97-1810. Accident/Incident Investigation Procedures  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 17 (Monday, January 27, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 3806-3808]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-1810]
    
    
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    NATIONAL TRANSPORTATION SAFETY BOARD
    
    49 CFR Part 831
    
    
    Accident/Incident Investigation Procedures
    
    AGENCY: National Transportation Safety Board.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Board is updating its regulations on accident and incident 
    investigation practices to reflect current operations and organization.
    
    DATES: The new rules are effective February 26, 1997.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jane F. Mackall, (202) 314-6080.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The majority of the current rules at 49 CFR 
    Part 831 have not been updated since 1988. The changes adopted here for 
    the most part reflect current accident and incident investigation 
    practices. Because these rule changes affect only rules of agency 
    organization, procedure, or practice, notice and comment procedures are 
    not required and are not provided here. 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B). Major 
    changes to the rules include the following: (1) the Board's wreckage 
    release form (6120.15) will be used, when needed, in all accident 
    investigations, not just aviation investigations; (2) participation in 
    accident investigations of individuals in legal positions has been 
    clarified; (3) the requirement that all party representatives in 
    aviation investigations sign the STATEMENT OF PARTY REPRESENTATIVES TO 
    NTSB INVESTIGATION has been codified; (4) the Board member's role at 
    accident sites has been clarified; (5) new sections have been added to 
    address Trade Secrets Act and voluntary data submission issues; and (6) 
    our policy regarding submissions received after a matter has been 
    calendared by the Board for a meeting has been codified.
    
     List of Subjects in 49 CFR Part 831
    
        Aviation safety, Highway safety, Investigations, Marine safety, 
    Pipeline safety, Railroad safety.
    
    PART 831--ACCIDENT/INCIDENT INVESTIGATION PROCEDURES
    
        1. The Authority citation for Part 831 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: Independent Safety Board Act of 1974, as amended (49 
    U.S.C. 1101 et seq.); Federal Aviation Act of 1958, as amended (49 
    U.S.C. 40101 et seq.).
    
        2. Section 831.2 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.2  Responsibility of Board.
    
        (a) Aviation. (1) The Board is responsible for the organization, 
    conduct, and control of all accident and incident investigations (see 
    Sec. 830.2 of this chapter) within the Untied States, its territories 
    and possessions, where the accident or incident involves any civil 
    aircraft or certain public aircraft (as specified in Sec. 830.5 of this 
    chapter), including an investigation involving civil or public aircraft 
    (as specified in Sec. 830.5) on the one hand, and an Armed Forces or 
    intelligence agency aircraft on the other hand. It is also responsible 
    for investigating accidents/incidents that occur outside the United 
    States, and which involve civil aircraft and/or certain public 
    aircraft, when the accident/incident is not in the territory of another 
    country (i.e., in international waters).
        (2) Certain aviation investigations may be conducted by the Federal 
    Aviation Administration (FAA), pursuant to a ``Request to the Secretary 
    of the Department of Transportation to Investigate Certain Aircraft 
    Accidents,'' effective February 10, 1977 (the text of the request is 
    contained in the appendix to part 800 of this chapter), but the Board 
    determines the probable cause of such accidents or incidents.\1\ Under 
    no circumstances are aviation investigations where the portion of the 
    investigation is so delegated to the FAA by the Board considered to be 
    joint investigations in the sense of sharing responsibility. These 
    investigations remain NTSB investigations.
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        \1\ The authority of a representative of the FAA during such 
    investigations is the same as that of a Board investigator under 
    this part.
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        (3) The Board is the agency charged with fulfilling the obligations 
    of the United States under Annex 13 to the Chicago Convention on 
    International Civil Aviation (Eighth Edition, July 1994), and does so 
    consistent with State Department requirements and in coordination with 
    that department. Annex 13 contains specific requirements for the 
    notification, investigation, and reporting of certain incidents and 
    accidents involving international civil aviation. In the case of an 
    accident or incident in a foreign state involving civil aircraft of 
    U.S. registry or manufacture, where the foreign state is a signatory to 
    Annex 13 to the Chicago Convention of the International Civil Aviation 
    Organization, the state of occurrence is responsible for the 
    investigation. If the accident or incident occurs in a foreign state 
    not bound by the provisions of Annex 13 to the Chicago Convention, or 
    if the accident or incident involves a public aircraft (Annex 13 
    applies only to civil aircraft), the conduct of the investigation shall 
    be in consonance with any agreement entered into between the United 
    States and the foreign state.
        (b) Surface. The Board is responsible for the investigation of: 
    railroad accidents in which there is a fatality, substantial property 
    damage, or which involve a passenger train (see part 840 of this 
    chapter); major marine casualties and marine accidents involving a 
    public and non-public vessel or involving Coast Guard functions (see 
    part 850 of this chapter \2\); highway accidents, including railroad 
    grade-crossing accidents, the investigation of which is selected in 
    cooperation with the States; and pipeline accidents in which there is a 
    fatality, significant injury to the environment, or substantial 
    property damage.
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        \2\ Part 850 also governs the conduct of certain investigations 
    in which the Board and the Coast Guard participate jointly.
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        (c) Other Accidents/Incidents. The Board is also responsible for 
    the investigation of an accident/incident that occurs in connection 
    with the transportation of people or property which, in the judgment of 
    the Board, is catastrophic, involves problems of a recurring character, 
    or would otherwise carry out the policy of the Independent Safety Board 
    Act of 1974. This authority includes, but is not limited to, marine and 
    boating accidents and incidents not covered by part 850 of this 
    chapter, and accidents/incidents selected by the Board involving 
    transportation and/or release of hazardous materials.
        3. Section 831.3 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.3  Authority of Directors.
    
        The Director, Office of Aviation Safety, or the Director, Office of 
    Surface Transportation Safety, subject to the provisions of Sec. 831.2 
    and part 800 of this chapter, may order an investigation into any 
    accident or incident.
        4. Section 831.4 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.4  Nature of Investigation.
    
        Accident and incident investigations are conducted by the Board to 
    determine the facts, conditions, and circumstances relating to an 
    accident or incident and the probable cause(s) thereof. These results 
    are then used to ascertain measures that would best tend to prevent 
    similar accidents or incidents
    
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    in the future. The investigation includes the field investigation (on-
    scene at the accident, testing, teardown, etc.), report preparation, 
    and, where ordered, a public hearing. The investigation results in 
    Board conclusions issued in the form of a report or ``brief'' of the 
    incident or accident. Accident/incident investigations are fact-finding 
    proceedings with no formal issues and no adverse parties. They are not 
    subject to the provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 
    504 et seq.), and are not conducted for the purpose of determining the 
    rights or liabilities of any person.
        5. Section 831.5 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.5  Priority of Board Investigations.
    
        Any investigation of an accident or incident conducted by the 
    Safety Board directly or pursuant to the appendix to part 800 of this 
    chapter (except major marine investigations conducted under 49 U.S.C. 
    1131(a)(1)(E)) has priority over all other investigations of such 
    accident or incident conducted by other Federal agencies. The Safety 
    Board shall provide for the appropriate participation by other Federal 
    agencies in any such investigation, except that such agencies may not 
    participate in the Safety Board's determination of the probable cause 
    of the accident or incident. Nothing in this section impairs the 
    authority of other Federal agencies to conduct investigations of an 
    accident or incident under applicable provisions of law or to obtain 
    information directly from parties involved in, and witnesses to, the 
    transportation accident or incident, provided they do so without 
    interfering with the Safety Board's investigation. The Safety Board and 
    other Federal agencies shall assure that appropriate information 
    obtained or developed in the course of their investigations is 
    exchanged in a timely manner.
        6. Section 831.6 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.6  Request to withhold information.
    
        (a) Trade Secrets Act (18 U.S.C. 1905), Exemption 4 of the Freedom 
    of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552) (FOIA), and The Independent Safety 
    Board Act of 1974, as amended.
        (1) General. The Trade Secrets Act provides criminal penalties for 
    unauthorized government disclosure of trade secrets and other specified 
    confidential commercial information. The Freedom of Information Act 
    authorizes withholding of such information; however, the Independent 
    Safety Board Act, at 49 U.S.C. 1114(b), provides that the Board may, 
    under certain circumstances, disclose information related to trade 
    secrets.
        (2) Procedures. Information submitted to the Board that the 
    submitter believes qualifies as a trade secret or confidential 
    commercial information subject either to the Trade Secrets Act or FOIA 
    Exemption 4 shall be so identified by the submitter on each and every 
    page of such document. The Board shall give the submitter of any 
    information so identified, or information the Board has substantial 
    reason to believe qualifies as a trade secret or confidential 
    commercial information subject either to the Trade Secrets Act or FOIA 
    Exemption 4, the opportunity to comment on any contemplated disclosure, 
    pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 1114(b). In all instances where the Board 
    determines to disclose pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 1114(b) and/or 5 U.S.C. 
    552, at least 10 days' notice will be provided the submitter. Notice 
    may not be provided the submitter when disclosure is required by a law 
    other than FOIA if the information is not identified by the submitter 
    as qualifying for withholding, as is required by this paragraph, unless 
    the Board has substantial reason to believe that disclosure would 
    result in competitive harm.
        (3) Voluntarily-provided Safety Information. It is the policy of 
    the Safety Board that commercial, safety-related information provided 
    to it voluntarily and not in the context of particular accident/
    incident investigations will not be disclosed. Reference to such 
    information for the purposes of safety recommendations will be 
    undertaken with consideration for the confidential nature of the 
    underlying database(s).
        (b) Other. Any person may make written objection to the public 
    disclosure of any other information contained in any report or document 
    filed, or otherwise obtained by the Board, stating the grounds for such 
    objection. The Board, on its own initiative or if such objection is 
    made, may order such information withheld from public disclosure when, 
    in its judgment, the information may be withheld under the provisions 
    of an exemption to the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552, see 
    part 801 of this chapter), and its release is found not to be in the 
    public interest.
        7. Section 831.7 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.7  Right to representation.
    
        Any person interviewed by an authorized representative of the Board 
    during the investigation, regardless of the form of the interview 
    (sworn, unsworn, transcribed, not transcribed, etc.), has the right to 
    be accompanied, represented, or advised by an attorney or non-attorney 
    representative.
        8. Section 831.8 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.8  Investigator-in-charge.
    
        The designated investigator-in-charge (IIC) organizes, conducts, 
    controls, and manages the field phase of the investigation, regardless 
    of whether a Board Member is also on-scene at the accident or incident 
    site. (The role of the Board member at the scene of an accident 
    investigation is as the official spokesperson for the Safety Board.) 
    The IIC has the responsibility and authority to supervise and 
    coordinate all resources and activities of all personnel, both Board 
    and non-Board, involved in the on-site investigation. The IIC continues 
    to have considerable organizational and management responsibilities 
    throughout later phases of the investigation, up to and including Board 
    consideration and adoption of a report or brief of probable cause(s).
        9. Section 831.9 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.9  Authority of Board representatives.
    
        (a) General. Any employee of the Board, upon presenting appropriate 
    credentials, is authorized to enter any property where an accident/
    incident subject to the Board's jurisdiction has occurred, or wreckage 
    from any such accident/incident is located, and do all things 
    considered necessary for proper investigation. Further, upon demand of 
    an authorized representative of the Board and presentation of 
    credentials, any Government agency, or person having possession or 
    control of any transportation vehicle or component thereof, any 
    facility, equipment, process or controls relevant to the investigation, 
    or any pertinent records or memoranda, including all files, hospital 
    records, and correspondence then or thereafter existing, and kept or 
    required to be kept, shall forthwith permit inspection, photographing, 
    or copying thereof by such authorized representative for the purpose of 
    investigating an accident or incident, or preparing a study, or related 
    to any special investigation pertaining to safety or the prevention of 
    accidents. The Safety Board may issue a subpoena, enforceable in 
    Federal district court, to obtain testimony or other evidence. 
    Authorized representatives of the Board may question any person having 
    knowledge relevant to an accident/incident, study, or special 
    investigation. Authorized representatives of the Board also have 
    exclusive authority, on behalf of the Board, to decide the way in which 
    any testing will be conducted, including
    
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    decisions on the person that will conduct the test, the type of test 
    that will be conducted, and any individual who will witness the test.
    * * * * *
        10. Section 831.11 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.11  Parties to the investigation.
    
        (a) All Investigations, regardless of mode. (1) The investigator-
    in-charge designates parties to participate in the investigation. 
    Parties shall be limited to those persons, government agencies, 
    companies, and associations whose employees, functions, activities, or 
    products were involved in the accident or incident and who can provide 
    suitable qualified technical personnel actively to assist in the 
    investigation. Other than the FAA in aviation cases, no other entity is 
    afforded the right to participate in Board investigations.
        (2) Participants in the investigation (i.e., party representatives, 
    party coordinators, and/or the larger party organization) shall be 
    responsive to the direction of Board representatives and may lose party 
    status if they do not comply with their assigned duties, actively 
    proscriptions or instructions, or if they conduct themselves in a 
    manner prejudicial to the investigation.
        (3) No party to the investigation shall be represented in any 
    aspect of the NTSB investigation by any person who also represents 
    claimants or insurers. No party representative may occupy a legal 
    position (see Sec. 845.13 of this chapter). Failure to comply with 
    these provisions may result in sanctions, including loss of status as a 
    party.
        (4) Title 49, United States Code Sec. 1132 provides for the 
    appropriate participation of the FAA in Board investigations, and 
    Sec. 1131(a)(2) provides for such participation by other departments, 
    agencies, or instrumentalities. The FAA and those other entities that 
    meet the requirements of paragraph (a)(1) of this section will be 
    parties to the investigation with the same rights and privileges and 
    subject to the same limitations as other parties, provided however that 
    representatives of the FAA need not sign the ``Statement of Party 
    Representatives to NTSB Investigation'' (see paragraph (b) of this 
    section).
        (b) Aviation investigations. In addition to compliance with the 
    provisions of paragraph (a) of this section, and to assist in ensuring 
    complete understanding of the requirements and limitations of party 
    status, all party representatives in aviation investigations shall sign 
    ``Statement of Party Representatives to NTSB Investigation'' 
    immediately upon attaining party representative status. Failure timely 
    to sign that statement may result in sanctions, including loss of 
    status as a party.
        11. Section 831.12 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.12  Access to and release of wreckage, records, mail, and 
    cargo.
    
        (a) Only the Board's accident investigation personnel, and persons 
    authorized by the investigator-in-charge to participate in any 
    particular investigation, examination or testing shall be permitted 
    access to wreckage, records, mail, or cargo in the Board's custody.
        (b) Wreckage, records, mail, and cargo in the Board's custody shall 
    be released by an authorized representative of the Board when it is 
    determined that the Board has no further need of such wreckage, mail, 
    cargo, or records. When such material is released, Form 6120.15, 
    ``Release of Wreckage,'' will be completed, acknowledging receipt.
        12. Section 831.13 is amended by revising the heading and paragraph 
    (b) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.13  Flow and dissemination of accident or incident 
    information.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) All information concerning the accident or incident obtained by 
    any person or organization participating in the investigation shall be 
    passed to the IIC through appropriate channels before being provided to 
    any individual outside the investigation. Parties to the investigation 
    may relay to their respective organizations information necessary for 
    purposes of prevention or remedial action. However, no information 
    concerning the accident or incident may be released to any person not a 
    party representative to the investigation (including non-party 
    representative employees of the party organization) before initial 
    release by the Safety Board without prior consultation and approval of 
    the IIC.
        13. Section 831.14 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 831.14  Proposed findings.
    
        (a) General. Any person, government agency, company, or association 
    whose employees, functions, activities, or products were involved in an 
    accident or incident under investigation may submit to the Board 
    written proposed findings to be drawn from the evidence produced during 
    the course of the investigation, a proposed probable cause, and/or 
    proposed safety recommendations designed to prevent future accidents.
        (b) Timing of submissions. To be considered, these submissions must 
    be received before the matter is calendared for consideration at a 
    Board meeting. All written submissions are expected to have been 
    presented to staff in advance of the formal scheduling of the meeting. 
    This procedure ensures orderly and thorough consideration of all views.
        (c) Exception. This limitation does not apply to safety enforcement 
    cases handled by the Board pursuant to part 821 of this chapter. 
    Separate ex parte rules, at part 821, subpart J, apply to those 
    proceedings.
    
        Issued in Washington, DC this 21st day of January, 1997.
    Jim Hall,
    Chairman.
    [FR Doc. 97-1810 Filed 1-24-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 7533-01-M
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/26/1997
Published:
01/27/1997
Department:
National Transportation Safety Board
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
97-1810
Dates:
The new rules are effective February 26, 1997.
Pages:
3806-3808 (3 pages)
PDF File:
97-1810.pdf
CFR: (14)
49 CFR 1131(a)(2)
49 CFR 831.7
49 CFR 831.8
49 CFR 831.9
49 CFR 831.11
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