Buy America & FRA’s High-Speed Intercity Passenger Rail Program: Answers to Frequently Asked Questions
The Buy America provision at 49 U.S.C. § 22905(a) applies to FRA’s Consolidated Rail Infrastructure and Safety Improvements, Federal-State Partnership for State of Good Repair, and Restoration and Enhancement Grants programs.
A separate statute governs Amtrak’s direct purchases (49 U.S.C. § 24305(f)); however, except where explicitly noted, these Answers to Frequently Asked Questions do not apply to Amtrak’s expenditures.
Section 22905(a) provides that the Secretary of Transportation (authority delegated to the Federal Railroad Administrator) may obligate an amount to carry out an FRA funded project only if the steel, iron, and manufactured goods used in the project are produced in the United States.
FRA believes that high-speed and intercity rail passenger equipment can and should be manufactured in the United States. FRA will do everything it can to ensure that its grant funds are spent domestically, and where there is not currently domestic production, will do what it can to encourage domestic production
Where it is impossible for a grantee to find a fully complying bidder/offeror (and therefore a waiver from Buy America is requested), the grantee is encouraged to choose (as long as this choice is consistent with applicable procurement practices) as its contract awardee the bidder/offeror with the proposal containing domestic manufacture and the highest domestic content.
FRA will apply the statutory Buy America provision strictly and will issue a waiver only when the bidder/offeror has demonstrated by clear evidence that it has met the requirements for a waiver. Moreover, FRA considers the need to grant waivers under these circumstances as strictly temporary because it expects that achieving domestic manufacture and 100% domestic component content can and will occur in the very near future. By encouraging grantees to use manufacturers or suppliers who maximize domestic content, FRA hopes to achieve its goal of 100% domestic content in the near future. More information on requesting a waiver can be found in FAQ no. 15.
No. PRIIA authorized the first grant program to be administered by FRA that incorporated a Buy America requirement (other than the Buy American preference that applies to Amtrak), and FRA has not yet implemented regulations. In the interim to aid grantees who must immediately apply Section 22905(a) to funds granted them by FRA, FRA is releasing these FAQs describing its procedures for applying the Buy America provision in the program listed in FAQ #1.
No. FRA cannot use statutory authority it does not have. As a long-standing grant-making entity, FTA has its own Buy America statute, which in many respects is identical to FRA’s statute. However, the FTA’s Buy America statute, at 49 U.S.C. § 5323(j)(2)(C)(i) and (ii), includes the specific additional waiver regarding a 60% component and American assembly allowance for rolling stock that 49 U.S.C. 22905(a) (FRA’s Buy America statute) does not. Had Congress intended for FRA to apply a “60 percent component but American-assembled” exception to rolling stock procurements made by its grantees, presumably it would have included such a provision in FRA’s statute, especially since the remainder of the FRA and FTA statutes are nearly identical.
Except for the FTA provision regarding a 60 percent component waiver for rolling stock, the general FTA and FRA Buy America provisions regarding the steel, iron, and manufactured goods used in its grant-funded projects are nearly identical. Both 49 U.S.C. §§ 5323(j)(1) and 22905(a)(1) state: “The Secretary of Transportation may obligate an amount that may be appropriated to carry out this chapter for a project only if the steel, iron, and manufactured goods used in the project are produced in the United States.” The FTA, throughout the 30 years it has administered its own Buy America statute, has implemented regulations and changes to those regulations which have resulted in a very detailed set of rules, guidance documents, and enforcement strategies. See 49 C.F.R. Part 661; see also http://www.fta.dot.gov/laws/leg_reg_178.html.
The definitions and provisions at 49 C.F.R. §§ 661.3, and 661.5 implement FTA’s Buy America general requirements covering steel, iron, and manufactured goods, except where 661.11 applies, which is FTA’s regulation covering the procurement of rolling stock (including train control, communication, and traction power equipment). See 61 Fed. Reg. 6300 (February 16, 1996) (for a discussion of FTA’s rulemaking).
FRA has concluded that it is reasonable and appropriate to use applicable FTA rules for purposes of providing guidance to FRA’s grantees, specifically 49 C.F.R. § 661.3, 661.5, and applicable parts of 661.11 – and use them as guidance for both FRA-funded manufactured goods procurement generally and rolling stock, where appropriate.
FRA also believes this makes sense from the perspective of FRA’s grantees, who are often the same or same kind of entities as those receiving FTA grants, e.g., State departments of transportation or State-sponsored transportation authorities and their subgrantees or contractors (who in many cases are the same firms competing to build rail systems, whether commuter, high speed or passenger rail). These entities are already familiar with applying the FTA provisions, which will facilitate the process. In addition, not doing so would result in a substantial administrative burden to FRA, its grantees, subgrantees, and contractors. If these provisions were not used as guidance, many projects over $100,000 would require a Buy America waiver, since it is unlikely that the tiniest of subcomponents would or could all be of United States origin.
General Requirements:
For manufactured goods, including rolling stock, to be considered produced in the United States: (1) All of the manufacturing processes for the end product must take place in the United States; and (2) All of the components of the end product must be of U.S. origin. A component is considered of U.S. origin if it is manufactured in the United States, regardless of the origin of its subcomponents. (See FTA regulation: 49 C.F.R. § 661.5(d)).
For consistency sake with industry-understood FTA rules for rolling stock, FRA has determined that the “manufacturing process” applicable to end product rolling stock is “final assembly.” Final assembly is the creation of the end product from individual elements brought together for that purpose through application of manufacturing processes. (See FTA Regulation: 49 C.F.R. § 661.11(r)).
For all other manufactured end products, including the components of rolling stock, the applicable “manufacturing process” is “manufacturing.” “Manufacturing” means the application of processes to alter the form or function of materials or of elements of the product in a manner adding value and transforming those materials or elements so that they represent a new end product functionally different from that which would result from mere assembly of the elements or materials. (See FTA Regulation: 661.3).
A component, including a rolling stock component, is considered to be manufactured in the United States if there are sufficient activities taking place in the United States to advance the value or improve the condition of the subcomponents of that component; that is, if the subcomponents have been substantially transformed into a new and functionally different article. (See FTA regulation: 49 C.F.R. § 661.11(e)).
The key element of the definition of “manufacturing” is the transformation of subcomponents to form a new product. The processes of transformation may include forming, extruding, material removal, welding, soldering, etching, plating, material deposition, pressing, permanent adhesive joining, shot blasting, brushing, grinding, lapping, finishing, vacuum impregnating, and, in electrical and electronic pneumatic, or mechanical products, the collection, interconnection, and testing of various elements.
Mere assembly of the subcomponents does not constitute substantial transformation.
FRA developed lists of likely rolling stock components for use by grantees procuring rolling stock . Grantees should consult with FRA before issuing procurement notices for rolling stock to be certain their component list is appropriate for the type of railcars being procured.
Definitions:
Component means any article, material, or supply, whether manufactured or unmanufactured, that is directly incorporated into the end product at the final assembly location. (See FTA regulation: 49 C.F.R. § 661.3)
End product means any vehicle, structure, product, article, material, supply, or system, which directly incorporates constituent components at the final assembly location, that is acquired for public use under a federally funded third-party contract, and which is ready to provide its intended end function or use without any further manufacturing or assembly change(s). (See FTA regulation: 49 C.F.R. § 661.3)
Subcomponent is any article, material, or supply, whether manufactured or unmanufactured, that is one step removed from a component in the manufacturing process and that is incorporated directly into a component. (See FTA regulation: 49 C.F.R. § 661.11(f)).
FRA has additional Buy America requirements for the steel and iron used to manufacture the following types of primarily steel and iron manufactured goods:
- Railcar systems and components, including items such as steel car shells, wheels, couplers, trucks, axles, piping, battery boxes, enclosures, mounting racks, and grab irons.
- Structural construction materials, including items such as steel or iron beams and columns, and bridge trusses.
- Steel track work used in track projects, including items such as running rail, contact rail, switch rails, and turnouts.
The additional requirements for steel and iron are that all steel and iron manufacturing processes must have taken place in the United States, except any metallurgical processes involving refinement of steel additives. In other words, FRA requires the ingot be manufactured (i.e. processed and rolled) in the United States. FRA does not consider the source of the raw materials whether recycled or otherwise that are used to manufacture steel or iron as long as it is manufactured in the United States. Additionally, steel manufacturing outside the United States would not be FRA Buy America compliant even if the raw material was U.S. mined.
FRA has determined that steel or iron subcomponents of a component, such as steel rebar (subcomponent) in a concrete pile (component), do not need to be comprised of U.S.-manufactured steel. In addition, whether classified by FRA as a component or subcomponent in a particular project, steel or iron connectors and fasteners, which because of their small size contain only a minimal quantity of steel or iron, do not need to be comprised of U.S.-manufactured steel.
There are also no added FRA Buy America requirements for the steel or iron used in the manufacture of non-structural construction material. For example, the steel or iron components found in a heating, ventilating, and air conditioning system, elevator or bathroom fixture need not consist of U.S.-manufactured steel or iron even though the components themselves must be manufactured in the United States.
FRA encourages maximizing domestic materials wherever possible.
No. The international agreements are not applicable to FRA’s Buy America provision. Chapter 10 and the Statement of Administrative Action that accompanied the NAFTA Implementation Act specifically exempts from its application certain kinds of purchases by the U.S. government, among them procurements funded by Federal grants, such as those made by FRA grantees. Therefore, manufacture in either Mexico or Canada is NOT considered domestic manufacture by FRA. In addition, the Annexes to the World Trade Organization’s Government Procurement Agreement (GPA) and the various Free Trade Agreements contain exceptions for Federal grants for mass transportation projects, which include FRA’s high-speed and intercity rail passenger program.
No. Though if other Federal funding is involved, other Buy America(n) statutes may apply. In addition, there may be applicable state or local domestic spending preferences.
Individual States are not precluded under 49 U.S.C. § 22905(a)(8) from adopting their own more stringent Buy American preference statutes. That section provides: “the Secretary may not impose any limitation on assistance provided under this chapter that restricts a State from imposing more stringent requirements than this subsection on the use of articles, materials, and supplies mined, produced, or manufactured in foreign countries in projects carried out with that assistance or restricts a recipient of that assistance from complying with those State-imposed requirements.” However, where Federal funds are involved, pursuant to 49 C.F.R. § 18.36(c)(2), States are precluded from imposing in-State or local geographical preferences.
As provided in 49 U.S.C. § 22905(a)(11), the PRIIA Buy America requirements apply only to projects for which the costs exceed $100,000.
In calculating a component’s cost for purposes of determining whether the $100,000 project threshold has been met, labor costs involved in final assembly should not be included. The term “component” is defined above in FAQ no. 6.
Grantees shall adhere to the Buy America clause set forth in the grant or cooperative agreement with FRA. Grantees shall include an appropriate notice of the Buy America provision in solicitations or requests for proposals. As a condition of responsiveness, such solicitations should require that the bidder or offeror submit with the bid or offer a completed Buy America certificate in accordance with the suggested format below. If upon being awarded a particular contract, a successful bidder or offeror fails to demonstrate that it is in compliance with its certification, the bidder or offeror should be required to take the necessary steps in order to achieve compliance. If a bidder or offeror takes these necessary steps, it should not be allowed to change its original bid price or the price of its final offer. If a bidder or offeror does not take the necessary steps to achieve compliance and the contract has not yet been awarded, it should not be awarded the contract. If a contract has been awarded and the bidder or offeror does not take the necessary steps to achieve compliance, it may be considered in breach of the contract.
Where the bidder or offeror believes it may qualify, pursuant to Section 22905(a)(2), for a waiver from the Buy America requirements, it should submit, along with the required certificate, a written justification detailing the reasons it believes it meets the particular waiver exception(s). As part of its waiver justification, the bidder or offeror should include a statement detailing the percentage of U.S. content in each component or end product, as applicable. FRA will apply the statutory Buy America provision strictly and will issue a waiver only when the bidder/offeror has demonstrated by clear evidence that it has met the requirements for a waiver. Moreover, FRA considers the need to grant waivers under these circumstances as strictly temporary because it expects that achieving domestic manufacture and 100% domestic component content can and will occur in the very near future. Where no bidder or offeror can fully comply with the Buy America requirement, FRA grantees are encouraged to consider most favorably (consistent with applicable procurement practices), when choosing among bidders or offerors, the bid or offer that includes the highest percentage of U.S. steel, iron, and manufactured goods. By encouraging grantees to use manufacturers or suppliers who maximize domestic content, FRA hopes to achieve its goal of 100% domestic content in the near future.
Certificate of Compliance with Buy America Requirements
The bidder or offeror hereby certifies that it will comply with the FRA Buy America requirements of 49 U.S.C. Section 22905(a)(1).
Date ___________________________________________________________________
Signature _____________________________________________________________
Company ______________________________________________________________
Name _________________________________________________________________
Title __________________________________________________________________
Certificate of Non-Compliance with Buy America Requirements
The bidder or offeror hereby certifies that it cannot comply with the requirements of 49 U.S.C. Section 22905(a)(1), but it may qualify for an exception to the requirement pursuant to 49 U.S.C. Section 22905(a)(2).
Date ___________________________________________________________________
Signature _____________________________________________________________
Company ______________________________________________________________
Name _________________________________________________________________
Title __________________________________________________________________
Certificate of Non-Compliance with Buy America Requirements
In accordance with 49 U.S.C. 22905(a)(7), a person or entity is ineligible to receive any contract or subcontract made with FRA grant funds if a court or department, agency, or instrumentality of the Government decides the person intentionally—(A) affixed a “Made in America” label, or a label with an inscription having the same meaning, to goods sold in or shipped to the United States that are used in a project to which this subsection applies but not produced in the United States; or (B) represented that goods described in subparagraph (A) of this paragraph were produced in the United States.
Whether or not a bidder or offeror certifies that it will comply with the applicable requirement, such bidder or offeror is bound by its original certification (in the case of a sealed bidding procurement) or its certification submitted with its final offer (in the case of a negotiated procurement) and is not permitted to change its certification after bid opening or submission of a final offer. Where a bidder or offeror certifies that it will comply with the applicable Buy America requirements, the bidder, offeror, or grantee is not later eligible for a waiver of those requirements.
When a project is likely to meet the $100,000 cost threshold, procurement officers need to be aware of the Buy America requirements and review the certificates of compliance and non-compliance prior to awarding contracts. Grantees should review all Buy America certifications before contract award and request a waiver, if one is necessary, before award in order to ensure FRA participation in funding for the contract. However, FRA will apply the Buy America provision strictly and will issue a waiver only when the bidder/offeror has demonstrated that waiver is absolutely necessary and that there is clear evidence that the requirements for a waiver have been met. Whether procurements are by sealed bids or by requests for proposals, awards may be made only to parties whose compliance has been certified, unless the grantees request and receive waivers from FRA. Should this review not be properly done by grantees and a contract awarded a bidder/offeror in error, the FRA may be forced to withdraw its participation in funding the project.
Except where a waiver for a class of goods may have been granted, individual waiver requests are always required. In the uncommon instance where a waiver would be granted, it would be non-precedential and apply only to the party and procurement referenced in the particular waiver. Grantees, manufacturers and suppliers should be aware that FRA granting a waiver in one instance is no indication that waiver for the same goods would be issued if a subsequent request for a waiver were made. FRA considers the need to grant waivers as a temporary activity because it expects that its goal of achieving domestic manufacture and 100% domestic component content can and will occur in the very near future.
Application for a waiver from FRA’s Buy America requirement is made by submitting in writing a detailed justification, along with supporting documentation to:
FRA Administrator
Federal Railroad Administration
U.S. Department of Transportation
1200 New Jersey Avenue, S.E.
Washington, D.C. 20590
Waiver requests should include at least the following information: 1) description of the project; 2) description of the steel, iron, or manufactured good not meeting the Buy America requirement, including percentages of U.S. material versus foreign; 3) description of the efforts made to secure complying steel, iron, or manufactured goods; 4) description of the bidding process; 5) cost differentials; 6) citation to the specific 49 U.S.C. § 22905(a)(2) waiver category(ies) under which the waiver is sought; 7) justification supporting the application of the waiver category(ies) cited; and 8) contact information for the responsible party, if FRA needs further information.
The Administrator may waive Section 22905(a)(1) only if he or she finds that: A) applying the statute would be inconsistent with the public interest; B) the steel, iron, and goods produced in the United States are not produced in a sufficient and reasonably available amount or are not of a satisfactory quality; C) rolling stock or power train equipment cannot be bought and delivered in the United States within a reasonable time; or D) including domestic material will increase the cost of the overall project by more than 25 percent. In calculating the components’ costs for purposes of determining whether including domestic material will increase the cost of the overall project by more than 25 percent, labor costs involved in final assembly should not be included. “Component” is defined in FAQ no. 6.
The FRA’s Buy America statute requires that: if the Secretary determines that it is necessary to waive the application of the Buy America requirements on the basis of one of the statutory exemptions, the Secretary shall, before the date on which such finding takes effect—publish in the Federal Register a detailed written justification as to why the waiver is needed; and provide notice of such finding and an opportunity for public comment on such finding for a reasonable period of time not to exceed 15 days. FRA will comply with this requirement by posting a notice of its intent to grant a waiver on FRA’s public website (at www.fra.dot.gov) and in the Federal Register with an open docket available for posting comments (at www.regulations.gov). Following the comment period, FRA will consider any comments and then make a final decision on the waiver. The waiver will not become final until the decision is signed by the FRA Administrator or his/her designee. In some instances, FRA may publish waiver requests before any decision has been reached; for example, in order to assist the FRA in determining whether a domestic manufacturer exists for particular manufactured goods.
Yes. The information provided to FRA may become public. First, as noted in FAQ no. 15, the Buy America provision requires that a notice of the FRA’s intent to grant a waiver be published in the Federal Register. In some instances, FRA would also publish a request for comment before making a determination on whether to grant a waiver. In addition, as a Federal agency, FRA is subject to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), which generally provides that any person has a right, enforceable in court, to obtain access to Federal agency records, except to the extent that such records (or portions of them) are protected from public disclosure by one of nine exemptions or by one of three special law enforcement record exclusions. 5 U.S.C. § 552. Materials submitted by grantees under the FRA Program become Federal agency records and are thus subject to the FOIA and to public release in response to individual FOIA requests.
Certain information submitted by a grantee or a stakeholder could be exempt from public release under FOIA. FOIA Exemption 4, for instance, protects trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained from a person if disclosure of the information is likely to cause substantial harm to the competitive position of the person from whom the information was obtained.
49 C.F.R. § 209.11 discusses FRA’s existing procedures for requesting confidential treatment of documents filed with FRA in connection with the agency's safety activities. However, the principles are the same for the FRA grant programs, and any entity seeking confidential treatment for documents submitted to the agency should follow the outlined procedures. Grantees seeking exempt treatment must provide a detailed statement supporting and justifying their request. See 49 C.F.R. § 209.11(c)-(d). The burden is on the entity requesting confidential treatment to identify all information for which exempt treatment is sought and to persuade the agency that the information should not be disclosed as consistent with existing law. See also 49 C.F.R. § 7.17 (describing the Department of Transportation's submitter consultation process as a part of the agency's FOIA implementing regulation). The final decision as to whether the information meets the standards of Exemption 4 and is exempt from release rests with FRA. 49 C.F.R. § 209.11(e). FRA will notify the submitter of any decision to release a document over the objection of the submitter (49 C.F.R. § 7.17(b)).
Please submit your question or inquiry to FRABuyAmerica@dot.gov.
Yes. Buy America (49 U.S.C. § 22905(a)) is applicable to most FRA program grant funds and is the primary subject of this guidance. The Buy American Act (41 U.S.C. § 8302 (formerly §10a - 10d)) and 48 C.F.R. Part 25) is a different statute and regulation that is applicable to purchases by Federal agencies and departments, and to certain Department of Transportation and Related Agencies Appropriations Acts funded projects.
Amtrak also is required to adhere to domestic buying preference requirements. However, either 49 U.S.C. § 24305(f) or another statute could apply to Amtrak projects, depending on the source of funds. 49 U.S.C. §22905(a) applies when Amtrak is operating under an FRA program grant or performing a contract for another FRA program grantee applying 49 U.S.C. §22905(a). However, 49 U.S.C. § 24305(f) applies when Amtrak is spending funds from its own capital or operating grant from the FRA.
Generally, Amtrak administers its own domestic buying preference program, except that interpretations of applicability and any waivers are decided by the FRA.