[Federal Register Volume 65, Number 3 (Wednesday, January 5, 2000)]
[Notices]
[Pages 553-554]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 00-162]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Bureau of Transportation Statistics
Agency Information Collection; Activity Under OMB Review; Report
of Financial and Operating Statistics for Small Aircraft Operators--
Form 298-C
AGENCY: Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS), DOT.
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: In compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public
Law 104-13, the Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) invites the
general public, industry and other Federal Agencies to comment on the
continuing need for and usefulness of BTS collecting financial, traffic
and operating statistics from small certificated and commuter air
carriers. Small certificated air carriers (operate aircraft with 60
seats or less or with 18,000 pounds of payload capacity or less) must
file the five quarterly schedules listed below:
A-1 Report of Flight and Traffic Statistics in Scheduled Passenger
Operations,
E-1 Report of Nonscheduled Passenger Enplanements by Small
Certificated Air Carriers,
F-1 Report of Financial Data,
F-2 Report of Aircraft Operating Expenses and Related Statistics, and
T-1 Report of Revenue Traffic by On-Line Origin and Destination.
Commuter air carriers must file the three quarterly schedules
listed below:
A-1 Report of Flight and Traffic Statistics in Scheduled Passenger
Operations,
F-1 Report of Financial Data, and
T-1 Report of Revenue Traffic by On-Line Origin and Destination.
Commenters should address whether BTS accurately estimated the
reporting burden and if there are other ways to enhance the quality,
utility and clarity of the information collected.
DATES: Written comments should be submitted by March 6, 2000.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be directed to: Office of Airline
Information, K-25, Room 4125, Bureau of Transportation Statistics,
Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh Street, SW., Washington, DC
20590-0001, fax # (202) 366-3383, or email bernard.stankus@bts.gov.
COMMENTS: Comments should identify the OMB # 2138-0009 and submit a
duplicate copy to the address listed above. Commenters wishing the
Department to acknowledge receipt of their comments must submit with
those comments a self-addressed stamped postcard on which the following
statement is made: Comments on OMB # 2138-0009. The postcard will be
date/time stamped and returned to the commenter.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Bernie Stankus, Office of Airline
Information, K-25, Bureau of Transportation Statistics, 400 Seventh
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20590-0001, (202) 366-4387.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
OMB Approval No. 2138-0009
Title: Report of Financial and Operating Statistics for Small
Aircraft Operators--Form 298-C.
Form No.: 298-C.
Type of Review: Extension of a currently approved collection.
Respondents: Small certificated and commuter air carriers.
Number of Respondents: 100.
Estimated Time Per Response: 16 hours for small certificated, 7
hours for commuters.
Total Annual Burden: 5,000 hours.
Needs and Uses: Program Uses of Form 298-C Data.
Mail Rates
The Department of Transportation (DOT) sets and updates the Intra-
Alaska Bush mail rates based on carrier expense, traffic, and
operational data. Form 298-C cost data, especially fuel costs, terminal
expenses, and line haul expenses are used in arriving at rate levels.
DOT revises the established rates based on the percentage of unit cost
changes in the carriers' operations. These updating procedures have
resulted in the carriers receiving rates of compensation that more
closely parallel their costs of providing mail service and contribute
to the carriers' economic well-being.
Essential Air Service
DOT also must determine a community's eligibility as an essential
air service (EAS) point. If the community qualifies as an EAS point, a
determination is made as to what level of service the community is
entitled and how much, if any, compensation must be paid to air
carriers that provide the service.
After DOT has determined that a community is eligible to receive
EAS, DOT often has to select a carrier to provide the service. Some of
the carrier selection criteria are historic presence in the community,
reliability of carrier service, financial stability of the carrier, and
carrier cost structure.
Carrier Fitness
Fitness determinations are made for both new entrants and
established U.S. domestic carriers proposing a substantial change in
operations. A portion of these applications consists of an operating
plan for the first year (14 CFR Part 204) and an associated projection
of revenues and expenses. The carrier's operating costs, included in
these projections, are compared against the cost data in the Form 298-
[[Page 554]]
C file for a carrier or carriers with the same aircraft type and
similar operating characteristics. Such a review validates the
reasonableness of the carrier's operating plan.
The quarterly financial submissions by commuter and small
certificated air carriers are used in determining each carrier's
continuing fitness to operate. Section 41738 of Title 49 of the United
States Code requires DOT to find all commuter and small certificated
air carriers fit, willing and able to conduct passenger service as a
prerequisite to providing such service to an eligible essential air
service point. In making a fitness determination, DOT reviews three
areas of a carrier's operation: (1) The qualifications of its
management team, (2) its disposition to comply with laws and
regulations, and (3) its financial posture. DOT must determine whether
or not a carrier has sufficient financial resources to conduct its
operations without imposing undue risk on the traveling public.
Moreover, once a carrier is operating as a commuter, DOT is required to
monitor its continuing fitness.
Industry Analysis
The Secretary, Deputy Secretary and other senior DOT officials must
be kept fully informed and advised of all current and developing
economic issues affecting the airline industry. This is accomplished
through the preparation of testimony given before Congressional
committees, briefing and status papers, speech preparation, and
memoranda recommending decisions or listing available options.
The analytical methodologies employed under this program are as
varied as the nature of the particular aviation policy issues that
confront senior DOT officials. In preparing financial condition reports
or status reports on a particular airline, financial and traffic data
are analyzed. Briefing papers may use the same information as well as
airport activity data and market data. In summary, the nature of a
particular aviation issue determines the particular methodology used to
prepare the analysis.
Safety Analysis
The FAA evaluates the adequacy of aviation safety regulations,
standards, policies and procedures. Problem areas are identified and
recommendations are developed for appropriate solutions. Enplanement
data are used in evaluating the safety status of carriers. Passenger-
miles are used to calculate fatality and injury rates, while aircraft-
miles are used in performing risk analysis and comparative analyses
with other traffic modes. Departure data are used to calculate
accident/incident rates, developing rates of near misses, and assessing
the significance of the incident of operational errors.
Forecasting
Traffic schedules are used to derive air carrier operations at non-
tower airports. Historical aircraft departure data are used to
supplement and validate other sources of Terminal Area Forecasts (TAF).
The aircraft operations data in the TAF are needed by the National Plan
of Integrated Airports System (NPIAS) to prepare airport master plans.
In addition, aircraft operations forecast data in TAF are used in
developing benefit/cost ratios for tower establishment and tower
discontinuance criteria, for supporting decisions on the purchase of
safety-related avionics equipment, and for the allocation of scarce
resources for the construction or expansion of runways and other
airport facilities.
Historical enplanement data are required to produce short, medium,
and long range passenger demand forecasts for all airports with
passenger service. These forecasts are presented in the TAF data base,
which contains approximately 4,000 airports, including all airports in
the NPIAS. TAF enplanement data are used in the preparation of various
airport master plans and in response to requests for specific airport
information from Congress, states, and the general public.
Historical passenger enplanement data, aircraft departure data, and
freight and mail tons enplaned by airport are all used to project air
carrier traffic and cargo activity levels for hub airports.
Cost/Benefit Analysis
Safety rules proposed by the FAA operating units are submitted for
economic analysis. Under established costing methodologies, which use
various cost and traffic data, accident data, and risk analysis, the
proposed rules are evaluated on (1) a cost/benefit basis, (2)
regulatory flexibility basis and, (3) an international trade impact
basis.
Allocation of Airport and Airways Improvement Funds
A revenue passenger enplanement formula prescribed in the Airport
and Airway Improvement Act is used to determine the amount of funds to
be allocated to each airport. Form 298-C schedules that identify
revenue passengers enplaned at individual airports in the United States
and Trust Territories, are used for the formula.
Since several airports in the national system are heavily involved
in air freight, all-cargo data, such as revenue tons enplaned and
aircraft departures, are used to plan for future needs of those
airports. Scheduled aircraft departures by aircraft type by airport are
used in determining the practical annual capacity (PANCAP) at airports,
as prescribed in FAA Advisory Circular ``Airport Capacity Criteria Used
in Preparing the National Airport Plan.'' PANCAP is a safety-related
benchmark measure which indicates when airport management should be
concerned about capacity problems, delays and possible needed airport
expansion or runway construction.
Noise Abatement
Air carrier traffic data by airport are used in assessing the level
and frequency of service at individual airports in order to determine
the environmental noise impact of carrier operations. Also, aircraft
operating data are used to assess carrier compliance with noise
abatement agreements.
Donald W. Bright,
Acting Director, Office of Airline Information, Bureau of
Transportation Statistics.
[FR Doc. 00-162 Filed 1-4-00; 8:45 am]
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