99-21276. Passenger Facility Charge Audit Guide for Air Carriers Procedures for Examining Air Carrier Passenger Facility Charge Collection, Remittance, and Reporting Practices  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 158 (Tuesday, August 17, 1999)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 44777-44778]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-21276]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    Federal Aviation Administration
    
    
    Passenger Facility Charge Audit Guide for Air Carriers--
    Procedures for Examining Air Carrier Passenger Facility Charge 
    Collection, Remittance, and Reporting Practices
    
    AGENCY: Federal Aviation Administration, Department of Transportation.
    
    ACTION: Notice of availability; Request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is issuing interim 
    guidance for conducting annual audits of air carrier Passenger Facility 
    Charge (PFC) collection, remittance, and reporting practices. An air 
    carrier collecting PFC's from at least 50,000 passengers annually is 
    required to provide for an annual audit of its PFC accounts by an 
    accredited independent public accountant. An auditor engaged to audit 
    the air carrier's PFC accounts is required to report ``on the fairness 
    and reasonableness of the carrier's procedures for collecting, holding, 
    and dispersing PFC revenues.'' In addition, an auditor is required to 
    report whether the quarterly reports of PFC accounts that the air 
    carriers must provide to airports ``fairly represent the net 
    transactions in the PFC account.''
        The interim guidance is issued for a one-year review and comment 
    period. It is intended that this interim guidance be used for air 
    carrier PFC audits will final guidance is issued, which will occur 
    after the evaluation and disposition of comments from the review 
    period. Use of the interim and final guidance is voluntary, although 
    the FAA will have greater confidence in audits conducted in accordance 
    with the guide.
        Interested parties may access the Passenger Facility Charge Audit 
    Guide for Air Carriers through the Internet at http://www.faa.gov/arp/
    audit.htm. Alternatively, the guide may be obtained by contacting the 
    individual listed below under the heading FOR FURTHER INFORMATION 
    CONTACT.
    
    DATES: Interim guidance effective August 17, 1999; Comments must be 
    submitted must be submitted on or before August 16, 2000.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be mailed, in triplicate, to Federal 
    Aviation Administration, Airports Financial Assistance Division, 
    Attention: Passenger Facility Charge Branch (APP-530), 800 Independence 
    Avenue, S.W., Room 619, Washington, DC 20591.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joseph Hebert, Program Analyst, 
    Passenger Facility Charge Branch, Airports Financial Assistance 
    Division (APP-530), Federal Aviation Administration, 800 Independence 
    Avenue, S.W., Washington, DC 20591, (202) 267-3845.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Title 49, USC, Section 40117, authorizes the 
    Secretary of Transportation (further delegated to the FAA 
    Administrator) to approve the local imposition of a PFC of $1, $2, or 
    $3 per enplaned passenger for use on certain airport projects. On May 
    29, 1991, the FAA issued 14 CFR Part 158 outlining policies and 
    procedures for the PFC program. Under Part 158, public agencies 
    controlling commercial service airports can apply to the FAA for 
    authority to impose a PFC for use on eligible projects. The proceeds 
    from such PFC's are to be used to finance approval, eligible airport-
    related projects.
        Once a public agency's application for the imposition of a PFC is 
    approved by the FAA, it must notify air carriers and foreign air 
    carriers required to collect PFC's at its airport(s) of the approval. 
    Once notified, an air carrier is required to collect PFC's on tickets 
    it issues showing an enplacnement at that airport (with certain 
    exceptions). The air carrier is also required to notify its agents, 
    including other issuing carriers, of the collection requirements. Air 
    carriers or their agents collect PFC's from passengers on behalf of the 
    public agency at the time of air travel ticket (or its equivalent) 
    issuance. Air carriers are responsible for all PFC funds from the time 
    of collection to remittance to the public agency and must provide 
    quarterly reports to the public agency showing the total amounts of PFC 
    revenue collected and refunded, as well as any amount withheld by the 
    air carrier as collection compensation in accordance with section 
    158.53 of Part 158. For the purposes of an audit under section 158.69, 
    collection is defined as the point when agents or other intermediaries 
    remit PFC revenue to the carrier.
        An air carrier collecting PFC's from at least 50,000 passengers 
    annually is required to provide for an annual audit of its PFC accounts 
    by an accredited independent public accountant. The audit shall be made 
    available to the public agency, upon request. Although not specifically 
    required by the regulation, the audit should also be submitted to the 
    FAA, upon request. Auditors engaged to audit the air carrier's PFC 
    accounts are required to report `` on the fairness and reasonableness 
    of the carrier's procedures for collecting, holding, and dispersing PFC 
    revenues.'' In addition, auditors are required to report whether the 
    quarterly reports of PFC accounts that the air carriers must provide to 
    airports ``fairly represent the net transactions in the PFC account'' 
    (section 158.69(b)(1) of Part 158). The FAA expects these audits to be 
    filed in a timely manner and should normally coincide with the 
    carrier's fiscal year and annual corporate audit cycle.
        To facilitate the conduct of audits that meet the requirements of 
    the statute and regulation, the FAA has prepared the Passenger Facility 
    Charge Audit Guide for Air Carriers. The procedures contained in the 
    guide for testing and reporting on PFC's collected, withheld, refunded/
    exchanged, and remitted during the year are intended to assist the 
    auditor in accomplishing the audit and internal control structure 
    attestation. This guide is not intended to supplant the auditor's 
    judgment of procedures to be performed. The auditor should use 
    professional judgment to tailor the procedures so that the audit 
    objectives are achieved. However, the auditor must address all 
    applicable internal control requirements.
        The interim guidance describes the collection, remittance, and 
    reporting requirements of 14 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 158 
    (the implementing regulation for Title 49, United States Code (USC), 
    Section 40117, that established PFC authority) in a requirements-
    objective-procedure format. This format is similar to that used in the 
    FAA Airport Improvement program supplement to OMB Circular A-133 and 
    should appear familiar to auditors.
        The guide also relies on the testing of nonstatistical samples of 
    lifted tickets or equivalent records as an agreed-upon procedure for 
    providing an airport-level assessment of air carrier compliance with 
    part 158 collection and remittance requirements. An air carrier 
    utilizing these procedures should provide copies of the agreed-upon 
    procedures to requesting public agencies. The carrier should also 
    provide a copy of the reports to the FAA, if requested.
        The use of this guide by auditors on behalf of the air carriers 
    will provide the FAA and airports collecting PFC's with
    
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    an acceptable level of assurance that the air carrier has followed 
    regulatory procedures. Although the guide is not intended to define the 
    sole method of complying with the audit requirements of section 158.69 
    of Part 158, the FAA has determined that the use of the procedures in 
    this audit guide by the auditors for an air carrier will provide 
    sufficient assurance that the air carrier has met the requirements of 
    Part 158 such that the FAA would not normally require additional 
    reports, undertake an audit of the carrier, or request Department of 
    Transportation, Office of the Inspector General (DOT OIG), intervention 
    on the FAA's behalf. The FAA would not normally initiate further 
    monitoring efforts unless an airport or other source subsequently 
    substantiates a significant violation of the regulation.
        The FAA will not have the same level of confidence with an air 
    carrier whose auditors have not used the procedures outlined in this 
    guide. Accordingly, alleged collection and remittance discrepancies 
    raised by airports through their monitoring of local PFC revenue 
    against air carriers whose auditors have not used this guidance are 
    more likely to trigger additional FAA monitoring activities, including 
    requiring additional reports, the undertaking of an audit, or a request 
    for DOT OIG intervention. This guidance shall not, however, foreclose 
    other FAA options for enforcing correct collection and remittance 
    procedures and responding to allegations of improper collection and 
    remittance practices. The FAA expects air carriers to attain a 
    reasonable level of accuracy with regard to PFC remittances.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC on August 10, 1999.
    Catherine M. Lang,
    Acting Director, Office of Airport Planning and Programming.
    [FR Doc. 99-21276 Filed 8-16-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-13-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
8/17/1999
Published:
08/17/1999
Department:
Federal Aviation Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of availability; Request for comments.
Document Number:
99-21276
Dates:
Interim guidance effective August 17, 1999; Comments must be submitted must be submitted on or before August 16, 2000.
Pages:
44777-44778 (2 pages)
PDF File:
99-21276.pdf