Beat the Street Interiors, Inc.-Grant of Petition for Temporary Exemption From Shoulder Belt Requirement for Side-Facing Seats on Motorcoaches, 78093-78096 [2023-25073]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 14, 2023 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
Notice of Meeting of the Transit
Advisory Committee for Safety
Federal Transit Administration,
Department of Transportation.
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
AGENCY:
The Federal Transit
Administration (FTA) announces a
public meeting of the Transit Advisory
Committee for Safety (TRACS).
DATES: The TRACS meeting will be held
on December 6, 2023, from 10:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m., and December 7, 2023, from
10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m., Eastern Time.
This will be a hybrid meeting, taking
place both in person at the U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT)
Headquarters and virtually via Zoom for
Government. Requests to attend the
meeting in person or virtually must be
received no later than November 29,
2023. Requests for disability
accommodations must be received no
later than November 29, 2023. Requests
to verbally address the committee
during the meeting must be submitted
with a written copy of the remarks to
DOT no later than November 29, 2023.
Requests to submit written materials to
be reviewed during the meeting must be
received no later than November 29,
2023.
SUMMARY:
The meeting will be held in
person at DOT Headquarters, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, District
of Columbia, 20590 and virtually via
Zoom for Government. Any committee
related requests should be sent by email
to TRACS@dot.gov. The virtual
meeting’s online access link and a
detailed agenda will be provided upon
registration. They will also be posted on
the TRACS web page at: https://
www.transit.dot.gov/regulations-andguidance/safety/transit-advisorycommittee-safety-tracs one week in
advance of the meeting. A copy of the
meeting minutes and other TRACS
related information will also be
available on the TRACS web page.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joseph DeLorenzo, TRACS Designated
Federal Officer, Associate
Administrator, FTA Office of Transit
Safety and Oversight,
Joseph.DeLorenzo@dot.gov; or Bridget
Zamperini, TRACS Program Manager,
FTA Office of Transit Safety and
Oversight, (202) 366–0306, or TRACS@
dot.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This
notice is provided in accordance with
the Federal Advisory Committee Act
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
ADDRESSES:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:48 Nov 13, 2023
Jkt 262001
(FACA) (Pub. L. 92–463, 5 U.S.C. app.
2). TRACS is composed of up to 25
members representing a broad base of
perspectives on transit safety necessary
to discharge its responsibilities. Please
see the TRACS web page for additional
information at https://www.transit.
dot.gov/regulations-and-guidance/
safety/transit-advisory-committeesafety-tracs.
I. Background
78093
organizational affiliation to the email
address listed in the ADDRESSES section.
Written and oral comments for
consideration by TRACS during the
meeting must be submitted no later than
the deadline listed in the DATES section
to ensure transmission to TRACS
members prior to the meeting.
Comments received after that date will
be distributed to the members but may
not be reviewed prior to the meeting.
The U.S. Secretary of Transportation
(Secretary) established TRACS in
accordance with FACA to provide
information, advice, and
recommendations to the Secretary and
FTA Administrator on matters relating
to the safety of public transportation
systems.
Joseph P. DeLorenzo,
Associate Administrator for Transit Safety
and Oversight.
II. Agenda
National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration
• Welcome Remarks and Introductions
• Overview of Hybrid Meeting Platform
Functions
• Review of Recommendations:
Reducing Bus Collisions
• Review of Recommendations:
Advancing Rider and Worker Safety
• Review of Recommendations: Cyber
and Data Security Systems
• Public Comments
• Summary of Deliverables, Next Steps,
and Concluding Remarks
III. Public Participation
The in-person attendance option will
be open to the public on a first come,
first served basis, as space is limited.
Members of the public who wish to
attend in-person are asked to register via
email by submitting their name and
affiliation to the email address listed in
the ADDRESSES section. The virtual
attendance option does not have
restrictions. Members of the public who
wish to attend virtually also are asked
to register via email by submitting their
name and affiliation to the email
address listed in the ADDRESSES section.
DOT is committed to providing equal
access to this meeting for all
participants. If you need alternative
formats or services because of a
disability, such as sign language,
interpretation, or other ancillary aids,
please contact the email address listed
in the ADDRESSES section.
There will be a total of 60 minutes
allotted for oral comments from
members of the public at the meeting.
To accommodate as many speakers as
possible, the time for each commenter
may be limited. Individuals wishing to
reserve speaking time during the
meeting must submit a request at the
time of registration, to include the
individual’s name, address, and
PO 00000
Frm 00146
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
[FR Doc. 2023–25090 Filed 11–13–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–57–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
[Docket No. NHTSA–2023–0018]
Beat the Street Interiors, Inc.—Grant of
Petition for Temporary Exemption
From Shoulder Belt Requirement for
Side-Facing Seats on Motorcoaches
National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of grant of petition for
temporary exemption.
AGENCY:
This notice grants the petition
of Beat the Street Interiors, Inc. (‘‘BTS’’)
for a temporary exemption from a
shoulder belt requirement of Federal
Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS)
No. 208, ‘‘Occupant crash protection,’’
for side-facing seats on motorcoaches.
This grant permits the petitioner to
install Type 1 seat belts (lap belt only)
at side-facing seating positions instead
of the Type 2 seat belts (lap and
shoulder belts) required by FMVSS No.
208. After reviewing the petition, the
agency has determined that the
requested exemption is warranted to
enable the petitioner to sell a vehicle
whose overall level of safety or impact
protection is at least equal to that of a
nonexempted vehicle.
DATES: This exemption applies to the
petitioner’s motorcoaches produced
from November 14, 2023 until
November 14, 2025.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Callie Roach, Office of the Chief
Counsel, NCC–200, National Highway
Traffic Safety Administration, 1200 New
Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC,
20590. Telephone: 202–366–2992; Fax:
202–366–3820.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\14NON1.SGM
14NON1
78094
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 14, 2023 / Notices
I. Relevant Legal Authority and
Regulations
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
a. Statutory Authority for Temporary
Exemptions
The National Traffic and Motor
Vehicle Safety Act (Safety Act), codified
as 49 U.S.C. Chapter 301, provides the
Secretary of Transportation authority to
exempt, on a temporary basis, under
specified circumstances, and on terms
the Secretary considers appropriate,
motor vehicles from a motor vehicle
safety standard or bumper standard.
This authority is set forth in 49 U.S.C.
30113. The Secretary has delegated the
authority for implementing this section
to NHTSA.1
NHTSA established 49 CFR part 555,
Temporary Exemption from Motor
Vehicle Safety and Bumper Standards,
to implement the statutory provisions
concerning temporary exemptions.
Under Part 555 subpart A, a vehicle
manufacturer seeking an exemption
must submit a petition for exemption
containing specified information.
Among other things, the petition must
set forth (a) the reasons why granting
the exemption would be in the public
interest and consistent with the
objectives of the Safety Act, and (b)
information showing that the
manufacturer satisfies one of four bases
for an exemption.2 The petitioner is
applying on the basis that compliance
with the standard would prevent the
manufacturer from selling a motor
vehicle with an overall safety level at
least equal to the overall safety level of
nonexempt vehicles (see 49 CFR
555.6(d)). A manufacturer is eligible for
an exemption on this basis only if
NHTSA determines the exemption is for
not more than 2,500 vehicles to be sold
in the U.S. in any 12-month period. An
exemption on this basis may be granted
for not more than two years but may be
renewed upon reapplication.3
b. Seat Belt Requirements for Over-theRoad Buses in FMVSS No. 208
On November 25, 2013, NHTSA
published a final rule amending FMVSS
No. 208 to require seat belts for each
passenger seating position in all new
over-the-road buses (OTRBs) (regardless
of gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR)),
and all other buses with GVWRs greater
than 11,793 kilograms (kg) (26,000
pounds (lbs.)) (with certain
exclusions).4
1 49
CFR 1.95.
CFR 555.5(b)(5) and 555.5(b)(7).
3 555.8(b) and 555.8(e).
4 78 FR 70415 (November 25, 2013); response to
petitions for reconsideration, 81 FR 19902 (April 6,
2016). The final rule became effective November 28,
2016 for buses manufactured in a single stage, and
2 49
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:48 Nov 13, 2023
Jkt 262001
In the notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM) preceding the final rule (75 FR
50958, August 18, 2010), NHTSA
proposed to permit manufacturers the
option of installing either a Type 1 (lap
belt) or a Type 2 (lap and shoulder belt)
on side-facing seats.5 The proposed
option was consistent with a provision
in FMVSS No. 208 that allows lap belts
for side-facing seats on buses with a
GVWR of 4,536 kg (10,000 lbs.) or less.
NHTSA proposed the option because
the agency was unaware of any
demonstrable increase in associated
risks using lap belts when compared to
using lap and shoulder belts on sidefacing seats. In the NPRM, NHTSA
noted that 6 ‘‘a study commissioned by
the European Commission regarding
side-facing seats on minibuses and
motorcoaches found that due to
different seat belt designs, crash modes
and a lack of real-world data, it cannot
be determined whether a lap belt or a
lap/shoulder belt would be the most
effective.’’ 7
However, after the NPRM was
published, the Motorcoach Enhanced
Safety Act of 2012 was enacted as part
of the Moving Ahead for Progress in the
21st Century Act (MAP–21), Public Law
112–141 (July 6, 2012). Section 32703(a)
of MAP–21 directed the Secretary of
Transportation (authority delegated to
NHTSA) to ‘‘prescribe regulations
requiring safety belts to be installed in
motorcoaches at each designated seating
position.’’ 8 As MAP–21 defined ‘‘safety
belt’’ to mean an integrated lap and
shoulder belt, the final rule amended
FMVSS No. 208 to require lap and
shoulder belts at all designated seating
positions, including side-facing seats,
on OTRBs.9
Even as it did so, however, the agency
reiterated its view that ‘‘the addition of
a shoulder belt at [side-facing seats on
light vehicles] is of limited value, given
the paucity of data related to side facing
a year later for buses manufactured in more than
one stage. The requirement is found at FMVSS No.
208 S4.4.5.1.2(c).
5 75 FR at 50971.
6 75 FR at 50971–50972.
7 https://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/automotive/
projects/safety_consid_long_stg.pdf.
8 MAP–21 states at § 32702(6) that ‘‘the term
‘motorcoach’ has the meaning given the term ‘overthe-road bus’ in section 3038(a)(3) of the
Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (49
U.S.C. 5310 note), but does not include a bus used
in public transportation provided by, or on behalf
of, a public transportation agency; or a school bus,
including a multifunction school activity bus.’’
Section 3038(a)(3) (49 U.S.C. 5310 note) states:
‘‘The term ‘over-the-road bus’ means a bus
characterized by an elevated passenger deck located
over a baggage compartment.’’
9 For side-facing seats on buses other than OTRBs,
in the final rule NHTSA permitted either lap or lap/
shoulder belts at the manufacturer’s option.
PO 00000
Frm 00147
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
seats.’’ 10 NHTSA also reiterated that
there have been concerns expressed in
literature about shoulder belts on sidefacing seats, noting in the final rule that,
although the agency has no direct
evidence that shoulder belts may cause
serious neck injuries when applied to
side-facing seats, there are simulation
data indicative of potential carotid
artery injury when the neck is loaded by
the shoulder belt.11 The agency also
noted that Australian Design Rule ADR
5/04, ‘‘Anchorages for Seatbelts,’’
specifically prohibits shoulder belts for
side-facing seats.
Given that background, and believing
there would be few side-facing seats on
OTRBs, NHTSA stated in the November
2013 final rule that manufacturers may
petition NHTSA for a temporary
exemption under 49 CFR part 555 to
install lap belts instead of lap and
shoulder belts at side-facing seats.12
NHTSA further explained that a
manufacturer could seek such an
exemption on the basis that the
applicant is otherwise unable to sell a
vehicle whose overall level of safety is
at least equal to that of an non-exempted
vehicle, stating that the agency would
be receptive to an argument that, for
side-facing seats, lap belts provide an
equivalent level of safety to lap and
shoulder belts.13
II. Petition From BTS
In accordance with 49 U.S.C. 30113
and the procedures in 49 CFR part 555,
BTS, a final-stage manufacturer of
entertainer motorcoaches, submitted a
petition on September 13, 2022, asking
NHTSA for a temporary exemption from
the shoulder belt requirement of FMVSS
No. 208 for side-facing seats on its
vehicles. The petitioner seeks to install
Type 1 seat belts (lap belt only) at sidefacing seating positions, instead of Type
2 seat belts (lap and shoulder belts) as
required by FMVSS No. 208. The basis
for the petition is that compliance
would prevent the petitioner from
selling a motor vehicle with an overall
safety level at least equal to the overall
safety level of nonexempt vehicles (49
CFR 555.6(d)).14
10 78 FR at 70448, quoting from the agency’s
Anton’s Law final rule which required lap/shoulder
belts in forward-facing rear seating positions of light
vehicles, 59 FR 70907.
11 Fildes, B., Digges, K., ‘‘Occupant Protection in
Far Side Crashes,’’ Monash University Accident
Research Center, Report No. 294, April 2010, pg. 57.
12 78 FR at 70448.
13 Id.
14 The petition is similar to petitions for
temporary exemption NHTSA received from 14
other final stage manufacturers on the same
shoulder belt requirement of FMVSS No. 208 for
side-facing seats on entertainer buses. The first
petition was submitted by Hemphill Brothers
E:\FR\FM\14NON1.SGM
14NON1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 14, 2023 / Notices
A copy of the petition has been placed
in the docket listed in the heading of
this notice. To view the petition, go to
https://www.regulations.gov and enter
the docket number in the heading.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
c. Brief Overview of the Petition
BTS states that it is a final-stage
manufacturer of over-the-road buses and
customizes motorcoaches to meet the
needs of its entertainer clients and other
specialized customers. BTS states that it
typically receives a bus shell 15 from a
manufacturer of incomplete vehicles
and then builds out the complete
interior of the vehicle.16 The petitioner
states that the motorcoaches it
completes are primarily used for touring
artists and their crews.17 BTS states that
it is a small business and expects to
manufacture no more than 14 vehicles
during the exemption period.18
Pursuant to 49 CFR 555.6(d), an
application must provide ‘‘[a] detailed
analysis of how the vehicle provides the
overall level of safety or impact
protection at least equal to that of
nonexempt vehicles.’’
BTS reiterates the agency’s discussion
from the August 2010 NPRM and
November 2013 seat belt final rule,
summarized above.19 BTS also
references the 14 petitions that NHTSA
has granted to other similar
manufacturers.20 BTS states that
NHTSA has not conducted testing on
the impact or injuries to passengers in
side-facing seats in motorcoaches, so
‘‘there is no available credible data that
supports requiring a Type 2 belt at the
side-facing seating positions.’’ 21 BTS
states that it believes that if not
exempted from the requirement, BTS
Leasing Company, LLC (Hemphill). (Notice of
receipt of petition, 84 FR 11735 (March 28, 2019);
notice of grant of petition, 84 FR 61966 (November
14, 2019)). Later, NHTSA granted 13 additional
petitions submitted by All Access Coach Leasing
LLC, Amadas Coach, Creative Mobile Interiors, D&S
Classic Coach Inc., Farber Specialty Vehicles,
Florida Coach, Inc., Geomarc, Inc., Integrity
Interiors LLC, Nitetrain Coach Company, Inc.,
Pioneer Coach Interiors LLC, Roberts Brothers
Coach Company, Russell Coachworks LLC, and
Ultra Coach Inc. (Notice of receipt of the petitions,
85 FR 51550 (August 20, 2022); notice of grant of
petitions, 87 FR 33299 (June 1, 2022)).
15 The petition describes the bus shell as
generally containing the following components:
exterior frame; driver’s seat; dash cluster,
speedometer, emissions light and emissions
diagnosis connector; exterior lighting, headlights,
marker lights, turn signals lights, and brake lights;
exterior glass, windshield and side lights with
emergency exits; windshield wiper system; braking
system; tires, tire pressure monitoring system and
suspension; and engine and transmission.
16 BTS petition at page 2.
17 Id.
18 Id.
19 Id. at pages 3–5.
20 Id. at page 2.
21 Id. at page 5.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:48 Nov 13, 2023
Jkt 262001
will be required to offer its customers ‘‘a
motorcoach with a safety feature that
could make the occupants less safe, or
certainly at least no more safe, than if
the feature was not installed.’’ 22
Pursuant to 49 CFR 555.5(b)(7), a
petitioner must state why granting an
exemption allowing it to install Type 1
instead of Type 2 seat belts in sidefacing seats would be in the public
interest and consistent with the
objectives of the Safety Act.
The petitioner states that granting an
exemption would enable it to sell
vehicles with Type 1 lap belts on its
side-facing seats.23 BTS further states
that granting this petition will provide
relief to a small business.24
Additionally, because this petition
follows NHTSA’s grant of 14 similar
petitions, BTS states that granting this
exemption will assist in providing a
consistent, objective standard that is
easy for manufacturers to understand
and meet.25
BTS also states its belief that
providing Type 1 belts at side-facing
seats is consistent with the objectives of
the Safety Act because it allows the
manufacturer to determine the best
approach to motor vehicle safety
depending on the intended use of the
vehicle and its overall design, and is
consistent with current analysis of the
NHTSA and the European Commission
that indicates no demonstrable
difference in risk between the two types
of belts when installed in sidewaysfacing seats.26
In support of its petition, BTS also
states that it produces only a small
number of motorcoaches annually,
expecting to manufacture only about 14
motorcoaches under the period of
exemption, well below the limit of 2,500
vehicles.27
The petitioner also indicates that it
expects to seek to renew this exemption,
if granted, at the end of the exemption
period.28
III. Receipt Notice Seeking Comments
On April 26, 2023, NHTSA published
a notice of receipt of the petition for
temporary exemption from BTS and
requested comment on the petition.29
No comments were received.
IV. Agency Analysis and Decision
The agency grants the petition. This
grant will allow the petitioner to sell a
22 Id.
at page 6.
23 Id.
24 Id.
78095
vehicle whose overall level of safety or
impact protection is at least equal to
that of a nonexempted vehicle.
In the rulemaking implementing
MAP–21’s mandate for seat belts on
motorcoaches, NHTSA’s proposal in the
NPRM was to allow manufacturers an
option of installing Type 1 (lap belt) or
Type 2 (lap and shoulder belt) on sidefacing seats. The proposed option was
consistent with a provision in FMVSS
No. 208 that allows lap belts for sidefacing seats on buses with a GVWR of
4,536 kg (10,000 lbs.) or less. NHTSA
proposed the option because the agency
was unaware of any demonstrable
increase in associated risk of lap belts
compared to lap and shoulder belts on
side-facing seats.30 The agency believed
that lap belts were as protective as lap
and shoulder belts on side-facing seats.
NHTSA continues to believe this to be
true.31
The petitioner cited discussion of
safety concerns about the shoulder belt
portion of a lap and shoulder belt on
side-facing seats. However, it did not
provide any additional information
about the potential for ‘‘serious injury’’
beyond reciting what NHTSA stated on
the matter in the November 2013 final
rule. Accordingly, NHTSA believes that
the potential safety risk at issue is
theoretical; as explained in the
November 2013 final rule,32 and the
agency cannot affirmatively conclude,
based on available information, that
shoulder belts on side-facing seats are
associated with a demonstrated risk of
serious neck injuries in frontal crashes.
At the same time, NHTSA believes a
shoulder belt is of limited value on sidefacing seats for the reasons explained in
the final rule. Given the uncertainties
about shoulder belts on side-facing
seats, the few side-facing seats there are
on buses subject to the November 2013
final rule, and that FMVSS No. 208 does
not require shoulder belts on side-facing
seats on any other vehicle type, NHTSA
is granting the petition for temporary
exemption.
The grant will permit the petitioner to
install Type 1 seat belts (lap belt only)
at side-facing seating positions, instead
of Type 2 seat belts (lap and shoulder
belts) at those positions, on the OTRBs
it manufactures. This exemption does
not apply to forward-facing designated
seating positions on the petitioner’s
vehicles. Under FMVSS No. 208, the
forward-facing seating positions must
have Type 2 lap and shoulder belts.
25 Id.
26 Id.
30 75 FR 50958 at pages 50971–72 (August 18,
2010).
31 78 FR 7041 at pages 70447–48.
32 78 FR 7041 at pages 70447–48
27 Id.
28 Id.
29 88
PO 00000
at page 7.
FR 25445.
Frm 00148
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\14NON1.SGM
14NON1
78096
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 218 / Tuesday, November 14, 2023 / Notices
NHTSA believes that granting the
petitioner’s exemption request is
consistent with the public interest. The
exemption will enable the applicant to
sell buses whose overall level of safety
is at least equal to that of non-exempted
vehicles. Further, we acknowledge that
the petitioner is a small business as
defined in 13 CFR 121.201 33 Thus, this
temporary exemption not only permits
the manufacturer to sell vehicles whose
overall level of safety is at least equal to
that of non-exempted vehicles, but also
provides relief to a small business.
A grant is consistent with the Safety
Act. The requested exemption will not
impact motor vehicle safety because the
exempted buses will provide overall
safety at least equal to that of
nonexempted buses. Further, the
petitioner produces a small number of
affected vehicles annually. The
petitioner stated that it expects to
produce no more than 14 affected
vehicles during the exemption period.
Thus, NHTSA concludes that the
petitioner will manufacture very few
vehicles relative to the 2,500 per
manufacturer limit set forth in the
Safety Act and 49 CFR 555.6(d)(4).
Further, as explained below, in
accordance with 49 CFR 555.9 and
§ 30113(h) of the Safety Act, prospective
purchasers will also be notified of the
exemption prior to making their
purchasing decisions. The vehicles must
have a label notifying prospective
purchasers that the vehicles are
exempted from the shoulder belt
requirement of FMVSS No. 208 for the
side-facing seats.
Under 49 CFR 555.9(b), a
manufacturer of an exempted vehicle
must securely affix to the windshield or
side window of each exempted vehicle
a label containing a statement that the
vehicle meets all applicable FMVSS in
effect on the date of manufacture
‘‘except for Standard Nos. [Listing the
standards by number and title for which
an exemption has been granted]
exempted pursuant to NHTSA
Exemption No.__.’’ This label notifies
prospective purchasers about the
exemption and its subject. Under
§ 555.9(c)(2), this information must also
be included on the vehicle’s
certification label.34
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Ann Carlson,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2023–25073 Filed 11–13–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–59–P
DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS
AFFAIRS
V. Labeling
33 According to 13 CFR 121.201, the Small
Business Administration’s size standards
regulations used to define small business concerns,
manufacturers of these buses fall under North
American Industry Classification System (NAICS)
No. 336213, Motor Home Manufacturing, which has
a size standard of 1,250 employees or fewer.
34 49 CFR 555.9(c)(2) refers to § 567.5(c)(7)(iii) as
the regulation setting forth the certification
VerDate Sep<11>2014
The text of § 555.9 does not expressly
indicate how the required statement on
the two labels should read in situations
in which an exemption covers part, but
not all, of an FMVSS. In this case,
NHTSA believes that a blanket
statement that the vehicle has been
exempted from Standard No. 208,
without an indication that the
exemption is limited to the shoulder
belt on side-facing seats, could be
confusing. A purchaser might
incorrectly believe that the vehicle has
been exempted from all requirements of
FMVSS No. 208. For this reason,
NHTSA believes the two labels should
state that the vehicle meets all
applicable FMVSS ‘‘except for the
shoulder belt requirement for sidefacing seats (Standard No. 208,
Occupant Crash Protection), exempted
pursuant to NHTSA Exemption No. 23–
02.’’
In accordance with 49 U.S.C.
30113(b)(3)(B)(iv), the petitioner is
granted NHTSA Temporary Exemption
No. EX 23–02 from the shoulder belt
requirement of 49 CFR 571.208 for sidefacing seats on their motorcoaches. The
exemption shall remain effective for the
period designated at the beginning of
this document in the DATES section.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30113; delegation
of authority at 49 CFR 1.95.
16:48 Nov 13, 2023
Jkt 262001
Solicitation of Nominations for
Appointment to the Advisory
Committee on Former Prisoners of War
ACTION:
Notice.
The Department of Veterans
Affairs (VA) is seeking nominations of
qualified candidates to be considered
for appointment to the Advisory
Committee (Committee) on Former
Prisoners of War (FPOW).
DATES: Nominations for membership on
the Committee must be received no later
than 5 p.m. EST on December 15, 2023.
ADDRESSES: All nominations should be
mailed to Outreach, Transition and
SUMMARY:
statement final-stage manufacturers are to use in
their certification labels. That reference to
§ 567.5(c)(7)(iii) is outdated; it should be to
§ 567.5(d)(2)(v)(A). The certification label
requirements for final-stage manufacturers formerly
were in § 567(c)(7)(iii) but the requirements were
moved to § 567.5(d)(2)(v)(A) (see, 70 FR 7433;
February 14, 2005).
PO 00000
Frm 00149
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Economic Development (OTED),
Veterans Benefits Administration
(VBA), Department of Veterans Affairs,
1800 G St. NW, Washington, DC 20006
or emailed to julian.wright2@va.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Julian Wright, Designated Federal
Officer (DFO), OTED, Department of
Veterans Affairs, 1800 G St. NW,
Washington, DC 20006, telephone (202)
302–8629.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In
carrying out the duties set forth, the
activities of the Committee include, but
are not limited to:
(1) Advising the Secretary on how VA
can assist and represent FPOWs’,
including recommendations regarding
expanding services and benefits to
FPOWs’ and related policy.
Administrative, legislative and/or
regulatory actions;
(2) Advising the Secretary on
incorporating lessons learned from
current, and previous, successful family
research and outreach efforts that
measure the impact of provided care
and benefits services on FPOWs;
(3) Advising the Secretary on
collaborating with family support
programs within VA and engaging with
other VA and non-VA advisory
committees focused on specific
demographics of FPOWs;
(4) Advising the Secretary on working
with interagency, intergovernmental,
private/non-profit, community, and
Veteran service organizations to identify
and address gaps in services for FPOWs;
(5) Providing such reports as the
Committee deems necessary, but not
less than one report per year, to the
Secretary, through the DFO/VBA to
describe the Committee’s activities,
deliberations, and findings, which may
include but are not limited to: (1)
identification of current challenges and
recommendations for remediation
related to access to care and benefits
services of FPOWs; and (2)
identification of current best practices
in care and benefits delivery to FPOWs,
and the impact of such best practices.
Authority: The Committee is
authorized by statute and operates
under the provisions of the Federal
Advisory Committee Act (FACA). The
Committee advises the Secretary on the
following:
(1) The administration of benefits for
Veterans who are FPOW, in the areas of
service-connected compensation,
dependency and indemnity
compensation, health care, and
rehabilitation.
(2) The use of VA care and benefits
services by FPOWs, and possible
adjustments to such care and benefits
services.
E:\FR\FM\14NON1.SGM
14NON1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 218 (Tuesday, November 14, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 78093-78096]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-25073]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
[Docket No. NHTSA-2023-0018]
Beat the Street Interiors, Inc.--Grant of Petition for Temporary
Exemption From Shoulder Belt Requirement for Side-Facing Seats on
Motorcoaches
AGENCY: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of grant of petition for temporary exemption.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice grants the petition of Beat the Street Interiors,
Inc. (``BTS'') for a temporary exemption from a shoulder belt
requirement of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 208,
``Occupant crash protection,'' for side-facing seats on motorcoaches.
This grant permits the petitioner to install Type 1 seat belts (lap
belt only) at side-facing seating positions instead of the Type 2 seat
belts (lap and shoulder belts) required by FMVSS No. 208. After
reviewing the petition, the agency has determined that the requested
exemption is warranted to enable the petitioner to sell a vehicle whose
overall level of safety or impact protection is at least equal to that
of a nonexempted vehicle.
DATES: This exemption applies to the petitioner's motorcoaches produced
from November 14, 2023 until November 14, 2025.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Callie Roach, Office of the Chief
Counsel, NCC-200, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE, Washington, DC, 20590. Telephone: 202-366-2992;
Fax: 202-366-3820.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[[Page 78094]]
I. Relevant Legal Authority and Regulations
a. Statutory Authority for Temporary Exemptions
The National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act (Safety Act),
codified as 49 U.S.C. Chapter 301, provides the Secretary of
Transportation authority to exempt, on a temporary basis, under
specified circumstances, and on terms the Secretary considers
appropriate, motor vehicles from a motor vehicle safety standard or
bumper standard. This authority is set forth in 49 U.S.C. 30113. The
Secretary has delegated the authority for implementing this section to
NHTSA.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 49 CFR 1.95.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NHTSA established 49 CFR part 555, Temporary Exemption from Motor
Vehicle Safety and Bumper Standards, to implement the statutory
provisions concerning temporary exemptions. Under Part 555 subpart A, a
vehicle manufacturer seeking an exemption must submit a petition for
exemption containing specified information. Among other things, the
petition must set forth (a) the reasons why granting the exemption
would be in the public interest and consistent with the objectives of
the Safety Act, and (b) information showing that the manufacturer
satisfies one of four bases for an exemption.\2\ The petitioner is
applying on the basis that compliance with the standard would prevent
the manufacturer from selling a motor vehicle with an overall safety
level at least equal to the overall safety level of nonexempt vehicles
(see 49 CFR 555.6(d)). A manufacturer is eligible for an exemption on
this basis only if NHTSA determines the exemption is for not more than
2,500 vehicles to be sold in the U.S. in any 12-month period. An
exemption on this basis may be granted for not more than two years but
may be renewed upon reapplication.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 49 CFR 555.5(b)(5) and 555.5(b)(7).
\3\ 555.8(b) and 555.8(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Seat Belt Requirements for Over-the-Road Buses in FMVSS No. 208
On November 25, 2013, NHTSA published a final rule amending FMVSS
No. 208 to require seat belts for each passenger seating position in
all new over-the-road buses (OTRBs) (regardless of gross vehicle weight
rating (GVWR)), and all other buses with GVWRs greater than 11,793
kilograms (kg) (26,000 pounds (lbs.)) (with certain exclusions).\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 78 FR 70415 (November 25, 2013); response to petitions for
reconsideration, 81 FR 19902 (April 6, 2016). The final rule became
effective November 28, 2016 for buses manufactured in a single
stage, and a year later for buses manufactured in more than one
stage. The requirement is found at FMVSS No. 208 S4.4.5.1.2(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) preceding the final
rule (75 FR 50958, August 18, 2010), NHTSA proposed to permit
manufacturers the option of installing either a Type 1 (lap belt) or a
Type 2 (lap and shoulder belt) on side-facing seats.\5\ The proposed
option was consistent with a provision in FMVSS No. 208 that allows lap
belts for side-facing seats on buses with a GVWR of 4,536 kg (10,000
lbs.) or less. NHTSA proposed the option because the agency was unaware
of any demonstrable increase in associated risks using lap belts when
compared to using lap and shoulder belts on side-facing seats. In the
NPRM, NHTSA noted that \6\ ``a study commissioned by the European
Commission regarding side-facing seats on minibuses and motorcoaches
found that due to different seat belt designs, crash modes and a lack
of real-world data, it cannot be determined whether a lap belt or a
lap/shoulder belt would be the most effective.'' \7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ 75 FR at 50971.
\6\ 75 FR at 50971-50972.
\7\ https://ec.europa.eu/enterprise/automotive/projects/safety_consid_long_stg.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
However, after the NPRM was published, the Motorcoach Enhanced
Safety Act of 2012 was enacted as part of the Moving Ahead for Progress
in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21), Public Law 112-141 (July 6, 2012).
Section 32703(a) of MAP-21 directed the Secretary of Transportation
(authority delegated to NHTSA) to ``prescribe regulations requiring
safety belts to be installed in motorcoaches at each designated seating
position.'' \8\ As MAP-21 defined ``safety belt'' to mean an integrated
lap and shoulder belt, the final rule amended FMVSS No. 208 to require
lap and shoulder belts at all designated seating positions, including
side-facing seats, on OTRBs.\9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ MAP-21 states at Sec. 32702(6) that ``the term `motorcoach'
has the meaning given the term `over-the-road bus' in section
3038(a)(3) of the Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century (49
U.S.C. 5310 note), but does not include a bus used in public
transportation provided by, or on behalf of, a public transportation
agency; or a school bus, including a multifunction school activity
bus.'' Section 3038(a)(3) (49 U.S.C. 5310 note) states: ``The term
`over-the-road bus' means a bus characterized by an elevated
passenger deck located over a baggage compartment.''
\9\ For side-facing seats on buses other than OTRBs, in the
final rule NHTSA permitted either lap or lap/shoulder belts at the
manufacturer's option.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Even as it did so, however, the agency reiterated its view that
``the addition of a shoulder belt at [side-facing seats on light
vehicles] is of limited value, given the paucity of data related to
side facing seats.'' \10\ NHTSA also reiterated that there have been
concerns expressed in literature about shoulder belts on side-facing
seats, noting in the final rule that, although the agency has no direct
evidence that shoulder belts may cause serious neck injuries when
applied to side-facing seats, there are simulation data indicative of
potential carotid artery injury when the neck is loaded by the shoulder
belt.\11\ The agency also noted that Australian Design Rule ADR 5/04,
``Anchorages for Seatbelts,'' specifically prohibits shoulder belts for
side-facing seats.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 78 FR at 70448, quoting from the agency's Anton's Law final
rule which required lap/shoulder belts in forward-facing rear
seating positions of light vehicles, 59 FR 70907.
\11\ Fildes, B., Digges, K., ``Occupant Protection in Far Side
Crashes,'' Monash University Accident Research Center, Report No.
294, April 2010, pg. 57.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Given that background, and believing there would be few side-facing
seats on OTRBs, NHTSA stated in the November 2013 final rule that
manufacturers may petition NHTSA for a temporary exemption under 49 CFR
part 555 to install lap belts instead of lap and shoulder belts at
side-facing seats.\12\ NHTSA further explained that a manufacturer
could seek such an exemption on the basis that the applicant is
otherwise unable to sell a vehicle whose overall level of safety is at
least equal to that of an non-exempted vehicle, stating that the agency
would be receptive to an argument that, for side-facing seats, lap
belts provide an equivalent level of safety to lap and shoulder
belts.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ 78 FR at 70448.
\13\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Petition From BTS
In accordance with 49 U.S.C. 30113 and the procedures in 49 CFR
part 555, BTS, a final-stage manufacturer of entertainer motorcoaches,
submitted a petition on September 13, 2022, asking NHTSA for a
temporary exemption from the shoulder belt requirement of FMVSS No. 208
for side-facing seats on its vehicles. The petitioner seeks to install
Type 1 seat belts (lap belt only) at side-facing seating positions,
instead of Type 2 seat belts (lap and shoulder belts) as required by
FMVSS No. 208. The basis for the petition is that compliance would
prevent the petitioner from selling a motor vehicle with an overall
safety level at least equal to the overall safety level of nonexempt
vehicles (49 CFR 555.6(d)).\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ The petition is similar to petitions for temporary
exemption NHTSA received from 14 other final stage manufacturers on
the same shoulder belt requirement of FMVSS No. 208 for side-facing
seats on entertainer buses. The first petition was submitted by
Hemphill Brothers Leasing Company, LLC (Hemphill). (Notice of
receipt of petition, 84 FR 11735 (March 28, 2019); notice of grant
of petition, 84 FR 61966 (November 14, 2019)). Later, NHTSA granted
13 additional petitions submitted by All Access Coach Leasing LLC,
Amadas Coach, Creative Mobile Interiors, D&S Classic Coach Inc.,
Farber Specialty Vehicles, Florida Coach, Inc., Geomarc, Inc.,
Integrity Interiors LLC, Nitetrain Coach Company, Inc., Pioneer
Coach Interiors LLC, Roberts Brothers Coach Company, Russell
Coachworks LLC, and Ultra Coach Inc. (Notice of receipt of the
petitions, 85 FR 51550 (August 20, 2022); notice of grant of
petitions, 87 FR 33299 (June 1, 2022)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 78095]]
A copy of the petition has been placed in the docket listed in the
heading of this notice. To view the petition, go to https://www.regulations.gov and enter the docket number in the heading.
c. Brief Overview of the Petition
BTS states that it is a final-stage manufacturer of over-the-road
buses and customizes motorcoaches to meet the needs of its entertainer
clients and other specialized customers. BTS states that it typically
receives a bus shell \15\ from a manufacturer of incomplete vehicles
and then builds out the complete interior of the vehicle.\16\ The
petitioner states that the motorcoaches it completes are primarily used
for touring artists and their crews.\17\ BTS states that it is a small
business and expects to manufacture no more than 14 vehicles during the
exemption period.\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ The petition describes the bus shell as generally
containing the following components: exterior frame; driver's seat;
dash cluster, speedometer, emissions light and emissions diagnosis
connector; exterior lighting, headlights, marker lights, turn
signals lights, and brake lights; exterior glass, windshield and
side lights with emergency exits; windshield wiper system; braking
system; tires, tire pressure monitoring system and suspension; and
engine and transmission.
\16\ BTS petition at page 2.
\17\ Id.
\18\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to 49 CFR 555.6(d), an application must provide ``[a]
detailed analysis of how the vehicle provides the overall level of
safety or impact protection at least equal to that of nonexempt
vehicles.''
BTS reiterates the agency's discussion from the August 2010 NPRM
and November 2013 seat belt final rule, summarized above.\19\ BTS also
references the 14 petitions that NHTSA has granted to other similar
manufacturers.\20\ BTS states that NHTSA has not conducted testing on
the impact or injuries to passengers in side-facing seats in
motorcoaches, so ``there is no available credible data that supports
requiring a Type 2 belt at the side-facing seating positions.'' \21\
BTS states that it believes that if not exempted from the requirement,
BTS will be required to offer its customers ``a motorcoach with a
safety feature that could make the occupants less safe, or certainly at
least no more safe, than if the feature was not installed.'' \22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Id. at pages 3-5.
\20\ Id. at page 2.
\21\ Id. at page 5.
\22\ Id. at page 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Pursuant to 49 CFR 555.5(b)(7), a petitioner must state why
granting an exemption allowing it to install Type 1 instead of Type 2
seat belts in side-facing seats would be in the public interest and
consistent with the objectives of the Safety Act.
The petitioner states that granting an exemption would enable it to
sell vehicles with Type 1 lap belts on its side-facing seats.\23\ BTS
further states that granting this petition will provide relief to a
small business.\24\ Additionally, because this petition follows NHTSA's
grant of 14 similar petitions, BTS states that granting this exemption
will assist in providing a consistent, objective standard that is easy
for manufacturers to understand and meet.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ Id.
\24\ Id.
\25\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
BTS also states its belief that providing Type 1 belts at side-
facing seats is consistent with the objectives of the Safety Act
because it allows the manufacturer to determine the best approach to
motor vehicle safety depending on the intended use of the vehicle and
its overall design, and is consistent with current analysis of the
NHTSA and the European Commission that indicates no demonstrable
difference in risk between the two types of belts when installed in
sideways-facing seats.\26\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In support of its petition, BTS also states that it produces only a
small number of motorcoaches annually, expecting to manufacture only
about 14 motorcoaches under the period of exemption, well below the
limit of 2,500 vehicles.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The petitioner also indicates that it expects to seek to renew this
exemption, if granted, at the end of the exemption period.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ Id. at page 7.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Receipt Notice Seeking Comments
On April 26, 2023, NHTSA published a notice of receipt of the
petition for temporary exemption from BTS and requested comment on the
petition.\29\ No comments were received.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ 88 FR 25445.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Agency Analysis and Decision
The agency grants the petition. This grant will allow the
petitioner to sell a vehicle whose overall level of safety or impact
protection is at least equal to that of a nonexempted vehicle.
In the rulemaking implementing MAP-21's mandate for seat belts on
motorcoaches, NHTSA's proposal in the NPRM was to allow manufacturers
an option of installing Type 1 (lap belt) or Type 2 (lap and shoulder
belt) on side-facing seats. The proposed option was consistent with a
provision in FMVSS No. 208 that allows lap belts for side-facing seats
on buses with a GVWR of 4,536 kg (10,000 lbs.) or less. NHTSA proposed
the option because the agency was unaware of any demonstrable increase
in associated risk of lap belts compared to lap and shoulder belts on
side-facing seats.\30\ The agency believed that lap belts were as
protective as lap and shoulder belts on side-facing seats. NHTSA
continues to believe this to be true.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ 75 FR 50958 at pages 50971-72 (August 18, 2010).
\31\ 78 FR 7041 at pages 70447-48.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The petitioner cited discussion of safety concerns about the
shoulder belt portion of a lap and shoulder belt on side-facing seats.
However, it did not provide any additional information about the
potential for ``serious injury'' beyond reciting what NHTSA stated on
the matter in the November 2013 final rule. Accordingly, NHTSA believes
that the potential safety risk at issue is theoretical; as explained in
the November 2013 final rule,\32\ and the agency cannot affirmatively
conclude, based on available information, that shoulder belts on side-
facing seats are associated with a demonstrated risk of serious neck
injuries in frontal crashes. At the same time, NHTSA believes a
shoulder belt is of limited value on side-facing seats for the reasons
explained in the final rule. Given the uncertainties about shoulder
belts on side-facing seats, the few side-facing seats there are on
buses subject to the November 2013 final rule, and that FMVSS No. 208
does not require shoulder belts on side-facing seats on any other
vehicle type, NHTSA is granting the petition for temporary exemption.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ 78 FR 7041 at pages 70447-48
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The grant will permit the petitioner to install Type 1 seat belts
(lap belt only) at side-facing seating positions, instead of Type 2
seat belts (lap and shoulder belts) at those positions, on the OTRBs it
manufactures. This exemption does not apply to forward-facing
designated seating positions on the petitioner's vehicles. Under FMVSS
No. 208, the forward-facing seating positions must have Type 2 lap and
shoulder belts.
[[Page 78096]]
NHTSA believes that granting the petitioner's exemption request is
consistent with the public interest. The exemption will enable the
applicant to sell buses whose overall level of safety is at least equal
to that of non-exempted vehicles. Further, we acknowledge that the
petitioner is a small business as defined in 13 CFR 121.201 \33\ Thus,
this temporary exemption not only permits the manufacturer to sell
vehicles whose overall level of safety is at least equal to that of
non-exempted vehicles, but also provides relief to a small business.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ According to 13 CFR 121.201, the Small Business
Administration's size standards regulations used to define small
business concerns, manufacturers of these buses fall under North
American Industry Classification System (NAICS) No. 336213, Motor
Home Manufacturing, which has a size standard of 1,250 employees or
fewer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A grant is consistent with the Safety Act. The requested exemption
will not impact motor vehicle safety because the exempted buses will
provide overall safety at least equal to that of nonexempted buses.
Further, the petitioner produces a small number of affected vehicles
annually. The petitioner stated that it expects to produce no more than
14 affected vehicles during the exemption period. Thus, NHTSA concludes
that the petitioner will manufacture very few vehicles relative to the
2,500 per manufacturer limit set forth in the Safety Act and 49 CFR
555.6(d)(4).
Further, as explained below, in accordance with 49 CFR 555.9 and
Sec. 30113(h) of the Safety Act, prospective purchasers will also be
notified of the exemption prior to making their purchasing decisions.
The vehicles must have a label notifying prospective purchasers that
the vehicles are exempted from the shoulder belt requirement of FMVSS
No. 208 for the side-facing seats.
V. Labeling
Under 49 CFR 555.9(b), a manufacturer of an exempted vehicle must
securely affix to the windshield or side window of each exempted
vehicle a label containing a statement that the vehicle meets all
applicable FMVSS in effect on the date of manufacture ``except for
Standard Nos. [Listing the standards by number and title for which an
exemption has been granted] exempted pursuant to NHTSA Exemption
No.__.'' This label notifies prospective purchasers about the exemption
and its subject. Under Sec. 555.9(c)(2), this information must also be
included on the vehicle's certification label.\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ 49 CFR 555.9(c)(2) refers to Sec. 567.5(c)(7)(iii) as the
regulation setting forth the certification statement final-stage
manufacturers are to use in their certification labels. That
reference to Sec. 567.5(c)(7)(iii) is outdated; it should be to
Sec. 567.5(d)(2)(v)(A). The certification label requirements for
final-stage manufacturers formerly were in Sec. 567(c)(7)(iii) but
the requirements were moved to Sec. 567.5(d)(2)(v)(A) (see, 70 FR
7433; February 14, 2005).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The text of Sec. 555.9 does not expressly indicate how the
required statement on the two labels should read in situations in which
an exemption covers part, but not all, of an FMVSS. In this case, NHTSA
believes that a blanket statement that the vehicle has been exempted
from Standard No. 208, without an indication that the exemption is
limited to the shoulder belt on side-facing seats, could be confusing.
A purchaser might incorrectly believe that the vehicle has been
exempted from all requirements of FMVSS No. 208. For this reason, NHTSA
believes the two labels should state that the vehicle meets all
applicable FMVSS ``except for the shoulder belt requirement for side-
facing seats (Standard No. 208, Occupant Crash Protection), exempted
pursuant to NHTSA Exemption No. 23-02.''
In accordance with 49 U.S.C. 30113(b)(3)(B)(iv), the petitioner is
granted NHTSA Temporary Exemption No. EX 23-02 from the shoulder belt
requirement of 49 CFR 571.208 for side-facing seats on their
motorcoaches. The exemption shall remain effective for the period
designated at the beginning of this document in the DATES section.
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 30113; delegation of authority at 49 CFR 1.95.
Ann Carlson,
Acting Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2023-25073 Filed 11-13-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-59-P