currently defined, a ‘‘designated
instructor’’ is ‘‘a person designated as
such by an employer, training
organization, or learning institution,
who has demonstrated, pursuant to the
[applicable] training program . . . an
adequate knowledge of the subject
matter under instruction, and where
applicable, has the necessary experience
to effectively provide formal training.’’
FRA understands that some industry
members read this definition to mean
that to be a ‘‘designated instructor’’ a
person must be: (1) an employee of the
employer; and (2) ‘‘qualified’’ as that
term is used in part 243. To clarify these
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issues, FRA is proposing to add two
sentences to the existing definition. The
first proposed sentence would specify
that a ‘‘designated instructor’’ is not
required to be an employee of the
employer and thus designated
instructors can be in-house employees
or outside contractors, such as
professional trainers. The second
proposed sentence would explain that
employers are required to ensure that
employees and non-employees used as
designated instructors have the
necessary knowledge, skills, and
abilities to provide sound coaching,
mentoring, and guidance to new
learners. FRA notes, however, that
‘‘designated instructors’’ are not
required to be ‘‘qualified’’ as that term
is defined in part 243.
FRA proposes to revise the definition
of ‘‘refresher training’’ to explain that
the purpose of this type of training is to
improve the job performance of existing
employees by acquainting them with
any changed standards, any relevant
problematic issues or new skills,
methods, and processes, and to ensure
no important skills or knowledge have
been lost due to lack of use. This
proposed explanation is intended to
distinguish refresher training from
initial training, which is targeted to
employees who generally are new to the
subject matter. FRA also proposes to
revise the definition of ‘‘refresher
training’’ to acknowledge that FRA has
referred to refresher training in its other
railroad safety regulations with a variety
of terms and that those refresher
training programs or plans required in
its other railroad safety regulations need
not be submitted for review pursuant to
§ 243.103(b). This proposed
acknowledgment is intended to be read
in conjunction with the proposal in
§ 243.201(e) that refresher training be at
an interval not to exceed three calendar
years from the date of an employee’s last
training event, except where refresher
training is specifically required more
frequently in accordance with this
chapter. Thus, for example, if FRA
requires ‘‘recurrent training’’ each
calendar year in a different FRA rail
safety regulation, then that more
stringent refresher training requirement
would not be superseded by the more
relaxed refresher training requirement of
three calendar years in § 243.201(e). In
addition, FRA is proposing revisions to
the refresher training requirements and
options in § 243.201(e) that would
clarify what employers need to include,
at a minimum, to complete acceptable
refresher training.
FRA also proposes to add a definition
of ‘‘training organizations or learning
institutions’’ to clarify which businesses
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that provide training to employers are
‘‘training organizations or learning
institutions.’’ FRA’s proposed definition
identifies four characteristics of a
training organization or learning
institution. First, a training organization
or learning institution is an entity that
provides training services for people
who are safety-related railroad
employees or independent students who
will rely on the training services
provided to qualify to become safetyrelated railroad employees, but not
employees of the entity providing the
training. This proposed characteristic is
intended to clarify that FRA’s training
organization or learning institution
definition does not include an employer
providing training to its employees.
Second, the proposed definition
identifies the main examples of training
organizations and learning institutions
as businesses that provide formal
training, and colleges and universities
that provide rail safety courses
necessary for a person to qualify as a
safety-related railroad employee. A
business that performs consulting work
or some type of training that does not
rise to the level of ‘‘formal training,’’ as
defined in part 243, would not be
considered a training organization or
learning institution. Third, the proposed
definition explains that even though an
entity may not maintain a fixed training
facility, it could still be considered a
training organization or learning
institution as it could rent or lease
meeting space to deliver training,
deliver training at an employer’s
facility, or deliver virtual training. Thus,
the proposed definition would clarify
that a business that goes to an
employer’s property to deliver formal
training may be considered a ‘‘training
organization or learning institution.’’
Fourth, while some railroads have inhouse training for their employees and
also train safety-related railroad
employees of other employers, FRA
does not consider these railroads as
training organizations or learning
institutions, and therefore proposes to
clarify that exclusion.
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Subpart B—Program Components and
Approval Process
Section 243.101 Employer Program
Required
FRA is proposing to delete paragraphs
(a)(1) and (2) and state the employer
requirement to submit, adopt, and
comply with a training program for its
safety-related railroad employees in
paragraph (a) without implementation
dates. Paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) are no
longer needed as the implementation
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requirements have already passed and
all employers currently must comply.
Paragraph (b) requires that employers
commencing operations after January 1,
2020, submit, adopt, and comply with a
training program before commencing
operations. As above, paragraph (b)
would also be revised to remove the
implementation date that has passed.
Thus, the proposed rule would apply
any time an employer commences
operations.
In response to the Assocations’
request, proposed revisions to paragraph
(c) clarify that employers may create
programs based on applicable CFR
parts, United States Code sections, or
citations to orders. Accordingly, FRA is
proposing to revise paragraph (c)(1) to
clarify what it means for an employer to
classify its safety-related railroad
employees by ‘‘other suitable
terminology,’’ which includes
references to the applicable part of the
CFR, section of the United States Code,
or citation to an order. Also, FRA
proposes to revise paragraphs (c)(2) and
(3) to exclude an employer that
classifies its safety-related railroad
employees by direct reference to Federal
railroad safety laws, regulations, and
orders because the existing requirement
would be redundant for an employer
who classifies in that way.
FRA proposes to revise paragraph
(c)(5) to codify guidance that OJT is
required when tasks require
neuromuscular coordination to learn
unless FRA approves alternative, formal
training that addresses the need to
practice safety-related tasks with the
ability to objectively measure task
completion proficiency.19 As
background, some employers or training
organizations may have access to stateof-the-art indoor/outdoor training
facilities that permit students to practice
tasks that require neuromuscular
coordination to learn in a controlled
environment with minimal or no risk of
personal injury. Other approaches may
include classroom practical exercises,
role play, lab simulation, VR, and other
emerging technologies. FRA’s proposal
recognizes that some safety-related tasks
that require neuromuscular
coordination can be taught effectively
through formal training other than
traditional OJT.
Paragraph (e) requires a contractor
that chooses to train its own safetyrelated railroad employees to provide
each railroad that utilizes its services
with a document indicating that the
contractor’s training program was
approved by FRA. However, paragraph
(e) does not account for the fact that
19 Id.
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some similar training programs or plans,
pursuant to other regulatory
requirements contained elsewhere in
this chapter, are not required to be
submitted in accordance with part 243
and, therefore, the contractor would not
have a document that it could show a
railroad validating FRA’s approval of
that program. For this reason, FRA is
proposing to change this requirement.
To the extent that a contractor chooses
to train its own safety-related railroad
employees with an FRA-approved
program under part 243, FRA proposes
that the contractor provide each railroad
utilizing the program with a document
declaring or proving that its training
program was approved by FRA.
However, as proposed, if a contractor is
not required to submit the training
program or plan as permitted by
§ 243.103(b), but is maintaining the
similar training program or plan
pursuant to other regulatory
requirements contained elsewhere in
this chapter, then the contractor’s
requirement to provide the railroad with
a document is limited to declaring or
proving that information. For this
proposed requirement, any FRA
approval document will be considered
sufficient proof and, when that proof is
unavailable, a contractor may simply
declare that the statement in the
document is true. FRA is also proposing
revisions to paragraph (f) that would
similarly change the type of document
a railroad is responsible to retain based
on the proposed corresponding changes
in paragraph (e).
Section 243.103 Training Components
Identified in Program
FRA is proposing four revisions to the
requirements in this existing section.
Paragraph (a)(1) requires each
employer’s program to include a unique
name and identifier for each formal
course of study. The proposed revision
to this requirement clarifies that the
types of formal courses needing a
unique name and identifier include both
initial and refresher training courses. An
initial or refresher training course that
FRA has previously approved would not
need a new unique name and identifier
each time it is revised.
Paragraph (a)(2)(v) requires each
employer’s program to include a course
outline, and the outline to include the
anticipated course duration. However,
the existing requirement does not
specify whether the anticipated course
duration includes OJT. Accordingly,
FRA proposes revising this paragraph to
provide that the employer’s course
outline for each course include the
anticipated course duration for all
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formal training combined, apart from
OJT.
The proposed revisions to paragraph
(b) would clarify which ‘‘similar
training programs or plans’’ that FRA
requires in its other rail safety
regulations do not have to be submitted
to FRA under part 243. Additionally,
proposed paragraph (b) would clarify
that if an employer needs to amend any
such similar program or plan required
by an FRA railroad safety regulation,
other than part 243, the employer is
required to amend its program but not
submit it to FRA under § 243.109.
FRA is proposing to amend paragraph
(d) to clarify that an employer is not
required to submit courseware (i.e.,
lesson plans, instructor guides,
participant guides, job aids, practical
exercises, tests/assessments, and other
materials used in the delivery of any
course) as part of a training program
submission, although FRA may require
an employer to provide FRA with such
program courseware upon request.
Section 243.105 Optional Model
Program Development
FRA is proposing several revisions to
this existing section, which permits the
optional development of model
programs that can be adopted by
multiple employers. The proposed
changes would remove a requirement no
longer necessary and add information to
the regulatory text that was previously
issued as guidance.
FRA proposes to remove paragraph
(a)(3) as it is no longer needed. The
existing paragraph provided model
program developers with the option to
file model training programs by May 1,
2019, to guarantee an FRA review
process of no more than 180 days. The
existing requirement is no longer
needed because the deadline for early
filing passed.
The proposed revisions to paragraph
(b) would add information intended to
help an employer that is planning to use
a model program. Existing paragraph (b)
already specifies that an employer that
chooses to use an FRA-approved model
program must submit only the unique
identifier associated with the program,
and all other information that is specific
to that employer or deviates from the
model program. However, proposed
paragraph (b) would contain
information about how an employer can
go to FRA’s part 243 web portal, obtain
contact information from a model
program developer, and contact that
developer to access the courseware
associated with the model program.
Further, FRA is proposing to revise
paragraph (b) to confirm that an
employer that submits, adopts, and
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implements an FRA-approved model
program, consistent with the operations
of that employer, will be considered in
compliance with the employer program
requirements of § 243.101.
FRA proposes adding paragraph (c) to
address how model program developers
are required to provide notice of any
FRA-approved changes to authorized
users. FRA proposes that sufficient
notice of any FRA-approved changes
may depend on whether the model
program developer loosely allows
adoption of the model program by
anyone with access to the developer’s
website or more stringently requires an
employer to obtain explicit
authorization to use a model program.
In short, FRA proposes that the model
program developer disseminate its FRAapproved updates in at least the same
(and no less stringent) manner as it
made the model program available to
employer users.
Section 243.107 Training Program
Submission, Introductory Information
Required
FRA proposes amending paragraph (a)
to remove the requirement that an
employer that does not provide, but is
responsible for, training for its safetyrelated railroad employees must submit
a training program. FRA also proposes
adding a sentence to paragraph (a)
notifying employers using FRA’s part
243 web portal that the web portal will
prompt the employers to provide the
information required in this section.
Thus, an employer using FRA’s part 243
web portal would not need to provide
this information elsewhere in its
submission as the web portal itself will
prompt the employer to provide the
information.
FRA also proposes amending
paragraph (a) to reduce the types of
information required at the time of
filing. The types of information
paragraphs (a)(4) and (5) require do not
directly apply to employers that must
submit training programs and thus the
requirements are unnecessary.
Accordingly, FRA proposes deleting
both requirements, and redesignating
and revising paragraph (a)(6) as (a)(4).
Similarly, paragraphs (b) and (c)
require a level of detail that is
unnecessary for FRA to evaluate an
employer’s training program
submission. Paragraph (b) requires an
employer to provide FRA with
information about the different methods
it will utilize to train its various
categories of safety-related railroad
employees. Paragraph (c) requires an
employer to provide FRA with
information about the training
organizations or learning institutions it
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elects to use to train all or some of its
safety-related railroad employees. FRA
recognizes that the agency can
determine this information during an
audit or investigation. For this reason,
FRA proposes to remove paragraphs (b)
and (c) in their entirety and would
reserve paragraph (b).
Section 243.109 Initial and Refresher
Training Program Submission, Review,
and Approval Process
FRA is proposing revisions to this
section clarifying that refresher training
programs must be submitted to FRA for
review and approval in the same
manner as an employer’s initial training
program. This proposal includes
revising the heading of this section to
make clear that it addresses the
submission, review, and approval
process for both initial and refresher
training programs. Similarly, FRA
proposes revising the introductory
heading in paragraph (a), which refers
only to initial programs, so that it refers
to both initial and refresher training
programs. Finally, FRA is proposing to
revise paragraph (a)(2) to reference both
initial and refresher programs.
Section 243.111 Approval of Programs
Filed by Training Organizations or
Learning Institutions
FRA proposes several revisions to this
section to remove unnecessary
requirements and eliminate regulatory
ambiguity.
Paragraph (a) currently requires a
training organization or learning
institution to submit its program to FRA
for review and approval. Because FRA
received inquiries from the
Associations, and some employers,
requesting guidance on whether they
would need to resubmit a previously
approved employer program so they
could also be recognized under part 243
as a training organization or learning
institution, FRA proposes new
requirements to address the issue.
Accordingly, when an entity has
previously received FRA approval of a
model program under § 243.105 or an
employer program under § 243.101,
under proposed paragraph (a)(1) the
program does not need to be submitted
a second time for FRA’s approval.
Meanwhile, FRA proposes requiring in
paragraph (a)(2) that an entity with such
a previously approved program must
submit an informational filing to its
previously approved program
containing the information required in
paragraph (c) of this section for a
training organization or learning
institution program.
The proposed revisions to paragraph
(c) would remove paragraphs (5)
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through (7), which require programs
submitted by training organizations and
learning institutions to include
designated instructors’ resumes, a list of
employer customers, and a summary
showing the methodology used to
develop training programs. FRA
proposes deleting these three
requirements because FRA is not an
educational accrediting agency and
finds that the existing requirements may
wrongly suggest FRA would be deciding
whether each training organization or
learning institution is suitable to
provide such training when that is a
decision for each employer to make. By
deleting these three existing
requirements, the regulation would
make clear that FRA approves training
programs and not any particular training
organization or learning institution. In
other words, no training organization or
learning institution should refer to itself
as ‘‘FRA-approved’’ but it may say that
its training program is ‘‘FRA-approved.’’
FRA proposes revising paragraph (e)
to clarify that a training organization or
learning institution may transfer an
approved program to another training
organization or learning institution, or
an employer. As proposed, the acquiring
entity need only submit an
informational filing with FRA noting the
transfer unless the acquiring entity is
making substantial additions or
revisions to the previously approved
program. If the acquiring entity is
making substantial additions or
revisions to the previously approved
program, then the acquiring entity must
obtain FRA’s approval of those changes
pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section.
FRA is considering an alternative
requirement that the acquiring entity
will need to submit the entire
previously approved program under the
acquiring entity’s web portal account for
administrative reasons.
243.113 Electronic and Written
Program Submission Requirements
FRA proposes several revisions to this
section to clarify that when FRA refers
to electronic program or informational
filings submission requirements, FRA
means submission through FRA’s part
243 web portal. For example, paragraph
(a) would be revised to specifically
reference FRA’s part 243 web portal and
to inform electronic submitters that the
web portal will prompt them to submit
all required training program
information.
FRA proposes the elimination of the
written program submission option for
an employer with less than 400,000 total
employee work hours annually. For this
reason, FRA proposes deleting that
option from paragraph (a) and removing
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existing paragraphs (d) through (f). The
cost in time and resources to print and
mail a submission is likely the
equivalent to the time and resources
needed for a person to go to FRA’s part
243 web portal, fill out the information
required, and upload the submission
documents. For these reasons, this
proposed requirement is not expected to
increase the costs on an employer with
less than 400,000 total employee work
hours annually, while reducing
administrative and cost burdens for FRA
personnel that would need to receive
the written program, scan it, and upload
it to FRA’s part 243 web portal.
In paragraph (b), FRA proposes to
clarify that a submitter will need to
register for access to the part 243 web
portal through a website before being
granted web portal access.
In paragraph (c), FRA proposes to
clarify that the electronic submitters
providing consent are the users of FRA’s
part 243 web portal. FRA also proposes
adding for clarity the existing paragraph
(e) requirement that a person that
electronically submits documents to
FRA shall be considered to have
provided their consent for FRA to
electronically store those materials
required by this part.
Subpart C—Program Implementation
and Oversight Requirements
Section 243.201 Employee
Qualification Requirements
FRA proposes revising this section to
provide more direction on what must be
included in refresher training, and how
refresher training is distinguished from
initial training.
FRA proposes several revisions and
additions to paragraph (a). The revisions
include the removal of implementation
dates that have passed. Proposed
paragraph (a)(1) includes the existing
requirement that each employer must
only permit employees appropriately
trained and qualified to perform safetyrelated service. Proposed paragraph
(a)(2) addresses the Associations’
petitions by permitting an employer to
limit a safety-related railroad
employee’s training to only the relevant
Federal requirements that apply to the
safety-related tasks that the employer
authorizes the employee to perform, in
addition to any knowledge-based
training that is required. FRA proposes
to move the requirement for designating
existing employees by occupational
category or subcategory in current
paragraph (a)(1) to proposed paragraph
(a)(3)(i).
FRA also proposes adding paragraph
(a)(3)(ii) to address an issue, like the one
addressed in proposed § 243.101(c),
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concerning employers that prefer to
categorize their employees by CFR parts
or other legal requirements, rather than
by occupational category or subcategory.
Proposed paragraph (a)(3)(ii) addresses
employers that do not designate
employees by department, occupational
category, or subcategory. For those
employers who do not designate
employees, paragraph (a)(3)(ii) proposes
that the employer must retain a record
for each employee identifying the list of
Federal railroad safety laws, regulations,
and orders that cover the work the
person is designated as qualified to
perform.
In response to the Assocations’
request, FRA proposes to revise
paragraph (c)(2) to allow an employee,
who is not yet qualified, to perform
tasks during OJT under the direct onsite
observation of a qualified person and in
accordance with certain conditions for
the qualified person, before the
employee has completed all of the
formal training, including classroom
training and OJT. The existing rule
requires the employee to complete
classroom or other formal training,
before the employer may allow an
employee, who is not yet qualified, to
perform tasks during OJT under the
direct onsite observation of a qualified
person, and under the same specified
conditions for the qualified person. The
proposed change would not be expected
to impact safety detrimentally as the
employee would still be required to
perform the OJT tasks under the direct
onsite observation of a qualified person,
provided the qualified person has been
advised of the circumstances and is
capable of intervening if an unsafe act
or non-compliance with Federal railroad
safety laws, regulations, or orders is
observed.
FRA proposes to amend paragraph
(d), which addresses how an employer
can avoid training an employee that was
previously trained or qualified by an
entity other than the current employer.
FRA is not proposing to amend the
existing options in paragraphs (d)(1) and
(2). Instead, FRA proposes changing
‘‘FRA-approved’’ to ‘‘FRA-required,’’
and ‘‘submitted’’ to ‘‘completed’’ to
coincide with other changes in this
proposed rule. The rule currently
requires that, in order to exercise one of
the options, the employee’s training or
qualification must have been provided
previously ‘‘through participation in a
FRA-approved training program’’ that
was submitted by an entity other than
the employee’s current employer.
Through the proposed changes to
§ 243.103(b), FRA is recognizing that an
employee could have been previously
trained or qualified by an entity other
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than the current employer using a
similar training program or plan,
pursuant to other regulatory
requirements contained elsewhere in
this chapter that do not require
submission to FRA or FRA-approval.
In conjunction with the proposed
definition of ‘‘refresher training,’’ FRA
proposes revisions to the requirements
for refresher training in paragraph (e).
Specifically, proposed paragraph
(e)(3)(i) would require as a baseline that
the employer ensure that each
employee’s refresher training include
notification of changes to any rule,
practice, or procedure relevant to the
employee’s assigned duties. Proposed
paragraph (e)(3)(ii) would clarify that
each employer must ensure that an
employee is not allowed to test out of
refresher training. Proposed paragraph
(e)(3)(iii) would include the sentence in
existing paragraphs (e)(1) and (2) which
is intended to capture that, ultimately,
the employer is required to ensure that
the employee is trained and qualified on
the application of any Federal railroad
safety laws, regulations, and orders the
person is required to comply with, as
well as any relevant railroad rules and
procedures promulgated to implement
those Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, and orders. That existing
requirement is for ensuring that
refresher training is used to fill any gaps
in an employee’s knowledge base. FRA
recognizes that proposed paragraphs
(e)(1) and (2) contain ‘‘beginning’’
implementation dates that may no
longer be relevant when a final rule is
published and will make changes to
these paragraphs to remove the
unnecessary implementation dates that
have passed.
Proposed paragraph (e)(3)(iii) also
describes the options available to
employers for refresher training. For
instance, rather than repeating initial
training, refresher training may be
limited and carefully tailored to review:
(1) all the required steps of a
complicated safety-related task; (2)
existing rules or procedures that were
initially learned but rarely used; and (3)
safety-related tasks that address skill
gaps that the employer identified in the
workforce through efficiency testing,
periodic oversight, annual reviews,
accident/incident data, FRA inspection
data, or other performance measuring
metrics.
FRA is proposing to add paragraph (f)
to require an employer to consider ways
to provide remedial training and
retesting of any employee who fails to
successfully pass any training or testing.
Additionally, proposed paragraph (f)
would make clear that a failure of any
test or training does not bar the person
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from successfully completing the
training or testing later.
Section 243.203
Records
FRA proposes revisions to paragraph
(b)(2) of this section to clarify that an
employer that designates its employees
by ‘‘other suitable terminology,’’ i.e.,
other than occupational category or
subcategory, is required to keep a record
of that designation for each qualification
of each qualified employee. This
proposed revision is intended to work
in tandem with the other proposed
requirements, §§ 243.101(c) and
243.201(a)(2)(ii), which would permit
an employer to categorize its employees
by CFR parts or other Federal railroad
safety legal requirements, rather than by
occupational category or subcategory.
In addition, FRA proposes revising
paragraph (b)(6)’s recordkeeping
information requirement to clarify that
the person determining that the
employee successfully completed all
OJT training necessary to be considered
qualified to perform certain safetyrelated tasks must be a designated
instructor. The existing rule does not
specify that the person making this
determination must be a designated
instructor, but instead only requires that
the record identify the person. Proposed
revisions to paragraph (b)(6) would also
add ‘‘other suitable terminology’’ to the
phrase ‘‘occupational categories or
subcategories.’’
FRA is proposing to revise the
recordkeeping requirement for records
other than individual employee records
and annual review records, for
consistency with part 217 of this
chapter. The existing requirement in
§ 243.203(c) requires each employer to
maintain test, inspection, and other
event records that do not demonstrate
the qualification status of a safetyrelated railroad employee, for a period
of three calendar years after the end of
the calendar year to which the event
relates. FRA received feedback from the
Associations that this recordkeeping
requirement is more stringent than
FRA’s requirement for operational tests
and inspections under 49 CFR
217.9(d)(1). As the test and inspection
records in the two regulations are
similar and are required to be kept for
similar reasons, FRA proposes this
change. No change is proposed for the
existing annual review recordkeeping
requirement in § 243.203(c), as 49 CFR
217.9(f) also has a similar annual review
recordkeeping requirement of the same
length and likewise is required to be
retained for similar reasons.
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Section 243.205
Periodic Oversight
FRA is generally proposing two
changes to § 243.205. Changes to
proposed paragraphs (a), (c), (d), (e)(1),
(g), and (i) would, as requested in the
Associations’ petitions, allow periodic
oversight to be limited to tests ‘‘or’’
inspections, rather than require both
tests ‘‘and’’ inspections. In the context
of periodic oversight, a ‘‘test’’ is
conducted by a qualified supervisor
who changes the work environment so
that one or more employees would need
to act to prevent non-compliance, while
an ‘‘inspection’’ involves a qualified
supervisor observing one or more
employees at a job site and determining
whether the employees are in
compliance.20 In revisiting the current
requirement for both tests and
inspections, FRA recognizes that tests
are more difficult to design and execute,
while inspections can be completed
through routine observations. By
revisiting this section, FRA recognizes
that the goal of periodic inspection may
be achieved by tests or inspections, and
that both tests and inspections may have
set a higher bar than a minimum
requirement.
FRA also proposes to revise
§ 243.205(h) to provide railroads and
contractors the flexibility to decide
which entity would be responsible for
conducting periodic oversight. This
proposed revision to the periodic
oversight requirements would address
an issue raised in the Associations’
petitions, which asked that FRA allow
a railroad and a contractor to agree to
any division of the periodic oversight
responsibility requirements that the
parties desire, rather than be bound by
the required assigned responsibilities in
the regulation. From a safety
perspective, it does not make a
difference whether periodic oversight is
conducted by a railroad or a contractor.
Thus, FRA proposes to revise
§ 243.205(h)(2) to state that, regardless
of the requirements in § 243.205 that
assign specific periodic oversight
responsibilities to a railroad or
contractor, these parties may agree to a
different periodic oversight
responsibility arrangement. This
proposed revision will allow the
regulated entities to decide which entity
is in the best position to conduct the
oversight and to make any necessary
arrangements to comply with the
periodic oversight requirements.
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IV. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866
This proposed rule is a nonsignificant regulatory action within the
meaning of Executive Order (E.O.)
12866. FRA made this determination by
finding that this proposed regulatory
action did not meet the definition of
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ in
Section 3(f) of E.O. 12866.
FRA is issuing the proposed
rulemaking to address issues raised in
the Associations’ petitions for
rulemaking, provide clarity to current
requirements, and remove requirements
that are no longer necessary. For
example, FRA proposes removing
certain requirements from § 243.111
because FRA found some of the
information submitted by training
organizations and learning institutions
to be unnecessary. FRA also proposes
removing implementation dates that
have passed. Overall, most changes
would codify existing regulatory
guidance that FRA has issued.
The proposed rule would provide
regulatory clarity and promote
regulatory compliance by the regulated
industry through, among other things:
(1) clarifying that FRA will accept a
training program that categorizes
employees by legal requirement
references rather than occupational
categories; (2) eliminating certain
submissions such as similar training
programs or plans; (3) requiring that
each employer under § 243.103(a)(2)(v)
exclude the course duration of OJT for
an employer’s estimate of the
anticipated course duration for all
formal training combined; (4) clarifying
the use of model programs without
requiring an entity to refer to guidance
or asking FRA for assistance; (5)
amending requirements for training
program submissions and the
introductory information required in
§ 243.107 due to FRA’s part 243 web
portal; (6) revising § 243.109 to clarify
refresher training program submission
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B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and
Executive Order 13272
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of
1980 21 and E.O. 13272 22 require agency
review of proposed and final rules to
Respondent universe
243.3(c)—Application and responsibility for
compliance—A parent or holding company that submits a training program on
behalf of one or more subsidiaries must
initially and continually maintain in its
written submission a list of the legal
name of each subsidiary (New requirements).
21 5
requirements; (7) requiring each training
organization and learning institution
provide less information in its
submission than required currently by
§ 243.111; (8) revising the refresher
training requirements and options,
clarifying what employers need to
include to complete minimum
acceptable refresher training; and (9)
allowing each railroad and contractor
the flexibility to decide which entity
would be responsible for conducting
periodic oversight.
FRA expects the proposed rule would
result in several, non-quantifiable
benefits for the regulated industry and
FRA, such as: permitting training
programs that categorize employees by
referencing the applicable part of the
CFR, a statute, or an order, rather than
occupational categories associated by
craft; clarifying that an employer need
not submit courseware unless FRA
requests that additional documentation
is needed to conduct an adequate
review; and clarifying what employers
need to include to complete minimum
acceptable refresher training, as well as
allow for tests or inspections, instead of
requiring both. FRA expects these
clarifications would provide employers
an easier means of complying with this
regulation, as well as save time
understanding what needs to be
submitted and preparing submissions to
FRA. By codifying existing regulatory
guidance, FRA expects that the railroads
would have greater regulatory certainty
for future submissions while complying
with training program requirements.
FRA estimates that there will be no
costs associated with this proposed
rulemaking. FRA requests comments on
the benefits and costs related to this
proposed rule.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection
requirements in this proposed rule are
being submitted for approval to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995.23 The sections that contain
the proposed and current information
collection requirements and the
estimated time to fulfill each
requirement are as follows:
Average
time per responses
Total annual
burden hours
Total cost
equivalent 25
The estimated paperwork burden for this requirement is covered under 49 CFR 243.101(b).
22 67
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Total annual responses
assess their impacts on small entities.
An agency must prepare an Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (IRFA)
unless it determines and certifies that a
rule, if promulgated, would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
This proposed rule directly affects all
railroads, of which there are
approximately 754. FRA estimates that
approximately 93 percent of these
railroads are small entities. This
proposed rule also affects approximately
300 contractors of railroads and
approximately 109 training
organizations or learning institutions,
most of which, by definition, are
considered small entities. Therefore,
FRA has determined that this proposed
rule will have an impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The requirements of this proposed
rule would apply to employers of safetyrelated railroad employees, whether the
employers are railroads, contractors, or
subcontractors. Although a substantial
number of small entities would be
subject to this proposed rule, the
proposed rule would codify agency
guidance, reduce submissions to FRA,
and clarify existing requirements.
Accordingly, the FRA Administrator
hereby certifies that this proposed rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. FRA invites comment from
members of the public who believe
there will be a significant impact on
small railroads.
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Respondent universe
Total annual responses
Average
time per responses
Total annual
burden hours
Total cost
equivalent 25
243.101(a)(2)—Training program required
for each employer not covered by (a)(1)
and subject to this part by May 1, 2021
(includes burden associated with the
usage of FRA’s part 243 web portal and
compliance guide.).
1,046 railroads/contractors.
60 training programs
250 hours ..
15,000
$1,155,000
—(b) Submission by new employers commencing operations after Jan. 1, 2020,
not covered by (a)(2).
10 new railroads/contractors.
10 training programs
20 hours ....
200
24,000
—(c) and (d) Employer’s classification of its
safety-related railroad employees and onthe-job (OJT) training requirements.
The burden for this requirement is included under § 243.101.
—(e) Contractor’s duty to validate approved
program to a railroad (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
400 railroads/contractors.
50 documents ...........
15 minutes
12.5
963
—(f) Railroad’s duty to retain copies of contractor’s validation document (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
10 new railroads .......
10 copies ..................
2 minutes ..
.3
23
243.103(a) and (c)—Training components
identified in program (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
The burden requirements for paragraphs (a) and (c) are included under § 243.101(a) and (b). Regarding the burden for paragraph (b), FRA estimates that it will receive zero (0) supplementary
document.
—(d) Training components identified in program; modifications to components of the
training programs (Revised requirement
text, no impact on burden).
1,155 railroads/contractors.
243.105(a) and (b)—Optional model program development (Revised requirement
text, no impact on burden).
The burden requirement for paragraph (a) has been fulfilled. The burden for paragraph (b) is included under § 243.101(a)–(b).
—(c) Optional model program development;
model program revisions: notice of FRAapproved changes to authorized users
(New requirement).
30 model programs ..
243.107(a)—Training program submission,
introductory information required (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
The burden for this requirement has been fulfilled.
243.109(b)—Previously approved programs
requiring an informational filing when
modified (Revised requirement text, no
impact on burden).
1,155 railroads/contractors/learning institutions.
10 informational filings.
—(c) New portions or substantial revisions
to an approved training program.
10 railroads/contractors.
—(c) New portions or substantial revisions
to an approved training program found
non-conforming to this part by FRA—revisions required.
70 modified training
programs.
26,950
154
8 hours ......
80
6,160
10 revised training
programs.
16 hours ....
160
12,320
5 railroads/contractors.
5 revised training
programs.
8 hours ......
40
3,080
—(d)(1)(i) Copy of additional submissions,
resubmissions, and informational filings
to labor organization presidents.
10 railroads/contractors.
25 copies ..................
10 minutes
4.2
323
—(d)(1)(ii) Railroad statement affirming that
a copy of submissions, resubmissions, or
informational filings has been served to
labor organization presidents.
228 railroads/contractors.
76 affirming statements.
10 minutes
12.7
978
—(d)(2) Labor comments on railroad training program submissions, resubmissions,
or informational filings.
228 railroads’ labor
organizations.
1 comment ................
30 minutes
0.5
39
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2
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10 notifications .........
5 hours ......
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Total annual responses
Respondent universe
Average
time per responses
Total annual
burden hours
59761
Total cost
equivalent 25
243.111(a) through (f)—Approval of programs filed by training organizations or
learning institutions (TO/LI) (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
The burden requirements for paragraphs (a) and (c) are included under § 243.101(a) and (b). The
burden requirement for paragraphs (b) and (d) are covered under § 243.103(d). The burden requirement for paragraphs (e) and (f) are covered under § 243.109(b).
—(g) Safety-related railroad employees instructed by TO/LI —Recordkeeping.
109 TO/LI .................
5,450 records ...........
5 minutes ..
454.2
34,973
—(h) TO/LI to provide student’s training
transcript or training record to any employer upon request by the student.
109 TO/LI .................
545 records ..............
5 minutes ..
45.4
3,496
243.113—Electronic and written program
submission requirements (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
The burden requirement for paragraph (a) has been fulfilled. The burden for paragraph (b) is included under § 243.101(a)–(b).
243.201(a)(2)—Designation of existing
safety-related railroad employees by job
category (for employers not covered by
(a)(1) and subject to this part by January
1, 2022) (Revised requirement text, no
impact on burden).
1,039 railroads/contractors.
346 designation lists
15 minutes
86.5
6,661
—(b) New employers operating after January 1, 2020, not covered by (a)(2), designation of safety-related employees by
job category—Lists.
10 new railroads/contractors.
10 designation lists ...
15 minutes
2.5
193
—(c) Training records of newly hired employees or those assigned new safety-related duties (Revised requirement text,
no impact on burden).
4,800 employees ......
4,800 records ...........
15 minutes
1,200
92,400
—(d)(1)(i) Requests for relevant qualification or training record from an entity other
than current employer (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
4,800 employees ......
960 record requests
5 minutes ..
80
6,160
243.203(a) through (e) Recordkeeping—
Systems set up to meet FRA requirements (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
1,155 railroads/contractors/TOLI.
1,046 recordkeeping
systems.
30 minutes
523
40,271
—(f) Transfer of records to successor employer.
1,155 railroads/contractors/TOLI.
3 records ..................
30 minutes
1.5
116
243.205(a), (b), (e) and (g)—Periodic oversight (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
The burden for adopting and complying with a program of periodic oversight under paragraph (a)
is included above under the training program requirements in §§ 243.101(a)(2) and 243.109. Furthermore, FRA estimates that zero (0) training programs will be changed as the result of the assessments under parts 240 and 242.
—(c) Railroad identification of supervisory
employees who conduct periodic oversight tests by category/subcategory (Revised requirement text, no impact on burden).
300 contractors .........
100 identifications .....
5 minutes ..
8.3
639
—(f) Notification by RR of contractor employee non-compliance with Federal
laws/regulations/orders to employee and
employee’s employer.
300 contractors .........
90 employee notices
10 minutes
15
1,155
—(f) Notification by RR of contractor employee non-compliance with Federal
laws/regulations/orders to employee and
employee’s employer.
300 contractors .........
270 employer notices
10 minutes
45
3,465
—(i) and (j) Employer records of periodic
oversight (Revised requirement text
under paragraph (i), no impact on burden).
1,046 railroads/contractors.
150,000 records .......
5 minutes ..
12,500
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CFR section 24
Respondent universe
Total annual responses
Average
time per responses
243.207(a)—Written annual review of safety
data (Railroads with 400,000 annual employee work hours or more).
22 railroads ...............
22 reviews ................
16 hours ....
352
27,104
—(b) Railroad copy of written annual review
at system headquarters.
22 railroads ...............
22 review copies ......
5 minutes ..
1.8
139
—(e) Railroad notification to contractor of
relevant training program adjustments.
22 railroads ...............
2 notifications ...........
15 minutes
.5
39
243.209(a) and (b)—Railroad maintained
list of contractors utilized.
754 railroads .............
754 lists ....................
30 minutes
377
29,029
—(c) Railroad duty to update list of contractors utilized and retain record for at least
3 years showing if a contractor was utilized in last 3 years.
754 railroads .............
75 updated lists ........
15 minutes
18.8
1,444
1,155 railroads/contractors/training organizations/learning institutions.
164,832 responses ...
N/A ............
31,574
2,439,774
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Total ......................................................
All estimates include the time for
reviewing instructions; searching
existing data sources; gathering or
maintaining the needed data; and
reviewing the information. Pursuant to
44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(B), FRA solicits
comments concerning: whether these
information collection requirements are
necessary for the proper performance of
the functions of FRA, including whether
the information has practical utility; the
accuracy of FRA’s estimates of the
burden of the information collection
requirements; the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and whether the burden of
collection of information on those who
are to respond, including through the
use of automated collection techniques
or other forms of information
technology, may be minimized. For
information or a copy of the paperwork
package submitted to OMB, contact Ms.
Hodan Wells, Information Collection
Clearance Officer, at 202–493–0440.
Organizations and individuals
desiring to submit comments on the
collection of information requirements
should direct them to Ms. Hodan Wells
via email at Hodan.Wells@dot.gov.
OMB is required to make a decision
concerning the collection of information
requirements contained in this proposed
rule between 30 and 60 days after
24 FRA will be requesting to revise the previously
approved OMB control number (OMB No. 2130–
0597) corresponding to existing part 243.
25 The dollar equivalent cost is derived from the
Surface Transportation Board’s Full Year Wage A&B
data series using the appropriate employee group
hourly wage rate that includes a 75-percent
overhead charge.
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publication of this document in the
Federal Register. Therefore, a comment
to OMB is best assured of having its full
effect if OMB receives it within 30 days
of publication. The final rule will
respond to any OMB or public
comments on the information collection
requirements contained in this proposal.
FRA is not authorized to impose a
penalty on persons for violating
information collection requirements that
do not display a current OMB control
number, if required. FRA intends to
obtain current OMB control numbers for
any new information collection
requirements resulting from this
rulemaking action prior to the effective
date of the final rule. The OMB control
number, when assigned, will be
announced by separate notice in the
Federal Register.
D. Federalism Implications
Executive Order 13132,
‘‘Federalism,’’ 26 requires FRA to
develop an accountable process to
ensure ‘‘meaningful and timely input by
State and local officials in the
development of regulatory policies that
have federalism implications.’’ ‘‘Policies
that have federalism implications’’ are
defined in the Executive Order to
include regulations that have
‘‘substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.’’ Under Executive
Order 13132, the agency may not issue
a regulation with federalism
26 64
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Frm 00032
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Total annual
burden hours
Total cost
equivalent 25
implications that imposes substantial
direct compliance costs and that is not
required by statute, unless the Federal
government provides the funds
necessary to pay the direct compliance
costs incurred by State and local
governments or the agency consults
with State and local government
officials early in the process of
developing the regulation. Where a
regulation has federalism implications
and preempts State law, the agency
seeks to consult with State and local
officials in the process of developing the
regulation.
FRA has analyzed the proposed rule
under the principles and criteria
contained in Executive Order 13132.
This proposed rule would not have
substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. In addition, FRA
has determined that the proposed rule
would not impose substantial direct
compliance costs on State and local
governments. Therefore, the
consultation and funding requirements
of Executive Order 13132 would not
apply. However, this proposed rule
could have preemptive effect by
operation of law under certain
provisions of the Federal railroad safety
statutes, specifically the former Federal
Railroad Safety Act of 1970, repealed
and recodified at 49 U.S.C. 20106.
Section 20106 provides that States may
not adopt or continue in effect any law,
regulation, or order related to railroad
safety or security that covers the subject
matter of a regulation prescribed or
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order issued by the Secretary of
Transportation (with respect to railroad
safety matters) or the Secretary of
Homeland Security (with respect to
railroad security matters), except when
the State law, regulation, or order
qualifies under the ‘‘essentially local
safety or security hazard’’ exception to
section 20106.
In sum, FRA has analyzed this
proposed rule under the principles and
criteria in Executive Order 13132. As
explained above, FRA has determined
this proposed rule has no federalism
implications, other than the possible
preemption of State laws under Federal
railroad safety statutes, specifically 49
U.S.C. 20106. Therefore, preparation of
a federalism summary impact statement
for this proposed rule is not required.
E. International Trade Impact
Assessment
The Trade Agreements Act of 1979 27
prohibits Federal agencies from
engaging in any standards or related
activities that create unnecessary
obstacles to the foreign commerce of the
United States. Legitimate domestic
objectives, such as safety, are not
considered unnecessary obstacles. The
statute also requires consideration of
international standards and where
appropriate, that they be the basis for
U.S. standards. This proposed rule is
purely domestic in nature and is not
expected to affect trade opportunities
for U.S. firms doing business overseas or
for foreign firms doing business in the
United States.
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F. Environmental Impact
FRA has evaluated this proposed rule
consistent with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA),28 the
Council on Environmental Quality’s
NEPA implementing regulations,29 and
FRA’s NEPA implementing
regulations 30 and determined that it is
categorically excluded from
environmental review and therefore
does not require the preparation of an
environmental assessment (EA) or
environmental impact statement (EIS).
Categorical exclusions (CEs) are actions
identified in an agency’s NEPA
implementing regulations that do not
normally have a significant impact on
the environment and therefore do not
require either an EA or EIS.31
Specifically, FRA has determined that
this proposed rule is categorically
27 19
U.S.C. Ch. 13.
U.S.C. 4321 et seq.
29 40 CFR parts 1500 through 1508.
30 23 CFR part 771
31 40 CFR 1508.4.
28 42
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excluded from detailed environmental
review.32
The purpose of this rulemaking is to
codify agency guidance and clarify
existing requirements for complying
with FRA’s regulation on the training,
qualification, and oversight of safetyrelated railroad employees. This
proposed rule does not directly or
indirectly impact any environmental
resources and would not result in
significantly increased emissions of air
or water pollutants or noise. In
analyzing the applicability of a CE, FRA
must also consider whether unusual
circumstances are present that would
warrant a more detailed environmental
review.33 FRA has concluded that no
such unusual circumstances exist with
respect to this proposed regulation and
the proposal meets the requirements for
categorical exclusion.34
Pursuant to Section 106 of the
National Historic Preservation Act and
its implementing regulations, FRA has
determined this undertaking has no
potential to affect historic properties.35
FRA has also determined that this
rulemaking would not approve a project
resulting in a use of a resource protected
by Section 4(f).36
G. Executive Order 12898
(Environmental Justice)
Executive Order 12898, ‘‘Federal
Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations,’’ and DOT
Order 5610.2C 37 require DOT agencies
to achieve environmental justice as part
of their mission by identifying and
addressing, as appropriate,
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects,
including interrelated social and
economic effects, of their programs,
policies, and activities on minority
populations and low-income
populations. The DOT Order instructs
DOT agencies to address compliance
with Executive Order 12898 and
requirements within the DOT Order in
rulemaking activities, as appropriate,
and also requires consideration of the
32 See 23 CFR 771.116(c)(15) (categorically
excluding ‘‘[p]romulgation of rules, the issuance of
policy statements, the waiver or modification of
existing regulatory requirements, or discretionary
approvals that do not result in significantly
increased emissions of air or water pollutants or
noise’’).
33 23 CFR 771.116(b).
34 23 CFR 771.116(c)(15).
35 54 U.S.C. 306108.
36 Department of Transportation Act of 1966, as
amended (Pub. L. 89–670, 80 Stat. 931); 49 U.S.C.
303.
37 Available at: https://www.transportation.gov/
sites/dot.gov/files/Final-for-OST-C-210312-003signed.pdf.
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benefits of transportation programs,
policies, and other activities where
minority populations and low-income
populations benefit, at a minimum, to
the same level as the general population
as a whole when determining impacts
on minority and low-income
populations. FRA has evaluated this
proposed rule under Executive Order
12898 and the DOT Order and has
determined it would not cause
disproportionately high and adverse
human health and environmental effects
on minority populations or low-income
populations.
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Under section 201 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 38 each
Federal agency shall, unless otherwise
prohibited by law, assess the effects of
Federal regulatory actions on State,
local, and tribal governments, and the
private sector (other than to the extent
that such regulations incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in
law). Section 202 of the Act 39 further
requires that before promulgating any
general notice of proposed rulemaking
that is likely to result in the
promulgation of any rule that includes
any Federal mandate that may result in
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100,000,000 or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any
one year, and before promulgating any
final rule for which a general notice of
proposed rulemaking was published,
the agency shall prepare a statement
detailing the effect on State, local, and
tribal governments and the private
sector. This proposed rule would not
result in such an expenditure, and thus
preparation of such a statement is not
required.
I. Energy Impact
Executive Order 13211, ‘‘Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use,’’ requires Federal
agencies to prepare a Statement of
Energy Effects for any ‘‘significant
energy action.’’ 40 FRA evaluated this
proposed rule under Executive Order
13211 and determined that this
regulatory action is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ within the meaning of
Executive Order 13211.
J. Privacy Act Statement
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c),
DOT solicits comments from the public
38 Public
Law 104–4, 2 U.S.C. 1531.
U.S.C. 1532.
40 66 FR 28355 (May 22, 2001).
39 2
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to better inform its rulemaking process.
DOT posts these comments, without
edit, to www.regulations.gov, as
described in the system of records
notice, DOT/ALL–14 FDMS, accessible
through https://www.transportation.gov/
privacy. To facilitate comment tracking
and response, we encourage
commenters to provide their name, or
the name of their organization; however,
submission of names is completely
optional. Whether or not commenters
identify themselves, all timely
comments will be fully considered. If
you wish to provide comments
containing proprietary or confidential
information, please contact the agency
for alternate submission instructions.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR part 243
Administrative practice and
procedure, Penalties, Railroad
employees, Railroad safety, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
The Proposed Rule
For the reasons discussed in the
preamble, FRA proposes to amend part
243 of chapter II, subtitle B of title 49
of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
PART 243—TRAINING,
QUALIFICATION, AND OVERSIGHT
FOR SAFETY-RELATED RAILROAD
EMPLOYEES
1. The authority citation for part 243
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20103, 20107, 20131–
20155, 20162, 20301–20306, 20701–20702,
21301–21304, 21311; 28 U.S.C. 2461, note;
and 49 CFR 1.89.
Subpart A—General
2. Section 243.1 is amended by adding
paragraphs (f) and (g) to read as follows:
■
§ 243.1
Purpose and scope.
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*
*
*
*
*
(f) The requirements in this part do
not require an employer to adopt and
comply with a training program when
the training required for a qualified
person is obtained through earning a
college degree or certification from an
accredited training organization or
learning institution. For example, the
requirements in this part do not require
the training program of an engineering
firm that conducts bridge inspections to
include training of railroad bridge
engineers on the subjects taught as part
of a professional engineering curriculum
covered by 49 CFR 237.51(b).
(g) The requirements in this part do
not require an employer to train
contractors who are hired to perform
elective audits or assessments that are
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not required by Federal railroad safety
laws, regulations, or orders.
■ 3. Section 243.3 is amended by adding
paragraph (c) to read as follows:
§ 243.3 Application and responsibility for
compliance.
*
*
*
*
*
(c)(1) A parent or holding company
may comply with the requirements of
this part on behalf of one or more
subsidiaries if the arrangement is
specified and submitted with the
relevant training program(s) under
subpart B of this part.
(i) The arrangement may be used to
fulfill all or a portion of a subsidiary’s
responsibility for compliance with this
part.
(ii) A parent or holding company that
submits a training program on behalf of
one or more subsidiaries must initially
and continually maintain in its
submission a list of the legal name of
each subsidiary. The submission must
reflect which courses each subsidiary is
adopting if a subsidiary is not adopting
the parent or holding company’s
training program in its entirety. The
submission must reflect whether each
subsidiary is adopting all of a parent or
holding company’s training programs or
identify which courses each subsidiary
is adopting.
(2) A subsidiary must not duplicate a
training program submission a parent or
holding company has made on its
behalf.
(3) A subsidiary must file a training
program submission, in accordance with
the requirements of subpart B of this
part, if a parent or holding company
does not submit one or more training
programs on behalf of the subsidiary
that is intended to fulfill all of the
subsidiary’s responsibilities under this
part.
(4) A subsidiary must comply with a
parent or holding company’s training
program submission that is filed on
behalf of the parent or holding
company’s subsidiaries unless the
subsidiary files its own submission, in
accordance with the requirements of
subpart B of this part.
■ 4. Section 243.5 is amended by
revising the definitions for ‘‘Designated
instructor’’ and ‘‘Refresher training’’ and
adding a definition for ‘‘Training
organizations or learning institutions,’’
to read as follows:
§ 243.5
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Designated instructor means a person
designated as such by an employer,
training organization, or learning
institution, who has demonstrated an
adequate knowledge of the subject
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matter under instruction and, where
applicable, has the necessary experience
to effectively provide formal training on
the subject matter. The designated
instructor is not required to be an
employee of the employer. Employers
are required to ensure that employees
and non-employees used as designated
instructors have the necessary
knowledge, skills, and abilities to
provide sound coaching, mentoring, and
guidance to new learners.
*
*
*
*
*
Refresher training means periodic
retraining required for each safetyrelated railroad employee that is
designed to maintain, improve, and
update the skills and knowledge of
existing employees to ensure they are
sufficiently acquainted with any
changed standards, or any relevant
problematic issues or new skills,
methods, and processes, and to ensure
no important skills or knowledge have
been lost due to lack of use. Similar
training programs or plans required
elsewhere in this chapter but identified
by a term other than refresher training
such as ‘‘recurrent training,’’ ‘‘retraining,’’ ‘‘periodic training,’’ ‘‘training
that occurs periodically,’’ or ‘‘training
that is required within defined
intervals,’’ are considered refresher
training for purposes of this subpart
although they need not be submitted for
review pursuant to § 243.103(b).
*
*
*
*
*
Training organizations or learning
institutions mean entities that provide
training services for people who are
safety-related railroad employees or
independent students who will rely on
the training services provided to qualify
to become safety-related railroad
employees, but not employees of the
entities providing the training. Training
organizations and learning institutions
include businesses that provide formal
training, and colleges and universities
that provide rail safety courses,
necessary for a person to qualify as a
safety-related railroad employee.
Training organizations and learning
institutions also include entities that do
not maintain fixed facilities (i.e., do not
have a physical location), as they may
rent or lease meeting space to deliver
formal training, deliver formal training
at an employer’s facility, or deliver
computer-based training virtually. A
railroad that trains its own employees
and also trains safety-related railroad
employees of other employers is not a
training organization or learning
institution.
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Subpart B—Program Components and
Approval Process
5. Section 243.101 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a), (b), (c)(1)
through (3), (c)(5), (e), and (f) to read as
follows:
■
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§ 243.101
Employer program required.
(a) Each employer conducting
operations subject to this part shall
submit, adopt, and comply with a
training program for its safety-related
railroad employees.
(b) Each employer that has not yet
commenced operations subject to this
part shall submit a training program for
its safety-related railroad employees
before commencing operations. Upon
commencing operations, the employer
shall adopt and comply with the
training program.
(c) * * *
(1) Classify its safety-related railroad
employees in occupational categories or
subcategories by craft, class, task, or
other suitable terminology. Other
suitable terminology for classifying
safety-related railroad employees may
include references to the applicable part
of the Code of Federal Regulations,
section of the United States Code, or
citation to an order as described in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section;
(2) Define the occupational categories
or subcategories of safety-related
railroad employees. The definition of
each category or subcategory shall
include a list of the Federal railroad
safety laws, regulations, and orders that
the employee is required to comply
with, based on the employee’s
assignments and duties, broken down at
a minimum to the applicable part of the
Code of Federal Regulations, section of
the United States Code, or citation to an
order. The listing of the Federal
requirements shall contain the
descriptive title of each law, regulation,
or order. An employer that classifies its
safety-related railroad employees by
direct reference to the applicable part of
the Code of Federal Regulations, section
of the United States Code, or citation to
an order as permitted in paragraph (c)(1)
of this section, is not required to define
the occupational categories or
subcategories of its safety-related
railroad employees;
(3) Create tables or utilize other
suitable formats which summarize the
information required in paragraphs
(c)(1) and (2) of this section, separated
by major railroad departments (e.g.,
operations, maintenance-of-way,
maintenance-of-equipment, signal and
communications). After listing the major
departments, the tables or other formats
should list the categories and
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subcategories of safety-related railroad
employees within those departments.
An employer that does not have major
railroad departments and classifies its
safety-related railroad employees by
direct reference to the applicable part of
the Code of Federal Regulations, section
of the United States Code, or citation to
an order, as permitted in paragraph
(c)(1) of this section, is not required to
summarize the information required in
paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section;
*
*
*
*
*
(5) Determine how training shall be
structured, developed, and delivered,
including an appropriate combination of
classroom, simulator, computer-based,
correspondence, OJT, or other formal
training. The curriculum shall be
designed to impart knowledge of, and
ability to comply with, applicable
Federal railroad safety laws, regulations,
and orders, as well as any relevant
railroad rules and procedures
promulgated to implement those
applicable Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, and orders. OJT is required
when tasks require neuromuscular
coordination to learn, unless FRA
approves alternative, formal training
that addresses the need to practice
safety-related tasks, with the ability to
objectively measure task completion
proficiency.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Contractor’s responsibility to
validate approved program to a railroad:
A contractor is being utilized by a
railroad when any of the contractor’s
employees conduct safety-related duties
on behalf of the railroad and the railroad
does not otherwise qualify those
employees of the contractor that are
allowed to perform those duties. A
contractor that chooses to train its own
safety-related railroad employees shall
provide each railroad that utilizes it
with a document proving or stating that:
(1) The contractor’s training program
was approved by FRA; or
(2) The contractor is not required to
submit the similar training program or
plan as required in § 243.103(b) but is
maintaining the similar training
program or plan, pursuant to other
regulatory requirements contained
elsewhere in this chapter.
(f) Railroad’s responsibility to retain
contractor’s validation of program: A
railroad that chooses to utilize
contractor employees to perform safetyrelated duties and relies on contractorprovided training as the basis for those
employees’ qualification to perform
those duties shall retain a document
from the contractor declaring or proving
that the contractor’s program was
approved by FRA, or the contractor is
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59765
not required to submit the similar
training program or plan as required in
§ 243.103(b) but is maintaining the
similar training program or plan,
pursuant to other regulatory
requirements contained elsewhere in
this chapter. A copy of the document
required in paragraph (e) of this section
satisfies this requirement.
■ 6. Section 243.103 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (2)(v), (b),
and (d) to read as follows:
§ 243.103 Training components identified
in program.
(a) * * *
(1) A unique name and identifier for
each formal initial and refresher training
course of study;
(2) * * *
(v) The anticipated course duration
for all formal training combined,
excluding the course duration of OJT;
*
*
*
*
*
(b) An employer that is required to
adopt and comply with similar training
programs or plans, pursuant to other
regulatory requirements contained
elsewhere in this chapter, is not
required to submit those similar training
programs or plans in accordance with
this part. When any such similar
program or plan, pursuant to other
regulatory requirements contained
elsewhere in this chapter, includes OJT
but does not include the OJT
components specified in paragraph
(a)(3) of this section and in § 243.101(d),
the employer shall supplement its
program to include the OJT components
in accordance with this part.
Additionally, when any such similar
program or plan, pursuant to other
regulatory requirements contained
elsewhere in this chapter, is amended
for any reason, the employer shall
amend its program without submission
to FRA under § 243.109.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) FRA may require modifications to
any programs, including those programs
referenced in paragraph (b) of this
section, if it determines essential
program components, such as OJT, or
arranged practice and feedback, are
missing or inadequate. Unless requested
by FRA, an employer is not required to
submit courseware (i.e., lesson plans,
instructor guides, participant guides, job
aids, practical exercises, tests/
assessments, and other materials used in
the delivery of any course) as part of a
training program submission.
■ 7. Section 243.105 is amended by
removing paragraph (a)(3), revising
paragraph (b), and adding paragraph (c)
to read as follows:
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§ 243.105 Optional model program
development.
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*
*
*
*
*
(b)(1) An employer that chooses to use
a model program approved by FRA is
not required to submit the entire
program to FRA. Instead, the employer
must submit only the unique identifier
associated with the program, and all
other information that is specific to that
employer or deviates from the model
program.
(2) An employer that chooses to adopt
a model program at FRA’s part 243 web
portal (https://safetydata.fra.dot.gov/
Part243/) will be prompted for the
required information and find each
model program developer’s contact
information if the developer has an
FRA-approved training program.
(3) An employer that chooses to adopt
and implement a model program must
contact the model program developer
and obtain the associated course/
training materials necessary for training
safety-related railroad employees. FRA
does not prohibit a model program
developer from charging an employer a
fee for the right to use a model training
program it developed or requiring each
employer obtain its explicit
authorization before the employer
adopts one of its model programs.
(4) An employer that submits, adopts,
and implements an FRA-approved
model program, consistent with the
operations of that employer, will be
considered in compliance with the
employer program requirements of
§ 243.101.
(c)(1) Once a model program is
approved by FRA, the developer must
consider when it is necessary to make
revisions in accordance with § 243.109.
A developer that revises its model
program is required to provide notice of
the FRA-approved changes to its
authorized users. A model program
developer is required to provide notice
of any model program revisions by
engaging in any form of communication
that positively affirms the developer
provided notice to employers likely to
be impacted by the changes to the
program, including posting the
information at the organization’s
website, writing letters to the
employers, and including information
in periodic newsletters. Such notice
must be at least as effective as the notice
the developer provided to employers
when it developed the model program.
For example, if the developer makes its
model program available to anyone with
access to the developer’s website, then
posting a notice of any revisions to the
program on its website will be
sufficient. In contrast, if a model
program developer requires explicit
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authorization to use its model programs,
the developer must provide adequate
notice to those entities that it has
specifically authorized in a manner
consistent with its authorization
practices.
(2) Once notified, an employer that is
adopting and complying with a model
program must:
(i) Adopt and comply with the
revisions to the model program made by
the developer; or
(ii) Submit information explaining
how the employer’s training program
will deviate from the model program in
accordance with § 243.109.
■ 8. Section 243.107 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (a) introductory
text and paragraph (a)(4);
■ b. Removing paragraphs (a)(5) and (6);
■ c. Removing and reserving paragraph
(b); and
■ d. Removing paragraph (c).
The revisions read as follows:
§ 243.107 Training program submission,
introductory information required.
(a) An employer who provides
training of safety-related railroad
employees shall submit its training
program to FRA for review and
approval. For an employer using FRA’s
part 243 web portal, the web portal will
prompt the employer to provide the
required information in this section.
Each employer shall state in its
submission whether, at the time of
filing, it:
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Uses any combination of
paragraphs (a)(1) through (3) of this
section.
(b) [Reserved]
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. Section 243.109 is amended by
revising the section heading, the
introductory heading in paragraph (a),
and paragraph (a)(2) to read as follows:
§ 243.109 Initial and refresher training
program submission, review, and approval
process.
(a) Initial and refresher programs.
*
*
*
*
(2) An employer’s initial program, as
required by § 243.101(a) or (b), or an
employer’s refresher program, as
required by § 243.201(e), must be
submitted to the Associate
Administrator and is considered
approved and may be implemented
immediately upon submission.
Following submission, the Associate
Administrator will review the program
and inform the employer as to whether
the program conforms to this part. If the
Associate Administrator determines that
all or part of the program does not
conform, the Associate Administrator
*
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Sfmt 4702
will inform the employer of the specific
deficiencies. The deficient portions of
the non-conforming program may
remain in effect until approval of the
revised program, unless FRA provides
notification otherwise. An employer
shall resubmit the portion of its
program, as revised to address specific
deficiencies, within 90 days after the
date of any notice of deficiencies from
the Associate Administrator. A failure to
resubmit the program with the
necessary revisions shall be considered
a failure to implement a program under
this part. The Associate Administrator
may extend this 90-day period upon
written request.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. Section 243.111 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a), (c)(3), and (e),
and removing paragraphs (c)(5) through
(7) to read as follows:
§ 243.111 Approval of programs filed by
training organizations or learning
institutions.
(a) A training organization or learning
institution that provides training
services for safety-related railroad
employees, including providing such
training services to independent
students who enroll with such training
organization or learning institution and
who will rely on the training services
provided to qualify to become safetyrelated railroad employees, must submit
its program to FRA for review and
approval unless:
(1) The program is approved as a
model program under § 243.105 or an
employer program under § 243.101; and
(2) The training organization or
learning institution submits an
informational filing to its previously
approved program containing the
information required in paragraph (c) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(3) The training organization or
learning institution’s primary telephone
number and point of contact; and
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Previously approved programs
require an informational filing when
modified. The training organization or
learning institution shall review its
previously approved training program
and modify it accordingly when new
safety-related Federal railroad laws,
regulations, or orders are issued, or new
safety-related technologies, procedures,
or equipment are introduced into the
workplace and result in new knowledge
requirements, safety-related tasks, or in
modifications of existing safety-related
duties. A training organization or
learning institution that modifies its
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training program for these described
reasons shall submit an informational
filing to the Associate Administrator not
later than 30 days after the end of the
calendar year in which the modification
occurred, unless FRA advises otherwise.
Programs modified in accordance with
this paragraph are considered approved
upon modification and may be
implemented immediately. Any
program deficiencies noted by the
Associate Administrator shall be
addressed as specified in this section. A
training organization or learning
institution may transfer an approved
program to another training organization
or learning institution, or an employer,
and that transfer will require the
acquiring entity to file an informational
filing unless the acquiring entity is
making substantial additions or
revisions to the previously approved
program, which will require FRA review
under paragraph (f) of this section. The
filing shall contain a summary
description of sufficient detail so that
FRA can associate the changes with the
training organization’s or learning
institution’s previously approved
program, and shall include:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Section 243.113 is revised to read
as follows:
lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
§ 243.113 Electronic and written program
submission requirements.
(a) Each employer, training
organization, or learning institution to
which this part applies is required to
file by electronic means at FRA’s part
243 web portal any program
submissions required under this part in
accordance with the requirements of
this section. FRA’s part 243 web portal
will prompt users to submit all required
training program information. Each
organization, business, or association
that develops an optional model
program in accordance with § 243.105 is
required to file by electronic means at
FRA’s part 243 web portal the program
in accordance with the requirements of
this section.
(b) Before any person’s first program
submission electronically at FRA’s part
243 web portal, the person must register
for access at the portal, https://
safetydata.fra.dot.gov/Part243/. Users
must provide the following information
to complete registration:
(1) The name of the employer,
organization, learning institution,
business, or association;
(2) The names of two individuals,
including job titles, who will be the
person’s points of contact and will be
the only individuals allowed access to
FRA’s secure document submission site;
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18:21 Sep 30, 2022
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(3) The mailing addresses for the
person’s points of contact;
(4) The person’s system or main
headquarters address located in the
United States;
(5) The email addresses for the
person’s points of contact; and
(6) The daytime telephone numbers
for the person’s points of contact.
(c) A person that electronically
submits an initial program,
informational filing, or new portions or
revisions to an approved program
required by this part at FRA’s part 243
web portal shall be considered to have
provided their consent for FRA to
electronically store any materials
required by this part and to receive
approval or disapproval notices from
FRA by email.
Subpart C—Program Implementation
and Oversight Requirements
12. Section 243.201 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a), (b), (c)(2), (d)
introductory text and (d)(1), and (e)(1)
and (2), and adding paragraphs (e)(3)
and (f) to read as follows:
■
§ 243.201 Employee qualification
requirements.
(a)(1) Each employer must permit
only employees appropriately trained
and qualified to perform safety-related
service.
(2) In addition to any required
knowledge-based training, an employer
may limit a safety-related railroad
employee’s training to only the relevant
Federal requirements that apply to the
safety-related tasks that the employer
authorizes the employee to perform.
(3) Each employer conducting
operations subject to this part shall
either:
(i) Declare the designation of each of
its existing safety-related railroad
employees by occupational category or
subcategory, and only permit designated
employees to perform safety-related
service in that occupational category or
subcategory; or
(ii) For an employer that does not
designate employees by occupational
category or subcategory, retain a record
for each employee identifying the list of
Federal railroad safety laws, regulations,
and orders that cover the work the
person is designated as qualified to
perform.
(b) An employer commencing
operations shall declare the designation
of each of its existing safety-related
railroad employees by occupational
category or subcategory before
beginning operations, and only permit
designated employees to perform safetyrelated service in that category or
subcategory. Any person designated
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59767
shall have met the requirements for
newly hired employees or those
assigned new safety-related duties in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section.
(c) * * *
(2) If the training curriculum includes
OJT, the employee shall demonstrate, to
the satisfaction of a designated
instructor, OJT proficiency by
successfully completing the safetyrelated tasks necessary to become a
qualified member of the occupational
category or subcategory. However, as
part of the OJT process and before
completing any of the formal training,
including classroom training and OJT,
and passing the field evaluation, a
person may perform such tasks under
the direct onsite observation of any
qualified person, provided the qualified
person has been advised of the
circumstances and is capable of
intervening if an unsafe act or noncompliance with Federal railroad safety
laws, regulations, or orders is observed.
An employee designated to provide
formal training to other employees, and
who is not a designated instructor, shall
be qualified on the safety-related topics
or tasks in accordance with the
employer’s training program and the
requirements of this part.
(d) Employees previously trained or
qualified, but not by the current
employer: If an employee has received
relevant training or qualification for a
particular occupational category or
subcategory through participation in a
FRA-required training program
completed by an entity other than the
employee’s current employer, that
training shall satisfy the requirements of
this part:
(1) Provided that:
(i) A current record of training is
obtained from that other entity; or
(ii) When a current record of training
is unavailable from that other entity, an
employer performs testing to ensure the
employee has the knowledge necessary
to be a member of that category or
subcategory of safety-related railroad
employee. Testing shall include an oral
or written examination, as well as the
ability to inspect, identify, and initiate
corrective action necessary for
compliance with Federal railroad safety
laws, regulations, or orders, as well as
any relevant railroad rules and
procedures promulgated to implement
those Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, or orders. A designated
instructor must make the final
determination as to whether the
employee has the knowledge, skills, and
abilities to become a member of an
occupational category; and
*
*
*
*
*
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(e) * * *
(1) Beginning January 1, 2022, each
Class I railroad, and each intercity or
commuter passenger railroad
conducting operations subject to this
part with 400,000 total employee work
hours annually or more, shall deliver
refresher training at an interval not to
exceed three calendar years from the
date of an employee’s last training
event, except where refresher training is
specifically required more frequently in
accordance with this chapter. If the last
training event occurs before FRA’s
approval of the employer’s training
program, the employer shall provide
refresher training either within three
calendar years from that prior training
event or no later than December 31,
2024.
(2) Beginning May 1, 2023, each
employer conducting operations subject
to this part not covered by paragraph
(e)(1) of this section shall deliver
refresher training at an interval not to
exceed three calendar years from the
date of an employee’s last training
event, except where refresher training is
specifically required more frequently in
accordance with this chapter. If the last
training event occurs before FRA’s
approval of the employer’s training
program, the employer shall provide
refresher training either within three
calendar years from that prior training
event or no later than December 31,
2025.
(3) Each employer shall ensure that,
as part of each employee’s refresher
training:
(i) An employee is advised of changes
to any rule, practice, or procedure
relevant to the employee’s assigned
duties;
(ii) An employee must not be allowed
to test out of refresher training; and
(iii) The employee is trained and
qualified on the application of any
Federal railroad safety laws, regulations,
and orders the person is required to
comply with, as well as any relevant
railroad rules and procedures
promulgated to implement those
Federal railroad safety laws, regulations,
and orders. An employer must consider
developing refresher training to address
railroad-wide or industry-wide safety
concerns, or those safety concerns that
address an individual employee’s
weaknesses. To ensure an employee is
trained and qualified, rather than
repeating initial training, an employer is
permitted to consider refresher training
as a limited and carefully tailored
review of:
(A) All the required steps of a
complicated safety-related task;
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18:21 Sep 30, 2022
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(B) Existing rules or procedures that
were initially learned but rarely used;
and
(C) Safety-related tasks that address
skill gaps that the employer identified
in the workforce through efficiency
testing, periodic oversight, annual
reviews, accident/incident data, FRA
inspection data, or other performance
measuring metrics.
(f) An employer must consider ways
to provide remedial training and
retesting of any employee who fails to
successfully pass any training or testing.
Under this part, a failure of any test or
training does not bar the person from
successfully completing the training or
testing at a later date.
■ 13. Section 243.203 is amended by
revising paragraphs (b)(2) and (6), and
(c) to read as follows:
§ 243.203
Records.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) Occupational category or
subcategory designations, or other
suitable designations, for which the
employee is deemed qualified;
*
*
*
*
*
(6) The employee’s OJT performance,
which shall include the unique name or
identifier of the OJT program
component in accordance with
§ 243.103, the date the OJT program
component was successfully completed,
and the identification of the designated
instructor(s) determining that the
employee successfully completed all
OJT training necessary to be considered
qualified to perform the safety-related
tasks identified with the occupational
categories or subcategories, or other
suitable terminology, for which the
employee is designated in accordance
with the program required by this part;
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Record accessibility for other than
individual employee records. Except for
records demonstrating the qualification
status of each safety-related railroad
employee as described in paragraph (b)
of this section or otherwise specified in
this part, each annual review required
by this part shall be accessible for three
calendar years after the end of the
calendar year to which the annual
review relates, and each test, inspection,
or other event record required by this
part shall be accessible for one calendar
year after the end of the calendar year
to which the event relates. Each
employer shall make these records
accessible at one headquarters location
within the United States, including, but
not limited to, a railroad’s system
headquarters, a holding company’s
headquarters, a joint venture’s
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
headquarters, a contractor’s principal
place of business or other headquarters
located where the contractor is
incorporated. This requirement does not
prohibit an employer with divisions
from also maintaining any of these
records at any division headquarters.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. Section 243.205 is amended by
revising paragraphs (a), (c) introductory
text, (d), (e)(1), (g) introductory text, (h),
and (i) to read as follows:
§ 243.205
Periodic oversight.
(a) General. As part of the program
required in accordance with this part,
an employer shall adopt and comply
with a program to conduct periodic
oversight tests or inspections to
determine if safety-related railroad
employees comply with Federal railroad
safety laws, regulations, and orders
particular to FRA-regulated personal
and work group safety. The program of
periodic oversight shall commence on
the day the employer files its program
with FRA pursuant to § 243.101(a) or on
the day the employer commences
operations pursuant to § 243.101(b). The
data gathered through the testing or
inspection components of the program
shall be used to determine whether
systemic performance gaps exist, and to
determine if modifications to the
training component of the program are
appropriate to close those gaps.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Railroad oversight. Each railroad
shall identify supervisory employees, by
category or subcategory, responsible for
conducting periodic oversight tests or
inspections for the safety-related
railroad employees that it authorizes to
perform safety-related duties on its
property, except a railroad is not
required to:
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Operational test exception for a
railroad. A railroad is not required to
perform operational tests or inspections
of safety-related railroad employees
employed by a contractor.
(e) * * *
(1) When oversight test or inspection
sessions are scheduled specifically to
determine if safety-related employees
are in compliance with Federal railroad
safety laws, regulations, and orders
particular to FRA-regulated personal
and work group safety; or
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Contractor oversight. Each
contractor shall conduct periodic
oversight tests or inspections of its
safety-related railroad employees
provided:
*
*
*
*
*
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lotter on DSK11XQN23PROD with PROPOSALS1
(h) Oversight divided by agreement.
(1) Notwithstanding the requirements of
paragraphs (c) and (g) of this section, a
railroad and a contractor may agree that
the contractor will provide the oversight
by specifying in the program that the
railroad has trained the contractor
employees responsible for training and
oversight; or
(2) Notwithstanding the requirements
of this section that assign specific
periodic oversight responsibilities to a
railroad or a contractor, a railroad and
a contractor may agree to a different
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18:21 Sep 30, 2022
Jkt 259001
periodic oversight responsibility
arrangement.
(i) Detailed records required. Each
employer that conducts periodic
oversight in accordance with this
section must keep a record of the date,
time, place, and result of each test or
inspection. The records shall specify
each person administering tests or
inspections, and each person tested. The
record shall also provide a method to
record whether the employee complied
with the monitored duties, and any
interventions used to remediate non-
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59769
compliance. Modifications of the
program required by § 217.9 of this
chapter may be used in lieu of this
oversight program, provided a railroad
specifies it has done so in its program
submitted in accordance with this part.
*
*
*
*
*
Issued in Washington, DC, under the
authority set forth in 49 CFR 1.89(b).
Amitabha Bose,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2022–21277 Filed 9–30–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–06–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 190 (Monday, October 3, 2022)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 59749-59769]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-21277]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Railroad Administration
49 CFR Part 243
[Docket No. FRA-2020-0017, Notice No. 1]
RIN 2130-AC87
Training, Qualification, and Oversight for Safety-Related
Railroad Employees
AGENCY: Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM).
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In response to petitions for rulemaking, FRA proposes amending
its regulation on Training, Qualification, and Oversight for Safety-
Related Railroad Employees (Training Rule) to codify agency guidance
and clarify existing requirements.
DATES: Written comments on the proposed rule must be received by
December 2, 2022. FRA will consider comments received after that date
to the extent practicable.
ADDRESSES:
Comments: Comments related to Docket No. FRA-2020-0017 may be
submitted by going to https://www.regulations.gov and following the
online instructions for submitting comments.
Instructions: All submissions must include the agency name, docket
number (FRA-2020-0017), and Regulatory Identification Number (RIN) for
this rulemaking (2130-AC87). All comments received will be posted
without change to https://www.regulations.gov; this includes any
personal information. Please see the Privacy Act Statement heading in
Section IV of this document for Privacy Act information related to any
submitted comments or materials.
Docket: For access to the docket to read background documents or
comments received, go to https://www.regulations.gov and follow the
online instructions for accessing the docket.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert J. Castiglione, Staff Director,
Safety Partnerships Division, Office of Railroad Safety, FRA,
telephone: 817-247-3707, email: [email protected]; or Alan H.
Nagler, Senior Attorney, Office of the Chief Counsel, FRA, telephone:
202-493-6038, email: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents for Supplementary Information
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Petition Requests FRA Proposes Adopting
B. Petition Requests FRA Does Not Propose Adopting
C. Summary of FRA Guidance to the Regulated Community
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
IV. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
D. Federalism Implications
E. International Trade Impact Assessment
F. Environmental Impact
G. Executive Order 12898 (Environmental Justice)
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
I. Energy Impact
I. Executive Summary
Purpose of the Regulatory Action and Legal Authority
In response to the mandate of section 401(a) of the Rail Safety
Improvement Act of 2008 (RSIA),\1\ on November 7, 2014, FRA published a
final rule (2014 Final Rule) establishing minimum training standards
for safety-related railroad employees and requiring railroad carriers,
contractors, and subcontractors to develop and submit certain training
programs to FRA for approval.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Public Law 110-432, 122 Stat. 4883 (Oct. 16, 2008), codified
at 49 U.S.C. 20162. The Secretary of Transportation delegated the
authority to carry out this mandate to the the Federal Railroad
Administrator. 49 CFR 1.89(b).
\2\ 79 FR 66459.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 3, 2017, FRA published a final rule which delayed
implementation dates in the 2014 Final Rule by one year.\3\ The delay
was necessary to help model training program developers and other
regulated entities comply with the rule.\4\ On April 27, 2018, FRA
published a final rule in response to a petition for reconsideration of
that May 2017 rule by granting the American Short Line and Regional
Railroad Association's (ASLRRA) request to delay the implementation
dates by an additional year.\5\ FRA determined that the delay was
necessary to improve compliance, reduce significant cost impacts
associated with the rule, and prevent complicating the approval
process.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 82 FR 20549.
\4\ 82 FR 20550. In December 2016, FRA completed sharing
training documents FRA uses to train the agency's personnel on
Federal rail safety requirements with model program developers and
made those documents available on FRA's website. However, even after
FRA produced those documents and performed significant outreach to
educate the regulated community, one association (considered a major
model program developer) informed FRA it found certain aspects of
the rule confusing to implement and difficult for contractors to
apply in practice.
\5\ 83 FR 18455.
\6\ 83 FR 18456.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On June 27 and July 31, 2019, FRA received joint petitions for
rulemaking filed by ASLRRA and the National Railroad Construction and
Maintenance Association, Inc. (NRC) (collectively, ``Associations'')
requesting additional implementation delays and other changes to the
2014 Final Rule; these petitions were docketed in DOT's Docket
Management System as FRA-2019-0050. On January 2, 2020, FRA responded
to the Associations' petitions for rulemaking by issuing a final rule
delaying the regulation's implementation dates for all contractors,
[[Page 59750]]
and those Class II and III railroads that are not intercity or commuter
passenger railroads with 400,000 total employee work hours annually or
more.\7\ Regarding the Associations' remaining requests in the
petitions for rulemaking, FRA's January 2, 2020, final rule stated that
FRA was considering addressing the Associations' remaining requests in
a separate rulemaking.\8\ This proposed rulemaking would address the
remaining requests in the Associations' 2019 petitions for rulemaking,
clarify current requirements, and remove regulatory provisions that are
obsolete.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 85 FR 10 (Jan. 2, 2020).
\8\ 85 FR 10 (stating FRA's intent to initiate a separate
rulemaking which would be limited to amending FRA's training
regulation so that the regulatory text includes the latest guidance
intended to help small entities and other users of model programs).
FRA's response to address the Associations' remaining requests in a
separate rulemaking was consistent with its previous statement on
the subject. 84 FR 64447, 64449 (Nov. 22, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Costs and Benefits
FRA has examined the proposed rulemaking and finds that any
associated costs and benefits would be de minimis. It is expected that
the railroad industry and FRA would experience several qualitative
benefits, which are fully discussed in the Regulatory Impact section of
this proposed rule. These benefits include: (1) providing clarity to
the regulated community, thereby facilitating compliance with the
regulatory requirements; (2) making it easier for FRA to administer the
Training Rule's requirements; and (3) removing certain regulatory
provisions that are obsolete.
II. Background
In the 2014 Final Rule, FRA stated its intention to issue a
compliance guide with a primary emphasis on assisting small entities,
but which could also be used by any employer.\9\ FRA anticipated that
the compliance guide would also help model program developers in
drafting programs to be adopted by small railroads and contractors. FRA
issued an interim compliance guide and made it available for immediate
effectiveness in the 2014 Final Rule docket \10\ on April 21, 2015, but
provided a comment period in anticipation that the regulated community
might have additional comments or concerns.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 79 FR 66474.
\10\ Document number FRA-2009-0033-0031.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On May 25, 2016, FRA responded to the comments and posted its first
version of the final compliance guide.\11\ On November 30, 2016, FRA
posted a second version of the final compliance guide,\12\ largely to
publish FRA's answers to questions received from the regulated
community that broad dissemination would benefit. When FRA amended the
implementation dates by final rules published on May 3, 2017, and April
27, 2018, FRA made conforming changes to the final compliance guide and
posted the revised version on FRA's website at https://railroads.dot.gov/divisions/safety-partnerships/training-standards-rule. The same location on FRA's website contains the following
additional guidance: (1) an ASLRRA Q&A Document, which contains FRA's
answers to 11 questions concerning part 243 posed by ASLRRA; (2) an On
the Job Training (OJT) matrix, which shows the minimum type of training
(i.e., formal training, OJT training, or briefing only) that FRA
expects to see in a program covering each specific rail safety
requirement under most circumstances; (3) OJT templates that serve as
examples of OJT training standards for some types of employees; and (4)
various resource documents to assist employers with training in the
areas of equipment maintenance, passenger equipment requirements, brake
systems, engineering and track maintenance, and signal and train
control requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Document number FRA-2009-0033-0035.
\12\ Document number FRA-2009-0033-0036.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This NPRM proposes addressing two of the Associations' overarching
concerns: first, that FRA provide sufficient certainty as to how the
agency will apply the requirements of part 243 in the future by
converting existing guidance applicable to part 243 into regulatory
text; second, that FRA adopt specific regulatory text changes so as to
facilitate compliance with the Training Rule.\13\ In this Background
section, FRA details the petition requests made by the Associations
that FRA proposes to address and those it does not. Additionally, this
Background section provides a summary of other guidance FRA has
provided to the regulated community that is not addressed by the
petitions for rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ FRA notes that representatives of the Associations met with
FRA on January 17, 2020, to discuss their requests for greater
clarity pertaining to the requirements for refresher training,
program submission, model program adoption, and periodic oversight.
A follow-up meeting with the Associations was held by phone on
December 4, 2020, so that FRA could express its continuing interest
to respond to the petitions for rulemaking and the Associations
could emphasize concerns of greatest interest to their members.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Petition Requests FRA Proposes Adopting
Through their petitions for rulemaking and informal discussions
with FRA, the Associations requested that FRA amend part 243 to codify
the guidance, thereby providing certainty to the regulated community as
to how the agency will apply part 243's requirements in the future. In
making this request, the Associations express concern that agency
guidance is subject to change without rulemaking. To the extent
possible, the Associations ask that FRA convert the information in
guidance documents into regulatory text so that the regulated community
only needs to consult the regulatory requirements to understand the
part 243 regulation. FRA agrees with this request and intends this
proposed rule to convert the guidance into regulatory text, to the
extent possible.
Definition of Refresher Training
FRA is proposing to revise the definition of ``refresher training''
because the Associations' request for clarification in their petitions
for rulemaking express confusion and request clarification. FRA
currently defines ``refresher training'' as meaning periodic retraining
required by an employer for each safety-related railroad employee to
remain qualified. Because refresher training is already required in
other FRA regulations, albeit under different names, FRA believed the
general meaning of the term was understood throughout the regulated
railroad community. However, in reviewing FRA's other refresher
training requirements, and the Associations' and other industry
members'questions about refresher training, FRA recognizes that
clarifying the term would be helpful--especially for small entities.
[[Page 59751]]
Accordingly, FRA proposes to revise the definition of the term
``refresher training'' in part 243 to, among other things: (1)
acknowledge that FRA refers to refresher training in its other
regulations with a variety of terms (e.g., ``recurrent training,''
``re-training,'' ``periodic training,'' ``training that occurs
periodically,'' or ``training that is required within defined
intervals''); and (2) state that those refresher training programs or
plans required by FRA's other regulations need not be submitted to FRA
for review under Sec. 243.103(b).\14\
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\14\ FRA published a chart identifying those already-maintained
training programs that FRA expects will not be submitted as initial
or refresher training under part 243. Although FRA does not intend
to maintain this chart, as FRA is perpetually removing, revising, or
adding regulatory requirements, the chart published on May 1, 2019,
in the compliance guide can be found at https://railroads.dot.gov/divisions/safety-partnerships/training-standards-rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA's proposed definition of refresher training explains that the
purpose of this type of training is to improve the job performance of
existing employees by acquainting them with any problematic issues or
new skills, methods, and processes. In conjunction with the proposed
revisions to the definition of ``refresher training,'' FRA is also
proposing revisions to the refresher training requirements and options
in Sec. 243.201(e) to clarify what employers need to include, at a
minimum, to complete acceptable refresher training.
Definition of Training Organizations or Learning Institutions
FRA is proposing to add a definition of ``training organizations or
learning institutions'' to address an issue FRA is currently answering
through guidance. FRA has been asked several times whether certain
small- and medium-sized businesses that provide training to employers
are ``training organizations or learning institutions'' for purposes of
part 243. Because part 243 currently lacks a definition, some
businesses were confused about their need to comply with the rule. To
provide clarity, and as explained in more detail in the section-by-
section analysis, FRA is proposing a definition that identifies four
characteristics of a training organization or learning institution.
Model Program Developer or Employer With an Approved Program Wants To
Be Treated as a Training Organization or Learning Institution
FRA has received inquiries from entities with FRA-approved programs
(either model programs under Sec. 243.105 or employer programs under
Sec. 243.101) asking whether they need additional FRA-approval to
provide training services to employers as a training organization or
learning institution. In conformance with verbal guidance that FRA has
previously provided, this NPRM would clarify that such entities need
not resubmit an approved model or employer program to be recognized
under part 243 as a training organization or learning institution.
Rather, such entities would only need to submit an informational filing
for FRA-approval containing the information required Sec. 243.111(c).
Section 243.101 Employer Program Required
FRA is proposing to revise this section to remove requirements that
are obsolete and to clarify and incorporate guidance. Among other
things, FRA is proposing to delete the effective date of January 1,
2020, as that implementation deadline has already passed and is now
unnecessary.
In addition, this NPRM would incorporate guidance that FRA has
previously provided in response to industry stakeholders' questions
regarding the ability of employers to classify their safety-related
railroad employees based on the FRA regulations the employees are
required to comply with for their work, rather than traditional craft
terminology. Specifically, this NPRM would clarify that it is
permissible for an employer to classify its safety-related railroad
employees by listing the Federal railroad safety laws, regulations, and
orders that the employee is required to comply with to complete the
employee's assignments and duties.
Further, the NPRM would incorporate FRA guidance to employers on
how training is required to be structured, developed, and delivered.
Specifically, OJT is required when tasks require neuromuscular
coordination to learn, unless FRA approves alternative, formal training
that addresses the need to practice safety-related tasks, with the
ability to objectively measure task completion proficiency. Examples of
alternative, formal training could include: training facilities that
permit students to practice tasks that require neuromuscular
coordination to learn in a controlled environment with minimal or no
risk of personal injury; classroom practical exercises; role play; lab
simulation; or virtual reality (VR) and other emerging technologies.
In addition, this NPRM would incorporate FRA guidance regarding
contractor employers. Currently, Sec. 243.101(e) requires a contractor
that chooses to train its own safety-related railroad employees to
provide each railroad that utilizes its services with a document
indicating that the contractor's program of training was approved by
FRA. However, the existing paragraph does not consider that some
similar training programs or plans, pursuant to other regulatory
requirements contained elsewhere in this chapter, are not required to
be submitted in accordance with this part and, therefore, the
contractor would not have a document that it could show a railroad
validating FRA's approval of its program. For this reason, FRA is
proposing to clarify that the requirement does not apply when the
contractor is not required to submit a training program to FRA or
retain a document indicating FRA's approval of the program.
Section 243.103 Training Components Identified in Program
FRA is proposing three clarifying revisions to the requirements of
Sec. 243.103. First, existing paragraph (a)(1) requires each
employer's program to include a unique name and identifier for each
formal course of study. The proposed revision to this requirement
clarifies that the types of formal courses needing a unique name and
identifier include both initial and refresher training. An initial or
refresher training course that FRA has previously approved would not
need a new unique name and identifier each time it is revised.
Second, existing paragraph (a)(2)(v) requires each employer's
program to include a course outline, and the outline to include the
anticipated course duration. However, the existing requirement does not
specify whether the anticipated course duration includes OJT. To
address that gap, FRA proposes to revise the requirement to state that
the employer's course outline for each course must include the
anticipated course duration for all formal training combined, apart
from OJT. Because OJT is rarely scheduled for a specific time duration,
FRA proposes that any estimate of OJT duration be excluded from the
formal training duration estimate.
Third, as discussed in the definition of Refresher Training section
above, this NPRM would clarify that similar training programs or plans,
currently required by other FRA regulations, do not have to be
submitted to FRA under part 243. As noted in footnote 13 above, FRA has
published a chart identifying those already-maintained training
programs that FRA expects will not be submitted as initial or refresher
training under part 243.
[[Page 59752]]
Additional Changes to Miscellaneous Sections
As described in the section-by-section analysis below, FRA has
identified a number of additional requirements that can be eliminated
as obsolete or revised to add regulatory certainty and clarity. Those
changes that can be found in the proposed requirements for Training
Components Identified in Program (Sec. 243.103), Optional Model
Program Development (Sec. 243.105), Training Program Submission,
Introductory Information Required (Sec. 243.107), Approval of Programs
Filed by Training Organizations or Learning Institutions (Sec.
243.111), Records (Sec. 243.203), and Periodic Oversight (Sec.
243.205).
In addition, the Associations' petitions requested that FRA revise
Sec. 243.113 to allow any employer, not just small employers with less
than 400,000 total employee work hours annually, to have the option to
submit a training program by a method other than electronic submission.
However, during subsequent communications, the Associations retracted
that request and told FRA that they would not object to FRA proposing
mandatory submission electronically for all employers through FRA's
part 243 web portal. Accordingly, this NPRM proposes that change in
Sec. 243.113, Electronic and Written Program Submission Requirements.
B. Petition Requests FRA Does Not Propose Adopting
Although FRA is proposing to adopt many of the recommendations the
Associations suggested in their petitions for rulemaking, there are
several items that FRA is not.
FRA is not proposing any additional implementation date delays. The
implementation dates in the existing rule have come due with the
exception of those for implementing the refresher training requirements
(December 31, 2024, for each Class I railroad and each intercity or
commuter passenger railroad conducting operations subject to this part
with 400,000 total employee work hours annually or more, or December
31, 2025, for each employer conducting operations subject to this part
that is not covered by the earlier implementation date). Thus, the need
for implementation date delays appears to have passed or is not yet
ripe for review.
Neither is FRA proposing a different set of training requirements
for the Class II and III freight railroads and contractors compared to
the Class I railroads. Because the work of each safety-related railroad
employee must comply with the same Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, and orders, and the consequences for failing to comply
with those laws can be just as dangerous regardless of the size or type
of operation of the employer, it is FRA's position that safety-related
railroad employees should not be held to different training standards
based on the size or type of their employer. Instead, FRA's existing
regulation and the proposed changes in this rulemaking provide for
differences in employer size or type by allowing employers to draft
their own programs or use model programs to develop training in ways
that are tailored to smaller entities, or contract for training
services from one or more training organizations or learning
institutions.
Additionally, for the same reasons, FRA is not proposing relief for
Class II and III freight railroads and contractors to have a different
set of qualification requirements versus Class I railroads when an
employee is qualified by an entity other than the employee's current
employer and the previous qualification records are unavailable under
Sec. 243.201(d)(1). Likewise, FRA is not proposing relief for Class II
and III freight railroads and contractors to have a different refresher
training period than the three-year period in the existing regulation.
FRA is also declining the Associations' suggestions to add a
definition of ``program'' that would mean the written and electronic
instructional and testing materials, and add a definition of
``template'' that would mean an outline of the training program, and
then allow employers to submit either one. However, FRA's approach to a
training program goes more to the employer describing the methodology
of determining how safety-related railroad employees are to be trained
and how the employer can determine that the training is effective.
Because the Associations' proposed definitions would impair that
approach, FRA is declining to propose adding these two terms to the
definitions section of this NPRM.
The Associations petitioned FRA to propose removing the burden on
an employer to affirmatively state that it has chosen to use an FRA-
approved model program, contending that the burden is unnecessary. FRA
declines to propose this revision. Although the Associations
acknowledge the burden is relatively small on each employer, they state
that the cumulative burden on small employers is relatively large.
FRA's decision to decline adopting this revision is based on the
statutory requirement for the submission of ``training and
qualification plans to the Secretary for approval, including training
programs and information deemed necessary by the Secretary to ensure
that all safety-related railroad employees receive appropriate training
in a timely manner.'' \15\ It would be difficult for FRA to ensure that
an employer's safety-related railroad employees were being trained as
statutorily required without an affirmative submission from the
employer. Meanwhile, FRA is proposing revisions to Sec. 243.105(b) to
help employers conceptualize the steps necessary to learn about what
model programs are available and how they can obtain the model programs
they need. Thus, this proposed rulemaking is targeted to easing the
burden raised by the Associations in their petitions for rulemaking,
even if it does not remove the burden.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ 49 U.S.C. 20162(a)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Associations' petitions suggest that FRA propose revising the
records requirement in Sec. 243.203 to eliminate the specific
requirements and allow their members to keep whatever records the Class
II and III railroads and contractors believe are necessary to
demonstrate compliance with part 243. FRA declines to propose this
suggestion because it would eliminate objective recordkeeping
requirements in exchange for an unknown, subjective, and variable
response.
The Associations' petitions suggest that FRA propose revising the
periodic oversight requirements in Sec. 243.205 to require a
contractor that employs supervisory safety-related railroad employees
to perform oversight only when those supervisory employees are
available to perform it. FRA is not proposing this suggestion because
the Associations' recommendation regarding a contractor's supervisory
employees would likely render that requirement unenforceable as FRA
would expect any employer could make a reasonable argument that its
supervisors were too busy to perform the oversight required.
Finally, the Associations' petitions suggest that FRA propose to
exclude Class II and III railroads from the requirement to conduct
annual reviews. This would be an expansion of the existing exclusion
which covers a railroad with less than 400,000 total employee work
hours annually. FRA is not proposing this revision because the
exclusion was purposely designed to exclude only the smallest Class III
railroads. A railroad with at least 400,000 total employee work hours
annually is large enough that it should be expected to have the
resources to
[[Page 59753]]
effectively evaluate its training programs on a regular basis. Annual
reviews help ensure that a railroad is updating the program as needed
and addressing rising systemic safety concerns through targeted
training program changes.
C. Summary of FRA Guidance to the Regulated Community
Since the effective date of the 2014 Final Rule, FRA has received
questions from the regulated community regarding the agency's plans for
auditing program implementation and enforcement. The following
background reiterates guidance FRA provided on these subjects in
response to questions received. Please note that these issues are
matters of agency discretion, policy, or rules of agency organization,
procedure, or practice that are exempt from notice and comment
rulemaking.\16\ Nevertheless, FRA will consider any comments on its
procedures or practices filed in response to this proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ 5 U.S.C. 553(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One question FRA answered in the compliance guide asked what an FRA
audit will include. FRA understands that each employer, organization,
or business required to comply with part 243 wants this information so
that it can best ensure that FRA will continue to find its program,
records, and activities in compliance. In the compliance guide, FRA
explained that agency personnel will likely engage in the following
audit activities: (1) attend classes and observe different types of
training; (2) review periodic oversight records; (3) review annual
review records; (4) review employee training records; (5) review
training evaluation methods; and (6) confirm that each employer is
complying with its training program. While FRA provided this list of
standard audit activities to inform the regulated community of the
general direction of most part 243 audits, the list was not intended to
be exhaustive, and certainly FRA could conduct additional audit
activities, including conducting interviews of relevant personnel, and
conducting site visits, if applicable.
Also, in the compliance guide, FRA answered a question regarding
whether the agency would provide a grace period before taking
enforcement action. FRA's answer in the compliance guide reflected the
agency's understanding that, as with all new regulations, it will take
some time for employers to learn how to comply fully with part 243, and
potentially 12 to 18 months after training program implementation for
FRA to begin scheduling routine audits. Consequently, FRA's response in
the compliance guide explained how FRA expects to help employers,
particularly small entities, comply with part 243, albeit without a
grace period. In addition, FRA clarified that it reserves the right to
use its full enforcement authority to ensure compliance, especially in
cases where gross disregard for compliance is observed.
In reviewing the guidance in the compliance guide regarding FRA
enforcement, FRA adds that regulated entities should expect FRA's
audits will focus on both compliance and performance. If a training
program is not effective, FRA will address those performance objectives
with the regulated entity. After all, the purpose of part 243 is to
ensure safety-related railroad employees are properly trained and
qualified so as to improve rail safety generally. To achieve that
purpose, FRA expects each regulated entity to continuously look for and
consider implementing industry best practices.
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
Subpart A--General
Section 243.1 Purpose and Scope
Section 243.1 sets forth the purpose and scope of part 243. This
NPRM proposes to add two new paragraphs, paragraphs (f) and (g), to
this section to incorporate existing guidance related to railroad
bridge engineers and non-railroad employees who perform elective audits
or assessments.
Proposed paragraph (f) codifies guidance in the compliance guide,
which explains that part 243 does not apply when the training required
under FRA's regulations is obtained through earning a college degree or
certification from an accredited training organization or learning
institution.\17\ For example, part 243 does not require railroad bridge
engineers to receive ``in-house'' training when an individual qualifies
as a bridge engineer under 49 CFR 237.51(b). That section provides that
an individual may qualify as a bridge engineer based on a degree in
engineering from an accredited school or organization. Employers are
not required to provide or duplicate the same types of classes a person
might need to earn a college degree or certification from a college or
university. However, if a railroad bridge engineer is conducting a
bridge inspection as required by 49 CFR part 237, an employer is
required to provide training on how to conduct a proper bridge
inspection safely as required by 49 CFR part 214. Not only is it
unlikely that a college engineering course would cover railroad bridge
safety rules for inspections, but each railroad is likely to have its
own unique combination of rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Compliance Guide at 49-50 located at https://railroads.dot.gov/elibrary/training-qualification-and-oversight-safety-related-railroad-employees-compliance-guide-0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed paragraph (g) codifies guidance in the compliance guide
clarifying that employers are not required to train non-railroad
employees who perform audits or assessments that are not required by
Federal railroad safety laws, regulations, or orders.\18\ FRA is
proposing this change in response to the Associations' concerns
specifically pertaining to employees of the Short Line Safety Institute
(SLSI) who conduct safety audits and provide recommendations to short
line railroads on ways to improve safety. The Associations assert in
their petitions that SLSI employees are not conducting ``oversight
inspections or testing'' and ``do not train railroad employees in
specific tasks.'' FRA agrees with the Associations' position on this
issue and notes that, although the Associations suggest in their
petitions that FRA amend the definition of ``safety-related railroad
employee'' to exclude these types of non-railroad employees and SLSI
employees specifically, FRA finds that the exclusion is better placed
in Sec. 243.1. FRA also finds that specifically excluding SLSI
employees is unnecessary as SLSI employees clearly fall within the
revised language as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Id. at 43.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 243.3 Application and Responsibility for Compliance
Section 243.3 provides that, with certain exceptions, part 243
applies to all railroads, contractors of railroads, and training
organizations or learning institutions that train safety-related
railroad employees. The section further makes clear that any person,
including a railroad or a contractor for a railroad, that performs any
duty covered by part 243 is responsible for performing that duty in
accordance with part 243. In response to industry's request that a
parent or holding company be able to submit a part 243 training program
on behalf of its subsidiaries, FRA has allowed parent and holding
companies to submit training programs on behalf of their subsidiaries
as long as the filing thoroughly describes which companies are covered
by the submission and how each company is covered. The current
regulation, however, is silent on this issue and FRA has not issued
guidance on the issue.
[[Page 59754]]
To address this issue in a clearer, more transparent manner, FRA
proposes adding paragraph (c) to this section to clarify how a parent
or holding company may comply with the requirements of this part on
behalf of one or more subsidiaries. In paragraph (c)(1), FRA proposes a
requirement that the arrangement be specified and submitted as other
programs are required in subpart B. Paragraph (c)(1)(i) proposes that
the arrangement may be used to fulfill all or a portion of a
subsidiary's responsibility for compliance required by part 243. This
proposed provision is intended to allow flexibility for each subsidiary
to opt out of a parent or holding company's program when the
subsidiary's training needs are different.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1)(ii) would require that a parent or
holding company that submits a training program on behalf of one or
more subsidiaries must initially and continually maintain in its
submission a list of the subsidiaries covered and the extent to which
each subsidiary is adopting a parent or holding company's training
program.
Recognizing that the efficiencies of a joint filing arrangement
would be lost if a subsidiary were to duplicate a parent or holding
company's filing on its behalf, paragraph (c)(2) proposes to prohibit a
subsidiary from filing a duplicate of any training program a parent or
holding company submitted on its behalf.
Proposed paragraph (c)(3) would provide that each railroad, even if
it is a subsidiary of a parent or holding company, is responsible for
compliance with the training program submission requirements in subpart
B. A subsidiary should not presume that the parent or holding company
will fulfill the program submission requirements without confirming the
arrangement. FRA reserves the right to take enforcement action against
each ``person,'' as defined in Sec. 243.5, that fails to comply with
the program submission requirements of subpart B.
Proposed paragraph (c)(4) would require that when a parent or
holding company's training program submission is filed on behalf of the
parent or holding company's subsidiaries, each subsidiary is required
to comply with that training program submission unless the subsidiary
files its own program with FRA. The existing and proposed requirements
in part 243 are predicated on each employer submitting a training
program and complying with that training program submission. This
proposed requirement ensures that a subsidiary understands that it
would have an obligation to comply with the parent or holding company
submission unless it takes the affirmative step to file its own
training program submission.
FRA's decision to accept programs filed by parent or holding
companies on behalf of their subsidiaries is based on the recognition
that companies that are legally related may often share company rules
or operating practices that make it possible to share a training
program. Meanwhile, there are legal considerations that parent
companies, holding companies, and their subsidiary companies must
consider before filing a program under part 243 and FRA expects that
all companies involved will discuss and agree to the submission as
represented to FRA. For instance, there is a legal difference between a
holding company, which has a passive relationship with its subsidiaries
because, in general, it does not participate in the daily decision
making of the subsidiaries and each subsidiary has its own management
running those day-to-day operations, and a parent company. A parent
company typically has its own business operations and will choose
whether to be actively or directly involved in managing its
subsidiaries. Accordingly, FRA's proposed revisions to this section are
intended to ensure that all companies covered by a submission are
legally bound and accept the submission, and that subsidiaries may opt
out of a parent or holding company's submission, in whole or in part.
Section 243.5 Definitions
To codify existing guidance and respond to questions from industry,
FRA is proposing to revise two definitions and add one new definition
to part 243. Specifically, FRA proposes to revise the existing
definitions of the terms ``designated instructor'' and ``refresher
training,'' and add a definition for the term ``training organizations
or learning institutions.''
First, FRA proposes to revise the definition of ``designated
instructor.'' As currently defined, a ``designated instructor'' is ``a
person designated as such by an employer, training organization, or
learning institution, who has demonstrated, pursuant to the
[applicable] training program . . . an adequate knowledge of the
subject matter under instruction, and where applicable, has the
necessary experience to effectively provide formal training.'' FRA
understands that some industry members read this definition to mean
that to be a ``designated instructor'' a person must be: (1) an
employee of the employer; and (2) ``qualified'' as that term is used in
part 243. To clarify these issues, FRA is proposing to add two
sentences to the existing definition. The first proposed sentence would
specify that a ``designated instructor'' is not required to be an
employee of the employer and thus designated instructors can be in-
house employees or outside contractors, such as professional trainers.
The second proposed sentence would explain that employers are required
to ensure that employees and non-employees used as designated
instructors have the necessary knowledge, skills, and abilities to
provide sound coaching, mentoring, and guidance to new learners. FRA
notes, however, that ``designated instructors'' are not required to be
``qualified'' as that term is defined in part 243.
FRA proposes to revise the definition of ``refresher training'' to
explain that the purpose of this type of training is to improve the job
performance of existing employees by acquainting them with any changed
standards, any relevant problematic issues or new skills, methods, and
processes, and to ensure no important skills or knowledge have been
lost due to lack of use. This proposed explanation is intended to
distinguish refresher training from initial training, which is targeted
to employees who generally are new to the subject matter. FRA also
proposes to revise the definition of ``refresher training'' to
acknowledge that FRA has referred to refresher training in its other
railroad safety regulations with a variety of terms and that those
refresher training programs or plans required in its other railroad
safety regulations need not be submitted for review pursuant to Sec.
243.103(b). This proposed acknowledgment is intended to be read in
conjunction with the proposal in Sec. 243.201(e) that refresher
training be at an interval not to exceed three calendar years from the
date of an employee's last training event, except where refresher
training is specifically required more frequently in accordance with
this chapter. Thus, for example, if FRA requires ``recurrent training''
each calendar year in a different FRA rail safety regulation, then that
more stringent refresher training requirement would not be superseded
by the more relaxed refresher training requirement of three calendar
years in Sec. 243.201(e). In addition, FRA is proposing revisions to
the refresher training requirements and options in Sec. 243.201(e)
that would clarify what employers need to include, at a minimum, to
complete acceptable refresher training.
FRA also proposes to add a definition of ``training organizations
or learning institutions'' to clarify which businesses
[[Page 59755]]
that provide training to employers are ``training organizations or
learning institutions.'' FRA's proposed definition identifies four
characteristics of a training organization or learning institution.
First, a training organization or learning institution is an entity
that provides training services for people who are safety-related
railroad employees or independent students who will rely on the
training services provided to qualify to become safety-related railroad
employees, but not employees of the entity providing the training. This
proposed characteristic is intended to clarify that FRA's training
organization or learning institution definition does not include an
employer providing training to its employees. Second, the proposed
definition identifies the main examples of training organizations and
learning institutions as businesses that provide formal training, and
colleges and universities that provide rail safety courses necessary
for a person to qualify as a safety-related railroad employee. A
business that performs consulting work or some type of training that
does not rise to the level of ``formal training,'' as defined in part
243, would not be considered a training organization or learning
institution. Third, the proposed definition explains that even though
an entity may not maintain a fixed training facility, it could still be
considered a training organization or learning institution as it could
rent or lease meeting space to deliver training, deliver training at an
employer's facility, or deliver virtual training. Thus, the proposed
definition would clarify that a business that goes to an employer's
property to deliver formal training may be considered a ``training
organization or learning institution.'' Fourth, while some railroads
have in-house training for their employees and also train safety-
related railroad employees of other employers, FRA does not consider
these railroads as training organizations or learning institutions, and
therefore proposes to clarify that exclusion.
Subpart B--Program Components and Approval Process
Section 243.101 Employer Program Required
FRA is proposing to delete paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) and state the
employer requirement to submit, adopt, and comply with a training
program for its safety-related railroad employees in paragraph (a)
without implementation dates. Paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) are no longer
needed as the implementation deadlines specified in those existing
requirements have already passed and all employers currently must
comply.
Paragraph (b) requires that employers commencing operations after
January 1, 2020, submit, adopt, and comply with a training program
before commencing operations. As above, paragraph (b) would also be
revised to remove the implementation date that has passed. Thus, the
proposed rule would apply any time an employer commences operations.
In response to the Assocations' request, proposed revisions to
paragraph (c) clarify that employers may create programs based on
applicable CFR parts, United States Code sections, or citations to
orders. Accordingly, FRA is proposing to revise paragraph (c)(1) to
clarify what it means for an employer to classify its safety-related
railroad employees by ``other suitable terminology,'' which includes
references to the applicable part of the CFR, section of the United
States Code, or citation to an order. Also, FRA proposes to revise
paragraphs (c)(2) and (3) to exclude an employer that classifies its
safety-related railroad employees by direct reference to Federal
railroad safety laws, regulations, and orders because the existing
requirement would be redundant for an employer who classifies in that
way.
FRA proposes to revise paragraph (c)(5) to codify guidance that OJT
is required when tasks require neuromuscular coordination to learn
unless FRA approves alternative, formal training that addresses the
need to practice safety-related tasks with the ability to objectively
measure task completion proficiency.\19\ As background, some employers
or training organizations may have access to state-of-the-art indoor/
outdoor training facilities that permit students to practice tasks that
require neuromuscular coordination to learn in a controlled environment
with minimal or no risk of personal injury. Other approaches may
include classroom practical exercises, role play, lab simulation, VR,
and other emerging technologies. FRA's proposal recognizes that some
safety-related tasks that require neuromuscular coordination can be
taught effectively through formal training other than traditional OJT.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Id. at 15.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paragraph (e) requires a contractor that chooses to train its own
safety-related railroad employees to provide each railroad that
utilizes its services with a document indicating that the contractor's
training program was approved by FRA. However, paragraph (e) does not
account for the fact that some similar training programs or plans,
pursuant to other regulatory requirements contained elsewhere in this
chapter, are not required to be submitted in accordance with part 243
and, therefore, the contractor would not have a document that it could
show a railroad validating FRA's approval of that program. For this
reason, FRA is proposing to change this requirement. To the extent that
a contractor chooses to train its own safety-related railroad employees
with an FRA-approved program under part 243, FRA proposes that the
contractor provide each railroad utilizing the program with a document
declaring or proving that its training program was approved by FRA.
However, as proposed, if a contractor is not required to submit the
training program or plan as permitted by Sec. 243.103(b), but is
maintaining the similar training program or plan pursuant to other
regulatory requirements contained elsewhere in this chapter, then the
contractor's requirement to provide the railroad with a document is
limited to declaring or proving that information. For this proposed
requirement, any FRA approval document will be considered sufficient
proof and, when that proof is unavailable, a contractor may simply
declare that the statement in the document is true. FRA is also
proposing revisions to paragraph (f) that would similarly change the
type of document a railroad is responsible to retain based on the
proposed corresponding changes in paragraph (e).
Section 243.103 Training Components Identified in Program
FRA is proposing four revisions to the requirements in this
existing section.
Paragraph (a)(1) requires each employer's program to include a
unique name and identifier for each formal course of study. The
proposed revision to this requirement clarifies that the types of
formal courses needing a unique name and identifier include both
initial and refresher training courses. An initial or refresher
training course that FRA has previously approved would not need a new
unique name and identifier each time it is revised.
Paragraph (a)(2)(v) requires each employer's program to include a
course outline, and the outline to include the anticipated course
duration. However, the existing requirement does not specify whether
the anticipated course duration includes OJT. Accordingly, FRA proposes
revising this paragraph to provide that the employer's course outline
for each course include the anticipated course duration for all
[[Page 59756]]
formal training combined, apart from OJT.
The proposed revisions to paragraph (b) would clarify which
``similar training programs or plans'' that FRA requires in its other
rail safety regulations do not have to be submitted to FRA under part
243. Additionally, proposed paragraph (b) would clarify that if an
employer needs to amend any such similar program or plan required by an
FRA railroad safety regulation, other than part 243, the employer is
required to amend its program but not submit it to FRA under Sec.
243.109.
FRA is proposing to amend paragraph (d) to clarify that an employer
is not required to submit courseware (i.e., lesson plans, instructor
guides, participant guides, job aids, practical exercises, tests/
assessments, and other materials used in the delivery of any course) as
part of a training program submission, although FRA may require an
employer to provide FRA with such program courseware upon request.
Section 243.105 Optional Model Program Development
FRA is proposing several revisions to this existing section, which
permits the optional development of model programs that can be adopted
by multiple employers. The proposed changes would remove a requirement
no longer necessary and add information to the regulatory text that was
previously issued as guidance.
FRA proposes to remove paragraph (a)(3) as it is no longer needed.
The existing paragraph provided model program developers with the
option to file model training programs by May 1, 2019, to guarantee an
FRA review process of no more than 180 days. The existing requirement
is no longer needed because the deadline for early filing passed.
The proposed revisions to paragraph (b) would add information
intended to help an employer that is planning to use a model program.
Existing paragraph (b) already specifies that an employer that chooses
to use an FRA-approved model program must submit only the unique
identifier associated with the program, and all other information that
is specific to that employer or deviates from the model program.
However, proposed paragraph (b) would contain information about how an
employer can go to FRA's part 243 web portal, obtain contact
information from a model program developer, and contact that developer
to access the courseware associated with the model program. Further,
FRA is proposing to revise paragraph (b) to confirm that an employer
that submits, adopts, and implements an FRA-approved model program,
consistent with the operations of that employer, will be considered in
compliance with the employer program requirements of Sec. 243.101.
FRA proposes adding paragraph (c) to address how model program
developers are required to provide notice of any FRA-approved changes
to authorized users. FRA proposes that sufficient notice of any FRA-
approved changes may depend on whether the model program developer
loosely allows adoption of the model program by anyone with access to
the developer's website or more stringently requires an employer to
obtain explicit authorization to use a model program. In short, FRA
proposes that the model program developer disseminate its FRA-approved
updates in at least the same (and no less stringent) manner as it made
the model program available to employer users.
Section 243.107 Training Program Submission, Introductory Information
Required
FRA proposes amending paragraph (a) to remove the requirement that
an employer that does not provide, but is responsible for, training for
its safety-related railroad employees must submit a training program.
FRA also proposes adding a sentence to paragraph (a) notifying
employers using FRA's part 243 web portal that the web portal will
prompt the employers to provide the information required in this
section. Thus, an employer using FRA's part 243 web portal would not
need to provide this information elsewhere in its submission as the web
portal itself will prompt the employer to provide the information.
FRA also proposes amending paragraph (a) to reduce the types of
information required at the time of filing. The types of information
paragraphs (a)(4) and (5) require do not directly apply to employers
that must submit training programs and thus the requirements are
unnecessary. Accordingly, FRA proposes deleting both requirements, and
redesignating and revising paragraph (a)(6) as (a)(4).
Similarly, paragraphs (b) and (c) require a level of detail that is
unnecessary for FRA to evaluate an employer's training program
submission. Paragraph (b) requires an employer to provide FRA with
information about the different methods it will utilize to train its
various categories of safety-related railroad employees. Paragraph (c)
requires an employer to provide FRA with information about the training
organizations or learning institutions it elects to use to train all or
some of its safety-related railroad employees. FRA recognizes that the
agency can determine this information during an audit or investigation.
For this reason, FRA proposes to remove paragraphs (b) and (c) in their
entirety and would reserve paragraph (b).
Section 243.109 Initial and Refresher Training Program Submission,
Review, and Approval Process
FRA is proposing revisions to this section clarifying that
refresher training programs must be submitted to FRA for review and
approval in the same manner as an employer's initial training program.
This proposal includes revising the heading of this section to make
clear that it addresses the submission, review, and approval process
for both initial and refresher training programs. Similarly, FRA
proposes revising the introductory heading in paragraph (a), which
refers only to initial programs, so that it refers to both initial and
refresher training programs. Finally, FRA is proposing to revise
paragraph (a)(2) to reference both initial and refresher programs.
Section 243.111 Approval of Programs Filed by Training Organizations or
Learning Institutions
FRA proposes several revisions to this section to remove
unnecessary requirements and eliminate regulatory ambiguity.
Paragraph (a) currently requires a training organization or
learning institution to submit its program to FRA for review and
approval. Because FRA received inquiries from the Associations, and
some employers, requesting guidance on whether they would need to
resubmit a previously approved employer program so they could also be
recognized under part 243 as a training organization or learning
institution, FRA proposes new requirements to address the issue.
Accordingly, when an entity has previously received FRA approval of a
model program under Sec. 243.105 or an employer program under Sec.
243.101, under proposed paragraph (a)(1) the program does not need to
be submitted a second time for FRA's approval. Meanwhile, FRA proposes
requiring in paragraph (a)(2) that an entity with such a previously
approved program must submit an informational filing to its previously
approved program containing the information required in paragraph (c)
of this section for a training organization or learning institution
program.
The proposed revisions to paragraph (c) would remove paragraphs (5)
[[Page 59757]]
through (7), which require programs submitted by training organizations
and learning institutions to include designated instructors' resumes, a
list of employer customers, and a summary showing the methodology used
to develop training programs. FRA proposes deleting these three
requirements because FRA is not an educational accrediting agency and
finds that the existing requirements may wrongly suggest FRA would be
deciding whether each training organization or learning institution is
suitable to provide such training when that is a decision for each
employer to make. By deleting these three existing requirements, the
regulation would make clear that FRA approves training programs and not
any particular training organization or learning institution. In other
words, no training organization or learning institution should refer to
itself as ``FRA-approved'' but it may say that its training program is
``FRA-approved.''
FRA proposes revising paragraph (e) to clarify that a training
organization or learning institution may transfer an approved program
to another training organization or learning institution, or an
employer. As proposed, the acquiring entity need only submit an
informational filing with FRA noting the transfer unless the acquiring
entity is making substantial additions or revisions to the previously
approved program. If the acquiring entity is making substantial
additions or revisions to the previously approved program, then the
acquiring entity must obtain FRA's approval of those changes pursuant
to paragraph (f) of this section. FRA is considering an alternative
requirement that the acquiring entity will need to submit the entire
previously approved program under the acquiring entity's web portal
account for administrative reasons.
243.113 Electronic and Written Program Submission Requirements
FRA proposes several revisions to this section to clarify that when
FRA refers to electronic program or informational filings submission
requirements, FRA means submission through FRA's part 243 web portal.
For example, paragraph (a) would be revised to specifically reference
FRA's part 243 web portal and to inform electronic submitters that the
web portal will prompt them to submit all required training program
information.
FRA proposes the elimination of the written program submission
option for an employer with less than 400,000 total employee work hours
annually. For this reason, FRA proposes deleting that option from
paragraph (a) and removing existing paragraphs (d) through (f). The
cost in time and resources to print and mail a submission is likely the
equivalent to the time and resources needed for a person to go to FRA's
part 243 web portal, fill out the information required, and upload the
submission documents. For these reasons, this proposed requirement is
not expected to increase the costs on an employer with less than
400,000 total employee work hours annually, while reducing
administrative and cost burdens for FRA personnel that would need to
receive the written program, scan it, and upload it to FRA's part 243
web portal.
In paragraph (b), FRA proposes to clarify that a submitter will
need to register for access to the part 243 web portal through a
website before being granted web portal access.
In paragraph (c), FRA proposes to clarify that the electronic
submitters providing consent are the users of FRA's part 243 web
portal. FRA also proposes adding for clarity the existing paragraph (e)
requirement that a person that electronically submits documents to FRA
shall be considered to have provided their consent for FRA to
electronically store those materials required by this part.
Subpart C--Program Implementation and Oversight Requirements
Section 243.201 Employee Qualification Requirements
FRA proposes revising this section to provide more direction on
what must be included in refresher training, and how refresher training
is distinguished from initial training.
FRA proposes several revisions and additions to paragraph (a). The
revisions include the removal of implementation dates that have passed.
Proposed paragraph (a)(1) includes the existing requirement that each
employer must only permit employees appropriately trained and qualified
to perform safety-related service. Proposed paragraph (a)(2) addresses
the Associations' petitions by permitting an employer to limit a
safety-related railroad employee's training to only the relevant
Federal requirements that apply to the safety-related tasks that the
employer authorizes the employee to perform, in addition to any
knowledge-based training that is required. FRA proposes to move the
requirement for designating existing employees by occupational category
or subcategory in current paragraph (a)(1) to proposed paragraph
(a)(3)(i).
FRA also proposes adding paragraph (a)(3)(ii) to address an issue,
like the one addressed in proposed Sec. 243.101(c), concerning
employers that prefer to categorize their employees by CFR parts or
other legal requirements, rather than by occupational category or
subcategory. Proposed paragraph (a)(3)(ii) addresses employers that do
not designate employees by department, occupational category, or
subcategory. For those employers who do not designate employees,
paragraph (a)(3)(ii) proposes that the employer must retain a record
for each employee identifying the list of Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, and orders that cover the work the person is designated as
qualified to perform.
In response to the Assocations' request, FRA proposes to revise
paragraph (c)(2) to allow an employee, who is not yet qualified, to
perform tasks during OJT under the direct onsite observation of a
qualified person and in accordance with certain conditions for the
qualified person, before the employee has completed all of the formal
training, including classroom training and OJT. The existing rule
requires the employee to complete classroom or other formal training,
before the employer may allow an employee, who is not yet qualified, to
perform tasks during OJT under the direct onsite observation of a
qualified person, and under the same specified conditions for the
qualified person. The proposed change would not be expected to impact
safety detrimentally as the employee would still be required to perform
the OJT tasks under the direct onsite observation of a qualified
person, provided the qualified person has been advised of the
circumstances and is capable of intervening if an unsafe act or non-
compliance with Federal railroad safety laws, regulations, or orders is
observed.
FRA proposes to amend paragraph (d), which addresses how an
employer can avoid training an employee that was previously trained or
qualified by an entity other than the current employer. FRA is not
proposing to amend the existing options in paragraphs (d)(1) and (2).
Instead, FRA proposes changing ``FRA-approved'' to ``FRA-required,''
and ``submitted'' to ``completed'' to coincide with other changes in
this proposed rule. The rule currently requires that, in order to
exercise one of the options, the employee's training or qualification
must have been provided previously ``through participation in a FRA-
approved training program'' that was submitted by an entity other than
the employee's current employer. Through the proposed changes to Sec.
243.103(b), FRA is recognizing that an employee could have been
previously trained or qualified by an entity other
[[Page 59758]]
than the current employer using a similar training program or plan,
pursuant to other regulatory requirements contained elsewhere in this
chapter that do not require submission to FRA or FRA-approval.
In conjunction with the proposed definition of ``refresher
training,'' FRA proposes revisions to the requirements for refresher
training in paragraph (e). Specifically, proposed paragraph (e)(3)(i)
would require as a baseline that the employer ensure that each
employee's refresher training include notification of changes to any
rule, practice, or procedure relevant to the employee's assigned
duties. Proposed paragraph (e)(3)(ii) would clarify that each employer
must ensure that an employee is not allowed to test out of refresher
training. Proposed paragraph (e)(3)(iii) would include the sentence in
existing paragraphs (e)(1) and (2) which is intended to capture that,
ultimately, the employer is required to ensure that the employee is
trained and qualified on the application of any Federal railroad safety
laws, regulations, and orders the person is required to comply with, as
well as any relevant railroad rules and procedures promulgated to
implement those Federal railroad safety laws, regulations, and orders.
That existing requirement is for ensuring that refresher training is
used to fill any gaps in an employee's knowledge base. FRA recognizes
that proposed paragraphs (e)(1) and (2) contain ``beginning''
implementation dates that may no longer be relevant when a final rule
is published and will make changes to these paragraphs to remove the
unnecessary implementation dates that have passed.
Proposed paragraph (e)(3)(iii) also describes the options available
to employers for refresher training. For instance, rather than
repeating initial training, refresher training may be limited and
carefully tailored to review: (1) all the required steps of a
complicated safety-related task; (2) existing rules or procedures that
were initially learned but rarely used; and (3) safety-related tasks
that address skill gaps that the employer identified in the workforce
through efficiency testing, periodic oversight, annual reviews,
accident/incident data, FRA inspection data, or other performance
measuring metrics.
FRA is proposing to add paragraph (f) to require an employer to
consider ways to provide remedial training and retesting of any
employee who fails to successfully pass any training or testing.
Additionally, proposed paragraph (f) would make clear that a failure of
any test or training does not bar the person from successfully
completing the training or testing later.
Section 243.203 Records
FRA proposes revisions to paragraph (b)(2) of this section to
clarify that an employer that designates its employees by ``other
suitable terminology,'' i.e., other than occupational category or
subcategory, is required to keep a record of that designation for each
qualification of each qualified employee. This proposed revision is
intended to work in tandem with the other proposed requirements,
Sec. Sec. 243.101(c) and 243.201(a)(2)(ii), which would permit an
employer to categorize its employees by CFR parts or other Federal
railroad safety legal requirements, rather than by occupational
category or subcategory.
In addition, FRA proposes revising paragraph (b)(6)'s recordkeeping
information requirement to clarify that the person determining that the
employee successfully completed all OJT training necessary to be
considered qualified to perform certain safety-related tasks must be a
designated instructor. The existing rule does not specify that the
person making this determination must be a designated instructor, but
instead only requires that the record identify the person. Proposed
revisions to paragraph (b)(6) would also add ``other suitable
terminology'' to the phrase ``occupational categories or
subcategories.''
FRA is proposing to revise the recordkeeping requirement for
records other than individual employee records and annual review
records, for consistency with part 217 of this chapter. The existing
requirement in Sec. 243.203(c) requires each employer to maintain
test, inspection, and other event records that do not demonstrate the
qualification status of a safety-related railroad employee, for a
period of three calendar years after the end of the calendar year to
which the event relates. FRA received feedback from the Associations
that this recordkeeping requirement is more stringent than FRA's
requirement for operational tests and inspections under 49 CFR
217.9(d)(1). As the test and inspection records in the two regulations
are similar and are required to be kept for similar reasons, FRA
proposes this change. No change is proposed for the existing annual
review recordkeeping requirement in Sec. 243.203(c), as 49 CFR
217.9(f) also has a similar annual review recordkeeping requirement of
the same length and likewise is required to be retained for similar
reasons.
Section 243.205 Periodic Oversight
FRA is generally proposing two changes to Sec. 243.205. Changes to
proposed paragraphs (a), (c), (d), (e)(1), (g), and (i) would, as
requested in the Associations' petitions, allow periodic oversight to
be limited to tests ``or'' inspections, rather than require both tests
``and'' inspections. In the context of periodic oversight, a ``test''
is conducted by a qualified supervisor who changes the work environment
so that one or more employees would need to act to prevent non-
compliance, while an ``inspection'' involves a qualified supervisor
observing one or more employees at a job site and determining whether
the employees are in compliance.\20\ In revisiting the current
requirement for both tests and inspections, FRA recognizes that tests
are more difficult to design and execute, while inspections can be
completed through routine observations. By revisiting this section, FRA
recognizes that the goal of periodic inspection may be achieved by
tests or inspections, and that both tests and inspections may have set
a higher bar than a minimum requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ 79 FR 66487.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA also proposes to revise Sec. 243.205(h) to provide railroads
and contractors the flexibility to decide which entity would be
responsible for conducting periodic oversight. This proposed revision
to the periodic oversight requirements would address an issue raised in
the Associations' petitions, which asked that FRA allow a railroad and
a contractor to agree to any division of the periodic oversight
responsibility requirements that the parties desire, rather than be
bound by the required assigned responsibilities in the regulation. From
a safety perspective, it does not make a difference whether periodic
oversight is conducted by a railroad or a contractor. Thus, FRA
proposes to revise Sec. 243.205(h)(2) to state that, regardless of the
requirements in Sec. 243.205 that assign specific periodic oversight
responsibilities to a railroad or contractor, these parties may agree
to a different periodic oversight responsibility arrangement. This
proposed revision will allow the regulated entities to decide which
entity is in the best position to conduct the oversight and to make any
necessary arrangements to comply with the periodic oversight
requirements.
[[Page 59759]]
IV. Regulatory Impact and Notices
A. Executive Order 12866
This proposed rule is a non-significant regulatory action within
the meaning of Executive Order (E.O.) 12866. FRA made this
determination by finding that this proposed regulatory action did not
meet the definition of ``significant regulatory action'' in Section
3(f) of E.O. 12866.
FRA is issuing the proposed rulemaking to address issues raised in
the Associations' petitions for rulemaking, provide clarity to current
requirements, and remove requirements that are no longer necessary. For
example, FRA proposes removing certain requirements from Sec. 243.111
because FRA found some of the information submitted by training
organizations and learning institutions to be unnecessary. FRA also
proposes removing implementation dates that have passed. Overall, most
changes would codify existing regulatory guidance that FRA has issued.
The proposed rule would provide regulatory clarity and promote
regulatory compliance by the regulated industry through, among other
things: (1) clarifying that FRA will accept a training program that
categorizes employees by legal requirement references rather than
occupational categories; (2) eliminating certain submissions such as
similar training programs or plans; (3) requiring that each employer
under Sec. 243.103(a)(2)(v) exclude the course duration of OJT for an
employer's estimate of the anticipated course duration for all formal
training combined; (4) clarifying the use of model programs without
requiring an entity to refer to guidance or asking FRA for assistance;
(5) amending requirements for training program submissions and the
introductory information required in Sec. 243.107 due to FRA's part
243 web portal; (6) revising Sec. 243.109 to clarify refresher
training program submission requirements; (7) requiring each training
organization and learning institution provide less information in its
submission than required currently by Sec. 243.111; (8) revising the
refresher training requirements and options, clarifying what employers
need to include to complete minimum acceptable refresher training; and
(9) allowing each railroad and contractor the flexibility to decide
which entity would be responsible for conducting periodic oversight.
FRA expects the proposed rule would result in several, non-
quantifiable benefits for the regulated industry and FRA, such as:
permitting training programs that categorize employees by referencing
the applicable part of the CFR, a statute, or an order, rather than
occupational categories associated by craft; clarifying that an
employer need not submit courseware unless FRA requests that additional
documentation is needed to conduct an adequate review; and clarifying
what employers need to include to complete minimum acceptable refresher
training, as well as allow for tests or inspections, instead of
requiring both. FRA expects these clarifications would provide
employers an easier means of complying with this regulation, as well as
save time understanding what needs to be submitted and preparing
submissions to FRA. By codifying existing regulatory guidance, FRA
expects that the railroads would have greater regulatory certainty for
future submissions while complying with training program requirements.
FRA estimates that there will be no costs associated with this proposed
rulemaking. FRA requests comments on the benefits and costs related to
this proposed rule.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act and Executive Order 13272
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 \21\ and E.O. 13272 \22\
require agency review of proposed and final rules to assess their
impacts on small entities. An agency must prepare an Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA) unless it determines and certifies that a
rule, if promulgated, would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\22\ 67 FR 53461 (Aug. 16, 2002).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
This proposed rule directly affects all railroads, of which there
are approximately 754. FRA estimates that approximately 93 percent of
these railroads are small entities. This proposed rule also affects
approximately 300 contractors of railroads and approximately 109
training organizations or learning institutions, most of which, by
definition, are considered small entities. Therefore, FRA has
determined that this proposed rule will have an impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
The requirements of this proposed rule would apply to employers of
safety-related railroad employees, whether the employers are railroads,
contractors, or subcontractors. Although a substantial number of small
entities would be subject to this proposed rule, the proposed rule
would codify agency guidance, reduce submissions to FRA, and clarify
existing requirements. Accordingly, the FRA Administrator hereby
certifies that this proposed rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. FRA invites comment
from members of the public who believe there will be a significant
impact on small railroads.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection requirements in this proposed rule are
being submitted for approval to the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.\23\ The sections that
contain the proposed and current information collection requirements
and the estimated time to fulfill each requirement are as follows:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average time per Total annual Total cost
CFR section \24\ Respondent universe Total annual responses responses burden hours equivalent \25\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.3(c)--Application and The estimated paperwork burden for this requirement is covered under 49 CFR 243.101(b).
responsibility for compliance--A
parent or holding company that
submits a training program on behalf
of one or more subsidiaries must
initially and continually maintain in
its written submission a list of the
legal name of each subsidiary (New
requirements).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 59760]]
243.101(a)(2)--Training program 1,046 railroads/ 60 training programs.... 250 hours............... 15,000 $1,155,000
required for each employer not contractors.
covered by (a)(1) and subject to this
part by May 1, 2021 (includes burden
associated with the usage of FRA's
part 243 web portal and compliance
guide.).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(b) Submission by new employers 10 new railroads/ 10 training programs.... 20 hours................ 200 24,000
commencing operations after Jan. 1, contractors.
2020, not covered by (a)(2).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(c) and (d) Employer's The burden for this requirement is included under Sec. 243.101.
classification of its safety-related
railroad employees and on-the-job
(OJT) training requirements.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(e) Contractor's duty to validate 400 railroads/contractors 50 documents............ 15 minutes.............. 12.5 963
approved program to a railroad
(Revised requirement text, no impact
on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(f) Railroad's duty to retain copies 10 new railroads......... 10 copies............... 2 minutes............... .3 23
of contractor's validation document
(Revised requirement text, no impact
on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.103(a) and (c)--Training The burden requirements for paragraphs (a) and (c) are included under Sec. 243.101(a) and (b). Regarding the
components identified in program burden for paragraph (b), FRA estimates that it will receive zero (0) supplementary document.
(Revised requirement text, no impact
on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(d) Training components identified 1,155 railroads/ 70 modified training 5 hours................. 350 26,950
in program; modifications to contractors. programs.
components of the training programs
(Revised requirement text, no impact
on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.105(a) and (b)--Optional model The burden requirement for paragraph (a) has been fulfilled. The burden for paragraph (b) is included under Sec.
program development (Revised 243.101(a)-(b).
requirement text, no impact on
burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(c) Optional model program 30 model programs........ 10 notifications........ 10 minutes.............. 2 154
development; model program revisions:
notice of FRA-approved changes to
authorized users (New requirement).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.107(a)--Training program The burden for this requirement has been fulfilled.
submission, introductory information
required (Revised requirement text,
no impact on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.109(b)--Previously approved 1,155 railroads/ 10 informational filings 8 hours................. 80 6,160
programs requiring an informational contractors/learning
filing when modified (Revised institutions.
requirement text, no impact on
burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(c) New portions or substantial 10 railroads/contractors. 10 revised training 16 hours................ 160 12,320
revisions to an approved training programs.
program.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(c) New portions or substantial 5 railroads/contractors.. 5 revised training 8 hours................. 40 3,080
revisions to an approved training programs.
program found non-conforming to this
part by FRA--revisions required.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(d)(1)(i) Copy of additional 10 railroads/contractors. 25 copies............... 10 minutes.............. 4.2 323
submissions, resubmissions, and
informational filings to labor
organization presidents.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(d)(1)(ii) Railroad statement 228 railroads/contractors 76 affirming statements. 10 minutes.............. 12.7 978
affirming that a copy of submissions,
resubmissions, or informational
filings has been served to labor
organization presidents.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(d)(2) Labor comments on railroad 228 railroads' labor 1 comment............... 30 minutes.............. 0.5 39
training program submissions, organizations.
resubmissions, or informational
filings.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 59761]]
243.111(a) through (f)--Approval of The burden requirements for paragraphs (a) and (c) are included under Sec. 243.101(a) and (b). The burden
programs filed by training requirement for paragraphs (b) and (d) are covered under Sec. 243.103(d). The burden requirement for
organizations or learning paragraphs (e) and (f) are covered under Sec. 243.109(b).
institutions (TO/LI) (Revised
requirement text, no impact on
burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(g) Safety-related railroad 109 TO/LI................ 5,450 records........... 5 minutes............... 454.2 34,973
employees instructed by TO/LI --
Recordkeeping.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(h) TO/LI to provide student's 109 TO/LI................ 545 records............. 5 minutes............... 45.4 3,496
training transcript or training
record to any employer upon request
by the student.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.113--Electronic and written The burden requirement for paragraph (a) has been fulfilled. The burden for paragraph (b) is included under Sec.
program submission requirements 243.101(a)-(b).
(Revised requirement text, no impact
on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.201(a)(2)--Designation of existing 1,039 railroads/ 346 designation lists... 15 minutes.............. 86.5 6,661
safety-related railroad employees by contractors.
job category (for employers not
covered by (a)(1) and subject to this
part by January 1, 2022) (Revised
requirement text, no impact on
burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(b) New employers operating after 10 new railroads/ 10 designation lists.... 15 minutes.............. 2.5 193
January 1, 2020, not covered by contractors.
(a)(2), designation of safety-related
employees by job category--Lists.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(c) Training records of newly hired 4,800 employees.......... 4,800 records........... 15 minutes.............. 1,200 92,400
employees or those assigned new
safety-related duties (Revised
requirement text, no impact on
burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(d)(1)(i) Requests for relevant 4,800 employees.......... 960 record requests..... 5 minutes............... 80 6,160
qualification or training record from
an entity other than current employer
(Revised requirement text, no impact
on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.203(a) through (e) Recordkeeping-- 1,155 railroads/ 1,046 recordkeeping 30 minutes.............. 523 40,271
Systems set up to meet FRA contractors/TOLI. systems.
requirements (Revised requirement
text, no impact on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(f) Transfer of records to successor 1,155 railroads/ 3 records............... 30 minutes.............. 1.5 116
employer. contractors/TOLI.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.205(a), (b), (e) and (g)--Periodic The burden for adopting and complying with a program of periodic oversight under paragraph (a) is included above
oversight (Revised requirement text, under the training program requirements in Sec. Sec. 243.101(a)(2) and 243.109. Furthermore, FRA estimates
no impact on burden). that zero (0) training programs will be changed as the result of the assessments under parts 240 and 242.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(c) Railroad identification of 300 contractors.......... 100 identifications..... 5 minutes............... 8.3 639
supervisory employees who conduct
periodic oversight tests by category/
subcategory (Revised requirement
text, no impact on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(f) Notification by RR of contractor 300 contractors.......... 90 employee notices..... 10 minutes.............. 15 1,155
employee non-compliance with Federal
laws/regulations/orders to employee
and employee's employer.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(f) Notification by RR of contractor 300 contractors.......... 270 employer notices.... 10 minutes.............. 45 3,465
employee non-compliance with Federal
laws/regulations/orders to employee
and employee's employer.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(i) and (j) Employer records of 1,046 railroads/ 150,000 records......... 5 minutes............... 12,500 962,500
periodic oversight (Revised contractors.
requirement text under paragraph (i),
no impact on burden).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 59762]]
243.207(a)--Written annual review of 22 railroads............. 22 reviews.............. 16 hours................ 352 27,104
safety data (Railroads with 400,000
annual employee work hours or more).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(b) Railroad copy of written annual 22 railroads............. 22 review copies........ 5 minutes............... 1.8 139
review at system headquarters.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(e) Railroad notification to 22 railroads............. 2 notifications......... 15 minutes.............. .5 39
contractor of relevant training
program adjustments.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
243.209(a) and (b)--Railroad 754 railroads............ 754 lists............... 30 minutes.............. 377 29,029
maintained list of contractors
utilized.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--(c) Railroad duty to update list of 754 railroads............ 75 updated lists........ 15 minutes.............. 18.8 1,444
contractors utilized and retain
record for at least 3 years showing
if a contractor was utilized in last
3 years.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................. 1,155 railroads/ 164,832 responses....... N/A..................... 31,574 2,439,774
contractors/training
organizations/learning
institutions.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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\24\ FRA will be requesting to revise the previously approved
OMB control number (OMB No. 2130-0597) corresponding to existing
part 243.
\25\ The dollar equivalent cost is derived from the Surface
Transportation Board's Full Year Wage A&B data series using the
appropriate employee group hourly wage rate that includes a 75-
percent overhead charge.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
All estimates include the time for reviewing instructions;
searching existing data sources; gathering or maintaining the needed
data; and reviewing the information. Pursuant to 44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(B), FRA solicits comments concerning: whether these
information collection requirements are necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of FRA, including whether the information
has practical utility; the accuracy of FRA's estimates of the burden of
the information collection requirements; the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be collected; and whether the burden of
collection of information on those who are to respond, including
through the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of
information technology, may be minimized. For information or a copy of
the paperwork package submitted to OMB, contact Ms. Hodan Wells,
Information Collection Clearance Officer, at 202-493-0440.
Organizations and individuals desiring to submit comments on the
collection of information requirements should direct them to Ms. Hodan
Wells via email at [email protected].
OMB is required to make a decision concerning the collection of
information requirements contained in this proposed rule between 30 and
60 days after publication of this document in the Federal Register.
Therefore, a comment to OMB is best assured of having its full effect
if OMB receives it within 30 days of publication. The final rule will
respond to any OMB or public comments on the information collection
requirements contained in this proposal.
FRA is not authorized to impose a penalty on persons for violating
information collection requirements that do not display a current OMB
control number, if required. FRA intends to obtain current OMB control
numbers for any new information collection requirements resulting from
this rulemaking action prior to the effective date of the final rule.
The OMB control number, when assigned, will be announced by separate
notice in the Federal Register.
D. Federalism Implications
Executive Order 13132, ``Federalism,'' \26\ requires FRA to develop
an accountable process to ensure ``meaningful and timely input by State
and local officials in the development of regulatory policies that have
federalism implications.'' ``Policies that have federalism
implications'' are defined in the Executive Order to include
regulations that have ``substantial direct effects on the States, on
the relationship between the national government and the States, or on
the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various levels
of government.'' Under Executive Order 13132, the agency may not issue
a regulation with federalism implications that imposes substantial
direct compliance costs and that is not required by statute, unless the
Federal government provides the funds necessary to pay the direct
compliance costs incurred by State and local governments or the agency
consults with State and local government officials early in the process
of developing the regulation. Where a regulation has federalism
implications and preempts State law, the agency seeks to consult with
State and local officials in the process of developing the regulation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ 64 FR 43255 (Aug. 10, 1999).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FRA has analyzed the proposed rule under the principles and
criteria contained in Executive Order 13132. This proposed rule would
not have substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and the States, or on the distribution
of power and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
In addition, FRA has determined that the proposed rule would not impose
substantial direct compliance costs on State and local governments.
Therefore, the consultation and funding requirements of Executive Order
13132 would not apply. However, this proposed rule could have
preemptive effect by operation of law under certain provisions of the
Federal railroad safety statutes, specifically the former Federal
Railroad Safety Act of 1970, repealed and recodified at 49 U.S.C.
20106. Section 20106 provides that States may not adopt or continue in
effect any law, regulation, or order related to railroad safety or
security that covers the subject matter of a regulation prescribed or
[[Page 59763]]
order issued by the Secretary of Transportation (with respect to
railroad safety matters) or the Secretary of Homeland Security (with
respect to railroad security matters), except when the State law,
regulation, or order qualifies under the ``essentially local safety or
security hazard'' exception to section 20106.
In sum, FRA has analyzed this proposed rule under the principles
and criteria in Executive Order 13132. As explained above, FRA has
determined this proposed rule has no federalism implications, other
than the possible preemption of State laws under Federal railroad
safety statutes, specifically 49 U.S.C. 20106. Therefore, preparation
of a federalism summary impact statement for this proposed rule is not
required.
E. International Trade Impact Assessment
The Trade Agreements Act of 1979 \27\ prohibits Federal agencies
from engaging in any standards or related activities that create
unnecessary obstacles to the foreign commerce of the United States.
Legitimate domestic objectives, such as safety, are not considered
unnecessary obstacles. The statute also requires consideration of
international standards and where appropriate, that they be the basis
for U.S. standards. This proposed rule is purely domestic in nature and
is not expected to affect trade opportunities for U.S. firms doing
business overseas or for foreign firms doing business in the United
States.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ 19 U.S.C. Ch. 13.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
F. Environmental Impact
FRA has evaluated this proposed rule consistent with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA),\28\ the Council on Environmental
Quality's NEPA implementing regulations,\29\ and FRA's NEPA
implementing regulations \30\ and determined that it is categorically
excluded from environmental review and therefore does not require the
preparation of an environmental assessment (EA) or environmental impact
statement (EIS). Categorical exclusions (CEs) are actions identified in
an agency's NEPA implementing regulations that do not normally have a
significant impact on the environment and therefore do not require
either an EA or EIS.\31\ Specifically, FRA has determined that this
proposed rule is categorically excluded from detailed environmental
review.\32\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.
\29\ 40 CFR parts 1500 through 1508.
\30\ 23 CFR part 771
\31\ 40 CFR 1508.4.
\32\ See 23 CFR 771.116(c)(15) (categorically excluding
``[p]romulgation of rules, the issuance of policy statements, the
waiver or modification of existing regulatory requirements, or
discretionary approvals that do not result in significantly
increased emissions of air or water pollutants or noise'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The purpose of this rulemaking is to codify agency guidance and
clarify existing requirements for complying with FRA's regulation on
the training, qualification, and oversight of safety-related railroad
employees. This proposed rule does not directly or indirectly impact
any environmental resources and would not result in significantly
increased emissions of air or water pollutants or noise. In analyzing
the applicability of a CE, FRA must also consider whether unusual
circumstances are present that would warrant a more detailed
environmental review.\33\ FRA has concluded that no such unusual
circumstances exist with respect to this proposed regulation and the
proposal meets the requirements for categorical exclusion.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ 23 CFR 771.116(b).
\34\ 23 CFR 771.116(c)(15).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act
and its implementing regulations, FRA has determined this undertaking
has no potential to affect historic properties.\35\ FRA has also
determined that this rulemaking would not approve a project resulting
in a use of a resource protected by Section 4(f).\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ 54 U.S.C. 306108.
\36\ Department of Transportation Act of 1966, as amended (Pub.
L. 89-670, 80 Stat. 931); 49 U.S.C. 303.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
G. Executive Order 12898 (Environmental Justice)
Executive Order 12898, ``Federal Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations,'' and DOT
Order 5610.2C \37\ require DOT agencies to achieve environmental
justice as part of their mission by identifying and addressing, as
appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse human health or
environmental effects, including interrelated social and economic
effects, of their programs, policies, and activities on minority
populations and low-income populations. The DOT Order instructs DOT
agencies to address compliance with Executive Order 12898 and
requirements within the DOT Order in rulemaking activities, as
appropriate, and also requires consideration of the benefits of
transportation programs, policies, and other activities where minority
populations and low-income populations benefit, at a minimum, to the
same level as the general population as a whole when determining
impacts on minority and low-income populations. FRA has evaluated this
proposed rule under Executive Order 12898 and the DOT Order and has
determined it would not cause disproportionately high and adverse human
health and environmental effects on minority populations or low-income
populations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ Available at: https://www.transportation.gov/sites/dot.gov/files/Final-for-OST-C-210312-003-signed.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Under section 201 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 \38\
each Federal agency shall, unless otherwise prohibited by law, assess
the effects of Federal regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal
governments, and the private sector (other than to the extent that such
regulations incorporate requirements specifically set forth in law).
Section 202 of the Act \39\ further requires that before promulgating
any general notice of proposed rulemaking that is likely to result in
the promulgation of any rule that includes any Federal mandate that may
result in expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100,000,000 or more (adjusted
annually for inflation) in any one year, and before promulgating any
final rule for which a general notice of proposed rulemaking was
published, the agency shall prepare a statement detailing the effect on
State, local, and tribal governments and the private sector. This
proposed rule would not result in such an expenditure, and thus
preparation of such a statement is not required.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Public Law 104-4, 2 U.S.C. 1531.
\39\ 2 U.S.C. 1532.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
I. Energy Impact
Executive Order 13211, ``Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use,'' requires
Federal agencies to prepare a Statement of Energy Effects for any
``significant energy action.'' \40\ FRA evaluated this proposed rule
under Executive Order 13211 and determined that this regulatory action
is not a ``significant energy action'' within the meaning of Executive
Order 13211.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\40\ 66 FR 28355 (May 22, 2001).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
J. Privacy Act Statement
In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 553(c), DOT solicits comments from the
public
[[Page 59764]]
to better inform its rulemaking process. DOT posts these comments,
without edit, to www.regulations.gov, as described in the system of
records notice, DOT/ALL-14 FDMS, accessible through https://www.transportation.gov/privacy. To facilitate comment tracking and
response, we encourage commenters to provide their name, or the name of
their organization; however, submission of names is completely
optional. Whether or not commenters identify themselves, all timely
comments will be fully considered. If you wish to provide comments
containing proprietary or confidential information, please contact the
agency for alternate submission instructions.
List of Subjects in 49 CFR part 243
Administrative practice and procedure, Penalties, Railroad
employees, Railroad safety, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
The Proposed Rule
For the reasons discussed in the preamble, FRA proposes to amend
part 243 of chapter II, subtitle B of title 49 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 243--TRAINING, QUALIFICATION, AND OVERSIGHT FOR SAFETY-RELATED
RAILROAD EMPLOYEES
0
1. The authority citation for part 243 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 20103, 20107, 20131-20155, 20162, 20301-
20306, 20701-20702, 21301-21304, 21311; 28 U.S.C. 2461, note; and 49
CFR 1.89.
Subpart A--General
0
2. Section 243.1 is amended by adding paragraphs (f) and (g) to read as
follows:
Sec. 243.1 Purpose and scope.
* * * * *
(f) The requirements in this part do not require an employer to
adopt and comply with a training program when the training required for
a qualified person is obtained through earning a college degree or
certification from an accredited training organization or learning
institution. For example, the requirements in this part do not require
the training program of an engineering firm that conducts bridge
inspections to include training of railroad bridge engineers on the
subjects taught as part of a professional engineering curriculum
covered by 49 CFR 237.51(b).
(g) The requirements in this part do not require an employer to
train contractors who are hired to perform elective audits or
assessments that are not required by Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, or orders.
0
3. Section 243.3 is amended by adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 243.3 Application and responsibility for compliance.
* * * * *
(c)(1) A parent or holding company may comply with the requirements
of this part on behalf of one or more subsidiaries if the arrangement
is specified and submitted with the relevant training program(s) under
subpart B of this part.
(i) The arrangement may be used to fulfill all or a portion of a
subsidiary's responsibility for compliance with this part.
(ii) A parent or holding company that submits a training program on
behalf of one or more subsidiaries must initially and continually
maintain in its submission a list of the legal name of each subsidiary.
The submission must reflect which courses each subsidiary is adopting
if a subsidiary is not adopting the parent or holding company's
training program in its entirety. The submission must reflect whether
each subsidiary is adopting all of a parent or holding company's
training programs or identify which courses each subsidiary is
adopting.
(2) A subsidiary must not duplicate a training program submission a
parent or holding company has made on its behalf.
(3) A subsidiary must file a training program submission, in
accordance with the requirements of subpart B of this part, if a parent
or holding company does not submit one or more training programs on
behalf of the subsidiary that is intended to fulfill all of the
subsidiary's responsibilities under this part.
(4) A subsidiary must comply with a parent or holding company's
training program submission that is filed on behalf of the parent or
holding company's subsidiaries unless the subsidiary files its own
submission, in accordance with the requirements of subpart B of this
part.
0
4. Section 243.5 is amended by revising the definitions for
``Designated instructor'' and ``Refresher training'' and adding a
definition for ``Training organizations or learning institutions,'' to
read as follows:
Sec. 243.5 Definitions.
* * * * *
Designated instructor means a person designated as such by an
employer, training organization, or learning institution, who has
demonstrated an adequate knowledge of the subject matter under
instruction and, where applicable, has the necessary experience to
effectively provide formal training on the subject matter. The
designated instructor is not required to be an employee of the
employer. Employers are required to ensure that employees and non-
employees used as designated instructors have the necessary knowledge,
skills, and abilities to provide sound coaching, mentoring, and
guidance to new learners.
* * * * *
Refresher training means periodic retraining required for each
safety-related railroad employee that is designed to maintain, improve,
and update the skills and knowledge of existing employees to ensure
they are sufficiently acquainted with any changed standards, or any
relevant problematic issues or new skills, methods, and processes, and
to ensure no important skills or knowledge have been lost due to lack
of use. Similar training programs or plans required elsewhere in this
chapter but identified by a term other than refresher training such as
``recurrent training,'' ``re-training,'' ``periodic training,''
``training that occurs periodically,'' or ``training that is required
within defined intervals,'' are considered refresher training for
purposes of this subpart although they need not be submitted for review
pursuant to Sec. 243.103(b).
* * * * *
Training organizations or learning institutions mean entities that
provide training services for people who are safety-related railroad
employees or independent students who will rely on the training
services provided to qualify to become safety-related railroad
employees, but not employees of the entities providing the training.
Training organizations and learning institutions include businesses
that provide formal training, and colleges and universities that
provide rail safety courses, necessary for a person to qualify as a
safety-related railroad employee. Training organizations and learning
institutions also include entities that do not maintain fixed
facilities (i.e., do not have a physical location), as they may rent or
lease meeting space to deliver formal training, deliver formal training
at an employer's facility, or deliver computer-based training
virtually. A railroad that trains its own employees and also trains
safety-related railroad employees of other employers is not a training
organization or learning institution.
[[Page 59765]]
Subpart B--Program Components and Approval Process
0
5. Section 243.101 is amended by revising paragraphs (a), (b), (c)(1)
through (3), (c)(5), (e), and (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 243.101 Employer program required.
(a) Each employer conducting operations subject to this part shall
submit, adopt, and comply with a training program for its safety-
related railroad employees.
(b) Each employer that has not yet commenced operations subject to
this part shall submit a training program for its safety-related
railroad employees before commencing operations. Upon commencing
operations, the employer shall adopt and comply with the training
program.
(c) * * *
(1) Classify its safety-related railroad employees in occupational
categories or subcategories by craft, class, task, or other suitable
terminology. Other suitable terminology for classifying safety-related
railroad employees may include references to the applicable part of the
Code of Federal Regulations, section of the United States Code, or
citation to an order as described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section;
(2) Define the occupational categories or subcategories of safety-
related railroad employees. The definition of each category or
subcategory shall include a list of the Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, and orders that the employee is required to comply with,
based on the employee's assignments and duties, broken down at a
minimum to the applicable part of the Code of Federal Regulations,
section of the United States Code, or citation to an order. The listing
of the Federal requirements shall contain the descriptive title of each
law, regulation, or order. An employer that classifies its safety-
related railroad employees by direct reference to the applicable part
of the Code of Federal Regulations, section of the United States Code,
or citation to an order as permitted in paragraph (c)(1) of this
section, is not required to define the occupational categories or
subcategories of its safety-related railroad employees;
(3) Create tables or utilize other suitable formats which summarize
the information required in paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section,
separated by major railroad departments (e.g., operations, maintenance-
of-way, maintenance-of-equipment, signal and communications). After
listing the major departments, the tables or other formats should list
the categories and subcategories of safety-related railroad employees
within those departments. An employer that does not have major railroad
departments and classifies its safety-related railroad employees by
direct reference to the applicable part of the Code of Federal
Regulations, section of the United States Code, or citation to an
order, as permitted in paragraph (c)(1) of this section, is not
required to summarize the information required in paragraphs (c)(1) and
(2) of this section;
* * * * *
(5) Determine how training shall be structured, developed, and
delivered, including an appropriate combination of classroom,
simulator, computer-based, correspondence, OJT, or other formal
training. The curriculum shall be designed to impart knowledge of, and
ability to comply with, applicable Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, and orders, as well as any relevant railroad rules and
procedures promulgated to implement those applicable Federal railroad
safety laws, regulations, and orders. OJT is required when tasks
require neuromuscular coordination to learn, unless FRA approves
alternative, formal training that addresses the need to practice
safety-related tasks, with the ability to objectively measure task
completion proficiency.
* * * * *
(e) Contractor's responsibility to validate approved program to a
railroad: A contractor is being utilized by a railroad when any of the
contractor's employees conduct safety-related duties on behalf of the
railroad and the railroad does not otherwise qualify those employees of
the contractor that are allowed to perform those duties. A contractor
that chooses to train its own safety-related railroad employees shall
provide each railroad that utilizes it with a document proving or
stating that:
(1) The contractor's training program was approved by FRA; or
(2) The contractor is not required to submit the similar training
program or plan as required in Sec. 243.103(b) but is maintaining the
similar training program or plan, pursuant to other regulatory
requirements contained elsewhere in this chapter.
(f) Railroad's responsibility to retain contractor's validation of
program: A railroad that chooses to utilize contractor employees to
perform safety-related duties and relies on contractor-provided
training as the basis for those employees' qualification to perform
those duties shall retain a document from the contractor declaring or
proving that the contractor's program was approved by FRA, or the
contractor is not required to submit the similar training program or
plan as required in Sec. 243.103(b) but is maintaining the similar
training program or plan, pursuant to other regulatory requirements
contained elsewhere in this chapter. A copy of the document required in
paragraph (e) of this section satisfies this requirement.
0
6. Section 243.103 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(1) and (2)(v),
(b), and (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 243.103 Training components identified in program.
(a) * * *
(1) A unique name and identifier for each formal initial and
refresher training course of study;
(2) * * *
(v) The anticipated course duration for all formal training
combined, excluding the course duration of OJT;
* * * * *
(b) An employer that is required to adopt and comply with similar
training programs or plans, pursuant to other regulatory requirements
contained elsewhere in this chapter, is not required to submit those
similar training programs or plans in accordance with this part. When
any such similar program or plan, pursuant to other regulatory
requirements contained elsewhere in this chapter, includes OJT but does
not include the OJT components specified in paragraph (a)(3) of this
section and in Sec. 243.101(d), the employer shall supplement its
program to include the OJT components in accordance with this part.
Additionally, when any such similar program or plan, pursuant to other
regulatory requirements contained elsewhere in this chapter, is amended
for any reason, the employer shall amend its program without submission
to FRA under Sec. 243.109.
* * * * *
(d) FRA may require modifications to any programs, including those
programs referenced in paragraph (b) of this section, if it determines
essential program components, such as OJT, or arranged practice and
feedback, are missing or inadequate. Unless requested by FRA, an
employer is not required to submit courseware (i.e., lesson plans,
instructor guides, participant guides, job aids, practical exercises,
tests/assessments, and other materials used in the delivery of any
course) as part of a training program submission.
0
7. Section 243.105 is amended by removing paragraph (a)(3), revising
paragraph (b), and adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:
[[Page 59766]]
Sec. 243.105 Optional model program development.
* * * * *
(b)(1) An employer that chooses to use a model program approved by
FRA is not required to submit the entire program to FRA. Instead, the
employer must submit only the unique identifier associated with the
program, and all other information that is specific to that employer or
deviates from the model program.
(2) An employer that chooses to adopt a model program at FRA's part
243 web portal (https://safetydata.fra.dot.gov/Part243/) will be
prompted for the required information and find each model program
developer's contact information if the developer has an FRA-approved
training program.
(3) An employer that chooses to adopt and implement a model program
must contact the model program developer and obtain the associated
course/training materials necessary for training safety-related
railroad employees. FRA does not prohibit a model program developer
from charging an employer a fee for the right to use a model training
program it developed or requiring each employer obtain its explicit
authorization before the employer adopts one of its model programs.
(4) An employer that submits, adopts, and implements an FRA-
approved model program, consistent with the operations of that
employer, will be considered in compliance with the employer program
requirements of Sec. 243.101.
(c)(1) Once a model program is approved by FRA, the developer must
consider when it is necessary to make revisions in accordance with
Sec. 243.109. A developer that revises its model program is required
to provide notice of the FRA-approved changes to its authorized users.
A model program developer is required to provide notice of any model
program revisions by engaging in any form of communication that
positively affirms the developer provided notice to employers likely to
be impacted by the changes to the program, including posting the
information at the organization's website, writing letters to the
employers, and including information in periodic newsletters. Such
notice must be at least as effective as the notice the developer
provided to employers when it developed the model program. For example,
if the developer makes its model program available to anyone with
access to the developer's website, then posting a notice of any
revisions to the program on its website will be sufficient. In
contrast, if a model program developer requires explicit authorization
to use its model programs, the developer must provide adequate notice
to those entities that it has specifically authorized in a manner
consistent with its authorization practices.
(2) Once notified, an employer that is adopting and complying with
a model program must:
(i) Adopt and comply with the revisions to the model program made
by the developer; or
(ii) Submit information explaining how the employer's training
program will deviate from the model program in accordance with Sec.
243.109.
0
8. Section 243.107 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (a) introductory text and paragraph (a)(4);
0
b. Removing paragraphs (a)(5) and (6);
0
c. Removing and reserving paragraph (b); and
0
d. Removing paragraph (c).
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 243.107 Training program submission, introductory information
required.
(a) An employer who provides training of safety-related railroad
employees shall submit its training program to FRA for review and
approval. For an employer using FRA's part 243 web portal, the web
portal will prompt the employer to provide the required information in
this section. Each employer shall state in its submission whether, at
the time of filing, it:
* * * * *
(4) Uses any combination of paragraphs (a)(1) through (3) of this
section.
(b) [Reserved]
* * * * *
0
9. Section 243.109 is amended by revising the section heading, the
introductory heading in paragraph (a), and paragraph (a)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 243.109 Initial and refresher training program submission,
review, and approval process.
(a) Initial and refresher programs.
* * * * *
(2) An employer's initial program, as required by Sec. 243.101(a)
or (b), or an employer's refresher program, as required by Sec.
243.201(e), must be submitted to the Associate Administrator and is
considered approved and may be implemented immediately upon submission.
Following submission, the Associate Administrator will review the
program and inform the employer as to whether the program conforms to
this part. If the Associate Administrator determines that all or part
of the program does not conform, the Associate Administrator will
inform the employer of the specific deficiencies. The deficient
portions of the non-conforming program may remain in effect until
approval of the revised program, unless FRA provides notification
otherwise. An employer shall resubmit the portion of its program, as
revised to address specific deficiencies, within 90 days after the date
of any notice of deficiencies from the Associate Administrator. A
failure to resubmit the program with the necessary revisions shall be
considered a failure to implement a program under this part. The
Associate Administrator may extend this 90-day period upon written
request.
* * * * *
0
10. Section 243.111 is amended by revising paragraphs (a), (c)(3), and
(e), and removing paragraphs (c)(5) through (7) to read as follows:
Sec. 243.111 Approval of programs filed by training organizations or
learning institutions.
(a) A training organization or learning institution that provides
training services for safety-related railroad employees, including
providing such training services to independent students who enroll
with such training organization or learning institution and who will
rely on the training services provided to qualify to become safety-
related railroad employees, must submit its program to FRA for review
and approval unless:
(1) The program is approved as a model program under Sec. 243.105
or an employer program under Sec. 243.101; and
(2) The training organization or learning institution submits an
informational filing to its previously approved program containing the
information required in paragraph (c) of this section.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) The training organization or learning institution's primary
telephone number and point of contact; and
* * * * *
(e) Previously approved programs require an informational filing
when modified. The training organization or learning institution shall
review its previously approved training program and modify it
accordingly when new safety-related Federal railroad laws, regulations,
or orders are issued, or new safety-related technologies, procedures,
or equipment are introduced into the workplace and result in new
knowledge requirements, safety-related tasks, or in modifications of
existing safety-related duties. A training organization or learning
institution that modifies its
[[Page 59767]]
training program for these described reasons shall submit an
informational filing to the Associate Administrator not later than 30
days after the end of the calendar year in which the modification
occurred, unless FRA advises otherwise. Programs modified in accordance
with this paragraph are considered approved upon modification and may
be implemented immediately. Any program deficiencies noted by the
Associate Administrator shall be addressed as specified in this
section. A training organization or learning institution may transfer
an approved program to another training organization or learning
institution, or an employer, and that transfer will require the
acquiring entity to file an informational filing unless the acquiring
entity is making substantial additions or revisions to the previously
approved program, which will require FRA review under paragraph (f) of
this section. The filing shall contain a summary description of
sufficient detail so that FRA can associate the changes with the
training organization's or learning institution's previously approved
program, and shall include:
* * * * *
0
11. Section 243.113 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 243.113 Electronic and written program submission requirements.
(a) Each employer, training organization, or learning institution
to which this part applies is required to file by electronic means at
FRA's part 243 web portal any program submissions required under this
part in accordance with the requirements of this section. FRA's part
243 web portal will prompt users to submit all required training
program information. Each organization, business, or association that
develops an optional model program in accordance with Sec. 243.105 is
required to file by electronic means at FRA's part 243 web portal the
program in accordance with the requirements of this section.
(b) Before any person's first program submission electronically at
FRA's part 243 web portal, the person must register for access at the
portal, https://safetydata.fra.dot.gov/Part243/. Users must provide the
following information to complete registration:
(1) The name of the employer, organization, learning institution,
business, or association;
(2) The names of two individuals, including job titles, who will be
the person's points of contact and will be the only individuals allowed
access to FRA's secure document submission site;
(3) The mailing addresses for the person's points of contact;
(4) The person's system or main headquarters address located in the
United States;
(5) The email addresses for the person's points of contact; and
(6) The daytime telephone numbers for the person's points of
contact.
(c) A person that electronically submits an initial program,
informational filing, or new portions or revisions to an approved
program required by this part at FRA's part 243 web portal shall be
considered to have provided their consent for FRA to electronically
store any materials required by this part and to receive approval or
disapproval notices from FRA by email.
Subpart C--Program Implementation and Oversight Requirements
0
12. Section 243.201 is amended by revising paragraphs (a), (b), (c)(2),
(d) introductory text and (d)(1), and (e)(1) and (2), and adding
paragraphs (e)(3) and (f) to read as follows:
Sec. 243.201 Employee qualification requirements.
(a)(1) Each employer must permit only employees appropriately
trained and qualified to perform safety-related service.
(2) In addition to any required knowledge-based training, an
employer may limit a safety-related railroad employee's training to
only the relevant Federal requirements that apply to the safety-related
tasks that the employer authorizes the employee to perform.
(3) Each employer conducting operations subject to this part shall
either:
(i) Declare the designation of each of its existing safety-related
railroad employees by occupational category or subcategory, and only
permit designated employees to perform safety-related service in that
occupational category or subcategory; or
(ii) For an employer that does not designate employees by
occupational category or subcategory, retain a record for each employee
identifying the list of Federal railroad safety laws, regulations, and
orders that cover the work the person is designated as qualified to
perform.
(b) An employer commencing operations shall declare the designation
of each of its existing safety-related railroad employees by
occupational category or subcategory before beginning operations, and
only permit designated employees to perform safety-related service in
that category or subcategory. Any person designated shall have met the
requirements for newly hired employees or those assigned new safety-
related duties in accordance with paragraph (c) of this section.
(c) * * *
(2) If the training curriculum includes OJT, the employee shall
demonstrate, to the satisfaction of a designated instructor, OJT
proficiency by successfully completing the safety-related tasks
necessary to become a qualified member of the occupational category or
subcategory. However, as part of the OJT process and before completing
any of the formal training, including classroom training and OJT, and
passing the field evaluation, a person may perform such tasks under the
direct onsite observation of any qualified person, provided the
qualified person has been advised of the circumstances and is capable
of intervening if an unsafe act or non-compliance with Federal railroad
safety laws, regulations, or orders is observed. An employee designated
to provide formal training to other employees, and who is not a
designated instructor, shall be qualified on the safety-related topics
or tasks in accordance with the employer's training program and the
requirements of this part.
(d) Employees previously trained or qualified, but not by the
current employer: If an employee has received relevant training or
qualification for a particular occupational category or subcategory
through participation in a FRA-required training program completed by
an entity other than the employee's current employer, that training
shall satisfy the requirements of this part:
(1) Provided that:
(i) A current record of training is obtained from that other
entity; or
(ii) When a current record of training is unavailable from that
other entity, an employer performs testing to ensure the employee has
the knowledge necessary to be a member of that category or subcategory
of safety-related railroad employee. Testing shall include an oral or
written examination, as well as the ability to inspect, identify, and
initiate corrective action necessary for compliance with Federal
railroad safety laws, regulations, or orders, as well as any relevant
railroad rules and procedures promulgated to implement those Federal
railroad safety laws, regulations, or orders. A designated instructor
must make the final determination as to whether the employee has the
knowledge, skills, and abilities to become a member of an occupational
category; and
* * * * *
[[Page 59768]]
(e) * * *
(1) Beginning January 1, 2022, each Class I railroad, and each
intercity or commuter passenger railroad conducting operations subject
to this part with 400,000 total employee work hours annually or more,
shall deliver refresher training at an interval not to exceed three
calendar years from the date of an employee's last training event,
except where refresher training is specifically required more
frequently in accordance with this chapter. If the last training event
occurs before FRA's approval of the employer's training program, the
employer shall provide refresher training either within three calendar
years from that prior training event or no later than December 31,
2024.
(2) Beginning May 1, 2023, each employer conducting operations
subject to this part not covered by paragraph (e)(1) of this section
shall deliver refresher training at an interval not to exceed three
calendar years from the date of an employee's last training event,
except where refresher training is specifically required more
frequently in accordance with this chapter. If the last training event
occurs before FRA's approval of the employer's training program, the
employer shall provide refresher training either within three calendar
years from that prior training event or no later than December 31,
2025.
(3) Each employer shall ensure that, as part of each employee's
refresher training:
(i) An employee is advised of changes to any rule, practice, or
procedure relevant to the employee's assigned duties;
(ii) An employee must not be allowed to test out of refresher
training; and
(iii) The employee is trained and qualified on the application of
any Federal railroad safety laws, regulations, and orders the person is
required to comply with, as well as any relevant railroad rules and
procedures promulgated to implement those Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, and orders. An employer must consider developing refresher
training to address railroad-wide or industry-wide safety concerns, or
those safety concerns that address an individual employee's weaknesses.
To ensure an employee is trained and qualified, rather than repeating
initial training, an employer is permitted to consider refresher
training as a limited and carefully tailored review of:
(A) All the required steps of a complicated safety-related task;
(B) Existing rules or procedures that were initially learned but
rarely used; and
(C) Safety-related tasks that address skill gaps that the employer
identified in the workforce through efficiency testing, periodic
oversight, annual reviews, accident/incident data, FRA inspection data,
or other performance measuring metrics.
(f) An employer must consider ways to provide remedial training and
retesting of any employee who fails to successfully pass any training
or testing. Under this part, a failure of any test or training does not
bar the person from successfully completing the training or testing at
a later date.
0
13. Section 243.203 is amended by revising paragraphs (b)(2) and (6),
and (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 243.203 Records.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) Occupational category or subcategory designations, or other
suitable designations, for which the employee is deemed qualified;
* * * * *
(6) The employee's OJT performance, which shall include the unique
name or identifier of the OJT program component in accordance with
Sec. 243.103, the date the OJT program component was successfully
completed, and the identification of the designated instructor(s)
determining that the employee successfully completed all OJT training
necessary to be considered qualified to perform the safety-related
tasks identified with the occupational categories or subcategories, or
other suitable terminology, for which the employee is designated in
accordance with the program required by this part;
* * * * *
(c) Record accessibility for other than individual employee
records. Except for records demonstrating the qualification status of
each safety-related railroad employee as described in paragraph (b) of
this section or otherwise specified in this part, each annual review
required by this part shall be accessible for three calendar years
after the end of the calendar year to which the annual review relates,
and each test, inspection, or other event record required by this part
shall be accessible for one calendar year after the end of the calendar
year to which the event relates. Each employer shall make these records
accessible at one headquarters location within the United States,
including, but not limited to, a railroad's system headquarters, a
holding company's headquarters, a joint venture's headquarters, a
contractor's principal place of business or other headquarters located
where the contractor is incorporated. This requirement does not
prohibit an employer with divisions from also maintaining any of these
records at any division headquarters.
* * * * *
0
14. Section 243.205 is amended by revising paragraphs (a), (c)
introductory text, (d), (e)(1), (g) introductory text, (h), and (i) to
read as follows:
Sec. 243.205 Periodic oversight.
(a) General. As part of the program required in accordance with
this part, an employer shall adopt and comply with a program to conduct
periodic oversight tests or inspections to determine if safety-related
railroad employees comply with Federal railroad safety laws,
regulations, and orders particular to FRA-regulated personal and work
group safety. The program of periodic oversight shall commence on the
day the employer files its program with FRA pursuant to Sec.
243.101(a) or on the day the employer commences operations pursuant to
Sec. 243.101(b). The data gathered through the testing or inspection
components of the program shall be used to determine whether systemic
performance gaps exist, and to determine if modifications to the
training component of the program are appropriate to close those gaps.
* * * * *
(c) Railroad oversight. Each railroad shall identify supervisory
employees, by category or subcategory, responsible for conducting
periodic oversight tests or inspections for the safety-related railroad
employees that it authorizes to perform safety-related duties on its
property, except a railroad is not required to:
* * * * *
(d) Operational test exception for a railroad. A railroad is not
required to perform operational tests or inspections of safety-related
railroad employees employed by a contractor.
(e) * * *
(1) When oversight test or inspection sessions are scheduled
specifically to determine if safety-related employees are in compliance
with Federal railroad safety laws, regulations, and orders particular
to FRA-regulated personal and work group safety; or
* * * * *
(g) Contractor oversight. Each contractor shall conduct periodic
oversight tests or inspections of its safety-related railroad employees
provided:
* * * * *
[[Page 59769]]
(h) Oversight divided by agreement. (1) Notwithstanding the
requirements of paragraphs (c) and (g) of this section, a railroad and
a contractor may agree that the contractor will provide the oversight
by specifying in the program that the railroad has trained the
contractor employees responsible for training and oversight; or
(2) Notwithstanding the requirements of this section that assign
specific periodic oversight responsibilities to a railroad or a
contractor, a railroad and a contractor may agree to a different
periodic oversight responsibility arrangement.
(i) Detailed records required. Each employer that conducts periodic
oversight in accordance with this section must keep a record of the
date, time, place, and result of each test or inspection. The records
shall specify each person administering tests or inspections, and each
person tested. The record shall also provide a method to record whether
the employee complied with the monitored duties, and any interventions
used to remediate non-compliance. Modifications of the program required
by Sec. 217.9 of this chapter may be used in lieu of this oversight
program, provided a railroad specifies it has done so in its program
submitted in accordance with this part.
* * * * *
Issued in Washington, DC, under the authority set forth in 49
CFR 1.89(b).
Amitabha Bose,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2022-21277 Filed 9-30-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-06-P