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United States Government Accountability Office: 
GAO: 

Report to Congressional Committees: 

August 2011: 

Public Transportation: 

Requirements for Smaller Capital Projects Generally Seen as Less 
Burdensome: 

GAO-11-778: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-11-778, a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The Federal Transit Administration's (FTA) Capital Investment Grant 
program funds, among other things, projects for fixed-guideway 
systems—-often called New Starts projects. In 2005, the Safe, 
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act-A Legacy 
for Users (SAFETEA-LU) established a category of lower-cost projects-—
Small Starts-—which expands project eligibility and offers streamlined 
requirements. FTA subsequently created the Very Small Starts category 
with a further streamlined process for very low-cost projects. Exempt 
projects, those receiving under $25 million and typically designated 
by Congress, also have a simplified process. 

As part of GAO’s annual mandate to review New Starts, this report 
describes (1) the history of Small Starts and Very Small Starts and 
the type of projects FTA recommended for funding; (2) the project 
development requirements for Small Starts and Very Small Starts and 
what stakeholders identify as the advantages and disadvantages of the 
requirements; and (3) the project development requirements for exempt 
projects, the projects selected to receive funding, and what 
stakeholders identify as the advantages and disadvantages of this 
category. Among other things, GAO analyzed laws, regulations, and 
agency guidance, and interviewed FTA headquarters staff and 
stakeholders from 7 FTA regional offices, 15 projects, and 2 industry 
groups. DOT officials reviewed a draft of this report and provided 
technical comments, which GAO incorporated as appropriate. 

What GAO Found: 

When SAFETEA-LU established the Small Starts program, it streamlined 
project development requirements and project evaluation and rating 
criteria, and authorized certain corridor-based bus projects—like bus 
rapid transit systems—to receive transit capital funding. Furthermore, 
FTA created Very Small Starts within Small Starts to further 
streamline requirements for projects that are simple and low-risk, 
based on cost and other features. FTA has mostly recommended bus 
projects for funding but has also recommended light rail, commuter 
rail, and streetcar projects. Overall, FTA has recommended 10 Small 
Starts and 19 Very Small Starts projects for funding. These projects’ 
total costs vary from about $5 million to about $232 million, and FTA 
has recommended capital investment program funds ranging from nearly 
$3 million to $75 million for these projects. 

FTA’s project development requirements for Small Starts and Very Small 
Starts include costs and financial summaries. While all sponsors 
submit similar information in some respects, such as financial 
summaries, FTA only requires sponsors of Small Starts projects to 
submit information on a project’s expected benefits, like travel 
forecasts. Some stakeholders GAO spoke with said an advantage of FTA’s 
requirements for Very Small Starts is that they are appropriately 
scaled and not overly burdensome for smaller projects. For example, 
about half of the stakeholders experienced with Very Small Starts told 
GAO that the requirements were straightforward and that project 
sponsors were able to meet them quickly without many problems. Four 
project sponsors and an industry group said that a disadvantage of the 
Small Starts requirements is that they are too similar to those for 
New Starts, even though Small Starts projects have a lower total cost 
and are less complex. Generally, stakeholders said that the 
requirements for both Small Starts and Very Small Starts help project 
sponsors fully develop and plan projects by helping identify potential 
problems. Stakeholders’ perspectives depend, in part, on their degree 
of experience with these programs, which ranged from none to several 
previous New Starts or Small Starts projects. 

Exempt projects, typically congressionally designated and below the 
$25 million threshold, are not evaluated and rated. Exempt projects 
are subject to fewer FTA requirements that mainly focus on the 
sponsor’s ability to carry out its project. Nine exempt projects have 
entered the New Starts pipeline since the last reauthorization of the 
New Starts program in 2005. These projects vary in terms of mode and 
scope. For example, one project extends a bus transitway with 
dedicated vehicle lanes; and another project builds a new station on 
an existing rail line. The total costs for these projects vary from 
about $10 million to about $493 million, and the federal contributions 
range from about $1 million to nearly $25 million in capital 
investment program funds. Four project sponsors GAO spoke with said 
that the exempt category provides a useful source of capital funding 
for atypical transit projects that solve local transportation 
problems. In its 2012 budget request, FTA proposes to continue the 
exempt category, which is set to expire under current law, in the next 
surface transportation reauthorization. 

View [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-778] or key 
components. For more information, contact Lorelei St. James at (202) 
512-2834 or stjamesl@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Small Starts and Very Small Starts History and Types of Projects: 

FTA's Project Development Requirements for Small Starts and Very Small 
Starts and Stakeholder Views: 

FTA's Project Development Requirements for Exempt Projects and 
Stakeholder Views: 

Agency Comments: 

Appendix I: Recommendation Follow-up: 

Appendix II: Small Starts and Very Small Starts Projects That Have 
Received Construction Grants: 

Appendix III: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix IV: Descriptions of Exempt Projects: 

Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Select Categories of Capital Investment Program Projects, by 
Total Cost and Federal Contribution: 

Table 2: Types and Number of Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
Projects FTA Recommended for Funding Since Fiscal Year 2007: 

Table 3: Small Starts Projects FTA Recommended for Funding Since 
Fiscal Year 2007: 

Table 4: Very Small Starts Projects FTA Recommended for Funding Since 
Fiscal Year 2007: 

Table 5: FTA's New Starts, Small Starts, and Very Small Starts 
Requirements for Entry into Project Development: 

Table 6: Exempt Projects That Have Entered the New Starts Pipeline 
Since 2005: 

Table 7: Urban Circulator Projects FTA Selected to Receive Funding: 

Table 8: Recommendations to DOT in 2008: 

Table 9: Recommendations to DOT in 2009: 

Table 10: Project Development Dates for Small Starts and Very Small 
Starts Projects That Received Construction Grants Since Fiscal Year 
2007: 

Table 11: Small Starts and Very Small Starts Project Sponsors 
Interviewed: 

Table 12: New Starts Exempt Project Sponsors Interviewed: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: New Starts Project Development Process: 

Figure 2: Comparison of New Starts and Small Starts Project 
Development Processes: 

Abbreviations: 

BRT: bus rapid transit: 

DOT: Department of Transportation: 

FFGA: full funding grant agreement: 

FTA: Federal Transit Administration: 

PCGA: project construction grant agreement: 

PMOC: project management oversight contractor: 

SAFETEA-LU: Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation 
Equity Act-A Legacy for Users: 

TIGER: Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

August 2, 2011: 

The Honorable Tim Johnson: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Richard C. Shelby: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs: 
United States Senate: 

The Honorable John L. Mica: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Nick J. Rahall, II: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure: 
House of Representatives: 

The Federal Transit Administration's (FTA) Capital Investment Grant 
program provides federal capital funds to help many states, cities, 
and localities plan and build new fixed-guideway systems[Footnote 1] 
or extensions to existing fixed-guideway systems, often called New 
Starts projects. FTA evaluates and recommends New Starts projects to 
Congress for grants, and then provides grants to project sponsors, 
typically transit agencies and other local governments. Over the last 
decade, FTA has provided more than $10 billion in New Starts funding 
to help design and construct transit projects that annually provide 
billions of passenger trips nationwide. 

In 2005, the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation 
Equity Act-A Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU) created a new category of 
lower-cost projects--the Small Starts program--primarily to streamline 
the project development process and evaluation and rating criteria 
that apply to larger-dollar New Starts projects.[Footnote 2] At the 
time Small Starts was established, FTA created an even more 
streamlined evaluation process for very low-cost projects called Very 
Small Starts within the Small Starts program. An additional category--
the exempt category--which dates back to 1991, provides funding for 
projects identified primarily by Congress.[Footnote 3] These projects 
are exempt altogether from the evaluation and rating process. Table 1 
provides information on these categories of projects by total cost and 
federal New Starts contribution, although projects must meet other 
requirements to qualify for funding. 

Table 1: Select Categories of Capital Investment Program Projects, by 
Total Cost and Federal Contribution[A]: 

New Starts: 
Total estimated project cost is $250 million or more or federal 
contribution is $75 million or more. 

Small Starts: 
Total estimated project cost is under $250 million and federal 
contribution is under $75 million; 
* Very Small Starts: 
Total estimated project cost is under $50 million. 

Exempt: 
Federal contribution is under $25 million, regardless of total project 
cost. 

Source: GAO analysis of FTA documents. 

[A] Federal contribution refers to Section 49 U.S.C. § 5309 Capital 
Investment Grant funds only. Projects may have other sources of 
federal funds, such as Recovery Act or Federal Highway Administration 
Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement funds. 

[End of table] 

As part of our annual mandate to review the New Starts program, 
[Footnote 4] we reviewed FTA's project development requirements for 
Small Starts, Very Small Starts, and exempt projects. We define 
project development requirements to include the information FTA 
requires from project sponsors when they apply for and proceed through 
each statutorily required project development phase, based on its 
guidance and regulations. These project development requirements help 
FTA manage the risks associated with a project to protect the federal 
investment in capital transit projects recommended for funding. This 
report describes (1) the legislative and program history for the 
creation of Small Starts and Very Small Starts, respectively, and the 
types of Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects that have been 
recommended for funding, by mode of transit and size; (2) the project 
development requirements for Small Starts and Very Small Starts and 
what stakeholders identify as the advantages and disadvantages of 
these requirements; and (3) the project development requirements for 
exempt projects, the projects that have been selected to receive 
funding, and what stakeholders identify as the advantages and 
disadvantages of this category. In addition, appendix I summarizes 
recommendations from recent GAO reports on the New Starts program and 
updates FTA's progress in implementing these recommendations. 

The focus of this review is on FTA's project development requirements 
for Small Starts, Very Small Starts, and exempt projects. We only 
refer to FTA's evaluation and rating process--including both project 
justification and local financial commitment criteria--as it affects 
simplification of project requirements. We did not review the project 
justification and local financial commitment criteria that help inform 
administration and congressional decisions about which projects should 
receive federal funding.[Footnote 5] However, FTA has an ongoing 
rulemaking in this area.[Footnote 6] 

To address the first objective, we analyzed SAFETEA-LU congressional 
reports, testimonies presented before Congress, and member floor 
statements to describe the legislative history for the Small Starts 
program. We also analyzed program guidance and Federal Register 
notices to describe program history for the Very Small Starts 
category. To provide information on Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
projects, including cost, mode of transit, and other characteristics, 
we analyzed and summarized project data compiled by FTA, as well as 
data from FTA's Annual Reports on Funding Recommendations for fiscal 
years 2007 through 2012. We included data on Small Starts and Very 
Small Starts projects that FTA had recommended to Congress for funding 
since the enactment of SAFETEA-LU. We assessed the reliability of the 
data compiled by FTA by comparing it to data from the Annual Reports 
on Funding Recommendations and information from project sponsors we 
interviewed. We also interviewed FTA officials. We determined that the 
data were sufficiently reliable for the purposes of this report. 

To address the second and third objectives, we reviewed relevant 
legislation including SAFETEA-LU; FTA guidance and regulations related 
to Small Starts, Very Small Starts, and exempt projects; and other 
relevant FTA documents. We interviewed stakeholders of Small Starts, 
Very Small Starts, and exempt projects to learn what they identify as 
advantages and disadvantages of FTA's project development 
requirements. These stakeholders included 15 judgmentally selected 
project sponsors (4 Small Starts, 6 Very Small Starts, and 5 exempt 
projects), officials at the 7 corresponding FTA regional offices, 
officials at FTA headquarters, and representatives of industry groups. 
While not representative, we selected the project sponsors to include 
variety in project characteristics including (1) mode of transit 
(e.g., light rail, commuter rail); (2) total project cost; (3) 
geographic location; and (4) year recommended for funding in the 
President's budget by FTA or year entering the program. Additionally, 
we used stakeholder observations and experiences to obtain information 
on these requirements, since there is not a reliable quantitative way 
to evaluate the impact of changes in FTA's requirements for Small 
Starts and Very Small Starts projects on project development time 
frames compared to New Starts projects for two reasons. First, less 
than half of the Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects 
recommended for funding to date have completed the project development 
phase and received a construction grant. Appendix II contains more 
information on these 11 projects. Second, we do not have reliable data 
on time frames for New Starts projects available for comparison. 
[Footnote 7] However, FTA officials said they do not agree with GAO's 
assessment of its data. See appendix I for more details. To provide 
information on exempt projects, we verified, analyzed, and summarized 
project data compiled by FTA and the Annual Reports on Funding 
Recommendations for fiscal years 2007 through 2012, as described 
above. As FTA does not recommend exempt projects to Congress for 
funding in the President's budget to Congress, we focused on exempt 
projects that FTA has approved to enter preliminary engineering since 
the passage of SAFETEA-LU in August 2005. 

We conducted this performance audit from December 2010 through August 
2011 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. See 
appendix III for more information about our scope and methodology. 

Background: 

FTA's New Starts program supports new or extensions to existing fixed- 
guideway transit capital projects, such as light rail, commuter rail, 
ferry, and bus rapid transit (BRT) projects.[Footnote 8] Sponsors of 
New Starts projects--those with a total cost of $250 million or more 
or a capital investment program contribution of $75 million or more--
must take a number of steps to select a project and apply for New 
Starts funding. Sponsors of New Starts projects are required by law to 
go through a planning and project development process, which is 
divided into three phases: alternatives analysis, preliminary 
engineering, and final design. This is followed by the construction 
phase. (See figure 1.) In the alternatives analysis phase, project 
sponsors identify the transportation needs in a specific corridor and 
evaluate a range of modal and alignment alternatives to address the 
locally identified problems in that corridor.[Footnote 9] Project 
sponsors complete the alternatives analysis phase by selecting a 
locally preferred alternative. During the preliminary engineering 
phase, project sponsors refine the design of the locally preferred 
alternative and its estimated costs, benefits, and impacts. When the 
preliminary engineering phase is completed and federal environmental 
requirements are satisfied, FTA may approve the project's advancement 
into final design, after which FTA may recommend the New Starts 
project for a full funding grant agreement (FFGA). An FFGA establishes 
the terms and conditions for federal participation in a transit 
project. 

Figure 1: New Starts Project Development Process: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

Alternatives analysis; 
Preliminary engineering; 
Final design; 
FFGA[A]; 
Construction. 

Sources: GAO and FTA. 

[A] FTA awards FFGAs to New Starts projects that it recommends for 
funding to Congress. 

[End of figure] 

SAFETEA-LU established the Small Starts program within the capital 
investment program; the Small Starts program simplifies the evaluation 
and rating criteria and steps in the project development process for 
lower-cost projects. According to FTA's guidance, projects must (1) 
meet the definition of a fixed-guideway for at least 50 percent of the 
project length in the peak period[Footnote 10] or (2) be a corridor- 
based bus project with certain elements[Footnote 11] to qualify as a 
Small Starts project. 

FTA subsequently introduced a further streamlined evaluation and 
rating process for very low-cost projects within the Small Starts 
program, which it calls Very Small Starts. Very Small Starts are 
projects that must contain the same elements as Small Starts projects 
and also contain the following three features: 

* be located in corridors with more than 3,000 existing riders per 
average weekday who will benefit from the proposed project, 

* have a total capital cost of less than $50 million (for all project 
elements), and: 

* have a per-mile cost of less than $3 million, excluding rolling 
stock (e.g., train cars). 

The project development process for Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
is a condensed version of the process for larger New Starts projects. 
For Small Starts, SAFETEA-LU set up a condensed process in which the 
preliminary engineering and final design phases are combined into one 
"project development" phase; see figure 2 below for a comparison to 
the New Starts project development process. When projects apply to 
enter project development, FTA evaluates and rates Small Starts 
projects on both project justification and local financial commitment 
criteria, but compared to New Starts projects, there are fewer 
statutorily prescribed project justification criteria for these 
projects.[Footnote 12] Very Small Starts projects also progress 
through a single project development phase and are evaluated and rated 
on the simplified project justification criteria. FTA may recommend 
Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects to Congress for funding 
once the projects have been approved to enter into project development 
and meet FTA's "readiness" requirements. Congress makes final 
appropriations decisions on projects. FTA provides funding for Small 
Starts and Very Small Starts projects in one of two ways: through 
project construction grant agreements (PCGA) or single-year 
construction grants when the New Starts funding request is less than 
$25 million and can be met with either a single-year appropriation or 
existing FTA appropriations that remain available for this purpose. 

Figure 2: Comparison of New Starts and Small Starts Project 
Development Processes: 

[Refer to PDF for image: illustration] 

New Starts projects, including exempt projects: 
Alternatives analysis; 
Preliminary engineering; 
Final design; 
FFGA[A]; 
Construction. 

Small Starts projects, including Very Small Starts projects: 
Alternatives analysis; 
Project development; 
PCGA; 
Construction. 

Sources: GAO and FTA. 

[A] FTA awards FFGAs to New Starts projects that it recommends for 
funding to Congress. For exempt projects, FTA awards construction 
grants after a project completes the final design phase. FTA does not 
recommend these projects for funding to Congress. 

[End of figure] 

Exempt projects follow the same project development process as New 
Starts projects, including alternatives analysis, preliminary 
engineering, final design, and construction. (See fig. 2.) Since these 
projects receive less than $25 million in federal funds, they are 
statutorily exempt from FTA's evaluation and rating process. However, 
exempt projects must still meet other FTA federal grant requirements 
before receiving federal funds.[Footnote 13] Currently, the exempt 
category of funding will expire when a final regulation implementing 
the Small Starts provisions of SAFETEA-LU is complete. However, FTA 
has not yet issued this final regulation.[Footnote 14] 

For the next reauthorization of federal transit programs, FTA proposes 
in its fiscal year 2012 budget request to transform the Capital 
Investment Grant program to further streamline the process for new 
fixed-guideway and corridor-based bus projects. FTA proposes to 
discontinue the separate categories of New Starts and Small Starts 
(which includes Very Small Starts) projects in law and instead 
evaluate and rate projects under a single set of streamlined criteria. 
Further, FTA proposes to reduce the steps in the project development 
process. FTA also proposes that projects that require less than 10 
percent of the project's total anticipated cost and no more than $100 
million in major capital investment funds be exempt from the 
evaluation and rating process. 

Small Starts and Very Small Starts History and Types of Projects: 

Small Starts Was Established to Streamline New Starts and Allowed 
Funding for Certain Types of Bus Projects: 

The Small Starts program was created to provide a more streamlined 
evaluation and rating process for lower-cost and less complex 
projects. SAFETEA-LU expanded the types of projects eligible under the 
new Small Starts program to include corridor-based bus projects, which 
includes projects such as BRT. Thus, any new major capital project 
fitting the broader definition is eligible, whether it is a BRT, 
streetcar, or rail project. Although certain bus projects are now 
eligible for Small Starts funding, the law does not express a 
preference for any particular mode of transit and the legislative 
history indicates that the program was to remain mode-neutral. 
[Footnote 15] 

At the time Small Starts was established, FTA created the category of 
Very Small Starts to further streamline the program for simple, low- 
risk projects that are, based on their features, expected to be cost- 
effective and with sufficient land use to warrant funding.[Footnote 
16] FTA officials stated that the features were developed and 
determined based on data that FTA had on existing projects.[Footnote 
17] According to FTA, it also created Very Small Starts to be mode-
neutral. 

FTA Has Mostly Recommended Bus Rapid Transit Projects for Small Starts 
and Very Small Starts Funding: 

Since fiscal year 2007, FTA has approved 29 Small Starts and Very 
Small Starts projects into project development, and has recommended 
for funding to Congress all 29 of them, which are mostly BRT projects 
and a handful of other transit modes.[Footnote 18] As Table 2 shows, 
25 of the 29 projects FTA recommended for funding are BRT projects. 
Six of the 10 Small Starts projects are BRT projects; all 19 Very 
Small Starts projects are BRT projects. 

Table 2: Types and Number of Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
Projects FTA Recommended for Funding Since Fiscal Year 2007: 

Mode: Bus rapid transit (BRT); 
Number of Small Starts projects: 6; 
Number of Very Small Starts projects: 19; 
Total: 25. 

Mode: Commuter/light rail; 
Number of Small Starts projects: 3; 
Number of Very Small Starts projects: 0; 
Total: 3. 

Mode: Streetcar; 
Number of Small Starts projects: 1; 
Number of Very Small Starts projects: 0; 
Total: 1. 

Mode: Total; 
Number of Small Starts projects: 10; 
Number of Very Small Starts projects: 19; 
Total: 29. 

Source: GAO analysis of FTA data. 

[End of table] 

The number of successful applicants does not necessarily represent the 
interest of all potential project sponsors in Small Starts and Very 
Small Starts. It is difficult to establish the total number of 
projects that sponsors might be interested in developing because, 
according to FTA officials in one regional office, FTA encourages 
sponsors not to formally apply for entry into project development 
until their project is ready for approval. The regional FTA officials 
cited two sponsors of potential Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
projects that have expressed interest in the program and met with 
their office, but have not been able to submit a thorough and complete 
application for entry. In 2007, we also reported that FTA's increased 
scrutiny of applications into New Starts was one of the likely reasons 
that the number of projects in the "pipeline" of potential projects 
had decreased over the past several years.[Footnote 19] It is also 
difficult to establish the number of project sponsors that might have 
considered applying to the program but decided against it, in part, 
because these sponsors may not have notified FTA of their intentions. 
Further, FTA officials we spoke with in headquarters and the regional 
offices are not aware of any project sponsors that withdrew from or 
were removed from Small Starts after being approved into project 
development. Therefore, because the types of projects (with respect to 
transit modes) that FTA can consider for funding are limited to those 
from sponsors that formally apply to the program, we do not have 
adequate information to determine whether FTA's funding 
recommendations are mode-neutral. 

It is difficult to establish the number of "potential" project 
sponsors, but we identified one sponsor of a streetcar project which 
initially sought federal funding through the Small Starts program 
before switching to other sources of federal funding, including the 
exempt category in the New Starts program and the Transportation 
Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) grant program. 
According to the project sponsor, it spent 2 years trying to gain 
entry into project development as a Small Starts project but had 
difficulty meeting the cost-effectiveness criterion. FTA evaluates 
Small Starts and New Starts projects using the same cost-effectiveness 
criterion, which measures effectiveness primarily in terms of travel 
time savings for transit riders. As we have previously reported, 
[Footnote 20] this measurement may not favor certain projects, such as 
streetcars, that are not designed to create travel time savings, but 
instead to create other benefits, such as providing enhanced access to 
an urban center. According to the project sponsor, in early 2008, FTA 
advised the sponsor to seek funding as an exempt project and to see if 
a final regulation on the Small Starts program, as previously 
mentioned, would result in a change to how cost-effectiveness was 
formulated that would change the situation. In 2010, the sponsor 
received a TIGER grant and decided to remain in the exempt category. 
Several other streetcar projects have also received funding through 
TIGER grants. According to FTA officials, difficulty with the cost-
effectiveness criterion was not the only issue which kept the 
streetcar project from entering the Small Starts program. In 
particular, the project sponsor was also unable to obtain high enough 
ratings on other criteria to offset the lower cost-effectiveness 
rating. Thus, the project was not able to obtain an overall rating 
that was high enough to advance in the Small Starts program as 
required by statute.[Footnote 21] Further, FTA officials told us that 
FTA has taken steps to address the problems that streetcar projects 
face in attempting to become Small Starts and New Starts projects. For 
example, FTA established the Urban Circulator Program in 2009 (which 
we will discuss later in our report) to provide funds to projects that 
aim to connect urban destinations and foster redevelopment. However, 
we have not assessed the actions that FTA has taken. 

Within Small Starts and Very Small Starts, the projects FTA 
recommended to Congress for funding vary in terms of the total project 
costs and capital investment program contribution.[Footnote 22] For 
the 10 Small Starts projects, the total project cost ranges from 
nearly $40 million to about $232 million, and the median cost is about 
$143 million. As shown in table 3, for half of the Small Starts 
projects, the total project costs are between $100 and $200 million. 
The capital investment program contribution to the projects' costs 
ranges from about $28 million to $75 million, and the median capital 
investment program contribution is $75 million, as is the maximum 
capital investment program contribution. Seven of the 10 Small Starts 
projects were recommended for the maximum allowable capital investment 
program contribution. 

Table 3: Small Starts Projects FTA Recommended for Funding Since 
Fiscal Year 2007: 

Project: Pioneer Parkway BRT; 
Location: Springfield, OR; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $41.3 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $32.5 million; 
Percentage: 79%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2008. 

Project: Perris Valley Line; 
Location: Riverside, CA; 
Mode[A]: CR; 
Total capital cost[B]: $232.1 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $75.0 million; 
Percentage: 32%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2009. 

Project: Fitchburg Commuter Rail Improvements; 
Location: Fitchburg, MA; 
Mode[A]: CR; 
Total capital cost[B]: $158.3 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $75.0 million; 
Percentage: 47%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2009. 

Project: Portland Streetcar Loop; 
Location: Portland, OR; 
Mode[A]: Streetcar; 
Total capital cost[B]: $128.3 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $75.0 million; 
Percentage: 58%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2009. 

Project: Mason Street BRT; 
Location: Fort Collins, CO; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $82.0 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $65.6 million; 
Percentage: 80%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2009. 

Project: E Street Corridor BRT; 
Location: San Bernardino, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $191.7 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $75.0 million; 
Percentage: 39%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2010. 

Project: East Bay BRT; 
Location: Oakland, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $216.1 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $75.0 million; 
Percentage: 35%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2011. 

Project: Van Ness Avenue BRT; 
Location: San Francisco, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $118.5 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $75.0 million; 
Percentage: 63%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2011. 

Project: Nostrand Avenue BRT; 
Location: New York, NY; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $39.9 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $28.4 million; 
Percentage: 71%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2011. 

Project: Central Mesa Light Rail Extension; 
Location: Mesa, AZ; 
Mode[A]: LRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $198.5 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $75.0 million; 
Percentage: 38%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2012. 

Source: GAO analysis of FTA data. 

[A] BRT = bus rapid transit; CR = commuter rail; LRT = light rail 
transit: 

[B] Dollar figures are in year of expenditure dollars. 

[End of table] 

For the 19 Very Small Starts projects, the total project cost ranges 
from about $5 million to about $48 million and the median cost is 
about $29 million. The capital investment program contribution to the 
projects' costs ranges from nearly $3 million to about $39 million and 
the median capital investment program contribution is about $20 
million. As shown in table 4, nearly half of these projects were 
recommended for $20 to $30 million in capital investment program funds. 

Table 4: Very Small Starts Projects FTA Recommended for Funding Since 
Fiscal Year 2007: 

Project: Troost Corridor BRT; 
Location: Kansas City, MO; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $30.7 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $24.6 million; 
Percentage: 80%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2008. 

Project: Gap Closure Project; 
Location: Los Angeles, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $29.2 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $16.7 million; 
Percentage: 57%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2008. 

Project: Federal Way, Pacific Highway South BRT; 
Location: King County, WA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $25.1 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $14.1 million; 
Percentage: 56%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2008. 

Project: Mid-City Rapid Bus; 
Location: San Diego, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $44.5 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $21.7 million; 
Percentage: 49%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2009. 

Project: Wilshire Boulevard Bus-Only Lane Project; 
Location: Los Angeles, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $31.5 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $23.3 million; 
Percentage: 74%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2009. 

Project: Bellevue-Redmond RapidRide; 
Location: King County, WA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $26.9 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $20.2 million; 
Percentage: 75%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2009. 

Project: Route 10 BRT; 
Location: Livermore, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $13.6 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $10.9 million; 
Percentage: 80%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2009. 

Project: Mountain Links; 
Location: Flagstaff, AZ; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $8.3 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $6.2 million; 
Percentage: 76%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2009. 

Project: Austin BRT; 
Location: Austin, TX; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $47.6 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $38.1 million; 
Percentage: 80%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2010. 

Project: Roaring Fork Valley BRT; 
Location: Roaring Fork Valley, CO; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $39.3 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $25.0 million; 
Percentage: 64%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2010. 

Project: Stockton Metro Express Airport Way Corridor BRT; 
Location: San Joaquin, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $9.7 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $2.8 million; 
Percentage: 29%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2010. 

Project: Monterey Bay Rapid Transit; 
Location: Monterey, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $5.1 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $2.8 million; 
Percentage: 54%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2010. 

Project: West Seattle BRT; 
Location: King County, WA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $28.4 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $21.3 million; 
Percentage: 75%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2011. 

Project: Blackstone/Kings Canyon BRT; 
Location: Fresno, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $48.2 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $38.6 million; 
Percentage: 80%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2012. 

Project: Aurora Avenue North BRT; 
Location: King County, WA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $48.1 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $21.6 million; 
Percentage: 45%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2012. 

Project: Grand Rapids Silver Line; 
Location: Grand Rapids, MI; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $37.0 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $29.6 million; 
Percentage: 80%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2012. 

Project: Burien to Renton BRT; 
Location: King County, WA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $36.8 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $15.9 million; 
Percentage: 43%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2012. 

Project: Mesa Corridor BRT; 
Location: El Paso, TX; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $27.1 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $13.5 million; 
Percentage: 50%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2012. 

Project: North Corridor BRT; 
Location: Jacksonville, FL; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $21.3 million; 
Capital investment program contribution: 
Amount[B]: $17.0 million; 
Percentage: 80%; 
Fiscal year recommended for funding: 2012. 

Source: GAO analysis of FTA data. 

[A] BRT = bus rapid transit: 

[B] Dollar figures are in year of expenditure dollars. 

[End of table] 

FTA's Project Development Requirements for Small Starts and Very Small 
Starts and Stakeholder Views: 

FTA's Project Development Requirements: 

FTA's project development requirements for Small and Very Small Starts 
are similar in some respects, but FTA's submission requirements for 
Small Starts' project justification criteria are more extensive. 
[Footnote 23] For application into the project development phase, FTA 
requires sponsors of Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects to 
submit comparable information in some respects, such as project 
description and local financial commitment. As outlined in FTA's 
Reporting Instructions for Small Starts and other guidance, both the 
number and type of requirements in these areas are similar for Small 
Starts and Very Small Starts projects. As shown in table 5, FTA has a 
similar number of requirements for Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
projects with regard to project description and maps and local 
financial commitment. Sponsors of Small Starts projects are also 
subject to submission requirements for project justification criteria, 
such as user benefit forecasts to meet the cost-effectiveness 
requirement. On the other hand, FTA does not require this information 
from sponsors of Very Small Starts projects. FTA officials told us 
they consider Very Small Starts projects to be inherently cost-
effective because they do not exceed certain total and per-mile costs 
and meet minimum ridership thresholds (at least 3,000 per weekday). We 
and others have reported that the Small Starts project justification 
requirements can be complicated and require substantial resources to 
complete.[Footnote 24] However, FTA officials said they do not agree 
with this assessment of the work required to meet the project 
justification requirements. Table 5 also lists the requirements for 
New Starts projects, for comparison. 

Table 5: FTA's New Starts, Small Starts, and Very Small Starts 
Requirements for Entry into Project Development: 

Reporting item: Project description and maps. 

Project description and maps: 

Reporting item: Documentation of existing riders in the corridor; 
New Starts[A]: [Empty]; 
Small Starts: [Empty]; 
Very Small Starts: [Check][B]. 

Reporting item: Project site map; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Check]. 

Reporting item: Vicinity map; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Check]. 

Reporting item: Certification of technical methods and planning 
assumptions; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Costs: 

Reporting item: Standard cost categories (SCC) (6 worksheets)[C]; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Check]. 

Reporting item: Annualized cost worksheets (3 worksheets)[C]; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Summary of operations and maintenance (O&M) costs 
productivities; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Project justification[D]: 

Reporting item: Travel forecasts and cost effectiveness: User benefits 
forecasts; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Travel forecasts and cost effectiveness: Thematic maps 
and legend; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Travel forecasts and cost effectiveness: Summary of 
travel forecasts; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Travel forecasts and cost effectiveness: Mobility 
improvements and cost-effectiveness (20 years out); 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Empty]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Travel forecasts and cost effectiveness: Cost-
effectiveness (opening year); 
New Starts[A]: [Empty]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Annualization factor; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Land use: Quantitative land use information for New 
Starts; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Empty]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Land use: Qualitative land use information for New 
Starts; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Empty]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Land use: Quantitative land use information for Small 
Starts; 
New Starts[A]: [Empty]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Land use: Qualitative land use information for Small 
Starts; 
New Starts[A]: [Empty]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Local financial commitment[E: 

Reporting item: Financial plan summary (finance template); 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Check]. 

Reporting item: Checklist for financial submittals; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Empty]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: 20-year capital operating plan; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Empty]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: 20-year operating financial plan; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Empty]; 
Very Small Starts: [Empty]. 

Reporting item: Evidence of agency financial condition; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Check]. 

Reporting item: Evidence that project O&M costs are within 5% of 
systemwide O&M costs; 
New Starts[A]: [Empty]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Check]. 

Reporting item: Supporting financial documentation; 
New Starts[A]: [Check]; 
Small Starts: [Check]; 
Very Small Starts: [Check]. 

Source: GAO analysis of FTA guidance. 

[A] While Small Starts projects go through a project development 
phase, New Starts projects go through two phases - preliminary 
engineering and final design. 

[B] FTA deems Very Small Starts projects to be inherently cost- 
effective. So, FTA requires sponsors of these projects to submit 
information to show that the project contains the features necessary 
to qualify for Very Small Starts, such as meeting the minimum 
ridership threshold, but does not require that sponsors submit other 
project justification information. 

[C] Each of these worksheets organizes project cost information. Two 
worksheets, for example, organize the project's capital costs by year 
of expenditure and type of expenditure, like vehicles or stations, 
stops, and terminals. The additional worksheets required for New 
Starts and Small Starts projects but not Very Small Starts projects 
capture, among other things, cost information on a "baseline" 
alternative project, which assumes low-cost improvements to the 
current transportation in the corridor. FTA compares a sponsor's Small 
Starts project to this baseline alternative to evaluate the project's 
cost-effectiveness. 

[D] Though several of FTA's submission requirements for project 
justification apply to both New Starts and Small Starts projects, FTA 
has reduced the amount of information to be submitted for specific 
requirements. For example, Small Starts projects have to complete 
travel forecasts for a shorter period (opening year only) than New 
Starts projects. In addition, FTA has reduced the land use submission 
requirements for Small Starts projects. For qualitative land use 
information, for example, FTA requires a land use reporting template 
for New Starts projects, which includes narrative text and references 
supporting documentation for seven land use factors; for Small Starts 
projects, FTA only requires three brief narratives on existing land 
use, transit supportive plans and policies, and performance and 
impacts of policies. The requirements for quantitative land use 
information are also reduced. 

[E] Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects that do not qualify 
for the streamlined financial evaluation must meet the financial 
reporting requirements for New Starts projects, though only for the 
period up to and including the project's opening year. 

[End of table] 

In addition, the type of information required for project description 
and maps and local financial commitment is comparable for Small Starts 
and Very Small Starts projects beyond having a similar number of 
requirements. For local financial commitment, for example, Small 
Starts and Very Small Starts project sponsors are required by FTA to 
submit the same information to FTA for a simplified financial 
evaluation. Specifically, project sponsors submit a financial plan 
summary, 3 years of audited financial statements to demonstrate 
financial health, evidence that operations and maintenance costs for 
the proposed project are no greater than 5 percent of the sponsor's 
systemwide operations and maintenance costs (to qualify for a 
simplified financial evaluation as opposed to the 20-year plans 
required for New Starts projects), and supporting financial documents. 

Besides the requirements listed in table 5, FTA also requires a 
project management plan for all Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
projects. FTA regulations and guidance outline the general 
requirements for a project management plan for all FTA-funded capital 
projects.[Footnote 25] The requirements include, for example, 
information on staff reporting relationships and responsibilities, 
recordkeeping processes, and the budget for managing the project. FTA 
does not have specific guidance on project management plans for Small 
Starts and Very Small Starts projects. According to officials from FTA 
headquarters, FTA regional office staff scale the general requirements 
and level of detail needed for each project, based on its complexity 
and the sponsor's level of experience managing capital improvement 
projects. For example, officials from one regional office we spoke to 
said that while all project management plans must include information 
on the scope, schedule, and cost of a project, less detail would be 
required for a less expensive project. 

Further, sponsors of both Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects 
may have additional requirements related to FTA regulations on project 
management oversight. FTA may assign project management oversight 
contractors (PMOC) to Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects that 
have a total cost over $100 million, are technically complex, or have 
less experienced sponsors, among other reasons.[Footnote 26] To 
support its oversight of a project, FTA can direct a PMOC to conduct 
various reviews of a project. For example, FTA can direct a PMOC to 
review a sponsor's project management plan or assess a project's 
readiness to enter the project development phase. For such reviews, 
the PMOC would typically review information that project sponsors are 
already required to submit for project development. For other PMOC 
reviews, such as a review of whether a project sponsor has the 
technical capacity and capability to complete its project, a project 
sponsor may be required to complete additional work, like 
participating in interviews with the PMOC and providing information on 
staffing levels and qualifications. 

While requirements are similar in several ways, FTA requires the 
sponsors of Small Starts projects to submit more information on a 
project's justification than the sponsors of Very Small Starts 
projects. FTA evaluates and rates Small Starts projects on three 
project justification criteria prescribed in statute: cost- 
effectiveness, land use, and economic development. Therefore, FTA 
requires travel forecasts for the project's opening year, estimates of 
user benefits like travel time savings, and land use plans, among 
other items. For Small Starts, travel forecasts are often generated by 
regional travel models but can be provided, in some circumstances, 
through a more straightforward spreadsheet analysis of data that, 
according to FTA, makes these calculations easier for Small Starts 
project sponsors. In our previous work, we reported that these 
requirements can require substantial resources and can create 
disincentives for sponsors to apply for funding. By contrast, FTA does 
not require such project justification information for Very Small 
Starts projects. According to FTA guidance, by containing certain FTA- 
defined features, such as having a total cost under $50 million and 
demonstrating that the project corridor already serves more than 3,000 
riders per weekday, projects are "warranted" as being inherently cost- 
effective at producing significant mobility benefits and supporting 
land use and economic development. 

Stakeholders' Views on Project Development Requirements: 

Several project sponsors and industry groups we spoke with told us 
that the project development requirements for Very Small Starts 
projects were streamlined and not overly burdensome. However, they 
also felt that such requirements for Small Starts projects were too 
similar to the requirements for New Starts projects and required a 
comparable amount of time and resources. As stated earlier, Congress 
established the Small Starts program to create a streamlined process 
for smaller, less complex capital transit projects, and FTA also 
created the Very Small Starts category with a similar desire. However, 
as described in our methodology, there is not a reliable quantitative 
way to evaluate the effect of changes in requirements on project 
development time frames. FTA officials said they do not agree with 
GAO's assessment of its data. (See appendix III.) 

FTA headquarters and regional officials, as well as three project 
sponsors we spoke with, indicated that local issues, such as delays in 
finalizing funding or lack of agreement on a project's route, often 
affect how long a project spends in development. Of the 29 Small 
Starts and Very Small Starts projects FTA has recommended for funding, 
11 projects have received construction grants. These projects took 
from about 9 months to almost 4 years to complete the project 
development phase and receive a construction grant from FTA. While the 
amount of time it takes for a project to complete project development 
can be influenced by several factors, FTA officials and project 
sponsors told us that local issues can delay the progress of a Small 
Starts or Very Small Starts project. Of the 10 project sponsors we 
interviewed, half told us that they experienced delays during project 
development. Three of the five project sponsors that experienced 
delays said that local issues caused the delays. One project sponsor, 
for example, said that the lack of committed funds for the project 
from the state government caused a 6-month delay in the project's 
development, while one other project sponsor said that its project was 
delayed while it addressed the public's concerns on the project route. 
Another project sponsor faced delays due to local and federal issues; 
specifically, the project had to wait for passage of a local 
referendum providing operating funds for the project and had to do 
additional work because it received conflicting information from FTA 
on the work it needed to complete to fulfill federal environmental 
requirements. 

To examine the project development process, we discussed the 
advantages and disadvantages of the requirements with a variety of 
stakeholders, including 10 project sponsors, officials from FTA 
headquarters and 7 regional offices, and 2 industry groups.[Footnote 
27] The perspectives of the stakeholders we spoke to depend, in part, 
on their experience with Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects, 
as well as any experience with New Starts projects. For example, 6 of 
the 10 project sponsors we spoke with had experience planning and 
implementing New Starts projects, while the other 4 sponsors had no 
such organizational experience. FTA officials in some regions told us 
that since the sponsors of many Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
projects were unfamiliar with the requirements for New Starts 
projects, these sponsors may not be aware of the difference in 
requirements or the degree to which some requirements had been scaled 
for their projects. FTA regional officials also had varying experience 
overseeing Small Starts and Very Small starts projects. Five regional 
offices had overseen only 1 Small Starts or Very Small Starts project 
while one regional office had overseen 13 projects. 

Stakeholders we spoke with cited advantages related to FTA's project 
development requirements for both Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
projects. 

* Several stakeholders we interviewed--five project sponsors, one 
industry group, and FTA headquarters and officials from two regions-- 
said that the project development requirements for Very Small Starts 
projects were straightforward and not overly burdensome and, as a 
result, that Very Small Starts projects have a streamlined process. 
Specifically, three project sponsors told us that an advantage of Very 
Small Starts was the minimal data analysis requirements, specifically 
travel forecasting. One of these sponsors said that its Very Small 
Starts project required less travel analysis and had a faster 
application process compared to New Starts projects that it had 
previously completed. Another project sponsor told us that FTA's use 
of a single-year construction grant instead of a multiyear PCGA helped 
to expedite the project development process. For this grant, the 
project sponsor was able to apply for the grant through FTA's 
electronic grant system rather than negotiate the terms of a PCGA with 
FTA. FTA may use a single-year construction grant, rather than a PCGA, 
for projects with sponsors that request less than $25 million and 
whose request can be met with a single-year appropriation or existing 
FTA appropriations that remain available for that purpose. 

* Seven stakeholders we spoke with, including officials from three FTA 
regional offices and four project sponsors, told us that the project 
development requirements help contribute to the success of a project 
through the development of detailed plans and examination of long-term 
costs. As a result, project sponsors are able to identify potential 
challenges and better communicate project details to the public. For 
example, one project sponsor and officials from one regional office 
told us that they were better prepared to respond to public questions 
on the project's design and funding after completing the project 
development requirements. 

* Officials from two FTA regional offices and five project sponsors 
told us that the project management plan, in particular, is a valuable 
tool to help organize a project's implementation, particularly for 
project sponsors that have not previously implemented capital 
projects. Moreover, two project sponsors we spoke with said that they 
would use a project management plan even if it were not required by 
FTA. However, three project sponsors told us that project management 
plan requirements were not scaled to fit their smaller, less complex 
projects. As described above, FTA does not have specific project 
management plan guidance for Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
projects but scales the requirements in the general guidance to fit 
each project's size and complexity. For example, officials from one 
regional office said that a project management plan may not include a 
section on real estate acquisition if the project sponsor did not have 
to purchase property to carry out the project. In September 2009, FTA 
issued an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking on project management 
oversight regulations, which included the guidelines for project 
management plans.[Footnote 28] The current regulations predate the 
creation of the Small Starts program and Very Small Starts category. 
In the notice, FTA specifically seeks comment on whether sponsors of 
Small Starts projects should establish less detailed project 
management plans than New Starts projects. 

* Two Small Starts project sponsors said that the single project 
development phase in the Small Starts program was an advantage. 
According to one project sponsor, the single phase eliminated the need 
to stop design work on the project while applying for and receiving 
approval from FTA to enter another phase, as can be the case with the 
two-stage process for New Starts projects. According to FTA officials, 
FTA allows project sponsors to continue design on a project while 
waiting for approval, as outlined in FTA's 2006 program guidance. In 
past studies of the New Starts program, GAO and Deloitte presented the 
use of a single project development phase for all New Starts projects 
as one option to help expedite the New Starts process.[Footnote 29] In 
its reauthorization proposal, as identified in the fiscal year 2012 
budget request, FTA proposed that all projects use this single-phase 
approach as one way to transform the New Starts program, balancing the 
need to advance projects in a reasonable time frame with being a 
steward for federal transit dollars. 

Some stakeholders we spoke with also reported disadvantages of FTA's 
project development requirements. As described below, stakeholders 
that have experience with New Starts projects said that the Small 
Starts project development requirements, which were to be streamlined, 
are too similar to those for New Starts projects. These comments 
suggest that, from some stakeholders' perspective, Small Starts could 
be further differentiated from New Starts. However, as stated in our 
previous work on the New Starts program, FTA's oversight of projects 
must strike an appropriate balance between expediting project 
development and maintaining the use of a rigorous and systematic 
process to distinguish among projects.[Footnote 30] 

* Sponsors from three Small Starts projects we spoke with were 
assigned PMOCs, and all three project sponsors felt that the PMOCs' 
oversight should have been better scaled to their Small Starts 
projects. All three project sponsors said that their PMOCs provided 
constructive comments and assistance during project development. 
However, all three felt that the PMOCs' reviews should have been 
better scaled to the size and complexity of their projects. Based on 
their experience developing both a New Starts and Small Starts 
project, two of the project sponsors told us that the PMOC reviewed 
their Small Starts project as though it were a New Starts project. As 
mentioned above, FTA issued an Advance Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 
on project management oversight regulations in September 2009, which, 
upon completion of the rulemaking process, could affect PMOC oversight 
of Small Starts projects. In the notice, FTA seeks comments on how it 
should best use PMOCs in overseeing projects and the circumstances, 
such as the complexity of a project, under which the agency may assign 
a PMOC to a project. 

* Two Small Starts project sponsors said that the length of the review 
process for PCGAs was a disadvantage. After FTA and a project sponsor 
negotiate a PCGA, it must go through multiple levels of review, 
including the Office of the Secretary of Transportation, the Office of 
Management and Budget, and Congress. By statute, a PCGA is subject to 
a 60-day congressional review period.[Footnote 31] According to one 
project sponsor, a reduction in the PCGA review time would be 
beneficial and help them implement their projects more quickly. In a 
recent congressional hearing, the FTA administrator said that the 
agency would ask Congress to consider shortening this review period to 
30 days when the New Starts program is reauthorized.[Footnote 32] 

* According to an industry group and one project sponsor we spoke 
with, New Starts and Small Starts projects entail comparable levels of 
work. Officials from the industry group told us that some of its 
members therefore feel it is better to apply as a New Starts project 
and seek more funding rather than apply as a Small Starts project and 
face constraints on the project's total cost and capital investment 
program share. We have previously reviewed FTA's Small Starts program 
and reported on options that exist to expedite the New Starts project 
development process. In 2007, for example, we reported that FTA could 
take additional action to further streamline the Small Starts program. 
[Footnote 33] FTA officials acknowledged that the requirements could 
be further streamlined and took steps to do so, such as reducing 
duplicative requirements and developing Small Starts-specific 
reporting templates. 

FTA's Project Development Requirements for Exempt Projects and 
Stakeholder Views: 

Exempt Projects Are Subject to Fewer Requirements Than Small Starts or 
Very Small Starts Projects: 

Exempt projects are not evaluated and rated or recommended for funding 
by FTA; exempt projects receive under $25 million in federal 
assistance and are typically congressionally designated. Since FTA 
does not evaluate and rate these projects, they are subject to fewer 
FTA requirements. However, FTA requires exempt projects to submit 
information similar to some requirements for Small Starts and Very 
Small Starts projects. This consists of information on a project's 
background, which includes a description of the project as well as 
site and vicinity maps; costs, such as worksheets that organize the 
project's capital costs by year of expenditure and type of 
expenditure, like vehicles and stations, stops, and terminals; and 
local financial commitment, which includes a financial plan summary 
and supporting financial documentation. 

According to its guidance, FTA does not have to evaluate and rate 
exempt projects. However, the projects still have to be approved by 
FTA into preliminary engineering and final design. FTA's approval for 
advancing exempt projects is based on compliance with planning, 
environmental, and project management requirements which apply to all 
federal-aid transit projects. FTA officials said that, as it relates 
to exempt projects, they mainly determine whether project sponsors 
possess a level of technical and financial capacity that is 
appropriate for the scope of the project before advancing an exempt 
project into the next stage of development. For example, FTA must 
determine whether a project has secured at least half of its local 
funding prior to advancing to the final design phase of project 
development. 

In terms of other requirements, FTA requires the sponsor of an exempt 
project to create and submit a project management plan to describe its 
budget, processes, procedures, and schedule for managing the project. 
FTA may also assign a PMOC to an exempt project with a total project 
cost over $100 million, technical complexity, or a sponsor with no 
previous experience implementing capital transit projects. 

Nine New Exempt Projects Since 2005: 

As table 6 shows, a total of nine exempt projects of various modes and 
total costs have entered the New Starts pipeline since SAFETEA-LU was 
enacted. 

Table 6: Exempt Projects That Have Entered the New Starts Pipeline 
Since 2005: 

Urban Transitway Phase II; 
Location: Stamford, CT; 
Mode[A]: Busway; 
Total capital cost[B]: $48.3 million; 
Capital investment program contribution[B]: $24.7 million; 
Fiscal year entered the pipeline: 2006. 

Maine Marine Highway Project; 
Location: Rockland, ME; 
Mode[A]: Ferry; 
Total capital cost[B]: $10.4 million; 
Capital investment program contribution[B]: $1.5 million; 
Fiscal year entered the pipeline: 2006. 

Downtown Transit Enhancement Project; 
Location: Jacksonville, FL; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Total capital cost[B]: $13.4 million; 
Capital investment program contribution[B]: $9.3 million; 
Fiscal year entered the pipeline: 2007. 

Assembly Square Station; 
Location: Boston, MA; 
Mode[A]: Heavy rail; 
Total capital cost[B]: $50.7 million; 
Capital investment program contribution[B]: $25.0 million; 
Fiscal year entered the pipeline: 2008. 

Lackawanna Cutoff Project - Phase 1; 
Location: Andover, NJ; 
Mode[A]: CR; 
Total capital cost[B]: $36.6 million; 
Capital investment program contribution[B]: $18.2 million; 
Fiscal year entered the pipeline: 2008. 

Modern Streetcar Project; 
Location: Tucson, AZ; 
Mode[A]: Streetcar; 
Total capital cost[B]: $196.5 million; 
Capital investment program contribution[B]: $5.8 million; 
Fiscal year entered the pipeline: 2009. 

Oakland Airport Connector; 
Location: Oakland, CA; 
Mode[A]: Heavy rail; 
Total capital cost[B]: $492.7 million; 
Capital investment program contribution[B]: $25.0 million; 
Fiscal year entered the pipeline: 2010. 

Pawtucket/Central Falls Commuter Rail Station; 
Location: Pawtucket, RI; 
Mode[A]: CR; 
Total capital cost[B]: $53.6 million; 
Capital investment program contribution[B]: $25.0 million; 
Fiscal year entered the pipeline: 2010. 

Crystal City-Potomac Yard Transitway; 
Location: Arlington, VA; 
Mode[A]: Busway; 
Total capital cost[B]: $38.1 million; 
Capital investment program contribution[B]: $0.98 million; 
Fiscal year entered the pipeline: 2010. 

Source: GAO analysis of FTA data. 

[A] BRT = bus rapid transit; CR = commuter rail. 

[B] Dollar figures are rounded and in year of expenditure dollars. 

[End of table] 

Within each mode, the exempt projects vary in characteristics, such as 
scope. For example: 

* For the bus projects, one extends a transitway with dedicated bus- 
priority/high-occupancy-vehicle lanes, bikeways, and sidewalks; 
another establishes initial components and infrastructure for a BRT 
system that includes dedicated bus lanes, transit stations, and a real-
time passenger information system. 

* For rail projects, one project constructs a new driverless, 
automated rail system between an existing transit station and an 
airport; another project builds a new transit station along an 
existing heavy rail line. See appendix IV for additional information 
on each of these exempt projects. 

In addition to the nine exempt projects listed in table 6, on March 4, 
2011, FTA selected five exempt projects to receive capital investment 
program discretionary grants under FTA's newly created Urban 
Circulator Program.[Footnote 34] The grants are to help state and 
local governments finance new fixed-guideway capital projects, 
including the acquisition of property, the initial acquisition of 
rolling stock, the acquisition of rights-of-way, and relocation. The 
projects fall within the exempt category because the maximum grant for 
each selected project must be less than $25 million and make up no 
more than 80 percent of the project's total capital cost. These are 
projects such as streetcars that provide a transportation option to 
connect urban destinations and foster the redevelopment of urban 
spaces into walkable mixed-use, high-density environments. Table 7 
lists the five Urban Circulator projects FTA selected to receive 
funds.[Footnote 35] 

Table 7: Urban Circulator Projects FTA Selected to Receive Funding: 

Project: Chicago Central Area Transitway; 
Location: Chicago, Illinois; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Amount allocated: $24.6 million. 

Project: St. Louis Loop Trolley Project; 
Location: St. Louis, Missouri; 
Mode[A]: Trolley; 
Amount allocated: $24.9 million. 

Project: Charlotte Streetcar Starter Project; 
Location: Charlotte, North Carolina; 
Mode[A]: Streetcar; 
Amount allocated: $24.9 million. 

Project: Cincinnati Streetcar Project; 
Location: Cincinnati, Ohio; 
Mode[A]: Streetcar; 
Amount allocated: $24.9 million. 

Project: Olive/St. Paul Street Loop; 
Location: Dallas Texas; 
Mode[A]: Trolley; 
Amount allocated: $4.9 million. 

[End of table] 

Source: GAO analysis of FTA data. 

[A] BRT = bus rapid transit: 

According to FTA, a total of 65 applicants requested $1.1 billion, 
resulting in high competition for the $130 million made available. FTA 
ran a competition for these funds and evaluated project proposals 
based on criteria such as livability, sustainability, economic 
development, and leveraging of public and private investments, in line 
with the Department of Transportation's livability initiative that 
began in 2009.[Footnote 36] According to FTA, the projects selected 
will provide mobility choices, improve economic competitiveness, 
support existing communities, create partnerships, and enhance the 
value of communities and neighborhoods. 

Continuing Demand for the Exempt Category: 

Although stakeholders cite a need for the exempt category, projects 
considered "exempt" from the statutory evaluation and rating process 
were eliminated in SAFETEA-LU, pending the publication by FTA of a 
final regulation implementing Small Starts, which has not yet 
occurred. However, until that happens, FTA officials said that it will 
still have an exempt category. The stakeholders with whom we spoke 
want to continue this category of funding because they said that a key 
advantage of the exempt category is that it serves as a useful source 
of funding for "unique" or atypical transit projects. For example, 
four project sponsors that we spoke with indicated that their projects 
may not have competed well with other projects if evaluated against 
the New Starts criteria and in competition with more typical New 
Starts transit projects, like light rail lines. Yet, they believe 
their projects fill a transportation gap for the communities they 
serve. Compared to a new commuter or light rail line, such exempt 
projects are not well suited to the New Starts evaluation and rating 
criteria--such as cost-effectiveness measured by travel time savings 
to user. However, we do not have enough information to determine how 
these exempt projects would have fared against the New Starts criteria. 

In its 2012 budget request, FTA proposes to continue the exempt 
category in the next surface transportation reauthorization. According 
to its fiscal year 2012 budget request, FTA is proposing to raise the 
amount of federal funding available to exempt projects, in conjunction 
with other changes to the New Starts program. 

* Specifically, projects could be "exempt" from the evaluation and 
rating process if the project sponsor is seeking less than $100 
million in § 5309 Capital Investment Grant program funds and the 
request represents less than 10 percent of the project's anticipated 
total capital cost. According to FTA, the main reason for continuing 
an exempt category is the awareness that if FTA provides only a small 
percentage of a project's total cost, there is a corresponding lower 
amount of risk to the federal government; at the same time, other 
entities, like state and local governments, provide a greater amount 
of funding and assume a higher amount of risk. Because of the lowered 
risk to the federal government, a project would be exempt from the 
more stringent federal oversight (i.e., evaluated and rated against 
criteria) that apply to other projects, while the other funding 
partners would likely conduct more due diligence to protect their 
increased investment. Just as they are now, these projects would only 
be subject to basic federal grant requirements and would not be 
evaluated and rated by FTA. 

* Given that these projects are not rated and evaluated, the project 
sponsors we talked with considered this as one of the major benefits 
to this category, because it potentially decreases the amount of time 
spent in project development and project costs. 

SAFETEA-LU requires project sponsors to conduct a before-and-after 
study for all New Starts projects.[Footnote 37] Additionally, FTA 
requires before-and-after studies to be conducted for all Small Starts 
projects, in accordance with FTA guidance. Although FTA and the 
project sponsors we spoke with generally view the exempt category as 
beneficial, these projects are not validated with studies, as are 
other New Starts and Small Starts projects. For New Starts and Small 
Starts projects, the before-and-after study describes the impact of 
the project on transit services and ridership and compares the 
predicted and actual project performance. Additionally, Very Small 
Starts project sponsors must complete a simplified before-and-after 
study on the project's actual scope, costs, and ridership. However, 
according to FTA officials, exempt project sponsors do not submit such 
information on completed projects. As we've previously reported, 
information about the outcomes of completed transit projects can be 
used to better determine what a particular project accomplished and 
improve decisions on other projects.[Footnote 38] 

Our interviews with stakeholders resulted in a few reported 
disadvantages. 

* Most notably, FTA has limited guidance on exempt projects. For 
example, FTA has a checklist that shows what is required for exempt 
projects, as opposed to New Starts and Small Starts. However, one 
project sponsor said they felt there was a lack of guidance for exempt 
projects and that their consultant helped to navigate the requirements 
in lieu of more thorough guidance. 

* Stakeholders, including officials from FTA and project sponsors, 
also said that the exempt projects can face funding uncertainties. 
Some stakeholders said that exempt projects have no guarantee of 
funding beyond what has been appropriated by Congress, and a project's 
exempt funding may not be appropriated all at once. One project 
sponsor told us that since only a portion of its exempt funding has 
been appropriated, they have had to leverage local funds to advance 
the project until more exempt funds become available. 

Agency Comments: 

We provided a draft of this report to the Secretary of Transportation 
for review and comment. DOT officials provided us with clarifying and 
technical comments, which we incorporated throughout the report as 
appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to the Secretary of 
Transportation, the Administrator of the Federal Transit 
Administration, and appropriate congressional committees. This report 
is also available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. 

If you have any questions about this report, please contact me at 
(202) 512-2834 or stjamesl@gao.gov. Contact points for our Offices of 
Congressional Relations and Public Affairs may be found on the last 
page of this report. Major contributors to this report are listed in 
appendix V. 

Signed by: 

Lorelei St. James: 
Director, Physical Infrastructure Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Recommendation Follow-up: 

Two recent GAO reports on the New Starts program contained 
recommendations that were open when we began our work on this review 
in December 2010. This appendix lists those reports and updates the 
Federal Transit Administration's (FTA) progress in implementing these 
recommendations. 

Public Transportation: Improvements Are Needed to More Fully Assess 
Predicted Impacts of New Starts Projects, GAO-08-844 (Washington, 
D.C.: July 25, 2008). 

This report made five recommendations to the Department of 
Transportation (DOT) to improve the New Starts evaluation process and 
the measures of project benefits, which could change the relative 
ranking of projects. Table 8 lists the five recommendations with 
information on the status of each recommendation, as of July 2011. 

Table 8: Recommendations to DOT in 2008: 

Recommendation: The Secretary of Transportation should seek additional 
resources to improve local travel models in the next authorizing 
legislation; 
Status: Open; 
Comments: The agency concurs, in part, but awaits Congress' decisions 
to provide additional resources, so no action has been taken. 

Recommendation: The Secretary of Transportation should seek a 
legislative change to allow the Federal Transit Administration (FTA) 
to consider the dollar value of mobility improvements in evaluating 
projects, developing regulations, or carrying out any other duties; 
Status: Open; 
Comments: The agency concurs, in part, but awaits Congress' decisions 
during the surface transportation reauthorization. 

Recommendation: The Secretary of Transportation should direct the 
Administrator of FTA to establish a timeline for issuing, awarding, 
and implementing the result of its request for proposals on short-and 
long-term approaches to measuring highway user benefits from transit 
improvements; 
Status: Open; 
Comments: FTA expects to award the contract in summer 2011 and 
complete the identification of acceptable approaches to measuring 
highway benefits by early 2013. 

Recommendation: The Secretary of Transportation should direct the 
Administrator of FTA to establish a timeline for initiating and 
completing its longer-term effort to develop more robust measures of 
transit projects' environmental benefits that are practically useful 
in distinguishing among proposed projects, including consultation with 
the transit community; 
Status: Open; 
Comments: FTA concurs. FTA issued an Advance Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking in June 2010, which among other measures sought input on 
better ways to examine environmental benefits generated by major 
capital improvement projects. FTA is preparing a Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking that will outline a proposed approach to measuring 
environmental benefits. 

Recommendation: The Secretary of Transportation should direct the 
Administrators of FTA and Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) to 
collaborate in efforts to improve the consistency and reliability of 
local travel models, including the aforementioned request for 
proposals on approaches to measuring highway user benefits; 
Status: Open; 
Comments: GAO received a written response to the recommendation from 
FTA in January 2009. The agency indicated that it plans to take steps 
to address this recommendation. However, as of the date of this 
report, FTA has not provided an update on this recommendation. 

Source: GAO analysis. 

[End of table] 

Public Transportation: Better Data Needed to Assess Length of New 
Starts Process, and Options Exist to Expedite Project Development, GAO-
09-784 (Washington, D.C.: Aug. 6, 2009). 

This report made two recommendations to DOT to improve the New Starts 
program. Table 9 lists these recommendations with information on the 
status of each recommendation, as of July 2011. 

Table 9: Recommendations to DOT in 2009: 

Recommendation: The Secretary of Transportation should direct the FTA 
Administrator to continue to improve data collection and retention for 
statutorily defined milestones and determine if additional data would 
help to better describe the time it takes for a project to move 
through the New Starts process. In doing so, FTA should establish 
mechanisms to ensure the accuracy of the data and routinely analyze 
the data in order to identify the length of time it takes projects to 
move through each phase, potential causes for perceived delays, and 
potential solutions. FTA should make its analysis available to 
Congress and other interested parties; 
Status: Tentatively closed--not implemented; 
FTA disagrees with GAO's recommendation. In particular, FTA noted that 
it has maintained data needed to effectively track projects and 
expressed concern that GAO used a standard for data management that is 
not necessary for effective project management. GAO disagreed with the 
assertion that we held this information to a standard that is not 
necessary for effective management and believes that analysis based on 
reliable data will only help strengthen FTA's management of the 
program. We, therefore, believe that this recommendation, revised to 
reflect FTA's concerns, is valid. For more information, see the Agency 
Comments section of GAO-09-784. 

Recommendation: The Secretary of Transportation should direct the FTA 
Administrator to continue to analyze the streamlining options 
identified in this report, along with any additional options, to 
determine which options, if any, to implement--seeking legislative 
change if necessary--to expedite the project development within the 
New Starts program; 
Status: Tentatively closed--implemented; 
In its fiscal year 2012 budget request, FTA proposed three changes to 
New Starts to streamline project development. GAO is working to verify 
FTA's actions to close this recommendation. 

Source: GAO analysis of FTA data. 

[End of table] 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: Small Starts and Very Small Starts Projects That Have 
Received Construction Grants: 

FTA has awarded construction grants to 11 of the 29 Small Starts and 
Very Small Starts projects recommended for funding to Congress. Table 
10 provides information on each project, including the date FTA 
approved the project into the project development phase and the date 
FTA obligated funds for construction. 

Table 10: Project Development Dates for Small Starts and Very Small 
Starts Projects That Received Construction Grants Since Fiscal Year 
2007: 

Project sponsor: King County Department of Transportation; 
Description[A]: Federal Way, Pacific Highway South BRT; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Very Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: Grant; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/7/2006; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 5/1/2009. 

Project sponsor: Lane County Transit District; 
Description[A]: Pioneer Parkway BRT; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: PCGA; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/8/2006; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 9/25/2009. 

Project sponsor: Kansas City Area Transportation Authority; 
Description[A]: Troost Corridor BRT; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Very Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: Grant; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/13/2006; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 9/11/2007. 

Project sponsor: Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation 
Authority; 
Description[A]: Gap Closure Project; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Very Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: Grant; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/15/2006; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 9/16/2010. 

Project sponsor: City of Portland and Tri-Met; 
Description[A]: Portland Eastside Streetcar (aka Streetcar Loop); 
Mode: Streetcar; 
Program/category: Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: PCGA; 
Date of approval into project development: 4/26/2007; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 11/10/2009. 

Project sponsor: King County Department of Transportation; 
Description[A]: Bellevue-Redmond RapidRide; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Very Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: Grant; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/13/2007; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 2/25/2010. 

Project sponsor: Livermore Amador Valley Transit Authority; 
Description[A]: Route 10 BRT; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Very Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: Grant; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/13/2007; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 8/28/2009. 

Project sponsor: Northern Arizona Intergovernmental Public 
Transportation Authority; 
Description[A]: Mountain Links; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Very Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: Grant; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/13/2007; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 5/27/2011. 

Project sponsor: San Diego Association of Governments; 
Description[A]: Mid-City Rapid Bus; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Very Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: Grant; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/20/2007; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 8/25/2010. 

Project sponsor: Monterey-Salinas Transit; 
Description[A]: Monterey Bay Rapid Transit; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Very Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: Grant; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/9/2008; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 9/10/2010. 

Project sponsor: San Joaquin Regional Transit District; 
Description[A]: Stockton Metro Express Airport Way Corridor BRT; 
Mode: BRT; 
Program/category: Very Small Starts; 
Type of grant[B]: Grant; 
Date of approval into project development: 12/9/2008; 
Date of construction grant obligation: 9/23/2010. 

Source: GAO analysis of FTA data. 

[A] BRT = bus rapid transit: 

[B] Grant = single-year construction grant; PCGA = Project 
construction grant agreement. 

[End of table] 

According to FTA officials, the agency typically recommends a Small 
Starts or Very Small Starts project for funding the first year it is 
in the project development phase, which is sooner than when the agency 
recommends New Starts projects for funding. After a project is 
recommended for funding, FTA makes firm funding commitments, such as 
those in a project construction grant agreement, when the project's 
development has reached a point where its scope, costs, benefits, and 
impacts are considered firm and final. 

[End of section] 

Appendix III: Scope and Methodology: 

To describe the legislative and program history for the creation of 
Small Starts and Very Small Starts, respectively, we analyzed the 
Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act-A 
Legacy for Users (SAFETEA-LU), congressional reports, testimonies 
before Congress, and member floor statements on the program from 2004 
to 2007, the years leading up to and after the passage of SAFETEA-LU. 
To describe the program history behind the Very Small Starts category, 
we similarly analyzed Federal Register notices and program guidance 
issued by FTA. We also interviewed FTA officials on the creation of 
Very Small Starts. To provide information on Small Starts and Very 
Small Starts projects, including total project cost, mode of transit, 
and other characteristics, we collected and analyzed project data, 
including grant data, compiled by FTA to determine the cost, mode of 
transit, and other characteristics of Small Starts and Very Small 
Starts projects. We included projects that had been recommended for 
funding to Congress since the passage of SAFETEA-LU (August 10, 2005). 
We also sought to include projects that were (1) in the project 
development phase but not yet recommended for funding or (2) in the 
process of applying to enter this phase. Through discussions with FTA 
staff and analysis of FTA Annual Reports on Funding Recommendations, 
we determined that no projects met the above conditions at the time of 
our review. To verify and assess the reliability of the data compiled 
by FTA, we compared it to project data contained in FTA's Annual 
Reports on Funding Recommendations for fiscal years 2007 through 2012 
and information from project sponsors we interviewed. We resolved any 
discrepancies with FTA headquarters staff, and we determined that the 
data were sufficiently reliable for our purposes. 

To describe the project development requirements for Small Starts and 
Very Small Starts projects, we collected and summarized relevant laws, 
such as SAFETEA-LU, as well as FTA circulars and policy guidance for 
the Small Starts program, including the 2007 Updated Interim Guidance 
and Instructions, 2010 Reporting Instructions for the Section 5309 
Small Starts Criteria, and Side-by-Side of Required Information for 
New Starts/Small Starts Evaluation and Rating. To determine the views 
of stakeholders on the advantages and disadvantages of these 
requirements, we conducted semistructured interviews with FTA 
officials from headquarters and regional offices, sponsors of projects 
that have been recommended for funding, and transit industry 
associations, such as the American Public Transportation Association. 
We selected a judgmental sample of 10 out of 29 projects to ensure 
variation in the project's geographic location, category of funding 
(i.e., Small Starts or Very Small Starts), mode of transit, total 
project cost, and fiscal year recommended for funding. We also 
interviewed FTA staff at the seven regional offices that corresponded 
with the judgmental sample of project sponsors. Table 11 lists the 
Small Starts and Very Small Starts project sponsors we interviewed for 
our review. 

Table 11: Small Starts and Very Small Starts Project Sponsors 
Interviewed: 

Name of project sponsor: Capital Metro; 
Project location: Austin, TX; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Project type: Very Small Starts. 

Name of project sponsor: City of Portland; 
Project location: Portland, OR; 
Mode[A]: Streetcar; 
Project type: Small Starts. 

Name of project sponsor: Interurban Transit Partnership; 
Project location: Grand Rapids, MI; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Project type: Very Small Starts. 

Name of project sponsor: Jacksonville Transportation Authority; 
Project location: Jacksonville, FL; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Project type: Very Small Starts. 

Name of project sponsor: King County Department of Transportation; 
Project location: Seattle, WA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Project type: Very Small Starts. 

Name of project sponsor: Lane County Transit District; 
Project location: Springfield, OR; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Project type: Small Starts. 

Name of project sponsor: Livermore Amador Valley Transit Authority; 
Project location: Livermore, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Project type: Very Small Starts. 

Name of project sponsor: Los Angeles County Metropolitan 
Transportation Authority; 
Project location: Los Angeles, CA; 
Mode[A]: BRT; 
Project type: Very Small Starts. 

Name of project sponsor: Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority; 
Project location: Fitchburg, MA; 
Mode[A]: CR; 
Project type: Small Starts. 

Name of project sponsor: Valley Metro Rail of Phoenix; 
Project location: Mesa, AZ; 
Mode[A]: LRT; 
Project type: Small Starts. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] BRT = bus rapid transit; CR = commuter rail; LRT = light rail 
transit. 

[End of table] 

We used stakeholder observations and experiences, as there is not a 
reliable quantitative way to evaluate the impact of changes in the 
requirements for Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects on 
project development time frames compared to New Starts projects for 
two reasons. First, only a small number of Small Starts (including 
Very Small Starts) projects--11 of 29 recommended for funding--have 
completed the project development phase and received a construction 
grant. Second, in past work we found that FTA and project sponsor data 
on time frames for New Starts projects (such as entry into preliminary 
engineering and final design) are not reliable.[Footnote 39] However, 
FTA officials said they do not agree with GAO's assessment of its 
data. Given these reasons, we did not include such a comparison in our 
methodology for this review. 

To describe the project development requirements for exempt projects, 
we summarized relevant laws, regulations, and FTA guidance for exempt 
projects. We also interviewed officials from FTA headquarters and 
regional offices. Our review of exempt projects included projects 
selected to receive funding that entered the New Starts pipeline 
(i.e., approved into the preliminary engineering phase) since SAFETEA-
LU was enacted. To describe the types of exempt projects that have 
entered the New Starts pipeline since the passage of SAFETEA-LU, we 
collected, verified, and analyzed data from FTA. We compared the data 
from FTA to project data available in FTA's Annual Reports on Funding 
Recommendations for fiscal years 2007 through 2012 to assess its 
reliability. There were a total of nine exempt projects that entered 
the New Starts pipeline since 2005. We worked with FTA to resolve any 
discrepancies and found the data sufficiently reliable for the 
purposes of this report. To determine the views of stakeholders on the 
advantages and disadvantages of the exempt category, we conducted 
semistructured interviews with FTA officials (headquarters and 
regional office staff), sponsors of exempt projects that received 
funding, and transit industry associations. We selected a judgmental 
sample of five exempt project sponsors to ensure variety in the 
projects' geographic location, mode of transit, project cost, and the 
fiscal year the projects were approved into the New Starts preliminary 
engineering phase. Table 12 lists the exempt project sponsors we 
interviewed for our review. 

Table 12: New Starts Exempt Project Sponsors Interviewed: 

Name of project sponsor: Arlington County; 
Project location: Arlington, VA; 
Mode[A]: Busway. 

Name of project sponsor: City of Tucson Department of Transportation; 
Project location: Tucson, AZ; 
Mode[A]: Streetcar. 

Name of project sponsor: Jacksonville Transportation Authority; 
Project location: Jacksonville, FL; 
Mode[A]: BRT. 

Name of project sponsor: Maine Department of Transportation; 
Project location: Rockland, ME; 
Mode[A]: Ferry. 

Name of project sponsor: San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District; 
Project location: Oakland, CA; 
Mode[A]: Heavy rail. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] BRT = bus rapid transit. 

[End of table] 

We conducted this performance audit from December 2010 through August 
2011 in accordance with generally accepted government auditing 
standards. Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit 
to obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable 
basis for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 
We believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for 
our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

[End of section] 

Appendix IV: Descriptions of Exempt Projects: 

The following provides detailed descriptions of the nine exempt 
projects of various modes that have entered the New Starts pipeline 
and their total costs since SAFETEA-LU was enacted. The descriptions 
are primarily from FTA's latest annual reports or as noted. There are 
four rail projects, a ferry project, a street car project, and three 
bus projects. These projects are listed in the order they entered the 
New Starts pipeline, beginning with the earliest. 

Urban Transitway Phase II--Stamford, Connecticut: 

The City of Stamford, Connecticut, is proposing to extend Phase I of 
its Urban Transitway, currently in operation, for an additional 0.6 
miles along Myrtle Avenue to U.S. Route 1. According to FTA's Annual 
Report on Funding Recommendations, the facility will accommodate new 
dedicated bus-priority/high-occupancy-vehicle lanes in both 
directions, as well as bike pathways and sidewalks. Signal priority 
treatments at intersections will give local and commuter buses 
priority. Bus stops in the corridor will include real-time passenger 
displays. The total capital cost for the Stamford Urban Transitway 
Phase II project is estimated at $48.3 million, with a proposed New 
Starts share of $24.7 million. FTA approved the project into 
preliminary engineering in May 2006 and into final design in November 
2007. 

Maine Marine Highway Project--Rockland, Maine: 

The Maine Marine Highway Project, sponsored by the Maine Department of 
Transportation, is for the construction of a ferry boat--the Governor 
Curtis. As proposed, this vessel will expand the capacity of the Maine 
State Ferry Service to provide transportation between Rockland and the 
off-shore islands in Penobscot Bay. It will also free up another 
vessel to be retrofitted and serve as a backup vessel; currently, no 
vessel of this size is available as a backup. The new vessel will hold 
250 passengers and approximately 20 cars. The New Starts share is $1.5 
million of an estimated total capital cost of $10.4 million. FTA 
concurrently approved the project into preliminary engineering and 
final design in May 2006. 

Downtown Transit Service Enhancement Project--Jacksonville, Florida: 

The Jacksonville Transit Authority is planning a regional bus rapid 
transit system for the Jacksonville metropolitan area. The Downtown 
Transit Service Enhancement Project is the first phase to be developed 
and will serve as the center hub of the system. The 8.4-mile project 
includes increased bus service, semi-exclusive reserved bus lanes, 22 
stations and stops, traffic signal priority, and real-time traveler 
information. The project is estimated to cost $15.6 million which 
includes a New Starts share of $9.4 million. FTA approved the project 
into preliminary engineering in December 2006 and into final design in 
August 2010. 

Assembly Square Station--Boston, Massachusetts: 

The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority proposes to build a new 
Assembly Square Station on the existing Massachusetts Bay 
Transportation Authority heavy rail Orange Line between the existing 
Sullivan Square and Wellington Stations in the City of Somerville, 
Massachusetts. No additional Massachusetts Bay Transportation 
Authority rail cars are needed to provide service to this new station. 
The total capital cost of the Assembly Square Station is estimated to 
be $47.7 million with a proposed New Starts share of $24.9 million. 
FTA approved the project into preliminary engineering in September 
2008 and into final design in November 2010. 

Lackawanna Cutoff Project, Minimum Operating Segment--Andover, New 
Jersey: 

According to FTA's latest description of this project, the Lackawanna 
Cutoff project involves the restoration of commuter rail service from 
Port Morris, New Jersey, to Andover, New Jersey--a distance of 7.3 
miles. The Lackawanna Minimum Operating Segment is a short rail line 
at the outer end of New Jersey Transit's existing Montclair/Boonton 
Line. The alignment consists of the construction of a single track 
along the existing right-of-way purchased by the state of New Jersey 
in 2001. One station will be constructed at the terminus in Andover. 
The project will utilize the existing Port Morris Yard for storage and 
maintenance services. New Jersey Transit's existing rolling stock will 
be used to operate the service. The estimated capital cost is $36.6 
million with a proposed New Starts share of $18.2 million including 
primarily New Starts funds. New Jersey Transit has already received 
the full amount of appropriations necessary for this project. 

Modern Streetcar Project--Tucson, Arizona: 

The City of Tucson Department of Transportation proposes to build a 
streetcar project in the downtown Tucson Urban Corridor. The project 
includes the purchase of eight streetcar vehicles. The streetcars will 
operate at grade on surface streets in mixed traffic in most 
locations, with some reserved right-of-way where available. Track 
placement will primarily be in the center of shared travel lanes with 
stations located either in the median or on the outside of roadways. 
Station platforms will be designed so that they can be used by buses 
as well as by streetcars, where possible. The total capital cost of 
the project is estimated to be $196.5 million; the current New Starts 
share is $5.8 million. FTA approved the Tucson Modern Streetcar 
Project into preliminary engineering as an exempt project in December 
2008 and into final design in September 2009. 

Oakland Airport Connector--Oakland, California: 

The Bay Area Rapid Transit's Oakland Airport Connector is a 3.2-mile 
rail project to connect the Oakland International Airport to the Bay 
Area Rapid Transit's Coliseum Station and the rest of the transit 
system. According to the project sponsor, it will be a driverless, 
automated rail system to replace bus service and provide more 
integrated service to the airport. To construct the project, Bay Area 
Rapid Transit is using a design-build-operate-maintain project 
delivery approach. The estimated $492.7 million project will be funded 
using several funding sources, including $24.9 million in federal New 
Starts funding. FTA concurrently approved the project into preliminary 
engineering and final design in December 2009. 

Pawtucket/Central Falls Commuter Rail Station--Pawtucket, Rhode Island: 

The Rhode Island Department of Transportation proposes to build a new 
Pawtucket/Central Falls Commuter Rail Station on the existing 
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Providence-to-Boston 
commuter rail route, which follows Amtrak's Northeast Corridor. The 
station would be constructed in Pawtucket near the site of a station 
that was closed in 1959 between the existing South Attleboro and 
Providence stations. The total capital cost of the Commuter Rail 
Station is estimated to be $53.6 million with a proposed New Starts 
share of $24.9 million. FTA approved the project into preliminary 
engineering as an exempt New Starts project in August 2010. The Rhode 
Island Department of Transportation expects to begin final design in 
2013, construction in 2015, and revenue operations in 2018. 

Crystal City-Potomac Yard Transitway--Arlington, Virginia: 

According to FTA, the Crystal City-Potomac Yard project is a 3.1 mile 
bus transitway project with eight stops. It includes 1.5 lane-miles of 
exclusive transit right-of-way (which is an independent roadway for 
buses) and 1.3 miles of an on-street dedicated bus lane, and 0.3 lane- 
miles of mixed traffic operation. Arlington County officials said this 
project is not a bus rapid transit project, which has different 
features such as large distances between stations. Instead, this bus 
transitway project provides limited local bus service that will 
replace the current standard local bus service. The purpose is to 
provide high-capacity and high-quality bus transit services in the 5-
mile corridor between the Pentagon (and Pentagon City) in Arlington 
County and the Braddock Road Metrorail Station in the City of 
Alexandria. The total capital cost of the bus transitway is estimated 
to be $38.1 million with a proposed New Starts share of $980,000. FTA 
approved the project into preliminary engineering as an exempt New 
Starts project in August 2010. 

[End of section] 

Appendix V: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Lorelei St. James, (202) 512-2834 or stjamesl@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the contact named above, Catherine Colwell, Assistant 
Director; Lauren Calhoun; Dwayne Curry; Robert Heilman; Terence Lam; 
Joanie Lofgren; Sara Ann W. Moessbauer; and Amy Rosewarne made key 
contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

Related GAO Products: 

Public Transportation: Use of Contractors is Generally Enhancing 
Transit Project Oversight, and FTA is Taking Actions to Address Some 
Stakeholder Concerns. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-909]. Washington, D.C.: September 
14, 2010. 

Public Transportation: Better Data Needed to Assess Length of New 
Starts Process, and Options Exist to Expedite Project Development. 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-784]. Washington, D.C.: 
August 6, 2009. 

Public Transportation: New Starts Program Challenges and Preliminary 
Observations on Expediting Project Development. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-763T]. Washington, D.C.: June 3, 
2009. 

Public Transportation: Improvements Are Needed to More Fully Assess 
Predicted Impacts of New Starts Projects. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-844]. Washington, D.C.: July 25, 
2008. 

Public Transportation: Future Demand Is Likely for New Starts and 
Small Starts Programs, but Improvements Needed to the Small Starts 
Application Process. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-917]. Washington, D.C.: July 27, 
2007. 

Public Transportation: Preliminary Analysis of Changes to and Trends 
in FTA's New Starts and Small Starts Programs. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-812T]. Washington, D.C.: May 10, 
2007. 

Public Transportation: New Starts Program Is in a Period of 
Transition. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-819]. 
Washington, D.C.: August 30, 2006. 

Public Transportation: Preliminary Information on FTA's Implementation 
of SAFETEA-LU Changes. [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-06-910T]. Washington, D.C.: June 27, 
2006. 

Public Transportation: Opportunities Exist to Improve the 
Communication and Transparency of Changes Made to the New Starts 
Program. [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-674]. 
Washington, D.C.: June 28, 2005. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] Fixed-guideway systems use and occupy a separate right-of-way for 
the exclusive use of public transportation services, such as fixed 
rail and exclusive lanes for buses and other high-occupancy vehicles. 

[2] Although SAFETEA-LU created a separate Small Starts "category" 
rather than a Small Starts "program," for the purposes of this report, 
we refer to the Small Starts category as the Small Starts program, as 
FTA consistently refers to the Small Starts program in reports and 
guidance. See 49 U.S.C. § 5309(e). 

[3] In accordance with SAFETEA-LU, 49 U.S.C. § 5309 (e)(1)(B), the 
exempt category will expire when FTA publishes a final regulation 
pertaining to Small Starts. However, FTA has not yet promulgated this 
final regulation. According to FTA officials, currently there is no 
timeline for the release of a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. 

[4] 49 U.S.C. § 5309(k)(2). 

[5] See 49 U.S.C. §§ 5309(d)(2), (e)(2). Project justification 
criteria include cost-effectiveness, land use, economic development 
effects, environmental benefits, mobility improvements, and operating 
efficiencies. To determine the project's local financial commitment, 
FTA evaluates a project's capital finance plan, operating finance 
plan, and non-New Starts share. We have previously assessed FTA's 
evaluation and rating process for New Starts; see GAO, Public 
Transportation: Improvements Are Needed to More Fully Assess Predicted 
Impacts of New Starts Projects, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-844] (Washington, D.C.: July 25, 
2008). 

[6] On June 3, 2010, FTA published an Advance Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking in the Federal Register, which seeks comments on how best 
to measure a proposed project's cost-effectiveness, economic 
development effects, and environmental impacts, among other things. 75 
Fed. Reg. 31383. According to FTA officials, currently there is no 
timeline for the release of a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking. 

[7] GAO, Public Transportation: Better Data Needed to Assess Length of 
New Starts Process, and Options Exist to Expedite Project Development, 
[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-784] (Washington, D.C.: 
Aug. 6, 2009). 

[8] Bus rapid transit, according to FTA, is a corridor-based, enhanced 
bus system that operates on bus lanes or other transitways in order to 
combine the flexibility of buses with the efficiency of rail to 
operate at faster speeds. 

[9] New Starts projects are carried out in concert with the 
statutorily established state and metropolitan planning processes. 23 
U.S.C. § 134. 

[10] Fixed-guideway systems use and occupy a separate right-of-way for 
the exclusive use of public transportation services, such as fixed 
rail and exclusive lanes for buses and other high-occupancy vehicles. 
For Small Starts projects, the fixed-guideway portion of the project 
need not be contiguous, but it should be located to result in faster 
and more reliable running times. Peak period refers to periods with 
high ridership or demand. 

[11] According to FTA's guidance, a corridor-based bus project must 
have the following minimum elements: substantial transit stations; 
traffic signal priority/preemption, to the extent, if any, that there 
are traffic signals on the corridor; low-floor vehicles or level 
boarding; branding of the proposed service; and 10-minute peak/15- 
minute off-peak running times (i.e., headways) or better while 
operating at least 14 hours per weekday. 

[12] Per 49 U.S.C. § 5309(d)(2)(B), New Starts projects are rated on 
six project justification criteria: cost-effectiveness, land use, 
economic development effects, environmental benefits, mobility 
improvements, and operating efficiencies. In accordance with 49 U.S.C. 
§ 5309(e)(2)(B), Small Starts projects are rated on three project 
justification criteria: cost-effectiveness, economic development, and 
land use. 

[13] Although exempt projects are not required by statute to go 
through alternatives analysis, FTA strongly suggests that sponsors of 
exempt projects conduct an analysis of alternative investment 
strategies to determine the optimal improvement to implement in a 
given corridor. 

[14] FTA issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking to implement these 
provisions on August 3, 2007. Subsequently, the SAFETEA-LU Technical 
Corrections Act of 2008 required FTA to "give comparable, but not 
necessarily equal, numerical weight to each project justification 
criteria" when rating projects. Pub. L. No. 110-244, § 201, 122 Stat 
1572. Therefore, FTA withdrew the 2007 notice in February 2009. As 
noted earlier, FTA issued a new Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking 
on June 3, 2010. 75 Fed. Reg. 31383. 

[15] H.R. Rep. No. 109-203, at 932-933 (2005) (Conf. Rep.). See also 
H.R. Rep. No. 108-452, pt. 1, at 31 (2004); H.R. Rep. No. 109-12, at 
409 (2005). 

[16] FTA created the Very Small Starts category based on its 
discretionary authority under 49 U.S.C. § 5309 to carry out the New 
Starts/Small Starts program. 

[17] The features that define a Very Small Starts project and that FTA 
determined would make a project cost-effective include minimum daily 
ridership requirements and maximum total and per-mile costs, as listed 
earlier in this report. 

[18] In fiscal year 2007, FTA budgeted $100 million for potential 
projects which may qualify under the Small Starts program. However, 
due to the early stages of rulemaking for the program, FTA did not 
recommend Small Starts funding for any projects in that fiscal year. 

[19] GAO, Public Transportation: Future Demand Is Likely for New 
Starts and Small Starts Program, but Improvements Needed to the Small 
Starts Application Process, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-917] (Washington, D.C.: July 27, 
2007). 

[20] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-844]. 

[21] FTA assigns each project an overall rating of "high," "medium- 
high," "medium," "medium-low," or "low." 49 U.S.C. § 5309(d)(5)(B). To 
qualify for funding, a project must receive an overall rating of 
"medium" or higher. 49 U.S.C. § 5309(d)(1)(B)(ii). 

[22] The federal contribution refers to 49 U.S.C. § 5309 Capital 
Investment Grant funds only. Projects may have other sources of 
federal funds, such as Recovery Act or Federal Highway Administration 
Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement funds. 

[23] As stated earlier, we define project development requirements to 
include the information FTA requires from project sponsors when they 
apply for and proceed through each statutorily required project 
development phase, based on its guidance and regulations. 

[24] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-08-844] and 
Deloitte Development LLC, New Starts Program Assessment (Feb. 12, 
2007). 

[25] See 49 C.F.R. part 633, subpart C. 

[26] See 49 U.S.C. §§ 633.11, 633.5 for criteria by which FTA may 
contract for PMOCs. 

[27] The 20 stakeholders that we interviewed did not all have 
experience with both Small Starts and Very Small Starts projects. For 
example, of the 10 project sponsors we interviewed, 4 were sponsors of 
Small Starts projects and 6 were sponsors of Very Small Starts 
projects. Also, not every FTA regional office had experience with both 
a Small Starts and Very Small Starts project; only two regional 
offices had experience with both Small Starts and Very Small Starts 
projects. Therefore, not every stakeholder applies to each category of 
projects. 

[28] 74 Fed. Reg. 46515 (Sept. 2009). 

[29] See [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-784] and 
Deloitte Development LLC, New Starts Program Assessment (Feb. 12, 
2007). 

[30] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-784]. 

[31] According to FTA officials, FFGAs and PCGAs have similar review 
and approval processes. For example, FFGAs are also subject to a 
statutorily required 60-day congressional review period. 49 U.S.C. § 
5309(g)(5). 

[32] Hearing on Public Transportation: Priorities and Challenges for 
Reauthorization, before the Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and 
Urban Affairs (May 19, 2011). 

[33] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-07-917]. 

[34] 76 Fed. Reg. 12217 (March 2011). Typically, an urban circulator 
operates regular service within a closed loop--usually 3 miles or 
shorter in length--and serves a discrete urban area. FTA believes 
projects that provide circulation through an urban area qualify, 
whether or not they have an actual loop, as long as they follow a 
course that returns to the starting point and distributes riders 
around the area. 

[35] FTA selected a sixth project in Fort Worth, Texas, but the 
project sponsor later decided not to participate in the program. 

[36] The goal of the department's livability initiative is to enhance 
the economic and social well-being of all Americans by creating and 
maintaining a safe, reliable, intermodal, and accessible 
transportation network that enhances choices for transportation users, 
provides easy access to employment opportunities and other 
destinations, and promotes positive effects on the surrounding 
community. 

[37] 49 U.S.C. § 5309(g)(1)(C). A before-and-after study is similar to 
an outcome evaluation in that it compares the forecasted benefits and 
costs of a project with the actual benefits and costs of the project 
after the project is completed. 

[38] GAO, Highway and Transit Investments: Options for Improving 
Information on Projects' Benefits and Costs and Increasing 
Accountability for Results, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-05-712] (Washington, D.C.: Jan. 24, 
2005). 

[39] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-09-784]. 

[End of section] 

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