<NOTICE>
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
<SUBAGY>Federal Highway Administration</SUBAGY>
<SUBJECT>Buy America Waiver Notification</SUBJECT>
<HD SOURCE="HED">AGENCY:</HD>
Federal Highway Administration (FHWA), U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT).
<HD SOURCE="HED">ACTION:</HD>
Notice.
<SUM>
<HD SOURCE="HED">SUMMARY:</HD>
This notice provides information regarding FHWA's finding that it is appropriate to grant a non-availability Buy America waiver to the Utah Department of Transportation (UDOT) for procurement and installation of 16 suspended explosive charge remote avalanche control systems (RACS), which contain non-domestic iron and steel components, along Mount Superior overlooking SR-210 in Little Cottonwood Canyon, Utah. The waiver relates specifically to iron and steel components that are part of the tower, deployment box, and charges of the RACS.
</SUM>
<DATES>
<HD SOURCE="HED">DATES:</HD>
The effective date of the waiver October 23, 2024.
</DATES>
<FURINF>
<HD SOURCE="HED">FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:</HD>
For questions about this notice, please contact Mr. Brian Hogge, FHWA Office of Infrastructure, (202) 366-1562, or via email at
<E T="03">Brian.Hogge@dot.gov</E>
. For legal questions, please contact Mr. David Serody, FHWA Office of the Chief Counsel, (202) 366-1345, or via email at
<E T="03">David.Serody@dot.gov</E>
. Office hours for FHWA are from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., E.T., Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays.
</FURINF>
<SUPLINF>
<HD SOURCE="HED">SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:</HD>
<HD SOURCE="HD1">Electronic Access</HD>
An electronic copy of this document may be downloaded from the
<E T="04">Federal Register</E>
's home page at:
<E T="03">www.FederalRegister.gov</E>
and the U.S. Government Publishing Office's database at:
<E T="03">www.GovInfo.gov.</E>
<HD SOURCE="HD1">Background</HD>
The FHWA's Buy America requirements for steel and iron are set forth at 23 U.S.C. 313 and 23 CFR 635.410 and require that all steel and iron that are permanently incorporated into a Federal-aid project must be produced in the United States unless a waiver is granted, including predominantly steel and iron components of a manufactured
product.
<SU>1</SU>
<FTREF/>
Under these requirements, all manufacturing processes, including the application of a coating, must occur in the United States.
<SU>2</SU>
<FTREF/>
<FTNT>
<SU>1</SU>
Under 23 U.S.C. 313, FHWA has a Buy America requirement for manufactured products; however, FHWA has a standing waiver under 23 U.S.C. 313(b), known as the Manufactured Products General Waiver, which covers manufactured products that are not predominantly steel and iron.
<E T="03">See</E>
48 FR 53099 (Nov. 25, 1983).
</FTNT>
<FTNT>
<SU>2</SU>
While the Build America, Buy America Act (BABA), included in the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (also known as the “Bipartisan Infrastructure Law” (BIL)) (Pub. L. 117-58), sets out Buy America preferences for steel, iron, manufactured products, and construction materials, these preferences only apply to the extent that a domestic content procurement preference, as described in section 70914 of BABA, does not already apply to iron, steel, manufactured products, and construction materials. BIL section 70917(a)-(b). As FHWA has existing domestic content preferences for steel, iron, and manufactured products at 23 U.S.C. 313, the requirements under 23 U.S.C. 313 apply to steel, iron, and manufactured products instead of the requirements under BABA. As FHWA's existing Buy America requirement does not specifically cover construction materials, the Buy America preference under section 70914 of BABA applies for construction materials.
</FTNT>
Under 23 U.S.C. 313(b)(2) and 23 CFR 635.410(c)(1)(ii), FHWA may waive the application of its Buy America requirement for steel and iron when products are not produced in the United States in sufficient and reasonably available quantities of a satisfactory quality. This notice provides information regarding FHWA's finding that it is appropriate to grant UDOT a non-availability Buy America waiver for procurement of 16 suspended explosive charge RACS, which include non-domestic iron and steel components, for installation along Mount Superior overlooking SR-210 in Little Cottonwood Canyon, Utah. For each of the 16 RACS, this waiver will cover only: (i) the tower; (ii) the deployment box; and (iii) the charges (collectively “waiver items”). This waiver does not apply to the reinforced foundation of the RACS, which consists of anchor kits and a base plate; such foundation must be domestically sourced and compliant with FHWA's Buy America requirements.
<E T="03">Background on the Project:</E>
In 2020, the U.S. Army asked all members of the Avalanche Artillery Users of North America Committee to submit an exit plan for their use of military artillery. Currently, UDOT leases a P-Ridge howitzer from the U.S. Army to fire live artillery ammunition for avalanche control in Little Cottonwood Canyon. This is the only location in North America where live artillery is fired over inhabited buildings. The UDOT has committed to ending the use of the howitzer by 2025 and replacing it with RACS, which use remotely detonated explosives to mitigate avalanches and save lives. This project is to install 16 RACS using suspended explosive charges along SR-210 in Little Cottonwood Canyon to minimize safety concerns from the overhead fire of live artillery over inhabited structures.
<E T="03">Background on Waiver Request:</E>
The UDOT is part of the Transportation Avalanche Research Pool, which has identified three main types of RACS used in the United States: gas-delivered explosives, propelled explosive charges, and suspended explosive charges. The UDOT believes that the most appropriate products for this project based on the unique terrain in the deployment area are RACS that utilize suspended explosive charges. Prior to submitting a waiver request, UDOT identified only one domestic supplier of any type of RACS; however, that company uses gas-delivered explosives, and such a system is not viable for this project due to the extreme terrain, excessive rockfall, and extensive distance of the required gas line that would be needed to operate the system. The UDOT also used the National Institute of Standards and Technology's Manufacturing Extension Partnership Supplier Scouting service to seek out any domestic manufacturers of RACS, but no domestic alternatives were identified.
The UDOT thus requested a waiver for the tower, deployment box, and charges that are part of the RACS for 16 systems that will use suspended explosive charges.
In accordance with section 122 of Division F of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2024 (Pub. L. 118-42), section 117 of the SAFETEA-LU Technical Corrections Act of 2008 (Pub. L. 110-244), and 23 U.S.C. 313(g), FHWA posted a notice of the waiver request on its website on April 10, 2024, soliciting public comment on the intent to issue a waiver of the waiver items for a 15-day period.
<SU>3</SU>
<FTREF/>
<FTNT>
<SU>3</SU>
<E T="03">https://www.fhwa.dot.gov/construction/contracts/waivers.cfm?id=175.</E>
</FTNT>
<HD SOURCE="HD1">Waiver Justification Summary</HD>
Comments to the Notice of Waiver Request: The FHWA received five comments in response to the notice of the waiver request. One commenter stated that FHWA's Buy America requirements are outdated and indicated that FHWA should grant the waiver. Another stated that FHWA should grant the waiver and argued that FHWA should not apply its Buy America requirements to predominantly steel and iron components.
Two other commenters provided information not relevant to the waiver request. One questioned the environmental impacts of RACS, which is not an issue within the scope of this waiver request.
Another commenter stated that the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) policy eliminated the need for the waiver request because OMB requirements apply to manufactured products, not just iron and steel. The FHWA's Buy America requirements with respect to manufactured products, however, differ from requirements applicable to other Federal Agencies under BABA, which was included as part of the BIL (Pub. L. 117-58). The FHWA has waived its statutory Buy America requirements as to all manufactured products that are not predominantly steel and iron; however, FHWA applies its Buy America requirements to predominantly iron and steel components of manufactured products, and such components must comply with FHWA's requirements that all iron and steel must be domestically manufactured. Although BABA requires that manufactured products be manufactured in the United States and the cost of the manufactured product's components that are mined, produced, or manufactured in the United States must be greater than 55 percent of the total cost of all components of the manufactured product, BABA does not specifically mandate that iron and steel components in particular must be domestically manufactured.
<SU>4</SU>
<FTREF/>
See BIL section 70912(6)(B).
<FTNT>
<SU>4</SU>
To meet the requirement that 55 percent of components, by cost, be mined, produced, or manufactured in the United States for a manufactured product containing predominantly iron or steel components, a manufacturer may choose to domestically produce those components. This is different from FHWA's Buy America requirements, which mandate that all predominantly steel or iron components be domestically produced, regardless of the percent, by cost, of which they make up the manufactured product.
</FTNT>
In other words, FHWA applies its own Buy America requirements to steel, iron, and manufactured products used on FHWA funded projects, not the standards for steel, iron, and manufactured products under BABA. See BIL section 70917(a)-(b). Accordingly, manufactured products us
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