National Transit Database Reporting Changes and Clarifications
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Abstract
This notice provides information on proposed changes and clarifications to the National Transit Database (NTD) reporting requirements. Some of the proposed NTD changes would take effect beginning in NTD report year (RY) 2023 or 2024, which corresponds to an agency's fiscal year, while others would take effect in calendar year (CY) 2023.
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<title>Federal Register, Volume 87 Issue 129 (Thursday, July 7, 2022)</title>
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[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 129 (Thursday, July 7, 2022)]
[Notices]
[Pages 40582-40585]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [<a href="http://www.gpo.gov">www.gpo.gov</a>]
[FR Doc No: 2022-14502]
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DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Transit Administration
[Docket No. FTA-2022-0018]
National Transit Database Reporting Changes and Clarifications
AGENCY: Federal Transit Administration, Department of Transportation
(DOT).
ACTION: Notice; Request for comments.
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SUMMARY: This notice provides information on proposed changes and
clarifications to the National Transit Database (NTD) reporting
requirements. Some of the proposed NTD changes would take effect
beginning in NTD report year (RY) 2023 or 2024, which corresponds to an
agency's fiscal year, while others would take effect in calendar year
(CY) 2023.
DATES: Comments are due by September 6, 2022. The Federal Transit
Administration (FTA) will consider late comments to the extent
practicable.
ADDRESSES: You may file comments identified by docket number FTA-2022-
0018 by any of the following methods:
<bullet> Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to <a href="https://www.regulations.gov">https://www.regulations.gov</a> and follow the online instructions for submitting
comments.
<bullet> Mail: Send comments to Docket Management Facility; U.S.
Department of Transportation, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE, West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12-140, Washington, DC 20590-0001.
<bullet> Hand Delivery or Courier: West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12-140, 1200 New Jersey Ave. SE, between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. ET,
Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
<bullet> Fax: Fax comments to Docket Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, at (202) 493-2251.
Instructions: You must include the agency name (Federal Transit
Administration) and Docket Number (FTA-2022-0018) for this notice, at
the beginning of your comments. If sent by mail, submit two copies of
your comments.
Electronic Access and Filing: This document and all comments
received may be viewed online through the Federal eRulemaking portal at
<a href="http://www.regulations.gov">http://www.regulations.gov</a> or at the street address listed above.
Electronic submission, retrieval help, and guidelines are available on
the Federal eRulemaking portal website. The website is available 24
hours each day, 365 days a year. Please follow the instructions. An
electronic copy of this document may also be downloaded from the Office
of the Federal Register's home page at <a href="https://www.federalregister.gov">https://www.federalregister.gov</a>.
Privacy Act: Except as provided below, all comments received into
the docket will be made public in their entirety. The comments will be
searchable by the name of the individual submitting the comment (or
signing the comment, if submitted on behalf of an association,
business, labor union, etc.) You should not include information in your
comment that you do not want to be made public. You may review DOT's
complete Privacy Act Statement in the Federal Register published on
April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477-78) or at <a href="https://www.transportation.gov/privacy">https://www.transportation.gov/privacy</a>.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Thomas Coleman, National Transit
Database Program Manager, FTA Office of Budget and Policy, (202) 366-
5333, <a href="/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection#9de9f5f2f0fceeb3fef2f1f8f0fcf3ddf9f2e9b3faf2eb"><span class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="80f4e8efede1f3aee3efece5ede1eec0e4eff4aee7eff6">[email protected]</span></a>.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
A. Background and Overview
B. New Sample-Based Monthly Data (WE-20)
C. General Transit Feed Specification (GTFS)
D. Collecting Geospatial Data for Demand Response Modes
E. Emergency Contact Information
F. Vehicle Fuel Type
A. Background and Overview
The National Transit Database (NTD) was established by Congress to
be the Nation's primary source for information and statistics on the
transit systems of the United States. Recipients and beneficiaries of
Federal Transit Administration (FTA) grants under either the Urbanized
Area Formula Program (49 U.S.C. 5307) or Rural Area Formula Program (49
U.S.C. 5311) are required by law to report to the NTD. FTA grantees
that own, operate, or manage public transportation capital assets are
required to provide more limited reports to the NTD regarding Transit
Asset Management.
Pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 5334(k), FTA is seeking public comment on
five proposed NTD reporting changes and clarifications. These proposals
are based on changes to Federal transportation law made by the
Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, enacted as the Infrastructure Investment
and Jobs Act (Pub. L. 117-58) and based on input from the transit
industry. These proposed changes are not related to safety and security
(S&S) reporting, as FTA is proposing S&S changes in a separate Federal
Register notice. The information below describes anticipated reporting
impacts from each proposed change or clarification, as well as the
proposed effective date of each change. FTA seeks comments on the
proposed changes and clarifications described below. All impacts or
changes described below are proposed and subject to finalization in a
future notice.
B. New Sample-Based Monthly Data (WE-20)
During the recent COVID-19 pandemic, FTA found that it did not have
timely data on transit ridership or transit service levels that was
sufficient to inform decision-makers at the Federal, State, and local
levels during a rapidly changing crisis situation. To better understand
changes in the transit industry on a timely basis, FTA proposes to
collect additional data from a sample set of modal reports from across
the universe of full, reduced, tribal, and rural reporters on a new WE-
20 Form. The goal of the sample is to obtain a representative
nationwide snapshot of transit ridership and transit service levels.
The sampling methodology would use a stratified random sampling based
on region, mode, and other factors. FTA would then make sampling
adjustments as needed based on unavailable modes, reporters without
weekly data access, or other factors. Sampling may not be purely random
to ensure the accuracy of the nationwide estimate of ridership and
service levels. Therefore, NTD reporters with the largest service
levels nationally or regionally may be more likely to be selected
multiple times to ensure the accuracy of the nationwide estimate.
For the sampled modes, FTA proposes to collect four data points
once each month:
<bullet> Weekday 5-day unlinked passenger trip (UPT) total for the
reference week;
<bullet> Weekday 5-day vehicle revenue miles (VRM) total for the
reference week;
[[Page 40583]]
<bullet> Weekend 2-day unlinked passenger trip (UPT) total for
either the weekend preceding or following the reference week; and
<bullet> Weekend 2-day vehicle revenue miles (VRM) total for either
the weekend preceding or following the reference week.
Under this proposal, these data will be due three business days
after the last day of the reference week. In general, FTA is proposing
to designate the second full week of the month as the ``reference
week,'' unless the reference week contains a Federal holiday. FTA will
inform reporters for the selected modes of the precise dates of the
reference week at least three months in advance and will list the
precise dates of the reference week on the form. For example, the
reference week for July 2023 would cover July 10-16, and data for that
week would be due three business days later--by the end of the day on
July 19. FTA will also give three months advance notice about whether
FTA will require agencies to report UPT and VRM data for the weekend
preceding or the weekend following the reference week.
FTA proposes to require a sampled subset of approximately 400 NTD
reporters to report these data for at least one mode. FTA proposes that
sampled reporters remain constant for a period of three consecutive
calendar years after the effective date of the reporting requirement.
The reporting requirement effective date is proposed to be
approximately three months following the publication of the final
notice. For instance, if FTA publishes the final notice in February
2023, FTA estimates the reporting requirement would take effect around
May 2023. At this time, reporters would be asked to submit a week of
data for May 2023, as well as for the prior months in calendar year
2023 on a one-time basis (January 2023-April 2023). Subsequently,
reporters would be required to submit a week of data for May 2023 and
each month following. FTA would update the sampled group in 2026. FTA
proposes to identify which NTD reporters are part of the sample with at
least three months' notice.
FTA proposes that the reporting standard for the data on the WE-20
Form will be ``best available data.'' Best available data will depend
on the facts and circumstances and the extent of data available to each
agency. The data could be preliminary or minimally validated (e.g.,
non-zero). Furthermore, FTA understands that these data reports might
not be as complete as the agency's regular monthly NTD data reports and
might not be audited. These weekly data would not be used to ensure
alignment of annual report data totals as is currently done with
monthly data. These data for the reference week will not replace the
regular monthly report on the MR-20 form for full reporters.
C. General Transit Feed Specification (GTFS)
The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law amended 49 U.S.C. 5335(a) to
require FTA to collect ``geographic service area coverage'' data
through the NTD. Transit agencies across the country have made
significant progress in recent years to record and publish geographic
transit data in a consistent manner. Specifically, FTA estimates that
35% of NTD reporters have adopted the General Transit Feed
Specification (GTFS) standard. The GTFS specification significantly
increases the utility of transit service data, enabling current and
accurate snapshots of transit service that support mobile applications
such as mapping and routing services.
To implement this data collection requirement, and in light of the
existing widespread GTFS adoption, FTA proposes to require annual
submissions of static GTFS data to the NTD. In this notice, GTFS
standards refer to the May 9, 2022 version of GTFS, which are published
here: <a href="https://gtfs.org/reference/static#field-definitions">https://gtfs.org/reference/static#field-definitions</a>. At present,
NTD reporters voluntarily submit web links to GTFS datasets for the
National Transit Map (NTM). More information about the NTM can be found
here: <a href="https://www.bts.gov/national-transit-map/about">https://www.bts.gov/national-transit-map/about</a>.
FTA is proposing this requirement to enable consistent submissions
of geographic service area coverage data. FTA believes that GTFS is the
best way to collect geographic service area coverage data for fixed-
route service because it is already widely used and meets specific,
practical needs in communicating service information in a standardized
format. GTFS defines a common format for public transportation
schedules and associated geographic information. The standardized
specifications ensure data consistency and minimum requirements are met
and allows data from across the United States to be aggregated, used,
and analyzed in a consistent manner.
Mandatory Requirement
FTA is proposing to make GTFS reporting a mandatory requirement.
Under this proposal, NTD reporters with fixed route modes must create
and maintain a public domain GTFS dataset that reflects their fixed
route service. These NTD reporters must also maintain a web link from
which the GTFS dataset can be collected. Specifically, FTA proposes
that agencies create and host one or more web links containing their
GTFS data. Each web link must link to a compressed (.zip or `zip')
archive containing at least one copy of each of the required text files
listed below under GTFS Data Requirements, covering all fixed route
modes. If an agency demonstrates hosting a web link is not possible,
FTA will accept GTFS zip archive file submission by email. This
requirement would not apply to capital asset-only reporters.
FTA is proposing to implement this reporting requirement in two
parts. First, FTA is proposing that in RY 2023, applicable NTD
reporters will be required to establish and submit a web-hosted GTFS
dataset for their fixed route service. The dataset may have multiple
links, such as one per mode. All links must be persistent (i.e.,
static), machine readable, and not password protected. FTA expects this
to be a one-time requirement. Once an agency publishes the data, it can
be maintained in that form at the persistent web link for subsequent
reporting years.
Second, beginning in RY 2024, FTA is proposing that applicable NTD
reporters certify annually via the D-10 certification form that their
previously submitted web links are up to date. All fixed route service
changes must be reflected in the previous weblink with the GTFS
dataset. Specifically, if there are changes to fixed routes, the
reporter must update the GTFS dataset at the previously submitted web
link. FTA does not expect this to be a large administrative burden
because fixed route service changes are infrequent.
FTA is proposing that if a reporter cannot publish a GTFS dataset,
they must email their NTD analyst and explain why hosting a web link is
not possible. FTA is proposing that reporters that are unable to host a
web link to a GTFS dataset must submit their geographic service area
coverage data via alternative means, e.g., email. FTA expects the
majority of agencies will be able to web-host GTFS datasets via web
links that are persistent, machine readable, and not password
protected.
FTA is proposing that this new requirement apply to full reporters,
reduced reporters, tribal reporters, and rural reporters, but not
capital asset-only reporters. This requirement would apply only to
reporters that operate a fixed route mode. FTA is proposing that in
cases where an NTD reporter reports on behalf of multiple reporters
(such as a State for multiple rural reporters), the State will be
required to submit at least one unique link or compressed file per
unique NTD reporting ID (NTDID). If the
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NTDID has multiple GTFS links for multiple modes, the reporter may
submit these multiple links.
GTFS Data Requirements
GTFS ensures data consistency by establishing minimum requirements.
Specifically, GTFS requires that an overarching compressed file
contain, at a minimum, seven underlying text files: (a) Agency; (b)
Stops; (c) Routes; (d) Trips; (e) Stop Times; (f) Calendar or Calendar
Dates.txt; and (g) Feed Info.txt. An eighth file, Shapes.txt, is an
optional file, but it is recommended to make the files more useful for
geospatial mapping purposes. Additionally, within each file, some
fields are noted as ``optional.'' Optional fields are recommended in
the file(s) mentioned above since they improve the usefulness of the
datasets for data users.
Detailed information about the fields required for each of these
files is published here: <a href="https://gtfs.org/reference/static#field-definitions">https://gtfs.org/reference/static#field-definitions</a>.
Development Assistance
For transit systems that currently operate fixed route modes, but
lack existing web-hosted GTFS datasets, FTA will provide technical
assistance. Existing available technical assistance includes:
<bullet<ls-thn-eq> Free technical assistance instructions through
the National Rural Transit Assistance Program (RTAP) website: <a href="https://www.nationalrtap.org/Technology-Tools/GTFS-Builder">https://www.nationalrtap.org/Technology-Tools/GTFS-Builder</a>; and
<bullet<ls-thn-eq> Bureau of Transportation Statistics, National
Transit Map Frequently Asked Questions: <a href="https://www.bts.gov/national-transit-map/frequently-asked-questions">https://www.bts.gov/national-transit-map/frequently-asked-questions</a>. Reporters may also consider
partnering with a local college or university for technical assistance
in establishing a GTFS feed. Additionally, FTA is proposing that NTD
reporters can request a one-year waiver of this requirement with
documentation that they are seeking technical assistance for
establishing GTFS data, such as a plan with dates and milestones
demonstrating how the reporter will comply with the GTFS requirement.
Compliance
FTA is proposing to monitor compliance in two ways. First, FTA
proposes to periodically check that web links are viable and current,
reflecting fixed route service stops, routes, and schedules. Second, on
an annual basis, FTA proposes to ask reporters to confirm the accuracy
of their GTFS feeds as part of their annual kick-off task. The kick-off
is the NTD's system task which confirms information to create the
relevant reporting forms for the new fiscal year.
Phasing
FTA expects reporting burdens to vary depending on existing agency
data processes. NTD reporters are likely in three different phases of
offering GTFS data feeds. First, some NTD reporters already submit GTFS
data feeds voluntarily to the NTD. Second, some reporters have GTFS
feeds but have not submitted these feeds to the NTD. Third, some
reporters do not yet have GTFS feeds.
FTA anticipates the greatest challenges will be for those reporters
who do not have GTFS feeds yet, or States who currently report data on
their behalf (e.g., States for rural reporters). FTA has identified
some technical assistance resources to assist in the development of
GTFS feeds (listed above). FTA proposes that reporters will not have to
submit new GTFS data or required updates to the NTD until RY 2023. FTA
welcomes comments requesting technical assistance or describing
specific barriers or issues related to developing or submitting GTFS
data.
Upon publication, all GTFS data submitted to the NTD will enter the
public domain.
D. Collecting Geospatial Data for Demand Response Modes
FTA proposes that beginning in RY 2023 certain demand response
modes must report geospatial data to the NTD. FTA will begin collecting
these data to implement the new requirement that FTA collect geographic
service area coverage data. FTA is proposing that this new requirement
apply to full, reduced, tribal, and rural reporters, but not capital
asset-only reporters. FTA is proposing to collect geospatial data for
non-fixed routes using a new NTD form. FTA is proposing to collect
these data annually through the questions shown below:
(1) Do you serve residents in another State besides your State?
(2) Select the Counties that you serve, either in whole or in part,
where you pick up residents for a new trip origination.
(3) Select Census `Places' served in these counties; indicate
whether these Places (e.g., Township) are served, and whether these
Places are partially or wholly served.
(4) Is your demand response service intended to meet the Americans
with Disabilities Act (ADA) complementary paratransit requirements for
a fixed route system?
(5) If yes to #4, is your service area limited to the ADA
complementary paratransit distance for:
a. Your own NTD Reporter ID; or
b. Select all those that are not your NTD Reporter ID.
(6) Within your service area, do you have different passenger
eligibility requirements or different terms and conditions of service?
(7) How many days per week do you operate?
(8) For each day of the week, what are your hours of operation, and
is your service open to:
(a) Only those persons found eligible for complementary paratransit
under the ADA through your local eligibility process?
(b) Another specific segment of the population defined by age or
disability?
(c) The general population?
(9) What is the minimum advanced reservation time for your service?
Select days or hours.
(10) What is the fare charged?
FTA is proposing to begin asking these questions on a new form
beginning in RY 2023.
E. Emergency Contact Information
At present, the NTD requires that each organization submit
organizational contact information on the P-10 form. The P-10 collects
details such as organization name, address, and website. FTA proposes
that beginning in RY 2023, FTA will also collect the organization's
emergency contact information on the P-10 form. This emergency contact
does not have to be the same person as someone with an existing NTD
system role. FTA proposes to use this emergency contact information to
facilitate communication between FTA and the reporter during
emergencies. Maintaining a current emergency point of contact (POC)
will allow FTA to quickly send updated relevant information to the
right contact and ensure communication before, during, and after the
emergency event.
FTA proposes that the emergency contact be someone affiliated with
emergency preparedness or response functions. This includes an
emergency liaison officer, a facility or building emergency response
team member, or a person with similar job functions. This person must
be the individual at an agency that is the FTA POC in the event of an
emergency. The agency will be asked to certify the accuracy of this
information on their annual kick-off task.
F. Vehicle Fuel Type
The Bipartisan Infrastructure Law provides historic investments
towards
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converting the Nation's transit fleet to zero-emission and low-emission
vehicles. Currently, FTA collects vehicle fuel type only from full and
reduced reporters on the A-30 form. Tribal, rural, and capital asset-
only reporters do not report fuel type on the A-30 form. In order to
track implementation of zero-emission and low-emission vehicles funded
by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, FTA is proposing to add a
question to the A-30 form for rural, tribal, and capital asset-only
reporters about fuel type. FTA proposes to apply this change beginning
in RY 2023.
Nuria I. Fernandez,
Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2022-14502 Filed 7-6-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-57-P
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</html>This is legal information, not legal advice. Laws vary by jurisdiction and change frequently. Always verify current law with official sources and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice on your specific situation.