98-13095. Expedited Relief for Service Inadequacies  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 95 (Monday, May 18, 1998)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 27253-27255]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-13095]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    Surface Transportation Board
    
    49 CFR Part 1146
    
    [STB Ex Parte No. 628]
    
    
    Expedited Relief for Service Inadequacies
    
    AGENCY: Surface Transportation Board, DOT.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
    
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    SUMMARY: Pursuant to its decision in Review of Rail Access and 
    Competition Issues, STB Ex Parte No. 575 (STB served Apr. 17, 1998) 
    (``Review''), the Board is instituting a proceeding to solicit comments 
    on proposed rules that would establish expedited procedures for 
    shippers to obtain alternative service from another rail carrier when 
    the incumbent carrier cannot properly serve shippers. The Board 
    requests that persons intending to participate in this proceeding 
    notify the agency of that intent. A separate service list will be 
    issued based on the notices of intent to participate that the Board 
    receives.
    
    DATES: Notices of intent to participate in this proceeding are due May 
    28, 1998. Comments on this proposal are due June 15, 1998. Replies are 
    due July 15, 1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: An original plus 12 copies of all comments and replies, 
    referring to STB Ex Parte No. 628, must be sent to the Office of the 
    Secretary, Case Control Unit, ATTN: STB Ex Parte No. 628, Surface 
    Transportation Board, 1925 K Street, NW., Washington, DC 20423-0001.
        Copies of the written comments will be available from the Board's 
    contractor, D.C. News and Data, Inc., located in Room 210 in the 
    Board's building. D.C. News can be reached at (202) 289-4357. The 
    comments will also be available for viewing and self copying in the 
    Board's Microfilm Unit, Room 755.
        In addition to an original and 12 copies of all paper documents 
    filed with the Board, the parties shall submit their pleadings, 
    including any graphics, on a 3.5-inch diskette formatted for 
    WordPerfect 7.0 (or in a format readily convertible into WordPerfect 
    7.0). All textual material, including cover letters, certificates of 
    service, appendices and exhibits, shall be included in a single file on 
    the diskette. The diskettes shall be clearly labeled with the filer's 
    name, the docket number of this proceeding, STB Ex Parte No. 628, and 
    the name of the electronic format used on the diskette for files other 
    than those formatted in WordPerfect 7.0. All pleadings submitted on 
    diskettes will be posted on the Board's website (www.stb.dot.gov). The 
    electronic submission requirements set forth in this notice supersede, 
    for the purposes of this proceeding, the otherwise applicable 
    electronic submission requirements set forth in the Board's 
    regulations. See 49 CFR 1104.3(a), as amended in Expedited Procedures 
    for Processing Rail Rate Reasonableness, Exemption and Revocation 
    Proceedings, STB Ex Parte No. 527, 61 FR 52710, 711 (Oct. 8, 1996), 61 
    FR 58490, 58491 (Nov. 15, 1996).1
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        \1\ A copy of each diskette submitted to the Board should be 
    provided to any other party upon request.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joseph H. Dettmar, (202) 565-1600. 
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    [TDD for the hearing impaired: (202) 565-1695.]
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In STB Ex Parte No. 575, the Board conducted 
    two days of informational hearings, on April 2 and 3, 1998, to examine 
    issues of rail access and competition in today's railroad industry, and 
    the statutory remedies and agency regulations and procedures that 
    relate to those matters. As a result of those hearings, we announced, 
    inter alia, that we would begin a rulemaking proceeding to consider 
    revisions to our rules to provide shippers receiving poor service 
    greater opportunity to obtain service from an additional carrier.
    
    Overview
    
        While the Board lacks general authority to require an unwilling 
    railroad to permit physical access over its lines to the trains and 
    crews of another railroad, it may direct that result in certain 
    situations: under 49 U.S.C. 11324(c), as a condition to the incumbent's 
    merger with another railroad; under 49 U.S.C. 11102(a), to serve 
    terminal facilities when it would be in the public interest; or, under 
    49 U.S.C. 11123(a), to serve any facilities for a limited period of 
    time (not more than 270 days) because of the carrier's inability or 
    failure to provide its shippers with adequate service.\2\ The Board may 
    also direct an incumbent railroad to afford access indirectly, either 
    by prescribing alternative through routes under 49 U.S.C. 10705(a) 
    (requiring the incumbent to interline traffic with another railroad 
    over a designated interchange and thereby create an alternative route 
    and rates for a shipper's traffic) or by requiring reciprocal switching 
    under 49 U.S.C. 11102(c) (where, for a fee, the incumbent must switch 
    cars to and from another railroad so that the latter, even though it 
    cannot physically reach a shipper, can constructively offer alternative 
    single-line service).
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        \2\ The using railroad must compensate the incumbent railroad 
    for the use of its tracks, at a level to be determined by the 
    carriers or fixed by the Board. 49 U.S.C. 11324(c), 11102(a), and 
    11123(b)(2).
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        The access remedies under sections 11102 and 10705--terminal 
    trackage rights, reciprocal switching, and alternative through routes--
    are now invoked through the ``competitive access'' regulations, 49 CFR 
    part 1144, and, to obtain relief, parties must show
    
    [[Page 27254]]
    
    that the incumbent rail carrier has acted in a way ``that is contrary 
    to the competition policies of 49 U.S.C. 10101[] or is otherwise 
    anticompetitive.'' \3\ At the Ex Parte 575 hearings, shippers 
    complained that the ``anticompetitive conduct'' standard of the 
    regulations is too restrictive and effectively precludes alternative 
    service in those situations where it is most urgently needed--where 
    shippers (such as those poorly served during the recent service 
    emergency in the West) are not receiving the level of service needed 
    from their incumbent carrier. At the hearings, the rail industry 
    concurred that the Board should be able to remedy such service failures 
    more quickly and effectively.
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        \3\ 49 CFR 1144.5(a); Intramodal Rail Competition, 1 I.C.C.2d 
    822 (1985), aff'd sub nom. Baltimore Gas & Elec. Co. v. United 
    States, 817 F.2d 108 (D.C. Cir. 1987). Under existing case law, 
    parties must show that the incumbent carrier has either: (1) Used 
    its market power to extract unreasonable terms, or (2) because of 
    its monopoly position, shown a disregard for the shipper's needs by 
    rendering inadequate service. Midtec Paper Corp. v. Chicago & N.W. 
    Transp. Co., 3 I.C.C. 2d 171 (1986), aff'd sub nom. Midtec Paper 
    Corp. v. United States, 857 F.2d 1487 (D.C. Cir. 1988).
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        Accordingly, we seek comment on the proposed rules set forth below 
    to provide expedited relief for demonstrated poor service.\4\
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        \4\ As we explained in Review, slip op. at 6-7, this decision 
    does not address whether to revise the competitive access 
    regulations with respect to competitive issues not related to 
    quality of service. We have directed the railroads and shippers to 
    meet, under the supervision of an Administrative Law Judge, to 
    identify mutually acceptable modifications to facilitate greater 
    access in appropriate circumstances, and to report back to us by 
    August 3, 1998. We are confident that shippers and railroads can 
    find common ground on this issue. See Review of Rail Access and 
    Competition Issues, STB Ex Parte No. 575 (STB served May 4, 1998).
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    Choice of Remedies
    
        To address these service issues more effectively, we propose rules 
    under which parties may seek alternative rail service under either the 
    access provisions of sections 11102 and 10705, or the emergency service 
    provisions of section 11123. While section 11123 has typically been 
    used to address regional service emergencies, such as the one recently 
    experienced in the West,\5\ we believe it can also be used to afford 
    more localized relief to shippers; that section broadly permits Board 
    intervention to remedy service deficiencies having ``substantial 
    adverse effects'' on shippers, or where a rail carrier ``cannot 
    transport the traffic offered to it in a manner that properly serves 
    the public.'' 49 U.S.C. 11123(a).
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        \5\ STB Service Order No. 1518, Joint Petition for Service Order 
    (STB served Oct. 31 and Dec. 4, 1997, and Feb. 17 and 25, 1998).
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        Moreover, permitting shippers to proceed either under sections 
    11102 or 10705, on the one hand, or section 11123, on the other, 
    affords greater flexibility and broadens the potential for regulatory 
    relief. For example, trackage rights access under section 11102(a), 
    while not statutorily limited in duration, is limited to an incumbent 
    railroad's terminal facilities, and therefore is not available for 
    shippers that are not located at or near terminal areas. In contrast, 
    remedies under section 11123(a), although limited to 270 days, are 
    potentially available for shippers located on any part of the incumbent 
    carrier's network; this section also affords the Board more latitude to 
    craft a variety of measures to remedy any particular service 
    situation.\6\
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        \6\ Although the remedies under sections 11102 and 10705 are not 
    statutorily limited in duration, we remind commenters that the 
    relief contemplated by this proposal is intended to respond to 
    service problems, and not to provide permanent responses to 
    perceived competitive issues.
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    Standard for Relief
    
        Whichever remedies are sought, however, the predicate for relief 
    would be the same: that, over an identified period of time, there has 
    been a substantial, measurable deterioration in the rail service 
    provided by the incumbent carrier.\7\ We do not think it necessary or 
    appropriate to propose a list of particular factors--or a formulaic 
    weighing of such factors--that shippers must use to make that 
    assessment, or to propose a specific test period. Each shipper has its 
    own particular service needs and experiences, and carrier difficulties 
    may vary. Our standard of relief must be flexible enough to permit us 
    to address varying circumstances. Commenters may wish to address this 
    issue.
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        \7\ Because the proposed predicate for relief is different than 
    that for ``competitive'' access under 49 CFR 1144.5(a), and to avoid 
    confusion, we do not propose to amend the competitive access 
    regulations, as we had suggested in Review, but rather to adopt a 
    new, discrete set of regulations to address relief for service 
    inadequacies, 49 CFR part 1146.
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        We caution that the proposed rules are not meant to redress minor 
    service disruptions. Access--particularly that which would compel 
    physical access by another railroad over an incumbent's lines--is a 
    serious remedy with potentially significant operational, safety, and 
    financial consequences for the involved carriers, and we intend that 
    the rules be used to remedy only substantial service problems that 
    cannot readily be resolved by the incumbent railroad. Accordingly, we 
    propose to require shippers to: (1) First discuss and assess with their 
    incumbent carrier whether adequate service can be restored within a 
    reasonable period of time that is consistent with the shipper's needs 
    and, if not, outline in its request for relief why that is the case; 
    and (2) obtain from another railroad the necessary commitment--should 
    it be afforded access--to meet the shipper's service needs, and 
    describe the carrier's plan to do so safely and without degrading 
    service to its existing customers or unreasonably interfering with the 
    incumbent's overall ability to provide service.
    
    Expedited Procedures
    
        The proposed rules include expedited procedures because of the 
    usually urgent nature of serious service problems. Instead of the more 
    time-consuming complaint process, parties may seek relief by 
    petition.\8\ We propose that the incumbent carrier be required to reply 
    to such a petition within five business days, and that the shipper, if 
    it wishes to file a rebuttal, be required to do so no more than three 
    business days later.
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        \8\ We note that section 11123(b)(1) gives us broad authority to 
    afford relief without regard to the administrative adjudication 
    procedures in 5 U.S.C. 551 et seq.
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        If relief is granted under these rules, once the incumbent carrier 
    can demonstrate that it has restored, or is prepared to restore, 
    adequate service, it may file a petition to terminate that relief. We 
    would discourage an incumbent carrier from filing such a petition too 
    hastily after the Board's order, however, as the objective in a 
    proceeding of this nature is to provide shippers with a needed degree 
    of certainty of adequate rail service.
        For the same reason, we propose that satisfying the standard for 
    relief under section 11123 ordinarily would establish a presumption 
    that the incumbent's inability to provide adequate service will last 
    beyond the initial 30-day period, and thus will provide the basis for a 
    subsequent order extending relief beyond the initial 30-day period. 
    However, if the incumbent carrier can show that it is prepared to 
    provide adequate service, it may seek to have the relief terminated 
    within the first 30 days.
        Should the incumbent carrier file a petition to terminate relief, 
    replies are to be filed in five business days, and the carrier may file 
    any rebuttal three business days afterward. The Board will then assess 
    all relevant factors in determining what action would be appropriate.
    
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        We invite comment on all aspects of this proposal. Any person that 
    wishes to participate as a party of record in this matter must notify 
    us of this intent by May 28, 1998. In order to be designated a party of 
    record, a person must satisfy the filing requirements outlined in the 
    ADDRESSES section. We will then compile and issue a service list. 
    Copies of comments and replies must be served on all persons designated 
    on the list as a party of record. Comments on the proposal are due June 
    15, 1998; replies are due July 15, 1998.
        A copy of this decision is being served on all parties on the 
    service list in Ex Parte No. 575. This decision will serve as notice 
    that persons who were parties of record in the Ex Parte 575 proceeding 
    will not be placed on the service list in the Ex Parte 628 proceeding 
    unless they notify us of their intent to participate therein.
        The Board preliminarily certifies that the proposed rules, if 
    adopted, would not have a significant effect on a substantial number of 
    small entities. While the proposed rules, if adopted, may ease the 
    burdens on obtaining alternative rail service in the limited situations 
    described, we do not expect them to affect a substantial number of 
    small entities. The Board, however, seeks comments on whether there 
    would be effects on small entities that should be considered.
        This action will not significantly affect either the quality of the 
    human environment or the conservation of energy resources.
    
    List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 1146
    
        Administrative practice and procedures, Railroads.
    
        Decided: May 12, 1998.
    
        By the Board, Chairman Morgan and Vice Chairman Owen.
    Vernon A. Williams,
    Secretary.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, title 49, chapter X, 
    Part 1146, consisting of Sec. 1146.1, is proposed to be added to read 
    as follows:
    
    PART 1146--EXPEDITED RELIEF FOR SERVICE INADEQUACIES
    
        1. The authority for part 1146 will read as follows:
    
        Authority: 49 U.S.C. 721, 11102, 11123, and 10705.
    
    
    Sec. 1146.1  Prescription of Alternative Rail Service
    
        (a) General. Alternative rail service will be prescribed under 49 
    U.S.C. 11102(a), 11102(c), 10705(a), or 11123(a), if the Board 
    determines that, over an identified period of time, there has been a 
    substantial, measurable deterioration in rail service provided by the 
    incumbent carrier.
        (b)(1) Petition for Relief. Parties may seek relief described in 
    paragraph (a) of this section by filing an appropriate petition 
    containing:
        (i) A full explanation, together with all supporting evidence, to 
    demonstrate that the standard for relief contained in paragraph (a) of 
    this section is met;
        (ii) A summary of the petitioner's discussions with the incumbent 
    carrier of the service problems and the reasons why the incumbent 
    carrier is unlikely to restore adequate rail service consistent with 
    the shipper's needs within a reasonable period of time;
        (iii) A commitment from another available railroad to provide 
    alternative service that would meet the shipper's service needs, and 
    how that carrier would provide the service safely without degrading 
    service to its existing customers or unreasonably interfering with the 
    incumbent's overall ability to provide service; and
        (iv) A certification of service of the petition, by overnight 
    delivery, on the incumbent carrier.
        (2) Reply. The incumbent carrier must file a reply to a petition 
    under this subsection within five (5) business days.
        (3) Rebuttal. The party requesting relief may file rebuttal no more 
    than three (3) business days later.
        (c) Presumption of Continuing Need. Unless otherwise indicated in 
    the Board's order, a Board order issued under paragraph (a) of this 
    section that prescribes relief under 49 U.S.C. 11123(a) shall establish 
    a rebuttable presumption that the transportation emergency will 
    continue for more than 30 days from the date of that order.
        (d)(1) Petition to Terminate Relief. Should the Board prescribe 
    alternative rail service under paragraph (a) of this section, the 
    incumbent carrier may subsequently file a petition to terminate that 
    relief. Such a petition shall contain a full explanation, together with 
    all supporting evidence, to demonstrate that the carrier is providing, 
    or is prepared to provide, adequate service to affected shippers. 
    Absent special circumstances, carriers are discouraged from filing such 
    a petition less than 90 days after relief is granted under paragraph 
    (a) of this section.
        (2) Reply. Parties must file replies to petitions to terminate 
    filed under this subsection within five (5) business days.
        (3) Rebuttal. The incumbent carrier may file any rebuttal no more 
    than three (3) business days later.
    * * * * *
    [FR Doc. 98-13095 Filed 5-15-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4915-00-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
05/18/1998
Department:
Surface Transportation Board
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking.
Document Number:
98-13095
Dates:
Notices of intent to participate in this proceeding are due May 28, 1998. Comments on this proposal are due June 15, 1998. Replies are due July 15, 1998.
Pages:
27253-27255 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
STB Ex Parte No. 628
PDF File:
98-13095.pdf
CFR: (1)
49 CFR 1146.1