cfr_sections
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6 rows where part_number = 393 and title_number = 46 sorted by section_id
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| section_id ▼ | title_number | title_name | chapter | subchapter | part_number | part_name | subpart | subpart_name | section_number | section_heading | agency | authority | source_citation | amendment_citations | full_text |
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| 46:46:8.0.1.12.48.1.18.1 | 46 | Shipping | II | K | 393 | PART 393—AMERICA'S MARINE HIGHWAY PROGRAM | A | Subpart A—General Provisions | § 393.1 Special definitions. | FMC | For the purposes of this part: (a) Administrator means the Maritime Administrator, Maritime Administration, U.S. Department of Transportation USDOT. The Administrator is responsible for administering the America's Marine Highway Program (AMHP) and making route and project recommendations to the Secretary. (b) Department means the U.S. Department of Transportation. (c) Cargo on a Marine Highway service means goods transported in commerce and generally refers to, but is not limited by, the types and kinds of cargo that are described in the definition of “Short sea transportation”, in paragraph (k) of this section. Neither weight nor proportionality are considered under this definition. The term as used in this context is generally interchangeable with the term “Freight”, defined in paragraph (d) of this section. (d) Freight on a Marine Highway service means goods transported in commerce and generally refers to, but is not limited by, the types and kinds of cargo that are described in the definition of “Short sea transportation”, in paragraph (k) of this section. Neither weight nor proportionality are considered under this definition. The term as used in this context is generally interchangeable with the term “Cargo”, defined in paragraph (c) of this section. (e) Marine Highway Routes or Routes mean commercially navigable coastal, inland, and intracoastal waters of the United States as designated by the Secretary. This includes connections between U.S. ports and Canadian ports on the Great Lakes-Saint Lawrence Seaway System, and non-contiguous U.S. ports. Marine Highway Routes are a component of the Nation's surface transportation system. Each Marine Highway Route is described in terms of the specific landside transportation routes (road or railway) that it supplements or to which it connects. All previously designated Marine Highway “corridors,” “connectors,” and “crossings” are now designated as “Routes.” (f) Marine Highway Projects are planned or contemplated new services, or expansions of exi… | ||||
| 46:46:8.0.1.12.48.2.18.1 | 46 | Shipping | II | K | 393 | PART 393—AMERICA'S MARINE HIGHWAY PROGRAM | B | Subpart B—Marine Highway Route and Project Designations | § 393.2 Marine Highway Routes. | FMC | (a) What are the minimum eligibility requirements for MARAD to recommend a Marine Highway Route for the Secretary to designate? (1) MARAD may recommend Marine Highway Routes that relieve landside congestion along coastal corridors or that promote short sea transportation; and (2) That advance the objectives of the AMHP in paragraph (c) of this section. (b) When can a Route Sponsor request designation of a Marine Highway Route? (1) The Department accepts Marine Highway Route designation requests any time. Route Sponsors must submit designation requests through the Program Office. (2) The Maritime Administration publishes all designated Routes on its Web site. Go to http://www.marad.dot.gov and search “America's Marine Highways” to see the current list. (c) What should Route Sponsors consider when preparing Marine Highway Route designation requests? (1) Route Sponsors designation requests should explain how a proposed route will help achieve the following objectives: (i) Establishing Marine Highway Routes as extensions of the national surface transportation system; (ii) Developing multi-jurisdictional coalitions and partnerships that focus public and private efforts to improve reliability and resiliency of the Route for freight and passengers; (iii) Obtaining public benefits as described in paragraph (d)(1)(vi) of this section; and (iv) Identifying potential savings that could be realized by providing an alternative to existing supply chains through short sea transportation. (2) [Reserved] (d) What information should Route Sponsors include in their designation requests? (1) One or more eligible Route Sponsors may submit Marine Highway Route designation requests to the Program Office. Designation requests should include the following information: (i) Physical Description of the Proposed Marine Highway Route. Describe the proposed Marine Highway Route, and its connection to existing or planned transportation infrastructure and intermodal facilities. Include key navigational factors such as avai… | ||||
| 46:46:8.0.1.12.48.2.18.2 | 46 | Shipping | II | K | 393 | PART 393—AMERICA'S MARINE HIGHWAY PROGRAM | B | Subpart B—Marine Highway Route and Project Designations | § 393.3 Marine Highway Projects. | FMC | (a) What are the minimum eligibility requirements for MARAD to recommend a Marine Highway Project for the Secretary to designate? (1) MARAD may recommend only those Marine Highway Projects that will use U.S. documented vessels and mitigate landside congestion or promote short sea transportation. (2) MARAD may recommend only those Marine Highway Projects that: (i) Involve the carriage of cargo in Short Sea Transportation as defined in paragraph (k) of this section; (ii) Involve new or expand existing services for the carriage of cargo; and (iii) Are on a designated Marine Highway Route. (3) Proposed Route Designations are accepted at any time, and may be submitted together with the proposed Project Designation. (4) Successful Project Applicants must demonstrate a direct connection between a proposed Marine Highway Project and the carriage of cargo through ports on Designated Marine Highway Routes. (b) When does the Program Office accept Marine Highway Project designation applications? (1) The Administrator will announce by notice in the Federal Register and on MARAD's AMHP Web site open season periods to allow Project Applicants opportunities to submit Marine Highway Project designation applications. (2) [Reserved] (c) What should Project Applicants include when preparing a Marine Highway Project designation application? (1) The market or customer base to be served by the service and the service's value proposition to customers. This includes— (i) A description of how the market is currently served by transportation options; (ii) Identities of shippers that have indicated an interest in, and level of commitment to, the proposed service; (iii) Specific commodities, markets, and shippers the Project is expected to attract; (iv) Extent to which interested entities have been educated about the Project and expressed support, and (v) A marketing strategy for the project if one exists. (2) Operational framework. A description of the proposed operational framework of the project including origin/d… | ||||
| 46:46:8.0.1.12.48.3.18.1 | 46 | Shipping | II | K | 393 | PART 393—AMERICA'S MARINE HIGHWAY PROGRAM | C | Subpart C—Department of Transportation Efforts To Foster and Support America's Marine Highways | § 393.4 DOT Support for planning activities. | FMC | (a) How does DOT provide support? (1) The Program Office engages in coordination and planning activities with Federal, State, local and tribal governments and planning and private entities organizations to encourage the use of designated Marine Highway Routes and Projects. These activities include: (i) Working with these entities to assess plans and develop strategies, where appropriate, to incorporate Marine Highway transportation and other short sea transportation solutions to their statewide and metropolitan transportation plans, including the Statewide Transportation Improvement Programs and State Freight Plans. (ii) Facilitating groups of States and multi-State transportation entities to determine how Marine Highway transportation can address port congestion, traffic delays, bottlenecks, and other interstate transportation challenges to their mutual benefit. (iii) Identifying other Federal agencies that have jurisdiction over services, or which currently provide funding for components of services, in order to determine which agencies should be consulted and assist in the coordination process. (iv) Organizing the Department's modal administrations, including Federal Highway Administration, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, Federal Railroad Administration, Saint Lawrence Seaway Development Corporation, and Federal Transit Administration, as appropriate, for support and to evaluate costs and benefits of proposed Marine Highway Routes and Projects. (2) [Reserved] (b) [Reserved] | ||||
| 46:46:8.0.1.12.48.3.18.2 | 46 | Shipping | II | K | 393 | PART 393—AMERICA'S MARINE HIGHWAY PROGRAM | C | Subpart C—Department of Transportation Efforts To Foster and Support America's Marine Highways | § 393.5 DOT Support for Marine Highway-related research. | FMC | (a) How does DOT support research? (1) The Program Office works in consultation with public and private entities as appropriate, within the limits of available resources, to identify impediments, develop incentives, and conduct innovative research, in support of the America's Marine Highway Program or in direct support of specific designated Marine Highway Routes and Projects. The primary objectives of selected research projects are to: (i) Identify markets, cargoes, and service parameters that could facilitate the development of new or expanded Marine Highway Services. (ii) Identify existing or emerging technology, vessel design, infrastructure designs, and other improvements that would reduce emissions, increase fuel economy, and lower costs of Marine Highway transportation and increase the efficiency of intermodal transfers. (iii) Identify impediments to the establishment of Marine Highway services. (iv) Identify incentives to increase the use and efficiency of Marine Highway services. (b) The Secretary, in consultation with the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency, may conduct research on short sea transportation regarding: (1) The environmental and transportation benefits to be derived from short sea transportation alternatives for other forms of transportation; (2) Technology, vessel design, and other improvements that would reduce emissions, increase fuel economy, and lower costs of short sea transportation and increase the efficiency of intermodal transfers; and (3) Solutions to impediments to short sea transportation projects designated. | ||||
| 46:46:8.0.1.12.48.3.18.3 | 46 | Shipping | II | K | 393 | PART 393—AMERICA'S MARINE HIGHWAY PROGRAM | C | Subpart C—Department of Transportation Efforts To Foster and Support America's Marine Highways | § 393.6 America's Marine Highway Program Project grants. | FMC | (a) How does MARAD administer the AMHP grant program? (1) The Associate Administrator for Intermodal Systems Development manages the program under the guidance and the immediate administrative direction of the Maritime Administrator. (2) MARAD establishes grant program priorities as reflected in its grant opportunity announcements and, from time-to-time, issues clarifying guidance documents through the MARAD Web site and the Federal Register . (3) The Administrator makes funding recommendations to the Secretary, who has the authority to award grants. (b) How does MARAD make grant opportunities known? (1) MARAD determines which grant opportunities it will offer, and establishes application deadlines and programmatic requirements when grant funds become available to the AMHP. (2) The MARAD staff prepares Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) announcements consisting of all information necessary to apply for each grant and publishes the announcement in the Federal Register and on grants.gov. (c) How may an applicant apply for an AMHP grant? (1) Applicants may apply for a grant using grants.gov or, in connection with a Federal Register announcement, by submitting the necessary information to the AMHP Office in electronic form. (2) [Reserved] |
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CREATE TABLE cfr_sections (
section_id TEXT PRIMARY KEY,
title_number INTEGER,
title_name TEXT,
chapter TEXT,
subchapter TEXT,
part_number TEXT,
part_name TEXT,
subpart TEXT,
subpart_name TEXT,
section_number TEXT,
section_heading TEXT,
agency TEXT,
authority TEXT,
source_citation TEXT,
amendment_citations TEXT,
full_text TEXT
);
CREATE INDEX idx_cfr_title ON cfr_sections(title_number);
CREATE INDEX idx_cfr_part ON cfr_sections(part_number);
CREATE INDEX idx_cfr_agency ON cfr_sections(agency);