[DOCID:172481tx-47]
From the Government Manual Online via GPO Access
[wais.access.gpo.gov]
[Page 401-437]
[[Page 401]]
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590
Phone, 202-366-4000
SECRETARY OF TRANSPORTATION Rodney E. Slater
Chief of Staff (vacancy)
Deputy Chief of Staff Jacqueline Lowey
White House Liaison Frances T. Greenberg
Special Assistant to the Secretary Jeffrey P. Morales
Deputy Secretary Mortimer L. Downey
Director of Drug and Alcohol Policy Mary Bernstein
and Compliance
Associate Deputy Secretary and Director, Office Michael P. Huerta
of Intermodalism
Deputy Director Richard M. Biter
Director, Executive Secretariat Jeanne Smith, Acting
Chairman, Board of Contract Appeals Thaddeus V. Ware
Director of Civil Rights (vacancy)
Director of Small and Disadvantaged Business Luz A. Hopewell
Utilization
Director of Intelligence and Security Rear Adm. Paul J.
Pluta, USCG
Chief Information Officer Michael P. Huerta,
Acting
Inspector General Joyce N. Fleischman,
Acting
Associate Deputy Inspector General Raymond J. DeCarli
Senior Counsel to the Inspector Roger P. Williams
General
Assistant Inspector General for Lawrence H. Weintrob
Auditing
Deputy Assistant Inspector General (vacancy)
for Auditing
Assistant Inspector General for Wilbur L. Daniels
Evaluations
Deputy Assistant Inspector General Darren L. Murphy
for Evaluations
Assistant Inspector General for Todd J. Zinser
Investigations
Deputy Assistant Inspector General Donald L. Wiseman
for Investigations
Director of Administration Patricia J. Thompson
General Counsel Nancy E. McFadden
Deputy General Counsel Rosalind A. Knapp
Special Counsels Diane R. Liff, Steven
R. Okun
Assistant General Counsel for Roberta D. Gabel
Environmental, Civil Rights,
and General Law
Deputy Assistants James R. Dann, David
K. Tochen
Patent Counsel Otto M. Wildensteiner
Chief, Freedom of Information Act Dorothy A. Chambers
Division
Assistant General Counsel for Donald H. Horn
International Law
Deputy Assistant Joseph A. Brooks
Assistant General Counsel for Paul M. Geier
Litigation
Deputy Assistant Dale C. Andrews
Assistant General Counsel for Thomas W. Herlihy
Legislation
[[Page 402]]
Deputy Assistant Clare R. Donelan
Assistant General Counsel for Neil R. Eisner
Regulation and Enforcement
Deputy Assistant Robert C. Ashby
Chairman, Board for Correction of Robert H. Joost
Military Records
Deputy Chairman Dorothy J. Ulmer
Assistant General Counsel for Samuel Podberesky
Aviation Enforcement and
Proceedings
Deputy Assistant Dayton Lehman, Jr.
Assistant Director for Aviation Hoyte B. Decker, Jr.
Consumer Protection
Assistant Secretary for Transportation Policy Frank E. Kruesi
Deputy Assistant Secretaries Joseph F. Canny, John
N. Lieber
Director of Environment, Energy, and Donald R. Trilling
Safety
Director of Economics (vacancy)
Assistant Secretary for Aviation and Charles A. Hunnicutt
International Affairs
Deputy Assistant Secretaries Patrick V. Murphy, Jr.
Mark L. Gerchick
Director of International Bernard Gaillard
Transportation and Trade
Director of International Aviation Paul Gretch
Director of Aviation Analysis John Coleman
Director of Aviation and James Craun
International Economics
Assistant Secretary for Budget and Programs and Louise Frankel Stoll
Chief Financial Officer
Deputy Assistant Secretary Peter J. Basso
Deputy Chief Financial Officer David K. Kleinberg
Director of Budget and Program Beverly Pheto
Performance
Director of Financial Management Eileen T. Powell
Assistant Secretary for Administration Melissa J.
Spillenkothen
Director of Human Resource Glenda M. Tate
Management
Director of Security and Lee A. Privett, Acting
Administrative Management
Director of Acquisition and Grant David J. Litman
Management
Director of Hearings Roy J. Maurer
Assistant Secretary for Governmental Affairs Steven O. Palmer
Deputy Assistant Secretary John C. Horsley
Director of Congressional Affairs Peter G. Halpin
Director of Intergovernmental Barbara M. Leach
Affairs
Assistant to the Secretary and Director of Steven J. Akey
Public Affairs
Deputy Director of Public Affairs William H. Schulz
Director, Transportation Administrative Service George C. Fields
Center
Principal, Customer Service Patricia Parrish
Principal, Business Support Ed Hansen, Acting
Principal, Worklife Wellness Linda Rhoads
Principal, Headquarters Building Janet Kraus
Management
Principal, Learning and Development Frederica Burnett
[[Page 403]]
Principal, Space Management Eugene Spruill, Acting
Principal, Security Operations Jeff Johns
Principal, Information Services Patricia Prosperi
Principal, Systems Development Richard Chapman,
Acting
Principal, Information Technology Richard Chapman
Operations
Principal, Acquisition Services Richard Lieber
Principal, Human Resource Services Terry Smith
UNITED STATES COAST GUARD
2100 Second Street SE., Washington, DC 20593-0001
Phone, 202-267-2229
Commandant Adm. Robert E. Kramek,
USCG
Vice Commandant Vice Adm. Richard D.
Herr, USCG
Chaplain Capt. Skip E.
Blancett, USCG
International Affairs Director/ Gerard P. Yoest
Foreign Policy Adviser
Chief Administrative Law Judge Joseph N. Ingolia
Chairman, Marine Safety Council Rear Adm. Paul M.
Blaney, USCG
Chief, Congressional Affairs Staff Capt. Jeffrey J.
Hathaway, USCG
Chief, Public Affairs Staff Capt. Warren G.
Schneeweis,
USCG
Chief of Staff Vice Adm. James M.
Loy, USCG
Deputy Chief of Staff Capt. David Belz, USCG
Director of Resources Rear Adm. Thad W.
Allen, USCG
Director of Finance and Procurement William H. Campbell
Assistant Commandant for Acquisition Rear Adm. Paul E.
Busick, USCG
Assistant Commandant for Systems Rear Adm. John T.
Tozzi, USCG
Chief, Office of Civil Rights Walter R. Somerville
Medical Adviser to the Commandant and Director Rear Adm. Joyce M.
of Health and Safety Johnson, USPHS
Chief Counsel Rear Adm. Paul M.
Blaney, USCG
Assistant Commandant for Marine Safety Rear Adm. Robert C.
North, USCG
Assistant Commandant for Operations Rear Adm. Ernest R.
Riutta, USCG
Assistant Commandant for Human Resources Rear Adm. Gerald F.
Woolever, USCG
Director of Personnel Management Rear Adm. Gordon G.
Piche, USCG
Director of Reserve and Training Rear Adm. Thomas J.
Barrett, USCG
Director of Information and Technology Rear Adm. George N.
Naccara, USCG
FEDERAL AVIATION ADMINISTRATION
800 Independence Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20591
Phone, 202-366-4000
Administrator Barry L. Valentine,
Acting
Deputy Administrator Monte R. Belger,
Acting
[[Page 404]]
Associate Administrator for Airports Susan L. Kurland
Deputy Associate Administrator for Quentin S. Taylor
Airports
Director of Airport Planning and Paul L. Galis
Programming
Director of Airport Safety and David L. Bennett
Standards
Chief Counsel Nicholas Garaufis
Associate Administrator for Civil Aviation Cathal L. Flynn
Security
Director of Civil Aviation Security Patrick McDonnell
Intelligence
Director of Civil Aviation Security Bruce R. Butterworth
Operations
Director of Civil Aviation Security Anthony Fainberg
Policy and Planning
Assistant Administrator for Civil Rights Fanny Rivera
Associate Administrator for Commercial Space Patti Grace Smith,
Transportation Acting
Assistant Administrator for Government and Bradley Mims
Industry Affairs
Assistant Administrator for Policy, Planning, Barry L. Valentine
and International Aviation
Deputy Assistant Administrator for Policy Louise E. Maillett
Planning and International Aviation
Director of Aviation Policy and John M. Rodgers
Plans
Director of Environment and Energy James B. Erickson
Director of International Aviation Joan W. Bauerlein
Assistant Administrator for Public Affairs Eliot Brenner
Assistant Administrator for System Safety Christopher A. Hart
Associate Administrator for Administration Edwin A. Verburg
Deputy Associate Administrator for Ruth A. Leverenz,
Administration Acting
Director of Financial Services Joel C. Taub, Acting
Director of Business Information Lawrence Covington
Director of Human Resource Kay Frances Dolan
Management
Associate Administrator for Regulation and Guy S. Gardner
Certification
Deputy Associate Administrator for Peggy M. Gilligan
Regulation and Certification
Federal Air Surgeon Jon L. Jordan, M.D.
Director of Accident Investigation David F. Thomas
Director, Aircraft Certification Thomas E. McSweeney
Service
Director, Flight Standards Service Thomas C. Accardi
Director of Rulemaking Joseph A. Hawkins
Associate Administrator for Air Traffic Services Monte R. Belger
Deputy Associate Administrator for Darlene M. Freeman
Air Traffic Services
Director, Air Traffic Service Ronald E. Morgan
Director, Air Traffic System Neil R. Planzer
Requirements Service
Director, Airway Facilities Service Stanley Rivers
Director of System Capacity and Carl Schellenberg
Requirements
Director of Independent Operational A. Martin Phillips
Test and Evaluation
[[Page 405]]
Associate Administrator for Research and George L. Donohue
Acquisitions
Deputy Associate Administrator for Dennis DeGaetano
Research and Acquisitions
Director of Acquisitions Gilbert B. Devey
Director of Air Traffic Systems Edward E. Seymour
Development
Director of Aviation Research Andres Zellweger
Director of Communication, Loni Czekalski
Navigation, and Surveillance
Systems
Director of System Architecture and Steven Zaidman
Investment Analysis
Director of Information Technology Theron A. Gray
FEDERAL HIGHWAY ADMINISTRATION
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590
Phone, 202-366-0660
Administrator Jane F. Garvey, Acting
Deputy Administrator Jane F. Garvey
Executive Director Anthony R. Kane
Chief Counsel Jerry L. Malone
Deputy Chief Counsel Edward V.A. Kussy
Director of External Communications (vacancy)
Director of Civil Rights Edward W. Morris, Jr.
Director of Program Quality Coordination Fred J. Hempel
Director of Intelligent Transportation Systems Christine M. Johnson
Joint Program Office
Associate Administrator for Policy Gloria J. Jeff
Director of Policy Development Madeleine S. Bloom
Director of Highway Information Gary E. Maring
Management
Director of International Programs King W. Gee
Associate Administrator for Research and Robert J. Betsold
Development
Director of Engineering, Research, Charles J. Nemmers
and Development
Director of Safety and Traffic A. George Ostensen
Operations Research and
Development
Director of Research and Development Robert J. Kreklau
Operations and Support
Associate Administrator for Program Development Thomas J. Ptak
Director of Engineering Gerald L. Eller
Director of Environment and Planning Kevin E. Heanue
Director of Real Estate Services Barbara K. Orski
Associate Administrator for Safety and System Dennis C. Judycki
Applications
Director of Highway Safety Michael F. Trentacoste
Director of Traffic Management and Susan B. Lauffer
Intelligent Transportation
Systems Applications
Director of Technology Applications Joseph S. Toole
Director of the National Highway Moges Ayele
Institute
Associate Administrator for Motor Carriers George L. Reagle
[[Page 406]]
Director of Motor Carrier Research Paul L. Brennan
and Standards
Director of Motor Carrier John F. Grimm
Information Analysis
Director of Motor Carrier Planning Jill L. Hochman
and Customer Liaison
Director of Motor Carrier Field Clinton O. Magby
Operations
Director of Motor Carrier Safety and Rose McMurray
Technology
Associate Administrator for Administration George S. Moore, Jr.
Deputy Associate Administrator for Diana L. Zeidel
Administration
Director of Personnel and Training Jerry A. Hawkins
Director of Information and Michael J. Vecchietti
Management Services
Director of Budget and Finance Frederick G. Wright
Director of Acquisition Management Diana L. Zeidel
Federal Lands Highway Program Administrator Thomas O. Edick
FEDERAL RAILROAD ADMINISTRATION
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590
Phone, 202-366-4000
Administrator Jolene M. Molitoris
Deputy Administrator Donald M. Itzkoff
Chief of Staff Robert C. Land
Director, Office of Civil Rights Miles S. Washington,
Jr.
Director, Office of Public Affairs David Bolger
Chief Counsel S. Mark Lindsey
Deputy Chief Counsel Michael T. Haley
Assistant Chief Counsel, General Law Robert S. Vermut
Division
Assistant Chief Counsel, Safety Law Daniel C. Smith
Division
Associate Administrator for Administration and Ray Rogers
Finance
Director, Office of Human Resources (vacancy)
Director, Office of Information Marie S. Savoy
Technology and Support
Systems
Director, Office of Acquisition and Elaine C. Duke
Grants Services
Director, Office of Financial Gerald Schoenauer
Services
Director, Office of Budget Kathryn B. Murphy
Associate Administrator for Policy and Program (vacancy)
Development
Deputy Associate Administrator for Jane H. Bachner
Industry and Intermodal
Policy
Deputy Associate Administrator for Raphael Kedar
Policy Systems
Associate Administrator for Safety Bruce Fine
Deputy Associate Administrators for Grady C. Cothen
Safety, Standards and
Program Development
Deputy Associate Administrator for (vacancy)
Safety Compliance and
Program Implementation
[[Page 407]]
Director, Office of Safety Assurance Edward R. English
and Compliance
Director, Office of Safety Analysis John G. Leeds
Associate Administrator for Railroad Development James T. McQueen
Deputy Associate Administrator for Arrigo Mongini
Railroad Development
Director, Office of Passenger and Arrigo Mongini, Acting
Freight Services
Director, Northeast Corridor Program Michael Saunders
Director, Office of Research and Steven R. Ditmeyer
Development
DOT Contact, Transportation Test Gunars Spons
Center, Pueblo, CO
NATIONAL HIGHWAY TRAFFIC SAFETY ADMINISTRATION
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590
Phone, 202-366-9550
Administrator Ricardo Martinez, M.D.
Deputy Administrator Philip R. Recht
Executive Director Donald C. Bischoff
Director, Executive Correspondence Linda Divelbiss
Chief Counsel John Womack, Acting
Director, Office of Civil Rights George B. Quick
Director, Office of Public and Consumer Affairs (vacancy)
Director, Office of International Harmonization Frank Turpin
Director, Office of Intergovernmental Affairs (vacancy)
Associate Administrator for Plans and Policy William H. Walsh, Jr.
Director, Office of Strategic and (vacancy)
Program Planning
Director, Office of Regulatory (vacancy)
Analysis and Evaluation
Director, Office of Fiscal Services Richard Rough
Associate Administrator for Safety Performance L. Robert Shelton
Standards
Director, Office of Crashworthiness James Hackney
Standards
Director, Office of Crash Avoidance Steven R. Kratzke,
Standards Acting
Director, Office of Planning and Noble N. Bowie
Consumer Programs
Associate Administrator for Research and Ralph J. Hitchcock,
Development Acting
Director, Office of Crash Avoidance Joseph N. Kanianthra
Research
Director, Office of Crashworthiness Ralph J. Hitchcock
Research
Director, Vehicle Research and Test Michael Monk
Center
Director, National Center for Patricia P. Breslin
Statistics and Analysis
Associate Administrator for Safety Assurance Kenneth Weinstein,
Acting
Director, Office of Defects Kathleen DeMeter
Investigation
Director, Office of Vehicle Safety Marilynne E. Jacobs
Compliance
[[Page 408]]
Associate Administrator for Traffic Safety James Hedlund
Programs
Director, Office of Communications Susan G. McLaughlin
and Outreach
Director, Office of Research and James Nichols
Traffic Records
Director, Office of Traffic Injury Marilena Amoni
Controls Program
Associate Administrator for State and Community Adele Derby
Services
Chief, Program Implementation Staff Rita Weiss
Chief, Program Support Staff Marlene Markinson
Associate Administrator for Administration Herman L. Simms
Director, Office of Human Resources Pamela K. Wise
Director, Office of Contracts and Linda Boor
Procurement
Director, Office of Information Joseph Cassell
Resource Management
FEDERAL TRANSIT ADMINISTRATION
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590
Phone, 202-366-4043
Administrator Gordon J. Linton
Deputy Administrator Hiram Walker, Acting
Chief Counsel Patrick W. Reilly
Director, Office of Civil Rights Arthur A. Lopez
Director, Office of Public Affairs Bruce C. Frame
Associate Administrator for Budget and Policy John W. Spencer,
Acting
Associate Administrator for Program Management Janet L. Sahaj, Acting
Associate Administrator for Research, Edward L. Thomas
Demonstration, and Innovation
Associate Administrator for Administration Dorrie Y. Aldrich
MARITIME ADMINISTRATION
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590
Phone, 202-366-5807
Administrator Albert J. Herberger
Deputy Administrator (vacancy)
Deputy Administrator for Inland Waterways and John E. Graykowski
Great Lakes
Director of Congressional and Public Affairs Sharon K. Brooks
Chief Counsel Joan M. Bondareff
Deputy Chief Counsel Robert J. Patton, Jr.
Secretary, Maritime Administration/Maritime Joel C. Richard
Subsidy Board
Coordinator of Research and Paul B. Mentz
Development
Director, Office of Maritime Labor, Training, Taylor E. Jones II
and Safety
Associate Administrator for Administration John L. Mann, Jr.
Director, Office of Management Ralph W. Ferguson
Services
Director, Office of Budget Thomas R. Bruneel
[[Page 409]]
Director, Office of Accounting John G. Hoban
Director, Office of Information Ralph W. Ferguson,
Resources Management Acting
Director, Office of Personnel Sherry D. Gilson
Director, Office of Acquisition Timothy P. Roark
Associate Administrator for Policy and Bruce J. Carlton
International Trade
Director, Office of Policy and Plans Ellen L. Heup
Director, Office of International James A. Treichel
Activities
Director, Office of Statistical and William B. Ebersold
Economic Analysis
Associate Administrator for Ship Financial James J. Zok
Assistance and Cargo Preference
Director, Office of Ship Financing Mitchell D. Lax
Director, Office of Costs and Rates Michael P. Ferris
Director, Office of Subsidy and Edmond J. Fitzgerald
Insurance
Director, Office of Financial Richard J. McDonnell
Approvals
Director, Office of Cargo Preference Thomas W. Harrelson
Associate Administrator for National Security James E. Caponiti
Director, Office of Ship Operations Michael Delpercio, Jr.
Director, Office of National Thomas M.P.
Security Plans Christensen
Director, Office of Sealift Support Raymond R. Barberesi
Associate Administrator for Shipbuilding and (vacancy)
Technology Development
Director, Office of Ship Edwin B. Schimler
Construction
Director, Office of Shipyard Joseph A. Byrne
Revitalization
Associate Administrator for Port, Intermodal, Margaret D. Blum
and Environmental Activities
Deputy Associate Administrator for Carmine P. Gerace
Port, Intermodal, and
Environmental Activities
Director, Office of Intermodal Richard L. Walker
Development
Director, Office of Environmental Michael C. Carter
Activities
Director, Office of Ports and John M. Pisani
Domestic Shipping
Director, North Atlantic Region Robert McKeon
Director, Great Lakes Region Alpha H. Ames, Jr.
Director, Central Region John W. Carnes
Director, South Atlantic Region Mayank Jain
Director, Western Region Francis X. Johnston
Superintendent, United States Merchant Marine Thomas T. Matteson
Academy
SAINT LAWRENCE SEAWAY DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
Washington Office: 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590
Phone, 202-366-0091; 800-785-2779
Administrator Gail C. McDonald
Deputy Administrator David G. Sanders
Director of Congressional and Public Ginger Vuich
Affairs
Director of Marketing Stephen J. Rybicki
Director of Development and Robert J. Lewis
Logistics
Chief Counsel Marc Owen
[[Page 410]]
Massena Office: 180 Andrews Street, Massena, NY 13662
Phone, 315-764-3200
Associate Administrator Erman J. Cocci
Director of Finance Edward Margosian
Director of Engineering and Stephen C. Hung
Strategic Planning
Director of Lock Operations Carol A. Fenton
Director of Maintenance and Marine Peter A. Bashaw
Services
Director of Administration Mary Ann Hazel
RESEARCH AND SPECIAL PROGRAMS ADMINISTRATION
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590
Phone, 202-366-4433
Administrator D.K. Sharma
Deputy Administrator Kelley S. Coyner
Special Assistant Patricia Carroll
Chief Counsel Judith S. Kaleta
Director, Office of Civil Rights (vacancy)
Director, Office of Policy and Program Support William E. Vincent
Director, Office of Emergency Transportation (vacancy)
Director, Volpe National Transportation Systems Richard R. John
Center
Associate Administrator for Management and Jerry Franklin
Administration
Associate Administrator for Pipeline Safety Richard B. Felder
Associate Administrator for Hazardous Materials Alan I. Roberts
Safety
Associate Administrator for Research, Fenton Carey
Technology, and Analysis
Director, Office of Research Policy (vacancy)
and Technology Transfer
Director, Office of University (vacancy)
Research and Education
Director, Transportation Safety H. Aldridge Gillespie
Institute
BUREAU OF TRANSPORTATION STATISTICS
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590
Phone, 202-366-DATA
Director T.R. Lakshmanan
Deputy Director Robert A. Knisely
Associate Director, Transportation Studies Rolf R. Schmitt
Associate Director, Statistical Programs and Philip N. Fulton
Services
Assistant Director, Geographic Information Bruce D. Spear
Services
Assistant Director, Information Technology Robert C. Zarnetske,
Center Acting
Administrative Officer Lorelei S. Evans
Director, Office of Airline Information Timothy E. Carmody
Chief, Regulations Division M. Clay Moritz
[[Page 411]]
Chief, Data Administration Division Donald W. Bright
Chief, Automated Data Processing Charles K. Bradford
Services Division
SURFACE TRANSPORTATION BOARD
1925 K Street NW., Washington, DC 20423-0001
Phone, 202-565-1674
Chairman Linda J. Morgan
Vice Chairman Gus A. Owen
Board Member (vacancy)
Staff Offices:
Director, Office of Economics, Environmental Leland L. Gardner
Analysis, and Administration
General Counsel Henri F. Rush
Secretary Vernon A. Williams
Director, Office of Compliance and Enforcement Melvin F. Clemens, Jr.
Director, Office of Congressional and External Richard S. Fitzsimmons
Affairs
Director, Office of Proceedings David M. Konschnik
Director, Office of Public Services Dan G. King
[For the Department of Transportation statement of organization, see the
Code of Federal Regulations, Title 49, Part 1, Subpart A]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
The U.S. Department of Transportation establishes the Nation's overall
transportation policy. Under its umbrella there are 10 administrations
whose jurisdictions include highway planning, development, and
construction; urban mass transit; railroads; aviation; and the safety of
waterways, ports, highways, and oil and gas pipelines. Decisions made by
the Department in conjunction with the appropriate State and local
officials strongly affect other programs such as land planning, energy
conservation, scarce resource utilization, and technological change.
The Department of Transportation (DOT) was established by act of October
15, 1966, as amended (49 U.S.C. 102 and 102 note), ``to assure the
coordinated, effective administration of the transportation programs of
the Federal Government'' and to develop ``national transportation
policies and programs conducive to the provision of fast, safe,
efficient, and convenient transportation at the lowest cost consistent
therewith.'' It became operational in April 1967 and was comprised of
elements transferred from eight other major departments and agencies. It
presently consists of the Office of the Secretary and 10 operating
administrations whose heads report directly to the Secretary and who
have highly decentralized authority.
Office of the Secretary of Transportation
[For the Office of the Secretary of Transportation statement of
organization, see the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 49, Part 1,
Subpart B]
The Department of Transportation is administered by the Secretary of
Transportation, who is the principal adviser to the President in all
matters relating to Federal transportation programs. The Secretary is
assisted in the administration of the Department by a Deputy Secretary
of Transportation, a Associate Deputy Secretary, the Assistant
Secretaries, a General Counsel, the Inspector General, and several
Directors and Chairmen. Areas where public purposes are widely served
are detailed on the following pages.
[[Page 412]]
<GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT>
[[Page 413]]
Aviation and International Affairs The Office of the Assistant
Secretary for Aviation and International Affairs has principal
responsibility for the development, review, and coordination of policy
for international transportation, and for development, coordination, and
implementation of policy relating to economic regulation of the airline
industry. The Office:
--licenses U.S. and foreign carriers to serve in international air
transportation and conducts carrier fitness determinations;
--develops policies to support the Department in aviation and
maritime multilateral and bilateral negotiations with foreign
governments and participates on the U.S. negotiating delegations;
--develops policies on a wide range of international transportation
and trade matters;
--furnishes guidance to the United States Trade Representative's
Trade Policy Committee in efforts to improve the U.S. balance of
payments;
--arranges and coordinates cooperative agreements with foreign
governments for the exchange of state-of-the-art scientific and
technical information;
--provides assistance to the Agency for International Development's
transportation programs in developing countries;
--participates on the U.S.-Saudi Arabian Joint Commission for
Economic Cooperation;
--processes and resolves complaints concerning unfair competitive
practices in international fares and rates;
--establishes international and intra-Alaska mail rates; and
--determines the disposition of requests for approval and
immunization from the antitrust laws of international aviation
agreements.
The Office also administers the essential air service program, which
involves:
--establishing appropriate subsidy levels for subsidized carriers;
--processing applications to terminate, suspend, or reduce air
service below the defined essential level;
--determining which carrier among various applicants should be
selected to provide subsidized service; and
--continuously reviewing essential air service definitions for each
community.
For further information, call 202-366-4551.
Civil Rights The Office of Civil Rights advises the Secretary on civil
rights and equal opportunity matters. It assures full and affirmative
implementation of civil rights and equal opportunity precepts within the
Department in all official actions, including departmental employment
practices, services rendered to the public, operation of federally
assisted activities, and other programs and efforts involving
departmental assistance, participation, or endorsement. It is also
responsible for adjudicating appeals and other dispositions relating to
denials of disadvantaged business enterprise certification by a
transportation financial assistance recipient, including investigating
third-party challenges and issuing final administrative decisions.
For further information, call 202-366-4648.
Contract Appeals The Board conducts hearings and issues final decisions
in appeals from contracting officer decisions under contracts awarded by
the Department and its constituent administrations in accordance with
the Contract Disputes Act of 1978 (41 U.S.C. 601); sits as the Contract
Adjustment Board with plenary authority to grant extraordinary
contractual relief under Public Law 85-804 (50 U.S.C. 1431); and hears
and decides all contractor debarment cases pursuant to 41 CFR 12-1.604-1
(1984). Judges are designated as hearing officers to hear cases arising
as a result of suspensions and debarments of participants in DOT
financial assistance programs and perform such other adjudicatory
functions assigned by the Secretary not inconsistent with the duties and
[[Page 414]]
responsibilities of the Board as set forth in the Contract Disputes Act
of 1978.
For further information, contact the Board of Contract Appeals,
Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC
20590. Phone, 202-366-4305.
Drug and Alcohol Policy and Compliance The Office ensures that the
national and international drug and alcohol policies and goals of the
Secretary are developed and carried out in a consistent, efficient, and
effective manner within the transportation industries. The Office
provides expert advice, counsel, and recommendations to the Secretary
regarding drugs and alcohol as it pertains to the Department of
Transportation and testing within the transportation industry. The
Director of the Office serves as the principal Department liaison with
the Office of National Drug Control Policy, the Department of Health and
Human Services, and other executive branch agencies concerning demand
reduction activities and workplace substance abuse programs.
For further information, contact the Office of Drug and Alcohol Policy
and Compliance. Phone, 202-366-3784.
Intelligence and Security The Office advises the Secretary on domestic
and international intelligence and security matters; coordinates the
development and implementation of long-term strategic plans, information
management systems, and integrated research and development programs
affecting the security of traveling public and of cargo; serves as the
focal point in the Department for intelligence and security policy; and
provides oversight of transportation security and intelligence programs.
For further information, contact the Office of Intelligence and
Security. Phone, 202-366-6525.
Intermodalism The mission of the Office is to help the transportation
community achieve the connections and choices they would like to see in
their transportation systems by providing departmental leadership and
coordination in developing intermodal transportation solutions that move
people and goods in an energy-efficient manner, provide the foundation
for improved productivity growth, strengthen the Nation's ability to
compete in the global economy, and obtain the optimum yield from the
Nation's transportation resources. The Office:
--serves as the Department's principal adviser and advocate for
intermodal transportation;
--coordinates Federal intermodal transportation policy and initiates
policies to promote efficient intermodal transportation;
--provides technical assistance to States and metropolitan planning
organizations in large metropolitan areas that facilitates their
collection of intermodal data and assists in intermodal planning;
--coordinates Federal research on intermodal transportation in
accordance with section 6009(b) of the Intermodal Surface Transportation
Efficiency Act of 1991 (ISTEA), including additional research needs
identified by the Director;
--reviews State-generated intermodal management systems to ensure
continued progress towards improving and integrating modal
transportation systems, where appropriate; and
--coordinates miscellaneous DOT intermodal issues as required by
ISTEA and/or as raised by the Secretary and the modal agencies.
Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization The Office provides policy
direction and Department goals for small, minority, women-owned, and
small disadvantaged business participation in the Department's
procurement and Federal financial assistance activities. It also
monitors and evaluates accomplishment of these goals.
The Minority Business Resource Center offers a Short Term Lending
Program, under which lines of credit up to $500,000 are available at
prime interest rates to finance accounts receivable, and a Bonding
Assistance Program which enables firms to obtain bid, performance, and
payment bonds of up to $1,000,000 per contract in support of
transportation-related contracts. Other
[[Page 415]]
program initiatives provide technical and educational assistance,
outreach, and information dissemination involving partnerships with
chambers of commerce and trade associations, historically black colleges
and universities, and Hispanic-serving institutions. The Center also
operates a National Information Clearinghouse.
For further information, call 202-366-1930 or 800-532-1169 (toll-free).
Internet, http://www.dot.gov/dotinfo/ost/osdbu/.
Transportation Policy The Office of the Assistant Secretary for
Transportation Policy has principal responsibility for analysis,
development, articulation, and review of policies and plans for all
modes of transportation. The Office:
--develops, coordinates, and evaluates public policy related to the
transportation industries, and maintains policy and economic oversight
of regulatory programs and legislative initiatives of the Department;
--reviews transportation matters involving the public and private
sectors, analyzes current and emerging transportation policy issues, and
assesses their economic and institutional implications;
--leads the Department in the development of transportation policies
and ensures that departmental actions and programs comprise a coherent
and coordinated strategy leading to an effectively functioning
integrated national transportation system;
--provides departmental policy leadership and coordination on
safety, energy, and environmental initiatives which affect air, surface,
marine, and pipeline transportation; and
--provides leadership on questions involving the financing of
transportation infrastructure projects, and provides economic analyses
of new transportation technologies.
The Assistant Secretary chairs the DOT Position/Navigation Executive
Committee and serves on the Global Positioning System Executive Board
with DOD. In addition, he represents the Department on the President's
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation.
United States Coast Guard
The Coast Guard, established by act of January 28, 1915 (14 U.S.C. 1),
became a component of the Department of Transportation on April 1, 1967,
pursuant to the Department of Transportation Act of October 15, 1966 (49
U.S.C. app. 1651 note). The Coast Guard is a branch of the Armed Forces
of the United States at all times and is a service within the Department
of Transportation except when operating as part of the Navy in time of
war or when the President directs.
The predecessor of the Coast Guard, the Revenue Marine, was
established in 1790 as a Federal maritime law enforcement agency. Many
other major responsibilities have since been added.
Activities
Aids to Navigation The Coast Guard establishes and maintains the U.S.
aids to navigation system that includes lights, buoys, daybeacons, fog
signals, marine radiobeacons, racons, and long-range radionavigation
aids. Long-range radionavigation aids include loran-C and the Global
Positioning System (GPS) and its augmentations such as Differential GPS.
Aids are established in or adjacent to waters subject to the
jurisdiction of the United States. These aids are intended to assist a
navigator to determine a position or plot a safe course or to warn the
navigator of dangers or obstructions to navigation. Other functions
related to navigation aids include broadcasting marine information and
publishing Local Notice to Mariners and Light Lists.
[[Page 416]]
Information regarding navigational aids is available electronically.
Phone (modem), 703-313-5900. Internet, http://www.navcen.uscg.mil/.
For further information, call 202-267-0980.
Boating Safety The Coast Guard develops and directs a national boating
safety program aimed at making the operation of small craft in U.S.
waters both pleasurable and safe. This is accomplished by establishing
uniform safety standards for recreational boats and associated
equipment; encouraging State efforts through a grant-in-aid and liaison
program; coordinating public education and information programs;
administering the Coast Guard Auxiliary; and enforcing compliance with
Federal laws and regulations relative to safe use and safety equipment
requirements for small boats.
For further information, call 202-267-1077.
Bridge Administration The Coast Guard administers the statutes
regulating the construction, maintenance, and operation of bridges and
causeways across the navigable waters of the United States to provide
for safe navigation through and under bridges.
For further information, call 202-267-0368.
Coast Guard Auxiliary The Auxiliary is a nonmilitary volunteer
organization of private citizens who own small boats, aircraft, or radio
stations. Auxiliary members assist the Coast Guard by conducting boating
education programs, patrolling marine regattas, participating in search
and rescue operations, and conducting courtesy marine examinations.
For further information, call 202-267-0982.
Deepwater Ports Under the provisions of the Deepwater Port Act of 1974
(33 U.S.C. 1501), the Coast Guard administers a licensing and regulatory
program governing the construction, ownership (international aspects),
and operation of deepwater ports on the high seas to transfer oil from
tankers to shore.
For further information, call 202-267-0495.
Ice Operations The Coast Guard operates the Nation's icebreaking
vessels (icebreakers and ice-capable cutters), supported by aircraft,
for ice reconnaissance, to facilitate maritime transportation and aid in
prevention of flooding in domestic waters. Additionally, icebreakers
support logistics to U.S. polar installations and also support
scientific research in Arctic and Antarctic waters.
For further information, call 202-267-1456.
Marine Environmental Response The Coast Guard is responsible for
enforcing the Federal Water Pollution Control Act (33 U.S.C. 1251) and
various other laws relating to the protection of the marine environment.
Program objectives are to ensure that public health and welfare and the
environment are protected when spills occur. Under these laws, U.S. and
foreign vessels are prohibited from using U.S. waters unless they have
insurance or other guarantees that potential pollution liability for
cleanup and damages will be met.
Other functions include providing a National Response Center to
receive reports of oil and hazardous substance spills, investigating
spills, initiating subsequent civil penalty actions when warranted,
encouraging and monitoring responsible party cleanups, and when
necessary, coordinating federally funded spill response operations. The
program also provides a National Strike Force to assist Federal On-Scene
Coordinators in responding to pollution incidents.
For further information, call 202-267-0518.
Marine Inspection The Coast Guard is charged with formulating,
administering, and enforcing various safety standards for the design,
construction, equipment, and maintenance of commercial vessels of the
United States and offshore structures on the Outer Continental Shelf.
The program includes enforcement of safety standards on foreign vessels
subject to U.S. jurisdiction.
Investigations are conducted of reported marine accidents,
casualties, violations of law and regulations, misconduct, negligence,
and
[[Page 417]]
incompetence occurring on commercial vessels subject to U.S.
jurisdiction. Surveillance operations and boardings are conducted to
detect violations of law and regulations. The program also functions to
facilitate marine transportation by admeasuring and administering the
vessel documentation laws.
For further information, call 202-267-1464.
Marine Licensing The Coast Guard administers a system for evaluating
and licensing of U.S. Merchant Marine personnel. This program develops
safe manning standards for commercial vessels. The Coast Guard also
maintains oversight and approval authority for the numerous mariner
training programs.
For further information, call 703-235-1951.
Marine Safety Council The Marine Safety Council acts as a deliberative
body to consider proposed Coast Guard regulations and to provide a forum
for the consideration of related problems.
For further information, call 202-267-1477.
Maritime Law Enforcement The Coast Guard is the primary maritime law
enforcement agency for the United States. It enforces or assists in the
enforcement of applicable Federal laws and treaties and other
international agreements to which the United States is party, on, over,
and under the high seas and waters subject to the jurisdiction of the
United States, and may conduct investigations into suspected violations
of such laws and international agreements. The Coast Guard works with
other Federal agencies in the enforcement of such laws as they pertain
to the protection of living and nonliving resources and in the
suppression of smuggling and illicit drug trafficking.
For further information, call 202-267-1890.
Military Readiness As required by law, the Coast Guard maintains a
state of readiness to function as a specialized service in the Navy in
time of war, or as directed by the President. Coastal and harbor
defense, including port security, are the most important military tasks
assigned to the Coast Guard in times of national crisis.
For further information, call 202-267-2025.
Port Safety and Security This program is administered by the Coast
Guard Captains of the Port. The Coast Guard is authorized to enforce
rules and regulations governing the safety and security of ports and
anchorages, and the movement of vessels and prevention of pollution in
U.S. waters. Port safety and security functions include supervising
cargo transfer operations, both storage and stowage, conducting harbor
patrols and waterfront facility inspections, establishing security zones
as required, and the control of vessel movement.
For further information, call 202-267-0495.
Reserve Training The Coast Guard Reserve provides qualified individuals
and trained units for active duty in time of war or national emergency
and at such other times as the national security requires. In addition
to its role in national defense, the Reserve augments the active service
in the performance of peacetime missions during domestic emergencies and
during routine and peak operations.
For further information, call 202-267-1240.
Search and Rescue The Coast Guard maintains a system of rescue vessels,
aircraft, and communications facilities to carry out its function of
saving life and property in and over the high seas and the navigable
waters of the United States. This function includes flood relief and
removing hazards to navigation.
For further information, call 202-267-1943.
Waterways Management The Coast Guard has a significant role in the safe
and orderly passage of cargo, people, and vessels on our nation's
waterways. It has established Vessel Traffic Services in six major ports
to provide for the safe movement of vessels at all times, but
particularly during hazardous conditions, restricted visibility, or bad
weather. The program's goal is to ensure the safe, efficient flow of
commerce. The Coast
[[Page 418]]
Guard also regulates the installation of equipment necessary for vessel
safety.
For further information, call 202-267-0407.
District and Field Organizations--United States Coast Guard
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Organization Address Commander Telephone
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Atlantic Area 431 Crawford St., Portsmouth, VA 23704- Vice Adm. Roger T. Rufe, USCG 757-398-6287
5004
Maintenance and 300 Main St. Twr., Norfolk, VA 23510 Rear Adm. Edward J. Barrett, 757-628-4275
Logistics Command- USCG
Atlantic
1st District 408 Atlantic Ave., Boston, MA 02110-3350 Rear Adm. Richard M. Larrabee 617-223-8480
III, USCG
7th District Rm. 944, 909 SE. 1st Ave., Miami, FL 33131- Rear Adm. Norman T. Saunders, 305-536-5654
3050 USCG
8th District 501 Magazine St., New Orleans, LA 70130- Rear Adm. Timothy W. Josiah, 504-589-6298
3396 USCG
9th District 1240 E. 9th St., Cleveland, OH 44199-2060 Rear Adm. John F. McGowan, USCG 216-522-3910
Pacific Area Coast Guard Island, Alameda, CA 94501-5100 Vice Adm. James C. Card, USCG 510-437-3196
Maintenance and Coast Guard Island, Alameda, CA 94501-5100 Rear Adm. Fred L. Ames, USCG 510-437-3939
Logistics Command-
Pacific
13th District 915 2d Ave., Seattle, WA 98174-1067 Rear Adm. J. David Spade, USCG 206-220-7090
14th District 9th Fl., 300 Ala Moana Blvd., Honolulu, HI Rear Adm. Thomas H. Collins, 808-541-2051
96850-4982 USCG
17th District P.O. Box 25517, Juneau, AK 99802-1217 Rear Adm. Terry M. Cross, USCG 907-463-2025
U.S. Coast Guard New London, CT 06320-4195 Rear Adm. Douglas H. Teeson, 203-444-8285
Academy USCG
National Pollution Suite 1000, 4200 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, Daniel F. Sheehan 703-235-4700
Funds Center VA 22203-1804
Coast Guard 2100 2d St. SW., Washington, DC 20593-0001 Capt. Thomas B. Taylor, USCG 202-267-2321
Personnel Command
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For further information, contact the Information Office, United States
Coast Guard, Department of Transportation, 2100 Second Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20593. Phone, 202-267-2229. Internet, http://
www.uscg.mil/.
Federal Aviation Administration
The Federal Aviation Administration, formerly the Federal Aviation
Agency, was established by the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 (49 U.S.C.
106) and became a component of the Department of Transportation in 1967
pursuant to the Department of Transportation Act (49 U.S.C. app. 1651
note).
The Administration is charged with:
--regulating air commerce in ways that best promote its development
and safety and fulfill the requirements of national defense;
--controlling the use of navigable airspace of the United States and
regulating both civil and military operations in such airspace in the
interest of safety and efficiency;
--encouraging and developing civil aeronautics;
--consolidating research and development with respect to air
navigation facilities;
--installing and operating air navigation facilities;
--developing and operating a common system of air traffic control
and navigation for both civil and military aircraft;
--developing and implementing programs and regulations to control
aircraft noise, sonic boom, and other
[[Page 419]]
environmental effects of civil aviation; and
--regulating U.S. commercial space transportation.
Activities
Air Navigation Facilities The agency is responsible for the location,
construction or installation, maintenance, operation, and quality
assurance of Federal visual and electronic aids to air navigation. The
agency operates and maintains voice/data communications equipment, radar
facilities, computer systems, and visual display equipment at flight
service stations, airport traffic control towers, and air route traffic
control centers.
Airport Programs The agency maintains a national plan of airport
requirements, administers a grant program for development of public use
airports to assure and improve safety and to meet current and future
airport capacity needs, evaluates the environmental impacts of airport
development, and administers an airport noise compatibility program with
the goal of reducing noncompatible uses around airports. It also
develops standards and technical guidance on airport planning, design,
safety, and operations and provides grants to assist public agencies in
airport system and master planning and airport development and
improvement.
Airspace and Air Traffic Management The safe and efficient utilization
of the navigable airspace is a primary objective of the agency. To meet
this objective, it operates a network of airport traffic control towers,
air route traffic control centers, and flight service stations. It
develops air traffic rules and regulations and allocates the use of the
airspace. It also provides for the security control of air traffic to
meet national defense requirements.
Civil Aviation Abroad Under the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 and the
International Aviation Facilities Act (49 U.S.C. app. 1151), the agency
promotes aviation safety and civil aviation abroad by exchanging
aeronautical information with foreign aviation authorities; certifying
foreign repair stations, airmen, and mechanics; negotiating bilateral
airworthiness agreements to facilitate the import and export of aircraft
and components; and providing technical assistance and training in all
areas of the agency's expertise. It provides technical representation at
international conferences, including participation in the International
Civil Aviation Organization and other international organizations.
Commercial Space Transportation The agency regulates and promotes the
U.S. commercial space transportation industry. It licenses the private
sector launching of space payloads on expendable launch vehicles and
commercial space launch facilities. It also sets insurance requirements
for the protection of persons and property and ensures that space
transportation activities comply with U.S. domestic and foreign policy.
Registration and Recordation The agency provides a system for the
registration of aircraft and recording of documents affecting title or
interest in the aircraft, aircraft engines, propellers, appliances, and
spare parts.
Research, Engineering, and Development The research, engineering, and
development activities of the agency are directed toward providing the
systems, procedures, facilities, and devices needed for a safe and
efficient system of air navigation and air traffic control to meet the
needs of civil aviation and the air defense system. The agency also
performs an aeromedical research function to apply knowledge gained from
its research program and the work of others to the safety and promotion
of civil aviation and the health, safety, and efficiency of agency
employees. The agency also supports development and testing of improved
aircraft, engines, propellers, and appliances.
Safety Regulation The Administration issues and enforces rules,
regulations, and minimum standards relating to the manufacture,
operation, and maintenance of aircraft, as well as the rating and
certification (including
[[Page 420]]
medical) of airmen and the certification of airports serving air
carriers.
The agency performs flight inspection of air navigation facilities
in the U.S. and, as required, abroad. It also enforces regulations under
the Hazardous Materials Transportation Act (49 U.S.C. app. 1801 note)
applicable to shipments by air.
Test and Evaluation The agency conducts tests and evaluations of
specified items such as aviation systems, subsystems, equipment,
devices, materials, concepts, or procedures at any phase in the cycle of
their development from conception to acceptance and implementation, as
well as assigned independent testing at key decision points.
Other Programs The agency administers the aviation insurance and
aircraft loan guarantee programs. It is an allotting agency under the
Defense Materials System with respect to priorities and allocation for
civil aircraft and civil aviation operations. The agency develops
specifications for the preparation of aeronautical charts. It publishes
current information on airways and airport service and issues technical
publications for the improvement of safety in flight, airport planning
and design, and other aeronautical activities. It serves as the
executive administration for the operation and maintenance of the
Department of Transportation automated payroll and personnel systems.
Major Field Organizations--Federal Aviation Administration
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Region/Field Office Address Administrator/Director
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Alaskan--AK P.O. Box 14, 701 C St., Anchorage, AK 99513 Andrew S. Billick
Central--IA, KS, MO, NE 601 E. 12th St., Kansas City, MO 64106 John E. Turner
Eastern--DE, MD, MA, NJ, NY, PA, Federal Bldg., JFK International Airport, Arlene B. Feldman
VA, WV Jamaica, NY 11430
Great Lakes--IL, IN, MI, MN, ND, 2300 E. Devon Ave., Des Plaines, IL 60018 Cecilia Hunziker
OH, SD, WI
New England--CT, MA, ME, NH, RI, 12 New England Executive Park, Burlington, Robert Bartanowicz
VT MA 01803
Northwest Mountain--CO, ID, MT, 1601 Lind Ave. SW., Renton, WA 98055 Larry Andriesen
OR, UT, WA, WY
Southern--AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, P.O. Box 20636, Atlanta, GA 30320 Carolyn C. Blum
NC, PR, SC, TN
Southwest--AR, LA, NM, OK, TX Fort Worth, TX 76193-0001 Clyde M. DeHart
Western-Pacific--AZ, CA, HI, NV P.O. Box 92007, Los Angeles, CA 90009 William C. Withycombe
Europe, Africa, and Middle East 15, Rue de la Loi B-1040, Brussels, Belgium Patrick N. Poe
Asia-Pacific U.S. Embassy, FAA, Singapore Eugene Ross Hamory
Latin America-Caribbean Miami International Airport, Miami FL Joaquin Archilla
William J. Hughes Technical Atlantic City, NJ 08405 Anne Harlan
Center
Mike Monroney Aeronautical P.O. Box 25082, Oklahoma City, OK 73125 Lindy Ritz
Center
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For further information, contact the Office of Public Affairs, Federal
Aviation Administration, Department of Transportation, 800 Independence
Avenue SW., Washington, DC 20591. Phone, 202-267-8521. Fax, 202-267-
5039.
Federal Highway Administration
The Federal Highway Administration became a component of the Department
of Transportation in 1967 pursuant to the Department of Transportation
Act (49 U.S.C. app. 1651 note). It administers the highway
transportation programs of the Department of Transportation under Title
23 U.S.C., other pertinent legislation, and the provisions of law cited
in section 6(a) of the act (49 U.S.C. 104).
The Administration encompasses highway transportation in its
broadest scope, seeking to coordinate highways with other modes of
transportation to achieve the most effective balance of transportation
systems and facilities under cohesive Federal transportation policies
pursuant to the act.
[[Page 421]]
Activities
Federal-Aid Highway Program The Administration manages the Federal-aid
highway program of financial assistance to the States for planning,
constructing, and improving highways and their operation. This program
provides for the improvement of approximately 159,000 miles of the
National Highway System (NHS), which includes the approximately 42,795-
mile Dwight D. Eisenhower System of Interstate and Defense Highways and
other public roads (except those classified as local or rural minor
collectors). The Interstate System's construction and preservation is
financed generally on a 90-percent Federal, 10-percent State basis.
However, projects not on the Interstate System and most projects on
other roads are funded on an 80-percent Federal, 20-percent State basis.
A new, more flexible assistance program, the Surface Transportation
Program (STP), may be used by the States and local authorities for any
roads (including NHS) that are not functionally classified as local or
rural minor collectors. Fifty percent of STP funds must be used in
metropolitan areas containing an urbanized population over 200,000. Ten
percent of STP funds are set aside for transportation enhancement
activities, which include bicycle and pedestrian facilities, scenic
enhancements, historic preservation, and mitigation of water pollution
due to highway runoff.
The Administration is also responsible for the Highway Bridge
Replacement and Rehabilitation Program to assist in the inspection,
analysis, and rehabilitation or replacement of bridges on public roads.
In addition, it administers an emergency relief program to assist in the
repair or reconstruction of Federal-aid highways and certain Federal
roads that have suffered serious damage by natural disasters over a wide
area or catastrophic failures.
The Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement (CMAQ) program
provides funding to assist nonattainment and maintenance areas, as
defined under the Clean Air Act, to help achieve healthful levels of air
quality. Transportation improvement projects and programs which reduce
transportation-related emissions are eligible for funding under the
major categories of transit, shared-ride, traffic flow improvements,
demand management, pedestrian/bicycle, inspection/maintenance, and
experimental pilot projects.
A metropolitan and statewide planning program is administered
jointly with the Federal Transit Administration for the purpose of
strengthening the transportation decision process and ensuring that
transportation investments address other key issues in metropolitan and
State areas, including development, land use, social, economic, and
environmental impacts. Metropolitan planning organizations are supported
by a one percent share of the funds authorized for the NHS, STP, CMAQ,
and Interstate Maintenance and Bridge programs. Statewide planning,
conducted by State departments of transportation, is supported by 2
percent of the major highway programs.
Funds are also available to State revenue agencies for enforcement
of highway use taxes, and to State and local governments and public
authorities for projects involving market-based approaches to congestion
management.
Highway Safety Programs The Administration is responsible for several
highway-related safety programs, including a State and community safety
program jointly administered with NHTSA and a highway safety
construction program to eliminate road hazards and improve rail/highway
crossing safety. These safety construction programs fund activities that
remove, relocate, or shield roadside obstacles, identify and correct
hazardous locations, eliminate or reduce hazards at railroad grade
crossings, and improve signing, pavement markings, and signalization.
Motor Carrier Programs Under the provisions of the Surface
Transportation Assistance Act of 1982 (23 U.S.C. 101), the
Administration was authorized to establish and maintain a National
Network for trucks, review State truck size and weight enforcement
programs, and assist in obtaining uniformity among
[[Page 422]]
the States in the area of commercial motor carrier registration and
taxation reporting.
The Administration works cooperatively with States and private
industry to achieve uniform motor carrier requirements in safety
regulations, inspections and fines, licensing, registration and taxation
requirements, and accident data. It provides grants to States for
technical assistance, training, and equipment associated with
participation in the International Registration Plan and the
International Fuel Tax Agreement.
Under the authority of the motor carrier safety provisions of title
49 of the United States Code, the agency exercises Federal regulatory
jurisdiction over the safety performance of all commercial motor
carriers engaged in interstate or foreign commerce. It deals with more
than 330,000 carriers and approximately 36,000 shippers of hazardous
materials. Reviews are conducted at the carrier's facilities to
determine the safety performance of the carrier's over-the-road
operations. These reviews may lead to prosecution or other sanctions
against violators of the Federal motor carrier safety regulations or the
hazardous materials transportation regulations.
The Commercial Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 1986 (49 U.S.C. app. 2701
note) authorizes the Administration to establish national standards for
a single commercial vehicle driver license for State issuance; a
national information system clearinghouse for commercial driver license
information; knowledge and skills tests for licensing commercial vehicle
drivers; and disqualification of drivers for serious traffic offenses,
including alcohol and drug abuse. The agency has responsibility for
administering the Motor Carrier Safety Assistance Program, a partnership
agreement between the Federal Government and the States, under the
provisions of sections 401-404 of the Surface Transportation Assistance
Act of 1982 (49 U.S.C. app. 2301-2304).
In fiscal year 1995, States performed 1.8 million roadside
inspections and decommissioned over 400,000 vehicles and 143,000 drivers
for safety regulation violations.
Federal Lands Highway Program The Administration, through cooperative
agreements with Federal land managing agencies, administers a
coordinated Federal lands program relating to forest highways, public
lands highways, park roads and parkways, and Indian reservation roads.
This program provides for the funding of more than 80,000 miles of
federally owned roads or public authority-owned roads that are open for
public travel and serve Federal lands. In addition, the agency's Federal
Lands Highway Office administers the Defense Access Road Program, funded
by the Department of Defense, for State and local roads providing access
to military installations. The Office and three field divisions provide
for program coordination and administration, and conduct transportation
planning, engineering studies, design, construction engineering
assistance, and construction contract administration.
Research and Technology The Administration coordinates varied research,
development, and technology transfer activities consisting of six
principal programs: Intelligent Transportation Systems, Highway Research
and Development, Long-Term Pavement Performance, Technology
Applications, Local Technical Assistance, and the National Highway
Institute.
Through its National Highway Institute (NHI), the Administration
develops and administers, in cooperation with State highway agencies,
instructional training programs designed for public sector employees,
private citizens, and foreign nationals engaged in highway work of
interest to the United States. NHI is headquarters for the Pan American
Institute of Highways, which is a program designed to provide training
and technology transfer to Latin American countries. NHI works closely
with universities through the Dwight David Eisenhower Transportation
Fellowship Program and the University Transportation Centers Program.
International Programs The Administration supports and participates
[[Page 423]]
in efforts to find research and technology abroad which can be applied
in the United States to provide a better quality, more cost-effective
highway system. It manages technology transfer and training centers in
Latin America, Africa, Russia, and the Baltics, and participates in
international technical organizations, committees, deliberations, and
studies. Other efforts include support for export promotion and trade
advocacy, technical assistance programs, and cooperation on border
issues that affect the United States, Mexico, and Canada.
Additional Programs The Administration manages the highway construction
phase of the Appalachian Regional Development Program and the
Territorial Highway Program and provides highway program support and
technical assistance on an allocation/transfer basis for other Federal
agencies, as well as program and technical support on a wide range of
policy and information programs and issues. It also administers civil
rights programs pursuant to a variety of statutes, with the aims of
preventing discrimination in the impacts of all programs and activities
of recipients and subrecipients; providing equal employment
opportunities and promoting diversity in public employment (Federal and
State transportation agencies, motor carrier safety, and commercial
driver's license program recipients and subrecipients) and private
employment (contractors, subcontractors, material suppliers, vendors,
and consultants) related to agency-funded projects; providing training
opportunities for minorities and women in highway construction crafts;
ensuring contracting opportunities for socially and economically
disadvantaged business enterprises; and increasing opportunities for
historically black colleges and universities, members of the Hispanic
Association of Colleges and Universities, and tribal colleges and
universities.
Major Field Organizations--Federal Highway Administration
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Areas Served Address Administrator Telephone
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CT, MA, ME, NH, NJ, NY, Rm. 719, Leo W. O'Brien Federal Bldg., Henry H. Rentz 518-431-4236
PR, RI, VT Albany, NY 12207
DC, DE, MA, PA, VA, WV Suite 4000, 10 S. Howard St., Baltimore, David S. Gendell 410-962-0093
MD 21201
AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, Suite 17T26, 100 Alabama St., Atlanta, GA Leon N. Larson 404-562-3570
SC, TN 30303-3104
IL, IN, MI, MN, OH, WI Suite 301, 19900 Governors Hwy., Olympia Dale E. Wilken 708-283-3510
Fields, IL 60461-1021
AR, LA, NM, OK, TX Rm. 8A00, 819 Taylor St., Fort Worth, TX Edward A. Wueste 817-978-4393
76102
IA, KS, MO, NE 6301 Rockhill Rd., Kansas City, MO 64141 Arthur E. Hamilton 816-276-2700
CO, MT, ND, SD, UT, WY Rm. 400, 555 Zang St., Lakewood, CO 80228 Vincent F. Schimmoller 303-969-6722
AZ, CA, HI, NV Suite 2100, 201 Mission St., San Julie A. Cirillo 415-744-2639
Francisco, CA 94105
AK, ID, OR, WA Suite 600, 222 SW. Columbia St., Leon J. Whitman, Jr. 503-326-2048
Portland, OR 97201
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For further information, contact the Office of Information and
Management Services, Federal Highway Administration, Department of
Transportation, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone,
202-366-0534.
Federal Railroad Administration
The purpose of the Federal Railroad Administration is to promulgate and
enforce rail safety regulations, administer railroad financial
assistance programs, conduct research and development in support of
improved railroad safety and national rail transportation policy,
provide for the rehabilitation of Northeast Corridor rail passenger
service,
[[Page 424]]
and consolidate government support of rail transportation activities.
The Federal Railroad Administration was created pursuant to section
3(e)(1) of the Department of Transportation Act of 1966 (49 U.S.C. app.
1652).
Activities
Railroad Safety The Administration administers and enforces the Federal
laws and related regulations designed to promote safety on railroads;
exercises jurisdiction over all areas of rail safety under the Rail
Safety Act of 1970, such as track maintenance, inspection standards,
equipment standards, and operating practices. It also administers and
enforces regulations resulting from railroad safety legislation for
locomotives, signals, safety appliances, power brakes, hours of service,
transportation of explosives and other dangerous articles, and reporting
and investigation of railroad accidents. Railroad and related industry
equipment, facilities, and records are inspected and required reports
reviewed. In addition, the administration educates the public about
safety at highway-rail grade crossings and the danger of trespassing on
rail property.
Research and Development A ground transportation research and
development program is administered to advance all aspects of intercity
ground transportation and railroad safety pertaining to the physical
sciences and engineering, in order to improve railroad safety and ensure
that railroads continue to be a viable national transportation resource.
Transportation Test Center This 50-square-mile facility, located near
Pueblo, CO, provides testing for advanced and conventional systems and
techniques designed to improve ground transportation. The facility has
been managed and staffed for the Administration by the Association of
American Railroads since October 1, 1982. The United States and Canadian
Governments and private industry use this facility to explore, under
controlled conditions, the operation of both conventional and advanced
systems. It is used by the Federal Transit Administration for testing of
urban rapid transit vehicles.
For further information, contact the Transportation Test Center, Pueblo,
CO 81001. Phone, 719-584-0507.
Policy Program management for new and revised policies, plans, and
projects related to railroad transportation economics, finance, system
planning, and operations is provided; appropriate studies and analyses
are performed; relevant tests, demonstrations, and evaluations are
conducted; and labor/management programs are evaluated. Analyses of
issues before regulatory agencies are carried out and recommendations
are made to the Secretary as to the positions to be taken by DOT.
Passenger and Freight Services The Administration administers a program
of Federal assistance for national, regional, and local rail services.
Programs include rail freight service assistance programs; rail service
continuation programs and State rail planning; and rail passenger
service on a national, regional, and local basis.
The agency also administers programs to develop, implement, and
administer rail system policies, plans, and programs for the Northeast
Corridor in support of applicable provisions of the Railroad
Revitalization and Regulatory Reform Act of 1976 (45 U.S.C. 801), the
Rail Passenger Service Act (45 U.S.C. 501), and related legislation.
Major Field Organizations--Federal Railroad Administration
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Regional Director of
Region Address/Telephone Railroad Safety
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Northeastern--CT, MA, ME, NH, Rm. 1077, 55 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02142. Phone, 617- Mark H. McKeon
NJ, NY, RI, VT 494-2302
Eastern--DC, DE, MA, OH, PA, Suite 550, Scott Plz. II, Philadelphia, PA 19113. David R. Myers
VA, WV Phone, 610-521-8200
Southern--AL, FL, GA, KY, MS, Suite 16T20, 61 Forsyth St. SW., Atlanta, GA 30303- L.F. Dennin II
NC, SC, TN 3104. Phone, 404-562-3800
[[Page 425]]
Central--IL, IN, MI, MN, WI Suite 655, 111 N. Canal St., Chicago, IL 60606. Phone, Laurence A. Hasvold
312-353-6203
Southwestern--AR, LA, NM, OK, Suite 425, 8701 Bedford Euless Rd., Hurst, TX 76053. John F. Megary
TX Phone, 817-284-8142
Midwestern--CO, IA, KS, MO, Suite 1130, 1100 Main St., Kansas City, MO 64105. Darrell J. Tisor
NE Phone, 816-426-2497
Western--AZ, CA, NV, UT Suite 466, 801 I St., Sacramento, CA 95814. Phone, 916- James T. Schultz
498-6540
Northwestern--AK, ID, MT, ND, Suite 650, 703 Broadway, Vancouver, WA 98660. Phone, Dick L. Clairmont
OR, SD, WA, WY 360-696-7536
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For further information, contact the Public Affairs Officer, Federal
Railroad Administration, Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh
Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone, 202-632-3124.
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
[For the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration statement of
organization, see the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 49, Part 501]
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) was
established by the Highway Safety Act of 1970 (23 U.S.C. 401 note). The
Administration carries out programs relating to the safety performance
of motor vehicles and related equipment, motor vehicle drivers,
occupants, and pedestrians, and the Highway Safety Act of 1966, as
amended (23 U.S.C. 401 et seq.). Under the authority of title 49 U.S.
Code, chapters 321, 323, 325, 327, 329, and 331, the Administration
carries out programs and studies aimed at reducing economic losses in
motor vehicle crashes and repairs through general motor vehicle
programs; administers the Federal odometer law; issues theft prevention
standards; and promulgates average fuel economy standards for passenger
and nonpassenger motor vehicles.
Under the authority of the Clean Air Amendments of 1970 (42 U.S.C.
7544(2)), the Administration certifies as to the consistency of
Environmental Protection Agency State grants with any highway safety
program developed pursuant to section 402 of title 23 of the United
States Code.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration was established
to carry out a congressional mandate to reduce the mounting number of
deaths, injuries, and economic losses resulting from motor vehicle
crashes on the Nation's highways and to provide motor vehicle damage
susceptibility and ease of repair information, motor vehicle inspection
demonstrations, and protection of purchasers of motor vehicles having
altered odometers, and to provide average standards for greater vehicle
mileage per gallon of fuel for vehicles under 10,000 pounds (gross
vehicle weight).
Activities
Research and Development The Administration's broad-scale program of
research, development, testing, demonstration, and evaluation of motor
vehicles, motor vehicle equipment, advanced technologies, and crash data
collection and analysis provides a foundation for the development of
motor vehicle and highway safety program standards.
The research program covers numerous areas affecting safety problems
and includes provision for appropriate laboratory testing facilities to
obtain necessary basic data. In this connection, research in both light
and heavy vehicle crashworthiness and crash avoidance is being pursued.
The objectives are to encourage industry to adopt advanced motor vehicle
safety designs, stimulate public awareness of safety potentials,
[[Page 426]]
and provide a base for vehicle safety information.
The Administration maintains a collection of scientific and
technical information related to motor vehicle safety, and operates the
National Center for Statistics and Analysis, whose activities include
the development and maintenance of highway crash data collection systems
and related analysis efforts. These comprehensive motor vehicle safety
information resources serve as documentary reference points for Federal,
State, and local agencies, as well as industry, universities, and the
public.
Safety Assurance The Administration identifies and investigates
problems with motor vehicles and motor vehicle equipment. If the vehicle
or item of equipment contains a defect which is safety related or if it
does not meet all applicable Federal motor vehicle safety standards, the
Administration will seek a recall in which owners are notified and the
vehicles or equipment are remedied free of charge. Recalls are monitored
to ensure that owners are being notified in a timely manner and that the
scope of the recall and the remedy are adequate to correct the problem.
Consumers can call the toll-free auto safety hotline at 800-424-9393
to report safety-related problems. The hotline also provides information
and literature to consumers about vehicle and child-seat recalls, New
Car Assessment Program test results, and a variety of other highway
safety information.
The Administration also investigates odometer tampering and supports
prosecutions by both the U.S. Department of Justice and the States.
Safety Performance Standards The Administration manages motor vehicle
safety programs to:
--reduce the occurrence of highway crashes and the severity of
resulting injuries;
--improve survivability and injury recovery by better post-crash
measures;
--reduce the economic losses in crashes;
--provide consumer information in the areas of tire grading for
treadwear, temperature resistance, and traction; and
--establish safeguards for the protection of purchasers of motor
vehicles having altered or reset odometers.
Under the Administration's program, Federal Motor Vehicle Safety
Standards are issued that prescribe safety features and levels of
safety-related performance for vehicles and items of motor vehicle
equipment. Damage susceptibility, crashworthiness, and theft prevention
are to be studied and reported to the Congress and the public.
The Energy Policy and Conservation Act, as amended (42 U.S.C. 6201
note), sets automotive fuel economy standards for passenger cars for
model years 1985 and thereafter. The Administration has the option of
altering the standards for the post-1985 period.
The Administration develops and promulgates mandatory fuel economy
standards for light trucks for each model year and administers the fuel
economy regulatory program. The Administration establishes rules for the
collection and reporting of information required concerning
manufacturers' technological alternatives and corporate economic
capabilities in meeting fuel economy standards.
State and Community Services The State and Community Highway Safety
Grant Program provides funds to the States, Indian nations, and the
Territories each year to support planning to identify and quantify
highway safety problems, provide startup money for new programs, and
give new direction to existing safety programs, particularly in the
following national priority program areas: occupant protection, alcohol
and other drug countermeasures, police traffic services, emergency
medical services, traffic records, motorcycle safety, pedestrian and
bicycle safety, speed control, and roadway safety. Incentive funds
encourage States to implement effective impaired-driving programs and to
encourage the use of safety belts and motorcycle helmets.
Traffic Safety Programs The Administration leads the national traffic
safety and emergency services efforts in order to save lives, reduce
injuries, and lessen medical and other costs. In
[[Page 427]]
accomplishing these tasks, it utilizes behavioral research,
demonstration, and evaluation, in addition to developing safety programs
and strategies, for use by a variety of public and private agencies and
organizations.
The Administration maintains a national register of information on
individuals whose licenses to operate a motor vehicle have been revoked,
suspended, canceled, or denied; or who have been convicted of certain
traffic-related violations such as driving while impaired by alcohol or
other drugs. The information obtained from the register assists State
driver licensing officials in determining whether or not to issue a
license.
For information concerning the National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration, contact the Office of Public and Consumer Affairs,
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Department of
Transportation, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone,
202-366-9550. Additional information may be obtained from the Technical
Reference Division, Office of Administrative Operations. Phone, 202-366-
2768.
Regional Offices--National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Region/Address Administrator
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Atlanta, GA (Suite 17T30, 61 Forsyth St. Tom Enright
SW., 30303).
Cambridge, MA (Kendall Sq., Code 903, George A. Luciano
02142).
Denver, CO (4th Fl., 555 Zang St., 80228) Louis R. De Carolis
Fort Worth, TX (819 Taylor St., 76102- Georgia Chakiris
6177).
Hanover, MD (Suite L, 7526 Connelley Dr., Eugene Peterson
21076-1699).
Kansas City, MO (P.O. Box 412515, 64141). Troy Ayers
Olympia Fields, IL (Suite 201, 1990 Donald J. McNamara
Governors Dr., 60461).
San Francisco, CA (201 Mission St., Joseph M. Cindrich
94105).
Seattle, WA 98174 (915 2d Ave.).......... Curtis A. Winston
White Plains, NY (222 Mamaroneck Ave., Tom Louizou
10605).
------------------------------------------------------------------------
For further information, contact the Office of Public and Consumer
Affairs, National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, Department of
Transportation, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone,
202-366-9550.
Federal Transit Administration
[For the Federal Transit Administration statement of organization, see
the Code of Federal Regulations, Title 49, Part 601]
The Federal Transit Administration was established as a component of the
Department of Transportation by section 3 of Reorganization Plan No. 2
of 1968 (5 U.S.C. app.), effective July 1, 1968. The Administration
(formerly the Urban Mass Transportation Administration) previously
operated under authority of the Federal Transit Act, as amended (49
U.S.C. app. 1601 et seq.). The Federal Transit Act was repealed on July
5, 1994, and the Federal transit laws were codified and re-enacted as
chapter 53 of title 49, United States Code.
The missions of the Administration are:
--to assist in the development of improved mass transportation
facilities, equipment, techniques, and methods, with the cooperation of
mass transportation companies both public and private;
--to encourage the planning and establishment of areawide urban mass
transportation systems needed for economical and desirable urban
development, with the cooperation of mass transportation companies both
public and private;
--to provide assistance to State and local governments and their
instrumentalities in financing such systems, to be operated by public or
private mass transportation companies as determined by local needs; and
--to provide financial assistance to State and local governments to
help implement national goals relating to mobility for elderly persons,
persons
[[Page 428]]
with disabilities, and economically disadvantaged persons.
Programs
Capital Program The section 5309 grants are authorized to assist in
financing the acquisition, construction, reconstruction, and improvement
of facilities and equipment for use--by operation, lease, or otherwise--
in mass transportation service in urban areas. Only public agencies are
eligible as applicants. Private transit operators may be assisted under
the program through arrangements with an eligible public body.
The Federal grant is 80 percent of the net project cost. If the
project is in an urbanized area, it must be part of a program for a
unified or officially coordinated urban transportation system as a part
of the comprehensive planned development of the area.
Annual funding is allocated in three categories: 40-percent funding
for fixed guideway modernization in which funds are apportioned by a
statutory formula; 40-percent funding for construction of new, fixed
guideway systems and their extensions; and 20-percent funding for
replacement, rehabilitation, and purchase of buses and related equipment
and the construction of bus-related facilities.
Elderly and Persons With Disabilities Program The section 5310 Program
provides financial assistance in meeting the transportation needs of
elderly persons and persons with disabilities where services provided by
public operators are unavailable, insufficient, or inappropriate; to
public bodies approved by the State to coordinate services for elderly
persons or persons with disabilities; or to public bodies which certify
to the Governor that no nonprofit corporation or association is readily
available in an area to provide the service. Funds are allocated by
formula to the States; local organizations apply for funding through a
designated State agency.
Managerial Training Program Grants to governmental bodies and agencies
and operators of public transportation services provide fellowships for
training in public or private training institutions for personnel
employed in managerial, technical, and professional positions in the
public transportation field. Assistance is provided on a 50-50 funding
match basis for training and educational expenses which may include
tuition, fees, books, or other training materials, excluding any
equipment items.
For further information, call 202-366-4052.
Nonurbanized Area Formula Program The section 5311 program provides
capital and operating assistance for public transportation in
nonurbanized areas (under 50,000 population). Funds are allocated by
formula to the Governor and the program is administered at the State
level by the designated transportation agency. Eligible activities are
operating assistance, planning, administrative and program development
activities, coordination of public transportation programs, vehicle
acquisition, and other capital investments in support of general or
special transit services, including services provided for the elderly
and handicapped and other transit-dependent persons. A fixed percentage
of a State's annual apportionment must be spent to carry out a program
for the development and support of rural and intercity transportation,
unless the State Governor certifies that such needs are adequately met.
A Rural Transit Assistance Program authorized under section 18(h)
provides funding for training and technical assistance for transit
operators in nonurbanized areas. Capital assistance is funded up to an
80-percent Federal share and operating assistance is funded with up to a
50-percent Federal share.
Rural The Rural Transportation Assistance Program provides assistance
for transit research, technical assistance, training, and related
support activities in non-urbanized areas (less than 50,000 population).
A portion of this is used at the national level for development of
training materials, development and maintenance of a national clearing
house on rural activities, and technical assistance through peer
practitioners to
[[Page 429]]
promote exemplary techniques and practices.
For further information, call 202-366-4052.
Safety The Federal Transit Administration Safety Program supports State
and local agencies in fulfilling their responsibility for the safety and
security of urban mass transportation facilities and services, through
the encouragement and sponsorship of safety and security planning,
training, information collection and analysis, drug control programs,
system/safety assurance reviews, generic research, and other cooperative
government/industry activities.
For further information, call 202-366-2896.
Technical Assistance The Administration provides funds for research,
development, and demonstration projects in urban transportation for the
purpose of increasing productivity and efficiency in urban and nonurban
area transportation systems, improving mass transportation service and
equipment, and assisting State and local governments in providing total
urban transportation services in a cost-effective, safe manner, and
expanding private-sector participation in all facets of urban
transportation.
The Administration conducts a program of research, development, and
demonstration addressing the following principal areas: advanced public
transportation systems, clean air, finance, information, human resources
and productivity, regional mobility, rural transportation, safety and
security, technology development, and transit accessibility.
Major project areas include developing and demonstrating new
approaches to involve employers, developers, local governments, and
transportation providers in finding solutions to the problems of
regional mobility, with special emphasis on the following:
--promoting institutional changes required to improve mobility in
suburban areas and between suburbs and central city locations;
--encouraging management and organized labor to jointly seek
opportunities for improving performance through upgrading of skills for
nonmanagerial personnel;
--identifying, evaluating, and documenting significant cost-
effective approaches to modernizing existing rail transit systems;
--encouraging participation by the private sector in the provision
of transportation services and encouragement of joint public/private
financing of transit capital investments;
--providing guidance and training concerning long-term financial
planning and leasing of capital assets;
--implementing a program of new model bus testing and test facility
improvements;
--promoting the delivery of safe and effective public transportation
in nonurbanized areas;
--assisting new safety and security initiatives, including safety
training; and
--compiling information on costs, benefits, financial feasibility,
and performance of new energy sources including nonpolluting fuels.
Projects are conducted under grants and cooperative agreements with
public bodies, including State and local governments, or contracts with
private organizations, both profit and nonprofit.
For further information, contact the Regional Office for the area
concerned.
University Research and Training Grants Grants may be awarded to public
and private nonprofit institutions of higher learning to assist in
conducting research and training activities that address urban and rural
transit issues and needs and in providing training for students and
working professionals in the field of urban transportation analysis and
operations. The objective is to encourage and support university
research, education, and training that addresses and is responsive to
Federal, State, and local transportation concerns, and advances the
understanding and resolution of critical transportation problems.
Urbanized Area Formula Program Section 5307 is a formula-apportioned
resource for capital, operating, and planning assistance. Recipients of
funds
[[Page 430]]
in urbanized areas of over 200,000 population are jointly designated by
the Governors of the respective States, local officials, and public
transit operators. The Governor acts as recipient for urbanized areas
with populations from 50,000 up to 200,000. Recipients must be State,
regional, or local governmental bodies or public agencies. Private
transit operators may be assisted under the program through arrangements
with an eligible public entity.
Grants may be made for 80 percent of the project cost for capital
and planning activities. Operating assistance is subject to changes in
the 1998 budget. Each year, potential grantees submit a proposed program
of projects for funding based on the State Transportation Improvement
Program. This program contains all of the highway and transit projects
endorsed at the metropolitan and State levels for Federal funding,
resulting from the State and local transportation planning process.
For further information, contact the Regional Office for the area
concerned.
For information concerning the Federal Transit Administration,
contact the area/regional office for the area concerned or contact the
Office of Public Affairs, Federal Transit Administration, Department of
Transportation, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone,
202-366-4043. Technical information may be obtained by contacting the
Transit Research Information Center. Phone, 202-366-9157. Information is
also available electronically through the Internet, at http://
www.fta.dot.gov/.
Field Organization--Federal Transit Administration
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Region/Address Telephone
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Arlington, TX (Suite 175, 524 E. Lamar Blvd., 76011-
3900).................................................. 817-860-9663
Atlanta, GA (Suite 17T50, 61 Forsyth St. SW., 30303).... 404-562-3500
Cambridge, MA (Suite 920, 55 Broadway, 02142)........... 617-494-2055
Chicago, IL (Rm. 1415, 55 E. Monroe St., 60603)......... 312-353-2789
Denver, CO (Suite 650, 216 16th St., 80202)............. 303-844-3242
Kansas City, MO (Suite 303, 6301 Rockhill Rd., 64131)... 816-523-0204
New York, NY (Suite 2940, 26 Federal Plz., 10278)....... 212-264-8162
Philadelphia, PA (Suite 500, 1760 Market St., 19103).... 215-656-7100
San Francisco, CA (Suite 2210, 201 Mission St., San
Francisco, CA 94105)................................... 415-744-3133
Seattle, WA (Suite 3142, 915 2d Ave., 98174)............ 206-220-7954
------------------------------------------------------------------------
For further information, contact the Office of Public Affairs, Federal
Transit Administration, Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh Street
SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone, 202-366-4043. Internet, http://
www.fta.dot.gov/.
Maritime Administration
The Maritime Administration was established by Reorganization Plan No.
21 of 1950 (5 U.S.C. app.), effective May 24, 1950. The Maritime Act of
1981 (46 U.S.C. 1601) transferred the Maritime Administration to the
Department of Transportation, effective August 6, 1981.
The Maritime Administration administers programs to aid in the
development, promotion, and operation of the U.S. merchant marine. It is
also charged with organizing and directing emergency merchant ship
operations.
The Maritime Administration administers subsidy programs, through
the Maritime Subsidy Board, under which the Federal Government, subject
to statutory limitations, pays the difference between certain costs of
operating ships under the U.S. flag and foreign competitive flags on
essential services, and the difference between the costs of constructing
ships in U.S. and foreign shipyards. It provides financing guarantees
for the construction, reconstruction, and reconditioning of ships; and
enters into capital construction fund agreements that grant
[[Page 431]]
tax deferrals on moneys to be used for the acquisition, construction, or
reconstruction of ships.
The Administration constructs or supervises the construction of
merchant type ships for the Federal Government. It helps industry
generate increased business for U.S. ships and conducts programs to
develop ports, facilities, and intermodal transport, and to promote
domestic shipping.
The Administration conducts program and technical studies and
administers a War Risk Insurance Program that insures operators and
seamen against losses caused by hostile action if domestic commercial
insurance is not available.
Under emergency conditions the Maritime Administration charters
Government-owned ships to U.S. operators, requisitions or procures ships
owned by U.S. citizens, and allocates them to meet defense needs.
It maintains a National Defense Reserve Fleet of Government-owned
ships that it operates through ship managers and general agents when
required in national defense interests. An element of this activity is
the Ready Reserve Force consisting of a number of ships available for
quick-response activation.
It regulates sales to aliens and transfers to foreign registry of
ships that are fully or partially owned by U.S. citizens. It also
disposes of Government-owned ships found nonessential for national
defense.
The Administration operates the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy, Kings
Point, NY, where young people are trained to become merchant marine
officers, and conducts training in shipboard firefighting at Earle, NJ,
and Toledo, OH. It also administers a Federal assistance program for the
maritime academies operated by California, Maine, Massachusetts,
Michigan, New York, and Texas.
Field Organization--Maritime Administration
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Region Address Telephone
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Central...................... Suite 2590, 365 Canal 504-589-6556
St., New Orleans, LA
70130-1137.
Great Lakes.................. Suite 185, 2860 South 847-298-4535
River Rd., Des Plaines,
IL 60018-2413.
North Atlantic............... Rm. 3737, 26 Federal 212-264-1300
Plz., New York, NY 10278.
South Atlantic............... Rm. 211, 7737 Hampton 757-441-6393
Blvd., Norfolk, VA 23505.
U.S. Merchant Marine Academy. Kings Point, NY 11024- 516-773-5000
1699.
Western...................... Suite 2200, 201 Mission 415-744-3125
St., San Francisco, CA
94105-1905.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
For further information, contact the Office of Congressional and Public
Affairs, Maritime Administration, Department of Transportation, 400
Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone, 202-366-5807.
Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation
The Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation was established by the
Saint Lawrence Seaway Act of May 13, 1954 (33 U.S.C. 981-990) and became
an operating administration of the Department of Transportation in 1966.
The Corporation, working cooperatively with the Saint Lawrence
Seaway Authority (SLSA) of Canada, is dedicated to operating and
maintaining a safe, reliable, and efficient deep draft waterway between
the Great Lakes and the Atlantic Ocean. It regulates U.S. pilotage on
the Great Lakes and the Saint Lawrence River, and ensures the safe
transit of commercial and noncommercial vessels through the two U.S.
locks and the navigation channels of the Saint Lawrence Seaway System.
The Corporation works jointly with SLSA on all matters related to rules
and regulations, overall operations, vessel inspections, traffic
control, navigation aids, safety, operating dates, and trade development
programs.
The Great Lakes/Saint Lawrence Seaway System extends from the
Atlantic Ocean to the Lake Superior ports of Duluth/Superior, a distance
of 2,342
[[Page 432]]
miles. The Corporation's main customers are vessel owners and operators,
Midwest States and Canadian provinces, Great Lakes port communities,
shippers and receivers of domestic and international cargo, and the
Lakes/Seaway maritime and related services industries. International and
domestic commerce through the Seaway contributes to the economic
prosperity of the entire Great Lakes region.
For further information, contact the Director of Congressional and
Public Affairs, Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation,
Department of Transportation, P.O. Box 44090, Washington, DC 20026-4090.
Phone, 202-366-0091. Fax, 202-366-7147.
Research and Special Programs Administration
The Research and Special Programs Administration (RSPA) was established
formally on September 23, 1977. It is responsible for hazardous
materials transportation and pipeline safety, transportation emergency
preparedness, safety training, and multimodal transportation research
and development activities.
Office of Hazardous Materials Safety
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone, 202-366-0656
The Office of Hazardous Materials Safety develops and issues regulations
for the safe transportation of hazardous materials by all modes,
excluding bulk transportation by water. The regulations cover shipper
and carrier operations, packaging and container specifications, and
hazardous materials definitions. The Office is also responsible for the
enforcement of regulations other than those applicable to a single mode
of transportation. The Office manages a user-fee funded grant program to
assist States in planning for hazardous materials emergencies and to
assist States and Indian tribes with training for hazardous materials
emergencies. Additionally, the Office executes a national safety program
to safeguard food and certain other products from contamination during
motor or rail transportation. A computer bulletin board, in conjunction
with the Federal Emergency Management Agency, offers nationwide access
to topics related to hazardous materials transportation safety and can
be accessed by dialing 1-800-PLANFOR (752-6367). The Office is the
national focal point for coordination and control of the Department's
multimodal hazardous materials regulatory program, ensuring uniformity
of approach and action by all modal administrations.
Regional Offices--Office of Hazardous Materials Safety
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Region Address Chief
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Eastern--CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, MA, MD, Suite 306, 820 Bear Tavern Rd., W. Trenton, NJ Colleen Abbenhaus
ME, NC, NH, NJ, NY, PA, PR, RI, SC, 08628
VA, VT, WV
Central--IL, IA, IN, KS, KY, MI, MN, Suite 136, 2350 E. Devon Ave., Des Plaines, IL Kevin Boehne
MO, ND, NE, OH, SD, WI 60018
Western--AK, AZ, CA, CO, HI, ID, MT, Suite 230, 3200 Inland Empire Blvd., Ontario, CA Anthony Smialek
NV, OR, UT, WA, WY 91764
Southwestern--AL, AR, LA, MS, NM, OK, Suite 2118, 2320 LaBranch St., Houston, TX 77004 Jesse Hughes
TN, TX
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Office of Pipeline Safety
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone, 202-366-4595
The Office of Pipeline Safety establishes and provides for compliance
with standards that assure public safety and environmental protection in
the transportation of gas and hazardous
[[Page 433]]
liquids by pipeline. The Office administers a program whereby a State
agency can voluntarily assert safety regulatory jurisdiction over all or
some intrastate pipeline facilities. The Federal Government is
authorized to pay a State agency grant-in-aid funds of up to 50 percent
of the actual cost for carrying out its pipeline safety program. The
Office under the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 established regulations
requiring petroleum pipeline operators to prepare and submit plans to
respond to oil spills for Federal review and approval.
Regional Offices--Office of Pipeline Safety
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Region Address Chief
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Central--IA, IL, IN, KS, MI, MN, MO, Suite 1120, 1100 Maine St., Kansas City, MO 64105 Ivan Huntoon
ND, NE, OH, SD, WI
Eastern--CT, DC, DE, MA, MD, ME, NH, Rm. 2108, 400 7th St. SW., Washington, DC 20590 William Gute
NJ, NY, PA, RI, VA, VT, WV
Southern--AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, MS, NC, Suite 446 N., 1720 Peachtree Rd. NW., Atlanta, GA Frederick Joyner
PR, SC, TN 30309
Southwest--AZ, LA, NM, OK, TX Suite 2118, 2320 LaBranch St., Houston, TX 77004 James Thomas
Western--AK, CA, CO, HI, ID, MT, NV, Suite 230, 12600 W. Colfax Ave., Lakewood, CO 80215 Edward Ondak
OR, UT, WA, WY
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Office of Research, Technology, and Analysis
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone, 202-366-4434
The Office of Research, Technology, and Analysis serves as the principal
adviser to the Administrator of RSPA on all research, technology, and
analysis program activities as they relate to RSPA's mission, programs,
objectives, and scientific and technological activities within RSPA. The
Office oversees and directs the activities of the Transportation Safety
Institute (TSI).
Office of University Research and Education
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone, 202-366-5442
The Office of University Research and Education acts as principal
adviser to RSPA and the Department on university research and education
activities; provides a point of contact with the academic community;
stimulates broad-based university involvement with intermodal
transportation problems and issues; and manages a national grant program
to establish and operate university transportation centers and
university research institutes.
Office of Research Policy and Technology Transfer
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone, 202-366-4208
The Office of Research Policy and Technology Transfer oversees the
Department's entire research and development programs, and those
technical assistance and technology sharing activities which bring the
results of research and development to its users and establishes needs
for future research. This responsibility includes coordination and
oversight of the Department's technology transfer activities under the
Stevenson-Wydler Technology Innovation Act of 1980, as amended (15
U.S.C. 3701 et seq.), relating to the transfer of federally funded
technology to the marketplace.
Transportation Safety Institute
Department of Transportation, 6500 South McArthur Boulevard, Oklahoma
City, OK 73125. Phone, 405-954-3153
The Institute was established in 1971 by the Secretary of Transportation
to support the Department's efforts to reduce the number and cost of
transportation accidents by promoting safety and security management
through education. The Institute is a primary source of transportation
safety and security training and technical assistance on domestic and
international levels for
[[Page 434]]
Department of Transportation elements, as well as other Federal, State,
and local government agencies.
Office of Emergency Transportation
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone, 202-366-5270
The Office of Emergency Transportation provides the staff to administer
and execute the Secretary of Transportation's statutory and
administrative responsibilities in the area of transportation civil
emergency preparedness. It is the primary element of the Department
engaged in the development, coordination, and review of policies, plans,
and programs for attaining and maintaining a high state of Federal
transportation emergency preparedness. This Office oversees the
effective discharge of the Secretary's responsibilities in all
emergencies affecting the national defense and in national or regional
emergencies, including those caused by natural disasters and other
crisis situations.
Volpe National Transportation Systems Center
Kendall Square, Cambridge, MA 02142. Phone, 617-494-2224
The Volpe National Transportation Systems Center (Volpe Center), as part
of RSPA, provides research, analysis, and systems capability to the
Department of Transportation (DOT) and other agencies requiring
expertise in national transportation and logistics programs.
Integrated systems approaches are developed by Volpe Center to
address Federal transportation issues of national importance. It does
not appear as a line item in the Federal budget, but is funded directly
by its sponsors. Volpe Center projects are therefore responsive to
customer needs. The Center has come to be increasingly recognized by
government, industry, and academia as a focal point for the
assimilation, generation, and interchange of knowledge and understanding
concerning national and international transportation and logistics
systems. The Volpe Center is widely valued as a vital national resource
for solving complex transportation and logistics problems.
Based on shifting national priorities and availability of its
resources, Volpe Center programmatic activities for DOT and other
agencies vary from year to year.
Volpe Center programs emphasize policy support and analysis, cost-
effective Government procurement, environmental protection and
remediation, transportation safety and security, and infrastructure
modernization.
For further information, contact the Office of Program and Policy
Support, Research and Special Programs Administration, Department of
Transportation, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590. Phone,
202-366-4831.
Bureau of Transportation Statistics
The Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS) was organized pursuant to
section 6006 of the Intermodal Surface Transportation Efficiency Act of
1991 (ISTEA) (49 U.S.C. 111), and was formally established by the
Secretary of Transportation on December 16, 1992. The Bureau has an
intermodal transportation focus whose missions are to compile, analyze,
and make accessible information on the Nation's transportation systems;
to collect information on intermodal transportation and other areas; and
to enhance the quality and effectiveness of DOT statistical programs
through research, the development of guidelines, and the promotion of
improvements in data acquisition and use.
The Bureau is mandated by ISTEA to:
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--compile, analyze, and publish statistics;
--develop a long-term data collection program;
--develop guidelines to improve the credibility and effectiveness of
the Department's statistics;
--represent transportation interests in the statistical community;
--make statistics accessible and understandable; and
--identify data needs.
The Bureau acquired the Office of Airline Information (OAI) pursuant
to DOT 1100.70 Chg. 1 and 60 FR 30195, in June of 1995. The Office
collects air carrier financial and traffic data (passenger and freight)
pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 329 and 41708. This information provides uniform
and comprehensive economic and market data on individual airline
operations.
The Bureau is also responsible for collecting motor carrier
financial data pursuant to 49 U.S.C. 14123 (Public Law 104-88). This
function was transferred to BTS, effective January 1, 1996, after the
termination of the Interstate Commerce Commission.
For further information, call 202-366-DATA. Fax, 202-366-3640. Fax-on-
demand, 800-671-8012. Internet, http://www.bts.gov/. E-mail,
info@bts.gov. Gopher, gopher.bts.gov. Phone (modem), 800-363-4BTS.
Surface Transportation Board
The Surface Transportation Board was established in 1996 by the ICC
Termination Act of 1995 (49 U.S.C. 10101 et seq.) as a decisionally
independent, bipartisan, adjudicatory body organizationally housed
within the Department of Transportation, with jurisdiction over certain
surface transportation economic regulatory matters formerly under ICC
jurisdiction.
The Board consists of three members, appointed by the President with
the advice and consent of the Senate for 5-year terms. The Board's
Chairman is designated by the President from among the members.
The Board adjudicates disputes and regulates interstate surface
tr