95-2674. Rules of Practice for Proceedings Concerning Airport Fees  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 23 (Friday, February 3, 1995)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 6919-6930]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-2674]
    
    
    
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 60, No. 23 / Friday, February 3, 1995 / Rules 
    and Regulations 
    [[Page 6919]] 
    
    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    Office of the Secretary
    
    14 CFR Part 302
    
    [Docket No. 49830]
    RIN 2105-AC18
    
    
    Rules of Practice for Proceedings Concerning Airport Fees
    
    AGENCY: Office of the Secretary, DOT.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This final rule establishes specific procedural rules under 
    which the Department of Transportation will handle complaints by air 
    carriers and foreign air carriers for a determination of the 
    reasonableness of a fee increase or newly established fee imposed upon 
    the carrier by the owner or operator of an airport. It also establishes 
    rules that would apply to requests by the owner or operator of an 
    airport for such a determination. The final rule responds to the 
    mandate in the recently enacted Federal Aviation Administration 
    Authorization Act of 1994 requiring the Department to issue regulations 
    establishing procedures for acting upon such complaints by air carriers 
    and requests by airport owners and operators.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: This rule is effective on February 3, 1995.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert Klothe, Office of Regulation 
    and Enforcement, Office of the General Counsel, United States 
    Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh Street, SW, Washington, DC 
    20590, telephone (202) 366-9307.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        This rulemaking had its origins in two related notices on the 
    subject of Federal policy on airport rates and charges issued by the 
    Office of the Secretary of Transportation (OST) and the Federal 
    Aviation Administration on June 9, 1994. A jointly-issued notice 
    entitled ``Proposed Policy Regarding Airport Rates and Charges'' 
    (Proposed Policy) listed and explained the proposed Federal policy on 
    the rates and charges that an airport proprietor can charge to 
    aeronautical users of the airport. (59 FR 29874); a supplemental notice 
    concerning the proposed policy was issued on October 12, 1994 (59 FR 
    51836). The FAA also issued a notice of proposed rulemaking entitled 
    ``Rules of Practice for Federally Assisted Airports'' setting forth 
    procedures for the filing, investigation, and adjudication of 
    complaints against airports for alleged violation of Federal 
    requirements under the Airport and Airway Improvement Act of 1982, as 
    amended, and the Anti-Head Tax Act provisions of the Federal Aviation 
    Act (59 FR 29880); subpart J of the proposed rule provided special 
    procedures for the expedited review of complaints by airlines involving 
    the fees charged by an airport proprietor.
        Subsequently, Congress passed the FAA Authorization Act of 1994, 
    which was signed into law on August 23, 1994. Section 113 of the FAA 
    Authorization Act included specific provisions for the resolution of 
    airport-air carrier disputes concerning airport fees. The procedures 
    contemplated by the FAA Authorization Act were substantially different 
    from those proposed by the FAA. Accordingly, the FAA withdrew its NPRM 
    on September 16, 1994, insofar as it applied to the resolution of the 
    reasonableness of airport fees charged to air carriers. (59 FR 47568). 
    However, the remaining procedures proposed in the FAA NPRM, which would 
    apply to the various other kinds of complaints filed against airports 
    relating to Federal requirements, are not affected by the FAA 
    Authorization Act, and the comment period on the remaining proposals 
    closed on December 1, 1994.
        In lieu of the procedures proposed by the FAA for handling air 
    carrier complaints about airport rates and charges, the Office of the 
    Secretary issued a new NPRM on October 24, 1994. As contemplated by the 
    FAA Authorization Act, the October 24 NPRM stated that the procedures 
    contained in 14 CFR Part 302 would generally govern air carrier 
    complaints as well as requests by airport owners or operators for a 
    determination of the reasonableness of airports fees and charges.
    
    Discussion of Comments
    
        The Department received twelve comments on the NPRM. They were 
    submitted by the Air Transport Association (ATA), the Aircraft Owners 
    and Pilots Association (AOPA), the Airports Council International--
    North America (ACI-NA), the American Association of Airport Executives 
    (AAAE), the General Aviation Manufacturers Association (GAMA), the 
    International Air Transport Association (IATA), Japan Airlines Company 
    (JAL), the Los Angeles Department of Airports, the Maryland Aviation 
    Administration, the Massachusetts Port Authority (Massport), the 
    Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority, and the National Business 
    Aircraft Association, Inc. (NBAA).
        Although there were numerous requests for changes to particular 
    provisions, the comments generally expressed support for the overall 
    concept of the proposed rule. The proposed regulatory approach, i.e., 
    consolidating all complaints as soon as the first carrier files a 
    complaint under the new subpart, received several supporting comments 
    and no opposition. Accordingly, the final rule follows this approach 
    with only minor modifications. We turn now to a discussion of the 
    issues most widely addressed in the comments. Other comments are 
    addressed in the section-by-section analysis.
    
    Party Status
    
        A number of commenters addressed issues involving who should be 
    able to make use of the expedited procedures contained in the new 
    subpart. JAL expressed specific support for our proposal to allow 
    foreign air carriers to use the expedited procedures along with U.S. 
    air carriers. AAAE stated that it considers this proposal acceptable, 
    and ACI-NA also indicated that it did not object, although ACI-NA added 
    that ``a foreign air carrier, like any other carrier, which initiates 
    or joins a case should not be allowed to pursue remedies in other 
    forums, in order to avoid duplicative proceedings which could lead to 
    inconsistent or conflicting results.'' Only the Los Angeles Department 
    of Airports opposed including foreign air carriers. It claims that 
    ``Congress intentionally provided the expedited procedures only to U.S. 
    carriers,'' and suggests that making this forum available to foreign 
    carriers forfeits a bargaining position for the United States and 
    contravenes the principle of international reciprocity.
        The final rule adopts the proposal to allow foreign air carriers to 
    file complaints under subpart F. As we noted in the NPRM, we anticipate 
    that both domestic and foreign carriers will dispute airport fees they 
    believe to be unreasonable. Since the economic and other issues 
    involved in determining the reasonableness of a fee are essentially the 
    same whether the complainant carrier is U.S. or foreign, it will be 
    simpler for the carriers, the airport and the Department to make that 
    determination in a single proceeding. Therefore, while the FAA 
    Authorization Act was only directed at complaints by U.S. carriers, we 
    will include foreign carriers on our own initiative.
        With respect to the comment that foreign carriers filing claims 
    under subpart F should be barred from seeking remedies in other forums, 
    we note that the various bilateral agreements on air service between 
    the United States and [[Page 6920]] other countries govern the rights 
    of foreign air carriers in this regard.
        GAMA, AOPA, and NBAA all argue that we should further expand the 
    applicability of this subpart to cover complaints by general aviation 
    operators. In their view, the arguments for including foreign air 
    carriers apply with equal force to general aviation users. While we 
    recognize that there may be cases in which an airport imposes 
    essentially similar fees on both general aviation and air carrier 
    operations, we cannot grant the request to expand the expedited 
    procedures to general aviation operators. The FAA Authorization Act 
    requires the Secretary to determine the reasonableness of a challenged 
    fee within 120 days after a complaint is filed and indicates a 
    preference for oral evidentiary procedures, to the extent that such 
    procedures are consistent with the 120-day timeframe. Our procedures 
    must carry out the Congressional intent. If general aviation operators 
    are permitted to make use of this subpart, however, the scope of the 
    hearing would be dramatically expanded. It is possible that there would 
    be dozens, conceivably even hundreds, of additional parties, possibly 
    with divergent interests. If this happened, it would so overwhelm the 
    Department's resources that it could become impossible for the 
    Department to meet the statutory deadline.
        The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority argues that there is 
    an integral relationship between the fees paid by ``signatory'' and 
    ``non-signatory'' carriers. (Signatory carriers are airlines that have 
    entered into a use or operating agreement with the airport operator.) 
    Therefore, ``it is important for the procedures to specify that the 
    airport can join as indispensable parties the signatory airlines when 
    the airports rates and charges are challenged by a non signatory 
    airline.'' The final rule does not incorporate this suggestion. If a 
    carrier (signatory or otherwise) would be affected by the outcome of a 
    complaint filed by another carrier at the same airport, it may well 
    choose to participate in the proceeding, such as by filing an answer to 
    the complaint. The NPRM's proposal to require service of any complaint 
    on other carriers (discussed more fully below) was made partly to 
    facilitate such participation. But there is no reason to require the 
    participation of carriers with no complaint of their own and no 
    interest in the fee being challenged.
    
    Evidence To Be Submitted With Complaints, Requests and Answers
    
        A number of commenters addressed the proposal in the NPRM that 
    carrier complaints should contain all supporting evidence and 
    testimony, and that answers should similarly be complete with all 
    evidence and testimony on which the party intends to rely.
        IATA commented that a carrier might not have access to much of the 
    information necessary to its complaint unless the airport had agreed to 
    furnish it. IATA requested that the final rule make clear that 
    information within the custody of the airport could be used by the 
    carrier if it was able to obtain the information only after the 
    complaint was filed. ATA raised the same issue, but suggested that we 
    provide for a formal discovery process within the 30-day period 
    following the complaint.
        The Department's Policy Regarding Airport Rates and Charges, 
    published in today's Federal Register, states that airports should 
    consult with carriers in advance of changing fees, and should provide 
    adequate information to permit carriers to evaluate the justification 
    for the change and the reasonableness of the new or increased fee. We 
    expect that airports will comply with this policy.
        The Department finds the IATA and ATA concerns valid. However, we 
    believe that the conduct of discovery in the 30-day period following 
    the complaint would be a burden to the airport owner or operator and to 
    the government. Moreover, any discovery conducted would be unnecessary, 
    and therefore excessive, if the complaint is subsequently dismissed 
    because the Secretary determines that there is no significant dispute. 
    Accordingly, the Department will provide, where necessary, special 
    procedures for the exchange or disclosure of information by the 
    parties.
        Airport parties had equivalent objections with respect to the 
    proposed requirements for the timing and completeness of answers. ACI-
    NA, AAAE, the Los Angeles Department of Airports, and Massport all 
    argued that airports should not have to submit their entire response 
    with the answer. They believe that answering parties should only have 
    to submit a brief in response to a complaint, and should be able to 
    supplement their submission with exhibits and testimony at a later 
    point in the proceeding.
        In addition, they claim that it is unfair that complainants will 
    have up to 60 days to gather evidence and prepare exhibits and 
    testimony, while, under the proposal, respondents would be required to 
    submit their complete response seven calendar days after the complaint 
    is filed. AAAE and ACI-NA suggested that we allow answers to be filed 
    21 days after the initial complaint. The Los Angeles Department of 
    Airports agreed, and also suggested the recommended 21-day period 
    should not start until the last day that complaints could be filed 
    (i.e., on the 60th day after notice of the fee or the seventh day after 
    the first complaint is filed). This would give parties a total of up to 
    28 days to file answers. Massport asked for a 14 calendar-day answer 
    period, and the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority recommended 
    14 days for the initial complaint and seven days for any additional 
    complaints. The Maryland Aviation Administration requested seven 
    business days instead of seven calendar days.
        We will retain the requirement that answers contain all testimony 
    and exhibits on which the answering party intends to rely. The carriers 
    pointed out that airport owners and operators possess much of the 
    information that they might need to introduce in challenging a fee. 
    However, there is no fee information in the hands of the carriers that 
    an airport would need to support the reasonableness of the fee. In view 
    of the extremely short decisional deadlines imposed by the FAA 
    Authorization Act, it is important that we have the most information 
    possible at the beginning of a proceeding. While it is true, as 
    commenters noted, that complaining carriers have up to 60 days to file 
    complaints, we do not agree that this gives complainants an unfair 
    advantage. We expect airports to have all the economic evidence they 
    need in support of a new or increased fee before the fee is increased 
    rather than after a complaint is filed. While an answer must, of 
    course, respond to the specific matters raised in a complaint, an 
    airport should not have to generate significant new data.
        On the other hand, we believe that it is reasonable to allow some 
    additional time to prepare and submit answers. In the case of 
    complaints, it will be easier for both the answering party and the 
    Department if answers are consolidated to address both the initial 
    complaint and any follow-on complaints. Accordingly, the final rule 
    provides that answers will be due 14 calendar days after the initial 
    complaint is filed. Thus, if there are follow-on complaints, the 
    answering parties will still have a minimum of seven days to address 
    them. We will also allow 14 days for answers to requests for 
    determination.
    
    Determination of ``Significant Dispute''
    
        Within 30 days after a carrier files a complaint, the FAA 
    Authorization Act requires the Department to determine whether there is 
    a ``significant dispute;'' if not, the statute requires the Secretary 
    [[Page 6921]] to dismiss the complaint. Accordingly, a number of 
    commenters addressed issues associated with the Secretary's 
    determination.
        IATA pointed out that the language in proposed Sec. 302.611 stated 
    that the Secretary would issue an order within 30 days determining 
    whether a carrier complaint presented a significant dispute, but there 
    was no corresponding language on requests for determination submitted 
    by an airport owner or operator. As the preamble in the NPRM indicated, 
    it has been our intention to issue such orders within 30 days. However, 
    as provided in Sec. 302.619(c), when both a complaint and a request for 
    determination have been filed with respect to the same airport fee, the 
    statutorily-imposed 120-day schedule for resolving complaints controls 
    the course of the proceeding. That is, as required by the FAA 
    Authorization Act, the Secretary will determine whether there is a 
    significant dispute within 30 days of the date the first complaint is 
    filed. In such cases, the determination may come more than 30 days 
    after the date of the airport request. In light of IATA's comment, we 
    have revised the language of Sec. 302.613 to clarify this point.
        The comments of both IATA and ATA ask that any order dismissing a 
    complaint for lack of a significant dispute should be clearly stated to 
    be final and appealable. IATA goes on to argue the proposed rule would 
    leave an airport owner or operator in a better position following 
    dismissal of a request for determination than a carrier would be 
    following dismissal of a complaint. We disagree, and we find that no 
    change is necessary in the final rule. If the Secretary dismisses a 
    complaint after finding that there is no significant dispute within the 
    meaning of the FAA Authorization Act, the order of dismissal is subject 
    to the same judicial review as any other order of the Secretary. (If 
    the Secretary instead finds that the complaint fails to meet the 
    procedural requirements of this subpart, the order will set forth the 
    conditions under which a revised complaint may be filed.)
        IATA asks that Sec. 302.611 ``provide some reasonably accurate 
    guidelines and standards of review'' under which the Secretary will 
    review complaints to determine whether they present a significant 
    dispute. ATA suggests that we employ the standards of Federal Rule of 
    Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), accepting any complaint as constituting a 
    significant dispute as long as it ``states a claim for relief under 
    Section 47129.'' In the alternative, it suggests we employ the 
    standards for grant of summary judgment under Federal Rule of Civil 
    Procedure 56. Under this approach, as ATA states, ``a 'significant 
    dispute' would exist whenever there was a genuine issue of material 
    fact or law.''
        Accepting either of ATA's recommendations would mean that the 
    Department would set for hearing virtually all complaints brought, no 
    matter how trivial. We believe that this is inconsistent with the 
    statutory intent. If Congress had meant for the Department to hear 
    every complaint in which a claim is made, it surely would not have 
    mandated in Sec. 47129(c)(2) that ``the Secretary shall dismiss any 
    complaint if no significant dispute exists.'' (Emphasis added.) 
    Congress established the extraordinary dispute resolution program in 
    Sec. 47129 to ensure that carriers and airports can obtain a prompt 
    decision when there is an important fee dispute. It plainly understood 
    that the Department has limited resources; if the expedited procedures 
    are employed any time a complainant can state a claim or establish that 
    there is a fact in dispute, the Department could be unable to respond 
    adequately when there are truly significant fee disputes. Moreover, 
    while we are sympathetic to IATA's request for clear guidelines and 
    standards for review, we believe that the circumstances at each airport 
    and the facts behind each fee dispute vary too widely for us to be able 
    to set out specific standards in the final rule. As we proposed, 
    however, Sec. 302.611 states that we will set forth our reasoning in 
    any order dismissing a complaint on the grounds that the alleged 
    dispute is not significant.
        AAAE objected to the statement in the preamble that one piece of 
    evidence that a dispute is significant would be that the complaining 
    carrier had attempted to resolve the dispute with the airport but had 
    been unsuccessful. AAAE points out, ``Airports and their tenant air 
    carriers can have legitimate, and even vehement disagreements about 
    issues that are, objectively, minor.'' We agree with AAAE that the 
    intensity of the discussions between airports and carriers does not by 
    itself mean that there is a significant dispute within the meaning of 
    Sec. 47129. Nevertheless, as the preamble to the NPRM stated, the 
    failure of direct negotiations ``would be some indication, although not 
    necessarily proof, that there is a significant dispute.''
        ACI-NA and IATA disagree sharply on our authority to dismiss 
    airport requests for determination when there is no significant 
    dispute. ACI-NA stated that the Department was correct in determining 
    that the FAA Authorization Act makes no provision for dismissal on that 
    basis (in contrast with its specific requirement to dismiss carrier 
    complaints that do not present a significant dispute). IATA, on the 
    other hand, claimed that our failure to provide for dismissal of an 
    airport owner or operator's request ``is clearly arbitrary and 
    capricious.'' As IATA's comments note, however, the statutory language 
    on dismissals, in Sec. 47129(c)(2), ``on its face appears to be 
    applicable only to complaints and air carriers.'' (Emphasis in 
    original.) While IATA suggests that this ``may be the result of 
    legislative oversight,'' we believe this language is plain, and we will 
    adopt the NPRM's proposal to proceed to a final order on the merits 
    when an airport properly submits a request for determination.
    
    Service of Documents
    
        In order to ensure compliance with the extremely short time frames 
    provided by the FAA Authorization Act for action on fee disputes, the 
    NPRM proposed special service requirements. The proposal contained 
    three main elements: (1) Complaints and requests for determination 
    would have to be served on all carriers providing service to the 
    airport; (2) For most filings, service would have to be made by hand, 
    by electronic transmission, or by overnight express delivery; and (3) 
    Parties would actually have to receive the documents no later than the 
    day they are filed.
        The NPRM stated that the Department realized that these service 
    requirements could pose a burden in some situations, but it also 
    expressed our belief that they are necessary to permit a consolidated 
    hearing for all complaints. Nevertheless, we specifically invited 
    comment on the service proposals, and particularly on an additional 
    proposal to substitute service of complaints or requests for 
    determination on members of any airline negotiating committee at the 
    airport rather than on all carriers serving the airport. A number of 
    commenters responded to this invitation.
        To begin with, AAAE and ACI-NA supported the proposal to allow 
    service of documents on airline committee members at those airports 
    having such committees. The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority 
    claimed that it should be adequate to serve the committee itself, 
    without serving the individual carrier members. ATA, however, strongly 
    argued that service on the airline committee members would not provide 
    adequate notice to other carriers serving the airport; it advocated 
    requiring service on all carriers serving the airport, preferably at 
    their [[Page 6922]] headquarters' offices. Complaints by carriers drive 
    the schedule for determining the reasonableness of airport fees. It is 
    essential that carriers have adequate notice when a document is filed, 
    particularly an initiating complaint, which starts the seven-day period 
    for follow-on complaints. In light of ATA's comments, therefore, the 
    final rule does not provide for serving the members of the airport's 
    carrier committee.\1\ Nevertheless, we continue to be concerned about 
    the potential burden of a literal application of a requirement to serve 
    ``all carriers.'' As the comments of the Metropolitan Washington 
    Airports Authority pointed out, ``the requirement to serve 'all' 
    carriers could become an unnecessary procedural hurdle that prevents 
    the expeditious resolution of a fee dispute,'' because it could be read 
    to require service on even the most infrequent users of the airport. 
    The Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority recommended that service 
    be limited to carriers that operated at the airport within the 30 days 
    prior to the filing, while AAAE and ACI-NA suggested using the Air 
    Carrier Activity Information System (ACAIS) as the basis for 
    determining which carriers should be served. As these parties note, 
    airports already use the list of carriers on the ACAIS in determining 
    which carriers to serve with respect to Passenger Facility Charges 
    under 14 CFR Part 158. Accordingly, we believe that the ACAIS list can 
    similarly serve as the basis for an acceptable means of compliance with 
    the service requirements of subpart F as well.
    
        \1\For the same reason, we will not adopt ATA's contingent 
    suggestion to allow carriers to serve only a written notice that a 
    complaint had been filed, along with instructions on how to obtain 
    complete copies. We believe interested persons must have immediate, 
    full information about the filing. (In any event, ATA stated that 
    its suggestion assumed additional time would be allowed for follow-
    on complaints).
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        While the ACAIS list provides an objective and convenient starting 
    point for parties needing to serve all carriers, it must be recognized 
    that the list is based on carriers that served the airport during the 
    preceding year, and thus may not include new entrants. In addition, 
    carriers operating under 14 CFR Part 135 are not required to submit 
    data for ACAIS, although many do so voluntarily. Therefore, as ACI-NA 
    proposed, any party intending to make use of the ACAIS list for service 
    must also serve any other carrier known to be operating at the airport 
    but not on the list. This is the same practice that is followed with 
    respect to PFC applications.
        The ACAIS list is routinely made available to airport operators. 
    However, since carriers do not file PFC applications, we recognize that 
    they have not previously used the ACAIS list to identify carriers for 
    the purposes of service. The Department's Office of Aviation Analysis 
    will provide the names of the carriers on the most recently published 
    ACAIS list at the request of a carrier considering filing a complaint 
    about a newly established or newly increased airport fee. Not all 
    information from ACAIS will be available on request. Much of the data 
    is potentially sensitive, and we believe most carriers would not want 
    it made available to competitors. Therefore, only carrier identities 
    will be released through this process.
        The Los Angeles Department of Airports objected to the requirement 
    to certify that the parties served have actually received the 
    documents, arguing that it cannot know when a document will be 
    received. It argued that parties should only have to certify that the 
    documents were sent. We disagree. The short response time required by 
    these procedures makes it essential that the receiving party receives 
    the maximum notice possible that a complaint, request, or responsive 
    document has been filed. Moreover, while we recognize that this 
    constitutes an additional burden on the filer, that burden is not 
    insurmountable. All three of the specified service methods allow the 
    sender to ascertain quickly that the receiving party has received the 
    filing. In the case of hand delivery, receipt is obvious. For 
    electronic transmission, both facsimile machines and many electronic 
    mail systems provide for receipts from the recipients. And the 
    availability of immediate proof of delivery is a widely-advertised 
    service of major overnight express delivery companies.
        The Los Angeles Department of Airports also argues that hand 
    delivery and overnight express may not be available to serve foreign 
    air carriers, and it suggests that we permit utilization of ``the next 
    most-expeditious, commercially available manner for sending documents 
    to the country in which the foreign air carrier must be served.'' Since 
    in many cases this would make it difficult or impossible to achieve 
    service in time to allow meaningful responsive pleadings, we cannot 
    agree. Overnight express delivery is increasingly available 
    commercially throughout the world, although it is true that the service 
    is not available everywhere. However, that is one reason why the NPRM 
    also proposed to permit service by electronic transmission. There are 
    few if any places in the world where facsimile service and/or 
    electronic mail are unavailable. Indeed, it is hard to imagine in 
    today's market that a carrier could conduct international operations 
    without having some capacity to receive electronic communications. 
    Moreover, many carriers, even foreign air carriers, will not need to be 
    served with complaints or requests for determination in their home 
    country. Unless a carrier indicates that a different person should 
    receive service for the purposes of this subpart, the final rule 
    authorizes service on the person responsible for communicating with the 
    airport on behalf of the air carrier or foreign air carrier about 
    airport fees. This person will be familiar with fee disputes involving 
    the airport, and is a logical contact point for routing the document 
    quickly to other key carrier personnel.
        In addition to the foregoing, one additional point warrants mention 
    with regard to the service of documents. All exhibits and briefs 
    prepared on electronic spreadsheet or word processing programs should 
    be accompanied by standard-format computer diskettes containing those 
    submissions. Word processing and spreadsheets files must be readable by 
    current versions of one or more of the following programs, or in such 
    other format as may be specified by notice in the Federal Register: 
    Microsoft Word, Word Perfect, Ami Pro, Microsoft Excel, Lotus, Quattro 
    Pro, or ASCII tab-delineated files. Parties should submit one copy of 
    each diskette to the docket section, one copy to the office of the 
    Chief Administrative Law Judge (M-50), and one copy to the Chief, 
    Economic and Financial Analysis Division (X-55), of the Office of 
    Aviation Analysis. Submissions in electronic form will assist the 
    Department and the administrative law judge in quickly analyzing the 
    record and in preparing decisions under these expedited procedures. The 
    paper copy will be the official record copy, but filers shall certify 
    that files on the diskette are true copies of the data file used to 
    prepare the printed versions of the exhibits or briefs. Filers should 
    ensure that files on the diskettes are locked.
    
    Section-by-Section Analysis
    
    Section 302.601  Applicability
    
        Section 302.601 describes the kinds of proceedings for which the 
    Department will employ the expedited procedures contained in subpart F. 
    ATA complained that we should not be issuing a procedural rule separate 
    from [[Page 6923]] the policy statement that will govern consideration 
    of airport fee disputes. (As noted above, the FAA's Supplemental Notice 
    of Proposed Policy was published in the Federal Register on October 12, 
    1994 (59 FR 51836). The comment period closed on the proposed policy on 
    October 26, 1994, and a final policy statement is published elsewhere 
    in today's Federal Register.) ATA urges us to consolidate these 
    proceedings and allow additional comment on a consolidated proposal. We 
    disagree. Because of the extremely short deadline for issuing rules 
    governing these proceedings, the Department decided that the best 
    course was to proceed in this two-stage fashion. Relatively few changes 
    were needed in the proposed policy statement after the adoption of the 
    FAA Authorization Act, while the FAA's previously proposed procedures 
    had to be completely rewritten. If we had waited until the new proposed 
    procedures were ready so that we could issue a consolidated document, 
    the highly-abbreviated public comment period that was necessary in this 
    proceeding would have had to apply to both the proposed procedures and 
    the proposed policy statement.
        As discussed above, the final rule adopts the proposal to include 
    complaints by foreign air carriers, but complaints by other airport 
    users would not be heard under this subpart. Subpart F also contains 
    the procedural rules for reviewing an airport owner or operator's 
    request for a determination of the reasonableness of an airport fee.
        By statute, a fee is subject to review under this subpart only 
    after it has been ``imposed'' on air carriers. As was proposed, 
    Sec. 302.601(a) states that a fee is considered to be imposed as soon 
    as the airport owner or operator has taken all steps necessary under 
    its procedures to establish the fee. Under the FAA Authorization Act in 
    new 49 U.S.C. 47129(a)(1)(B), one essential element to those procedures 
    is providing written notice to carriers of any new or increased fee. 
    Also as proposed, the 60-day filing period for complaints begins to run 
    as soon as the requirements for imposing a fee are met, whether or not 
    the fee is being paid by the carriers. ACI-NA points out that this 
    ``may help resolve fee disputes before the airport is actually counting 
    on receiving the amounts in dispute, and would thus be less disruptive 
    of airport planning and financing.'' To the extent that it encourages 
    airports to avoid raising fees on short notice, it should be less 
    disruptive of carrier planning as well.
        AAAE commented that the language in Sec. 302.601 should be made 
    consistent with the final language in the policy statement. 
    Specifically, it suggests adding the words ``for aeronautical use'' to 
    describe the kinds of fees imposed by airports on carriers that may be 
    challenged under this subpart. The Department agrees that the language 
    of the procedural rule should be parallel to that in the policy 
    statement, and the suggested change has been adopted.
        Paragraph (b) of Sec. 302.601 sets out the three limitations on 
    applicability contained in the Authorization Act. The Secretary would 
    not entertain complaints about a fee imposed pursuant to a written 
    agreement with carriers using the facilities of an airport; a fee 
    imposed pursuant to a financing agreement or covenant entered into 
    prior to August 23, 1994, or any other existing fee not in dispute as 
    of August 23, 1994. August 23, 1994 is the date the Authorization Act 
    was enacted.
        Some commenters suggested additional provisions. ACI-NA, for 
    example, recommends that ``Airlines should not be allowed to challenge 
    a fee increase that is the result of the recalculation of airline fees 
    due to the airport's loss of one or more air carriers, or the 
    substantial diminution of service by one or more air carriers.'' We do 
    not agree that this should be added to the final rule. If a fee is 
    increased as a result of a proper recalculation of charges, the 
    increase will be found reasonable. However, that is no basis for 
    denying a carrier's right to file a complaint under this subpart. ATA 
    would have us limit the exclusions on using subpart F to challenge fees 
    imposed pursuant to agreements with carriers or pursuant to a financing 
    agreement. These exclusions should apply, ATA believes, only if the 
    agreements contain a basis for determining how fees are to be set. 
    ``[S]ome airports require air carriers to sign operating agreements 
    that provide * * * that the carrier is required to pay whatever fees 
    are established by the airport operator.'' We will not adopt ATA's 
    comment; the statutory language is clear that these rules may not be 
    used to challenge fees based on agreements.
    
    Section 302.603  Complaint by an Air Carrier or Foreign Air Carrier; 
    Request for Determination by an Airport Owner or Operator
    
        This section describes the requirements for carrier complaints and 
    airport requests for determination. In keeping with the proposal, 
    paragraph (a) states that both complaints and requests would be 
    submitted in accordance with the usual technical requirements of 
    proceedings under 14 CFR Part 302. (14 CFR Sec. 302.3 specifies such 
    matters as the number of copies to be filed, the size of pages that may 
    be used, and the filing address.) ATA's comments stated that the 
    proposed rule failed ``to specify the type and form of briefs to be 
    presented upon the filing of complaints.'' ATA is thus incorrect.
        As noted above, no commenter objected in principle to the basic 
    procedure proposed in the NPRM for consolidating all complaints and any 
    request for determination once any carrier has filed a complaint under 
    this subpart. The final rule adopts the language of the NPRM. Following 
    the first complaint, other air carriers or foreign air carriers wishing 
    to file their own complaints would have seven days to do so. An airport 
    owner or operator's request for determination would also have to be 
    submitted no later than seven days after a carrier complaint. The 
    Authorization Act specifies that all complaints would have to be 
    submitted within 60 days of the written notice, even if this is less 
    than seven days after the initial complaint. The law does not provide 
    for entertaining later complaints. No potential complainant, having had 
    54 or more days to prepare, will be disadvantaged by the immutability 
    of the 60-day filing limit. As indicated above, JAL's request to extend 
    the statutory deadline for foreign carriers is denied. While there is 
    no statutory limitation on submitting airport requests for 
    determination, no commenter objected to our proposal to impose a 
    similar 60-day limit on such requests, and that proposal is also made 
    final here. As noted in the NPRM, airport fee increases become 
    incontestable under this subpart 60 days after the airport provides 
    written notice to carriers of the imposition of a new or increased fee. 
    The early determination of the reasonableness of a fee, which is the 
    purpose of the Act, would be undermined by allowing more time. There is 
    no point in expending Departmental resources on airport requests 
    brought after that date.
    
    Section 302.605  Contents of Complaint or Request for Determination
    
        Most of the issues pertaining to this section have been fully 
    discussed above. The following is only a brief summary of the 
    requirements in the final rule.
        Carriers filing complaints and airports filing requests for 
    determination will generally be expected to submit documentation that 
    contains the filing party's entire position and supporting evidence. We 
    recognize, however, that an airport may control information or 
    documents that a complaining carrier would need. If that is the case, 
    and the carrier has unsuccessfully attempted to obtain the necessary 
    information, Sec. 302.605 now provides that the carrier 
    [[Page 6924]] must state that fact in the complaint. As discussed 
    above, the Department anticipates that airports will promptly disclose 
    any necessary information.
        The carrier filing the complaint or the airport owner or operator 
    filing the request must serve the complaint or request and accompanying 
    documents on all carriers serving the airport using the expedited 
    procedures proposed in the NPRM. If a complaint has already been filed 
    with respect to a particular airport's fees, additional complaints are 
    due seven days after the initial complaint. All complaints must be 
    filed within 60 days after the carrier has received written notice of a 
    new or increased fees.
        The final rule retains the language that the filing carrier or 
    airport would have to certify that it had previously attempted to 
    resolve any fee dispute directly. In addition, as noted above, the 
    filing party must certify that any submission on computer diskette is a 
    true copy of the data file used to prepare the brief or exhibit.
    
    Section 302.607  Answers to a Complaint or Request for Determination
    
        As discussed above, the most significant change in this section 
    involves the time for filing answers to complaints or requests for 
    determination. Answers will be due 14 days after the first complaint is 
    filed rather than seven days after each complaint. Answers are to 
    respond to both the initiating complaint and any follow-on complaints, 
    which will continue to be due seven days after the initial complaint. 
    This will respond to requests that we make it possible for parties to 
    submit a consolidated answer to all complaints, while still allowing 
    the Department sufficient time to review complaints or requests and the 
    answers submitted.
        Under the final rule, therefore, upon receiving a copy of a 
    complaint filed by another carrier, an air carrier or foreign air 
    carrier could file its own complaint within seven days or an answer to 
    the first complaint within 14 days. As noted in the preamble to the 
    NPRM, it is technically permissible for a party to submit both its own 
    complaint and an answer to the initiating complaint. However, because 
    of the limited time available for the Department to review complaints 
    and answers, parties are strongly urged to avoid duplicative filings. 
    Naturally, answers, including answers in support of a complainant's 
    position, do not give the answering party status as an additional 
    complainant, nor may answers raise new objections to a fee or fees in 
    dispute. A carrier that wants to raise any new arguments in opposition 
    to the fee should do so in a follow-on complaint under Sec. 302.603.
        Both the airport owner or operator and any carrier serving the 
    airport may file an answer to a complaint under this subpart. In the 
    case of an airport request for determination, any carrier serving the 
    airport would be authorized to file an answer. While only carriers 
    subject to a new or increased fee at the airport may submit a follow-on 
    complaint under Sec. 302.603, any carrier at the airport may submit an 
    answer.
        As stated above, answering parties would generally be expected to 
    set out all of their responsive arguments, testimony and exhibits in 
    their answer.
        The answering party will serve the complaining carrier or carriers 
    or the airport owner or operator requesting the determination by hand, 
    by electronic transmission, or by overnight express delivery. The 
    answering party must certify that the answer and accompanying documents 
    will be received no later than the day the answer is due, and that any 
    submission on computer diskette is a true copy of the data file used to 
    prepare the brief or exhibit. Answers need only be served on the party 
    to which the answer is directed.
    
    Section 302.609  Replies
    
        ACI-NA argued that we should eliminate the opportunity to file 
    replies, claiming that they are unnecessary, and that the requirement 
    that they be filed two calendar days after the answer makes the 
    opportunity to reply illusory. We see no need to eliminate the 
    opportunity to file replies, although we emphasize that replies are 
    voluntary submissions.
        While no other party suggested eliminating replies altogether, 
    Massport, the Maryland Aviation Administration, and AAAE all 
    recommended that we allow two business days rather than two calendar 
    days. In part, it appears that this recommendation may stem from a 
    misunderstanding of our procedures. AAAE, for example, states that 
    ``The rules as proposed would require that a party replying to an 
    answer filed on a Friday file its reply on Sunday evening, when the 
    agency is not even open for business.'' This is simply wrong. As 
    provided in our rules of practice (14 CFR Sec. 302.16), any filing that 
    would be due on a Saturday, Sunday, or government holiday is 
    automatically due instead on the next business day. Accordingly, when 
    an answer is due on a Thursday or Friday, any reply to the answer would 
    be due by close of business on the following Monday (or the first 
    business day thereafter). In such a case, the replying party would thus 
    have at least three calendar days to prepare and submit its reply, 
    although we recognize that two of those days are on the weekend.
        In accordance with our proposal, only the carrier originating a 
    complaint or the airport originating a request for determination would 
    be authorized to file a reply. Except as provided in subpart A of 14 
    CFR Part 302, replies by any other party would not be accepted, nor 
    would further responsive pleadings. For that reason, the NPRM did not 
    propose to require that replies be served under the expedited 
    procedures required for complaints, requests for determination, and 
    answers. The NPRM specifically invited commenters to address whether 
    expedited procedures were necessary for replies, but no party did so. 
    We conclude that ordinary service as provided by 14 CFR Sec. 302.8 
    (including service by mail) will suffice for replies. As with 
    complaints, requests for determination, and answers, however, the 
    replying party must certify that any submission on computer diskette is 
    a true copy of the data file used to prepare the brief or exhibit.
    
    Section 302.611  Review of Complaints
    
        As was proposed, paragraph (a) of Sec. 302.611 provides that the 
    Secretary will determine within 30 days after a complaint is filed 
    whether a significant dispute exists and whether the complaint meets 
    the procedural requirements of subpart F. If the Secretary determines 
    that there is no significant dispute, he or she will issue an order 
    dismissing the complaint, as required by the FAA Authorization Act. The 
    Secretary's order will include an explanation of the reasons for the 
    determination. If the Secretary determines that the complaint does not 
    meet the procedural requirements of this subpart (for example, the 
    complaint was not properly served on the airport owner or operator), 
    the Secretary will dismiss the complaint without prejudice. In this 
    case, the order would explain any conditions necessary for the 
    complaint to be re-filed.
        When one or more properly filed complaints have been submitted, the 
    Secretary will issue an instituting order consolidating all complaints 
    that raise significant issues and any request for determination. The 
    instituting order will assign the consolidated case to an 
    administrative law judge and describe the issues to be considered and 
    the parties that will participate.
        In addition, Sec. 302.611 now provides that the instituting order 
    may contain special provisions for exchange or disclosure of 
    information by the parties. [[Page 6925]] As discussed above, the 
    Department presumes that airports will provide all information 
    necessary for carriers to understand the basis and justification for 
    any new or increased airport fee. However, we have included this 
    provision to clarify the Department's ability to ensure that adequate 
    information is made available.
        Finally, the Secretary's order will state when the administrative 
    law judge must issue a recommended decision (60 days after the 
    instituting order, unless the order specifies a shorter period).
    
    Section 302.613  Review of Requests for Determination
    
        An airport owner or operator's request for determination of the 
    reasonableness of an airport fee will generally be handled in the same 
    manner as a carrier complaint. As discussed above, we have revised the 
    language of Sec. 302.613 to clarify the timing for action on an 
    airport's request.
        When only an airport request has been filed, and not a carrier 
    complaint, the Secretary will determine within 30 days whether there is 
    a significant dispute and whether the procedural requirements of the 
    subpart have been met. Properly submitted requests raising a 
    significant dispute will be assigned to an administrative law judge in 
    the same manner as carrier complaints, with appropriate guidelines on 
    the scope of the issues and the parties to participate. If there is a 
    procedural deficiency, the request will be dismissed without prejudice, 
    and the order of dismissal will set forth the terms and conditions 
    under which a revised request could be filed.
        However, when both an airport request and one or more carrier 
    complaints have been filed, the Secretary will proceed under the 
    statutorily prescribed schedule for resolving the complaint. As 
    required by the FAA Authorization Act, the Secretary will determine 
    whether any complaint presents a significant dispute within 30 days 
    after the first complaint is submitted. If the first complaint is filed 
    after the airport owner or operator's request, the request will be 
    reviewed in conjunction with the complaints, and the consolidated 
    instituting order may be issued more than 30 days following the 
    request.
        As discussed above, the Secretary will not dismiss an airport owner 
    or operator's request for determination on the basis that it does not 
    raise a significant issue. In such cases, the Secretary would usually 
    proceed directly to issue a final order determining whether the fee is 
    reasonable. While this determination would ordinarily not require any 
    additional procedures, the Secretary would retain discretion to require 
    whatever additional procedures are necessary in a particular case.
        ACI-NA notes that paragraph (b) differs from paragraph (c) in that 
    the latter specifies that the Secretary's determination with respect to 
    reasonableness will be issued within 120 days after the airport request 
    is filed. ACI-NA asks that we insert the 120-day language in paragraph 
    (b) as well. While ACI-NA is correct that the two provisions should be 
    parallel, Sec. 302.619(b) contains the completion time applicable to 
    all requests for determination. Therefore, to avoid confusion, the 
    final rule deletes the last sentence of proposed paragraph (c).
    
    Section 302.615  Decision by Administrative Law Judge
    
        As provided by the FAA Authorization Act, Sec. 302.615 requires the 
    administrative law judge to issue a recommended decision within 60 days 
    after the case is assigned by the Secretary for hearing, unless the 
    instituting order specifies a shorter period.
        ATA asked that we set out in this subpart specific requirements for 
    hearings on airport fee disputes. It recommended that ``the Rule 
    provide clear definition as to the nature of these hearings and a 
    standardized approach to the resolution of the complicated factual and 
    legal issues raised by airport fee disputes. As presently crafted, the 
    NPRM would apparently rely upon the Secretary's order to draft a 
    different approach in each and every case. Aside from the logical 
    impracticality of such an unpredictable approach, we believe it to be 
    so lacking in procedural guidance as to be fundamentally inconsistent 
    with the requirements of Section 47129. As an alternative, we propose 
    that the Secretary incorporate the procedures governing hearings set 
    forth in 14 CFR part 302, subpart A, as modified in order to meet the 
    time constraints imposed by Section 47129.''
        ATA appears to be suggesting that the Department lacks authority to 
    impose specific requirements on the conduct of individual proceedings. 
    This is simply incorrect, and indeed one important purpose of an 
    instituting order is to tailor the general rules to the needs of a 
    particular case. However, with respect to ATA's alternative suggestion 
    that we rely generally on subpart A procedures, no change from the NPRM 
    language is necessary. We have made it clear throughout this rulemaking 
    that subpart A procedures will apply in the absence of a specific 
    applicable provision in this subpart or a direction in the instituting 
    order. As the FAA Authorization Act expressly states, following 
    assignment of the proceeding to an administrative law judge, ``the 
    matter shall be handled in accordance with part 302 of title 14, Code 
    of Federal Regulations, or as modified by the Secretary to ensure an 
    orderly disposition of the matter within the 120-day period and any 
    specifically applicable provisions of this section.'' (49 U.S.C. 
    47129(c)(2)). Similarly, subpart A of part 302 states as follows:
    
        Subpart A of this part sets forth general rules applicable to 
    all types of proceedings. Each of the other subparts of this part 
    sets forth special rules applicable to the type of proceedings 
    described in the title of the subpart. Therefore, for information as 
    to applicable rules, reference should be made to subpart A and to 
    the rules in the subpart relating to the particular type of 
    proceeding 14 CFR 302.1(b).
    
        ACI-NA argued that a prehearing conference should be mandatory for 
    all parties in any proceeding brought under this subpart in which an 
    oral hearing is scheduled. Although ACI-NA points out that this is 
    common practice in the federal courts and many state courts, we do not 
    believe that it is desirable to include this requirement in the rule. 
    Once the case is assigned for hearing, we anticipate that the 
    administrative law judge will frequently choose to order a prehearing 
    conference. There might even be situations in which it would be 
    appropriate for the Secretary to require a prehearing conference, in 
    which case the instituting order will direct one be held. However, 
    there is no reason for the final rule to make a prehearing conference 
    mandatory in all cases.
    
    Section 302.617   Petitions for Discretionary Review
    
        The Los Angeles Department of Airports objected to our proposal to 
    provide for the filing of petitions for discretionary review of the 
    administrative law judge's recommended decision. Instead, it argues 
    that the FAA Authorization Act mandates Secretarial review of the 
    recommended decision. It advocated allowing seven days for parties to 
    provide exceptions to the recommended decision, and an additional seven 
    days in which to file cross-exceptions.
        As we stated in the preamble to the NPRM, we anticipate that the 
    Secretary will issue all final orders in proceedings under subpart F. 
    Nevertheless, we do not agree that the Authorization Act makes this 
    mandatory. In fact, the statute specifically anticipates that the 
    Secretary might not issue a final order: It provides that the 
    administrative law [[Page 6926]] judge's recommended decision is to be 
    considered the Secretary's final order if the Secretary does not act 
    within 120 days after a complaint is filed. Accordingly, we will adopt 
    the proposed structure of providing for discretionary review of the 
    recommended decision.
        As we proposed, a party to the proceeding will be able to file a 
    petition for discretionary review of the administrative law judge's 
    decision within five days after the recommended decision is served. The 
    petitioner will serve all parties by hand, electronic transmission or 
    overnight express delivery, and will certify that all parties had 
    received the petition or would receive it by the date of filing. Any 
    other party could then submit an answer, which would be due four days 
    after the petition is filed. AAAE and ACI-NA stated that answers should 
    be subject to the same expedited service requirements as petitions, but 
    they did not explain why this would be necessary. The Department does 
    not anticipate permitting further pleadings at this stage of the 
    proceeding, and we do not believe that the burden of expedited service 
    is justified.
    
    Section 302.619   Completion of Proceeding
    
        This section sets out the completion dates for proceedings 
    conducted under this subpart. No comments were submitted on it, and it 
    is unchanged from the NPRM.
        Paragraph (a) states that the Secretary will issue a final order 
    determining whether the disputed fee is reasonable within 120 days 
    after the filing of a complaint by an air carrier or foreign air 
    carrier, unless the complaint is dismissed as provided in proposed 
    Sec. 302.611. This is the time limit for resolving air carrier 
    complaints set forth in the FAA Authorization Act.
        Paragraphs (b) and (c) address proceedings involving requests for 
    determination by airport owners and operators. Although the FAA 
    Authorization Act does not impose a time limit on such requests, 
    Sec. 302.619 provides a 120-day limit on these proceedings as well. 
    When an airport has filed a request for determination but there are no 
    carrier complaints with respect to the same fee, paragraph (b) states 
    that the Secretary would issue a final order within 120 days of the 
    request. However, as noted in Sec. 302.613, the Department will 
    consolidate proceedings concerning the same airport fee or fees that 
    are the subject of both a carrier complaint and an airport request for 
    determination. In this situation, paragraph (c) provides that the 
    timetable for resolving carrier complaints would control the schedule 
    for action by the Department. Thus, if a carrier complaint is filed 
    before the airport request, the Department would issue a final order in 
    the consolidated proceeding in less than 120 days after the airport's 
    request for determination. If one or more carriers file a complaint 
    after the airport request, the 120-day period would begin on the day 
    the first carrier complaint is filed.
    
    Section 302.621   Final Order
    
        Following review of the recommended decision, the Secretary will 
    issue a final determination with respect to the reasonableness of an 
    airport fee that is the subject of a complaint or a request under this 
    subpart. The Secretary's order will set forth the reasoning underlying 
    the determination, and, if a fee is determined to be unreasonable, the 
    order will provide for a refund or credit of the unreasonable charge. 
    As noted in the NPRM, the exact terms under which the refund or credit 
    would be ordered would vary with the particular circumstances of each 
    case, but the Department intends to ensure prompt action.
        The FAA Authorization Act, in new 49 U.S.C. Section 47129 (a) (3), 
    limits the Secretary's order to determining reasonableness, and the 
    order would not set the level of the fee. The Maryland Aviation 
    Administration expressed concern in its comments that disputes may not 
    really be resolved within the 120-day limit unless the Department 
    states what a reasonable fee would be. In the absence of such a 
    statement, a revised fee would still be subject to challenge. Because 
    the limitation on the Secretary's authority is a matter of statute, 
    there is nothing we can do in this rulemaking to change it. However, 
    the Secretary's order will attempt to set out the analysis underlying 
    the decision as clearly as possible. If a fee is found unreasonable, we 
    hope and expect that parties will be able to establish a reasonable fee 
    after reviewing the decision and analysis.
        The Maryland Aviation Administration also states that ``the 
    Department, or as may be required, the framers of the underlying 
    statutory scheme, should consider whether the Department should award 
    costs to airports'' when a disputed fee is found reasonable. As the 
    commenter appears to appreciate, the Department does not have authority 
    to award costs to the prevailing party in a fee dispute under subpart 
    F. Accordingly, the comment is beyond the scope of this rulemaking.
        ACI-NA asks that the rule clarify that ``any finding of 
    unreasonableness resulting from a complaint filed by a non-signatory 
    carrier does not affect the underlying rates for signatory carriers, 
    since the signatory fees may not be challenged.'' No rule change is 
    needed here. However, it is obvious that no fee will be found to be 
    unreasonable under subpart F unless it is the subject of a complaint or 
    a request for determination.
        As stated above, the Department expects the Secretary to issue all 
    final orders. However, if the Secretary fails to issue an order within 
    120 days after a complaint is filed, the FAA Authorization Act requires 
    that the administrative law judge's decision be deemed the final order 
    of the Secretary. Section 302.621(c) restates this requirement. There 
    is no corresponding legislative requirement with respect to airport 
    requests for determination. Therefore Section 302.621 does not contain 
    any provision for automatic adoption of the administrative law judge's 
    decision. The Department nevertheless intends to resolve airport 
    requests for determination within 120 days after they are filed.
    
    Justification for Immediate Effectiveness
    
        Section 553 of the Administrative Procedure Act provides that the 
    effective date of a new rule should be at least 30 days after it is 
    published, unless the agency finds good cause for a shorter period.
        In enacting the FAA Authorization Act, the Congress made it clear 
    that it intends for fee disputes between carriers and airports to be 
    resolved promptly. Congress required that the Department issue this 
    rule within 90 days of enactment of the Authorization Act, and mandated 
    that all proceedings brought under the new procedures lead to a final 
    order within 120 days. The Department will be unable to process any 
    carrier complaints under this subpart until the procedures are 
    effective. Accordingly, the Department finds that good cause exists to 
    make this rule effective on publication in the Federal Register.
    
    Regulatory Evaluation Summary
    
        This final rule contains new procedures for the filing and 
    adjudication of complaints by air carriers and foreign air carriers 
    alleging that an airport has imposed an unreasonable fee or charge on 
    the complaining carrier. It also sets forth corresponding procedures 
    under which an airport owner or operator may request and receive a 
    determination of the reasonableness of a fee or charge it 
    [[Page 6927]] has imposed on one or more air carriers or foreign air 
    carriers. The new procedures replace existing procedures under 14 CFR 
    part 13, and impose no new substantive requirements on either carriers 
    or airports. The only commenter to question the tentative conclusion in 
    the NPRM that the economic effect of the proposed rule would be minimal 
    was the Maryland Aviation Administration, which argues that ``[t]he 
    cost to provide expert witnesses and legal counsel if it is determined 
    that there is a `significant dispute' may well prove to be material.'' 
    The Maryland Aviation Administration did not attempt to quantify the 
    costs it believed involved. More importantly, it did not establish that 
    the costs are actually the result of the procedural rules at issue here 
    rather than the general cost of the litigation authorized by 49 U.S.C. 
    47129. Accordingly, the Department concludes that the economic impact 
    of the final rule is minimal and that further calculation of the 
    economic effects is not warranted.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Determination
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA) was enacted by 
    Congress to ensure that small entities are not unnecessarily or 
    disproportionately burdened by government regulations. The RFA requires 
    a Regulatory Flexibility Analysis if a rule would have a significant 
    economic impact, either detrimental or beneficial, on a substantial 
    number of small entities. This rule contains procedural requirements 
    for processing carrier complaints and airport requests. The Department 
    concludes that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on 
    a substantial number of small entities.
    
    Federalism Implications
    
        The final rule will not have substantial direct effects on the 
    States, on the relationship between the national government and the 
    States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the 
    various levels of government. Therefore, in accordance with Executive 
    Order 12612, it is determined that this rule does not have sufficient 
    federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a Federalism 
    Assessment.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This rule contains no information collection requirements that 
    require approval of the Office of Management and Budget pursuant to the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (44 U.S.C. 3507 et seq.).
    
    Conclusion
    
        Although the Department has concluded that the economic effects of 
    this rulemaking are minimal, this rule is considered significant under 
    Executive Order 12866 because of the public interest in this 
    rulemaking. The Department certifies that this rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact, positive or negative, on a substantial 
    number of small entities under the criteria of the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act. This rule is considered significant under DOT 
    Regulatory Policies and Procedures (44 FR 11034; February 26, 1978).
    
    List of Subjects in 14 CFR Part 302
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Air carriers, Airports, 
    Postal Service.
    
    The Amendments
    
        Accordingly, the Department of Transportation amends 14 CFR part 
    302 as follows:
    
    PART 302--RULES OF PRACTICE IN PROCEEDINGS
    
        1. The authority citation for 14 CFR Part 302 is revised to read:
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.; 39 U.S.C. 5402; 42 U.S.C. 4321; 
    49 U.S.C. 40101, 40102, 40113, 40114, Chapters 411-415, 41702, 
    41705, 41706, 41901, 41907, 41909, 41910, 42111, 46301, 46302, 
    46303, 46105, 47129.
    
        2. A new subpart F is added to 14 CFR Part 302 to read as follows:
    
    Subpart F--Rules Applicable to Proceedings Concerning Airport Fees
    
    Sec.
    302.601  Applicability of this subpart.
    302.603  Complaint by an air carrier or foreign air carrier; request 
    for determination by an airport owner or operator.
    302.605  Contents of complaint or request for determination.
    302.607  Answers to a complaint or request for determination.
    302.609  Replies.
    302.611  Review of complaints.
    302.613  Review of requests for determination.
    302.615  Decision by administrative law judge.
    302.617  Petitions for discretionary review.
    302.619  Completion of proceedings.
    302.621  Final order.
    
    Subpart F--Rules Applicable to Proceedings Concerning Airport Fees
    
    
    Sec. 302.601  Applicability of this subpart.
    
        (a) This subpart contains the specific rules that apply to a 
    complaint filed by one or more air carriers or foreign air carriers, 
    pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 47129 (a), for a determination of the 
    reasonableness of a fee increase or a newly established fee for 
    aeronautical uses that is imposed upon the air carrier or foreign air 
    carrier by the owner or operator of an airport. This subpart also 
    applies to requests by the owner or operator of an airport for such a 
    determination. An airport owner or operator has imposed a fee on an air 
    carrier or foreign air carrier when it has taken all steps necessary 
    under its procedures to establish the fee, whether or not the fee is 
    being collected or carriers are currently required to pay it.
        (b) This subpart does not apply to--
        (1) A fee imposed pursuant to a written agreement with air carriers 
    or foreign air carriers using the facilities of an airport;
        (2) A fee imposed pursuant to a financing agreement or covenant 
    entered into prior to August 23, 1994; or
        (3) Any other existing fee not in dispute as of August 23, 1994.
    
    
    Sec. 302.603  Complaint by an air carrier or foreign air carrier; 
    request for determination by an airport owner or operator.
    
        (a) Any air carrier or foreign air carrier may file a complaint 
    with the Secretary for a determination as to the reasonableness of any 
    fee imposed on the carrier by the owner or operator of an airport. Any 
    airport owner or operator may also request such a determination with 
    respect to a fee it has imposed on one or more air carriers. The 
    complaint or request for determination shall conform to the 
    requirements of this subpart and Sec. 302.3 concerning the form and 
    filing of documents.
        (b) If an air carrier or foreign air carrier has previously filed a 
    complaint with respect to the same airport fee or fees, any complaint 
    by another carrier and any airport request for determination shall be 
    filed no later than 7 calendar days following the initial complaint. In 
    addition, all complaints or requests for determination must be filed on 
    or before the 60th day after the carrier receives written notice of the 
    imposition of the new fee or the imposition of the increase in the fee.
        (c) To ensure an orderly disposition of the matter, all complaints 
    and any request for determination filed with respect to the same 
    airport fee or fees will be considered in a consolidated proceeding, as 
    provided in Secs. 302.611 and 302.613.
    
    
    Sec. 302.605  Contents of complaint or request for determination.
    
        (a) The complaint or request for determination shall set forth the 
    entire grounds for requesting a determination of the reasonableness of 
    the airport fee. [[Page 6928]] The complaint or request shall include a 
    copy of the airport owner or operator's written notice to the carrier 
    of the imposition of the fee, a statement of position with a brief, and 
    all supporting testimony and exhibits available to the carrier on which 
    the filing party intends to rely. In lieu of submitting duplicative 
    exhibits or testimony, the filing party may incorporate by reference 
    testimony and exhibits already filed in the same proceeding.
        (b) All exhibits and briefs prepared on electronic spreadsheet or 
    word processing programs should be accompanied by standard-format 
    computer diskettes containing those submissions. Word processing and 
    spreadsheets files must be readable by current versions of one or more 
    of the following programs, or in such other format as may be specified 
    by notice in the Federal Register: Microsoft Word, Word Perfect, Ami 
    Pro, Microsoft Excel, Lotus, Quattro Pro, or ASCII tab-delineated 
    files. Parties should submit one copy of each diskette to the docket 
    section, one copy to the office of the Chief Administrative Law Judge 
    (M-50), and one copy to the Chief, Economic and Financial Analysis 
    Division (X-55), of the Office of Aviation Analysis. Filers should 
    ensure that files on the diskettes are unalterably locked.
        (c) When a carrier files a complaint, it must also submit the 
    following certifications:
        (1) The carrier has served the complaint, brief, and all supporting 
    testimony and exhibits on the airport owner or operator and all other 
    air carriers and foreign air carriers serving the airport by hand, by 
    electronic transmission, or by overnight express delivery. (Unless an 
    air carrier or foreign air carrier has informed the complaining carrier 
    that a different person should be served, service may be made on the 
    person responsible for communicating with the airport on behalf of the 
    carrier about airport fees.);
        (2) The parties served have received the complaint, brief, and all 
    supporting testimony and exhibits or will receive them no later than 
    the date the complaint is filed;
        (3) The carrier has previously attempted to resolve the dispute 
    directly with the airport owner or operator;
        (4) When there is information on which the carrier intends to rely 
    that is not included with the brief, exhibits, or testimony, the 
    information has been omitted because the airport owner or operator has 
    not made that information available to the carrier. The certification 
    shall specify the date and form of the carrier's request for 
    information from the airport owner or operator; and
        (5) Any submission on computer diskette is a true copy of the data 
    file used to prepare the printed versions of the exhibits or briefs.
        (d) When an airport owner or operator files a request for 
    determination, it must also submit the following certifications:
        (1) The airport owner or operator has served the request, brief, 
    and all supporting testimony and exhibits on all air carriers and 
    foreign air carriers serving the airport by hand, by electronic 
    transmission, or by overnight express delivery. (Unless the air carrier 
    or foreign air carrier has informed the airport owner or operator that 
    a different person should be served, service may be made on the person 
    responsible for communicating with the airport on behalf of the carrier 
    about airport fees.);
        (2) The carriers served have received the request, brief, and all 
    supporting testimony and exhibits or will receive them no later than 
    the date the request is filed;
        (3) The airport owner or operator has previously attempted to 
    resolve the dispute directly with the carriers; and
        (4) Any submission on computer diskette is a true copy of the data 
    file used to prepare the printed versions of the exhibits or briefs.
    
    
    Sec. 302.607  Answers to a complaint or request for determination.
    
        (a)(1) When an air carrier or foreign air carrier files a complaint 
    under this subpart, the owner or operator of an airport and any other 
    air carrier or foreign air carrier serving the airport may file an 
    answer to the complaint as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of this 
    section.
        (2) When the owner or operator of an airport files a request for 
    determination of the reasonableness of a fee it has imposed, any air 
    carrier or foreign air carrier serving the airport may file an answer 
    to the request.
        (b) The answer to a complaint or request for determination shall 
    set forth the answering party's entire response. When one or more 
    additional complaints or a request for determination has been filed 
    pursuant to Sec. 302.603(b) with respect to the same airport's fee or 
    fees, the answer shall set forth the answering party's entire response 
    to all complaints and any such request for determination. The answer 
    shall include a statement of position with a brief and any supporting 
    testimony and exhibits on which the answering party intends to rely. In 
    lieu of submitting duplicative exhibits or testimony, the answering 
    party may incorporate by reference testimony and exhibits already filed 
    in the same proceeding.
        (c) Answers to a complaint shall be filed no later than fourteen 
    calendar days after the filing date of the first complaint with respect 
    to the fee or fees in dispute at a particular airport. Answers to a 
    request for determination shall be filed no later than fourteen 
    calendar days after the filing date of the request.
        (d) All exhibits and briefs prepared on electronic spreadsheet or 
    word processing programs should be accompanied by standard-format 
    computer diskettes containing those submissions. Word processing and 
    spreadsheets files must be readable by current versions of one or more 
    of the following programs, or in such other format as may be specified 
    by notice in the Federal Register: Microsoft Word, Word Perfect, Ami 
    Pro, Microsoft Excel, Lotus, Quattro Pro, or ASCII tab-delineated 
    files. Parties should submit one copy of each diskette to the docket 
    section, one copy to the office of the Chief Administrative Law Judge 
    (M-50), and one copy to the Chief, Economic and Financial Analysis 
    Division (X-55), of the Office of Aviation Analysis. Filers should 
    ensure that files on the diskettes are unalterably locked.
        (e) The answering party must also submit the following 
    certifications:
        (1) The answering party has served the answer, brief, and all 
    supporting testimony and exhibits by hand, by electronic transmission, 
    or by overnight express delivery on the carrier filing the complaint or 
    the airport owner or operator requesting the determination;
        (2) The parties served have received the answer and exhibits or 
    will receive them no later than the filing date of the answer; and
        (3) Any submission on computer diskette is a true copy of the data 
    file used to prepare the printed versions of the exhibits or briefs.
    
    
    Sec. 302.609  Replies.
    
        (a) The carrier submitting a complaint may file a reply to any or 
    all of the answers to the complaint. The airport owner or operator 
    submitting a request for determination may file a reply to any or all 
    of the answers to the request for determination.
        (b) The reply shall be limited to new matters raised in the 
    answers. It shall constitute the replying party's entire response to 
    the answers. It shall be in the form of a reply brief and may include 
    supporting testimony and exhibits responsive to new matters raised in 
    the answers. In lieu of submitting duplicative exhibits or testimony, 
    the replying party may incorporate by reference testimony and 
    [[Page 6929]] exhibits already filed in the same proceeding.
        (c) The reply shall be filed no later than two calendar days after 
    answers are filed.
        (d) All exhibits and briefs prepared on electronic spreadsheet or 
    word processing programs should be accompanied by standard-format 
    computer diskettes containing those submissions. Word processing and 
    spreadsheets files must be readable by current versions of one or more 
    of the following programs, or in such other format as may be specified 
    by notice in the Federal Register: Microsoft Word, Word Perfect, Ami 
    Pro, Microsoft Excel, Lotus, Quattro Pro, or ASCII tab-delineated 
    files. Parties should submit one copy of each diskette to the docket 
    section, one copy to the office of the Chief Administrative Law Judge 
    (M-50), and one copy to the Chief, Economic and Financial Analysis 
    Division, (X-55) of the Office of Aviation Analysis. Filers should 
    ensure that files on the diskettes are unalterably locked.
        (e) The carrier or airport owner or operator submitting the reply 
    must certify that it has served the reply and all supporting testimony 
    and exhibits on the party or parties submitting the answer to which the 
    reply is directed and that any submission on computer diskette is a 
    true copy of the data file used to prepare the printed versions of the 
    exhibits or briefs.
    
    
    Sec. 302.611  Review of complaints.
    
        (a) Within 30 days after a complaint is filed under this subpart, 
    the Secretary will determine whether the complaint meets the procedural 
    requirements of this subpart and whether a significant dispute exists, 
    and take appropriate action pursuant to paragraph (b), (c), or (d) of 
    this section.
        (b) If the Secretary determines that a significant dispute exists, 
    he or she will issue an instituting order assigning the complaint for 
    hearing before an administrative law judge. The instituting order 
    will--
        (1) Establish the scope of the issues to be considered and the 
    procedures to be employed;
        (2) Indicate the parties to participate in the hearing;
        (3) Consolidate into a single proceeding all complaints and any 
    request for determination with respect to the fee or fees in dispute; 
    and
        (4) Include any special provisions for exchange or disclosure of 
    information by the parties.
        (c) The Secretary will dismiss any complaint if he or she finds 
    that no significant dispute exists. The order dismissing the complaint 
    will contain a concise explanation of the reasons for the determination 
    that the dispute is not significant.
        (d) If the Secretary determines that the complaint does not meet 
    the procedural requirements of this subpart, the complaint will be 
    dismissed without prejudice to filing a new complaint. The order of the 
    Secretary will set forth the terms and conditions under which a revised 
    complaint may be filed.
    
    
    Sec. 302.613  Review of requests for determination.
    
        (a) Except as provided in paragraph (e) of this section, within 30 
    days after an airport owner or operator files a request for 
    determination of the reasonableness of a fee under this subpart, the 
    Secretary will determine whether the request meets the procedural 
    requirements of this subpart and whether a significant dispute exists.
        (b) If the Secretary determines that a significant dispute exists, 
    he or she will issue an instituting order assigning the request for 
    hearing before an administrative law judge. The instituting order will 
    establish the scope of the issues to be considered and the procedures 
    to be employed and will indicate the parties to participate in the 
    hearing. The instituting order will consolidate into a single 
    proceeding all complaints and any request for determination with 
    respect to the fee or fees in dispute.
        (c) If the Secretary finds that the request for determination 
    presents no significant dispute, the Secretary will either issue a 
    final order as provided in Sec. 302.621 or set forth the schedule for 
    any additional procedures required to complete the proceeding.
        (d) If the Secretary determines that the request does not meet the 
    procedural requirements of this subpart, the request for determination 
    will be dismissed without prejudice to filing a new request. The order 
    of the Secretary will set forth the terms and conditions under which a 
    revised request may be filed.
        (e) When both a complaint and a request for determination have been 
    filed with respect to the same airport fee or fees, the Secretary will 
    issue a determination as to whether the complaint, the request, or both 
    meet the procedural requirements of this subpart and whether a 
    significant dispute exists within 30 days after the complaint is filed.
    
    
    Sec. 302.615  Decision by administrative law judge.
    
        The administrative law judge shall issue a decision recommending a 
    disposition of a complaint or request for determination within 60 days 
    after the date of the instituting order, unless a shorter period is 
    specified by the Secretary.
    
    
    Sec.  302.617  Petitions for discretionary review.
    
        (a) Within 5 calendar days after service of a decision by an 
    administrative law judge, any party may file with the Secretary a 
    petition for discretionary review of the administrative law judge's 
    decision.
        (b) Petitions for discretionary review shall comply with 
    Sec. 302.28(a). The petitioner must also submit the following 
    certifications:
        (1) The petitioner has served the petition by hand, by electronic 
    transmission, or by overnight express delivery on all parties to the 
    proceeding; and
        (2) The parties served have received the petition or will receive 
    it no later than the date the petition is filed.
        (c) Any party may file an answer in support of or in opposition to 
    any petition for discretionary review. The answer shall be filed within 
    4 calendar days after service of the petition for discretionary review. 
    The answer shall comply with the page limits specified in 
    Sec. 302.28(b).
    
    
    Sec. 302.619  Completion of proceedings.
    
        (a) When a complaint with respect to an airport fee or fees has 
    been filed under this subpart and has not been dismissed, the Secretary 
    will issue a determination as to whether the fee is reasonable within 
    120 days after the complaint is filed.
        (b) When a request for determination has been filed under this 
    subpart and has not been dismissed, the Secretary will issue a 
    determination as to whether the fee is reasonable within 120 days after 
    the date the request for determination is filed.
        (c) When both a complaint and a request for determination have been 
    filed with respect to the same airport fee or fees and have not been 
    dismissed, the Secretary will issue a determination as to whether the 
    fee is reasonable within 120 days after the complaint is filed.
    
    
    Sec. 302.621  Final order.
    
        (a) When a complaint or request for determination stands submitted 
    to the Secretary for final decision on the merits, he or she may 
    dispose of the issues presented by entering an appropriate order, which 
    will include a statement of the reasons for his or her findings and 
    conclusions. Such an order shall be deemed a final order of the 
    Secretary.
        (b) The final order of the Secretary shall include, where 
    necessary, [[Page 6930]] directions regarding an appropriate refund or 
    credit of the fee increase or newly established fee which is the 
    subject of the complaint or request for determination.
        (c) If the Secretary has not issued a final order within 120 days 
    after the filing of a complaint by an air carrier or foreign air 
    carrier, the decision of the administrative law judge shall be deemed 
    to be the final order of the Secretary.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC, on January 30, 1995.
    Federico Pena,
    Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 95-2674 Filed 1-31-95; 3:15 pm]
    BILLING CODE 4910-62-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/3/1995
Published:
02/03/1995
Department:
Transportation Department
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
95-2674
Dates:
This rule is effective on February 3, 1995.
Pages:
6919-6930 (12 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket No. 49830
RINs:
2105-AC18
PDF File:
95-2674.pdf
CFR: (15)
14 CFR 302.601(a)
14 CFR 302.28(a)
14 CFR 302.28(b)
14 CFR 47129
14 CFR 302.601
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