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49
CFR Sec. 605.40
Reports and Information
The Administrator
may order any grantee or operator for the grantee, to file special or
separate reports setting forth information relating to any transportation
service rendered by such grantee or operator, in addition to any other
reports required by this part.
APPENDIX
A
Comptroller
General of the United States
Washington, D.C.
December 7, 1966
Dear
Mr. Wilson:
The enclosure with your letter of October 4, 1966, concerns the legality
of providing a grant under the Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964
to the City of San Diego, (City), California. The problem involved arises
in connection with the definition in subsection 9(d)(5) of the Act,
49 U.S.C. 1608(d)(5), excluding charter or sightseeing service from
the term 'mass transportation.'
It appears from the enclosure with your
letter that the City originally included in its grant application a
request for funds to purchase 8 buses designed for charter service.
Subsequently the City amended its application by deleting a request
for a portion of the funds attributable to the charter bus coaches.
However, in addition to the 8 specially designed charter buses initially
applied for, the City allegedly uses about 40 of its transit type buses
to a substantial extent for charter-type services. In light of these
factors surrounding the application by the City, the enclosure requests
our opinion with regard to the legality of grants under the Act as it
applies to certain matters (in effect questions), which are numbered
and quoted below and answered in the order presented.
Number
one:
'The grant of funds to a City to purchase
buses and equipment which are intended for substantial use in the general
charter bus business as well as in the Mass Transportation type business.'
The Urban Mass Transportation Act of 1964 does not
authorize grants to assist in the purchase of buses or other equipment
for any service other than urban mass transportation service. Section
3(a) of the Act limits the range of eligible facilities and equipment
to '* * * buses and other rolling stock, and other real or personal
property needed for an efficient and coordinated mass transportation
system.' In turn, 'mass transportation' is defined, in section 9(d)(5)
of the Act, specifically to exclude charter service. We are advised
by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) that under
these provisions, the Department has limited its grants to the purchase
of buses of types suitable to meet the needs of the particular kind
of urban mass transportation proposed to be furnished by the applicant.'
HUD
further advises that:
'One of the basic facts of urban mass
transportation operations is that the need for rolling stock is far
greater during the morning and evening rush hours on weekdays than at
any other time. For that reason, any system which has sufficient rolling
stock to meet the weekday rush-hour needs of its customers must have
a substantial amount of equipment standing idle at other times, as well
as drivers and other personnel being paid when there is little for them
to do. To relieve this inefficient and uneconomical situation, quite
a number of cities have offered incidental charter service using this
idle equipment and personnel during the hours when the same are not
needed for regularly scheduled runs. Among the cities so doing are Cleveland,
Pittsburgh, Alameda, Tacoma, Detroit and Dallas.
'Such service contributes to the success
of urban mass transportation operations by bringing in additional revenues
and providing full employment to drivers and other employees. It may
in some cases even reduce the need for Federal capital grant assistance.
'We do not consider that there is any
violation of either the letter or the spirit of the Act as a result
of such incidental use of buses in charter service. To guard against
abuses, every capital facilities grant contract made by this Department
contains the following provisions:
''Sec. 4. Use of Project Facilities and
Equipment - The Public Body agrees that the Project facilities and equipment
will be used for the provision of mass transportation service within
its urban area for the period of the useful life of such facilities
and equipment. . . . The Public Body further agrees that during the
useful life of the Project facilities and equipment it will submit to
HUD such financial statements and other data as may be deemed necessary
to assure compliance with this Section.' '
It is our view that grants may be made
to a city under section 3(a) of the Act to purchase buses needed by
the city for an efficient and coordinated mass transportation system,
even though the city may intend to use such buses for charter use when
the buses are not needed on regularly scheduled runs (i.e. for mass
transportation purposes) and would otherwise be idle.
Number
two:
'Whether a grant of such funds is proper
if charter bus use is incidental to mass public transportation operations.
If so, what is the definition of incidental use. '
We
are advised by HUD that under its legislative authority, it cannot and
does not take charter service requirements into consideration in any
way in evaluating the needs of a local mass transportation system for
buses or other equipment.
HUD
further advises that:
'However, as indicated above, we are of
the opinion that any lawful use of project equipment which does not
detract from or interfere with the urban mass transportation service
for which the equipment is needed would be deemed an incidental use
of such equipment, and that such use of project equipment is entirely
permissible under our legislation. What uses are in fact incidental,
under this test, can be determined only on a case-by-case basis.'
In view of what we stated above in answer
to the first question, the first part of question two is answered in
the affirmative.
As to the second part of the question,
in Security National Insurance Co. v. Secuoyah Marina, 246F.2d 830,
'incident' is defined as meaning 'that which appertains to something
else which is primary.' Thus, we cannot say HUD's definition of incidental
use as set forth above is unreasonable. Under the Act involved grants
may be made to purchase buses only if the buses are needed for an efficient
and coordinated mass transportation system. It would appear that if
buses are purchased in order to meet this need, and are, in fact, used
to meet such need, the use of such buses for charter service when not
needed for mass transportation services would, in effect, be an 'incidental
use,' insofar as pertinent here. In our opinion such incidental use
would not violate the provisions of the 1964 Act.
Number
three:
'The grant of funds for mass public transportation
purposes to a City which has expressed an intent to engage in the general
charter bus business when such funds would in effect constitute a subsidy
to the City of its intended charter bus operations; i.e. freeing Municipal
funds with which to purchase charter bus equipment.' Section
4(a) of the 1954 Act (49 U.S.C. 1603(a)) provides, in part, as follows:
'* * * The Administrator (now Secretary),
on the basis of engineering studies, studies of economic feasibility,
and data showing the nature and extent of expected utilization of the
facilities and equipment, shall estimate what portion of the cost of
a project to be assisted under section 1602 of this title cannot be
reasonably financed from revenues - which portion shall hereinafter
be called 'net project cost'. The Federal grant for such a project shall
not exceed two-thirds of the net project cost. The remainder of the
net project cost shall be provided, in cash, from sources other than
Federal funds
* * *.'
It is clear from the legislative history
of the Act involved that the 'revenues' to be considered are mass transportation
system revenues including any revenues from incidental charter operations.
There is nothing in the language of the Act which requires HUD to take
into account the status of the general funds of an applicant city in
determining how much capital grant assistance to extend to that city.
It should be noted that in a sense nearly
every capital grant to a city constitutes a partial subsidy of every
activity of the city which is supported by tax revenues, since it frees
tax revenues for such other uses.
Number
four:
'With specific reference to the application
of the City of San Diego for funds under its application to the Department
of Housing and Urban Development dated June 2, 1966, whether the Act
permits a grant to purchase equipment wherein 25 percent of such equipment
will be used either exclusively or substantially in the operation of
charter bus services.'
As to the City of San Diego's grant application,
we have been advised by HUD as follows:
'As explained above, the Act authorizes
assistance only for facilities to be used in mass transportation service.
We could not, therefore, assist San Diego in purchasing any equipment
to be used 'exclusively' in the operation of charter bus service. Furthermore,
as also explained above, assisted mass transportation equipment can
be used only incidentally for such charter services.
'Whether equipment used 'substantially'
in such service qualifies under this rule can be answered only in the
light of the specifics of the San Diego situation. We have already,
during our preliminary review of the City's application, disallowed
about $150,000 of the proposed project cost which was allocated to the
purchase of eight charter-type buses.
'The final application of the City of
San Diego is presently under active consideration by this Department.
In particular, we have requested the City to furnish additional information
as to the nature and extent of the proposed use, if any, of project
facilities and equipment in charter service, so that we can further
evaluate the application under the criteria above set forth. We have
also requested similar information from Mr. Fredrick J. Ruane, who has
filed a taxpayers' suit (Superior Court for San Diego County Civil 297329)
against the City, contesting its authority to engage in charter bus
operations.'
As indicated above, it is clear that under
the Act in question grants may not legally be made to purchase buses
to be used 'exclusively' in the operation of charter bus service. However,
in view of the purposes of the Act involved it is our opinion that a
city which has purchased with grant funds buses needed for an efficient
mass transportation system, is not precluded by the act from using such
buses for charter service during idle or off-peak periods when the buses
are not needed for regularly scheduled runs. As indicated above, such
a use would appear to be an incidental use. The fourth question is answered
accordingly.
As requested, the correspondence enclosed
with your letter is returned herewith.
Frank
H. Weitzel
Assistant Comptroller General of the United
States
Robert
E. Patricelli
Urban Mass Transportation Administrator
Enclosures:
The Honorable Bob Wilson
House of Representatives
March 29, 1976
INFLATIONARY
IMPACT STATEMENT FINAL REGULATIONS ON SCHOOL BUS OPERATIONS
I certify that, in accordance with Executive Order 11821, dated November
27, 1974, and Departmental implementing instructions, an Inflationary
Impact Statement is not required for final regulations on School Bus
Operations.
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