TO: FHWA docket on MUTCD NPA (docket # 28977)
FROM: National Committee on Uniform Traffic Control Devices
SUBJECT: Request for a Supplemental Notice of Proposed Amendments to the
MUTCD
DATE: July 15, 2008
The National Committee on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (NCUTCD) is an
organization that exists solely to contribute to the improvement of the Manual on
Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD). The NCUTCD meets twice a year. At
each meeting, over 250 professionals representing a wide cross-section of MUTCD
users develop suggested MUTCD language, review proposed MUTCD language
published by the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), and/or offer
recommendations to FHWA staff related to important MUTCD issues. There are
20 individual organizations that sponsor the NCUTCD and the total annual
contribution of NCUTCD participants exceeds 10,000 labor-hours, all of it devoted
to improving the MUTCD. The NCUTCD believes that the MUTCD benefits greatly
from the input that it provides to the FHWA.
On January 2, 2008, the FHWA published a Notice of Proposed Amendments
(NPA) to the 2003 MUTCD (FHWA Docket No. FHWA-2007-28977). This NPA
was expected, as the NCUTCD has provided input and recommended language to
the FHWA on a continuing basis since the publication of the 2000 MUTCD.
However, the NPA as published contains an extensive number of proposed
changes, perhaps more than have been proposed in any previous edition of the
MUTCD. The NCUTCD technical committee members worked diligently during the
docket comment period to review the proposed changes and the NCUTCD Council
has approved an extensive set of docket comments in response to the NPA nearly
700 total pages of comments).
The NCUTCD recognizes the need to revise the MUTCD on a timely basis to keep
it up-to-date with current practices and technologies. However, the NCUTCD also
believes that it is vital that the FHWA produce an MUTCD that is fully vetted by
practitioners, even if more time is needed to revise and republish a proposed rule.
After a careful review of the NPA and an assessment of its own docket comments,
the NCUTCD believes that the changes to the NPA will be significant and justify
further review before finalizing. In the interest of producing the best possible next
edition of the MUTCD, the NCUTCD is recommending that the FHWA publish a
Supplemental Notice of Proposed Amendments (SNPA) on the MUTCD prior to
publication of a Final Rule. The SNPA should incorporate the FHWA responses to
the docket comments received in response to the NPA and provide an opportunity
for the public to assess how all of the changes to the NPA relate to each other
prior to the Final Rule. The NCUTCD offers the following reasons that support the
publication of an SNPA:
• Economic Assessment: The current NPA does not include a quantified
assessment of the economic impacts of the proposed changes on public agencies
and the private sector. It is the opinion of the NCUTCD that the economic impacts
of the proposed changes are extensive and that an assessment will determine that
the NPA is an unfunded mandate according to the Unfunded Mandate Reform Act
of 1995. The NCUTCD recommends that the FHWA perform an assessment of
the economic impacts of the proposed changes (after incorporating changes due
to docket comments) and publish the assessment as part of the SNPA. The
assessment should consider all economic factors associated with the proposed
changes, including the following examples:
? Non-Federal-Aid Costs: The costs of complying with the changes on
roads that are not part of the federal-aid system and that are not eligible for federal
reimbursement.
? Local Agency Costs: The costs to local agencies for complying with
the changes. Although local agencies are eligible for federal reimbursement on
federal-aid projects, local agencies indicate that this type of reimbursement flows
through state agencies and may not be readily available to local agencies.
? Private Sector Costs: The costs to the private sector for bringing private
roads, parking lots, and other private facilities open to public travel in compliance
with the MUTCD. This includes privately owned toll roads, shopping center roads,
parking lots, airports, and sports arenas. As the MUTCD has not previously
required compliance for these facilities, this is a new impact on private property
owners and may result in extensive costs to achieve compliance.
? Liability Impacts: The potential liability impacts of an MUTCD which is
more specific than previous editions and provides less flexibility in adapting to the
unique circumstances that may exist at a specific location. In assessing these
costs, the FHWA must include the cost of meeting both standard (shall) and
guidance (should) statements as most states treat a guidance statement as
equal, or nearly so, to a standard statement.
? Sign and Sign Infrastructure Costs: The costs of replacing signs and
sign support structures to accommodate the proposed change in minimum
legibility distance (30 ft/in).
? Signal Hardware Costs: The costs of traffic signal hardware and the
installation/maintenance aspects of signal hardware. In particular, the costs of
implementing pedestrian countdown signals, 12-inch signal heads, installing
additional signal heads as recommended/required, and relocating traffic signal
heads to meet proposed guidelines.
? Life-Cycle Costs: The Unfunded Mandate Reform Act of 1995 requires
that costs be assessed only for the first seven years following a Final Rule. For
many of the proposed MUTCD changes, the FHWA has established extended
compliance dates (often longer than seven years). As a result, the costs of
complying with a Final Rule are incurred beyond the time frame of the Act. The
NCUTCD believes that the practice of extended compliance dates hides the true
costs of a Final Rule to state and local agencies. Accordingly, the NCUTCD
requests that the FHWA consider the costs of implementing the proposed
changes over the life of the devices, not just in the seven year period following the
Final Rule.
• Additional Review Needed: Several of the NCUTCD docket comments
request that the FHWA provide more detail about a proposed change or that
proposed changes be reorganized or reformatted. Although the FHWA may
consider reorganizing changes as editorial, the NCUTCD believes that the creation
of new parts or chapters in the MUTCD is something that should be reviewed by
practitioners prior to a Final Rule. Likewise, the need for more information also
requires additional review. Examples of changes that should receive SNPA review
include:
? New Part on Toll Roads: The NCUTCD recommends that all of the toll
road related material be moved to a new part in the MUTCD. This need addresses
toll road issues that cut across several parts of the MUTCD. The combination of a
new MUTCD part with changes in the proposed material justifies further review in a
public forum.
? Reorganized Part 3: The proposed changes to Part 3 of the MUTCD will
make it more difficult to use because of the large amount of information that is
contained in individual sections and the difficulty in identifying related applications
within Part 3. To address this, the NCUTCD approved a reorganization of Part 3.
As with the toll road material, the NCUTCD believes that a reorganized Part 3
should be reviewed by practitioners and the public prior to becoming a Final Rule.
? Revised Legibility Index: The NPA includes a provision that the legibility
index be changed to 30 ft/in. While such a change is desirable at the conceptual
level, the FHWA has not addressed the application of this change on individual
signs. The FHWA needs to provide information in an SNPA that indicates the
impacts of this change on each sign in the MUTCD.
? Lack of Research Findings: Many of the proposed signing and marking
changes are based on findings from the FHWA sign synthesis and the NCHRP
marking synthesis. It is the position of the NCUTCD that the findings from a
synthesis alone are not sufficient grounds for establishing a standard or guidance
in the MUTCD. Specifying specific practices based on a synthesis study is
different from basing the changes on research findings. A synthesis merely
indicates what agencies are doing – it does not indicate what is the best way or
proper way. The FHWA should conduct or sponsor research to provide
justification for the proposed changes that are based on the signing or marking
synthesis. Such findings should be included in the SNPA or the recommended
changes should not be included in the SNPA if there are docket comments that
oppose the changes.
? Typical Application Figures for Incident Management: The FHWA
chose not to include typical application figures for incident management in the
NPA despite a recommendation from the NCUTCD that it be included. Other
legally affected organizations also support including incident management typical
applications in the next MUTCD. The FHWA should include incident management
typical application figures in an SNPA so that they can be reviewed for
incorporation into the next edition of the MUTCD.
? Aerial Lift Bucket Vehicle Operations: The FHWA chose not to include
language related to Aerial Lift Bucket Vehicle Operations in the NPA. This activity
legally affects the work of other agencies beyond the NCUTCD, justifying
additional review. As with incident management typical applications, such
guidelines should be included in an SNPA rather than waiting for a separate
MUTCD rulemaking activity.
? Traffic Signal Issues: The NCUTCD made numerous recommendations
for changes to the NPA regarding traffic signal issues, particularly with respect to:
pedestrian clearance time/pedestrian change interval and their relation to
pedestrian signal head and countdown displays, legal definitions associated with
pedestrian signal symbols, traffic signal indications for permissive left turns, and a
reorganization of Chapter 4D. NCUTCD recommendations for changes to the NPA
related to these and other signal issues should be reviewed by practitioners before
being published as a Final Rule.
• Extent of Proposed Changes and Expected Docket Comments: The
NPA contains a large number of proposed changes and is expected to generate
significant docket comments. The NCUTCD believes that the FHWA needs to
make significant changes to the NPA prior to publication as a Final Rule.
Because of the size of the NPA and the number of comments, the changes made
to the NPA are expected to produce an MUTCD that is sufficiently different from
the NPA version that it constitutes a new document. This new MUTCD should be
reviewed in an SNPA prior to becoming a final rule. The following reasons support
this position:
? Number of Proposed Changes: The NPA Federal Register notice
identifies 513 individual changes that are proposed for the MUTCD. These 513
changes do not include many additional changes which seem minor, but which
can have far-reaching impacts on public agencies. The number of identified
changes is 62 percent higher than those identified in the NPA that resulted in the
2003 MUTCD.
? Number of Expected Docket Comments: The current NPA has
generated 1,279 comment letters through the end of June 2008, a full month before
the close of the comment period. The NCUTCD recognizes that a large number of
these comments relate to the RV friendly symbol or to high visibility garments for
fire fighters. However, the large number of comments makes it difficult for the
public to gain a sense of the content of the overall docket comments and indicates
a high level of interest in the MUTCD changes. The large volume of comments
also suggests a greater potential for changes to the NPA in response to the
comments.
? Comparison to Previous MUTCD Rulemaking Efforts: In comparison to
the current NPA, there were 771 letters commenting on the multiple NPAs that led
to the 2000 MUTCD and there were 293 letters responding to the NPA that led to
the 2003 MUTCD. The comments generated by the current NPA are far above
those of previous rulemaking efforts, with a month remaining in the docket
comment period.
? Timing of Docket Comments: Of the comment letters for the 2003
MUTCD that were submitted before the deadline, 77 percent were submitted in the
final month of the docket period. If a similar trend is exhibited for the current
docket, then there will be over 5,500 individual letters submitted to the docket. In
many cases, a letter may contain multiple individual comments. This trend
indicates that there is significant interest in the proposed MUTCD revision and that
FHWA may have to make a large number of changes to the NPA in response to
the comments.
? Potential for Follow-Up Rulemaking: Implementing changes without
additional public review could lead to inconsistencies in MUTCD language and
unintended consequences. It would be detrimental to both the FHWA and to
MUTCD users to have a new edition of the MUTCD with inconsistencies and
potentially conflicting information. Such problems could lead to the need to
produce another MUTCD NPA shortly after the Final Rule to address the
shortcomings, similar to how the NPA for the 2003 MUTCD was published 17
months after the Final Rule for the 2000 MUTCD. The NCUTCD believes that an
SNPA would provide an opportunity for MUTCD users to review the changes that
FHWA wishes to make in response to the multitude of comments, many of which
may conflict with one another, and in so doing, avoid the need for a follow-up
rulemaking immediately after the publication of a new MUTCD.
? Potential for Amended Final Rule: Publishing a Final Rule with errors or
inconsistencies could lead to a challenge on the Final Rule and the potential need
for an amended Final Rule. A similar situation occurred with the Final Rule for
color specifications for signs and markings (Docket No. FHWA–99–6190). In that
rulemaking effort, the FHWA published a change in the Final Rule that was
significant and which had not been publicly reviewed. As a result, the FHWA had
to make changes and publish an amended Final Rule. An amended Final Rule on
the MUTCD would be confusing to users. Publishing an SNPA would help to
minimize the potential for an amended Final Rule.
• Interconnectivity of Proposed Changes: The MUTCD is akin to a spider
web in that there is significant interconnectivity between the language in various
sections, chapters, and parts. A change in one section may have impacts on
multiple other sections throughout the Manual. With the expected number of
changes and the potential differences in the comments, it is essential that an
SNPA provide the opportunity to examine the additional proposed changes to
assess whether they are consistent with each other.
• Precedent for an SNPA: There is a precedent for issuing multiple
proposed rules for changes to the MUTCD. The most recent example is the
SNPA issued in response to docket comments related to minimum levels of sign
retroreflectivity. Additionally, the FHWA published updated proposed rules for
Parts 1, 3, 4, and 8 prior to the Final Rule for the 2000 MUTCD. Publishing an
SNPA for the current rulemaking effort would not be inconsistent with previous
MUTCD rulemaking efforts.
• Legal and Practical Implementation Challenges: The MUTCD has
always been an important document, from both a legal and practical perspective.
However, recent changes in the Code of Federal Regulations (Docket No. FHWA–
2005–23182) have increased the legal significance of the document and its
application to public and private roads. Furthermore, the changes
defining “substantial conformance” justifies a detailed review of the changes as
state agencies have less discretion in adopting MUTCD changes in state manuals
and supplements than they have had in the past. While the NCUTCD has
performed such a review over the last six months, there is uncertainty over the final
product. It is essential that the FHWA provide an opportunity for Manual users to
review FHWA responses to the docket so that implementation and liability
challenges can be identified, assessed, and discussed before a Final Rule is
published.
• Prescriptive Nature of the NPA: The NPA is much more prescriptive
than previous MUTCD editions with respect to the specificity of the standards and
guidance in the Manual. The changes contained in the NPA will have the effect of
reducing flexibility to address selection, installation, operation, and maintenance
issues and increasing the liability and risk exposure of public agencies. With the
expectation that many docket comments will address this issue in general or on
specific changes, the NCUTCD believes that an SNPA is needed to assess the
FHWA response to the comments and evaluate the level of engineering flexibility
that will be provided in the next edition of the MUTCD.
In summary, the NCUTCD recommends that the FHWA publish a Supplemental
Notice of Proposed Amendments for the current MUTCD rulemaking effort for the
reasons listed above. Doing so will help to produce a Manual that best meets the
needs of road users and the practitioners that are responsible for implementing the
principles contained in the document.
Robert M. Garrett, NCUTCD Executive Secretary
National Committee on Uniform Traffic Control Devices - Comments
This is comment on Rule
U.S. DOT/FHWA - Notice of proposed amendments to the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD); request for comments
View Comment
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