Buy America Waiver Notification, 84435-84437 [2024-24334]
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 204 / Tuesday, October 22, 2024 / Notices
for an individual; organization; or
government entity to request official
agency information, records, or
testimony of an agency employee in a
legal proceeding when the agency is not
a party. The request, which respondents
submit in writing to SSA, must: (1) fully
set out the nature and relevance of the
sought testimony; (2) explain why the
information is not available by other
means; (3) explain why it is in SSA’s
interest to provide the testimony; and
(4) provide the date, time, and place for
the testimony. Respondents are
84435
individuals or entities who request
testimony from SSA employees in
connection with a legal proceeding.
Type of Request: Extension of an
OMB-approved information collection.
Modality of completion
Number of
respondents
Frequency
of response
Average
burden per
response
(minutes)
Estimated
total annual
burden
(hours)
Average
theoretical
hourly cost
amount
(dollars) *
Total annual
opportunity
cost
(dollars) **
20 CFR 403.100–403.155 ...........
50
1
60
50
* $31.48
** $1,574
* We based this figure on the average U.S. worker’s mean hourly wages, as reported by Bureau of Labor Statistics data (https://www.bls.gov/
oes/current/oes_nat.htm#00-0000).
** This figure does not represent actual costs that SSA is imposing on recipients of Social Security payments to complete this application; rather, these are theoretical opportunity costs for the additional time respondents will spend to complete the application. There is no actual charge to
respondents to complete the application.
Dated October 17, 2024.
Tasha Harley,
Acting Reports Clearance Officer, Social
Security Administration.
[FR Doc. 2024–24391 Filed 10–21–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4191–02–P
DEPARTMENT OF STATE
[Public Notice: 12568]
Notice of Public Meeting of the
Advisory Committee on Responsible
Business Conduct
This notice announces the
public meeting of the Advisory
Committee on Responsible Business
Conduct (RBC Advisory Committee) on
November 14, 2024, from 9:00 a.m. to
5:00 p.m. ET.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Emily Santor, Foreign Affairs Analyst,
telephone: 202–679–5368, email:
RBCAdvisoryCommittee@state.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The RBC
Advisory Committee will meet in a
hybrid meeting on November 14, 2024,
from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. to hear,
deliberate, and vote on the preliminary
recommendations of its subcommittees:
the Subcommittee on the U.S. National
Contact Point for the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and
Development Guidelines for
Multinational Enterprises, the
Subcommittee on National Action Plan
Implementation, and the Subcommittee
on Human Rights and Environmental
Due Diligence.
Members of the public wishing to
participate must register by 11:59 p.m.
ET November 6, 2024, via email to
RBCAdvisoryCommittee@state.gov, with
the subject line ‘‘Registration.’’ To
register, please include your name, title,
affiliation, and the email you will use to
access the meeting. The Department will
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SUMMARY:
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17:10 Oct 21, 2024
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provide login information prior to the
meeting. Meeting minutes and future
recommendation reports will be
available to the public at the RBC
Advisory Committee website and the
RBC Advisory Committee page of the
FACA Database.
Public comments and requests for
accommodation can be sent to
RBCAdvisoryCommittee@state.gov and
must be submitted by 11:59 p.m. ET on
November 11, 2024. The subject line for
comment submissions should include
‘‘Public Comment.’’ During this
meeting, there will not be an option for
members of the public to make oral
statements. Requests for reasonable
accommodation should be submitted
with the subject line ‘‘Accommodations
Request.’’ Reasonable accommodation
requests received after the submission
deadline will be considered but may not
be possible to fulfill.
(Authority: 5 U.S.C. 1001 et seq. and 5 U.S.C.
552)
Jordyn E. Arndt,
Senior Foreign Affairs Officer, Office of
Multilateral and Global Affairs, Department
of State.
[FR Doc. 2024–24460 Filed 10–21–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4710–18–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Buy America Waiver Notification
Federal Highway
Administration (FHWA), U.S.
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice provides
information regarding FHWA’s finding
that it is appropriate to grant a nonavailability Buy America waiver to the
SUMMARY:
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Utah Department of Transportation
(UDOT) for procurement and
installation of 16 suspended explosive
charge remote avalanche control
systems (RACS), which contain nondomestic iron and steel components,
along Mount Superior overlooking SR–
210 in Little Cottonwood Canyon, Utah.
The waiver relates specifically to iron
and steel components that are part of
the tower, deployment box, and charges
of the RACS.
DATES: The effective date of the waiver
October 23, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
questions about this notice, please
contact Mr. Brian Hogge, FHWA Office
of Infrastructure, (202) 366–1562, or via
email at Brian.Hogge@dot.gov. For legal
questions, please contact Mr. David
Serody, FHWA Office of the Chief
Counsel, (202) 366–1345, or via email at
David.Serody@dot.gov. Office hours for
FHWA are from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,
E.T., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
An electronic copy of this document
may be downloaded from the Federal
Register’s home page at:
www.FederalRegister.gov and the U.S.
Government Publishing Office’s
database at: www.GovInfo.gov.
Background
The FHWA’s Buy America
requirements for steel and iron are set
forth at 23 U.S.C. 313 and 23 CFR
635.410 and require that all steel and
iron that are permanently incorporated
into a Federal-aid project must be
produced in the United States unless a
waiver is granted, including
predominantly steel and iron
components of a manufactured
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84436
Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 204 / Tuesday, October 22, 2024 / Notices
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product.1 Under these requirements, all
manufacturing processes, including the
application of a coating, must occur in
the United States.2
Under 23 U.S.C. 313(b)(2) and 23 CFR
635.410(c)(1)(ii), FHWA may waive the
application of its Buy America
requirement for steel and iron when
products are not produced in the United
States in sufficient and reasonably
available quantities of a satisfactory
quality. This notice provides
information regarding FHWA’s finding
that it is appropriate to grant UDOT a
non-availability Buy America waiver for
procurement of 16 suspended explosive
charge RACS, which include nondomestic iron and steel components, for
installation along Mount Superior
overlooking SR–210 in Little
Cottonwood Canyon, Utah. For each of
the 16 RACS, this waiver will cover
only: (i) the tower; (ii) the deployment
box; and (iii) the charges (collectively
‘‘waiver items’’). This waiver does not
apply to the reinforced foundation of
the RACS, which consists of anchor kits
and a base plate; such foundation must
be domestically sourced and compliant
with FHWA’s Buy America
requirements.
Background on the Project: In 2020,
the U.S. Army asked all members of the
Avalanche Artillery Users of North
America Committee to submit an exit
plan for their use of military artillery.
Currently, UDOT leases a P-Ridge
howitzer from the U.S. Army to fire live
artillery ammunition for avalanche
control in Little Cottonwood Canyon.
This is the only location in North
America where live artillery is fired
over inhabited buildings. The UDOT has
committed to ending the use of the
howitzer by 2025 and replacing it with
1 Under 23 U.S.C. 313, FHWA has a Buy America
requirement for manufactured products; however,
FHWA has a standing waiver under 23 U.S.C.
313(b), known as the Manufactured Products
General Waiver, which covers manufactured
products that are not predominantly steel and iron.
See 48 FR 53099 (Nov. 25, 1983).
2 While the Build America, Buy America Act
(BABA), included in the Infrastructure Investment
and Jobs Act (also known as the ‘‘Bipartisan
Infrastructure Law’’ (BIL)) (Pub. L. 117–58), sets out
Buy America preferences for steel, iron,
manufactured products, and construction materials,
these preferences only apply to the extent that a
domestic content procurement preference, as
described in section 70914 of BABA, does not
already apply to iron, steel, manufactured products,
and construction materials. BIL section 70917(a)–
(b). As FHWA has existing domestic content
preferences for steel, iron, and manufactured
products at 23 U.S.C. 313, the requirements under
23 U.S.C. 313 apply to steel, iron, and
manufactured products instead of the requirements
under BABA. As FHWA’s existing Buy America
requirement does not specifically cover
construction materials, the Buy America preference
under section 70914 of BABA applies for
construction materials.
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RACS, which use remotely detonated
explosives to mitigate avalanches and
save lives. This project is to install 16
RACS using suspended explosive
charges along SR–210 in Little
Cottonwood Canyon to minimize safety
concerns from the overhead fire of live
artillery over inhabited structures.
Background on Waiver Request: The
UDOT is part of the Transportation
Avalanche Research Pool, which has
identified three main types of RACS
used in the United States: gas-delivered
explosives, propelled explosive charges,
and suspended explosive charges. The
UDOT believes that the most
appropriate products for this project
based on the unique terrain in the
deployment area are RACS that utilize
suspended explosive charges. Prior to
submitting a waiver request, UDOT
identified only one domestic supplier of
any type of RACS; however, that
company uses gas-delivered explosives,
and such a system is not viable for this
project due to the extreme terrain,
excessive rockfall, and extensive
distance of the required gas line that
would be needed to operate the system.
The UDOT also used the National
Institute of Standards and Technology’s
Manufacturing Extension Partnership
Supplier Scouting service to seek out
any domestic manufacturers of RACS,
but no domestic alternatives were
identified.
The UDOT thus requested a waiver
for the tower, deployment box, and
charges that are part of the RACS for 16
systems that will use suspended
explosive charges.
In accordance with section 122 of
Division F of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2024 (Pub. L. 118–
42), section 117 of the SAFETEA–LU
Technical Corrections Act of 2008 (Pub.
L. 110–244), and 23 U.S.C. 313(g),
FHWA posted a notice of the waiver
request on its website on April 10, 2024,
soliciting public comment on the intent
to issue a waiver of the waiver items for
a 15-day period.3
Waiver Justification Summary
Comments to the Notice of Waiver
Request: The FHWA received five
comments in response to the notice of
the waiver request. One commenter
stated that FHWA’s Buy America
requirements are outdated and indicated
that FHWA should grant the waiver.
Another stated that FHWA should grant
the waiver and argued that FHWA
should not apply its Buy America
requirements to predominantly steel
and iron components.
3 https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/construction/
contracts/waivers.cfm?id=175.
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Sfmt 4703
Two other commenters provided
information not relevant to the waiver
request. One questioned the
environmental impacts of RACS, which
is not an issue within the scope of this
waiver request.
Another commenter stated that the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) policy eliminated the need for
the waiver request because OMB
requirements apply to manufactured
products, not just iron and steel. The
FHWA’s Buy America requirements
with respect to manufactured products,
however, differ from requirements
applicable to other Federal Agencies
under BABA, which was included as
part of the BIL (Pub. L. 117–58). The
FHWA has waived its statutory Buy
America requirements as to all
manufactured products that are not
predominantly steel and iron; however,
FHWA applies its Buy America
requirements to predominantly iron and
steel components of manufactured
products, and such components must
comply with FHWA’s requirements that
all iron and steel must be domestically
manufactured. Although BABA requires
that manufactured products be
manufactured in the United States and
the cost of the manufactured product’s
components that are mined, produced,
or manufactured in the United States
must be greater than 55 percent of the
total cost of all components of the
manufactured product, BABA does not
specifically mandate that iron and steel
components in particular must be
domestically manufactured.4 See BIL
section 70912(6)(B).
In other words, FHWA applies its
own Buy America requirements to steel,
iron, and manufactured products used
on FHWA funded projects, not the
standards for steel, iron, and
manufactured products under BABA.
See BIL section 70917(a)–(b).
Accordingly, manufactured products
used on FHWA funded projects are only
compliant with Buy America if all of
their predominantly steel and iron
components are domestically
manufactured. Manufactured products
that meet BABA’s standards, being
manufactured in the United States and
having 55 percent of the components, by
cost, be mined, produced, or
4 To meet the requirement that 55 percent of
components, by cost, be mined, produced, or
manufactured in the United States for a
manufactured product containing predominantly
iron or steel components, a manufacturer may
choose to domestically produce those components.
This is different from FHWA’s Buy America
requirements, which mandate that all
predominantly steel or iron components be
domestically produced, regardless of the percent, by
cost, of which they make up the manufactured
product.
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Federal Register / Vol. 89, No. 204 / Tuesday, October 22, 2024 / Notices
manufactured in the United States, are
not inherently compliant with FHWA’s
Buy America and may not necessarily
be permanently incorporated into
FHWA-funded projects.
Finally, the fifth commenter,
representing the domestic supplier
identified by UDOT as using gasdelivered explosives noted above, stated
that the company was not consulted on
the viability of its product to work in
the project terrain and contested the
statement from UDOT that its products
are not a viable alternative for the
project. When determining whether
steel and iron materials or products are
not produced in the United States in
sufficient and reasonably available
quantities which are of a satisfactory
quality pursuant to 23 U.S.C. 313(b)(2)
and 23 CFR 635.410(c)(1)(ii), FHWA
considers whether the recipient has
used appropriate due diligence to
identify domestic products or
domestically available alternative
products that meet the recipient’s
specifications. A comparable product
that performs a similar function is not
necessarily a domestic alternative; the
product must also meet the recipient’s
specific requirements that are deemed
necessary in order to achieve the
performance objectives of the project.
The FHWA’s statutory requirements do
not require recipients to change product
specifications in order to utilize
domestic products that do not meet the
recipient’s original specifications.
Accordingly, as FHWA views this fifth
commenter as arguing UDOT should
modify their original specifications to
accommodate their domestic product,
FHWA does not believe that this
commenter has demonstrated that they
have a suitable domestic alternative.
In sum, no commenter provided
information on potential domestic
manufacturers of suspended explosive
charge RACS. Thus, UDOT did not
receive any new information indicating
that the waiver items could be produced
by domestic manufacturers from any of
the commenters.
The FHWA believes that UDOT has
made substantial efforts to find suitable
Buy America-compliant waiver items
that will safely and effectively serve the
purpose of this project but that such
products are unavailable.
Timing and Need for a Waiver: The
waiver items are essential to achieving
the goal of replacing the current use of
live artillery with a safer remoteactivated system that can provide
highway avalanche mitigation.
While UDOT did not request a waiver
for the reinforced foundation of the
RACS, as such foundation can be
domestically manufactured, the waiver
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17:10 Oct 21, 2024
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items are engineered to work together as
a single system, and exchanging parts of
the system would reduce the reliability
and safety of the system. Accordingly,
the waiver items at issue must be
purchased and installed as a single
system, and UDOT has not located any
domestic manufacturers for the waiver
items meeting the project’s
specifications, nor has any domestic
manufacturer identified the ability to
produce Buy America-compliant waiver
items through the public comment
process.
Executive Order 14005: Executive
Order (E.O.) 14005, entitled ‘‘Ensuring
the Future is Made in All of America by
All of America’s Workers,’’ provides
that Federal Agencies should, consistent
with applicable law, maximize the use
of goods, products, and materials
produced in, and services offered in, the
United States. 86 FR 7475 (Jan. 28,
2021). Based on the information
contained in the waiver request from
UDOT and the lack of responsive
comments to the notice of waiver
request, FHWA concludes that issuing a
waiver is not inconsistent with E.O.
14005.
Finding and Request for Comments
Based on all the information available
to the Agency, FHWA concludes that
there are no Buy America-compliant
waiver items meeting the project’s
specifications and is waiving its Buy
America requirements for steel and iron
set forth at 23 U.S.C. 313 and 23 CFR
635.410 for recipient purchases of 16
RACS using suspended explosive
charges for avalanche highway
mitigation in Little Cottonwood Canyon.
For each RACS, this waiver will cover
only: (i) the tower; (ii) the deployment
box; and (iii) the charges (collectively
‘‘waiver items’’). This waiver does not
apply to other components of the RACS,
such as reinforced foundations, which
must be compliant with FHWA’s Buy
America requirements. In addition, this
waiver does not cover additional
charges purchased for the RACS.
The waiver applies to the waiver
items used in the project that are subject
to FHWA’s Buy America requirements
as a result of obligations of Federal
financial assistance made by FHWA for
the project.
The UDOT and its contractors and
subcontractors involved in the
procurement of the relevant components
are reminded of the need to comply
with the Cargo Preference Act in 46 CFR
part 38, if applicable.
In accordance with the provisions of
section 117 of the SAFETEA–LU
Technical Corrections Act of 2008,
FHWA is providing this notice as its
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Sfmt 4703
84437
finding that a waiver of its Buy America
requirements for steel and iron is
appropriate. The FHWA invites public
comment on this finding for an
additional five days following the
effective date of the finding. Comments
may be submitted to FHWA’s website
via the link provided to the waiver page
noted above.
Authority: 23 U.S.C. 313; Pub. L. 110–
161; 23 CFR 635.410.
Kristin R. White,
Acting Administrator, Federal Highway
Administration.
[FR Doc. 2024–24334 Filed 10–21–24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–22–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration
[Docket No. FMCSA–2017–0319]
Parts and Accessories Necessary for
Safe Operation; Exemption Renewal
for Agricultural and Food Transporters
Conference of American Trucking
Associations
Federal Motor Carrier Safety
Administration (FMCSA), Department
of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of final disposition; grant
of application for exemption.
AGENCY:
FMCSA announces its
decision to renew an exemption
requested by the Agricultural and Food
Transporters Conference (AFTC) of
American Trucking Associations (ATA),
which will allow certain alternative
methods for the securement of
agricultural commodities transported in
wood and plastic boxes and bins and
large fiberglass tubs, as well as hay,
straw, and cotton bales that are grouped
together into large singular units.
FMCSA concludes that renewing the
exemption, subject to the terms and
conditions set forth below, is likely to
achieve a level of safety equivalent to or
greater than the level of safety that
would be achieved absent the
exemption.
DATES: This renewed exemption is
effective April 15, 2024, through April
15, 2029.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
David Sutula, Chief, Vehicle and
Roadside Operations Division, Office of
Carrier, Driver, and Vehicle Safety,
FMCSA, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
Washington, DC 20590–0001; (202) 366–
9209; MCPSV@dot.gov. If you have
questions on viewing or submitting
material to the docket, call Dockets
Operations at (202) 366–9826.
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 89, Number 204 (Tuesday, October 22, 2024)]
[Notices]
[Pages 84435-84437]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2024-24334]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Highway Administration
Buy America Waiver Notification
AGENCY: Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice provides information regarding FHWA's finding that
it is appropriate to grant a non-availability Buy America waiver to the
Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) for procurement and
installation of 16 suspended explosive charge remote avalanche control
systems (RACS), which contain non-domestic iron and steel components,
along Mount Superior overlooking SR-210 in Little Cottonwood Canyon,
Utah. The waiver relates specifically to iron and steel components that
are part of the tower, deployment box, and charges of the RACS.
DATES: The effective date of the waiver October 23, 2024.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For questions about this notice,
please contact Mr. Brian Hogge, FHWA Office of Infrastructure, (202)
366-1562, or via email at [email protected]. For legal questions,
please contact Mr. David Serody, FHWA Office of the Chief Counsel,
(202) 366-1345, or via email at [email protected]. Office hours for
FHWA are from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., E.T., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Electronic Access
An electronic copy of this document may be downloaded from the
Federal Register's home page at: www.FederalRegister.gov and the U.S.
Government Publishing Office's database at: www.GovInfo.gov.
Background
The FHWA's Buy America requirements for steel and iron are set
forth at 23 U.S.C. 313 and 23 CFR 635.410 and require that all steel
and iron that are permanently incorporated into a Federal-aid project
must be produced in the United States unless a waiver is granted,
including predominantly steel and iron components of a manufactured
[[Page 84436]]
product.\1\ Under these requirements, all manufacturing processes,
including the application of a coating, must occur in the United
States.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Under 23 U.S.C. 313, FHWA has a Buy America requirement for
manufactured products; however, FHWA has a standing waiver under 23
U.S.C. 313(b), known as the Manufactured Products General Waiver,
which covers manufactured products that are not predominantly steel
and iron. See 48 FR 53099 (Nov. 25, 1983).
\2\ While the Build America, Buy America Act (BABA), included in
the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (also known as the
``Bipartisan Infrastructure Law'' (BIL)) (Pub. L. 117-58), sets out
Buy America preferences for steel, iron, manufactured products, and
construction materials, these preferences only apply to the extent
that a domestic content procurement preference, as described in
section 70914 of BABA, does not already apply to iron, steel,
manufactured products, and construction materials. BIL section
70917(a)-(b). As FHWA has existing domestic content preferences for
steel, iron, and manufactured products at 23 U.S.C. 313, the
requirements under 23 U.S.C. 313 apply to steel, iron, and
manufactured products instead of the requirements under BABA. As
FHWA's existing Buy America requirement does not specifically cover
construction materials, the Buy America preference under section
70914 of BABA applies for construction materials.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under 23 U.S.C. 313(b)(2) and 23 CFR 635.410(c)(1)(ii), FHWA may
waive the application of its Buy America requirement for steel and iron
when products are not produced in the United States in sufficient and
reasonably available quantities of a satisfactory quality. This notice
provides information regarding FHWA's finding that it is appropriate to
grant UDOT a non-availability Buy America waiver for procurement of 16
suspended explosive charge RACS, which include non-domestic iron and
steel components, for installation along Mount Superior overlooking SR-
210 in Little Cottonwood Canyon, Utah. For each of the 16 RACS, this
waiver will cover only: (i) the tower; (ii) the deployment box; and
(iii) the charges (collectively ``waiver items''). This waiver does not
apply to the reinforced foundation of the RACS, which consists of
anchor kits and a base plate; such foundation must be domestically
sourced and compliant with FHWA's Buy America requirements.
Background on the Project: In 2020, the U.S. Army asked all members
of the Avalanche Artillery Users of North America Committee to submit
an exit plan for their use of military artillery. Currently, UDOT
leases a P-Ridge howitzer from the U.S. Army to fire live artillery
ammunition for avalanche control in Little Cottonwood Canyon. This is
the only location in North America where live artillery is fired over
inhabited buildings. The UDOT has committed to ending the use of the
howitzer by 2025 and replacing it with RACS, which use remotely
detonated explosives to mitigate avalanches and save lives. This
project is to install 16 RACS using suspended explosive charges along
SR-210 in Little Cottonwood Canyon to minimize safety concerns from the
overhead fire of live artillery over inhabited structures.
Background on Waiver Request: The UDOT is part of the
Transportation Avalanche Research Pool, which has identified three main
types of RACS used in the United States: gas-delivered explosives,
propelled explosive charges, and suspended explosive charges. The UDOT
believes that the most appropriate products for this project based on
the unique terrain in the deployment area are RACS that utilize
suspended explosive charges. Prior to submitting a waiver request, UDOT
identified only one domestic supplier of any type of RACS; however,
that company uses gas-delivered explosives, and such a system is not
viable for this project due to the extreme terrain, excessive rockfall,
and extensive distance of the required gas line that would be needed to
operate the system. The UDOT also used the National Institute of
Standards and Technology's Manufacturing Extension Partnership Supplier
Scouting service to seek out any domestic manufacturers of RACS, but no
domestic alternatives were identified.
The UDOT thus requested a waiver for the tower, deployment box, and
charges that are part of the RACS for 16 systems that will use
suspended explosive charges.
In accordance with section 122 of Division F of the Consolidated
Appropriations Act, 2024 (Pub. L. 118-42), section 117 of the SAFETEA-
LU Technical Corrections Act of 2008 (Pub. L. 110-244), and 23 U.S.C.
313(g), FHWA posted a notice of the waiver request on its website on
April 10, 2024, soliciting public comment on the intent to issue a
waiver of the waiver items for a 15-day period.\3\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/construction/contracts/waivers.cfm?id=175.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Waiver Justification Summary
Comments to the Notice of Waiver Request: The FHWA received five
comments in response to the notice of the waiver request. One commenter
stated that FHWA's Buy America requirements are outdated and indicated
that FHWA should grant the waiver. Another stated that FHWA should
grant the waiver and argued that FHWA should not apply its Buy America
requirements to predominantly steel and iron components.
Two other commenters provided information not relevant to the
waiver request. One questioned the environmental impacts of RACS, which
is not an issue within the scope of this waiver request.
Another commenter stated that the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) policy eliminated the need for the waiver request because OMB
requirements apply to manufactured products, not just iron and steel.
The FHWA's Buy America requirements with respect to manufactured
products, however, differ from requirements applicable to other Federal
Agencies under BABA, which was included as part of the BIL (Pub. L.
117-58). The FHWA has waived its statutory Buy America requirements as
to all manufactured products that are not predominantly steel and iron;
however, FHWA applies its Buy America requirements to predominantly
iron and steel components of manufactured products, and such components
must comply with FHWA's requirements that all iron and steel must be
domestically manufactured. Although BABA requires that manufactured
products be manufactured in the United States and the cost of the
manufactured product's components that are mined, produced, or
manufactured in the United States must be greater than 55 percent of
the total cost of all components of the manufactured product, BABA does
not specifically mandate that iron and steel components in particular
must be domestically manufactured.\4\ See BIL section 70912(6)(B).
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\4\ To meet the requirement that 55 percent of components, by
cost, be mined, produced, or manufactured in the United States for a
manufactured product containing predominantly iron or steel
components, a manufacturer may choose to domestically produce those
components. This is different from FHWA's Buy America requirements,
which mandate that all predominantly steel or iron components be
domestically produced, regardless of the percent, by cost, of which
they make up the manufactured product.
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In other words, FHWA applies its own Buy America requirements to
steel, iron, and manufactured products used on FHWA funded projects,
not the standards for steel, iron, and manufactured products under
BABA. See BIL section 70917(a)-(b). Accordingly, manufactured products
used on FHWA funded projects are only compliant with Buy America if all
of their predominantly steel and iron components are domestically
manufactured. Manufactured products that meet BABA's standards, being
manufactured in the United States and having 55 percent of the
components, by cost, be mined, produced, or
[[Page 84437]]
manufactured in the United States, are not inherently compliant with
FHWA's Buy America and may not necessarily be permanently incorporated
into FHWA-funded projects.
Finally, the fifth commenter, representing the domestic supplier
identified by UDOT as using gas-delivered explosives noted above,
stated that the company was not consulted on the viability of its
product to work in the project terrain and contested the statement from
UDOT that its products are not a viable alternative for the project.
When determining whether steel and iron materials or products are not
produced in the United States in sufficient and reasonably available
quantities which are of a satisfactory quality pursuant to 23 U.S.C.
313(b)(2) and 23 CFR 635.410(c)(1)(ii), FHWA considers whether the
recipient has used appropriate due diligence to identify domestic
products or domestically available alternative products that meet the
recipient's specifications. A comparable product that performs a
similar function is not necessarily a domestic alternative; the product
must also meet the recipient's specific requirements that are deemed
necessary in order to achieve the performance objectives of the
project. The FHWA's statutory requirements do not require recipients to
change product specifications in order to utilize domestic products
that do not meet the recipient's original specifications. Accordingly,
as FHWA views this fifth commenter as arguing UDOT should modify their
original specifications to accommodate their domestic product, FHWA
does not believe that this commenter has demonstrated that they have a
suitable domestic alternative.
In sum, no commenter provided information on potential domestic
manufacturers of suspended explosive charge RACS. Thus, UDOT did not
receive any new information indicating that the waiver items could be
produced by domestic manufacturers from any of the commenters.
The FHWA believes that UDOT has made substantial efforts to find
suitable Buy America-compliant waiver items that will safely and
effectively serve the purpose of this project but that such products
are unavailable.
Timing and Need for a Waiver: The waiver items are essential to
achieving the goal of replacing the current use of live artillery with
a safer remote-activated system that can provide highway avalanche
mitigation.
While UDOT did not request a waiver for the reinforced foundation
of the RACS, as such foundation can be domestically manufactured, the
waiver items are engineered to work together as a single system, and
exchanging parts of the system would reduce the reliability and safety
of the system. Accordingly, the waiver items at issue must be purchased
and installed as a single system, and UDOT has not located any domestic
manufacturers for the waiver items meeting the project's
specifications, nor has any domestic manufacturer identified the
ability to produce Buy America-compliant waiver items through the
public comment process.
Executive Order 14005: Executive Order (E.O.) 14005, entitled
``Ensuring the Future is Made in All of America by All of America's
Workers,'' provides that Federal Agencies should, consistent with
applicable law, maximize the use of goods, products, and materials
produced in, and services offered in, the United States. 86 FR 7475
(Jan. 28, 2021). Based on the information contained in the waiver
request from UDOT and the lack of responsive comments to the notice of
waiver request, FHWA concludes that issuing a waiver is not
inconsistent with E.O. 14005.
Finding and Request for Comments
Based on all the information available to the Agency, FHWA
concludes that there are no Buy America-compliant waiver items meeting
the project's specifications and is waiving its Buy America
requirements for steel and iron set forth at 23 U.S.C. 313 and 23 CFR
635.410 for recipient purchases of 16 RACS using suspended explosive
charges for avalanche highway mitigation in Little Cottonwood Canyon.
For each RACS, this waiver will cover only: (i) the tower; (ii) the
deployment box; and (iii) the charges (collectively ``waiver items'').
This waiver does not apply to other components of the RACS, such as
reinforced foundations, which must be compliant with FHWA's Buy America
requirements. In addition, this waiver does not cover additional
charges purchased for the RACS.
The waiver applies to the waiver items used in the project that are
subject to FHWA's Buy America requirements as a result of obligations
of Federal financial assistance made by FHWA for the project.
The UDOT and its contractors and subcontractors involved in the
procurement of the relevant components are reminded of the need to
comply with the Cargo Preference Act in 46 CFR part 38, if applicable.
In accordance with the provisions of section 117 of the SAFETEA-LU
Technical Corrections Act of 2008, FHWA is providing this notice as its
finding that a waiver of its Buy America requirements for steel and
iron is appropriate. The FHWA invites public comment on this finding
for an additional five days following the effective date of the
finding. Comments may be submitted to FHWA's website via the link
provided to the waiver page noted above.
Authority: 23 U.S.C. 313; Pub. L. 110-161; 23 CFR 635.410.
Kristin R. White,
Acting Administrator, Federal Highway Administration.
[FR Doc. 2024-24334 Filed 10-21-24; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-22-P