PRA-2126-0016. EmergencySS.071608

PRA-2126-0016. EmergencySS.071608.doc

Licensing Applications for Motor Carrier Operating Authority

OMB: 2126-0016

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DOT Emergency Processing Request

Licensing Applications for Motor Carrier Operating Authority (2126-0016)

(formerly named, Revision of Licensing Application Forms,

Application Procedures and Corresponding Regulations)


SUPPORTING STATEMENT


The U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) submits this request for emergency approval to the Office of Management and Budget for a revision to the above information collection as soon as possible, but not later than July 24, 2008. This DOT request does not alter the existing information collection activities of the Licensing Applications for Motor Carrier Operating Authority covered by OMB control number 2126-0016. Approval of this request will allow a one-time independent evaluation of the safety performance of Mexican-domiciled trucks. The proposed collection under this emergency request accounts for only 130 burden hours.

At the conclusion of the independent evaluation, this will terminate in September 2008. The previously approved FMCSA information collection activities under 2126-0016 will continue. ICR 2126-0016 is due to expire on August 31, 2008. DOT will submit a renewal ICR before the expiration date.


This IC combines all of the information collection requirements for all application forms in the OP-1 series that are used by the for-hire motor property carriers and brokers of general freight and household goods; passenger carriers (OP-1(P)); freight forwarders (OP-1(FF)); and Mexico-domiciled motor property carriers, including household goods and motor passenger carriers, registering to operate beyond municipalities and commercial zones along the U.S-Mexico international border to points within the U.S. (OP-1(MX)) to apply for registration authority. Since the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) provisions have not yet taken effect, the number of annual burden hours for the Form OP-1(MX) are still estimated at 2,060 hours out of a total of 40,060 hours previously approved for this information collection. The FMCSA revised the name of this information collection to Licensing Applications for Motor Carrier Operating Authority, to better describe its purpose.


1. Circumstances that make collection of information necessary:


The FMCSA registers for-hire motor carriers of regulated commodities and of passengers under 49 U.S.C. § 13902(a); surface freight forwarders under 49 U.S.C. § 13903; property brokers under 49 U.S.C. § 13904; and certain Mexican motor carriers under 49 U.S.C. § 13902(c). These motor carriers may conduct transportation services in the United States only if they are registered with the FMCSA. Each registration is effective from the date specified and remains in effect for such period as the Secretary of Transportation (Secretary) determines by regulations. The ICC Termination Act of 1995 (ICCTA), Public Law No. 104-88, 109 Stat. 803, transferred this registration authority from the former Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) to the Secretary, who subsequently delegated the registration function to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), then to the FMCSA at the time that agency was created.



The ICCTA directed the Secretary to issue regulations to replace the current identification number system, the single State registration system, and the registration and insurance monitoring systems formerly administered by the ICC, with a single, on-line Federal system (see 49 U.S.C. § 13908). An advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM), which solicited comments on the parameters of the single integrated system, was published in the Federal Register on August 26, 1996, at 61 FR 43816. It is anticipated that the OP-1 registration forms will remain in use until adoption of the unified on-line Federal registration system required by the ICCTA.


On May 3, 2001, the FMCSA published a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) at 66 FR 22371 (Attachment A) which proposed changes in its regulations to govern applications by Mexican carriers to operate beyond the United States-Mexico border municipalities and commercial zones to points within the U.S. The FMCSA also proposed to revise the application Form OP-1(MX) that would be filed by these Mexican motor carriers. The changes were needed to implement only part of the NAFTA.


On March 19, 2002, the FMCSA published an interim final rule (IFR) at 67 FR 12702 (Attachment B) which proposed to amend 49 CFR part 365 and revise Form OP-1(MX). Under the amended regulations, Mexico-domiciled motor carriers seeking to operate within the United States beyond the commercial border zones, including carriers that previously filed pending Form OP-1(MX) applications, would be required to submit the revised Form OP-1(MX). Under the revised Form OP-1(MX), the FMCSA would collect more detailed information on an applicant motor carrier’s size, operations and history than could be collected previously by using the existing form.


This information collection supports the DOT’s Strategic Goals of Safety and Economic Growth and Trade by allowing foreign motor carriers to conduct operations in the United States pursuant to the North American Free Trade Agreement, but requiring foreign (Mexican) motor carriers to comply with similar registration procedures as U.S. motor carriers to ensure safety on our Nation’s highways.


2. How, by whom, and for what purpose is the information used:


Data contained on the completed Forms OP-1, OP-1(P), OP-1(FF) or OP-1(MX) provides information to the FMCSA on the type of surface transportation operations which the registration applicant proposes to conduct. The forms also enable FMCSA staff to make a determination concerning the level of insurance coverage which the applicant will be required to obtain to maintain its registration, the applicant’s familiarity with relevant safety requirements and its willingness to comply with those requirements in its operations, and applicant’s ability to meet any specific statutory and regulatory requirements applicable to its particular proposed operations.


Information on the forms is also used to prepare a notice of the registration application, which is published in the FMCSA Register. Publication of the notice initiates a 10-day period during which an interested party may file a complaint seeking denial of the registration on a limited number of statutory grounds.


At the end of the 10-day period, the FMCSA will issue the registration authorizing surface transportation operations if no complaints have been filed; if applicant is willing and able to comply with all applicable statutory and regulatory provisions and safety fitness requirements; and if applicant has made the required insurance and process agent filings. In addition, the forms will enable the DOT to determine the applicants’ ability to meet specific statutory requirements applicable to its particular proposed operation. Also, DOT will follow-up with applicants to clarify information provided to DOT.


3. Extent of automated information collections:


Applicants for registration authority file forms in the OP-1 series on a voluntary and, for the most part, one-time basis. Except for the revised Form OP-1(MX), the forms call for a limited amount of information to identify the applicant and the nature and scope of its proposed operations. Form OP-1(MX) includes narrative descriptions of the applicant’s safety policies and procedures and information regarding the drivers and vehicles it plans to use in U.S. operations. It is anticipated that 80 percent (80%) of the responses will be collected electronically.


4. Efforts to identify duplication:


There are no similar filings made with any other Federal agency or within the Department of Transportation that would result in duplication of this information.


5. Efforts to minimize the burden on small businesses:


Paperwork burdens associated with completing most forms in the OP-1 series are minimal for small businesses, as the forms are easy to understand and complete. Most applicants are required only to check appropriate boxes on the forms and to fill in blank spaces with information on their identity and on the nature of the transportation operations and/or services they propose to register. This information is readily available to the applicants and is the minimum necessary to accomplish the purpose of the filing. Further, the application package contains a list of telephone numbers, which allow applicants to contact FMCSA staff and others to discuss any questions concerning the aspects of the application process and regulatory requirements. All of the OP forms can be filed electronically on the WEB. However, implementation of electronic transactions for the OP-1(MX) will be deferred until the U.S./Mexico borders are opened for business.


Mexican applicants, however, are required to provide additional safety information and certifications of compliance to demonstrate their willingness and ability to comply with applicable safety regulations. The requested information cannot be obtained from any other source since all Mexican applicants will be domiciled in Mexico, and we are requesting no more information than is absolutely necessary to ensure compliance with applicable safety regulations.


6. Impact of less frequent collection of information:


There is no requirement that forms in the OP-1 series be filed on a periodic basis. The forms are filed on an “as needed” and usually one-time basis. The purpose of the forms which is to allow transportation entities to meet statutory registration requirements, would be defeated if the information was collected less frequently.


When Mexican motor carriers who have previously filed an OP-1(MX) application form are required to comply with the registration provisions, they may do so by a one-time, re-filing of the revised form. There will be no $300 filing fee required for this one-time re-filing. All Mexican carriers will be required to report changes in basic identifying information, such as addresses and telephone numbers, through supplemental filings as the changes occur. The FMCSA does not require registrants to re-file the entire form in these circumstances. A new application form is currently required only if the carrier wishes to extend the scope of its authority or is applying for new authority. Under this proposal, where a Mexican carrier wishes to expand its authority, it must make an “initial filing” of the Form OP-1(MX) and go through the full application process to obtain the additional authority.


7. Special circumstances:


There are no special circumstances associated with this information collection.


8. Compliance with 5 CFR § 1320.8:

The DOT request OMB’s waiver on publication of a federal register notice.


9. Payments or gifts to respondents:


Respondents are not provided with any payment or gift for this information collection.



10. Assurance of confidentiality:


There is no assurance of confidentiality. The forms call for information identifying the applicant and the scope of its proposed operations. All registration applications filed with the FMCSA become part of a public docket and are open to the public for inspection and review.


11. Justification for collection of sensitive information:


The information requested and collected is not of a sensitive nature.


12. Estimate of burden hours for information requested:


This information collection currently covers all of the forms in the OP-1" series (OP-1, OP-1(FF), OP-1(P) and OP-1(MX)).


The FMCSA estimates that the Form OP-1(MX) takes approximately 4 hours to complete. The time required to complete an individual form will vary depending upon the applicant’s knowledge of the English language. Pursuant to Executive Order 13166, dated August 11, 2000, entitled “Improving Access to Services for Persons with Limited English Proficiency,” the FMCSA provides an English/Spanish version of the OP-1(MX) application form and instructions; however, the application must be completed in English.


The FMCSA estimates that 7,200 Mexican carriers are operating in the United States. The vast majority of these Mexican motor carriers currently operating in the United States have Form OP-2 authority that allow them to operate only within the municipalities and commercial zones of the U.S.-Mexico border. The agency estimates that half of the 7,200 Mexican carriers (or 3,600) operating in the U.S. will switch to Form OP-1(MX) authority, while the other half will continue operating within the border commercial zones pursuant to Form OP-2 authority. We assume that new carriers entering the industry will be more likely than current carriers to apply for OP-2 form authority, since most of the large carriers (who would presumably benefit from expanded U.S. operations) are already operating in the border commercial zones pursuant to Form OP-2 authority. While some new applicants may also want to take advantage of the opportunity to operate throughout the United States, many will not have the financial and administrative wherewithal or resources to benefit from the enlarged operations allowed by this NAFTA rule.


Approximately 2,800 Mexican carriers have filed a Form OP-2 annually over the last several years (and, about three-quarters of these have been granted). The FMCSA estimates no increase to this number of new Mexican motor carrier applicants in the foreseeable future, and extends this figure out to 8,400 [2,800 x 3 = 8,400] Mexican applicants over the next 3 years. Additionally, we estimate that three quarters (or 75 percent—6,300) of these new Mexican motor carrier applicants will apply for Form OP-2 authority, with one quarter (or 25 percent—2,100) requesting the expanded Form OP-1(MX) registration authority annually.


As this supporting statement relates to those Mexican motor carrier applicants requesting registration authority by filing Form OP-1(MX), we estimate that during the first year, half of the 7,200 Mexican carriers (or 3,600) currently operating in the U.S., plus 25 percent of the 2,800 new applicants (or 700) would make an “initial filing” of the revised Form OP-1(MX). For future years, the FMCSA estimates that approximately 25 percent of the 2,800 new Mexican applicants (or 700) would file an OP-1(MX) form.


For changes and updates, the agency anticipates that one-quarter of these 3,600 carriers (or 900) operating in the U.S. pursuant to the Form OP-1(MX) authority and one-quarter of the 700 new filings (or 175) seeking Form OP-1(MX) authority in the first year would have a need to file for changes and/or updates of their information on the OP-1(MX) forms. The FMCSA estimates that it would require applicants 30 minutes to fill out a form to request changes, and it would take the government one hour to process the form.


Therefore, the FMCSA estimates an adjusted burden hour calculation for completion of the Form OP-1(MX) as follows:


Mexican carrier re-filings or initial filings of the Form OP-1(MX)


50 percent of 7,200 carriers in 1st year (3,600) x 4 hours per form = 14,400

25 percent of 2,800 new applicants in 1st year (700) x 4 hours = 2,800

25 percent of 2,800 new applicants in future years (700) x 4 hours = 2,800


Total burden hours for revised Form OP-1(MX)/Year 1 = 17,200

Total burden hours for revised Form OP-1(MX)/Future Years = 2,800



Updates/Changes


¼ of 3,600 carriers filing in 1st year (900) x 30 min./60 min. = 450

¼ of 700 filings for new carriers in 1st year (175) x 30 min./60 min. = 88

¼ of 5,000 (3,600 + 700 + 700) filings in future years (1,250)

x 30 min./60 min. = 625


Total burden hours for updates/changes in 1st year = 538

Total burden hours for updates/changes in each future year = 625


Total Annual Number of Responses Year 1 = 21,262 [26,637 previously approved responses – (3,600 first year carriers + 700 first year new applicants re-filings/updates of OP-1(MX) Form)+ (900 first year carriers + 700 first year new applicants update/changes) = 21,262].


Thus, proposals in the IFR, when promulgated into a final rule, would result in a change to the total annual burden hours for this information collection as follows:



In the first year: 55,738 annual burden hours [38,000 (40,060 previously approved burden hours for OP-1 series forms – 2,060 previously approved burden hours for OP-1 (MX) = 38,000) + 17,738 (17,200 first year burden hours for Form OP-1 (MX) + 538 first year burden hours for updates/changes) = 55,738 + 130 burden hours for this emergency, temporary request will increase the total burden hours to 55, 868 (55,738 + 130). In subsequent years: 41,425 annual burden hours [38,000 + 2,800 + 625 = 41,425]


Although most applicants complete the OP-1 application forms themselves, some applicants seek assistance from “permitting” services, non-attorney practitioners, or attorneys. Without the necessary information on wages in the Mexican trucking industry, the FMCSA used several data sources to obtain it. Data from the World Bank show that the labor cost per worker in the manufacturing sector in Mexico from 1995 to 1999 was $7,607 per year. The comparable figure for the U.S. manufacturing sector was $28,907. The ratio of these 2 figures is 0.263, which can be used as an approximation of the ratio of Mexico to U.S. wages. Based on the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment Survey, the mean wage for managerial and administrative occupations in Standard Industrial Code (SIC) 42, which includes trucking companies, was $25.50, adding 33 percent to that to cover fringe benefits yields a U.S. wage of $33.92. Multiplying that figure by 0.263 results in an average Mexican wage (for those completing the Form OP-1(MX)) of $8.92, rounded to $9.00. Thus, the related salary costs for respondents to complete each Form OP-1(MX) in the first year is estimated to be $154,800 (17,200 x $9) in the first year; and $25,200 (2,800 x $9) in subsequent years.


Salary Costs


Total salary costs for all respondents associated with the completion of the revised Form OP-1(MX) are calculated as follows:


Mexican carrier re-filings or initial filings of the Form OP-1(MX)


In the first year, $154,800 total burden hours [17,200 to complete Form OP-1(MX) (14,400 + 2,800 = 17,200) x $9 hourly salary = $154,800]; and in subsequent years, $25,200 total burden hours [2,800 total hours to complete revised Form OP-1(MX) x $9 hourly salary = $25,200].


Updates/Changes


In the first year, $4,842 total burden hours [538 hours for updates/changes to the revised Form OP-1(MX) x $9 hourly salary = $ 4,842]; and in subsequent years, $5,625 total burden hours [625 hours for updates/changes to the revised Form OP-1(MX) x $9 hourly salary = $5,625 thereafter].

13. Estimate of total annual costs to respondent:


There is a registration filing fee of $300 for each applicant filing Form OP-1(MX). Each foreign applicant is required to submit a filing fee of $300 with each application package. Once the application is accepted, the fee is non-refundable even if the certificate of registration is not issued to the applicant. However, as the NPRM explains, the application fee will not apply to the one-time, re-filings by the 190 Mexican motor carriers who have previously filed an OP-1(MX) form, or U.S.-owned Mexico-domiciled carriers who currently operate beyond the border commercial zones and are not expanding their operations, or for requests to update and/or change the identifying information. The IFR adopted these requirements without change. Thus, the estimated, future annual costs to respondents to file the Form OP-1(MX) in the first year is $1,290,000 [$300 filing fee x 4,300 (3,600 re-filings + 700 initial filings of new applicants in the 1st year per year that have not previously filed a Form OP-1(MX)) = $1,290,000]. Estimated costs for filing for future years is $210,000 [700 new applicants in future years x $300 filing fee each = $210,000].


FMCSA anticipates that the costs for the remaining forms to remain fixed. Therefore, the estimated total annualized cost to the respondents is $7,299,000 [$1,290,000 cost to file Form OP-(MX) + $6,009,000 previously approved costs for filing remaining forms] = $7,299,000.


14. Estimate of cost to the Federal government:


The OP-1(MX) application forms are processed by Grade 9 Transportation Specialists at the Trans-Border Office. The average hourly salary of these employees is $22.00. The FMCSA estimates that each OP-1 form currently requires approximately 6.5 hours to process through to issuance of a certificate of registration. The FMCSA staff will now review the safety fitness and certifications information submitted with the Form OP-1(MX), which in turn will increase the handling of these applications by two hours, for a total of 8.5 hours. Thus, the estimated annual cost to the Federal government of processing each OP-1(MX) application form in the first year is approximately $804,100 [8.5 hours x $22 x 4,300 annual filings = $804,100]; and $148,750 [8.5 hours x $25 x 700 = $148,750] thereafter.


15. Explanation of program changes or adjustments:


The increase of 130 burden hours is to conduct a one-time independent evaluation of the safety performance of Mexican-domiciled trucks.


16. Publication of results of data collection:


This information collected is not intended for publication for statistical purposes.


17. Approval for not displaying the expiration data for OMB approval:


The FMCSA is not seeking approval to not display the expiration date of OMB approval of the information collection.


18. Exceptions to certification statement:


The FMCSA is claiming no exception to any element of the certification statement.


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File Typeapplication/msword
File TitleSUPPORTING STATEMENT
Authorkray
Last Modified Byherman.dogan
File Modified2008-07-16
File Created2008-07-16

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