Revisions to Regulations for Expedited Relief for Service Emergencies, 4564-4579 [2024-01365]
Download as PDF
4564
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
harmonizing rules, and of promoting
flexibility. This is not a significant
regulatory action and, therefore, was not
subject to review by OMB under E.O.
12866, Regulatory Planning and Review.
This rule is not a major rule under 5
U.S.C. 804.
IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act
NASA does not expect this rule to
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
within the meaning of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601, et seq.,
because the rule is removing the NFS
unique requirements for submission of
total compensation plan. Therefore, an
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
was not performed.
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. chapter 35) does apply. With the
publication of this final rule, an existing
information collection currently
approved under Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) control number
2700–0077, Contractor and
Subcontractor Compensation Plans, is
no longer needed. Once the final rule is
effective, NASA will discontinue this
collection and rely on OMB control
number 9000–0066, Certain Federal
Acquisition Regulation Part 22 Labor
Requirements—FAR Sections Affected:
52.222–2, 52.222–6, 52.222–11, 52.222–
18, 52.222–33, 52.222–34, 52.222–46,
and SF 1413 and 1444.
List of Subjects
48 CFR Part 1831
Accounting, Government
procurement.
48 CFR Part 1852
Accounting, Government
procurement, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Erica Jones,
NASA FAR Supplement Manager.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, NASA amends 48 CFR parts
1831 and 1852 as follows:
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
PART 1831—CONTRACT COST
PRINCIPLES AND PROCEDURES
1. The authority citation for part 1831
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 51 U.S.C. 20113(a) and 48 CFR
chapter 1.
1831.205–671
3. The authority citation for part 1852
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 51 U.S.C. 20113(a) and 48 CFR
chapter 1.
1852.231–71
[Removed and Reserved]
4. Remove and reserve section
1852.231–71.
■
[FR Doc. 2024–01124 Filed 1–23–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7510–13–P
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
49 CFR Parts 1011, 1104, 1115, and
1146
[Docket No. EP 762]
Revisions to Regulations for Expedited
Relief for Service Emergencies
Surface Transportation Board.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Surface Transportation
Board (STB or Board) adopts a final rule
amending its emergency service
regulations.
SUMMARY:
DATES:
The rule is effective February 23,
2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jonathon Binet at (202) 245–0368. If you
require an accommodation under the
Americans with Disabilities Act, please
call (202) 245–0245.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant
to its broad statutory mandate, the
Surface Transportation Board closely
monitors the rail industry’s service
performance. See 49 U.S.C. 1321, 11145;
see also 49 U.S.C. 10101, 11323, 10907.
Over the last decade, railroad service
challenges impacting a wide range of
geographic regions and commodities
have occurred with some frequency.
See, e.g., U.S. Rail Serv. Issues—
Performance Data Reporting, EP 724
(Sub-No. 4) (STB served Dec. 30, 2014);
STB Letter to CSX Transp., Inc.
Requesting Serv. Reporting (July 27,
2017); Chairman Oberman Letter to
Norfolk S. Regarding Serv. Issues (Nov.
23, 2021); 1 Urgent Issues in Freight Rail
Serv., EP 770 (STB served Apr. 7, 2022);
Oversight Hearing Pertaining to Union
Pac. R.R.’s Embargoes, EP 772 (STB
served Nov. 22, 2022).
In response to service challenges in
recent years, the Board has held a series
of public hearings to permit interested
[Removed and Reserved]
2. Remove and reserve section
1831.205–671.
■
VerDate Sep<11>2014
PART 1852—SOLICITATION
PROCEDURES AND CONTRACT
CLAUSES
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
1 Letters available at www.stb.gov (open tab
‘‘News & Communications’’ and select ‘‘NonDocketed Public Correspondence’’).
PO 00000
Frm 00026
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
persons to report on specific service
problems, to hear from rail industry
executives on plans to address rail
service problems generally, and to
explore additional options to improve
service. At one such hearing in October
2017, several shippers observed that the
Board’s regulations at 49 CFR part 1146,
which implement 49 U.S.C. 11123 and
govern expedited relief for service
emergencies, are rarely invoked, even in
times of serious rail service challenges.
See Pub. Listening Session Regarding
CSX Transp., Inc.’s Rail Serv. Issues, EP
742, Hr’g Tr. 89:13–22; 90:1; 150:3–14;
196:11–22; 197:1–16; 199:1–9 (Oct. 17,
2017).
Based on these concerns, and to better
understand the reasons for the lack of
use of the Board’s directed service
regulations, the Board announced on
March 15, 2018, that Board staff would
hold informal meetings with interested
persons to discuss and gather feedback
on the adequacy of the Board’s current
regulations regarding emergency service
and service inadequacies, and whether
and how the current regulations should
be modified to offer a more meaningful
path to relief. See Press Release, STB,
Board to Hold Informal Meetings on
Directed Serv. Reguls. Beginning in Apr.
(Mar. 15, 2018), www.stb.gov/newscommunications/latest-news/archivedpress-releases/.2 As a result, in the
second quarter of 2018 Board staff met
with representatives of a variety of
entities representing carrier and shipper
interests. A recurring concern expressed
by shipper interests was the amount of
time required under the existing
procedures to obtain relief for service
failures and the difficulty of satisfying
certain informational burdens. Although
carrier interests acknowledged that very
few emergency service petitions had
been filed in recent years, they
nevertheless generally asserted that the
existing procedures were sufficient, and
noted that the Board’s Rail Customer
and Public Assistance program (RCPA)
had been helpful in resolving acute
service issues informally.
By decision served April 7, 2022, the
Board announced that it would hold a
hearing on April 26 and 27, 2022, on
rail service problems impacting the
network and the recovery efforts
involving several Class I carriers.3 As
2 While these meetings also included discussion
of 49 CFR part 1147 (Temporary Relief Under 49
U.S.C. 10705 and 11102 for Service Inadequacies),
this proceeding concerns only 49 CFR part 1146
(Expedited Relief for Service Emergencies) pursuant
to 49 U.S.C. 11123.
3 Press Release, STB, STB Issues Hearing Notice
for Urgent Issues in Freight Rail Serv. (Apr. 7,
2022), www.stb.gov/news-communications/latestnews/pr-22–21/.
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
the hearing notice explained, the Board
had informally heard from a broad range
of stakeholders about inconsistent and
unreliable rail service throughout the
network and across commodity groups.
Urgent Issues in Freight Rail Serv., EP
770, slip op. at 2. These challenges
included tight car supply and unfilled
car orders, delays in transportation for
carload and bulk traffic, increased origin
dwell time for released unit trains,
missed switches, and ineffective
customer assistance. Id.
On April 22, 2022, the Board issued
a notice of proposed rulemaking in this
docket, proposing to amend its
emergency service regulations.
Revisions to Reguls. for Expedited Relief
for Serv. Emergencies (NPRM), EP 762
(STB served Apr. 22, 2022).4 The Board
explained in the NPRM that if the
service issues continue, they could
result in an increased need for
emergency Board action to meet the
needs of the public. NPRM, EP 762, slip
op. at 2. Indeed, since the issuance of
the NPRM, the Board has issued orders
to address service emergencies. See, e.g.,
Foster Poultry Farms—Ex Parte Pet. for
Emergency Serv. Ord., FD 36609 (STB
served June 17, 2022) (issuing, just two
days after the filing of the petition
seeking emergency service relief, an
order under 49 U.S.C. 11123 directing
Union Pacific to adhere, to the greatest
extent possible, to a schedule that
Union Pacific itself put forward). In
addition, the Board has proposed new
regulations that would, if adopted,
establish additional procedures to
govern reciprocal switching
determinations related to service
inadequacy. See Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, Reciprocal Switching for
Inadequate Serv., EP 711 (Sub-No. 2)
(STB served Sept. 7, 2023).
Background
Emergency service orders are
designed to preserve rail service where
there has been a substantial rail service
issue or failure that requires immediate
relief. Under 49 U.S.C. 11123(a), the
Board may issue an emergency service
order when it determines that there
exists ‘‘an emergency situation of such
magnitude as to have substantial
adverse effects on shippers, or on rail
service in a region of the United States,
or that a rail carrier . . . cannot
transport the traffic offered to it in a
manner that properly serves the
public.’’ 5 When the Board determines
4 The NPRM was published in the Federal
Register, 87 FR 25609 (May 5, 2022).
5 Under the statute, an emergency situation can be
created by ‘‘shortage of equipment, congestion of
traffic, unauthorized cessation of operations, failure
of existing commuter rail passenger transportation
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
that such a situation exists, it may: ‘‘(1)
direct the handling, routing, and
movement of the traffic of a rail carrier
and its distribution over its own or other
railroad lines; (2) require joint or
common use of railroad facilities; (3)
prescribe temporary through routes;
[and] (4) give directions for—(A)
preference or priority in transportation;
(B) embargoes; or (C) movement of
traffic under permits;’’ or, when the
service failure is caused by a cessation
of service by Amtrak, direct the
continuation of operations and related
functions. 49 U.S.C. 11123(a). The
Board may act on its own initiative or
pursuant to a petition, and emergency
service may be ordered summarily (i.e.,
without regard to the Administrative
Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 551–559). 49
U.S.C. 11123(b)(1). Board orders under
49 U.S.C. 11123 are subject to an initial
time limit of 30 days, but they may be
extended up to an additional 240 days
if the Board finds that emergency
conditions continue to exist. 49 U.S.C.
11123(a), (c).6
The current regulations at 49 CFR
1146.1(a) require that a petitioner
seeking relief show a substantial,
measurable deterioration or other
demonstrated inadequacy in rail service
by the incumbent carrier over an
identified period of time. Any petition
for relief must demonstrate that the
standard in 49 CFR 1146.1(a) is met,
provide a summary of discussions the
petitioner has had with the incumbent
carrier regarding the service problems
and the reasons why the incumbent is
unlikely to restore adequate rail service
within a reasonable period of time, and
include a commitment from an
alternative carrier to provide service
that can be performed safely without
degrading service to existing customers
of the alternative carrier and without
unreasonably interfering with the
incumbent’s overall ability to provide
service. 49 CFR 1146.1(b). A reply to the
petition must be filed by the incumbent
carrier within five business days, and a
rebuttal by the party requesting relief
may be filed within three business days
following submission of the reply. 49
CFR 1146.1(b)(2) and (3).
In the NPRM, the Board proposed to
amend part 1146 by (1) modifying the
procedures for parties seeking a Board
operations caused by a cessation of service by the
National Railroad Passenger Corporation, or other
failure of traffic movement.’’ 49 U.S.C. 11123(a).
6 In the case of an alternative carrier providing
service over an incumbent carrier’s lines, the
carriers themselves may establish the terms of
compensation and operations, with the Board
available to resolve disputes, including disputes
about compensation, if any arise. 49 U.S.C.
11123(b)(2).
PO 00000
Frm 00027
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
4565
order directing an incumbent carrier to
take action to remedy a service
emergency, (2) indicating that the Board
may act on its own initiative to direct
emergency service, (3) modifying the
informational requirements for parties
in emergency service proceedings, (4)
shortening the filing deadlines in
emergency service proceedings and
establishing a timeframe for Board
decisions, and (5) establishing an
accelerated process for certain acute
service emergencies. In response to the
NPRM, the Board received 18 opening
comments and five reply comments.7
Below, the Board addresses the
comments submitted and discusses the
clarifications and modifications being
adopted in this final rule. The text of the
final rule is appended to this decision.
Final Rule
Several commenters express support
for the Board’s proposal.8 For example,
ARA comments that the proposal would
reduce barriers and provide more
certainty for both shippers and
railroads, as well as enable the Board to
better address emergency service
situations, thus helping to prevent
localized service issues from impacting
the entire network. (ARA Comment 1.)
NACD points to the efficiencies the
proposal would bring, (NACD Comment
2), and emphasizes that such
‘‘[a]ccessible and efficient relief
mechanisms are especially needed now
in this unprecedented time of supply
chain problems,’’ (id. at 4). Shipper
7 Opening comments were filed by the
Association of American Railroads (AAR); the
American Chemistry Council, the Corn Refiners
Association, and The Fertilizer Institute
(collectively, the Coalition Associations); American
Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers (AFPM);
Agricultural Retailers Association (ARA); the
Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers and
Trainmen (BLET); CSX Transportation, Inc. (CSXT);
Industrial Minerals Association—North America
(IMA); the Military Surface Deployment and
Distribution Command (SDDC); the National
Association of Chemical Distributors (NACD); the
National Mining Association (NMA); the National
Grain and Feed Association (NGFA); Norfolk
Southern Railway Company (NS); Private Railcar
Food and Beverage Association (PRFBA); the
Renewable Fuels Association (RFA); the
Transportation Trades Department, AFL–CIO
(TTD); the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA);
the West Virginia Coal Association (WVCA); and
the Western Coal Traffic League, Freight Rail
Customer Alliance, National Coal Transportation
Association, and Portland Cement Association
(collectively, Shipper Groups).
Reply comments were filed by AAR, the Coalition
Associations, NGFA, the National Industrial
Transportation League (NITL) and the Institute of
Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI), and the Shipper
Groups.
8 (See, e.g., AFPM Comment 2; ARA Comment 1;
IMA Comment 2; NACD Comment 2; NGFA
Comment 1–2; PRFBA Comment 2; RFA Comment
2; Shipper Grps. Comment 1–2; SDDC Comment 1;
USDA Comment 1.)
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
4566
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Groups argue that the proposed changes
would clarify substantive standards and
improve the emergency service relief
procedures, (Shipper Grps. Comment 1–
2), as well as encourage carriers to act
more responsibly to avoid emergency
service issues in the first place, (id. at
8). USDA agrees that the proposal
would ‘‘improve rail service in times of
disruption and incentivize railroads to
maintain better service overall.’’ (USDA
Comment 1.)
AFPM, IMA, NACD, and PRFBA each
note how infrequently the Board’s
emergency service regulations have
been utilized and argue that this lack of
use justifies review of the provisions.
(AFPM Comment 6; IMA Comment 7;
NACD Comment 2–3; PRFBA Comment
7.) According to AFPM, rather than
pursuing emergency relief from the
Board, refiners simply accept the
temporary disruptions, often adjusting
production, storage, or fleet size. (AFPM
Comment 6–7; see also NACD Comment
2–3.) IMA similarly states that its
member companies have not petitioned
the Board for emergency service because
the existing process requires
information unavailable to them and
does not provide a timely result. (IMA
Comment 3.) Several commenters note
that shippers choose not to petition the
Board for emergency relief because they
fear retribution from railroads. (AFPM
Comment 6–7; PRFBA Comment 8 n.6;
IMA Comment 8 n.6.) 9
Other commenters support the
proposal but assert that the Board
should take further action. The
Coalition Associations, for example,
express strong support for the proposal,
stating that it provides ‘‘critical
improvements that will enhance the
utility of emergency service orders for
some circumstances,’’ but caution that
the rulemaking will not solve all, or
even most, service problems. (Coalition
Ass’ns Comment 1–2; see also NMA
Comment 2–3; NITL & ISRI Reply 1.)
TTD likewise supports the proposal but
also argues that the provisions in this
rulemaking will not fully address the
current rail service problems, which it
claims stem primarily from the
railroads’ staffing, equipment, and
scheduling decisions. (TTD Comment
1.) WVCA states it supports the NPRM
9 AFPM requests that the Board investigate
retribution by railroads toward shippers through
rate increases, reduction in service days, and more.
(AFPM Comment 6.) Similarly, WVCA asks the
Board to ‘‘convene a specific examination and
proceeding regarding rail service and the movement
of coal.’’ (WVCA Comment 12.) While these
requests are outside the scope of this proceeding,
stakeholders may share information about these
concerns through the Board’s RCPA program or
request informal meetings with the Board, as
appropriate.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
and encourages the Board to continue
its rail service oversight efforts. (WVCA
Comment 2, 12.)
AAR, CSXT, and NS each express
their support of the Board’s efforts to
ensure the accessibility of service relief
when necessary in times of emergency.
(AAR Comment 1; CSXT Comment 2;
NS Comment 2.) AAR supports ‘‘the
Board’s effort to properly structure
expedited relief where appropriate and
necessary to resolve emergency
situations,’’ and proposes several
modifications and additional
clarifications. (AAR Comment 1–2.)
CSXT expressly supports certain aspects
of the proposed rule and expresses
‘‘serious concerns’’ about others. (CSXT
Comment 2–3.) NS ‘‘supports review
and appropriate updates based on sound
policy and evidence,’’ but it notes that
the Board has ‘‘existing tools at its
disposal . . . that remain useful and
effective to address service issues in an
expedited manner,’’ and it offers ‘‘three
suggestions and minor modifications’’ to
the proposed rule. (NS Comment 2.)
Clarifying Remedial Pathways. In the
NPRM, the Board proposed adding
language to 49 CFR 1146.1(a) to clarify
that it may direct an incumbent carrier
or alternative carrier to provide service
and that it can act on its own initiative
as well as pursuant to a petition. NPRM,
EP 762, slip op. at 5. The Board noted
these changes would better align the
Board’s regulations with its statutory
authority and provide clarity to
stakeholders. Id. Several commenters
express support for one or both of these
clarifications, which merely codify the
Board’s existing statutory authority.10
Other commenters request additional
modifications and clarifications to other
aspects of part 1146.1(a). Specifically,
the Coalition Associations request that
the Board remove the phrase ‘‘over an
identified period of time,’’ arguing that
service emergencies can arise in short
order and that this language suggests a
shipper must wait for some time to pass
before petitioning the Board for
emergency service relief. (Coalition
Ass’ns Comment 2.) NGFA and Shipper
Groups ask the Board to address the
Board’s authority to issue emergency
service orders on an ex parte basis.
(NGFA Comment 3; Shipper Grps.
Comment 9 (citing Hasa, Inc. v. Union
Pac. R.R., NOR 42165 (STB served Aug.
21, 2019)).) According to Shipper
Groups, the reply and rebuttal filings
permitted in 49 CFR 1146.1(b) are
unnecessary when a second carrier is
not involved. (Shipper Grps. Comment
9.)
The Board finds it unnecessary to
remove the phrase ‘‘over an identified
period of time’’ from 49 CFR 1146.1(a).
This language does not restrict
petitioners from seeking emergency
service orders in quickly emerging
situations because the section prescribes
no minimum period that must pass
prior to filing. See Expedited Relief, EP
628, slip op. at 8 n.14. In addition, as
the Board has previously noted, the
language of 49 CFR 1146.1(a) in its
current format affords the Board the
needed flexibility to address varying
circumstances on a case-by-case basis.
See Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at
8–9.
Regarding the request from NGFA and
Shipper Groups that the Board address
its authority to issue emergency service
orders on an ex parte basis, the Board
agrees that 49 U.S.C. 11123 permits the
Board to order emergency service
without regard to Administrative
Procedure Act requirements. See 49
U.S.C. 11123(b)(1).11 Even though the
Board is modifying its regulations to
improve the processing time when
emergencies occur, there may still be
circumstances when the Board needs to
act on an ex parte basis. Under the
current proposal, the Board retains the
statutory authority to order emergency
service on an ex parte basis in
appropriate circumstances and may
waive its regulations when
appropriate.12
AAR and NS ask the Board to
articulate a standard for the types of
emergency situations that would be
eligible for relief under 49 CFR part
1146. (AAR Comment 3; NS Comment
3.) They argue that emergency service
relief should be available only in ‘‘real’’
or ‘‘true’’ emergencies. (AAR Comment
2; NS Comment 2.) According to AAR,
10 NACD, NMA, and Shipper Groups express
support for both clarifications. (See NACD
Comment 3; NMA Comment 2; Shipper Grps.
Comment 4.) CSXT,NITL, and ISRI state that they
support clarifying that the Board may direct an
emergency service order at the incumbent as well
as the alternative carrier, (see CSXT Comment 2;
NITL & ISRI Reply 1), while AFPM, IMA, and
PRFBA state they support clarifying that the Board
can act on its own initiative as well as on petition,
(see AFPM Comment 6; IMA Comment 7; PRFBA
Comment 7; NS Comment 2 (acknowledging that
the statute provides the Board authority to act on
its own initiative)).
11 The Board is subject to the Administrative
Procedure Act when it establishes the terms of
compensation if the railroads do not agree. 49
U.S.C. 11123(b)(1) and (2).
12 The procedures in the proposed regulations do
not address situations when the Board is acting on
its own initiative. NS argues that the Board should
ensure impacted rail carriers have an opportunity
to comment—either in writing or by telephonic
conference—before the Board orders emergency
service in these situations. (NS Comment 4.) Absent
extraordinary circumstances, the Board intends to
afford carriers an opportunity to be heard even
when the Board acts on its own initiative.
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
without further guidance, the
regulations could be used to ‘‘secure
leverage and immediate attention to
their particular service complaints.’’
(AAR Comment 5.) On reply, various
commenters argue AAR’s request is
unnecessary and overly restrictive. (See
Coalition Ass’ns Reply 9; NITL & ISRI
Reply 3.) The Coalition Associations
note that the existing process has been
in place for ‘‘nearly 25 years without the
objective standards AAR deems
‘essential’ ’’ and that the Board has
denied emergency relief when a
petitioner has improperly invoked 49
CFR 1146.1. (Coalition Ass’ns Reply
9.) 13 They argue that a case-by-case
approach is superior because the Board
cannot anticipate every scenario that
may arise. (Coalition Ass’ns Reply 9–10;
see also NITL & ISRI Reply 3; Shipper
Grps. Reply 2 (‘‘[w]hether relief is
appropriate should be determined based
on a full set of facts’’).)
AAR also asks that the Board require
petitioners seeking relief under 49 CFR
part 1146 to ‘‘affirm that there are no
alternative modes available or feasible.’’
(AAR Comment 17.) According to AAR,
the Board could not find there was a
‘‘real’’ emergency if the petitioner could
shift its traffic to truck, barge, or another
mode. (Id.) In response, the Coalition
Associations note that it is unclear
whether AAR is asking the Board to
require the petitioner to include a sworn
statement or market dominance analysis
and that the latter would be impractical
in an emergency. (Coalition Ass’ns
Reply 14.) The Coalition Associations
also assert that the ‘‘time, cost, and
uncertainty of pursuing emergency
service relief will always outweigh the
additional cost of a non-rail
transportation alternative to avoid the
emergency,’’ so AAR’s inference that
shippers would petition for an
emergency service order when they
have alternatives available is
‘‘unrealistic and cynical.’’ (Coalition
Ass’ns Reply 14; see also Shipper Grps.
Reply 8 (‘‘[O]ne would expect that a
shipper that had a viable, economic
option to pursue would choose that
option before seeking emergency
relief.’’).) Shipper Groups claim that
13 In support of its argument, Coalition
Association cite to Granite State Concrete Company
v. B&M Corporation, NOR 42083 (STB served Sept.
15, 2003) (denying an emergency service order but
commencing a proceeding); Keokuk Junction
Railway—Alternative Rail Service—Line of Toledo,
Peoria & Western Railway, FD 34397 (STB served
Oct. 31, 2003) (denying an emergency service order
because alleged service inadequacy was based
primarily upon rate levels); and Ohio Valley
Railroad—Petition to Restore Switch Connection &
Other Relief, FD 34608 (STB served Feb. 23, 2005)
(denying an emergency service order but granting
relief under 49 U.S.C. 10742).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
carriers are attempting to increase the
burden on petitioners by inserting a
‘‘mini-market dominance case’’ into
emergency service proceedings. (Id.)
AAR’s and NS’s proposal to limit the
type of situations eligible for emergency
relief under 49 CFR part 1146 is not
necessary and would complicate the
process, increase the burden on
shippers, and undermine the flexibility
provided by the current regulations.14 In
addition, as various commenters have
observed, the substantive standard in
the part 1146 regulations has been in
place for nearly 25 years without this
limitation, during which time the Board
has denied petitions where it found the
situation did not constitute an
emergency. See, e.g., S.F. Bay R.R.—
Mare Island Pet. for Emergency Serv.
Ord. & Pet. for Declaratory Ord.—
Lennar Mare Island, LLC, FD 35360, slip
op. at 3 (STB served Dec. 6, 2010)
(denying an emergency service petition
‘‘because the record does not show that
an emergency exists’’). The Board has
previously emphasized that the
emergency service procedures are ‘‘not
meant to redress minor service
disruptions,’’ Expedited Relief, EP 628,
slip op. at 2, but rather provide
temporary relief for serious ones, id. at
8.
The Board also declines to adopt
AAR’s suggestion to require petitioners
to affirm that no alternative modes of
transportation are feasible or available.
Generally, it seems unlikely that a
shipper would seek emergency service
relief from the Board if it has easy
access to other transportation options,
as the Coalition Associations have
observed. However, in evaluating
emergency service petitions, the Board
has considered and will continue to
consider the transportation environment
in which the emergency occurs and the
impact of the inadequate rail service on
14 In contrast, the Board has proposed using
objective standards, rather than a flexible case-bycase approach, to determine when a reciprocal
switching arrangement should be prescribed, since
objective standards in that context ‘‘would create an
incentive for rail carriers to provide adequate
service in the first instance and because, if a rail
carrier did not do so, the affected shippers and
receivers would then have more certainty in their
opportunities to obtain line-haul service from an
alternate carrier.’’ See Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, Reciprocal Switching for Inadequate
Serv., EP 711 (Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 9–10 (STB
served Sept. 7, 2023). Those proposed objective
standards seek to ‘‘provide the certainty that is
needed to protect the public interest, as well as the
interests of rail customers, in adequate service on
a general and sustained basis.’’ Id. at 5. The Board
made clear, however, that these standards should
not be used ‘‘for the prescription of emergency
service under part 1146.’’ Id. at 10–11. The Board
finds that a more flexible approach is appropriate
here, given the nature of an emergency finding, its
related effects, and generally shorter remedy period.
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
4567
the affected shippers. Roseburg Forest
Prod. Co.—Alt. Rail Serv.—Cent. Or. &
Pac. R.R., FD 35175, slip op. at 7–8 (STB
served Mar. 4, 2009); Pioneer Indus.
Ry.—Alt. Rail Serv.—Cent. Ill. R.R., FD
34917, slip op. at 9–11 (STB served Jan.
12, 2007).
NS expresses its concern that the
Board might base an emergency service
order on the railroad performance data
collected under 49 CFR part 1250
without obtaining additional
information from all parties involved.
(NS Comment 3.) NS argues that,
although railroad performance data
might identify service trends, those
trends do not necessarily amount to
service emergencies under 49 U.S.C.
11123. (Id.) The Board appreciates the
significance of ordering emergency
service and the operational, safety, and
financial implications it may have on
carriers, and it anticipates getting more
information beyond service trends in
individual emergency service cases to
aid the Board in appropriately resolving
these matters. The procedures in the
proposed regulations thus allow an
opportunity for carriers to provide
specific information to the Board about
the situation at hand.
Lastly, AAR requests the Board either
‘‘clarify that it will not invoke [49 CFR]
1146.1 authority on its own motion if
the issue has been the subject of [an]
RCPA informal dispute resolution
process about which the Board was
aware,’’ or add a requirement that the
Board ‘‘certify when it invokes its [49
CFR] 1146.1 authority on its own
motion, that none of the information
leading to such invocation came from an
RCPA informal dispute resolution
process.’’ (AAR Comment 15.) As the
Board explained in the NPRM, RCPA
serves as a resource for the Board’s
stakeholders, and a key part of RCPA’s
mission involves providing informal
facilitation services to shippers and
other parties without charge to resolve
disputes with railroads. Requests for
RCPA assistance, including informal
facilitation services, are kept
confidential and not shared with other
STB offices. Accordingly, the Board
does not find it necessary to add the
language requested by AAR.
Modifying Petition Requirements.
Currently, under 49 CFR
1146.1(b)(1)(iii), a petitioner must have
a commitment from another available
railroad to provide alternative service
and explain how the alternative service
would be provided safely without
degrading service to the alternative
carrier’s existing customers and without
unreasonably interfering with the
incumbent’s overall ability to provide
service. As the Board discussed in the
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
4568
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
NPRM, many proponents of a rule
modification have expressed frustration
with the requirement to secure an
alternative carrier in advance (i.e., a
commitment to be included in a
petition) during a service emergency
because potential alternative carriers
may be reluctant to participate in
emergency alternative service. NPRM,
EP 762, slip op. at 5. The Board stated
in the NPRM that requiring an advance
commitment from an alternative carrier
as a condition to filing an emergency
service petition is an unnecessary
burden on petitioners experiencing a
service crisis that undermines the
usefulness of this important statutory
remedy. Id. at 5–6. Accordingly, the
Board proposed removing that
requirement and instead requiring
petitioners to submit only a list of
possible alternative carriers, based on
the petitioner’s understanding of other
rail carriers’ nearby operations. Id. at 6.
The Board also proposed requiring the
incumbent carrier and alternative
carriers, if any, to address in the first
instance whether the specific remedy
proposed by the petitioner would be
unsafe or infeasible, or whether it would
substantially impair the replying
carrier’s ability to serve its other
customers adequately or fulfill its
common carrier obligations. Id.
Regarding the requirement that petitions
include an explanation of reasons why
the incumbent carrier is unlikely to
restore rail service, the Board proposed
to clarify that the explanation need only
take the form of a ‘‘summary’’ to the
extent that such information is available
to the petitioner. Id. The Board reasoned
that these changes would place the
informational requirements on the
parties most likely to have the
information. Id.
According to NGFA, these changes are
‘‘an extremely equitable and more
efficient way to ensure the Board is
presented with the evidence it needs to
make a decision in an efficient manner.’’
(NGFA Comment 4–5.) Shipper Groups,
AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA each express
support for how these changes place the
burden to provide certain relevant
information on the entity likely to have
direct knowledge of it. (AFPM Comment
8; IMA Comment 10; PRFBA Comment
10; Shipper Grps. Comment 5–6.)
Shipper Groups argue that the changes
would ‘‘lead to the development of a
better evidentiary record and more
efficient and expeditious decisionmaking,’’ further the rail transportation
policy goals of requiring fair and
expeditious regulatory decisions when
regulation is required, and provide for
the expeditious handling and resolution
of proceedings. (Shipper Grps.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
Comment 5–6 (citing 49 U.S.C.
10101(2), (15)).) AFPM, IMA, and
PRFBA note that these changes would
incentivize rail shippers to bring cases
that may have gone unfiled in the past
for lack of evidence not within the
petitioner’s control. (AFPM Comment 8;
IMA Comment 10; PRFBA Comment
10.)
RFA projects that the Board’s
proposal to eliminate the requirement
for an advance commitment from an
alternative carrier and instead require
only a list of potential alternative
carriers would ease the burden on
petitioners, streamline the petition
process, and minimize disruptions in
important customer service dynamics
with carriers. (RFA Comment 1.)
According to NACD, NGFA, and
Shipper Groups, the advance
commitment requirement has made it
excessively difficult for shippers
seeking relief as the regulations
intended. (NACD Comment 3; NGFA
Comment 4; Shipper Grps. Reply 6; see
also Shipper Grps. Comment 6.)
According to Shipper Groups, an
alternative carrier ‘‘may be reluctant to
commit publicly in advance to
providing alternative service, especially
if it is otherwise dependent on the
incumbent carrier in some way, such as
a short line that is beholden to the
affected carrier for all or much of its
business or otherwise subject to ‘paper
barriers’ established by the incumbent.’’
(Shipper Grps. Reply 6.) NITL and ISRI
contend that this change will enhance
the utility of the emergency service
remedy. (NITL & ISRI Reply 2.)
On the other hand, AAR and CSXT
oppose this change. AAR argues that
deferring the question of whether an
alternative carrier is available and able
to provide emergency service would be
impractical given the short time frames,
‘‘unfairly penalize the alternative carrier
by suddenly dragging them into an
emergency proceeding as to which they
had no prior knowledge,’’ and hinder
the Board’s ability to ‘‘act quickly and
decisively, with knowledge of all
relevant facts.’’ (AAR Comment 7.)
According to AAR, for the Board to be
aware of factors affecting an alternative
carrier’s ability to provide service, such
as restrictions on service in labor
contracts or operational difficulties
being experienced by the alternative
carrier, the alternative carrier must be
‘‘involved on the frontend.’’ (Id. at 9.)
AAR claims its concerns are exacerbated
by the tight timelines proposed. (Id.)
CSXT argues that retaining the
requirement for an advance
commitment would promote the speed
and success of the emergency service
process and would ensure that any
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Board action is consistent with the
prohibition in 49 U.S.C. 11123 of any
Board action that would ‘‘cause a rail
carrier to operate in violation of this
part’’ or ‘‘impair substantially the ability
of a rail carrier to serve its own
customers adequately, or to fulfill its
common carrier obligations.’’ (CSXT
Comment 6 (quoting 49 U.S.C.
11123(c)(2)(A)–(B)).) CSXT further
argues that requiring petitioners to
obtain advance commitment from an
alternative carrier is not ‘‘an
obstruction’’ to their ability to obtain
relief but rather ‘‘essential’’ because it
‘‘can only expedite the process by
ensuring the [alternative] carrier is
ready, willing, and able to act at the
earliest possible point in the remedial
process.’’ (Id. at 7.)
AAR and CSXT both note that the
Board—when it adopted 49 CFR
1146.1—considered and rejected the
position the Board took in the NPRM.
(AAR Comment 8 (quoting Expedited
Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 11); CSXT
Comment 7.) AAR argues that nothing
has changed since then that would make
an alternative carrier’s advance
commitment less essential, (AAR
Comment 8), and CSXT asserts that ‘‘the
Board must offer a reasoned decision
supported by substantial evidence for
making any change to [its] conclusion.’’
(CSXT Comment 7–8 (citing Jicarilla
Apache Nation v. Dep’t of Interior, 613
F.3d 1112, 1120 (D.C. Cir. 2010)).)
In response to these concerns, the
Coalition Associations suggest the Board
require petitioners to serve their
petitions on the identified alternative
carriers and to mandate that those
carriers participate in the process.
(Coalition Ass’ns Reply 6, see also
NGFA Comment 5–6 (suggesting the
Board mandate that identified
alternative carriers reply to a petition).)
NGFA urges the Board to ‘‘err on the
side [of] collecting as much relevant
information as possible, as quickly as
possible, from the incumbent and an
identified alternative carrier.’’ (NGFA
Comment 6.) NITL and ISRI also oppose
the carriers’ proposal to retain the
advance commitment requirement,
arguing that elimination of this
requirement would increase the
usefulness of the emergency service
regulations. (NITL & ISRI Reply 3.)
The Board does not find AAR’s and
CSXT’s concerns persuasive and finds it
in the public interest to eliminate the
advance commitment requirement, as
was proposed in the NPRM. Requiring
shippers to obtain an advance
commitment from an alternative carrier
has unduly hindered the objectives of
the emergency service process for the
reasons stated in the NPRM, slip op. at
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
5–6, and by various commenters, see
supra at 9–10, and removing this
obstacle will help the process work
more effectively. As the Board
acknowledged in the NPRM, and as
AAR and CSXT point out, the Board
took a different position in the 1998
decision, stating that the absence of an
advance commitment could create
safety concerns, impair service to the
alternative carrier’s customers, or hurt
the alternative carrier’s finances. NPRM,
slip op. at 5 (citing Expedited Relief for
Serv. Inadequacies, EP 628, slip op. at
11). However, as the Board explained in
the NPRM, feedback from rail users and
the agency’s own observations have led
the Board to conclude that the
disadvantages of the advance
commitment requirement outweigh any
potential advantages, and that the
concerns expressed in the 1998 decision
can be adequately addressed when
considering individual requests. See id.
Moreover, the inability of shippers to
obtain such advance commitments from
alternative carriers appears to have been
a key driver in shippers’ failure to use
the regulatory process at all. Id. In
promulgating the original regulations in
1998, the Board did not anticipate that
the alternative carrier commitment
requirement would lead to that result,
and AAR and CSXT cite no precedent
requiring the Board to ignore its
experience under the regulations. With
regard to the NGFA’s suggestion, the
Board will require an identified
alternative carrier to reply to a petition.
Though the Board noted in the NPRM
that it could take appropriate action to
request more information from an
alternative carrier, it has determined
that—for the Board to best meet its
information needs and carry out its
statutory obligations in a more efficient
manner—the Board will require that an
alternative carrier address whether the
specific remedy would be unsafe or
infeasible, or would substantially impair
the carrier’s ability to serve its other
customers adequately or fulfill its
common carrier obligations.
Numerous commenters support the
Board’s proposal to require incumbent
carriers to first address whether the
proposed remedy would be unsafe or
infeasible or whether it would
substantially impair the replying
carrier’s ability to adequately serve its
other customers or fulfill its common
carrier obligations.15 AFPM, IMA, and
PRFBA assert that such a procedural
shift makes sense in proceedings where
the ‘‘use of the discovery process
15 (See, e.g., AFPM Comment 8; BLET Comment
4; IMA Comment 10; NACD Comment 3; PRFBA
Comment 10; USDA Comment 1.)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
[would be] too slow to allow the Board
to act expediently.’’ (AFPM Comment 9;
IMA Comment 10; PRFBA Comment
10.) NACD also supports this proposed
change, calling it a ‘‘common sense
reform,’’ (NACD Comment 3), and CSXT
agrees that it is appropriate to ask the
rail carrier rather than the shipper to
address the safety and feasibility of the
requested service, (CSXT Comment 3).
BLET supports the Board’s proposal to
allow an alternative carrier to reply to
the petition, arguing that its employees
and members could provide valuable
insight into how operations are
happening in the field. (BLET Comment
4.)
The Coalition Associations suggest
the Board consider requiring railroads to
provide certain minimum information
to validate their claims that a remedy is
unsafe or infeasible, or that it will
interfere with their ability to serve their
other customers. (Coalition Ass’ns
Comment 7.) Similarly, Shipper Groups
ask the Board to require carriers to make
a ‘‘specific and documented showing,’’
rather than ‘‘conclusory assertions,’’ of
substantial impairment in order to
defeat a request for emergency service
relief. (Shipper Grps. Comment 7.)
According to Shipper Groups, carriers
will seek to preserve service that is more
profitable or that limits liquidated
damages or other contractual exposure.
(Id.) The Coalition Associations also ask
the Board to clarify that a petition
would not be defeated automatically if
the proposed emergency service would
affect another shipper. (Coalition Ass’ns
Comment 8.)
AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA argue the
Board should shift the burden of proof
to the railroads if a petitioner can
demonstrate a prima facie case of ‘‘a
substantial, measurable service
deterioration or other demonstrated
inadequacy over an identified period of
time by the incumbent carrier.’’ (AFPM
Comment 9; IMA Comment 10; PRFBA
Comment 10.) They further ask the
Board to establish a defined standard for
that prima facie showing of service
deterioration, which could be based on,
for example, the percentage of missed
switches for first mile/last mile, trip
plan compliance data, or plant/facility
shutdown/slowdown in the past,
present, or future. (AFPM Comment 9–
10; IMA Comment 10–11; PRFBA
Comment 11.) AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA
also suggest that in cases where the
incumbent railroad’s reply fails to
adequately rebut the petitioner’s prima
facie case, the Board should issue its
order five days after the reply,
effectively eliminating the rebuttal
period and expediting the case by two
days. (AFPM Comment 11; IMA
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
4569
Comment 13; PRFBA Comment 13.)
AAR opposes this request, arguing that
the Board’s authority under 49 U.S.C.
11123 is ‘‘limited to emergency
situations, not generalized service
complaints,’’ and that service metrics,
‘‘whether based on first-mile/last-mile
data or trip plan compliance, are illsuited to the identification of
emergencies.’’ (AAR Reply 4–5.) AAR
further argues that proponents of a
Board order are required to make their
case in support of the order, and that it
would be unfair to further shorten a
carrier’s response time while also
shifting the burden to the carrier. (Id. at
5.)
Since emergencies can take various
forms, flexibility is critical in
determining whether a particular
situation constitutes an emergency
requiring expeditious Board action. The
Board will not attempt to define the
required minimum information
appropriate for every case, nor will it
establish a requirement for a carrier to
make ‘‘a specific and documented
showing’’ of substantial impairment in
its ability to serve its other customers to
defeat a request for an emergency
service order. The Board seeks to gain
a quick and accurate understanding of
the circumstances underlying requests
for relief so it can act to serve the public
when necessary, not bog proceedings
down with technical requirements that
might undermine the purpose of these
emergency proceedings. To be sure,
especially given the expedited
timelines, the Board expects that parties
will support their claims with available
evidence. The Board will not accept
bald assertions regarding feasibility or
safety as evidence of such, but
circumstances will unfold differently
from case to case, and the Board must
maintain flexibility so it can evaluate all
aspects of a case and act
appropriately.16 Additionally,
emergencies often arise from
unexpected or unanticipated
circumstances, and the Board must have
the flexibility to respond to those
circumstances promptly.
The Board also clarifies that petitions,
regardless of whether they seek
emergency service from incumbent
carrier or an alternative, will not
automatically be defeated simply
16 The Board is mindful that whether railroad
operations are safe is generally within the purview
of the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA). The
Board’s regulations accordingly require that
petitions for emergency service relief under part
1146 be served on FRA. See 49 CFR 1146.1(e),
1146.2(e). Carriers should demonstrate that they
have undertaken the requisite advance planning
necessary to assure safe operations, including
consideration of FRA safety regulations. See
Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 13 n.19.
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
4570
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
because the proposed emergency service
order would affect another party.
Rather, the concern lies with whether a
proposal would ‘‘substantially impair’’ a
carrier’s ability to serve its other
customers or fulfill its common carrier
obligations, which is why the Board is
asking for replies from carriers to
address this matter. Pursuant to 49
U.S.C. 1146.1(a), the Board will then
consider this information and the effects
on other shippers of ordering emergency
service as part of its analysis when
determining whether emergency service
is suitable under the circumstances and
whether to order relief.
In addition, the Board declines to
shift the burden of proof onto carriers by
requiring a petitioner only to make a
defined prima facie showing of a
substantial and measurable service
deterioration or another demonstrated
service inadequacy, as requested by
certain shipper interests. As AAR notes,
this would shift the burden from
petitioners to carriers while also giving
carriers less time to respond. While the
regulations adopted here seek to remove
unnecessary burdens on petitioners,
such as obtaining the advance
commitment from alternative carriers,
petitioners must still bear the burden of
establishing the need for such relief.
CSXT and NS ask the Board to require
petitioners seeking relief under 49 CFR
1146.1 to describe the efforts taken to
resolve the issue through other means,
as the Board is proposing for the new,
accelerated process under 49 CFR
1146.2. (CSXT Comment 11; NS
Comment 12.) According to CSXT, ‘‘it
would be appropriate to likewise
encourage good faith efforts at informal
dispute resolution prior to seeking the
extraordinary relief of an emergency
service order.’’ (CSXT Comment 11.) NS
notes that the Board’s reasoning for
including this requirement in 49 CFR
1146.2, which it states appears related
to the timeline of the accelerated
process, seems to apply equally to the
49 CFR 1146.1 process, which the Board
also proposes to shorten. (NS Comment
12.)
The Board agrees that it is appropriate
to require petitioners seeking relief
under 49 CFR 1146.1 to describe efforts
taken to resolve issues prior to the filing
of the petition. The Board prefers
informal resolution of disputes
whenever possible, and requiring
petitioners to describe efforts taken to
arrive at solutions prior to emergency
service will encourage parties to make
such efforts in good faith rather than
seeking an order from the Board as a
matter of first resort. Moreover, many
petitions already include this
information to some degree, given that
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
the current regulations require petitions
to include a ‘‘summary of the
petitioner’s discussions with the
incumbent carrier of the service
problems,’’ so mandating that
petitioners describe their efforts at
resolution in 49 CFR 1146.1 would not
significantly increase their burden.
Finally, requiring this information in 49
CFR 1146.1 petitions would better align
that process with the 49 CFR 1146.2
process and help ensure that the Board
receives all information necessary to
understand the underlying emergency
and overall circumstances. 49 CFR
1146.1(b)(ii) will be amended to adopt
this requirement.
Shipper Groups argue that a carrier
should face additional consequences,
such as penalties or damages, when it
has ‘‘deprived itself of the ability to
meet its commitments and obligations’’
due to underinvestment in employees
and other resources, particularly when
it cannot provide emergency service due
to this underinvestment. (Shipper Grps.
Comment 8.) According to Shipper
Groups, penalties would incentivize
carriers to act more proactively to
maintain their service commitments and
reduce the need for emergency service
orders altogether. (Id.) NGFA agrees,
adding that the Board should more
aggressively penalize carriers that do
not comply with emergency service
orders or are unable to provide
emergency service relief due to business
or operational decisions. (NFGA Reply
3–4.) NGFA further contends that the
Board should interpret the phrase ‘‘each
violation’’ more broadly, for example,
on a per-car basis instead of a per-train
basis. (Id. at 4.) AAR, in contrast,
maintains that a punitive approach is
not authorized by 49 U.S.C. 11123,
which contemplates alternative carriers
compensating incumbent carriers for the
use of incumbents’ equipment and
facilities. (AAR Reply 2–3 (quoting Pyco
Indus., Inc.—Alt. Rail Serv.—S. Plains
Switching, Ltd. Co., FD 34889 et al, slip
op. at 4–5 (STB served Jan. 11, 2008)).)
The Board will not adopt these
changes suggested by Shipper Groups
and NGFA. Section 11123, from which
the Board derives its emergency
authority, contains no language or
provision authorizing penalties or
damages. Furthermore, the Board
rejected similar arguments when
adopting the existing regulations, noting
that emergency service relief ‘‘is to be
used for restorative or alleviative
purposes only, and not as a punitive or
preventive measure.’’ Expedited Relief,
EP 628, slip op. at 7.17
17 See also Notice of Proposed Rulemaking,
Reciprocal Switching for Inadequate Serv., EP 711
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
Finally, APFM, IMA, and PRFBA
want the Board to create a ‘‘reasonable
railroad standard’’ requiring ‘‘the
incumbent railroad to cooperate in a
reasonable manner with the petitioner
and the alternative carrier, while the
[emergency service] order is in effect.’’
(AFPM Comment 10; IMA Comment 11–
12; PRFBA Comment 11–12.) The Board
finds that implementing such a
‘‘reasonable railroad’’ standard is not
necessary because acting reasonably, in
good faith and in compliance with
Board orders, is already required. See 49
U.S.C. 10702. Any allegation of
unreasonableness, bad faith or noncompliance can and will be dealt with
on a case-by-case basis.
Modifying the Regulatory Timeframe.
In response to stakeholders’ previouslyexpressed concerns about the overall
length of the current 49 CFR 1146.1
process, as well as the lack of a date
certain by which a Board decision can
be expected, the Board proposed in the
NPRM to shorten the filing deadlines for
replies and rebuttals set forth in 49 CFR
1146.1 and to establish a target
timeframe for a Board decision. NPRM,
EP 762, slip op. at 7. The Board
explained that by shortening the
timeframe and indicating when the
parties can expect a decision by the
Board, the proposed amendments would
further streamline the process for all
parties involved in an emergency
service proceeding. Id.
Many commenters support this aspect
of the Board’s proposal.18 AFPM, IMA,
and PRFBA assert that shortening the
procedural timeline would expedite the
proceeding where time is clearly of the
essence. (AFPM Comment 10–11; IMA
Comment 13; PRFBA Comment 13.)
NGFA asserts that a short timeline is
imperative to avoid severe damage to a
petitioner’s business and customers
since shippers will have exhausted all
commercial remedies before seeking
Board intervention. (NGFA Comment 5.)
According to Shipper Groups, the
Board’s proposal to shorten the filing
deadlines and establish a target
timeframe for a Board decision is
reasonable and appropriate. (Shipper
Grps. Comment 8.)
Several commenters ask the Board to
shorten the 49 CFR 1146.1 timeline
further still. According to RFA, ‘‘the
modified timeline is too lengthy to
(Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 10 (STB served Sept. 6,
2023) (distinguishing the standard for obtaining a
reciprocal switching order from complaint-based
common carrier obligation cases under 49 U.S.C.
11101(a)).
18 (See AFPM Comment 10–11; BLET Comment 4;
IMA Comment 13; NACD Comment 3; NGFA
Comment 5; PRFBA Comment 13; RFA Comment 2;
Shipper Grps. Comment 8; USDA Comment 1.)
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
efficiently address emergencies in a
timely manner.’’ (RFA Comment 2.)
RFA explains that because ethanol
facilities can typically store less than
one week’s production on-site,
shortening the process by a few days
would not fully address emergency
situations at these facilities. (Id.) ARA
presents a similar argument, noting that
timely delivery of products, such as
fertilizer, is critical for agricultural
retailers as crop production is weatherdependent and seasonal. (ARA
Comment 1.) 19
AAR opposes shortening the timeline
under 49 CFR 1146.1, arguing that
‘‘[r]educing the time available for the
parties to make an adequate record is
not the solution to uncertainty over how
quickly relief will be ordered,’’ and
suggests that modifying the proposed
rule to provide firm decision deadlines
may help alleviate this concern. (AAR
Comment 13; see also CSXT Comment
12 (asking the Board to provide firm
decision deadlines for 49 CFR 1146.1
and 1146.2).) AAR notes that the Board
previously rejected shorter timelines
and argues that the concerns expressed
in that decision remain valid today.
(AAR Comment 12 (quoting Expedited
Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 16 (‘‘[w]e do
not believe that a shorter time frame is
feasible, given the nature of the relief
sought, the need for an adequately
developed record regarding the factual
predicate for such action, and the ability
of the parties to implement the
proposed arrangement safely and
without harm to either railroad or their
other shippers.’’).) According to AAR,
shortening the timeline is even less
feasible under the current proposal
because the Board is also eliminating
the requirement that petitioners obtain
an advance commitment from an
alternative carrier. (Id.) AAR asserts
petitioners can consider the total
timeline when deciding when to file a
petition. (Id. at 13.) In addition, AAR
urges the Board to reject the requests to
further shorten the proposal’s timelines.
(AAR Reply 6.) AAR claims the
proposal’s timelines are ‘‘already so
short as to strain feasibility’’ and asserts
shippers can time the filing of their
19 BLET asks the Board to permit extension of the
deadlines if all parties agree, (BLET Comment 4),
and AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA urge the Board to
grant extension requests in extraordinary
circumstances only, (AFPM Comment 11, IMA
Comment 13; PRFBA Comment 13). In most cases,
extension requests agreed upon by all parties to an
emergency service proceeding are likely to be
appropriate. However, given the urgent nature of
the situations underlying emergency service
proceedings, the Board will grant unilateral
extension requests only for good cause. The Board
will amend 49 CFR 1104.7 to clarify that requests
for an extension under 49 CFR part 1146 must be
filed as early as possible under the circumstances.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
petitions ‘‘to ensure relief can be
provided in the correct amount of time.’’
(Id.)
On reply, Shipper Groups assert that
AAR’s proposals are unnecessary or at
least speculative at this time, and they
state that a firm decision deadline might
prevent the Board from taking the time
that is needed in complex situations.
(Shipper Grps. Reply 7.) The Coalition
Associations state they are amenable to
forgoing the shortening of the timelines
in 49 CFR 1146.1 since the Board has
proposed an accelerated process in 49
CFR 1146.2. (Coalition Ass’ns Reply 6–
7.)
The Board is not persuaded by AAR’s
arguments for retaining the existing
timeline in 49 CFR 1146.1. As explained
in the NPRM, the Board agrees with
stakeholders that have expressed
concern that the process in 1146.1 is too
lengthy in the context of a service
emergency. NPRM, EP 762, slip op. at 7.
Although the Board rejected a shorter
timeframe in 1998, its subsequent
experience with 49 CFR 1146.1 has
convinced the Board that a shorter time
frame would in fact be feasible, contrary
to what the Board anticipated when it
adopted these regulations. See Foster
Farms—Ex Parte Pet. for Emergency
Serv. Ord., FD 36609 (STB served June
17, 2022).
Because the final rule includes an
accelerated process for acute service
emergencies, the Board does not find it
necessary to further shorten the
timelines in 49 CFR 1146.1 beyond the
periods initially proposed in the NPRM.
The Board will also refrain from setting
a firm decision deadline in the
regulations. The Board intends to issue
decisions within five days of the
rebuttal deadline, as proposed in the
NPRM, but setting a firm deadline for
this part of the regulations would serve
only to complicate the decision-making
process by constraining the Board (or
requiring additional procedural
decisions) in situations where a specific
deadline might prove to be
impracticable. The Board again
emphasizes that flexibility is vital in
conducting these proceedings.
Establishing an Accelerated Process to
Handle Acute Service Emergencies. In
an effort to more efficiently address the
most urgent service emergencies in a
more expeditious manner, the Board
proposed in the NPRM to establish a
new, accelerated process at new 49 CFR
1146.2 for certain acute service
emergencies presenting potential
imminent harm and threatening
potentially severe adverse consequences
to the petitioner, its customers, or the
public. NPRM, EP 762, slip op. at 7.
Under the new process proposed by the
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
4571
Board, a petitioner seeking accelerated
relief must indicate that it is seeking
such relief pursuant to that process,
include a description of specific and
particularized actions that can be
performed by the incumbent or an
alternative carrier and ordered by the
Board,20 and demonstrate that the
described emergency presents an
imminent significant harm and
threatens potentially severe adverse
consequences to the petitioner, its
customers, or the public. Id. To satisfy
this standard, the Board proposed that
the petitioner must demonstrate the
alleged harm will occur before any relief
could be ordered under 49 CFR 1146.1
and that any relief ordered by the Board
pursuant to 49 CFR 1146.1 would be
rendered ineffective. NPRM, EP 762,
slip op. at 7. The Board noted that such
severe adverse circumstances would
exist when there is a clear and present
threat to public health, safety, or food
security, or a high probability of
business closures or immediate and
extended plant shutdowns. Id.
Additionally, the Board proposed that
the petition must include a verified
description of any efforts taken to
resolve the issue through other means,
such as consultation with RCPA or
direct discussions with the incumbent
railroad. Id. at 8. The Board proposed to
limit the length of petitions to three
substantive pages (not including cover
page, verifications, or certificate of
service), noting that a petitioner could
present further evidence in support of
its petition during a telephonic or
virtual hearing. Id.
Under the Board’s proposal, a petition
filed under the proposed 49 CFR 1146.2
would be assigned to a designated Board
Member for initial resolution. NPRM, EP
762, slip op. at 8. The Board proposed
that the Board Member designation
would rotate on a quarterly basis, and if
the designated Board Member is
unavailable, the next Board Member in
the rotation would be assigned to
evaluate the petition. Id. The designated
Board Member would notify the parties
regarding a telephonic or virtual hearing
to be held between 24 and 48 hours after
receipt of the petition or as soon
thereafter as logistically possible. Id.
Given the accelerated process, the
Board’s proposed schedule did not
include a period for written replies—
oral replies to the petition would occur
during the hearing—however, the
designated Board Member could order
20 Because the statute limits the Board’s
emergency service authority to the actions
enumerated in 49 U.S.C. 11123(a), the proposal
limited any relief ordered pursuant to the
accelerated process to the actions listed in the
statute. NPRM, EP 762, slip op. at 7 n.9.
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
4572
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the carriers to submit, or the carriers
could voluntarily submit, an alternative
plan to address the emergency within 24
hours of the hearing. Id. The Board’s
proposal contemplated an initial
decision on the merits of the petition by
the designated Board Member within
two business days after completion of
the hearing. Id. That initial decision
could be appealed to the entire Board
pursuant to 49 CFR 1115.2. Id.
The Board proposed that any relief
granted under 49 CFR 1146.2 clearly
avoid any substantial impairment of the
ability of a rail carrier to serve its own
customers adequately or to fulfill its
common carrier obligations. NPRM, EP
762, slip op. at 8–9. Given the
accelerated nature of this process, the
Board also proposed a 20-day limit on
relief, which it stated should provide
petitioners with sufficient time to
pursue relief up to 240 days, if
necessary, under 49 CFR 1146.1. Id. at
9. Under the Board’s proposal, if a
petition for relief under 49 CFR 1146.2
is denied for failure to satisfy the
standard for relief, the petitioner may
appeal that ruling to the entire Board, or
the petitioner may file a new petition
pursuant to 49 CFR 1146.1 regarding the
same service emergency. NPRM, EP 762,
slip op. at 8.
According to the Coalition
Associations, the creation of this new
accelerated process is the ‘‘single most
impactful proposal’’ in the NPRM.
(Coalition Ass’ns Comment 2.) NACD
also supports the creation of this new
accelerated process, noting that
emergencies require immediate action
and accelerating the timeliness would
facilitate relief in emergency situations.
(NACD Comment 3.) SDDC states that it
‘‘sees the potential for a significant
improvement from adding [49 CFR]
1146.2,’’ (SDDC Comment 1), and NITL
and ISRI state that the creation of this
new process is a critical change that will
enhance the usefulness of the Board’s
emergency service regulations, (NITL &
ISRI Reply 1–2). AFPM, IMA, NGFA,
RFA, and USDA also indicated their
support of the new proposed process at
49 CFR 1146.2. (AFPM Comment 12;
IMA Comment 14; NGFA Comment 6;
RFA Comment 2; USDA Comment 1.)
AAR, CSXT, and NS urge the Board
to discard its proposal for a new
accelerated process. According to AAR,
the new accelerated process is
‘‘fundamentally unfair and
impracticable,’’ and the ‘‘extreme
limitations on development of a record
and meaningful opportunity to be heard
present substantial questions of
procedural fairness and due process.’’
(AAR Comment 13.) AAR notes that
neither the incumbent nor any
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
alternative carrier would have the
opportunity to reply in writing to a
petition and claims ‘‘the incumbent
(and any alternative carrier) will have
virtually no time to investigate the few
facts provided’’ in the three-page
petition. (Id.) AAR doubts the timeline
would allow the Board to ‘‘make a
responsible decision’’ and asserts its
concerns are exacerbated by the fact that
petitioners would not be required to
obtain an advance commitment from an
alternative carrier. (AAR Comment 13–
14; see also CSXT Comment 10 (‘‘The
proposed acceleration to the [49 CFR]
1146.1 process is as fast as the Board
could reasonably act in a manner that
ensures that the parties and the Board
have sufficient time to both gather and
analyze the available information to
make a wise decision with such an
extraordinary power.’’) (emphasis
omitted); NS Comment 4 (‘‘[T]he
proposed accelerated process will not
allow for the development of a factual
record upon which the Board can
act.’’).)
CSXT argues it is unnecessary to
create a second process when the Board
is shortening the existing process.
(CSXT Comment 9.) According to CSXT,
because the Board’s authority under 49
U.S.C. 11123 is limited to acute service
emergencies, there is ‘‘no authority for
an even more extraordinary remedy for
a different category of emergency—
emergent is emergent.’’ (CSXT Comment
9.) CSXT also asserts the Board has not
explained why ‘‘acute service
emergencies’’ cannot be handled under
49 CFR 1146.1 or through the Board’s
injunctive authority at 49 U.S.C.
1321(b)(4). (CSXT Comment 9.)
NS likewise cites to the Board’s
injunctive authority as a reason for
discarding the proposed new process,
noting that the Board has in the past
granted an injunction where emergency
service was sought. (NS Comment 5 n.4
(citing Cent. Valley Ag Grinding, Inc. v.
Modesto & Empire Traction Co., NOR
42159, slip op. at 7 (STB served June 12,
2018).) NS further argues that the Board
previously declined to shorten the
timeline of 49 CFR 1146.1 and that there
is no evidence a faster process is
‘‘needed or superior to the current
expedited timeline in [49 CFR] 1146.1.’’
(NS Comment 5.) NS asserts that if the
Board is concerned about the timeline of
the 49 CFR 1146.1 process, the Board
can eliminate the rebuttal period. (NS
Comment 5 n.4.)
On reply, the Coalition Associations
urge the Board to reject the carriers’
requests to abandon the accelerated
process and suggest several
modifications to address the concerns
raised. (Coalition Ass’ns Reply 8.) First,
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
the Coalition Associations suggest that
rather than discarding the new
accelerated process, the Board could
discard its proposal to shorten the
existing 49 CFR 1146.1 process.
(Coalition Ass’ns Reply 8.) According to
the Coalition Associations, the
accelerated process would sufficiently
address shippers’ concerns that the 49
CFR 1146.1 process is ‘‘too slow and
cumbersome for the most time-sensitive
emergencies.’’ (Coalition Ass’ns Reply
8.) The Coalition Associations also state
they are open to limiting the relief
available under 49 CFR 1146.2 to
incumbent-based relief only. (Coalition
Ass’ns Reply 8–9.)
NITL and ISRI also oppose the
carriers’ proposal to jettison the
accelerated process, noting that it offers
one of the ‘‘greatest opportunit[ies] to
improve the usefulness of the [Board’s
regulations].’’ (NITL & ISRI Reply 3.)
Shipper Groups argue that ‘‘[t]here is no
basis to conclude at this stage that any
railroad will be deprived of a fair
hearing without the opportunity to
make a written presentation.’’ (Shipper
Grps. Reply 8.)
The Board finds that an accelerated
process is warranted to address acute
service emergencies more efficiently. As
noted in the NPRM, the most serious
issue identified by stakeholders was the
timeliness of regulatory action in
situations involving acute service
emergencies. In certain instances, the
process in 49 CFR 1146.1 would simply
take too long (even under the shortened
1146.1 timeline adopted in this final
rule) for a shipper facing an acute
emergency to utilize it effectively, even
though the shipper might otherwise
qualify for emergency service relief. The
accelerated process addresses this
timeliness issue by streamlining the
petition process in certain emergency
situations to allow the Board to act
quickly while providing it with enough
time to make a responsible decision
while maintaining adequate due process
for carriers.21
Although the process will be short,
carriers will have a meaningful
opportunity to reply to the petition, and
the provision of an oral response at a
hearing is consistent with 49 U.S.C.
11123, which intended summary
procedures in these emergency
21 The Board appreciates the Coalition
Associations’ suggestion that 1146.2 might make it
possible to discard its proposal to shorten the
deadlines for 1146.1, but concludes that the best
solution is to adopt 1146.2 and to shorten the
deadlines under 1146.1. The situations that justify
the use of 1146.1 are emergencies, even if they are
not ‘‘acute’’ emergencies, so a faster timeline will
be beneficial.
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
situations.22 Additionally, the
regulations do not preclude the
provision of written comments by the
rail carriers; it simply does not provide
specific extra time for them in the
necessarily short schedule. Nor will the
filing of a petition be the first
opportunity for carriers to investigate
the circumstances surrounding the
particular service issue. Prior to filing at
the Board, a petitioner would have to
engage in the process mandated by 49
CFR 1146.2(a), which requires that
parties seek, in good faith, to resolve
any service issues through an informal
dispute resolution process first. Finally,
the accelerated process limits relief to
no more than 20 days, and parties may
petition the Board to reconsider its
decision.23 The Board understands the
gravity of issuing emergency service
orders and finds that this new process
will accommodate the procedural rights
of all parties while affording the Board
the ability to swiftly act on behalf of the
public interest in necessary situations,
as Congress intended.24
Concerning the standard for relief
proposed by the Board, the Coalition
Associations state that the proposal
‘‘reasonably restricts this process to
circumstances that threaten severe
consequences to the shipper, its
customers, or the public that cannot be
avoided using the [49 CFR] 1146.1
procedures.’’ (Coalition Ass’ns
Comment 3.) However, several
commenters ask the Board to define
‘‘acute service emergency’’ more clearly.
AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA urge that the
Board permit any plant shutdown to
qualify for relief under this new process,
arguing that any shutdown is acute.
(AFPM Comment 12; IMA Comment 14;
PRFBA Comment 14.) AFPM suggests
removing the requirement that plant
shutdowns be ‘‘extended,’’ (AFPM
22 As noted above, the Board’s decision would not
be subject to the APA. See 49 U.S.C. 11123(b)(1).
23 NS contends that the Board should not adopt
a shorter 1146.2 process because it rejected a
shorter 1146.1 process when it adopted the rule in
1998. (NS Comment 5.) But the fact that relief under
1146.2 is significantly more limited than relief
under 1146.1 (a distinction that did not exist in
1998) weighs in favor of a shorter time frame. See
Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 16. Also, the
absence of rebuttal and reply periods in 1146.2 will
facilitate a faster process. Moreover, as explained
above in connection with 1146.1, the Board has
reevaluated its views of the feasibility of faster
timelines than the one established in 1998.
24 NS argues that the 1146.2 process is
unnecessary because the Board could issue
preliminary injunctions instead, but the emergency
service standard is different from the preliminary
injunction standard, as discussed in more detail
below. The fact that the Board has found it
appropriate under certain circumstances to issue
preliminary injunctions in lieu of emergency
service orders does not mean that preliminary
injunctions are an adequate substitute for 1146.2.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
Comment 12), and IMA and PRFBA
suggest removing the requirement that
plant shutdowns be ‘‘immediate and
extended,’’ (IMA Comment 14; PRFBA
Comment 14). NMA expresses concern
that entities may interpret ‘‘acute
service emergency’’ differently and
notes that if there are multiple
emergencies at the same time, the Board
may need to weigh one emergency over
the other. (NMA Comment 3.)
AAR opposes allowing any plant
slowdown or shutdown to qualify under
49 CFR 1146.2, arguing that not all plant
slowdowns, shutdowns, or even
closures are genuine emergencies that
would qualify for emergency service
relief.25 (AAR Reply 5–6.) According to
AAR, ‘‘shutdowns and closures can
often be remedied with monetary
damages.’’ (AAR Comment 6.) AAR and
NS both argue the accelerated process,
if adopted, should be more narrowly
tailored, available only if the petitioner
will experience immediate and
irreparable harm, as is required for a
preliminary injunction or temporary
restraining order. (AAR Comment 6; NS
Comment 6–7.) NS notes emergency
service orders are similar to preliminary
injunctions in that both are
extraordinary remedies, (NS Comment
7), and AAR argues that much like
temporary restraining orders, petitions
brought under 49 CFR 1146.2 would be
decided pursuant to a short procedural
schedule with ‘‘minimal opportunity for
response from the involved railroad[s],’’
(AAR Comment 6 (brackets in original)).
Shipper Groups and the Coalition
Associations both take issue with AAR’s
suggestion that not all plant shutdowns
meet the statutory requirements for an
emergency under 49 U.S.C. 11123.
(Shipper Grps. Reply 2; Coalition Ass’ns
Reply 10.) According to Shipper
Groups, the basis for relief should be
decided in individual adjudications, not
based on hypothetical facts at the
rulemaking stage. (Shipper Grps. Reply
2.)
Shipper Groups and the Coalition
Associations also both oppose applying
the standard for injunctions at 49 U.S.C.
1321(b)(4) to emergency service
petitions. (Shipper Grps. Reply 4;
Coalition Ass’ns Reply 12.) The
Coalition Associations argue that the
irreparable harm standard considers
whether the petitioner could be made
whole, whereas the Board’s emergency
service authority is also exercised for
the public interest. (Coalition Ass’ns
25 The Board agrees that not all ‘‘immediate plant
shutdowns’’ are genuine emergencies that would
qualify for relief under 1146.2 and, as reflected in
the language of 1146.2, that it is highly unlikely that
a plant ‘‘slowdown’’ would ever constitute a
genuine emergency under 1146.2.
PO 00000
Frm 00035
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
4573
Reply 12–13). According to Coalition
Associations, ‘‘[i]t is entirely
conceivable that the petitioner could be
made whole with monetary damages,
but the broader public interest could
not.’’ (Id. at 13.) The Coalition
Associations further argue that
monetary damages are not a realistic
remedy for plant shutdowns as most
contracts and tariffs allow only for
direct damages (i.e., primarily the
additional cost of alternative
transportation) but not consequential
damages.26 (Id. at 10.) According to
Shipper Groups, the fact that shippers
need to seek emergency relief in the first
place is evidence that the ‘‘other types
of proceedings’’ AAR references are
insufficient and fail to deter carriers
from curtailing service. (Shipper Grps.
Reply 2 (quoting AAR Comment 5).)
According to Shipper Groups, the
economic losses shippers face from rail
service failures can be massive, and the
carriers’ proposal would ‘‘categorically
preclude[]’’ shippers and their
customers from receiving emergency
service. (Shipper Grps. Reply 3–4.)
The Board will revise the portion of
49 CFR 1146.2(a) that states ‘‘immediate
and extended plant shutdowns’’ to
simply state ‘‘immediate plant
shutdowns.’’ Striking ‘‘extended’’ as a
qualifier allows the Board to consider
how the impact of a shutdown will vary
by industry. In some industries, for
example, imminent significant harm
and severe adverse consequences could
occur immediately upon plant
shutdown. This change will allow the
Board to better assess petitions for
emergency relief based on the
circumstances of the underlying
emergency.27
The irreparable harm standard
applicable to injunctions under section
49 U.S.C. 1321(b)(4) will not be
imported by the Board to its
consideration of emergency petitions
under 49 U.S.C. 11123. Congress has
kept separate the emergency service and
preliminary injunction powers of the
Board. The Board sees no reason to
conflate the general preliminary
injunction standard in 49 U.S.C.
1321(b)(4) with the more specific
emergency issues arising under 49
U.S.C. 11123, which provides an
independent standard for when it
applies, see 49 U.S.C. 11123(a).
26 The Coalition Associations further note that
captive shippers, which they claim have the
greatest need for emergency service, have the least
ability to use alternative transportation. (Coalition
Ass’ns Reply 10–11.)
27 49 CFR 1146.2 will also be revised to include
reference to 49 U.S.C. 11123 in a manner similar
to 49 CFR 1146.1.
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
4574
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
NGFA and AAR ask the Board to
clarify the phrase ‘‘food security.’’ More
specifically, NGFA asks the Board to
clarify that the new accelerated process
could be used in situations presenting a
‘‘clear and present threat to the health
of livestock.’’ (NGFA Comment 6.)
NGFA states that railroads’ failures to
deliver corn, which its members process
into feed for livestock, can be damaging
and potentially catastrophic to the
health of livestock populations. (Id.)
AAR questions what the phrase would
include (e.g., does it cover a shortage of
pet food, livestock feed, potato chips, or
soda) and asserts it is not clear ‘‘what a
threat to ‘food security’ would entail in
the railroad context.’’ (AAR Comment
7.) The Coalition Associations argue that
‘‘food security’’ need not be defined
more clearly as it is ‘‘common sense’’
and note that food security is ‘‘traced
back to the ultimate food sources, not
the manufactured products in the AAR’s
hypotheticals.’’ (Coalition Ass’ns Reply
11.)
Further clarification of ‘‘food
security’’ is unnecessary at this time.
While the Board agrees with the
Coalition Associations that shortages of
the ultimate food sources are more
likely to constitute an emergency than
shortages of manufactured products, the
Board cannot anticipate all
circumstances of potential food
security-related emergencies. Instead, a
case-by-case application that affords the
Board flexibility in addressing
situations based on the specific
conditions of each case will best allow
the Board to apply these regulations
appropriately.
SDDC requests the Board add ‘‘a
threat to national defense’’ to the
standard for relief under 49 CFR 1146.2.
(SDDC Comment 1.) SDDC states that
‘‘national defense is one very important
aspect of the public interest, and the
timely deployment of military units to
a port or timely movement of critical
defense materiel are important to that
end.’’ (Id.) AAR states it does not object
to this change if the accelerated process
is adopted. (AAR Reply 7.) The Board of
course agrees that national defense is
critical to the public interest and will
therefore include language in 49 CFR
1146.2 to reflect that the accelerated
process is an appropriate mechanism for
addressing threats to national defense
related to rail service.
Regarding the proposed petition
requirements under 49 CFR 1146.2,
AAR requests that the Board require a
petitioner to include in its petition that
it has ‘‘previously notified the
incumbent railroad of the emergency
and its intent to file.’’ (AAR Comment
17.) According to AAR, while the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
proposal requires a good faith effort to
resolve the dispute before filing, it does
not require the petitioner to notify the
incumbent carrier of the emergency.
(Id.) AAR asserts that this modification
would ensure the incumbent carrier has
sufficient notice to prepare a response to
a petition and that the Board has the
most complete information. (Id.)
Shipper Groups argue this concern is
unfounded. (Shipper Grps. Reply 8.)
Additionally, Shipper Groups express
concern with the Board’s proposal to
limit petitions under 49 CFR 1146.2 to
three substantive pages. According to
Shipper Groups, this page limit may
lead to skeletal filings that could cause
uncertainty, confusion, and longer
hearings. (Shipper Grps. Comment 10.)
Shipper Groups suggest that a word
count limitation would be less subject to
manipulation. (Id.)
The Board agrees with Shipper
Groups regarding AAR’s concerns here.
It is redundant to require petitions to
state that petitioners have notified
incumbent carriers of emergencies and
their intent to file for emergency service
given that shippers are required in good
faith to seek informal resolution of the
matter before filing under 49 CFR
1146.2 and to describe those efforts in
their petitions. The Board expects that
shippers facing such an emergency
would make the impact of the service
issue on their business clear to the
railroad during informal discussions.
The Board declines to adopt Shipper
Groups’ suggestion that it address
concerns about the page limitation by
using a word limit instead. It is not clear
from Shipper Groups’ argument why
such a change would be meaningful,
and doing so would depart from
standard Board practice. See, e.g., 49
CFR 1115.2(d), 1115.3(d), 1115.5(c).
Moreover, 49 CFR 1104.2 sets forth
requirements such as page size, font
size, and line spacing, which will help
prevent parties from manipulating the
limitations. The Board will, however,
expand the petition page limit from
three substantive pages to five
substantive pages to accommodate the
requirements that petitions include a
particularized description of the
commodities and volumes subject to the
requested relief and the timing
necessary for such relief, including why
relief under 1146.1 would be ineffective;
as well as a particularized description of
how the measurable deterioration or
other demonstrated inadequacy, absent
the requested relief, presents imminent
significant harm and threatens
potentially severe consequences as
specified in 1146.2(a).
AAR expresses concern about the
Board’s proposal to rotate, on a
PO 00000
Frm 00036
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
quarterly basis, the Board Member
assigned to evaluate petitions for
emergency relief and issue the initial
decision. AAR projects that a single
quarter may see a large number of
complaints, which could tax a single
Board Member; AAR goes so far as to
speculate that single-Member decision
making could even lead to ‘‘judge
shopping’’ by shippers. (AAR Comment
15–16.) AAR suggests that the Board
‘‘shorten the rotation, not make it
public, and allow for at least two
Members’’ to resolve cases or allow
Board staff to hold a conference before
making a recommendation to the full
Board, as is done for motions to compel.
(Id. at 16.) The Coalition Associations
do not object to AAR’s proposals
intended to mitigate the burdens that
could fall unduly upon a single Board
Member; however, they object to AAR’s
statement that petitioners would ‘‘judge
shop.’’ (Coalition Ass’ns Reply 14.)
According to the Coalition Associations,
‘‘any circumstance in which a shipper
can afford to wait until the following
calendar quarter to have its petition
decided by a different Board Member
would not qualify for the [49 CFR]
1146.2 process.’’ (Coalition Ass’ns Reply
14–15.) Shipper Groups argue that
AAR’s concerns may never materialize,
and if they do, the Board can address
them at that time. (Shipper Grps. Reply
7.) 28
After considering the concerns raised
in the comments, the Board finds that
the objectives of the new 49 CFR 1146.2
process would be best achieved through
a full Board decision rather than
through delegation to a single Board
Member. The Board’s emergency service
powers, when exercised, undoubtedly
have a significant impact on various
parties and the interstate rail network as
a whole. Consideration by the full Board
better lends itself to the exercise of that
power, even in the accelerated process.
Moreover, consideration by the full
Board in the first instance (rather than
upon appeal of a single-Member
decision) will allow the process to be
more efficient while still protecting the
right to appeal by petitioning the Board
for reconsideration. Accordingly, the
regulations adopted in this final rule
provide for a full Board decision on the
merits of petitions seeking relief under
49 CFR 1146.2. To accommodate this
procedural change but still allow
proceedings to move quickly, instead of
a hearing before the designated single
28 NS notes the NPRM did not propose to amend
the Board regulations at 49 CFR 1011.4 to delegate
this authority to an individual Board Member. (NS
Comment 11 n.10.) Because the regulations adopted
in this final rule provide for a full Board decision,
this modification is unnecessary.
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Board Member as was proposed in the
NPRM, Board staff will hold a staff-led
conference with parties, as suggested by
AAR.29 (AAR Comment 16.) Board
Members may attend the staff-led
conference.30 A transcript or recording
of the staff-led conference will be made
available to all Board Members before
they make their decision and will be
posted in the docket following any
necessary redactions for confidentiality.
In addition, given the change from a
single Member to full Board decision,
the Board will endeavor to issue a
decision on the merits within three
business days, rather than two as was
proposed in the NPRM. This process is
intended to be quick and flexible while
also respecting the regulatory powers
involved in the emergency service
process.31 Moreover, including a staffled conference might encourage
discussion and resolution among parties
to a proceeding.
NGFA asks the Board to require
potential alternative carriers to address
at the hearing proposed by the Board in
the NPRM ‘‘whether the remedy
proposed by the petitioner is unsafe,
infeasible, or will substantially impair
the replying carrier’s ability to serve its
other customers adequately or fulfill its
common carrier obligations,’’ as the
proposed regulations required of
incumbent carriers. (NGFA Comment 6–
7.) Additionally, CSXT and NS argue
that if the Board adopts the accelerated
process, it should modify the proposed
treatment of confidential information
because closing portions of the
proposed hearing to certain parties is
unnecessary and would be unfair,
prejudicial, and inconsistent with how
the Board treats confidential
information in other proceedings
29 Designated Board staff will not be recused from
handling substantive elements of the case.
30 The Board Members may do so ‘‘without regard
to subchapter II of chapter 5 of title 5.’’ 49 U.S.C.
11123(b)(1).
31 Shipper Groups assert that the possibility for
consecutive appeals—first, to the entire Board,
followed by a petition for reconsideration of the full
Board decision—could dissuade petitioners from
utilizing the accelerated process because the 49 CFR
1146.1 process, which takes 10 business days,
would appear to be less burdensome. (Shipper
Grps. Comment 10–11.) On reply, AAR argues that
the right to appeal is ‘‘fundamental and already
required by the Board’s own regulations’’ and that
‘‘prohibiting appeal from the decision of a single
Board [M]ember would be patently unfair and a
denial of due process.’’ (AAR Reply 4.) Now that
the entire Board will decide on petitions under 49
CFR 1146.2, parties will no longer need to appeal
these decisions to the full Board before then
petitioning for reconsideration. However, petitions
for reconsideration will be permitted under a
shortened timeline, similar to the timeline provided
for appeals in the NPRM, given the nature of
proceedings under the accelerated process. The
Board will amend 49 CFR 1115.3 accordingly.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
(accessible subject to a protective order).
(CSXT Comment 13; NS Comment 11.)
Potential alternative carriers will be
required to attend the staff conference
where that information can be discussed
and will be required to identify, at the
conference, facts showing whether the
proposed alternative service would be
infeasible, or substantially impair the
replying carrier’s service to other
customers. As for CSXT’s and NS’s
positions on modifying the treatment of
confidential information, the Board
finds it is best to adopt this aspect of the
regulation as proposed in order to
maintain flexibility. This flexibility is
imperative, for example, if a case
involves multiple carriers and requires
discussion of highly confidential
information. While the Board will leave
this aspect of the proposal unchanged,
the Board emphasizes that transparency
will be pursued to the greatest extent
possible.
Regarding the proposed limitations on
relief available under the new process,
BLET argues the 20-day relief limit
would provide a ‘‘back-stop to causing
most major harms.’’ (BLET Comment 4–
5.) CSXT asks the Board to clarify in the
regulations that orders under 49 CFR
1146.2 may not be extended beyond the
20-day period and that additional relief
would require a petition under 49 CFR
1146.1. (CSXT Comment 12.) AAR and
NS argue that relief under the proposed
new accelerated process should be
limited to incumbent-based relief. (AAR
Comment 10–11; see also NS Comment
5.) Both carrier interests argue it would
be impractical for an alternative carrier
to provide service for 20 days and that,
for safety reasons, crews from the
alternative carrier must be qualified to
operate on the incumbent’s tracks. (AAR
Comment 10–11; NS Comment 5–6.)
AAR adds that if an incumbent crew is
available to train the crew of the
alternative carrier, the incumbent crew
could simply be directed to provide the
service itself. (AAR Comment 10–11.)
AAR asserts that limiting 49 CFR 1146.2
to incumbent-based relief would
provide more time to identify an
alternative carrier for continued relief
under 49 CFR 1146.1. (AAR Comment
11.) 32 The Coalition Associations state
they are amenable to limiting the relief
under 49 CFR 1146.2 to ‘‘incumbent32 AAR notes the proposed language for 49 CFR
1146.2 in the NPRM did not include a requirement
to provide even an identification of an alternative
carrier, although potential alternative carriers
would be required to attend the hearing. (AAR
Comment 11 n.16.) However, 49 CFR 1146.2(e)
requires service on other parties, which, as
discussed below, includes any proposed alternative
carriers. Accordingly, the contact information for
any potential alternative carriers should be
provided on the certificate of service.
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
4575
based relief’’ only, which they
understand to include relief that does
not involve the grant of trackage rights
to an alternative carrier but could
include granting an alternative through
route using an alternative carrier.
(Coalition Ass’ns Reply 7.)
The Board will adopt language
clarifying that relief under 49 CFR
1146.2 may not be extended beyond the
20-day period and any additional relief
will require a separate petition under 49
CFR 1146.1. This will provide a clearer
pathway for any party wishing to seek
additional emergency relief. However,
the Board will not limit 49 CFR 1146.2
to provide for incumbent-based relief
only. Section 1146.1 allows the Board to
provide for trackage rights to an
alternative carrier with the same safety
and feasibility concerns present as those
raised regarding 49 CFR 1146.2.
Additionally, while the Board expects
incumbent-based relief to be utilized in
the vast majority of instances, the Board
finds it important to maintain flexibility
in its process since, for example, there
may be situations where arrangements
between parties could make trackagerights relief more feasible. Nevertheless,
the Board emphasizes that feasibility
will be considered in determining what
relief is appropriate in a given case and
that it will not order a remedy that it
deems infeasible.
Several commenters asked the Board
to clarify the proposed service
requirements. CSXT questions whether
the Board is suggesting that all
pleadings must be e-filed with the
Board, or whether it is proposing to
introduce electronic service of
pleadings, which cannot be
accomplished through e-filing. (CSXT
Comment 12.) AAR and NS each ask the
Board to clarify that e-filing alone is not
considered sufficient service since efiling on the Board’s website does not
effectuate service on other parties or the
FRA. (AAR Comment 16; NS Comment
10.) NS states it ‘‘supports the Board
adding a method of electronic service
and suggests that the Board consider
using language similar to that contained
in 49 CFR 1104.12, which governs
service of documents.’’ (NS Comment
11.) The Coalition Associations agree
that the requested clarifications are
needed. (Coalition Ass’ns Reply 15.)
They also ask the Board to consider
requiring all Class I carriers to file with
the Board the name and electronic
address for service of petitions, which it
states would ensure faster delivery to
those carriers and maximize their
response time. (Id.)
The Board agrees that the proposed
service provisions were unclear and will
clarify them by revising the text to read
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
4576
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
more like that in 49 CFR 1104.12. The
Board should be served by e-filing on
the Board’s website, given the short
timeline of these proceedings. Service
on other parties, including any
proposed alternative carriers, and the
FRA may be done by email, hand, or
overnight delivery. In addition, all
pleadings should also be emailed to
ServiceEmergency@stb.gov. However,
the Board will not at this time require
the Class I carriers to file the name and
electronic address for service of
petitions. The contact information for
the serving carrier is the type of
information that should already be in
the possession of the petitioner.
Moreover, parties are required to make
a good faith effort to resolve any service
issues through an informal dispute
resolution process, during which time
they can obtain this information from
the carrier, if needed.
BLET expresses concern that
emergency service for acute service
emergencies might undermine collective
bargaining agreements (CBAs). (BLET
Comment 5.) The Board does not
anticipate that CBAs will be an issue in
most emergency service proceedings,
but notes that any such issues are best
resolved on a case-by-case basis in any
event.
Lastly, NMA cautions that the new
process, if codified, should be used
sparingly because, although ‘‘it is not
the intent of the [Board] to create a new
program to regulate rail, this proposed
rulemaking is a slippery slope that has
the potential to be abused by bad
actors.’’ (NMA Comment 3; see also
AAR Reply 8–9 (noting that it shares the
concerns expressed by NMA).) While
the accelerated process may impact
informal dispute resolution between the
parties, the Board finds no reason to
assume potential abuse of the
accelerated process itself. By its own
definition, 49 CFR 1146.2 will be used
only sparingly because it is much
narrower than 49 CFR 1146.1, and the
circumstances under which it can be
used are limited. Moreover, it is in the
interest of all parties to act in good faith,
and the Board will deny petitions filed
in bad faith or that otherwise abuse the
Board’s processes.
Contract and Exempt Traffic. Various
carrier interests also ask the Board to
clarify that traffic moving pursuant to a
contract is not eligible for relief under
the Board’s proposal. (AAR Comment
18–19, CSXT Comment 12; NS
Comment 7–10.) According to NS, the
plain language of 49 U.S.C. 10709(c)(1)
makes clear that traffic moving pursuant
to a contract is outside the Board’s
jurisdiction, but the Board’s final rule
adopting 49 CFR 1146.1 ‘‘injected
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
unnecessary ambiguity’’ into the issue.
(NS Comment 7–10 (citing Expedited
Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 10).) NS argues
that even if a railroad stops service, if
that service is governed by a contract,
‘‘any relief . . . is wholly outside the
Board’s jurisdiction,’’ and any remedies
‘‘must be provided for in the contract
itself (e.g., a force majeure provision)
and are enforceable only in the courts
and subject to applicable state law.’’ (Id.
at 9 (citing 49 U.S.C. 10709(c)(2)).)
CSXT asks that the Board require all
petitions filed under part 1146 to
include a verification that the
transportation for which relief is sought
is not governed by a contract. (CSXT
Comment 12.) AAR also argues exempt
traffic should be ineligible for relief
under part 1146 because the expedited
timelines would not provide sufficient
time for the Board to complete the
analysis required by statute to revoke an
exemption. (AAR Comment 19.) AAR
further argues that revocation of an
exemption requires a decision of the full
Board, not an individual Board Member
as contemplated by 49 CFR 1146.2.
(AAR Comment 20.)
The Coalition Associations disagree,
arguing the Board may exercise its
authority to order emergency service
over traffic covered by a contract.
(Coalition Ass’ns Reply 3.) According to
the Coalition Associations, Congress
would not have granted the Board the
broad emergency authority it did in 49
U.S.C. 11123 only to carve out in 49
U.S.C. 10709 the substantial volume of
traffic covered by a contract, nor would
Congress have subordinated the public
interest to a private contract. (Coalition
Ass’ns Reply 4.) The Coalition
Associations contend that ‘‘[t]he
transportation that occurs pursuant to
an emergency service order is not
occurring under a contract,’’ but rather
is ‘‘alternate service pursuant to [49
U.S.C.] 11123,’’ (Coalition Ass’ns Reply
5), and they identify a prior instance
where the Board exercised its 49 U.S.C.
11123 authority over contract traffic,
(Coalition Ass’ns Reply 4 (citing Joint
Pet. for Serv. Ord., SO 1518 (STB served
Oct. 31, 1997), modified and extended
(STB served Dec. 4, 1997), further
modified and extended (STB served
Feb. 17 and 25, 1998), terminated with
wind-down period (STB served July 31,
1998).)
NGFA also disagrees with the
proposition that contract traffic is not
eligible for emergency service relief,
pointing to the Board’s rejection of this
very argument made by AAR in the
1998 final rule in Docket No. EP 628,
and asserting that the Board ‘‘clearly
established that it has jurisdiction to
issue an order under [49 U.S.C.] 11123
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
for movements subject to a
transportation contract if the facts and
circumstances require it.’’ (NGFA Reply
1–2 (citing Expedited Relief, EP 628,
slip op. at 10.)) NGFA likewise urges the
Board to decline NS’s request for the
Board to clarify that its emergency
service authority does not apply to
contract traffic, observing that the
adoption of such a ‘‘blanket,
overreaching prohibition’’ would be bad
public policy because it would render
the Board powerless to act when rail
service failures significantly harm
businesses and the public merely
because the service is governed by a
contract. (Id. at 3.) Rather, NGFA asks
the Board to reaffirm its decision that 49
U.S.C. 11123 grants the Board authority
‘‘to act in the public interest to avert rail
service emergencies, regardless of
whether the service the railroad has
failed to provide is governed by a tariff
or a contract, subject to the restrictions
set forth in [Expedited Relief, EP 628].’’
(NGFA Reply 3.) In a similar vein,
NGFA disputes the claim that exempt
traffic is ineligible for emergency
service, citing Expedited Relief, EP 628,
where the Board noted that this
argument ‘‘is clearly wrong’’ because the
Board ‘‘retain[s] full jurisdiction to deal
with exempted transportation, as [the
Board] can revoke the exemption at any
time, in whole or in part, under [49
U.S.C.] 10502(d).’’ (NGFA Reply 2
(quoting Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip
op. at 10).)
NITL and ISRI similarly dispute
carrier arguments that the Board lacks
the power to exercise its emergency
service authority over contract and
exempt traffic. With respect to contract
traffic, NITL and ISRI assert the carriers’
arguments ‘‘are factually and legally
incorrect and contrary to the intent of
Congress.’’ (NITL & ISRI Reply 3.) As for
exempt traffic, NITL and ISRI request
that the Board partially revoke existing
class exemptions so they will not apply
to requests for emergency service. (Id. at
8.) NITL and ISRI argue there are
‘‘substantial similarities’’ between the
Board’s ‘‘partial revocation of the
exemption for agricultural commodities
and the circumstances involving exempt
traffic and emergency service orders,’’
which would justify the Board partially
revoking existing exemptions to permit
shippers of exempt commodities to
access the Board’s emergency service
regulations. (Id. at 3–8.)
Shipper Groups contend that the
carriers have not presented any basis for
the Board to depart from its decision in
Expedited Relief, EP 628, (Shipper Grps.
Reply 4), and argue that this issue is
outside the scope of the proceeding
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
because it was not included in the
NPRM, (id. at 5).
The NPRM did not make any new
proposal regarding the application of
section 11123 to contract traffic. In
Expedited Relief, EP 628, the Board
concluded that any advance rejection of
all authority to address situations where
a contract exists in an emergency would
be inappropriate and declined to
include any bright-line prohibition.
Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 10.
In the NPRM, the Board made no
proposals changing the status of existing
law on this issue and sees no reason to
revisit that position here.
As for exempt traffic, the Board
reiterates that it has the authority to
revoke exemptions when appropriate.
Petitioners may request partial
revocations in their filings at 49 CFR
1146.1 or the new accelerated process at
49 CFR 1146.2 (which will not be
decided by a single Member, as the
NPRM originally proposed, but by the
full Board). See supra at 23–24.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(Regulatory Flexibility Act), 5 U.S.C.
601–612, generally requires a
description and analysis of new rules
that would have a significant economic
impact of a substantial number of small
entities. In drafting a rule, an agency is
required to: (1) assess the effect that its
regulation will have on small entities,
(2) analyze effective alternatives that
may minimize a regulation’s impact,
and (3) make the analysis available for
public comment. 5 U.S.C. 601–604. In
its final rule, the agency must either
include a final regulatory flexibility
analysis, 5 U.S.C. 604(a), or certify that
the proposed rule would not have a
‘‘significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities,’’ 5 U.S.C.
605(b).
Because the goal of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act is to reduce the cost to
small entities of complying with federal
regulations, the Regulatory Flexibility
Act requires an agency to perform a
regulatory flexibility analysis of small
entity impacts only when a rule directly
regulates those entities. In other words,
the impact must be a direct impact on
small entities ‘‘whose conduct is
circumscribed or mandated’’ by the
proposed rule. White Eagle Coop. v.
Conner, 553 F.3d 467, 480 (7th Cir.
2009).
In the NPRM, the Board certified
under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that the proposed
rule would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities within the
meaning of the Regulatory Flexibility
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
Act.33 The Board explained that the
proposed changes were intended to
improve the Board’s directed service
procedures and would not mandate or
circumscribe the conduct of small
entities. Rather, the Board said, the
changes would be largely procedural
and would not have a significant
economic impact on the Class III rail
carriers to which the Regulatory
Flexibility Act applies. Because affected
shippers or railroads could seek the
relief under 49 CFR part 1146 to obtain
temporary relief from serious, localized
service problems more quickly and
effectively, the Board certified under 5
U.S.C. 605(b) that the proposed rules, if
promulgated, would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
within the meaning of Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
The final rule adopted here revises
the rules proposed in the NPRM;
however, the same basis for the Board’s
certification of the proposed rule
applies to the final rule. Thus, the Board
again certifies under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that
this final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities as defined by
the Regulatory Flexibility Act. A copy of
this decision will be served upon the
Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Office of
Advocacy, U.S. Small Business
Administration, Washington, DC 20416.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In the NPRM, the Board sought
comments pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA), 44 U.S.C. 3501–
3521, Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) regulations at 5 CFR
1320.8(d)(3), and Appendix B, about the
impact of the collection for the Directed
Service Regulations (OMB Control No.
2140–XXXX), concerning: (1) whether
the collections of information, as added
in the proposed rule, and further
described in Appendix A, are necessary
for the proper performance of the
functions of the Board, including
whether the collections have practical
utility; (2) the accuracy of the Board’s
33 For the purpose of Regulatory Flexibility Act
analysis for rail carriers subject to Board
jurisdiction, the Board defines a ‘‘small business’’
as only including those rail carriers classified as
Class III rail carriers under 49 CFR part 1201,
General Instructions 1–1. See Small Entity Size
Standards Under the Regul. Flexibility Act, EP 719
(STB served June 30, 2016). Class III carriers have
annual operating revenues of $40.4 million or less
in 2019 dollars. Class II rail carriers have annual
operating revenues of less than $900 million but
more than $40.4 million in 2019 dollars. The Board
calculates the revenue deflator factor annually and
publishes the railroad revenue thresholds in
decisions and on its website. 49 CFR 1201.1–1;
Indexing the Annual Operating Revenues of R.Rs.,
EP 748 (STB served June 29, 2023).
PO 00000
Frm 00039
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
4577
burden estimates; (3) ways to enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information collected; and (4) ways to
minimize the burden of the collection of
information on the respondents,
including the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology, when
appropriate.
The Board estimated in the NPRM
that the proposed requirements will
have a total hourly burden of 2,710
hours. There were no proposed nonhourly burdens associated with these
collections. No comments were received
pertaining to the collections of this
information under the PRA. The new
collections will be submitted to OMB
for review as required under the PRA,
44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11.
Congressional Review Act. Pursuant
to the Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801–808, the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has
designated this rule as a non-major rule,
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
List of Subjects
49 CFR Part 1011
Administrative practice and
procedure, Authority delegations
(Government agencies), Organization
and functions (Government agencies).
49 CFR Part 1104
Administrative practice and
procedure.
49 CFR Part 1115
Administrative practice and
procedure.
49 CFR Part 1146
Railroads.
It is ordered:
1. The Board adopts the final rule as
set forth in this decision. Notice of the
adopted rule will be published in the
Federal Register.
2. This decision is effective February
23, 2024.
3. A copy of this decision will be
served upon the Chief Counsel for
Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S.
Small Business Administration.
Decided: January 18, 2024.
By the Board, Board Members Fuchs,
Hedlund, Oberman, Primus, and Schultz.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Surface Transportation
Board proposes to amend title 49,
chapter X, parts 1011, 1104, 1115, and
1146 of the Code of Federal Regulations
as follows:
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
4578
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
PART 1011—BOARD ORGANIZATION;
DELEGATIONS OF AUTHORITY
PART 1115—APPELLATE
PROCEDURES
■
1. The authority citation for part 1011
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 553; 31 U.S.C. 9701;
49 U.S.C. 1301, 1321, 11123, 11124, 11144,
14122, and 15722.
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 559; 49 U.S.C. 1321;
49 U.S.C. 11708.
2. Add § 1011.7(a)(2)(xx) to read as
follows:
■
2. Revise § 1115.3(e) to read as
follows:
■
§ 1115.3 Board actions other than initial
decisions.
§ 1011.7 Delegations of authority by the
Board to specific offices of the Board.
1. The authority citation for part 1104
continues to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
(e) Petitions must be filed within 20
days after the service of the action or
within any further period (not to exceed
20 days) as the Board may authorize.
However, in cases under Final Offer
Rate Review and in cases seeking
expedited relief for service emergencies
under the accelerated process at 49 CFR
1146.2, petitions must be filed within 5
days after the service of the action, and
replies to petitions must be filed within
10 days after the service of the action.
*
*
*
*
*
Authority: 5.U.S.C. 553 and 559; 18 U.S.C.
1621; and 49 U.S.C. 1321.
PART 1146—EXPEDITED RELIEF FOR
SERVICE EMERGENCIES
2. Revise § 1104.7(b) to read as
follows:
■
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(xx) To delegate to Board staff any
necessary parties for purposes of
accelerated emergency service
proceedings at § 1146.2 of this chapter.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 1104—FILING WITH THE
BOARD–COPIES–VERIFICATION–
SERVICE–PLEADINGS, GENERALLY
■
■
§ 1104.7
time.
*
*
*
*
(b) Extensions. Any time period,
except those provided by law or
specified in these rules respecting
informal complaints seeking damage,
may be extended by the Board in its
discretion, upon request and for good
cause. Requests for extensions must be
served on all parties of record at the
same time and by the same means as
service is made on the Board. However,
if service is made on the Board in
person and personal service on other
parties is not feasible, service on other
parties should be made by first class or
express mail. A request for an extension
must be filed not less than 10 days
before the due date, except that in cases
seeking expedited relief for service
emergencies under part 1146 of this
chapter, a request for an extension must
be made within 24 hours of service of
the petition, reply, or other filing or
procedural order of the Board as
applicable. Only the original of the
request and certificate of service need be
filed with the Board. If granted, the
party making the request should
promptly notify all parties to the
proceeding of the extension and so
certify to the Board, except that this
notification is not required in
rulemaking proceedings.
*
*
*
*
*
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
*
1. The authority citation for part 1146
continues to read as follows:
Computation and extension of
*
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
1. The authority citation for part 1115
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 1321, 11101, and
11123.
■
2. Revise § 1146.1 to read as follows:
§ 1146.1 Prescription of alternative rail
service or directed action by an incumbent
carrier.
(a) General. Alternative rail service, or
directed action by an incumbent carrier,
will be prescribed under 49 U.S.C.
11123(a) if the Board determines that,
over an identified period of time, there
has been a substantial, measurable
deterioration or other demonstrated
inadequacy in rail service provided by
the incumbent carrier. In prescribing the
relief described herein, the Board may
act on its own initiative or pursuant to
a petition.
(b) Procedure for petition for relief—
(1) Petition for relief. Affected shippers
or railroads may seek the relief
described in paragraph (a) of this
section by filing an appropriate petition
containing:
(i) A full explanation, together with
all supporting evidence, to demonstrate
that the standard for relief contained in
paragraph (a) of this section is met;
(ii) A summary of both the petitioner’s
discussions with the incumbent carrier
of the service problems (including a
description of the efforts taken to
resolve the matter prior to filing of the
petition, verified by a person or persons
with knowledge of the efforts taken to
PO 00000
Frm 00040
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
resolve the matter), and the reasons why
the incumbent carrier is unlikely to
restore adequate rail service consistent
with the petitioner’s current
transportation needs within a
reasonable period of time;
(iii) In a petition that seeks alternative
rail service, identification of at least one
possible rail carrier to provide
alternative service, based on the
petitioner’s understanding of other rail
carriers’ nearby operations, that would
meet the current transportation needs of
the petitioner; and
(iv) A detailed explanation of the
specific remedy that is being sought.
(2) Reply. The incumbent carrier and
any proposed alternative carriers must
file a reply to a petition under this
paragraph within three (3) business days
of service of the petition. If applicable,
any reply must address whether the
specific remedy proposed by the
petitioner would be unsafe or infeasible,
or would substantially impair the
carrier’s ability to serve its other
customers adequately or fulfill its
common carrier obligations.
(3) Rebuttal. The party requesting
relief may file rebuttal no more than two
(2) business days after the reply is filed.
(4) Board Decision. The Board will
endeavor to issue a decision five (5)
business days after receiving the
rebuttal or time has expired for the party
requesting relief to file a rebuttal,
whichever is earlier.
(c) Presumption of continuing need.
Unless otherwise indicated in the
Board’s order, a Board order issued
under paragraph (a) of this section shall
establish a rebuttable presumption that
the transportation emergency will
continue for more than 30 days from the
date of that order.
(d) Procedure for petition to terminate
relief—(1) Petition to terminate relief.
Should the Board prescribe alternative
rail service under paragraph (a) of this
section the incumbent carrier may
subsequently file a petition to terminate
that relief. Such a petition shall contain
a full explanation, together with all
supporting evidence, to demonstrate
that the carrier is providing, or is
prepared to provide, adequate service.
Carriers are admonished not to file such
a petition prematurely.
(2) Reply. Parties must file replies to
petitions to terminate filed under this
paragraph (d) within five (5) business
days.
(3) Rebuttal. The incumbent carrier
may file any rebuttal no more than three
(3) business days later.
(e) Service. Every document filed with
the Board under this section must
include a certificate showing
simultaneous service upon all parties to
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 16 / Wednesday, January 24, 2024 / Rules and Regulations
the proceeding, including any proposed
alternative carriers and the Federal
Railroad Administration. Service on the
parties must be by the same method and
class of service used in serving the
Board, with charges, if any, prepaid.
One copy must be served on each party.
If service is made on the Board in
person, and personal service on other
parties is not feasible, service must be
made by overnight delivery. If a
document is filed with the Board
through the e-filing process, a copy of
the e-filed document must be emailed to
other parties if that means of service is
acceptable to those other parties. If
email is not acceptable to the receiving
party, a paper copy of the document
must be personally served on the other
parties. If neither email nor personal
service is feasible, service of a paper
copy must be by overnight delivery.
When a party is represented by a
practitioner or attorney, service upon
the practitioner is deemed to be service
upon the party. All pleadings under this
section must also be emailed to
ServiceEmergency@stb.gov.
■ 3. Add § 1146.2 to read as follows:
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with RULES1
§ 1146.2
Accelerated process.
(a) Request for accelerated process.
After making a good faith effort to
resolve its service issue through an
informal dispute resolution process or
service of the Board, affected shippers
or railroads may seek accelerated
temporary interim relief under 49 U.S.C.
11123(a) for substantial, measurable
deterioration or other demonstrated
inadequacy in rail service provided by
the incumbent carrier that presents
potential imminent significant harm and
threatens potentially severe adverse
consequences to the petitioner, its
customers, or the public. Such
emergencies exist when there is a clear
and present threat to public health,
safety, national defense, or food
security, or a high probability of
business closures or immediate plant
shutdowns. The timing of potential
harm and consequences must render
potential relief under § 1146.1
ineffective. The relief requested must be
feasible and clearly avoid any
substantial impairment of the ability of
a rail carrier to serve its own customers
adequately, or to fulfill its common
carrier obligations.
(b) Procedure for accelerated
process—(1) Petition for relief. A
petitioner seeking accelerated relief
must indicate in its petition that it is
seeking such relief pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section and must
demonstrate circumstances that meet
the standard set forth in that paragraph.
The petition must include:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
16:06 Jan 23, 2024
Jkt 262001
(i) A particularized description of the
commodities and volumes which would
be subject to the requested relief and the
timing necessary for such relief,
including why potential relief under
§ 1146.1 would be ineffective;
(ii) A particularized explanation of
how the measurable deterioration or
other demonstrated inadequacy, absent
the requested relief, presents imminent
significant harm and threatens
potentially severe adverse consequences
as specified in paragraph (a) of this
section;
(iii) A description of specific and
particularized action that could be
performed by the incumbent carrier or
an alternative carrier and ordered by the
Board to relieve the potential harm and
adverse consequences;
(iv) A summary description of the
efforts taken to resolve the matter prior
to filing the petition, which must be
verified by a person or persons with
knowledge of the efforts taken to resolve
the matter; and
(v) Contact information for the
incumbent carrier.
(vi) The petition will be limited to
five (5) substantive pages, not including
the cover page, verifications, or
certificate of service.
(2) Staff conference. When the Board
receives a petition seeking accelerated
relief under paragraph (a) of this
section, the petition will be evaluated
on its merits by the Board.
(i) After the Board receives the
petition for accelerated relief, a
telephonic or virtual conference, led by
designated Board staff, will be held no
sooner than 24 hours after receipt of the
filing, but no later than 48 hours after
receipt of the filing, if practicable.
Designated Board staff may continue to
work on the case after the conference.
(ii) Required parties for the
conference include the petitioner(s), the
incumbent carrier, and any proposed
potential alternative carriers and other
parties deemed necessary by the Board.
Portions of the conference may be
closed to certain parties if confidential
business information needs to be
discussed. The conference will be
recorded and later transcribed (with
redactions, if necessary), and placed in
the public docket of the proceeding.
(iii) If applicable, the incumbent
carrier or any alternative carrier shall
address at the conference whether the
remedy proposed by the petitioner is
unsafe, infeasible, or will unreasonably
impair the carrier’s ability to serve other
customers. The Board may order the
incumbent carrier to submit, or if no
such order is issued, the incumbent
carrier may choose to submit, within 24
hours of the completion of the
PO 00000
Frm 00041
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 9990
4579
conference, an alternative service plan
for the Board to consider. Any
alternative carrier may also submit,
within 24 hours of the completion of the
conference, an alternative service plan
for the Board to consider. The Board
may choose to receive such information
either via written submission or a
second virtual or telephonic conference,
if practicable.
(3) Board decision. The Board will
endeavor to issue an initial decision on
the merits of the petition requesting
accelerated relief within three (3)
business days of the completion of the
conference. The Board shall not award
relief under this section for more than
20 days, and any relief ordered under
this section shall not be extended
beyond the 20-day period. A party may
petition the Board for subsequent relief
under § 1146.1.
(c) Petition for reconsideration. After
the Board issues an initial decision on
the merits of the petition requesting
accelerated relief, parties may petition
the Board for reconsideration. The
petition for reconsideration will be
subject to § 1115.3 of this chapter. The
record is to include any filings by the
parties in the proceeding and the
unredacted recording of the conference.
(d) Stay of relief. Notwithstanding
§ 1115.3 of this chapter, parties seeking
a stay of the relief issued by the Board
must concurrently file a petition for
reconsideration of the decision and a
petition to stay.
(e) Service. Every document filed with
the Board under this section must
include a certificate showing
simultaneous service upon all parties to
the proceeding, including any proposed
alternative carriers and the Federal
Railroad Administration. One copy
must be served on each party. Service
on the Board must be made through the
e-filing process, and a copy of the e-filed
document must be emailed to other
parties if that means of service is
acceptable to those other parties. If
email is not acceptable to the receiving
party, a paper copy of the document
must be personally served on the other
parties. If neither email nor personal
service is feasible, service of a paper
copy must be by overnight delivery.
When a party is represented by a
practitioner or attorney, service upon
the practitioner is deemed to be service
upon the party. All pleadings under this
section must also be emailed to
ServiceEmergency@stb.gov.
[FR Doc. 2024–01365 Filed 1–23–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915–01–P
E:\FR\FM\24JAR1.SGM
24JAR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 16 (Wednesday, January 24, 2024)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 4564-4579]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-01365]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
49 CFR Parts 1011, 1104, 1115, and 1146
[Docket No. EP 762]
Revisions to Regulations for Expedited Relief for Service
Emergencies
AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Surface Transportation Board (STB or Board) adopts a final
rule amending its emergency service regulations.
DATES: The rule is effective February 23, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jonathon Binet at (202) 245-0368. If
you require an accommodation under the Americans with Disabilities Act,
please call (202) 245-0245.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Pursuant to its broad statutory mandate, the
Surface Transportation Board closely monitors the rail industry's
service performance. See 49 U.S.C. 1321, 11145; see also 49 U.S.C.
10101, 11323, 10907. Over the last decade, railroad service challenges
impacting a wide range of geographic regions and commodities have
occurred with some frequency. See, e.g., U.S. Rail Serv. Issues--
Performance Data Reporting, EP 724 (Sub-No. 4) (STB served Dec. 30,
2014); STB Letter to CSX Transp., Inc. Requesting Serv. Reporting (July
27, 2017); Chairman Oberman Letter to Norfolk S. Regarding Serv. Issues
(Nov. 23, 2021); \1\ Urgent Issues in Freight Rail Serv., EP 770 (STB
served Apr. 7, 2022); Oversight Hearing Pertaining to Union Pac. R.R.'s
Embargoes, EP 772 (STB served Nov. 22, 2022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Letters available at www.stb.gov (open tab ``News &
Communications'' and select ``Non-Docketed Public Correspondence'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to service challenges in recent years, the Board has
held a series of public hearings to permit interested persons to report
on specific service problems, to hear from rail industry executives on
plans to address rail service problems generally, and to explore
additional options to improve service. At one such hearing in October
2017, several shippers observed that the Board's regulations at 49 CFR
part 1146, which implement 49 U.S.C. 11123 and govern expedited relief
for service emergencies, are rarely invoked, even in times of serious
rail service challenges. See Pub. Listening Session Regarding CSX
Transp., Inc.'s Rail Serv. Issues, EP 742, Hr'g Tr. 89:13-22; 90:1;
150:3-14; 196:11-22; 197:1-16; 199:1-9 (Oct. 17, 2017).
Based on these concerns, and to better understand the reasons for
the lack of use of the Board's directed service regulations, the Board
announced on March 15, 2018, that Board staff would hold informal
meetings with interested persons to discuss and gather feedback on the
adequacy of the Board's current regulations regarding emergency service
and service inadequacies, and whether and how the current regulations
should be modified to offer a more meaningful path to relief. See Press
Release, STB, Board to Hold Informal Meetings on Directed Serv. Reguls.
Beginning in Apr. (Mar. 15, 2018), www.stb.gov/news-communications/latest-news/archived-press-releases/.\2\ As a result, in the second
quarter of 2018 Board staff met with representatives of a variety of
entities representing carrier and shipper interests. A recurring
concern expressed by shipper interests was the amount of time required
under the existing procedures to obtain relief for service failures and
the difficulty of satisfying certain informational burdens. Although
carrier interests acknowledged that very few emergency service
petitions had been filed in recent years, they nevertheless generally
asserted that the existing procedures were sufficient, and noted that
the Board's Rail Customer and Public Assistance program (RCPA) had been
helpful in resolving acute service issues informally.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ While these meetings also included discussion of 49 CFR part
1147 (Temporary Relief Under 49 U.S.C. 10705 and 11102 for Service
Inadequacies), this proceeding concerns only 49 CFR part 1146
(Expedited Relief for Service Emergencies) pursuant to 49 U.S.C.
11123.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
By decision served April 7, 2022, the Board announced that it would
hold a hearing on April 26 and 27, 2022, on rail service problems
impacting the network and the recovery efforts involving several Class
I carriers.\3\ As
[[Page 4565]]
the hearing notice explained, the Board had informally heard from a
broad range of stakeholders about inconsistent and unreliable rail
service throughout the network and across commodity groups. Urgent
Issues in Freight Rail Serv., EP 770, slip op. at 2. These challenges
included tight car supply and unfilled car orders, delays in
transportation for carload and bulk traffic, increased origin dwell
time for released unit trains, missed switches, and ineffective
customer assistance. Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Press Release, STB, STB Issues Hearing Notice for Urgent
Issues in Freight Rail Serv. (Apr. 7, 2022), www.stb.gov/news-communications/latest-news/pr-22-21/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On April 22, 2022, the Board issued a notice of proposed rulemaking
in this docket, proposing to amend its emergency service regulations.
Revisions to Reguls. for Expedited Relief for Serv. Emergencies (NPRM),
EP 762 (STB served Apr. 22, 2022).\4\ The Board explained in the NPRM
that if the service issues continue, they could result in an increased
need for emergency Board action to meet the needs of the public. NPRM,
EP 762, slip op. at 2. Indeed, since the issuance of the NPRM, the
Board has issued orders to address service emergencies. See, e.g.,
Foster Poultry Farms--Ex Parte Pet. for Emergency Serv. Ord., FD 36609
(STB served June 17, 2022) (issuing, just two days after the filing of
the petition seeking emergency service relief, an order under 49 U.S.C.
11123 directing Union Pacific to adhere, to the greatest extent
possible, to a schedule that Union Pacific itself put forward). In
addition, the Board has proposed new regulations that would, if
adopted, establish additional procedures to govern reciprocal switching
determinations related to service inadequacy. See Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, Reciprocal Switching for Inadequate Serv., EP 711 (Sub-No.
2) (STB served Sept. 7, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The NPRM was published in the Federal Register, 87 FR 25609
(May 5, 2022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Background
Emergency service orders are designed to preserve rail service
where there has been a substantial rail service issue or failure that
requires immediate relief. Under 49 U.S.C. 11123(a), the Board may
issue an emergency service order when it determines that there exists
``an emergency situation of such magnitude as to have substantial
adverse effects on shippers, or on rail service in a region of the
United States, or that a rail carrier . . . cannot transport the
traffic offered to it in a manner that properly serves the public.''
\5\ When the Board determines that such a situation exists, it may:
``(1) direct the handling, routing, and movement of the traffic of a
rail carrier and its distribution over its own or other railroad lines;
(2) require joint or common use of railroad facilities; (3) prescribe
temporary through routes; [and] (4) give directions for--(A) preference
or priority in transportation; (B) embargoes; or (C) movement of
traffic under permits;'' or, when the service failure is caused by a
cessation of service by Amtrak, direct the continuation of operations
and related functions. 49 U.S.C. 11123(a). The Board may act on its own
initiative or pursuant to a petition, and emergency service may be
ordered summarily (i.e., without regard to the Administrative Procedure
Act, 5 U.S.C. 551-559). 49 U.S.C. 11123(b)(1). Board orders under 49
U.S.C. 11123 are subject to an initial time limit of 30 days, but they
may be extended up to an additional 240 days if the Board finds that
emergency conditions continue to exist. 49 U.S.C. 11123(a), (c).\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Under the statute, an emergency situation can be created by
``shortage of equipment, congestion of traffic, unauthorized
cessation of operations, failure of existing commuter rail passenger
transportation operations caused by a cessation of service by the
National Railroad Passenger Corporation, or other failure of traffic
movement.'' 49 U.S.C. 11123(a).
\6\ In the case of an alternative carrier providing service over
an incumbent carrier's lines, the carriers themselves may establish
the terms of compensation and operations, with the Board available
to resolve disputes, including disputes about compensation, if any
arise. 49 U.S.C. 11123(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The current regulations at 49 CFR 1146.1(a) require that a
petitioner seeking relief show a substantial, measurable deterioration
or other demonstrated inadequacy in rail service by the incumbent
carrier over an identified period of time. Any petition for relief must
demonstrate that the standard in 49 CFR 1146.1(a) is met, provide a
summary of discussions the petitioner has had with the incumbent
carrier regarding the service problems and the reasons why the
incumbent is unlikely to restore adequate rail service within a
reasonable period of time, and include a commitment from an alternative
carrier to provide service that can be performed safely without
degrading service to existing customers of the alternative carrier and
without unreasonably interfering with the incumbent's overall ability
to provide service. 49 CFR 1146.1(b). A reply to the petition must be
filed by the incumbent carrier within five business days, and a
rebuttal by the party requesting relief may be filed within three
business days following submission of the reply. 49 CFR 1146.1(b)(2)
and (3).
In the NPRM, the Board proposed to amend part 1146 by (1) modifying
the procedures for parties seeking a Board order directing an incumbent
carrier to take action to remedy a service emergency, (2) indicating
that the Board may act on its own initiative to direct emergency
service, (3) modifying the informational requirements for parties in
emergency service proceedings, (4) shortening the filing deadlines in
emergency service proceedings and establishing a timeframe for Board
decisions, and (5) establishing an accelerated process for certain
acute service emergencies. In response to the NPRM, the Board received
18 opening comments and five reply comments.\7\ Below, the Board
addresses the comments submitted and discusses the clarifications and
modifications being adopted in this final rule. The text of the final
rule is appended to this decision.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Opening comments were filed by the Association of American
Railroads (AAR); the American Chemistry Council, the Corn Refiners
Association, and The Fertilizer Institute (collectively, the
Coalition Associations); American Fuel & Petrochemical Manufacturers
(AFPM); Agricultural Retailers Association (ARA); the Brotherhood of
Locomotive Engineers and Trainmen (BLET); CSX Transportation, Inc.
(CSXT); Industrial Minerals Association--North America (IMA); the
Military Surface Deployment and Distribution Command (SDDC); the
National Association of Chemical Distributors (NACD); the National
Mining Association (NMA); the National Grain and Feed Association
(NGFA); Norfolk Southern Railway Company (NS); Private Railcar Food
and Beverage Association (PRFBA); the Renewable Fuels Association
(RFA); the Transportation Trades Department, AFL-CIO (TTD); the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA); the West Virginia Coal Association
(WVCA); and the Western Coal Traffic League, Freight Rail Customer
Alliance, National Coal Transportation Association, and Portland
Cement Association (collectively, Shipper Groups).
Reply comments were filed by AAR, the Coalition Associations,
NGFA, the National Industrial Transportation League (NITL) and the
Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries (ISRI), and the Shipper
Groups.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Final Rule
Several commenters express support for the Board's proposal.\8\ For
example, ARA comments that the proposal would reduce barriers and
provide more certainty for both shippers and railroads, as well as
enable the Board to better address emergency service situations, thus
helping to prevent localized service issues from impacting the entire
network. (ARA Comment 1.) NACD points to the efficiencies the proposal
would bring, (NACD Comment 2), and emphasizes that such ``[a]ccessible
and efficient relief mechanisms are especially needed now in this
unprecedented time of supply chain problems,'' (id. at 4). Shipper
[[Page 4566]]
Groups argue that the proposed changes would clarify substantive
standards and improve the emergency service relief procedures, (Shipper
Grps. Comment 1-2), as well as encourage carriers to act more
responsibly to avoid emergency service issues in the first place, (id.
at 8). USDA agrees that the proposal would ``improve rail service in
times of disruption and incentivize railroads to maintain better
service overall.'' (USDA Comment 1.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ (See, e.g., AFPM Comment 2; ARA Comment 1; IMA Comment 2;
NACD Comment 2; NGFA Comment 1-2; PRFBA Comment 2; RFA Comment 2;
Shipper Grps. Comment 1-2; SDDC Comment 1; USDA Comment 1.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
AFPM, IMA, NACD, and PRFBA each note how infrequently the Board's
emergency service regulations have been utilized and argue that this
lack of use justifies review of the provisions. (AFPM Comment 6; IMA
Comment 7; NACD Comment 2-3; PRFBA Comment 7.) According to AFPM,
rather than pursuing emergency relief from the Board, refiners simply
accept the temporary disruptions, often adjusting production, storage,
or fleet size. (AFPM Comment 6-7; see also NACD Comment 2-3.) IMA
similarly states that its member companies have not petitioned the
Board for emergency service because the existing process requires
information unavailable to them and does not provide a timely result.
(IMA Comment 3.) Several commenters note that shippers choose not to
petition the Board for emergency relief because they fear retribution
from railroads. (AFPM Comment 6-7; PRFBA Comment 8 n.6; IMA Comment 8
n.6.) \9\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ AFPM requests that the Board investigate retribution by
railroads toward shippers through rate increases, reduction in
service days, and more. (AFPM Comment 6.) Similarly, WVCA asks the
Board to ``convene a specific examination and proceeding regarding
rail service and the movement of coal.'' (WVCA Comment 12.) While
these requests are outside the scope of this proceeding,
stakeholders may share information about these concerns through the
Board's RCPA program or request informal meetings with the Board, as
appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other commenters support the proposal but assert that the Board
should take further action. The Coalition Associations, for example,
express strong support for the proposal, stating that it provides
``critical improvements that will enhance the utility of emergency
service orders for some circumstances,'' but caution that the
rulemaking will not solve all, or even most, service problems.
(Coalition Ass'ns Comment 1-2; see also NMA Comment 2-3; NITL & ISRI
Reply 1.) TTD likewise supports the proposal but also argues that the
provisions in this rulemaking will not fully address the current rail
service problems, which it claims stem primarily from the railroads'
staffing, equipment, and scheduling decisions. (TTD Comment 1.) WVCA
states it supports the NPRM and encourages the Board to continue its
rail service oversight efforts. (WVCA Comment 2, 12.)
AAR, CSXT, and NS each express their support of the Board's efforts
to ensure the accessibility of service relief when necessary in times
of emergency. (AAR Comment 1; CSXT Comment 2; NS Comment 2.) AAR
supports ``the Board's effort to properly structure expedited relief
where appropriate and necessary to resolve emergency situations,'' and
proposes several modifications and additional clarifications. (AAR
Comment 1-2.) CSXT expressly supports certain aspects of the proposed
rule and expresses ``serious concerns'' about others. (CSXT Comment 2-
3.) NS ``supports review and appropriate updates based on sound policy
and evidence,'' but it notes that the Board has ``existing tools at its
disposal . . . that remain useful and effective to address service
issues in an expedited manner,'' and it offers ``three suggestions and
minor modifications'' to the proposed rule. (NS Comment 2.)
Clarifying Remedial Pathways. In the NPRM, the Board proposed
adding language to 49 CFR 1146.1(a) to clarify that it may direct an
incumbent carrier or alternative carrier to provide service and that it
can act on its own initiative as well as pursuant to a petition. NPRM,
EP 762, slip op. at 5. The Board noted these changes would better align
the Board's regulations with its statutory authority and provide
clarity to stakeholders. Id. Several commenters express support for one
or both of these clarifications, which merely codify the Board's
existing statutory authority.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ NACD, NMA, and Shipper Groups express support for both
clarifications. (See NACD Comment 3; NMA Comment 2; Shipper Grps.
Comment 4.) CSXT,NITL, and ISRI state that they support clarifying
that the Board may direct an emergency service order at the
incumbent as well as the alternative carrier, (see CSXT Comment 2;
NITL & ISRI Reply 1), while AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA state they support
clarifying that the Board can act on its own initiative as well as
on petition, (see AFPM Comment 6; IMA Comment 7; PRFBA Comment 7; NS
Comment 2 (acknowledging that the statute provides the Board
authority to act on its own initiative)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other commenters request additional modifications and
clarifications to other aspects of part 1146.1(a). Specifically, the
Coalition Associations request that the Board remove the phrase ``over
an identified period of time,'' arguing that service emergencies can
arise in short order and that this language suggests a shipper must
wait for some time to pass before petitioning the Board for emergency
service relief. (Coalition Ass'ns Comment 2.) NGFA and Shipper Groups
ask the Board to address the Board's authority to issue emergency
service orders on an ex parte basis. (NGFA Comment 3; Shipper Grps.
Comment 9 (citing Hasa, Inc. v. Union Pac. R.R., NOR 42165 (STB served
Aug. 21, 2019)).) According to Shipper Groups, the reply and rebuttal
filings permitted in 49 CFR 1146.1(b) are unnecessary when a second
carrier is not involved. (Shipper Grps. Comment 9.)
The Board finds it unnecessary to remove the phrase ``over an
identified period of time'' from 49 CFR 1146.1(a). This language does
not restrict petitioners from seeking emergency service orders in
quickly emerging situations because the section prescribes no minimum
period that must pass prior to filing. See Expedited Relief, EP 628,
slip op. at 8 n.14. In addition, as the Board has previously noted, the
language of 49 CFR 1146.1(a) in its current format affords the Board
the needed flexibility to address varying circumstances on a case-by-
case basis. See Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 8-9.
Regarding the request from NGFA and Shipper Groups that the Board
address its authority to issue emergency service orders on an ex parte
basis, the Board agrees that 49 U.S.C. 11123 permits the Board to order
emergency service without regard to Administrative Procedure Act
requirements. See 49 U.S.C. 11123(b)(1).\11\ Even though the Board is
modifying its regulations to improve the processing time when
emergencies occur, there may still be circumstances when the Board
needs to act on an ex parte basis. Under the current proposal, the
Board retains the statutory authority to order emergency service on an
ex parte basis in appropriate circumstances and may waive its
regulations when appropriate.\12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ The Board is subject to the Administrative Procedure Act
when it establishes the terms of compensation if the railroads do
not agree. 49 U.S.C. 11123(b)(1) and (2).
\12\ The procedures in the proposed regulations do not address
situations when the Board is acting on its own initiative. NS argues
that the Board should ensure impacted rail carriers have an
opportunity to comment--either in writing or by telephonic
conference--before the Board orders emergency service in these
situations. (NS Comment 4.) Absent extraordinary circumstances, the
Board intends to afford carriers an opportunity to be heard even
when the Board acts on its own initiative.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
AAR and NS ask the Board to articulate a standard for the types of
emergency situations that would be eligible for relief under 49 CFR
part 1146. (AAR Comment 3; NS Comment 3.) They argue that emergency
service relief should be available only in ``real'' or ``true''
emergencies. (AAR Comment 2; NS Comment 2.) According to AAR,
[[Page 4567]]
without further guidance, the regulations could be used to ``secure
leverage and immediate attention to their particular service
complaints.'' (AAR Comment 5.) On reply, various commenters argue AAR's
request is unnecessary and overly restrictive. (See Coalition Ass'ns
Reply 9; NITL & ISRI Reply 3.) The Coalition Associations note that the
existing process has been in place for ``nearly 25 years without the
objective standards AAR deems `essential' '' and that the Board has
denied emergency relief when a petitioner has improperly invoked 49 CFR
1146.1. (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 9.) \13\ They argue that a case-by-case
approach is superior because the Board cannot anticipate every scenario
that may arise. (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 9-10; see also NITL & ISRI
Reply 3; Shipper Grps. Reply 2 (``[w]hether relief is appropriate
should be determined based on a full set of facts'').)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ In support of its argument, Coalition Association cite to
Granite State Concrete Company v. B&M Corporation, NOR 42083 (STB
served Sept. 15, 2003) (denying an emergency service order but
commencing a proceeding); Keokuk Junction Railway--Alternative Rail
Service--Line of Toledo, Peoria & Western Railway, FD 34397 (STB
served Oct. 31, 2003) (denying an emergency service order because
alleged service inadequacy was based primarily upon rate levels);
and Ohio Valley Railroad--Petition to Restore Switch Connection &
Other Relief, FD 34608 (STB served Feb. 23, 2005) (denying an
emergency service order but granting relief under 49 U.S.C. 10742).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
AAR also asks that the Board require petitioners seeking relief
under 49 CFR part 1146 to ``affirm that there are no alternative modes
available or feasible.'' (AAR Comment 17.) According to AAR, the Board
could not find there was a ``real'' emergency if the petitioner could
shift its traffic to truck, barge, or another mode. (Id.) In response,
the Coalition Associations note that it is unclear whether AAR is
asking the Board to require the petitioner to include a sworn statement
or market dominance analysis and that the latter would be impractical
in an emergency. (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 14.) The Coalition
Associations also assert that the ``time, cost, and uncertainty of
pursuing emergency service relief will always outweigh the additional
cost of a non-rail transportation alternative to avoid the emergency,''
so AAR's inference that shippers would petition for an emergency
service order when they have alternatives available is ``unrealistic
and cynical.'' (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 14; see also Shipper Grps. Reply
8 (``[O]ne would expect that a shipper that had a viable, economic
option to pursue would choose that option before seeking emergency
relief.'').) Shipper Groups claim that carriers are attempting to
increase the burden on petitioners by inserting a ``mini-market
dominance case'' into emergency service proceedings. (Id.)
AAR's and NS's proposal to limit the type of situations eligible
for emergency relief under 49 CFR part 1146 is not necessary and would
complicate the process, increase the burden on shippers, and undermine
the flexibility provided by the current regulations.\14\ In addition,
as various commenters have observed, the substantive standard in the
part 1146 regulations has been in place for nearly 25 years without
this limitation, during which time the Board has denied petitions where
it found the situation did not constitute an emergency. See, e.g., S.F.
Bay R.R.--Mare Island Pet. for Emergency Serv. Ord. & Pet. for
Declaratory Ord.--Lennar Mare Island, LLC, FD 35360, slip op. at 3 (STB
served Dec. 6, 2010) (denying an emergency service petition ``because
the record does not show that an emergency exists''). The Board has
previously emphasized that the emergency service procedures are ``not
meant to redress minor service disruptions,'' Expedited Relief, EP 628,
slip op. at 2, but rather provide temporary relief for serious ones,
id. at 8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ In contrast, the Board has proposed using objective
standards, rather than a flexible case-by-case approach, to
determine when a reciprocal switching arrangement should be
prescribed, since objective standards in that context ``would create
an incentive for rail carriers to provide adequate service in the
first instance and because, if a rail carrier did not do so, the
affected shippers and receivers would then have more certainty in
their opportunities to obtain line-haul service from an alternate
carrier.'' See Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Reciprocal Switching
for Inadequate Serv., EP 711 (Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 9-10 (STB
served Sept. 7, 2023). Those proposed objective standards seek to
``provide the certainty that is needed to protect the public
interest, as well as the interests of rail customers, in adequate
service on a general and sustained basis.'' Id. at 5. The Board made
clear, however, that these standards should not be used ``for the
prescription of emergency service under part 1146.'' Id. at 10-11.
The Board finds that a more flexible approach is appropriate here,
given the nature of an emergency finding, its related effects, and
generally shorter remedy period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board also declines to adopt AAR's suggestion to require
petitioners to affirm that no alternative modes of transportation are
feasible or available. Generally, it seems unlikely that a shipper
would seek emergency service relief from the Board if it has easy
access to other transportation options, as the Coalition Associations
have observed. However, in evaluating emergency service petitions, the
Board has considered and will continue to consider the transportation
environment in which the emergency occurs and the impact of the
inadequate rail service on the affected shippers. Roseburg Forest Prod.
Co.--Alt. Rail Serv.--Cent. Or. & Pac. R.R., FD 35175, slip op. at 7-8
(STB served Mar. 4, 2009); Pioneer Indus. Ry.--Alt. Rail Serv.--Cent.
Ill. R.R., FD 34917, slip op. at 9-11 (STB served Jan. 12, 2007).
NS expresses its concern that the Board might base an emergency
service order on the railroad performance data collected under 49 CFR
part 1250 without obtaining additional information from all parties
involved. (NS Comment 3.) NS argues that, although railroad performance
data might identify service trends, those trends do not necessarily
amount to service emergencies under 49 U.S.C. 11123. (Id.) The Board
appreciates the significance of ordering emergency service and the
operational, safety, and financial implications it may have on
carriers, and it anticipates getting more information beyond service
trends in individual emergency service cases to aid the Board in
appropriately resolving these matters. The procedures in the proposed
regulations thus allow an opportunity for carriers to provide specific
information to the Board about the situation at hand.
Lastly, AAR requests the Board either ``clarify that it will not
invoke [49 CFR] 1146.1 authority on its own motion if the issue has
been the subject of [an] RCPA informal dispute resolution process about
which the Board was aware,'' or add a requirement that the Board
``certify when it invokes its [49 CFR] 1146.1 authority on its own
motion, that none of the information leading to such invocation came
from an RCPA informal dispute resolution process.'' (AAR Comment 15.)
As the Board explained in the NPRM, RCPA serves as a resource for the
Board's stakeholders, and a key part of RCPA's mission involves
providing informal facilitation services to shippers and other parties
without charge to resolve disputes with railroads. Requests for RCPA
assistance, including informal facilitation services, are kept
confidential and not shared with other STB offices. Accordingly, the
Board does not find it necessary to add the language requested by AAR.
Modifying Petition Requirements. Currently, under 49 CFR
1146.1(b)(1)(iii), a petitioner must have a commitment from another
available railroad to provide alternative service and explain how the
alternative service would be provided safely without degrading service
to the alternative carrier's existing customers and without
unreasonably interfering with the incumbent's overall ability to
provide service. As the Board discussed in the
[[Page 4568]]
NPRM, many proponents of a rule modification have expressed frustration
with the requirement to secure an alternative carrier in advance (i.e.,
a commitment to be included in a petition) during a service emergency
because potential alternative carriers may be reluctant to participate
in emergency alternative service. NPRM, EP 762, slip op. at 5. The
Board stated in the NPRM that requiring an advance commitment from an
alternative carrier as a condition to filing an emergency service
petition is an unnecessary burden on petitioners experiencing a service
crisis that undermines the usefulness of this important statutory
remedy. Id. at 5-6. Accordingly, the Board proposed removing that
requirement and instead requiring petitioners to submit only a list of
possible alternative carriers, based on the petitioner's understanding
of other rail carriers' nearby operations. Id. at 6.
The Board also proposed requiring the incumbent carrier and
alternative carriers, if any, to address in the first instance whether
the specific remedy proposed by the petitioner would be unsafe or
infeasible, or whether it would substantially impair the replying
carrier's ability to serve its other customers adequately or fulfill
its common carrier obligations. Id. Regarding the requirement that
petitions include an explanation of reasons why the incumbent carrier
is unlikely to restore rail service, the Board proposed to clarify that
the explanation need only take the form of a ``summary'' to the extent
that such information is available to the petitioner. Id. The Board
reasoned that these changes would place the informational requirements
on the parties most likely to have the information. Id.
According to NGFA, these changes are ``an extremely equitable and
more efficient way to ensure the Board is presented with the evidence
it needs to make a decision in an efficient manner.'' (NGFA Comment 4-
5.) Shipper Groups, AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA each express support for how
these changes place the burden to provide certain relevant information
on the entity likely to have direct knowledge of it. (AFPM Comment 8;
IMA Comment 10; PRFBA Comment 10; Shipper Grps. Comment 5-6.) Shipper
Groups argue that the changes would ``lead to the development of a
better evidentiary record and more efficient and expeditious decision-
making,'' further the rail transportation policy goals of requiring
fair and expeditious regulatory decisions when regulation is required,
and provide for the expeditious handling and resolution of proceedings.
(Shipper Grps. Comment 5-6 (citing 49 U.S.C. 10101(2), (15)).) AFPM,
IMA, and PRFBA note that these changes would incentivize rail shippers
to bring cases that may have gone unfiled in the past for lack of
evidence not within the petitioner's control. (AFPM Comment 8; IMA
Comment 10; PRFBA Comment 10.)
RFA projects that the Board's proposal to eliminate the requirement
for an advance commitment from an alternative carrier and instead
require only a list of potential alternative carriers would ease the
burden on petitioners, streamline the petition process, and minimize
disruptions in important customer service dynamics with carriers. (RFA
Comment 1.) According to NACD, NGFA, and Shipper Groups, the advance
commitment requirement has made it excessively difficult for shippers
seeking relief as the regulations intended. (NACD Comment 3; NGFA
Comment 4; Shipper Grps. Reply 6; see also Shipper Grps. Comment 6.)
According to Shipper Groups, an alternative carrier ``may be reluctant
to commit publicly in advance to providing alternative service,
especially if it is otherwise dependent on the incumbent carrier in
some way, such as a short line that is beholden to the affected carrier
for all or much of its business or otherwise subject to `paper
barriers' established by the incumbent.'' (Shipper Grps. Reply 6.) NITL
and ISRI contend that this change will enhance the utility of the
emergency service remedy. (NITL & ISRI Reply 2.)
On the other hand, AAR and CSXT oppose this change. AAR argues that
deferring the question of whether an alternative carrier is available
and able to provide emergency service would be impractical given the
short time frames, ``unfairly penalize the alternative carrier by
suddenly dragging them into an emergency proceeding as to which they
had no prior knowledge,'' and hinder the Board's ability to ``act
quickly and decisively, with knowledge of all relevant facts.'' (AAR
Comment 7.) According to AAR, for the Board to be aware of factors
affecting an alternative carrier's ability to provide service, such as
restrictions on service in labor contracts or operational difficulties
being experienced by the alternative carrier, the alternative carrier
must be ``involved on the frontend.'' (Id. at 9.) AAR claims its
concerns are exacerbated by the tight timelines proposed. (Id.)
CSXT argues that retaining the requirement for an advance
commitment would promote the speed and success of the emergency service
process and would ensure that any Board action is consistent with the
prohibition in 49 U.S.C. 11123 of any Board action that would ``cause a
rail carrier to operate in violation of this part'' or ``impair
substantially the ability of a rail carrier to serve its own customers
adequately, or to fulfill its common carrier obligations.'' (CSXT
Comment 6 (quoting 49 U.S.C. 11123(c)(2)(A)-(B)).) CSXT further argues
that requiring petitioners to obtain advance commitment from an
alternative carrier is not ``an obstruction'' to their ability to
obtain relief but rather ``essential'' because it ``can only expedite
the process by ensuring the [alternative] carrier is ready, willing,
and able to act at the earliest possible point in the remedial
process.'' (Id. at 7.)
AAR and CSXT both note that the Board--when it adopted 49 CFR
1146.1--considered and rejected the position the Board took in the
NPRM. (AAR Comment 8 (quoting Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at
11); CSXT Comment 7.) AAR argues that nothing has changed since then
that would make an alternative carrier's advance commitment less
essential, (AAR Comment 8), and CSXT asserts that ``the Board must
offer a reasoned decision supported by substantial evidence for making
any change to [its] conclusion.'' (CSXT Comment 7-8 (citing Jicarilla
Apache Nation v. Dep't of Interior, 613 F.3d 1112, 1120 (D.C. Cir.
2010)).)
In response to these concerns, the Coalition Associations suggest
the Board require petitioners to serve their petitions on the
identified alternative carriers and to mandate that those carriers
participate in the process. (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 6, see also NGFA
Comment 5-6 (suggesting the Board mandate that identified alternative
carriers reply to a petition).) NGFA urges the Board to ``err on the
side [of] collecting as much relevant information as possible, as
quickly as possible, from the incumbent and an identified alternative
carrier.'' (NGFA Comment 6.) NITL and ISRI also oppose the carriers'
proposal to retain the advance commitment requirement, arguing that
elimination of this requirement would increase the usefulness of the
emergency service regulations. (NITL & ISRI Reply 3.)
The Board does not find AAR's and CSXT's concerns persuasive and
finds it in the public interest to eliminate the advance commitment
requirement, as was proposed in the NPRM. Requiring shippers to obtain
an advance commitment from an alternative carrier has unduly hindered
the objectives of the emergency service process for the reasons stated
in the NPRM, slip op. at
[[Page 4569]]
5-6, and by various commenters, see supra at 9-10, and removing this
obstacle will help the process work more effectively. As the Board
acknowledged in the NPRM, and as AAR and CSXT point out, the Board took
a different position in the 1998 decision, stating that the absence of
an advance commitment could create safety concerns, impair service to
the alternative carrier's customers, or hurt the alternative carrier's
finances. NPRM, slip op. at 5 (citing Expedited Relief for Serv.
Inadequacies, EP 628, slip op. at 11). However, as the Board explained
in the NPRM, feedback from rail users and the agency's own observations
have led the Board to conclude that the disadvantages of the advance
commitment requirement outweigh any potential advantages, and that the
concerns expressed in the 1998 decision can be adequately addressed
when considering individual requests. See id. Moreover, the inability
of shippers to obtain such advance commitments from alternative
carriers appears to have been a key driver in shippers' failure to use
the regulatory process at all. Id. In promulgating the original
regulations in 1998, the Board did not anticipate that the alternative
carrier commitment requirement would lead to that result, and AAR and
CSXT cite no precedent requiring the Board to ignore its experience
under the regulations. With regard to the NGFA's suggestion, the Board
will require an identified alternative carrier to reply to a petition.
Though the Board noted in the NPRM that it could take appropriate
action to request more information from an alternative carrier, it has
determined that--for the Board to best meet its information needs and
carry out its statutory obligations in a more efficient manner--the
Board will require that an alternative carrier address whether the
specific remedy would be unsafe or infeasible, or would substantially
impair the carrier's ability to serve its other customers adequately or
fulfill its common carrier obligations.
Numerous commenters support the Board's proposal to require
incumbent carriers to first address whether the proposed remedy would
be unsafe or infeasible or whether it would substantially impair the
replying carrier's ability to adequately serve its other customers or
fulfill its common carrier obligations.\15\ AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA assert
that such a procedural shift makes sense in proceedings where the ``use
of the discovery process [would be] too slow to allow the Board to act
expediently.'' (AFPM Comment 9; IMA Comment 10; PRFBA Comment 10.) NACD
also supports this proposed change, calling it a ``common sense
reform,'' (NACD Comment 3), and CSXT agrees that it is appropriate to
ask the rail carrier rather than the shipper to address the safety and
feasibility of the requested service, (CSXT Comment 3). BLET supports
the Board's proposal to allow an alternative carrier to reply to the
petition, arguing that its employees and members could provide valuable
insight into how operations are happening in the field. (BLET Comment
4.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ (See, e.g., AFPM Comment 8; BLET Comment 4; IMA Comment 10;
NACD Comment 3; PRFBA Comment 10; USDA Comment 1.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Coalition Associations suggest the Board consider requiring
railroads to provide certain minimum information to validate their
claims that a remedy is unsafe or infeasible, or that it will interfere
with their ability to serve their other customers. (Coalition Ass'ns
Comment 7.) Similarly, Shipper Groups ask the Board to require carriers
to make a ``specific and documented showing,'' rather than ``conclusory
assertions,'' of substantial impairment in order to defeat a request
for emergency service relief. (Shipper Grps. Comment 7.) According to
Shipper Groups, carriers will seek to preserve service that is more
profitable or that limits liquidated damages or other contractual
exposure. (Id.) The Coalition Associations also ask the Board to
clarify that a petition would not be defeated automatically if the
proposed emergency service would affect another shipper. (Coalition
Ass'ns Comment 8.)
AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA argue the Board should shift the burden of
proof to the railroads if a petitioner can demonstrate a prima facie
case of ``a substantial, measurable service deterioration or other
demonstrated inadequacy over an identified period of time by the
incumbent carrier.'' (AFPM Comment 9; IMA Comment 10; PRFBA Comment
10.) They further ask the Board to establish a defined standard for
that prima facie showing of service deterioration, which could be based
on, for example, the percentage of missed switches for first mile/last
mile, trip plan compliance data, or plant/facility shutdown/slowdown in
the past, present, or future. (AFPM Comment 9-10; IMA Comment 10-11;
PRFBA Comment 11.) AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA also suggest that in cases
where the incumbent railroad's reply fails to adequately rebut the
petitioner's prima facie case, the Board should issue its order five
days after the reply, effectively eliminating the rebuttal period and
expediting the case by two days. (AFPM Comment 11; IMA Comment 13;
PRFBA Comment 13.) AAR opposes this request, arguing that the Board's
authority under 49 U.S.C. 11123 is ``limited to emergency situations,
not generalized service complaints,'' and that service metrics,
``whether based on first-mile/last-mile data or trip plan compliance,
are ill-suited to the identification of emergencies.'' (AAR Reply 4-5.)
AAR further argues that proponents of a Board order are required to
make their case in support of the order, and that it would be unfair to
further shorten a carrier's response time while also shifting the
burden to the carrier. (Id. at 5.)
Since emergencies can take various forms, flexibility is critical
in determining whether a particular situation constitutes an emergency
requiring expeditious Board action. The Board will not attempt to
define the required minimum information appropriate for every case, nor
will it establish a requirement for a carrier to make ``a specific and
documented showing'' of substantial impairment in its ability to serve
its other customers to defeat a request for an emergency service order.
The Board seeks to gain a quick and accurate understanding of the
circumstances underlying requests for relief so it can act to serve the
public when necessary, not bog proceedings down with technical
requirements that might undermine the purpose of these emergency
proceedings. To be sure, especially given the expedited timelines, the
Board expects that parties will support their claims with available
evidence. The Board will not accept bald assertions regarding
feasibility or safety as evidence of such, but circumstances will
unfold differently from case to case, and the Board must maintain
flexibility so it can evaluate all aspects of a case and act
appropriately.\16\ Additionally, emergencies often arise from
unexpected or unanticipated circumstances, and the Board must have the
flexibility to respond to those circumstances promptly.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ The Board is mindful that whether railroad operations are
safe is generally within the purview of the Federal Railroad
Administration (FRA). The Board's regulations accordingly require
that petitions for emergency service relief under part 1146 be
served on FRA. See 49 CFR 1146.1(e), 1146.2(e). Carriers should
demonstrate that they have undertaken the requisite advance planning
necessary to assure safe operations, including consideration of FRA
safety regulations. See Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 13
n.19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board also clarifies that petitions, regardless of whether they
seek emergency service from incumbent carrier or an alternative, will
not automatically be defeated simply
[[Page 4570]]
because the proposed emergency service order would affect another
party. Rather, the concern lies with whether a proposal would
``substantially impair'' a carrier's ability to serve its other
customers or fulfill its common carrier obligations, which is why the
Board is asking for replies from carriers to address this matter.
Pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 1146.1(a), the Board will then consider this
information and the effects on other shippers of ordering emergency
service as part of its analysis when determining whether emergency
service is suitable under the circumstances and whether to order
relief.
In addition, the Board declines to shift the burden of proof onto
carriers by requiring a petitioner only to make a defined prima facie
showing of a substantial and measurable service deterioration or
another demonstrated service inadequacy, as requested by certain
shipper interests. As AAR notes, this would shift the burden from
petitioners to carriers while also giving carriers less time to
respond. While the regulations adopted here seek to remove unnecessary
burdens on petitioners, such as obtaining the advance commitment from
alternative carriers, petitioners must still bear the burden of
establishing the need for such relief.
CSXT and NS ask the Board to require petitioners seeking relief
under 49 CFR 1146.1 to describe the efforts taken to resolve the issue
through other means, as the Board is proposing for the new, accelerated
process under 49 CFR 1146.2. (CSXT Comment 11; NS Comment 12.)
According to CSXT, ``it would be appropriate to likewise encourage good
faith efforts at informal dispute resolution prior to seeking the
extraordinary relief of an emergency service order.'' (CSXT Comment
11.) NS notes that the Board's reasoning for including this requirement
in 49 CFR 1146.2, which it states appears related to the timeline of
the accelerated process, seems to apply equally to the 49 CFR 1146.1
process, which the Board also proposes to shorten. (NS Comment 12.)
The Board agrees that it is appropriate to require petitioners
seeking relief under 49 CFR 1146.1 to describe efforts taken to resolve
issues prior to the filing of the petition. The Board prefers informal
resolution of disputes whenever possible, and requiring petitioners to
describe efforts taken to arrive at solutions prior to emergency
service will encourage parties to make such efforts in good faith
rather than seeking an order from the Board as a matter of first
resort. Moreover, many petitions already include this information to
some degree, given that the current regulations require petitions to
include a ``summary of the petitioner's discussions with the incumbent
carrier of the service problems,'' so mandating that petitioners
describe their efforts at resolution in 49 CFR 1146.1 would not
significantly increase their burden. Finally, requiring this
information in 49 CFR 1146.1 petitions would better align that process
with the 49 CFR 1146.2 process and help ensure that the Board receives
all information necessary to understand the underlying emergency and
overall circumstances. 49 CFR 1146.1(b)(ii) will be amended to adopt
this requirement.
Shipper Groups argue that a carrier should face additional
consequences, such as penalties or damages, when it has ``deprived
itself of the ability to meet its commitments and obligations'' due to
underinvestment in employees and other resources, particularly when it
cannot provide emergency service due to this underinvestment. (Shipper
Grps. Comment 8.) According to Shipper Groups, penalties would
incentivize carriers to act more proactively to maintain their service
commitments and reduce the need for emergency service orders
altogether. (Id.) NGFA agrees, adding that the Board should more
aggressively penalize carriers that do not comply with emergency
service orders or are unable to provide emergency service relief due to
business or operational decisions. (NFGA Reply 3-4.) NGFA further
contends that the Board should interpret the phrase ``each violation''
more broadly, for example, on a per-car basis instead of a per-train
basis. (Id. at 4.) AAR, in contrast, maintains that a punitive approach
is not authorized by 49 U.S.C. 11123, which contemplates alternative
carriers compensating incumbent carriers for the use of incumbents'
equipment and facilities. (AAR Reply 2-3 (quoting Pyco Indus., Inc.--
Alt. Rail Serv.--S. Plains Switching, Ltd. Co., FD 34889 et al, slip
op. at 4-5 (STB served Jan. 11, 2008)).)
The Board will not adopt these changes suggested by Shipper Groups
and NGFA. Section 11123, from which the Board derives its emergency
authority, contains no language or provision authorizing penalties or
damages. Furthermore, the Board rejected similar arguments when
adopting the existing regulations, noting that emergency service relief
``is to be used for restorative or alleviative purposes only, and not
as a punitive or preventive measure.'' Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip
op. at 7.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ See also Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, Reciprocal
Switching for Inadequate Serv., EP 711 (Sub-No. 2), slip op. at 10
(STB served Sept. 6, 2023) (distinguishing the standard for
obtaining a reciprocal switching order from complaint-based common
carrier obligation cases under 49 U.S.C. 11101(a)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, APFM, IMA, and PRFBA want the Board to create a
``reasonable railroad standard'' requiring ``the incumbent railroad to
cooperate in a reasonable manner with the petitioner and the
alternative carrier, while the [emergency service] order is in
effect.'' (AFPM Comment 10; IMA Comment 11-12; PRFBA Comment 11-12.)
The Board finds that implementing such a ``reasonable railroad''
standard is not necessary because acting reasonably, in good faith and
in compliance with Board orders, is already required. See 49 U.S.C.
10702. Any allegation of unreasonableness, bad faith or non-compliance
can and will be dealt with on a case-by-case basis.
Modifying the Regulatory Timeframe. In response to stakeholders'
previously-expressed concerns about the overall length of the current
49 CFR 1146.1 process, as well as the lack of a date certain by which a
Board decision can be expected, the Board proposed in the NPRM to
shorten the filing deadlines for replies and rebuttals set forth in 49
CFR 1146.1 and to establish a target timeframe for a Board decision.
NPRM, EP 762, slip op. at 7. The Board explained that by shortening the
timeframe and indicating when the parties can expect a decision by the
Board, the proposed amendments would further streamline the process for
all parties involved in an emergency service proceeding. Id.
Many commenters support this aspect of the Board's proposal.\18\
AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA assert that shortening the procedural timeline
would expedite the proceeding where time is clearly of the essence.
(AFPM Comment 10-11; IMA Comment 13; PRFBA Comment 13.) NGFA asserts
that a short timeline is imperative to avoid severe damage to a
petitioner's business and customers since shippers will have exhausted
all commercial remedies before seeking Board intervention. (NGFA
Comment 5.) According to Shipper Groups, the Board's proposal to
shorten the filing deadlines and establish a target timeframe for a
Board decision is reasonable and appropriate. (Shipper Grps. Comment
8.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ (See AFPM Comment 10-11; BLET Comment 4; IMA Comment 13;
NACD Comment 3; NGFA Comment 5; PRFBA Comment 13; RFA Comment 2;
Shipper Grps. Comment 8; USDA Comment 1.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several commenters ask the Board to shorten the 49 CFR 1146.1
timeline further still. According to RFA, ``the modified timeline is
too lengthy to
[[Page 4571]]
efficiently address emergencies in a timely manner.'' (RFA Comment 2.)
RFA explains that because ethanol facilities can typically store less
than one week's production on-site, shortening the process by a few
days would not fully address emergency situations at these facilities.
(Id.) ARA presents a similar argument, noting that timely delivery of
products, such as fertilizer, is critical for agricultural retailers as
crop production is weather-dependent and seasonal. (ARA Comment 1.)
\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ BLET asks the Board to permit extension of the deadlines if
all parties agree, (BLET Comment 4), and AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA urge
the Board to grant extension requests in extraordinary circumstances
only, (AFPM Comment 11, IMA Comment 13; PRFBA Comment 13). In most
cases, extension requests agreed upon by all parties to an emergency
service proceeding are likely to be appropriate. However, given the
urgent nature of the situations underlying emergency service
proceedings, the Board will grant unilateral extension requests only
for good cause. The Board will amend 49 CFR 1104.7 to clarify that
requests for an extension under 49 CFR part 1146 must be filed as
early as possible under the circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
AAR opposes shortening the timeline under 49 CFR 1146.1, arguing
that ``[r]educing the time available for the parties to make an
adequate record is not the solution to uncertainty over how quickly
relief will be ordered,'' and suggests that modifying the proposed rule
to provide firm decision deadlines may help alleviate this concern.
(AAR Comment 13; see also CSXT Comment 12 (asking the Board to provide
firm decision deadlines for 49 CFR 1146.1 and 1146.2).) AAR notes that
the Board previously rejected shorter timelines and argues that the
concerns expressed in that decision remain valid today. (AAR Comment 12
(quoting Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 16 (``[w]e do not
believe that a shorter time frame is feasible, given the nature of the
relief sought, the need for an adequately developed record regarding
the factual predicate for such action, and the ability of the parties
to implement the proposed arrangement safely and without harm to either
railroad or their other shippers.'').) According to AAR, shortening the
timeline is even less feasible under the current proposal because the
Board is also eliminating the requirement that petitioners obtain an
advance commitment from an alternative carrier. (Id.) AAR asserts
petitioners can consider the total timeline when deciding when to file
a petition. (Id. at 13.) In addition, AAR urges the Board to reject the
requests to further shorten the proposal's timelines. (AAR Reply 6.)
AAR claims the proposal's timelines are ``already so short as to strain
feasibility'' and asserts shippers can time the filing of their
petitions ``to ensure relief can be provided in the correct amount of
time.'' (Id.)
On reply, Shipper Groups assert that AAR's proposals are
unnecessary or at least speculative at this time, and they state that a
firm decision deadline might prevent the Board from taking the time
that is needed in complex situations. (Shipper Grps. Reply 7.) The
Coalition Associations state they are amenable to forgoing the
shortening of the timelines in 49 CFR 1146.1 since the Board has
proposed an accelerated process in 49 CFR 1146.2. (Coalition Ass'ns
Reply 6-7.)
The Board is not persuaded by AAR's arguments for retaining the
existing timeline in 49 CFR 1146.1. As explained in the NPRM, the Board
agrees with stakeholders that have expressed concern that the process
in 1146.1 is too lengthy in the context of a service emergency. NPRM,
EP 762, slip op. at 7. Although the Board rejected a shorter timeframe
in 1998, its subsequent experience with 49 CFR 1146.1 has convinced the
Board that a shorter time frame would in fact be feasible, contrary to
what the Board anticipated when it adopted these regulations. See
Foster Farms--Ex Parte Pet. for Emergency Serv. Ord., FD 36609 (STB
served June 17, 2022).
Because the final rule includes an accelerated process for acute
service emergencies, the Board does not find it necessary to further
shorten the timelines in 49 CFR 1146.1 beyond the periods initially
proposed in the NPRM. The Board will also refrain from setting a firm
decision deadline in the regulations. The Board intends to issue
decisions within five days of the rebuttal deadline, as proposed in the
NPRM, but setting a firm deadline for this part of the regulations
would serve only to complicate the decision-making process by
constraining the Board (or requiring additional procedural decisions)
in situations where a specific deadline might prove to be
impracticable. The Board again emphasizes that flexibility is vital in
conducting these proceedings.
Establishing an Accelerated Process to Handle Acute Service
Emergencies. In an effort to more efficiently address the most urgent
service emergencies in a more expeditious manner, the Board proposed in
the NPRM to establish a new, accelerated process at new 49 CFR 1146.2
for certain acute service emergencies presenting potential imminent
harm and threatening potentially severe adverse consequences to the
petitioner, its customers, or the public. NPRM, EP 762, slip op. at 7.
Under the new process proposed by the Board, a petitioner seeking
accelerated relief must indicate that it is seeking such relief
pursuant to that process, include a description of specific and
particularized actions that can be performed by the incumbent or an
alternative carrier and ordered by the Board,\20\ and demonstrate that
the described emergency presents an imminent significant harm and
threatens potentially severe adverse consequences to the petitioner,
its customers, or the public. Id. To satisfy this standard, the Board
proposed that the petitioner must demonstrate the alleged harm will
occur before any relief could be ordered under 49 CFR 1146.1 and that
any relief ordered by the Board pursuant to 49 CFR 1146.1 would be
rendered ineffective. NPRM, EP 762, slip op. at 7. The Board noted that
such severe adverse circumstances would exist when there is a clear and
present threat to public health, safety, or food security, or a high
probability of business closures or immediate and extended plant
shutdowns. Id. Additionally, the Board proposed that the petition must
include a verified description of any efforts taken to resolve the
issue through other means, such as consultation with RCPA or direct
discussions with the incumbent railroad. Id. at 8. The Board proposed
to limit the length of petitions to three substantive pages (not
including cover page, verifications, or certificate of service), noting
that a petitioner could present further evidence in support of its
petition during a telephonic or virtual hearing. Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ Because the statute limits the Board's emergency service
authority to the actions enumerated in 49 U.S.C. 11123(a), the
proposal limited any relief ordered pursuant to the accelerated
process to the actions listed in the statute. NPRM, EP 762, slip op.
at 7 n.9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the Board's proposal, a petition filed under the proposed 49
CFR 1146.2 would be assigned to a designated Board Member for initial
resolution. NPRM, EP 762, slip op. at 8. The Board proposed that the
Board Member designation would rotate on a quarterly basis, and if the
designated Board Member is unavailable, the next Board Member in the
rotation would be assigned to evaluate the petition. Id. The designated
Board Member would notify the parties regarding a telephonic or virtual
hearing to be held between 24 and 48 hours after receipt of the
petition or as soon thereafter as logistically possible. Id. Given the
accelerated process, the Board's proposed schedule did not include a
period for written replies--oral replies to the petition would occur
during the hearing--however, the designated Board Member could order
[[Page 4572]]
the carriers to submit, or the carriers could voluntarily submit, an
alternative plan to address the emergency within 24 hours of the
hearing. Id. The Board's proposal contemplated an initial decision on
the merits of the petition by the designated Board Member within two
business days after completion of the hearing. Id. That initial
decision could be appealed to the entire Board pursuant to 49 CFR
1115.2. Id.
The Board proposed that any relief granted under 49 CFR 1146.2
clearly avoid any substantial impairment of the ability of a rail
carrier to serve its own customers adequately or to fulfill its common
carrier obligations. NPRM, EP 762, slip op. at 8-9. Given the
accelerated nature of this process, the Board also proposed a 20-day
limit on relief, which it stated should provide petitioners with
sufficient time to pursue relief up to 240 days, if necessary, under 49
CFR 1146.1. Id. at 9. Under the Board's proposal, if a petition for
relief under 49 CFR 1146.2 is denied for failure to satisfy the
standard for relief, the petitioner may appeal that ruling to the
entire Board, or the petitioner may file a new petition pursuant to 49
CFR 1146.1 regarding the same service emergency. NPRM, EP 762, slip op.
at 8.
According to the Coalition Associations, the creation of this new
accelerated process is the ``single most impactful proposal'' in the
NPRM. (Coalition Ass'ns Comment 2.) NACD also supports the creation of
this new accelerated process, noting that emergencies require immediate
action and accelerating the timeliness would facilitate relief in
emergency situations. (NACD Comment 3.) SDDC states that it ``sees the
potential for a significant improvement from adding [49 CFR] 1146.2,''
(SDDC Comment 1), and NITL and ISRI state that the creation of this new
process is a critical change that will enhance the usefulness of the
Board's emergency service regulations, (NITL & ISRI Reply 1-2). AFPM,
IMA, NGFA, RFA, and USDA also indicated their support of the new
proposed process at 49 CFR 1146.2. (AFPM Comment 12; IMA Comment 14;
NGFA Comment 6; RFA Comment 2; USDA Comment 1.)
AAR, CSXT, and NS urge the Board to discard its proposal for a new
accelerated process. According to AAR, the new accelerated process is
``fundamentally unfair and impracticable,'' and the ``extreme
limitations on development of a record and meaningful opportunity to be
heard present substantial questions of procedural fairness and due
process.'' (AAR Comment 13.) AAR notes that neither the incumbent nor
any alternative carrier would have the opportunity to reply in writing
to a petition and claims ``the incumbent (and any alternative carrier)
will have virtually no time to investigate the few facts provided'' in
the three-page petition. (Id.) AAR doubts the timeline would allow the
Board to ``make a responsible decision'' and asserts its concerns are
exacerbated by the fact that petitioners would not be required to
obtain an advance commitment from an alternative carrier. (AAR Comment
13-14; see also CSXT Comment 10 (``The proposed acceleration to the [49
CFR] 1146.1 process is as fast as the Board could reasonably act in a
manner that ensures that the parties and the Board have sufficient time
to both gather and analyze the available information to make a wise
decision with such an extraordinary power.'') (emphasis omitted); NS
Comment 4 (``[T]he proposed accelerated process will not allow for the
development of a factual record upon which the Board can act.'').)
CSXT argues it is unnecessary to create a second process when the
Board is shortening the existing process. (CSXT Comment 9.) According
to CSXT, because the Board's authority under 49 U.S.C. 11123 is limited
to acute service emergencies, there is ``no authority for an even more
extraordinary remedy for a different category of emergency--emergent is
emergent.'' (CSXT Comment 9.) CSXT also asserts the Board has not
explained why ``acute service emergencies'' cannot be handled under 49
CFR 1146.1 or through the Board's injunctive authority at 49 U.S.C.
1321(b)(4). (CSXT Comment 9.)
NS likewise cites to the Board's injunctive authority as a reason
for discarding the proposed new process, noting that the Board has in
the past granted an injunction where emergency service was sought. (NS
Comment 5 n.4 (citing Cent. Valley Ag Grinding, Inc. v. Modesto &
Empire Traction Co., NOR 42159, slip op. at 7 (STB served June 12,
2018).) NS further argues that the Board previously declined to shorten
the timeline of 49 CFR 1146.1 and that there is no evidence a faster
process is ``needed or superior to the current expedited timeline in
[49 CFR] 1146.1.'' (NS Comment 5.) NS asserts that if the Board is
concerned about the timeline of the 49 CFR 1146.1 process, the Board
can eliminate the rebuttal period. (NS Comment 5 n.4.)
On reply, the Coalition Associations urge the Board to reject the
carriers' requests to abandon the accelerated process and suggest
several modifications to address the concerns raised. (Coalition Ass'ns
Reply 8.) First, the Coalition Associations suggest that rather than
discarding the new accelerated process, the Board could discard its
proposal to shorten the existing 49 CFR 1146.1 process. (Coalition
Ass'ns Reply 8.) According to the Coalition Associations, the
accelerated process would sufficiently address shippers' concerns that
the 49 CFR 1146.1 process is ``too slow and cumbersome for the most
time-sensitive emergencies.'' (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 8.) The Coalition
Associations also state they are open to limiting the relief available
under 49 CFR 1146.2 to incumbent-based relief only. (Coalition Ass'ns
Reply 8-9.)
NITL and ISRI also oppose the carriers' proposal to jettison the
accelerated process, noting that it offers one of the ``greatest
opportunit[ies] to improve the usefulness of the [Board's
regulations].'' (NITL & ISRI Reply 3.) Shipper Groups argue that
``[t]here is no basis to conclude at this stage that any railroad will
be deprived of a fair hearing without the opportunity to make a written
presentation.'' (Shipper Grps. Reply 8.)
The Board finds that an accelerated process is warranted to address
acute service emergencies more efficiently. As noted in the NPRM, the
most serious issue identified by stakeholders was the timeliness of
regulatory action in situations involving acute service emergencies. In
certain instances, the process in 49 CFR 1146.1 would simply take too
long (even under the shortened 1146.1 timeline adopted in this final
rule) for a shipper facing an acute emergency to utilize it
effectively, even though the shipper might otherwise qualify for
emergency service relief. The accelerated process addresses this
timeliness issue by streamlining the petition process in certain
emergency situations to allow the Board to act quickly while providing
it with enough time to make a responsible decision while maintaining
adequate due process for carriers.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ The Board appreciates the Coalition Associations'
suggestion that 1146.2 might make it possible to discard its
proposal to shorten the deadlines for 1146.1, but concludes that the
best solution is to adopt 1146.2 and to shorten the deadlines under
1146.1. The situations that justify the use of 1146.1 are
emergencies, even if they are not ``acute'' emergencies, so a faster
timeline will be beneficial.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although the process will be short, carriers will have a meaningful
opportunity to reply to the petition, and the provision of an oral
response at a hearing is consistent with 49 U.S.C. 11123, which
intended summary procedures in these emergency
[[Page 4573]]
situations.\22\ Additionally, the regulations do not preclude the
provision of written comments by the rail carriers; it simply does not
provide specific extra time for them in the necessarily short schedule.
Nor will the filing of a petition be the first opportunity for carriers
to investigate the circumstances surrounding the particular service
issue. Prior to filing at the Board, a petitioner would have to engage
in the process mandated by 49 CFR 1146.2(a), which requires that
parties seek, in good faith, to resolve any service issues through an
informal dispute resolution process first. Finally, the accelerated
process limits relief to no more than 20 days, and parties may petition
the Board to reconsider its decision.\23\ The Board understands the
gravity of issuing emergency service orders and finds that this new
process will accommodate the procedural rights of all parties while
affording the Board the ability to swiftly act on behalf of the public
interest in necessary situations, as Congress intended.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ As noted above, the Board's decision would not be subject
to the APA. See 49 U.S.C. 11123(b)(1).
\23\ NS contends that the Board should not adopt a shorter
1146.2 process because it rejected a shorter 1146.1 process when it
adopted the rule in 1998. (NS Comment 5.) But the fact that relief
under 1146.2 is significantly more limited than relief under 1146.1
(a distinction that did not exist in 1998) weighs in favor of a
shorter time frame. See Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 16.
Also, the absence of rebuttal and reply periods in 1146.2 will
facilitate a faster process. Moreover, as explained above in
connection with 1146.1, the Board has reevaluated its views of the
feasibility of faster timelines than the one established in 1998.
\24\ NS argues that the 1146.2 process is unnecessary because
the Board could issue preliminary injunctions instead, but the
emergency service standard is different from the preliminary
injunction standard, as discussed in more detail below. The fact
that the Board has found it appropriate under certain circumstances
to issue preliminary injunctions in lieu of emergency service orders
does not mean that preliminary injunctions are an adequate
substitute for 1146.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Concerning the standard for relief proposed by the Board, the
Coalition Associations state that the proposal ``reasonably restricts
this process to circumstances that threaten severe consequences to the
shipper, its customers, or the public that cannot be avoided using the
[49 CFR] 1146.1 procedures.'' (Coalition Ass'ns Comment 3.) However,
several commenters ask the Board to define ``acute service emergency''
more clearly. AFPM, IMA, and PRFBA urge that the Board permit any plant
shutdown to qualify for relief under this new process, arguing that any
shutdown is acute. (AFPM Comment 12; IMA Comment 14; PRFBA Comment 14.)
AFPM suggests removing the requirement that plant shutdowns be
``extended,'' (AFPM Comment 12), and IMA and PRFBA suggest removing the
requirement that plant shutdowns be ``immediate and extended,'' (IMA
Comment 14; PRFBA Comment 14). NMA expresses concern that entities may
interpret ``acute service emergency'' differently and notes that if
there are multiple emergencies at the same time, the Board may need to
weigh one emergency over the other. (NMA Comment 3.)
AAR opposes allowing any plant slowdown or shutdown to qualify
under 49 CFR 1146.2, arguing that not all plant slowdowns, shutdowns,
or even closures are genuine emergencies that would qualify for
emergency service relief.\25\ (AAR Reply 5-6.) According to AAR,
``shutdowns and closures can often be remedied with monetary damages.''
(AAR Comment 6.) AAR and NS both argue the accelerated process, if
adopted, should be more narrowly tailored, available only if the
petitioner will experience immediate and irreparable harm, as is
required for a preliminary injunction or temporary restraining order.
(AAR Comment 6; NS Comment 6-7.) NS notes emergency service orders are
similar to preliminary injunctions in that both are extraordinary
remedies, (NS Comment 7), and AAR argues that much like temporary
restraining orders, petitions brought under 49 CFR 1146.2 would be
decided pursuant to a short procedural schedule with ``minimal
opportunity for response from the involved railroad[s],'' (AAR Comment
6 (brackets in original)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ The Board agrees that not all ``immediate plant shutdowns''
are genuine emergencies that would qualify for relief under 1146.2
and, as reflected in the language of 1146.2, that it is highly
unlikely that a plant ``slowdown'' would ever constitute a genuine
emergency under 1146.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shipper Groups and the Coalition Associations both take issue with
AAR's suggestion that not all plant shutdowns meet the statutory
requirements for an emergency under 49 U.S.C. 11123. (Shipper Grps.
Reply 2; Coalition Ass'ns Reply 10.) According to Shipper Groups, the
basis for relief should be decided in individual adjudications, not
based on hypothetical facts at the rulemaking stage. (Shipper Grps.
Reply 2.)
Shipper Groups and the Coalition Associations also both oppose
applying the standard for injunctions at 49 U.S.C. 1321(b)(4) to
emergency service petitions. (Shipper Grps. Reply 4; Coalition Ass'ns
Reply 12.) The Coalition Associations argue that the irreparable harm
standard considers whether the petitioner could be made whole, whereas
the Board's emergency service authority is also exercised for the
public interest. (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 12-13). According to Coalition
Associations, ``[i]t is entirely conceivable that the petitioner could
be made whole with monetary damages, but the broader public interest
could not.'' (Id. at 13.) The Coalition Associations further argue that
monetary damages are not a realistic remedy for plant shutdowns as most
contracts and tariffs allow only for direct damages (i.e., primarily
the additional cost of alternative transportation) but not
consequential damages.\26\ (Id. at 10.) According to Shipper Groups,
the fact that shippers need to seek emergency relief in the first place
is evidence that the ``other types of proceedings'' AAR references are
insufficient and fail to deter carriers from curtailing service.
(Shipper Grps. Reply 2 (quoting AAR Comment 5).) According to Shipper
Groups, the economic losses shippers face from rail service failures
can be massive, and the carriers' proposal would ``categorically
preclude[]'' shippers and their customers from receiving emergency
service. (Shipper Grps. Reply 3-4.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ The Coalition Associations further note that captive
shippers, which they claim have the greatest need for emergency
service, have the least ability to use alternative transportation.
(Coalition Ass'ns Reply 10-11.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board will revise the portion of 49 CFR 1146.2(a) that states
``immediate and extended plant shutdowns'' to simply state ``immediate
plant shutdowns.'' Striking ``extended'' as a qualifier allows the
Board to consider how the impact of a shutdown will vary by industry.
In some industries, for example, imminent significant harm and severe
adverse consequences could occur immediately upon plant shutdown. This
change will allow the Board to better assess petitions for emergency
relief based on the circumstances of the underlying emergency.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ 49 CFR 1146.2 will also be revised to include reference to
49 U.S.C. 11123 in a manner similar to 49 CFR 1146.1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The irreparable harm standard applicable to injunctions under
section 49 U.S.C. 1321(b)(4) will not be imported by the Board to its
consideration of emergency petitions under 49 U.S.C. 11123. Congress
has kept separate the emergency service and preliminary injunction
powers of the Board. The Board sees no reason to conflate the general
preliminary injunction standard in 49 U.S.C. 1321(b)(4) with the more
specific emergency issues arising under 49 U.S.C. 11123, which provides
an independent standard for when it applies, see 49 U.S.C. 11123(a).
[[Page 4574]]
NGFA and AAR ask the Board to clarify the phrase ``food security.''
More specifically, NGFA asks the Board to clarify that the new
accelerated process could be used in situations presenting a ``clear
and present threat to the health of livestock.'' (NGFA Comment 6.) NGFA
states that railroads' failures to deliver corn, which its members
process into feed for livestock, can be damaging and potentially
catastrophic to the health of livestock populations. (Id.) AAR
questions what the phrase would include (e.g., does it cover a shortage
of pet food, livestock feed, potato chips, or soda) and asserts it is
not clear ``what a threat to `food security' would entail in the
railroad context.'' (AAR Comment 7.) The Coalition Associations argue
that ``food security'' need not be defined more clearly as it is
``common sense'' and note that food security is ``traced back to the
ultimate food sources, not the manufactured products in the AAR's
hypotheticals.'' (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 11.)
Further clarification of ``food security'' is unnecessary at this
time. While the Board agrees with the Coalition Associations that
shortages of the ultimate food sources are more likely to constitute an
emergency than shortages of manufactured products, the Board cannot
anticipate all circumstances of potential food security-related
emergencies. Instead, a case-by-case application that affords the Board
flexibility in addressing situations based on the specific conditions
of each case will best allow the Board to apply these regulations
appropriately.
SDDC requests the Board add ``a threat to national defense'' to the
standard for relief under 49 CFR 1146.2. (SDDC Comment 1.) SDDC states
that ``national defense is one very important aspect of the public
interest, and the timely deployment of military units to a port or
timely movement of critical defense materiel are important to that
end.'' (Id.) AAR states it does not object to this change if the
accelerated process is adopted. (AAR Reply 7.) The Board of course
agrees that national defense is critical to the public interest and
will therefore include language in 49 CFR 1146.2 to reflect that the
accelerated process is an appropriate mechanism for addressing threats
to national defense related to rail service.
Regarding the proposed petition requirements under 49 CFR 1146.2,
AAR requests that the Board require a petitioner to include in its
petition that it has ``previously notified the incumbent railroad of
the emergency and its intent to file.'' (AAR Comment 17.) According to
AAR, while the proposal requires a good faith effort to resolve the
dispute before filing, it does not require the petitioner to notify the
incumbent carrier of the emergency. (Id.) AAR asserts that this
modification would ensure the incumbent carrier has sufficient notice
to prepare a response to a petition and that the Board has the most
complete information. (Id.) Shipper Groups argue this concern is
unfounded. (Shipper Grps. Reply 8.) Additionally, Shipper Groups
express concern with the Board's proposal to limit petitions under 49
CFR 1146.2 to three substantive pages. According to Shipper Groups,
this page limit may lead to skeletal filings that could cause
uncertainty, confusion, and longer hearings. (Shipper Grps. Comment
10.) Shipper Groups suggest that a word count limitation would be less
subject to manipulation. (Id.)
The Board agrees with Shipper Groups regarding AAR's concerns here.
It is redundant to require petitions to state that petitioners have
notified incumbent carriers of emergencies and their intent to file for
emergency service given that shippers are required in good faith to
seek informal resolution of the matter before filing under 49 CFR
1146.2 and to describe those efforts in their petitions. The Board
expects that shippers facing such an emergency would make the impact of
the service issue on their business clear to the railroad during
informal discussions.
The Board declines to adopt Shipper Groups' suggestion that it
address concerns about the page limitation by using a word limit
instead. It is not clear from Shipper Groups' argument why such a
change would be meaningful, and doing so would depart from standard
Board practice. See, e.g., 49 CFR 1115.2(d), 1115.3(d), 1115.5(c).
Moreover, 49 CFR 1104.2 sets forth requirements such as page size, font
size, and line spacing, which will help prevent parties from
manipulating the limitations. The Board will, however, expand the
petition page limit from three substantive pages to five substantive
pages to accommodate the requirements that petitions include a
particularized description of the commodities and volumes subject to
the requested relief and the timing necessary for such relief,
including why relief under 1146.1 would be ineffective; as well as a
particularized description of how the measurable deterioration or other
demonstrated inadequacy, absent the requested relief, presents imminent
significant harm and threatens potentially severe consequences as
specified in 1146.2(a).
AAR expresses concern about the Board's proposal to rotate, on a
quarterly basis, the Board Member assigned to evaluate petitions for
emergency relief and issue the initial decision. AAR projects that a
single quarter may see a large number of complaints, which could tax a
single Board Member; AAR goes so far as to speculate that single-Member
decision making could even lead to ``judge shopping'' by shippers. (AAR
Comment 15-16.) AAR suggests that the Board ``shorten the rotation, not
make it public, and allow for at least two Members'' to resolve cases
or allow Board staff to hold a conference before making a
recommendation to the full Board, as is done for motions to compel.
(Id. at 16.) The Coalition Associations do not object to AAR's
proposals intended to mitigate the burdens that could fall unduly upon
a single Board Member; however, they object to AAR's statement that
petitioners would ``judge shop.'' (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 14.)
According to the Coalition Associations, ``any circumstance in which a
shipper can afford to wait until the following calendar quarter to have
its petition decided by a different Board Member would not qualify for
the [49 CFR] 1146.2 process.'' (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 14-15.) Shipper
Groups argue that AAR's concerns may never materialize, and if they do,
the Board can address them at that time. (Shipper Grps. Reply 7.) \28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ NS notes the NPRM did not propose to amend the Board
regulations at 49 CFR 1011.4 to delegate this authority to an
individual Board Member. (NS Comment 11 n.10.) Because the
regulations adopted in this final rule provide for a full Board
decision, this modification is unnecessary.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the concerns raised in the comments, the Board
finds that the objectives of the new 49 CFR 1146.2 process would be
best achieved through a full Board decision rather than through
delegation to a single Board Member. The Board's emergency service
powers, when exercised, undoubtedly have a significant impact on
various parties and the interstate rail network as a whole.
Consideration by the full Board better lends itself to the exercise of
that power, even in the accelerated process. Moreover, consideration by
the full Board in the first instance (rather than upon appeal of a
single-Member decision) will allow the process to be more efficient
while still protecting the right to appeal by petitioning the Board for
reconsideration. Accordingly, the regulations adopted in this final
rule provide for a full Board decision on the merits of petitions
seeking relief under 49 CFR 1146.2. To accommodate this procedural
change but still allow proceedings to move quickly, instead of a
hearing before the designated single
[[Page 4575]]
Board Member as was proposed in the NPRM, Board staff will hold a
staff-led conference with parties, as suggested by AAR.\29\ (AAR
Comment 16.) Board Members may attend the staff-led conference.\30\ A
transcript or recording of the staff-led conference will be made
available to all Board Members before they make their decision and will
be posted in the docket following any necessary redactions for
confidentiality. In addition, given the change from a single Member to
full Board decision, the Board will endeavor to issue a decision on the
merits within three business days, rather than two as was proposed in
the NPRM. This process is intended to be quick and flexible while also
respecting the regulatory powers involved in the emergency service
process.\31\ Moreover, including a staff-led conference might encourage
discussion and resolution among parties to a proceeding.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ Designated Board staff will not be recused from handling
substantive elements of the case.
\30\ The Board Members may do so ``without regard to subchapter
II of chapter 5 of title 5.'' 49 U.S.C. 11123(b)(1).
\31\ Shipper Groups assert that the possibility for consecutive
appeals--first, to the entire Board, followed by a petition for
reconsideration of the full Board decision--could dissuade
petitioners from utilizing the accelerated process because the 49
CFR 1146.1 process, which takes 10 business days, would appear to be
less burdensome. (Shipper Grps. Comment 10-11.) On reply, AAR argues
that the right to appeal is ``fundamental and already required by
the Board's own regulations'' and that ``prohibiting appeal from the
decision of a single Board [M]ember would be patently unfair and a
denial of due process.'' (AAR Reply 4.) Now that the entire Board
will decide on petitions under 49 CFR 1146.2, parties will no longer
need to appeal these decisions to the full Board before then
petitioning for reconsideration. However, petitions for
reconsideration will be permitted under a shortened timeline,
similar to the timeline provided for appeals in the NPRM, given the
nature of proceedings under the accelerated process. The Board will
amend 49 CFR 1115.3 accordingly.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
NGFA asks the Board to require potential alternative carriers to
address at the hearing proposed by the Board in the NPRM ``whether the
remedy proposed by the petitioner is unsafe, infeasible, or will
substantially impair the replying carrier's ability to serve its other
customers adequately or fulfill its common carrier obligations,'' as
the proposed regulations required of incumbent carriers. (NGFA Comment
6-7.) Additionally, CSXT and NS argue that if the Board adopts the
accelerated process, it should modify the proposed treatment of
confidential information because closing portions of the proposed
hearing to certain parties is unnecessary and would be unfair,
prejudicial, and inconsistent with how the Board treats confidential
information in other proceedings (accessible subject to a protective
order). (CSXT Comment 13; NS Comment 11.)
Potential alternative carriers will be required to attend the staff
conference where that information can be discussed and will be required
to identify, at the conference, facts showing whether the proposed
alternative service would be infeasible, or substantially impair the
replying carrier's service to other customers. As for CSXT's and NS's
positions on modifying the treatment of confidential information, the
Board finds it is best to adopt this aspect of the regulation as
proposed in order to maintain flexibility. This flexibility is
imperative, for example, if a case involves multiple carriers and
requires discussion of highly confidential information. While the Board
will leave this aspect of the proposal unchanged, the Board emphasizes
that transparency will be pursued to the greatest extent possible.
Regarding the proposed limitations on relief available under the
new process, BLET argues the 20-day relief limit would provide a
``back-stop to causing most major harms.'' (BLET Comment 4-5.) CSXT
asks the Board to clarify in the regulations that orders under 49 CFR
1146.2 may not be extended beyond the 20-day period and that additional
relief would require a petition under 49 CFR 1146.1. (CSXT Comment 12.)
AAR and NS argue that relief under the proposed new accelerated process
should be limited to incumbent-based relief. (AAR Comment 10-11; see
also NS Comment 5.) Both carrier interests argue it would be
impractical for an alternative carrier to provide service for 20 days
and that, for safety reasons, crews from the alternative carrier must
be qualified to operate on the incumbent's tracks. (AAR Comment 10-11;
NS Comment 5-6.) AAR adds that if an incumbent crew is available to
train the crew of the alternative carrier, the incumbent crew could
simply be directed to provide the service itself. (AAR Comment 10-11.)
AAR asserts that limiting 49 CFR 1146.2 to incumbent-based relief would
provide more time to identify an alternative carrier for continued
relief under 49 CFR 1146.1. (AAR Comment 11.) \32\ The Coalition
Associations state they are amenable to limiting the relief under 49
CFR 1146.2 to ``incumbent-based relief'' only, which they understand to
include relief that does not involve the grant of trackage rights to an
alternative carrier but could include granting an alternative through
route using an alternative carrier. (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 7.)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ AAR notes the proposed language for 49 CFR 1146.2 in the
NPRM did not include a requirement to provide even an identification
of an alternative carrier, although potential alternative carriers
would be required to attend the hearing. (AAR Comment 11 n.16.)
However, 49 CFR 1146.2(e) requires service on other parties, which,
as discussed below, includes any proposed alternative carriers.
Accordingly, the contact information for any potential alternative
carriers should be provided on the certificate of service.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Board will adopt language clarifying that relief under 49 CFR
1146.2 may not be extended beyond the 20-day period and any additional
relief will require a separate petition under 49 CFR 1146.1. This will
provide a clearer pathway for any party wishing to seek additional
emergency relief. However, the Board will not limit 49 CFR 1146.2 to
provide for incumbent-based relief only. Section 1146.1 allows the
Board to provide for trackage rights to an alternative carrier with the
same safety and feasibility concerns present as those raised regarding
49 CFR 1146.2. Additionally, while the Board expects incumbent-based
relief to be utilized in the vast majority of instances, the Board
finds it important to maintain flexibility in its process since, for
example, there may be situations where arrangements between parties
could make trackage-rights relief more feasible. Nevertheless, the
Board emphasizes that feasibility will be considered in determining
what relief is appropriate in a given case and that it will not order a
remedy that it deems infeasible.
Several commenters asked the Board to clarify the proposed service
requirements. CSXT questions whether the Board is suggesting that all
pleadings must be e-filed with the Board, or whether it is proposing to
introduce electronic service of pleadings, which cannot be accomplished
through e-filing. (CSXT Comment 12.) AAR and NS each ask the Board to
clarify that e-filing alone is not considered sufficient service since
e-filing on the Board's website does not effectuate service on other
parties or the FRA. (AAR Comment 16; NS Comment 10.) NS states it
``supports the Board adding a method of electronic service and suggests
that the Board consider using language similar to that contained in 49
CFR 1104.12, which governs service of documents.'' (NS Comment 11.) The
Coalition Associations agree that the requested clarifications are
needed. (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 15.) They also ask the Board to
consider requiring all Class I carriers to file with the Board the name
and electronic address for service of petitions, which it states would
ensure faster delivery to those carriers and maximize their response
time. (Id.)
The Board agrees that the proposed service provisions were unclear
and will clarify them by revising the text to read
[[Page 4576]]
more like that in 49 CFR 1104.12. The Board should be served by e-
filing on the Board's website, given the short timeline of these
proceedings. Service on other parties, including any proposed
alternative carriers, and the FRA may be done by email, hand, or
overnight delivery. In addition, all pleadings should also be emailed
to [email protected]. However, the Board will not at this time
require the Class I carriers to file the name and electronic address
for service of petitions. The contact information for the serving
carrier is the type of information that should already be in the
possession of the petitioner. Moreover, parties are required to make a
good faith effort to resolve any service issues through an informal
dispute resolution process, during which time they can obtain this
information from the carrier, if needed.
BLET expresses concern that emergency service for acute service
emergencies might undermine collective bargaining agreements (CBAs).
(BLET Comment 5.) The Board does not anticipate that CBAs will be an
issue in most emergency service proceedings, but notes that any such
issues are best resolved on a case-by-case basis in any event.
Lastly, NMA cautions that the new process, if codified, should be
used sparingly because, although ``it is not the intent of the [Board]
to create a new program to regulate rail, this proposed rulemaking is a
slippery slope that has the potential to be abused by bad actors.''
(NMA Comment 3; see also AAR Reply 8-9 (noting that it shares the
concerns expressed by NMA).) While the accelerated process may impact
informal dispute resolution between the parties, the Board finds no
reason to assume potential abuse of the accelerated process itself. By
its own definition, 49 CFR 1146.2 will be used only sparingly because
it is much narrower than 49 CFR 1146.1, and the circumstances under
which it can be used are limited. Moreover, it is in the interest of
all parties to act in good faith, and the Board will deny petitions
filed in bad faith or that otherwise abuse the Board's processes.
Contract and Exempt Traffic. Various carrier interests also ask the
Board to clarify that traffic moving pursuant to a contract is not
eligible for relief under the Board's proposal. (AAR Comment 18-19,
CSXT Comment 12; NS Comment 7-10.) According to NS, the plain language
of 49 U.S.C. 10709(c)(1) makes clear that traffic moving pursuant to a
contract is outside the Board's jurisdiction, but the Board's final
rule adopting 49 CFR 1146.1 ``injected unnecessary ambiguity'' into the
issue. (NS Comment 7-10 (citing Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at
10).) NS argues that even if a railroad stops service, if that service
is governed by a contract, ``any relief . . . is wholly outside the
Board's jurisdiction,'' and any remedies ``must be provided for in the
contract itself (e.g., a force majeure provision) and are enforceable
only in the courts and subject to applicable state law.'' (Id. at 9
(citing 49 U.S.C. 10709(c)(2)).) CSXT asks that the Board require all
petitions filed under part 1146 to include a verification that the
transportation for which relief is sought is not governed by a
contract. (CSXT Comment 12.) AAR also argues exempt traffic should be
ineligible for relief under part 1146 because the expedited timelines
would not provide sufficient time for the Board to complete the
analysis required by statute to revoke an exemption. (AAR Comment 19.)
AAR further argues that revocation of an exemption requires a decision
of the full Board, not an individual Board Member as contemplated by 49
CFR 1146.2. (AAR Comment 20.)
The Coalition Associations disagree, arguing the Board may exercise
its authority to order emergency service over traffic covered by a
contract. (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 3.) According to the Coalition
Associations, Congress would not have granted the Board the broad
emergency authority it did in 49 U.S.C. 11123 only to carve out in 49
U.S.C. 10709 the substantial volume of traffic covered by a contract,
nor would Congress have subordinated the public interest to a private
contract. (Coalition Ass'ns Reply 4.) The Coalition Associations
contend that ``[t]he transportation that occurs pursuant to an
emergency service order is not occurring under a contract,'' but rather
is ``alternate service pursuant to [49 U.S.C.] 11123,'' (Coalition
Ass'ns Reply 5), and they identify a prior instance where the Board
exercised its 49 U.S.C. 11123 authority over contract traffic,
(Coalition Ass'ns Reply 4 (citing Joint Pet. for Serv. Ord., SO 1518
(STB served Oct. 31, 1997), modified and extended (STB served Dec. 4,
1997), further modified and extended (STB served Feb. 17 and 25, 1998),
terminated with wind-down period (STB served July 31, 1998).)
NGFA also disagrees with the proposition that contract traffic is
not eligible for emergency service relief, pointing to the Board's
rejection of this very argument made by AAR in the 1998 final rule in
Docket No. EP 628, and asserting that the Board ``clearly established
that it has jurisdiction to issue an order under [49 U.S.C.] 11123 for
movements subject to a transportation contract if the facts and
circumstances require it.'' (NGFA Reply 1-2 (citing Expedited Relief,
EP 628, slip op. at 10.)) NGFA likewise urges the Board to decline NS's
request for the Board to clarify that its emergency service authority
does not apply to contract traffic, observing that the adoption of such
a ``blanket, overreaching prohibition'' would be bad public policy
because it would render the Board powerless to act when rail service
failures significantly harm businesses and the public merely because
the service is governed by a contract. (Id. at 3.) Rather, NGFA asks
the Board to reaffirm its decision that 49 U.S.C. 11123 grants the
Board authority ``to act in the public interest to avert rail service
emergencies, regardless of whether the service the railroad has failed
to provide is governed by a tariff or a contract, subject to the
restrictions set forth in [Expedited Relief, EP 628].'' (NGFA Reply 3.)
In a similar vein, NGFA disputes the claim that exempt traffic is
ineligible for emergency service, citing Expedited Relief, EP 628,
where the Board noted that this argument ``is clearly wrong'' because
the Board ``retain[s] full jurisdiction to deal with exempted
transportation, as [the Board] can revoke the exemption at any time, in
whole or in part, under [49 U.S.C.] 10502(d).'' (NGFA Reply 2 (quoting
Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 10).)
NITL and ISRI similarly dispute carrier arguments that the Board
lacks the power to exercise its emergency service authority over
contract and exempt traffic. With respect to contract traffic, NITL and
ISRI assert the carriers' arguments ``are factually and legally
incorrect and contrary to the intent of Congress.'' (NITL & ISRI Reply
3.) As for exempt traffic, NITL and ISRI request that the Board
partially revoke existing class exemptions so they will not apply to
requests for emergency service. (Id. at 8.) NITL and ISRI argue there
are ``substantial similarities'' between the Board's ``partial
revocation of the exemption for agricultural commodities and the
circumstances involving exempt traffic and emergency service orders,''
which would justify the Board partially revoking existing exemptions to
permit shippers of exempt commodities to access the Board's emergency
service regulations. (Id. at 3-8.)
Shipper Groups contend that the carriers have not presented any
basis for the Board to depart from its decision in Expedited Relief, EP
628, (Shipper Grps. Reply 4), and argue that this issue is outside the
scope of the proceeding
[[Page 4577]]
because it was not included in the NPRM, (id. at 5).
The NPRM did not make any new proposal regarding the application of
section 11123 to contract traffic. In Expedited Relief, EP 628, the
Board concluded that any advance rejection of all authority to address
situations where a contract exists in an emergency would be
inappropriate and declined to include any bright-line prohibition.
Expedited Relief, EP 628, slip op. at 10. In the NPRM, the Board made
no proposals changing the status of existing law on this issue and sees
no reason to revisit that position here.
As for exempt traffic, the Board reiterates that it has the
authority to revoke exemptions when appropriate. Petitioners may
request partial revocations in their filings at 49 CFR 1146.1 or the
new accelerated process at 49 CFR 1146.2 (which will not be decided by
a single Member, as the NPRM originally proposed, but by the full
Board). See supra at 23-24.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (Regulatory Flexibility
Act), 5 U.S.C. 601-612, generally requires a description and analysis
of new rules that would have a significant economic impact of a
substantial number of small entities. In drafting a rule, an agency is
required to: (1) assess the effect that its regulation will have on
small entities, (2) analyze effective alternatives that may minimize a
regulation's impact, and (3) make the analysis available for public
comment. 5 U.S.C. 601-604. In its final rule, the agency must either
include a final regulatory flexibility analysis, 5 U.S.C. 604(a), or
certify that the proposed rule would not have a ``significant impact on
a substantial number of small entities,'' 5 U.S.C. 605(b).
Because the goal of the Regulatory Flexibility Act is to reduce the
cost to small entities of complying with federal regulations, the
Regulatory Flexibility Act requires an agency to perform a regulatory
flexibility analysis of small entity impacts only when a rule directly
regulates those entities. In other words, the impact must be a direct
impact on small entities ``whose conduct is circumscribed or mandated''
by the proposed rule. White Eagle Coop. v. Conner, 553 F.3d 467, 480
(7th Cir. 2009).
In the NPRM, the Board certified under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that the
proposed rule would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities within the meaning of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act.\33\ The Board explained that the proposed
changes were intended to improve the Board's directed service
procedures and would not mandate or circumscribe the conduct of small
entities. Rather, the Board said, the changes would be largely
procedural and would not have a significant economic impact on the
Class III rail carriers to which the Regulatory Flexibility Act
applies. Because affected shippers or railroads could seek the relief
under 49 CFR part 1146 to obtain temporary relief from serious,
localized service problems more quickly and effectively, the Board
certified under 5 U.S.C. 605(b) that the proposed rules, if
promulgated, would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities within the meaning of Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ For the purpose of Regulatory Flexibility Act analysis for
rail carriers subject to Board jurisdiction, the Board defines a
``small business'' as only including those rail carriers classified
as Class III rail carriers under 49 CFR part 1201, General
Instructions 1-1. See Small Entity Size Standards Under the Regul.
Flexibility Act, EP 719 (STB served June 30, 2016). Class III
carriers have annual operating revenues of $40.4 million or less in
2019 dollars. Class II rail carriers have annual operating revenues
of less than $900 million but more than $40.4 million in 2019
dollars. The Board calculates the revenue deflator factor annually
and publishes the railroad revenue thresholds in decisions and on
its website. 49 CFR 1201.1-1; Indexing the Annual Operating Revenues
of R.Rs., EP 748 (STB served June 29, 2023).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The final rule adopted here revises the rules proposed in the NPRM;
however, the same basis for the Board's certification of the proposed
rule applies to the final rule. Thus, the Board again certifies under 5
U.S.C. 605(b) that this final rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities as defined by the
Regulatory Flexibility Act. A copy of this decision will be served upon
the Chief Counsel for Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business
Administration, Washington, DC 20416.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In the NPRM, the Board sought comments pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA), 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521, Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) regulations at 5 CFR 1320.8(d)(3), and Appendix B, about
the impact of the collection for the Directed Service Regulations (OMB
Control No. 2140-XXXX), concerning: (1) whether the collections of
information, as added in the proposed rule, and further described in
Appendix A, are necessary for the proper performance of the functions
of the Board, including whether the collections have practical utility;
(2) the accuracy of the Board's burden estimates; (3) ways to enhance
the quality, utility, and clarity of the information collected; and (4)
ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information on the
respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology, when appropriate.
The Board estimated in the NPRM that the proposed requirements will
have a total hourly burden of 2,710 hours. There were no proposed non-
hourly burdens associated with these collections. No comments were
received pertaining to the collections of this information under the
PRA. The new collections will be submitted to OMB for review as
required under the PRA, 44 U.S.C. 3507(d) and 5 CFR 1320.11.
Congressional Review Act. Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act,
5 U.S.C. 801-808, the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs has
designated this rule as a non-major rule, as defined by 5 U.S.C.
804(2).
List of Subjects
49 CFR Part 1011
Administrative practice and procedure, Authority delegations
(Government agencies), Organization and functions (Government
agencies).
49 CFR Part 1104
Administrative practice and procedure.
49 CFR Part 1115
Administrative practice and procedure.
49 CFR Part 1146
Railroads.
It is ordered:
1. The Board adopts the final rule as set forth in this decision.
Notice of the adopted rule will be published in the Federal Register.
2. This decision is effective February 23, 2024.
3. A copy of this decision will be served upon the Chief Counsel
for Advocacy, Office of Advocacy, U.S. Small Business Administration.
Decided: January 18, 2024.
By the Board, Board Members Fuchs, Hedlund, Oberman, Primus, and
Schultz.
Jeffrey Herzig,
Clearance Clerk.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Surface
Transportation Board proposes to amend title 49, chapter X, parts 1011,
1104, 1115, and 1146 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
[[Page 4578]]
PART 1011--BOARD ORGANIZATION; DELEGATIONS OF AUTHORITY
0
1. The authority citation for part 1011 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 553; 31 U.S.C. 9701; 49 U.S.C. 1301, 1321,
11123, 11124, 11144, 14122, and 15722.
0
2. Add Sec. 1011.7(a)(2)(xx) to read as follows:
Sec. 1011.7 Delegations of authority by the Board to specific offices
of the Board.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(xx) To delegate to Board staff any necessary parties for purposes
of accelerated emergency service proceedings at Sec. 1146.2 of this
chapter.
* * * * *
PART 1104--FILING WITH THE BOARD-COPIES-VERIFICATION-SERVICE-
PLEADINGS, GENERALLY
0
1. The authority citation for part 1104 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5.U.S.C. 553 and 559; 18 U.S.C. 1621; and 49 U.S.C.
1321.
0
2. Revise Sec. 1104.7(b) to read as follows:
Sec. 1104.7 Computation and extension of time.
* * * * *
(b) Extensions. Any time period, except those provided by law or
specified in these rules respecting informal complaints seeking damage,
may be extended by the Board in its discretion, upon request and for
good cause. Requests for extensions must be served on all parties of
record at the same time and by the same means as service is made on the
Board. However, if service is made on the Board in person and personal
service on other parties is not feasible, service on other parties
should be made by first class or express mail. A request for an
extension must be filed not less than 10 days before the due date,
except that in cases seeking expedited relief for service emergencies
under part 1146 of this chapter, a request for an extension must be
made within 24 hours of service of the petition, reply, or other filing
or procedural order of the Board as applicable. Only the original of
the request and certificate of service need be filed with the Board. If
granted, the party making the request should promptly notify all
parties to the proceeding of the extension and so certify to the Board,
except that this notification is not required in rulemaking
proceedings.
* * * * *
PART 1115--APPELLATE PROCEDURES
0
1. The authority citation for part 1115 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 5 U.S.C. 559; 49 U.S.C. 1321; 49 U.S.C. 11708.
0
2. Revise Sec. 1115.3(e) to read as follows:
Sec. 1115.3 Board actions other than initial decisions.
* * * * *
(e) Petitions must be filed within 20 days after the service of the
action or within any further period (not to exceed 20 days) as the
Board may authorize. However, in cases under Final Offer Rate Review
and in cases seeking expedited relief for service emergencies under the
accelerated process at 49 CFR 1146.2, petitions must be filed within 5
days after the service of the action, and replies to petitions must be
filed within 10 days after the service of the action.
* * * * *
PART 1146--EXPEDITED RELIEF FOR SERVICE EMERGENCIES
0
1. The authority citation for part 1146 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 49 U.S.C. 1321, 11101, and 11123.
0
2. Revise Sec. 1146.1 to read as follows:
Sec. 1146.1 Prescription of alternative rail service or directed
action by an incumbent carrier.
(a) General. Alternative rail service, or directed action by an
incumbent carrier, will be prescribed under 49 U.S.C. 11123(a) if the
Board determines that, over an identified period of time, there has
been a substantial, measurable deterioration or other demonstrated
inadequacy in rail service provided by the incumbent carrier. In
prescribing the relief described herein, the Board may act on its own
initiative or pursuant to a petition.
(b) Procedure for petition for relief--(1) Petition for relief.
Affected shippers or railroads may seek the relief described in
paragraph (a) of this section by filing an appropriate petition
containing:
(i) A full explanation, together with all supporting evidence, to
demonstrate that the standard for relief contained in paragraph (a) of
this section is met;
(ii) A summary of both the petitioner's discussions with the
incumbent carrier of the service problems (including a description of
the efforts taken to resolve the matter prior to filing of the
petition, verified by a person or persons with knowledge of the efforts
taken to resolve the matter), and the reasons why the incumbent carrier
is unlikely to restore adequate rail service consistent with the
petitioner's current transportation needs within a reasonable period of
time;
(iii) In a petition that seeks alternative rail service,
identification of at least one possible rail carrier to provide
alternative service, based on the petitioner's understanding of other
rail carriers' nearby operations, that would meet the current
transportation needs of the petitioner; and
(iv) A detailed explanation of the specific remedy that is being
sought.
(2) Reply. The incumbent carrier and any proposed alternative
carriers must file a reply to a petition under this paragraph within
three (3) business days of service of the petition. If applicable, any
reply must address whether the specific remedy proposed by the
petitioner would be unsafe or infeasible, or would substantially impair
the carrier's ability to serve its other customers adequately or
fulfill its common carrier obligations.
(3) Rebuttal. The party requesting relief may file rebuttal no more
than two (2) business days after the reply is filed.
(4) Board Decision. The Board will endeavor to issue a decision
five (5) business days after receiving the rebuttal or time has expired
for the party requesting relief to file a rebuttal, whichever is
earlier.
(c) Presumption of continuing need. Unless otherwise indicated in
the Board's order, a Board order issued under paragraph (a) of this
section shall establish a rebuttable presumption that the
transportation emergency will continue for more than 30 days from the
date of that order.
(d) Procedure for petition to terminate relief--(1) Petition to
terminate relief. Should the Board prescribe alternative rail service
under paragraph (a) of this section the incumbent carrier may
subsequently file a petition to terminate that relief. Such a petition
shall contain a full explanation, together with all supporting
evidence, to demonstrate that the carrier is providing, or is prepared
to provide, adequate service. Carriers are admonished not to file such
a petition prematurely.
(2) Reply. Parties must file replies to petitions to terminate
filed under this paragraph (d) within five (5) business days.
(3) Rebuttal. The incumbent carrier may file any rebuttal no more
than three (3) business days later.
(e) Service. Every document filed with the Board under this section
must include a certificate showing simultaneous service upon all
parties to
[[Page 4579]]
the proceeding, including any proposed alternative carriers and the
Federal Railroad Administration. Service on the parties must be by the
same method and class of service used in serving the Board, with
charges, if any, prepaid. One copy must be served on each party. If
service is made on the Board in person, and personal service on other
parties is not feasible, service must be made by overnight delivery. If
a document is filed with the Board through the e-filing process, a copy
of the e-filed document must be emailed to other parties if that means
of service is acceptable to those other parties. If email is not
acceptable to the receiving party, a paper copy of the document must be
personally served on the other parties. If neither email nor personal
service is feasible, service of a paper copy must be by overnight
delivery. When a party is represented by a practitioner or attorney,
service upon the practitioner is deemed to be service upon the party.
All pleadings under this section must also be emailed to
[email protected].
0
3. Add Sec. 1146.2 to read as follows:
Sec. 1146.2 Accelerated process.
(a) Request for accelerated process. After making a good faith
effort to resolve its service issue through an informal dispute
resolution process or service of the Board, affected shippers or
railroads may seek accelerated temporary interim relief under 49 U.S.C.
11123(a) for substantial, measurable deterioration or other
demonstrated inadequacy in rail service provided by the incumbent
carrier that presents potential imminent significant harm and threatens
potentially severe adverse consequences to the petitioner, its
customers, or the public. Such emergencies exist when there is a clear
and present threat to public health, safety, national defense, or food
security, or a high probability of business closures or immediate plant
shutdowns. The timing of potential harm and consequences must render
potential relief under Sec. 1146.1 ineffective. The relief requested
must be feasible and clearly avoid any substantial impairment of the
ability of a rail carrier to serve its own customers adequately, or to
fulfill its common carrier obligations.
(b) Procedure for accelerated process--(1) Petition for relief. A
petitioner seeking accelerated relief must indicate in its petition
that it is seeking such relief pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section and must demonstrate circumstances that meet the standard set
forth in that paragraph. The petition must include:
(i) A particularized description of the commodities and volumes
which would be subject to the requested relief and the timing necessary
for such relief, including why potential relief under Sec. 1146.1
would be ineffective;
(ii) A particularized explanation of how the measurable
deterioration or other demonstrated inadequacy, absent the requested
relief, presents imminent significant harm and threatens potentially
severe adverse consequences as specified in paragraph (a) of this
section;
(iii) A description of specific and particularized action that
could be performed by the incumbent carrier or an alternative carrier
and ordered by the Board to relieve the potential harm and adverse
consequences;
(iv) A summary description of the efforts taken to resolve the
matter prior to filing the petition, which must be verified by a person
or persons with knowledge of the efforts taken to resolve the matter;
and
(v) Contact information for the incumbent carrier.
(vi) The petition will be limited to five (5) substantive pages,
not including the cover page, verifications, or certificate of service.
(2) Staff conference. When the Board receives a petition seeking
accelerated relief under paragraph (a) of this section, the petition
will be evaluated on its merits by the Board.
(i) After the Board receives the petition for accelerated relief, a
telephonic or virtual conference, led by designated Board staff, will
be held no sooner than 24 hours after receipt of the filing, but no
later than 48 hours after receipt of the filing, if practicable.
Designated Board staff may continue to work on the case after the
conference.
(ii) Required parties for the conference include the petitioner(s),
the incumbent carrier, and any proposed potential alternative carriers
and other parties deemed necessary by the Board. Portions of the
conference may be closed to certain parties if confidential business
information needs to be discussed. The conference will be recorded and
later transcribed (with redactions, if necessary), and placed in the
public docket of the proceeding.
(iii) If applicable, the incumbent carrier or any alternative
carrier shall address at the conference whether the remedy proposed by
the petitioner is unsafe, infeasible, or will unreasonably impair the
carrier's ability to serve other customers. The Board may order the
incumbent carrier to submit, or if no such order is issued, the
incumbent carrier may choose to submit, within 24 hours of the
completion of the conference, an alternative service plan for the Board
to consider. Any alternative carrier may also submit, within 24 hours
of the completion of the conference, an alternative service plan for
the Board to consider. The Board may choose to receive such information
either via written submission or a second virtual or telephonic
conference, if practicable.
(3) Board decision. The Board will endeavor to issue an initial
decision on the merits of the petition requesting accelerated relief
within three (3) business days of the completion of the conference. The
Board shall not award relief under this section for more than 20 days,
and any relief ordered under this section shall not be extended beyond
the 20-day period. A party may petition the Board for subsequent relief
under Sec. 1146.1.
(c) Petition for reconsideration. After the Board issues an initial
decision on the merits of the petition requesting accelerated relief,
parties may petition the Board for reconsideration. The petition for
reconsideration will be subject to Sec. 1115.3 of this chapter. The
record is to include any filings by the parties in the proceeding and
the unredacted recording of the conference.
(d) Stay of relief. Notwithstanding Sec. 1115.3 of this chapter,
parties seeking a stay of the relief issued by the Board must
concurrently file a petition for reconsideration of the decision and a
petition to stay.
(e) Service. Every document filed with the Board under this section
must include a certificate showing simultaneous service upon all
parties to the proceeding, including any proposed alternative carriers
and the Federal Railroad Administration. One copy must be served on
each party. Service on the Board must be made through the e-filing
process, and a copy of the e-filed document must be emailed to other
parties if that means of service is acceptable to those other parties.
If email is not acceptable to the receiving party, a paper copy of the
document must be personally served on the other parties. If neither
email nor personal service is feasible, service of a paper copy must be
by overnight delivery. When a party is represented by a practitioner or
attorney, service upon the practitioner is deemed to be service upon
the party. All pleadings under this section must also be emailed to
[email protected].
[FR Doc. 2024-01365 Filed 1-23-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4915-01-P