SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD ISSUES NOTICE OF PROPOSED RULEMAKING TO ADDRESS MAJOR ISSUES IN RAIL RATE CASES

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 




-----------------------------***-----------------------------
>From the Surface Transportation Board, Washington, D.C.
-----------------------------***-----------------------------


The Surface Transportation Board announced that it has instituted a
rulemaking proceeding to address major issues regarding the proper
application of the stand-alone cost (SAC) test in rail rate cases and the
proper calculation of the floor for any rail rate relief.  Topics the
rulemaking will address are (1) alternatives to the percent reduction
method to determine maximum reasonable rates, (2) the allocation of revenue
from cross-over traffic, (3) forecasting future operating expenses of a
stand-alone railroad, (4) movement-specific adjustments to the Board’s
Uniform Railroad Costing System, (5) the time frame for the SAC analyses
and corresponding rate prescriptions, and (6) standards for reopening and
vacating a prior SAC decision.  The Board’s proposals on these issues –
described in detail in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking – are intended to
ensure that both the SAC test and the jurisdictional floor for rate relief
are applied fairly and in conformity with the Board’s statutory
responsibilities.  These issues go to the heart of the SAC test and have
industry-wide significance for rail carriers and their captive
shippers.  The Board seeks comment from all interested parties on the
proposed changes.

Because this rulemaking will affect pending SAC cases, the Board has set an
expedited schedule for this proceeding in the interest of fairness to the
parties in those cases.  All parties wishing to participate in the
rulemaking should file a notice of intent to participate with the
Board.  Comments on the proposals are due May 1, 2006, with a copy to be
served on all parties participating in this proceeding.  Reply comments are
due May 31, 2006, and final rebuttal comments are due June 30, 2006.

        The STB’s decision initiating the rulemaking in Major Issues in
Rail Rate Cases, STB Ex Parte No. 657 (Sub-No. 1) (
http://www.stb.dot.gov/decisions/readingroom.nsf/51d7c65c6f78e79385256541007f0580/d2192db687eff82a8525712200779aab?OpenDocument
 ), is available for viewing and downloading via the Boards website at
http://www.stb.dot.gov, under E-Library, then under Decisions & Notices,
beneath the date “2/27/06.”  A printed copy of the Board’s decision also is
available for a fee by contacting ASAP Document Solutions, 9332 Annapolis
Rd., Suite 103, Lanham, MD 20706, telephone (202) 306-4004, or via
asapdc@xxxxxxxxxxxx  A fact sheet is attached.

                                    ###

                                FACT SHEET

     Major Issues in Rail Rate Cases, STB Ex Parte No. 657 (Sub-No. 1)


The Board’s general standards for judging the reasonableness of rail
freight rates are set forth in Coal Rate Guidelines, Nationwide, 1 I.C.C.2d
520 (1985) (Guidelines), aff’d sub nom. Consolidated Rail Corp. v. United
States, 812 F.2d 1444 (3d Cir. 1987).  These guidelines adopt a set of
pricing principles known as “constrained market pricing” (CMP).  The
objectives of CMP can be simply stated.  A captive shipper should not be
required to pay more than is necessary for the carrier involved to earn
adequate revenues.  Nor should it pay more than is necessary for efficient
service.  And a captive shipper should not bear the cost of any facilities
or services from which it derives no benefit.  Most captive rail shippers
seek relief under CMP’s stand-alone cost (SAC) test.  The SAC test protects
a captive shipper from bearing costs of inefficiencies or from
cross-subsidizing other traffic by paying more than the revenue needed to
replicate rail service to a select subset of the carrier’s traffic base.  A
stand-alone railroad (SARR) is hypothesized that could serve the traffic at
issue if the rail industry were free of entry barriers.  Under the SAC
constraint, the rate at issue cannot be higher than what the SARR would
need to charge to serve the complaining shipper while fully covering all of
its costs, including a reasonable return on investment.



In this proceeding, the agency seeks comments on proposals it has developed
to address six issues that have been raised in recent SAC cases.  First,
the Board presents two alternatives to the “percent reduction” method to
determine maximum reasonable rates to address concerns that the existing
method can be unfairly manipulated by the railroads.  Second, the Board
proposes a new cost-based method for allocating revenue from “cross-over
traffic” to reflect economies of density.  Third, the Board proposes a
method for forecasting future operating expenses of a SARR that would
reflect anticipated future productivity gains.  Fourth, the Board proposes
to no longer permit movement-specific adjustments to the Board’s Uniform
Railroad Costing System (URCS) when calculating the 180%
revenue-to-variable cost jurisdictional floor for rate relief, as such
adjustments appear inconsistent with URCS, may distort the variable cost
calculation, and contribute inordinately to the complexity and expense of
rail rate cases.  Fifth, the Board proposes to shorten the time frame for
its SAC analyses and corresponding rate prescriptions from 20 years to 10
years.  Sixth, the Board proposes new standards for reopening and vacating
a prior Board decision (including any resulting rate prescription) that is
based on a SAC analysis.

These proposals are intended to ensure that both the SAC test and the
jurisdictional floor for rate relief are applied fairly and in conformity
with the agency’s statutory responsibilities.  Because the issues they
address go to the heart of the SAC test and have industry-wide significance
for rail carriers and their captive shippers, all interested parties are
invited to comment on these proposed changes.  Because these issues have
been raised or are implicated in the pending rail rate cases, the agency is
holding the pending rail rate cases in AEP Texas North Co. v. BNSF Ry., STB
Docket No. 41191 (Sub-No. 1), and Western Fuels Ass’n, et. al v. BNSF Ry.,
STB Docket No. 42088, in abeyance while it examines these important
issues.  The parties in those proceedings are asked to comment on whether
and to what extent it would be inequitable to apply the proposed changes to
their pending cases.


-----------------------------***-----------------------------
If you have received this e-mail in error or wish to unsubscribe from STB
News, please send an e-mail message to stbnewslistserver@xxxxxxxxxxx and
place "unsubscribe stbnews" as the body of the message.


[Index of Archives]     [Railroad Photos]     [NTSB]     [FAA]     [NSF]     [USDA]     [Yosemite]     [Steve's Art]     [SB Lupus]     [FDA News]

  Powered by Linux