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entitled 'Public Transportation: Federal Project Approval Process 
Remains a Barrier to Greater Private Sector Role and DOT Could Enhance 
Efforts to Assist Project Sponsors' which was released on October 29, 
2009. 

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Report to Congressional Committees: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

October 2009: 

Public Transportation: 

Federal Project Approval Process Remains a Barrier to Greater Private 
Sector Role and DOT Could Enhance Efforts to Assist Project Sponsors: 

Private Sector Role in Transit Projects: 

GAO-10-19: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-10-19], 
a report to congressional committees. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

As demand for transit and competition for available federal funding 
increases, transit project sponsors are increasingly looking to 
alternative approaches, such as public-private partnerships, to deliver 
and finance new, large-scale public transit projects more quickly and 
at reduced costs. GAO reviewed (1) the role of the private sector in 
U.S. public transit projects as compared to international projects; (2) 
the benefits and limitations of and barriers, if any, to greater 
private sector involvement in transit projects and how these barriers 
are addressed in the Department of Transportation’s (DOT) pilot 
program; and (3) how project sponsors and DOT can protect the public 
interest when these approaches are used. GAO reviewed regulations, 
studies, and contracts and interviewed U.S., Canadian, and United 
Kingdom officials (identified by experts in the use of these 
approaches). 

The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) should incorporate greater 
flexibility in its pilot program through the use of existing tools, 
such as conditional approvals, to streamline the New Starts process, 
and develop a sound evaluation plan to assess the pilot program’s 
results. DOT should increase efforts to better equip project sponsors 
in using these approaches, including developing guidance and providing 
technical assistance. DOT agreed to consider our recommendations. 

What GAO Found: 

In the United States, the private sector role in delivering and 
financing transit projects through alternative approaches, such as 
public-private partnerships, has been more limited than in 
international projects. The private sector role in U.S. projects has 
focused more on how they are delivered rather than how they are 
financed, while the private sector role in international projects has 
focused on both project delivery and financing. Since 2000, seven new 
large-scale construction projects funded through FTA’s Fixed Guideway 
Capital Investment Program—New Starts program—have been completed using 
one of two alternative project delivery approaches, and none of these 
projects included private sector financing. In 2005, Congress 
authorized FTA to establish a pilot program to demonstrate the 
advantages and disadvantages of these alternative approaches and how 
the New Starts Program could better allow for them. 

Alternative approaches can offer potential benefits such as a greater 
likelihood of completing projects on time and on budget, but also 
involve limitations such as less project sponsor control over 
operations. The sequential and phased New Starts process is a barrier 
because it is incompatible with alternative approaches and thus does 
not allow for work to be completed concurrently, which can lead to 
delays and increased costs. Under its pilot program, FTA can grant 
major streamlining modifications to the New Starts process for up to 
three project sponsors, but has not yet granted any such modifications 
because FTA has found that none of the projects has transferred enough 
risk, in particular financial responsibilities, to the private sector. 
FTA has the ability within its pilot program to further experiment with 
the use of long-standing existing tools that could encourage a greater 
private sector role while continuing to balance the need to protect the 
public interest. This includes forms of conditional funding approvals 
used by other DOT agencies and international governments. FTA also 
lacks an evaluation plan to accurately and reliably assess the pilot 
program’s results, including the effect of its efforts to streamline 
the New Starts process for pilot project sponsors. Without such a plan, 
agencies and Congress will be limited in their decision making 
regarding the pilot program. 

Transit project sponsors protect the public interest in alternative 
approaches through, for example, the use of performance standards and 
financial assessments to evaluate the costs and benefits of proposed 
approaches. Other governments have established entities to assist 
project sponsors in protecting the public interest. These entities have 
better equipped project sponsors to implement alternative approaches by 
creating a uniform approach to developing project agreements and 
serving as a repository of institutional knowledge. DOT can serve as a 
valuable resource for transit project sponsors by broadening its 
current efforts, including providing technical assistance and 
encouraging the use of additional financial assessments, among other 
measures. 

View GAO-10-19 or key components.
For more information, contact Susan Fleming at (202) 512-2834 or 
flemings@gao.gov. 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Background: 

Private Sector Roles in the Delivery and Financing of U.S. Transit 
Projects Have Been Narrower Than in Some Other Countries: 

While FTA's Pilot Program Is Expected to Demonstrate Potential Benefits 
and Limitations in Using Alternative Approaches, New Starts Process 
Remains a Barrier for Pilot Projects: 

Project Sponsors Have Sought to Protect the Public Interest in Various 
Ways and DOT Can Provide Guidance and Technical Assistance: 

Conclusions: 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Related GAO Products: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Completed U.S. New Starts Transit Projects That Have Used 
Alternative Approaches: 

Table 2: Selected Ongoing and Completed Transit Projects in Canada and 
the United Kingdom That Have Used Alternative Approaches: 

Table 3: Potential Benefits for Project Sponsors: 

Table 4: Potential Limitations for Project Sponsors: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Range of Private Sector Role in Transit Projects That Use 
Alternative Approaches: 

Figure 2: New Starts Planning and Development Process: 

Abbreviations: 

DOT: Department of Transportation: 

FTA: Federal Transit Administration: 

[End of section] 

United States Government Accountability Office: 
Washington, DC 20548: 

October 29, 2009: 

The Honorable James L. Oberstar: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable John L. Mica: 
Ranking Republican Member: 
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure: 
House of Representatives: 

The Honorable Peter A. DeFazio: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable John J. Duncan, Jr.: 
Ranking Member: 
Subcommittee on Highways and Transit: 
Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure: 
House of Representatives: 

Many Americans rely on mass transit to reach their jobs, schools, and 
other activities. In 2008, passengers took over 10.7 billion trips 
using public transportation, the highest level of ridership in 52 years 
and a modern ridership record. As national demand for mass transit 
services increases, more sponsors of transit projects are seeking 
available federal funding. The Federal Transit Administration (FTA) 
distributes federal funding to transit agencies for the construction of 
projects through a variety of formula and discretionary grant programs, 
including the New Starts grant program for new, large-scale 
projects.[Footnote 1] As competition for these federal funds grows more 
intense, transit project sponsors are increasingly looking for 
alternative mechanisms to finance and deliver new, large-scale transit 
projects. Moreover, there is a belief by some in the United States that 
the conventional approach to delivering and financing infrastructure 
projects--in which contracts for the design and construction of the 
transit facility are awarded separately to the private sector--may not 
always be the most desirable. In transportation, public sector entities 
including state departments of transportation, local and regional 
governments, and transit providers are seeking unconventional or 
"alternative" approaches to delivering and financing their projects 
that may not only reduce project costs, but also deliver the projects 
more quickly and efficiently. Generally, these alternative approaches, 
which can include public-private partnerships, rely on the private 
sector assuming an enhanced responsibility for performing all or a 
significant number of functions in connection with a project, in some 
cases including financial liability. FTA defines public-private 
partnerships broadly as arrangements that do not use the conventional 
method of design-bid-build, and has encouraged the use of public- 
private partnerships to deliver and finance transit projects. 

Public-private partnerships for transit differ from those for highways 
in terms of their ability to generate sufficient revenue to pay for 
themselves and the need for ongoing public financial assistance. 
Alternative approaches are more common worldwide for highway projects. 
For example, as we described in a previous report, highway public- 
private partnerships are common in France, Spain, Australia, and the 
United Kingdom.[Footnote 2] Highway public-private partnerships 
projects can take the form of the public sector entering into long-term 
agreements with the private sector (known as "concession agreements") 
in which the private sector finances and constructs a new facility and 
then operates and maintains it over a specified period of time in 
return for the right to collect tolls to fund operations and 
maintenance and to receive a return on their investment. One key 
difference between highways and transit is that at least in some cases 
a private entity might be able to charge users sufficient tolls to 
profitably build and operate a highway, but transit almost always 
cannot pay for itself from farebox revenues. Public transit systems 
typically receive government funding to supplement farebox revenues in 
paying for construction as well operations and maintenance. Therefore, 
it is important to safeguard the public interest in transit public- 
private partnerships. In addition, whereas some highway public-private 
partnership agreements have given private entities substantial 
authority to set toll rates, governments often retain control of fare 
levels even when entering into agreements for transit projects that use 
alternative approaches because transit fare-setting considers, among 
other factors, keeping fares low to increase ridership and provide an 
affordable form of mobility for urban residents, including low-income 
citizens. 

To assist Congress as it prepares for its upcoming surface 
transportation reauthorization, you asked us to identify key issues as 
they relate to alternative project delivery and financing approaches, 
including public-private partnerships. In response to your request, 
this report addresses (1) the role of the private sector in the 
delivering and financing of U.S. transit projects compared to other 
countries; (2) the benefits and limitations of and the barriers, if 
any, to greater private sector involvement in transit projects and how 
these barriers are addressed in the Department of Transportation's 
(DOT) Public-Private Partnership Pilot Program; and (3) how project 
sponsors and DOT can protect the public interest in transit projects 
that use alternative approaches. 

To address these issues, we reviewed pertinent federal legislation and 
regulations, including: Federal Register notices and guidance for FTA's 
Public-Private Partnership Pilot Program and the New Starts Program; 
DOT's 2007 Report to Congress on the Costs, Benefits, and Efficiencies 
of Public-Private Partnerships for Fixed Guideway Capital Projects; and 
other DOT reports. We also collected, summarized, and analyzed in-depth 
interviews with officials from the three FTA Public-Private Partnership 
Pilot Program projects--Bay Area Rapid Transit Oakland Airport 
Connector, Denver Regional Transportation District East Corridor and 
Gold Line, and Houston Metro North and Southeast Corridors--in addition 
to Minnesota Metro Transit Hiawatha Corridor and Denver Regional 
Transportation District Transportation Expansion. As part of the 
review, we collected descriptions of the projects, copies of the 
concession or development agreements, and documentation related to the 
financial structure of such projects. These projects were selected 
because they are recent examples of ongoing and completed transit 
projects in the United States that incorporated greater private sector 
involvement through the use of alternative project delivery or 
financing approaches or both. We focused solely on projects that have 
or are expected to go through FTA's New Starts process given that it is 
the largest capital grant program for transit projects and that any 
such projects would be reviewed to protect the public interest. In 
addition to reviewing these domestic projects, we conducted extensive 
interviews with financial and legal advisors, experts, and private 
sector officials from Canada and the United Kingdom who are 
knowledgeable about private sector participation in the delivery and 
financing of transit projects. Further, we collected information on how 
the following project sponsors protect the public interest in the 
following international transit projects: Croydon Tramlink, Docklands 
Light Railway, London Underground, Manchester Metrolink, and Nottingham 
Express Transit in the United Kingdom, and the Canada Line in 
Vancouver, Canada. To collect the most valuable and relevant 
information for our review, these international projects were selected, 
in part, because they are examples of ongoing and completed transit 
public-private partnerships that incorporate a range of alternative 
project delivery or financing approaches, or both, and they are in 
countries that share a similar political structure to the United 
States. Finally, we conducted a literature review of domestic and 
international transit projects with greater private sector 
participation and interviewed FTA and other federal and local officials 
as well as private sector participants associated with the projects we 
selected. 

We conducted this performance audit from October 2008 through October 
2009 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. 

Background: 

Private sector participation and investment in transit is not new. In 
the 1800s, the private sector played a central role in financing early 
transportation infrastructure development in the United States. For 
example, original sections of the New York City Subway were constructed 
from 1899 to 1904 by a public-private partnership. New York City sought 
private sector bids for the first four contracts to construct and 
finance segments of the initial subway system. Ultimately, a 50-year 
private sector lease to operate and maintain the system was used. 
Another example is the City of Chicago's "L" transit system, which was 
built from the 1880s through the 1920s and operated by the Chicago 
Rapid Transit Company, a privately owned firm. The construction of the 
system was financed by the private sector. In following years, 
transportation infrastructure development became almost wholly publicly 
funded. Conditions placed on federal transportation grants-in- aid 
limited private involvement in federally funded projects. More 
recently, there has been a move back towards policies that encourage 
more private and public blending of funding, responsibility, and 
control in transportation projects. The federal government has 
progressively relaxed restrictions on private participation in highway 
and transit projects serving public objectives. This change in federal 
policy toward considering transit projects that use alternative 
approaches has also created an opportunity for states to reexamine 
their own public-private partnership policies. 

Conventional transit projects generally follow a "design-bid-build" 
approach whereby the project sponsor contracts with separate entities 
for the discrete functions of a project, generally keeping much of the 
project responsibility and risk with the public sector.[Footnote 3] FTA 
defines alternative approaches, including public-private partnerships, 
as those that increase the extent of private sector involvement beyond 
the conventional design-bid-build project delivery approach. These 
alternative approaches contemplate a single private sector entity being 
responsible and financially liable for performing all or a significant 
number of functions in connection with a project. In transferring 
responsibility and risk for multiple project elements to the private 
sector partner, the project sponsor often has less control over the 
procurement and the private sector partner may have the opportunity to 
earn a financial return commensurate with the risks it has assumed (see 
fig. 1). 

Figure 1: Range of Private Sector Role in Transit Projects That Use 
Alternative Approaches: 

[Refer to PDF for image: chart] 

Extent of sector role: Greater private sector role (Upside of arrow) & 
Lesser private sector role (Downside of arrow). 

Types of alternative approach: 
* Build-own-operate; 
* Design-build-finance-operate-maintain; 
* Design-build-finance-operate; 
* Build-operate-transfer; 
* Design-build-operate-maintain; 
* Design-build-operate; 
* Design-build. 

Private sector role in project delivery and finance: 
Constructs, owns, and operates the project (without transferring it to 
the public sector project sponsor); fully finances the project  
* Designs, constructs, operates, and maintains the project; partially 
or fully finances the project  
* Designs, constructs, and operates the project; partially or fully 
finances the project  
* Designs, constructs, and operates a project for a specified time 
before transferring ownership to the public sector project sponsor  
* Designs, constructs, operates, and maintains the project; does not 
finance the project  
* Designs, constructs, and operates the project; does not finance the 
project; 
* Designs and constructs the project; does not finance the project.

Source: DOT and GAO. 

[End of figure] 

With these alternative approaches, many of the project risks that would 
normally be borne by the project sponsor in a design-bid-build approach 
are transferred to or shared with the private sector. Risk transfer 
involves assigning responsibility for a project risk in a contract so 
that the private sector is accountable for nonperformance or errors. 
Project sponsors can transfer a range of key project risks to the 
private sector, including those related to design, financing, 
construction performance and schedule, vehicle supply, maintenance, 
operations, and ridership. For example, design risk refers to whether 
an error causes delays or additional costs, or causes the project to 
fail to satisfy legal or other requirements. Ridership risk refers to 
whether the actual number of passengers on the transit system reaches 
forecasted levels. However, some risks may not be transferable. 

Much of the federal government's share of new capital investment in 
mass transportation has come through FTA's New Starts program.[Footnote 
4] Through the New Starts program, FTA identifies and recommends new 
fixed-guideway transit projects including heavy, light, and commuter 
rail, ferry, and certain bus projects for federal funding. Over the 
last decade, the New Starts program has resulted in funding state and 
local agencies with over $10 billion to help design and construct 
transit projects throughout the country and is FTA's largest capital 
grant program for transit projects. Moreover, since the early 1970s, a 
significant portion of the federal government's share of new capital 
investment in mass transportation has been initiated through the New 
Starts process, resulting in full funding grant agreements.[Footnote 5] 
FTA must prioritize transit projects for funding by evaluating, rating, 
and recommending potential projects on the basis of specific financial 
commitment and project justification criteria. Using criteria set by 
law, FTA evaluates potential transit projects and assigns ratings to 
them annually. These evaluation criteria reflect a range of benefits 
and effects of the proposed project, such as cost-effectiveness, as 
well as the ability of the project sponsor to fund the project and 
finance the continued operation of its transit system. FTA uses the 
evaluation and rating process to decide which projects to recommend to 
Congress for funding. As part of the New Starts process, FTA approves 
projects into three phases: preliminary engineering (in which the 
designs of project proposals are refined),[Footnote 6] final design 
(the end of project development in which final construction plans and 
cost estimates, among other activities, are completed), and 
construction (in which FTA awards the project a full funding grant 
agreement, providing a federal commitment of funds subject to the 
availability of appropriations)[Footnote 7] (see fig. 2). 

Figure 2: New Starts Planning and Development Process: 

[Refer to PDF for image: flowchart of New Starts planning and 
development process] 

Source: FTA. 

[End of figure] 

We have previously identified FTA's New Starts program as a model for 
other federal transportation programs because of its use of a rigorous 
and systematic evaluation process to distinguish among proposed New 
Starts investments.[Footnote 8] However, we and other stakeholders and 
policymakers have also identified challenges facing the program. Among 
these challenges is the need to streamline the New Starts project 
approval process. Our past reviews, for example, found that many 
project stakeholders thought that FTA's process for evaluating New 
Starts projects was too time consuming, costly, and complex.[Footnote 
9] The New Starts grant process is closely aligned with the 
conventional design-bid-build approach, whereby the project sponsor 
contracts with separate entities for the design and construction of the 
project. 

In 2005, Congress authorized FTA to establish the Public-Private 
Partnership Pilot Program to demonstrate (1) the advantages and 
disadvantages of transit projects that use alternative approaches for 
new fixed-guideway capital projects and (2) how FTA's New Starts 
program can be modified or streamlined for these alternative 
approaches.[Footnote 10] The pilot program allows FTA to study projects 
that incorporate greater private sector involvement through alternative 
project delivery and financing approaches; integrate a sharing of 
project risk; and streamline design, construction, and operations and 
maintenance. FTA can designate up to three project sponsors for the 
pilot program. Projects selected under the pilot program will be 
eligible for a simplified and accelerated review process that is 
intended to substantially reduce the time and cost to the sponsors of 
New Starts projects. This can include major modifications of the 
requirements and oversight tools. For example, FTA may offer concurrent 
project approvals into preliminary engineering and final design. 
Further, FTA may modify its risk-assessment process--which aims to 
identify issues that could affect a project's schedule or cost--as well 
as other project reviews. The modification of any of FTA's New Starts 
requirements and oversight tools will be on a case-by-case basis if FTA 
determines enough risk is transferred to and equity capital is invested 
by the private sector.[Footnote 11] In addition to major modifications, 
FTA may also make use of other tools (not unique to the pilot program) 
to expedite the review process. These include Letters of No Prejudice 
that allow a project sponsor to incur costs with the understanding that 
these costs may be reimbursable as eligible expenses (or eligible for 
credit toward the local match) should FTA approve the project for 
funding at a later date.[Footnote 12] FTA can also use Letters of 
Intent to signal an intention to obligate federal funds at a later date 
when funds become available.[Footnote 13] Finally, Early Systems Work 
Agreements obligate a portion of a project's federal funding so that 
project sponsors can begin preliminary project activities before a full 
funding grant agreement is awarded. FTA has employed a contractor to 
determine whether risk is effectively transferred from the public to 
private sector for its pilot program projects, and will consider 
private sector due diligence as a substitute for its own. 

From a public perspective, an important component of analyzing the 
potential benefits and limitations of greater private sector 
involvement is consideration of the public interest. Although, in 
transportation, no definition of public interest exists at the federal 
level, nor does federal guidance identify public interest 
considerations in transportation, consideration of the public interest 
in transit may refer to the many stakeholders in public-private 
partnerships, each of which may have its own interests. Stakeholders 
include public transit authorities, transit agency employees, mass 
transit users and members of the public who may be affected by 
ancillary effects of a transit public-private partnership or 
alternative project delivery approach, including users of bus and 
highways, special interest groups, and taxpayers in general. Moreover, 
defining the public interest is a function of scale and can differ 
based on the range of stakeholders in addition to the geographic and 
political domain considered. For the purposes of its pilot program, FTA 
has stated that the public interest refers to the due diligence that 
FTA typically conducts as a public entity with a financial interest in 
a transit project. 

Private Sector Roles in the Delivery and Financing of U.S. Transit 
Projects Have Been Narrower Than in Some Other Countries: 

In the United States, the private sector has played a more limited role 
in the delivery and financing of transit projects than in some other 
countries. Since 2000, seven New Starts projects were completed using 
alternative approaches (see table 1). These projects have focused on 
delivery, rather than financing, and have used either the design-build 
or the design-build-operate-maintain delivery approach, in which the 
private sector role is to design and construct the project or to 
design, construct, operate, and maintain the project, respectively. In 
addition, to date, no completed New Starts projects have been privately 
financed and therefore, none of these projects have used private equity 
financing. 

Table 1: Completed U.S. New Starts Transit Projects That Have Used 
Alternative Approaches: 

Project name: New Jersey Transit Hudson Bergen Minimum Operable Segment 
1; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build-operate-maintain; 
Year completed: 2002. 

Project name: Bay Area Rapid Transit Extension to San Francisco 
International Airport; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build; 
Year completed: 2003. 

Project name: Minneapolis Metro Transit Hiawatha Light Rail; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build; 
Year completed: 2004. 

Project name: Washington Metropolitan Area Transportation Largo 
Metrorail Extension; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build; 
Year completed: 2004. 

Project name: Denver Regional Transportation District Transportation 
Expansion Light Rail; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build; 
Year completed: 2006. 

Project name: New Jersey Transit Hudson Bergen Minimum Operable Segment 
2; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build-operate-maintain; 
Year completed: 2006. 

Project name: South Florida Commuter Rail Upgrades; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build; 
Year completed: 2006. 

Source: FTA. 

[End of table] 

However, there have been very few examples of completed non-New Starts- 
funded new fixed-guideway projects that have been privately financed. 
One project, the Las Vegas Monorail, a 4-mile fixed-guideway system 
serving the resort corridor along Las Vegas Boulevard in Nevada, was 
financed with tax-exempt revenue bonds issued through the state of 
Nevada and with contributions from the area resorts and 
hotels.[Footnote 14] 

As previously mentioned, Congress authorized FTA to establish its 
Public-Private Partnership Pilot Program to demonstrate the advantages 
and disadvantages of these approaches in transit. As established, the 
pilot project studies those projects that use alternative approaches 
that integrate a sharing of project risk and incorporate private equity 
capital in order to illustrate where FTA can grant greater flexibility 
of some of its New Starts requirements to projects within the pilot 
program. However, to date, only one of the pilot projects is expected 
to incorporate private equity capital. FTA designated three project 
sponsors for its Public-Private Partnership Pilot Program in 2007: 

* Bay Area Rapid Transit--The Oakland Airport Connector project is to 
be a 3.2-mile system that will connect the Oakland International 
Airport to the Bay Area Rapid Transit's Coliseum Station and the rest 
of the transit system. In its original iteration, the Oakland Airport 
Connector planned on using a design-build-finance-operate-maintain 
project delivery approach that included private sector financing. 
However, lower-than-expected ridership predictions due to the economic 
climate, among other factors, led Bay Area Rapid Transit to move 
forward with a different alternative approach for its project--now 
design-build-operate-maintain--and undergo a new request for qualified 
bidders and request for proposals process. According to Bay Area Rapid 
Transit, a contract will be awarded in December 2009. 

* Metropolitan Transit Authority of Harris County (Houston Metro)-- 
North and Southeast Corridor projects are to provide improved access to 
Houston's Central Business District. This project was also originally 
to use a design-build-finance-operate-maintain approach that included 
private sector financing, but no bidders on the project proposed an 
equity investment, so it is instead using a design-build-operate- 
maintain approach. Issues related to price and risk transference led 
Houston Metro to switch private partners and the new partner chose not 
to provide financing for the project. Groundbreaking for the 
construction of the two projects occurred in July 2009. 

* Denver Regional Transportation District--East Corridor and Gold Line 
pilot projects are to connect the city's main railway station with its 
airport and other parts of the city. The project is using a design- 
build-finance-operate-maintain approach, which includes financing by 
the private sector partner. The private sector partner will be selected 
through a competitive proposal process to deliver and operate the 
project under a long-term agreement. In September 2009, Denver Regional 
Transportation District released a request for proposals to 
prequalified teams. 

One ongoing New Starts project did not apply to be part of the pilot 
program, but is using an alternative approach. The Dulles Silver Line 
is using the design-build approach with partial funding of the local 
share coming from area businesses generated through a tax-increment 
financing district to connect Washington, D.C., metropolitan area's 
transit system with one of the area's three major airports. 

In contrast, international project sponsors have delivered transit 
projects using a wider range of alternative approaches, including 
public-private partnerships, beyond the more commonly used design-build 
in the United States (see table 2). According to World Bank officials 
and a World Bank-sponsored report, transit public-private partnerships 
have been implemented in Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Hong Kong, 
Malaysia, the Philippines, South Africa, Thailand, and the United 
Kingdom. Furthermore, international project sponsors have incorporated 
private equity investment financing for some of their projects. 
According to World Bank officials, the United Kingdom and Canada are 
leading countries for private equity investment in transit, and the 
United Kingdom has the most experience using different public-private 
partnership models. International projects also generally require a 
government subsidy to supplement farebox revenues for construction as 
well as operations and maintenance. 

Table 2: Selected Ongoing and Completed Transit Projects in Canada and 
the United Kingdom That Have Used Alternative Approaches: 

Project name: Docklands Light Railway Lewisham, London City Airport, 
and Woolwich Arsenal Extensions; 
Alternative approach used: Design- build-finance-maintain; 
Year completed: 1999, 2005, and 2009. 

Project name: Croydon Tramlink light rail; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build-finance-operate-maintain; 
Year completed: 2000. 

Project name: Manchester Metrolink Phase II light rail; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build-finance-operate-maintain; 
Year completed: 2000. 

Project name: London Underground Maintenance; 
Alternative approach used: Maintain; 
Year completed: 2003[A]. 

Project name: Nottingham Express light rail; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build-finance-operate-maintain; 
Year completed: 2004. 

Project name: Canada Line light rail; 
Alternative approach used: Design-build-finance-operate-maintain; 
Year completed: 2009. 

Source: World Bank and GAO. 

[A] This refers to the date when the London Underground's two 
maintenance contracts took effect. 

[End of table] 

Examples of several projects in the United Kingdom and Canada that we 
reviewed include the following: 

* The Docklands Light Railway serves a redevelopment area east and 
southeast of London. Transport for London, the public sector project 
sponsor, used three separate design-build-finance-maintain concession 
agreements to construct system extensions as well as a single franchise 
to operate trains over the entire system. All three extensions were 
financed in part or full using private equity investment, and the 
Lewisham Extension was the United Kingdom's first transportation public-
private partnership for both project delivery and financing. 

* The Croydon Tramlink light rail project was a 99-year design-build- 
finance-operate-maintain agreement to develop the new system. In this 
project, payments to the private sector partner during operations were 
based entirely on ridership revenue, but the project sponsor retained 
the authority to set fares. The private sector partner faced financial 
difficulties, and the concession was ultimately bought by Transport for 
London. 

* The Manchester Metrolink Phase II light rail project was a 17-year 
concession agreement wherein the private partner had responsibility to 
design, construct, finance, operate, and maintain this project. The 
project was designed to expand the Metrolink System in order to connect 
two of the city's existing stations. The private partner provided over 
one-half of the project's funding for construction. The public sector 
terminated the concession to further expand the system. 

* The London Underground maintenance projects included agreements 
entered into between London Underground and two private sector partners 
to maintain and upgrade the system's infrastructure, including track, 
tunnels, trains, and stations. In return, the private sector would 
receive periodic payments based on its performance. One of the two 
private sector partners subsequently went bankrupt, and the concession 
agreement was then taken over by Transport for London. 

* The Nottingham Express Transit light rail project used a 27-year 
contract to design, build, finance, operate, and maintain a new transit 
line. Payments to the private sector were based on performance and 
ridership revenue, meaning that the private sector assumed some risk 
that actual ridership would not reach forecasted levels. Along with 
this transfer of risk, the private sector was also given the ability to 
set fares. The project is in the ninth year of its contract. 

* The Canada Line light rail project in the Vancouver area is a 35-year 
design-build-finance-operate-maintain concession agreement developed to 
link Vancouver with its international airport and neighboring 
employment and population centers in anticipation of the 2010 Winter 
Olympics. A separate entity was created to oversee the project's 
development and the private partner provided one-third of the project's 
funding, including private equity capital, in exchange for periodic 
payments based on performance and ridership. 

While FTA's Pilot Program Is Expected to Demonstrate Potential Benefits 
and Limitations in Using Alternative Approaches, New Starts Process 
Remains a Barrier for Pilot Projects: 

Pilot Program to Demonstrate Potential Benefits and Limitations to 
Using Alternative Approaches: 

FTA's pilot program is expected to demonstrate potential benefits to 
using alternative approaches in transit.[Footnote 15] Project sponsors 
we interviewed cited a range of potential benefits, such as achieving 
cost and time savings, as well as potential advantages to the public 
sector, such as increased financing flexibility (see table 3). DOT 
outlined some of these same benefits and advantages in its 2007 Report 
to Congress on transit public-private partnerships and we similarly 
reported on them in 2008 for highway public-private 
partnerships.[Footnote 16] However, as we said then, benefits are not 
assured and should be evaluated by weighing them against potential 
costs and trade-offs. 

Table 3: Potential Benefits for Project Sponsors: 

Potential benefits: With the transference of risk, better adherence to 
cost and schedule targets. 

Potential benefits: Enhanced efficiencies and service improvements. 

Potential benefits: Increased financial flexibility and more 
predictable funding. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table] 

Among the benefits from using alternative approaches, project sponsors 
told us that they may better meet cost and schedule targets as well as 
achieve cost and time savings by transferring risks to the private 
sector. With transit projects that use alternative approaches, project 
sponsors can transfer a range of key project risks to the private 
sector, such as those related to design and its effect on construction 
that would normally be borne by the project sponsor, so that the 
private sector is accountable for errors or nonperformance. By 
transferring these project risks, the project sponsor creates 
incentives for the private sector to keep the project on schedule and 
on budget as, for example, the private sector would be responsible for 
any excess costs incurred from design errors. In addition, when a 
project sponsor transfers multiple project risks to the private sector, 
it can potentially reduce the total cost and duration since a single 
contractor can concurrently perform project activities that would 
typically be carried out consecutively by multiple contractors under 
the conventional design-bid-build approach. 

Project sponsors, stakeholders, and transit experts we interviewed told 
us that potential cost and time savings can be key incentives for using 
alternative approaches. For example, FTA reported that Minnesota Metro 
Transit's Hiawatha Corridor (one of the seven completed New Starts 
projects that used an alternative approach) was completed 12 months 
ahead of schedule compared to using the conventional design-bid-build 
approach by allowing design and construction schedules to overlap. This 
saved an estimated $25 million to $38 million since early completion 
led to avoided administration costs using a design-build alternative 
approach. Denver Regional Transportation District and the private 
sector completed the Transportation Expansion project 22 months ahead 
of schedule and within budget. In the United Kingdom, the three 
Docklands Light Railway extensions were built using design-build- 
finance-maintain approaches, and were completed 2 weeks to 2 months 
ahead of schedule. However, the use of alternative approaches does not 
guarantee cost and schedule benefits. For example, the design-build 
approach used by the South Florida Commuter Rail Upgrades saved 4 to 6 
years by completing all upgrades as a single project, but incurred 
slightly higher costs than estimated for the conventional design-bid- 
build approach. 

Project sponsors may be able to benefit from certain efficiencies and 
service improvements by transferring long-term responsibility of 
transit operations and maintenance in addition to design and 
construction to the private sector. DOT's 2007 Report to Congress on 
transit public-private partnerships stated that the private sector may 
be able to add value to transit projects through improved management 
and innovation in a project's construction, maintenance, and operation. 
Project sponsors and stakeholders we interviewed stated that 
alternative approaches promote the use of performance measures (such as 
train capacity and frequency) rather than specific design details (such 
as the type of train). This allows the private sector to potentially 
generate and apply innovative solutions in the design of the transit 
system, adding value to the project. For example, because Denver 
Regional Transportation District's Transportation Expansion Light Rail 
project (another of the seven New Starts projects) used a design-build 
approach, a lessons-learned report following the project's completion 
stated that the project sponsor was able to incorporate 198 design 
modifications identified by the private sector partner during 
development to improve overall quality of the transit system while 
remaining on budget. A conventional design-bid-build contract is 
generally not flexible enough to allow for such design modifications 
without additional costs because contracts often specify the use of 
technical or other specifications. 

When the long-term responsibilities of transit operations and 
maintenance are transferred, the private sector potentially has a 
greater incentive to make efficient design decisions. This is because 
the private sector can be held responsible for the condition of a 
transit project for longer durations than under the conventional design-
bid-build approach. Houston Metro officials told us that for an earlier 
project that used the conventional design-bid-build approach, the 
project's warranty terms did not hold the construction firm responsible 
long enough to cover defects such as faulty track and concrete. As a 
result, Houston Metro had to file claims to remedy these defects. 
Houston Metro officials stated they chose to build its North and 
Southeast Corridor pilot project using design-build-operate- maintain 
contract in part to hold the private sector entity responsible for the 
quality of the project's construction for a longer period of time. 

A greater private sector role in transit projects can also potentially 
offer certain advantages to the public sector, including increased 
financial flexibility and more predictable operations and maintenance 
funding. For example, Denver Regional Transportation District officials 
said that they will make payments tied to operations to the private 
sector over a number of years to, in part, pay for the private sector's 
partial financing for the East Corridor and Gold Line pilot projects. 
By using the design-build-finance-operate-maintain approach, Denver may 
have more financing flexibility by potentially extending the payments 
20 years longer than if a bond were used and the private sector were 
not involved in financing the project. With a longer payment period, 
project stakeholders told us that the transit agency could conserve 
funds in the short term to help it construct other new transit projects 
on time.[Footnote 17] Additionally, alternative approaches may help 
ensure more predictable funding for maintenance and operations since 
these activities can be subject to unpredictable public sector budget 
cycles under the conventional design-bid-build approach. Because 
alternative approaches for transit projects may include operations and 
maintenance standards in the contract, the private sector might be 
responsible to fund these activities within the overall contract price. 

FTA's pilot program is also expected to demonstrate the potential 
limitations to using alternative approaches in transit, including some 
of those addressed in DOT's 2007 Report to Congress on transit public- 
private partnerships (see table 4). One limitation is that some project 
risks should not be transferred to the private sector. For example, it 
may be too costly for project sponsors to transfer certain risks, such 
as ridership and environmental remediation, because the private sector 
may want to charge an additional premium to take them on. Ridership 
risk refers to whether the actual number of passengers achieves 
forecasted levels. According to officials we interviewed, environmental 
remediation risk refers to whether the cleanup of hazardous materials 
and other conditions at a project site leads to increased project costs 
or schedule delays, and can encompass conditions that are identified as 
well as those that are not identified during surveys of a project site. 
Past experience in projects demonstrates the difficulty of transferring 
these risks to the private sector. 

Table 4: Potential Limitations for Project Sponsors: 

Potential limitations: Not all risks can be transferred, including 
ridership and environmental remediation risk. 

Potential limitations: Reduced flexibility and control in operations. 

Potential limitations: Additional public sector costs, such as 
transaction costs and higher-priced financing. 

Source: GAO. 

[End of table] 

According to officials we interviewed, ridership risk may be difficult 
to transfer to the private sector if transit project sponsors are 
reluctant to forfeit full fare-setting authority. For example, Denver 
Regional Transportation District chose not to transfer ridership risk 
for its East Corridor and Gold Line pilot projects given that it wanted 
to retain the right to set fares in order to keep fares uniform 
systemwide. Another example is the United Kingdom's Croydon Tramlink 
project, which transferred ridership risk but not the ability to set 
fares. Officials we interviewed stated that the private partner 
progressively faced financial difficulties due to low ridership 
revenue, which led to the collapse and ultimate buyback of the 
partnership by Transport for London. Additionally, if a transit project 
is built as an extension of an existing system, the private sector 
partner may not want to operate a single segment of a publicly owned 
system. According to officials, private investors are reluctant to 
assume ridership risk of any portion of a system operated by an entity 
they do not control. These officials said that in many cases, the 
private sector partner would need the authority to increase or decrease 
transit fares based on ridership trends and the number of transit users 
to assume greater ridership risk. However, because raising fares 
involves political considerations, including equity for low-income 
transit users, officials told us that most project sponsors retain the 
right to set fares and are unwilling to forfeit fare-setting control. 

Some project sponsors that have tried to transfer ridership risk while 
retaining fare-setting authority have run into difficulties. According 
to project sponsors and transit experts, the Bay Area Rapid Transit's 
Oakland Airport Connector project initially tried but ultimately was 
unable to transfer ridership risk in part because the private sector 
concessionaire (under the project's original iteration) would not have 
fare-setting authority. This was also the case with the Canada Line, 
where the agreement was structured to incorporate a limited transfer of 
ridership risk to the private sector partner. Although the project 
sponsor wanted to transfer full ridership risk to the concessionaire, 
it learned that private investors would not finance a deal with full 
ridership risk transfer due to their inability to control factors that 
influence ridership such as transit fares. As such, the project sponsor 
decided to transfer limited ridership risk to the private sector by 
basing 10 percent of its payments to the private sector partner during 
operations and maintenance on ridership figures.[Footnote 18] According 
to project sponsors, this transfer of ridership risk was done to induce 
the concessionaire to increase ridership by providing quality customer 
service. 

Officials we interviewed also stated that environmental remediation 
risks may be difficult to transfer to the private sector because of the 
additional premium the private sector charges to address unknown 
factors. Denver Regional Transportation District originally planned to 
transfer all environmental remediation risk for its East Corridor and 
Gold Line pilot projects' long-term design-build-finance-operate- 
maintain concession. This caused the private sector to estimate a $25 
million charge for taking on this risk, according to Denver Regional 
Transportation District officials we interviewed. When the project 
sponsor decided to retain one aspect of the environmental risk related 
to several unknown remediation elements, the private sector dropped the 
cost estimate of transferring the remaining environmental risk from $25 
million to $9 million. Moreover, as we have previously reported 
regarding highway public-private partnerships, it may be inefficient 
and inappropriate for certain risks to be transferred to the private 
sector due to the costs and risks associated with environmental 
issues.[Footnote 19] Permitting requirements and other environmental 
risks may become too time-consuming and costly for the private sector 
to address and may best be retained by the public sector given its 
stewardship role within the government. According to officials we 
interviewed, although the Canada Line's concession agreement 
transferred all key construction risks (i.e., cost overruns) to the 
private sector, the public authority retained risks associated with 
permitting and other environmental risks such as unknown contaminated 
soils. Further, for one early highway public-private partnership in 
California, the project sponsor attempted to transfer environmental 
permitting risk to the private sector. However, the private sector 
partner spent more than $30 million dollars over a 10-year period and 
never obtained final approval to proceed with construction.[Footnote 
20] 

Another potential limitation in transit projects that use alternative 
approaches is the project sponsor's loss of control and reduced 
flexibility in transit operations. Because the transit project sponsor 
enters into a contractual agreement that gives the private partner a 
greater decision-making role, the project sponsor may lose some control 
over its ability to modify existing assets or implement plans to 
accommodate changes over time such as extensions, service changes, and 
technology upgrades. For example, in the United Kingdom, the project 
sponsor for Manchester Metrolink had to break two existing public- 
private partnership concession agreements to accommodate extensions to 
its system. Consultants to the Manchester project told us that breaking 
a concession agreement can be very expensive and can damage the 
relationship between the project sponsor and the private sector 
partner. Similarly, to accommodate increased ridership, the project 
sponsor for Docklands Light Railway decided to build platform 
expansions. However, the private sector partner was not willing to take 
on this additional work, requiring the project sponsor to take the 
extra steps to hire another party to build the platform extensions and 
negotiate the handover of the platforms to the private sector partner 
for maintenance. 

Transit projects that use alternative approaches may also introduce 
transaction costs to the project sponsor through legal, financial, and 
administrative fees in addition to higher-priced financing in cases 
where the transit project is privately financed. According to officials 
we interviewed, transit public-private partnerships often require the 
advisory services of attorneys, financial experts, and private 
consultants to successfully execute the steps necessary to finalize the 
project's agreement. These additional services and transaction fees 
represent additional public sector costs that the conventional project 
delivery approach may not necessarily require. For example, the project 
sponsor for the London Underground spent the equivalent of $112 million 
or approximately 1.1 percent of the concession agreement's total price 
to cover legal expenses, financial services, and administrative fees. 
Officials we interviewed also stated that Denver Regional 
Transportation District anticipates spending $15 million in advisory 
fees for its East Corridor and Gold Line pilot projects' request for 
proposals submittals. In addition to transaction costs, public-private 
partnerships incur added costs when the private sector provides the 
financing for the project. The municipal bond market in the United 
States generally provides public transit agencies a cheaper source of 
funding because they can borrow more cheaply than the private sector. 
Officials also stated that the effects of the recent economic recession 
and failed credit markets have stymied the private sector's ability to 
raise revenues and provide affordable long-term debt for large transit 
projects due to tight lending conditions. 

FTA New Starts Project Approval Process Is a Barrier to a Greater 
Private Sector Role in Transit: 

While we have previously identified FTA's New Starts grant program-- 
which funds new, large-scale transit projects--as a model for other 
federal transportation programs because of its use of a rigorous and 
systematic evaluation process to distinguish among proposed 
investments, the New Starts project approval process is not entirely 
compatible with transit projects that use alternative approaches in 
that the process is sequential and phased with approvals granted 
separately and at certain decision points. Therefore, the New Starts 
process serves as a potential barrier because transit projects that use 
alternative approaches often rely on the concurrent completion of 
project phases to meet cost and schedule targets and to accrue savings 
and other potential benefits. Congress recognized New Starts as a 
potential barrier, as it authorized FTA to establish a Public-Private 
Partnership Pilot Program in part to identify ways to streamline the 
process. According to DOT's 2007 Report to Congress as well as project 
sponsors, their advisors, and private sector partners, the New Starts 
project approval process, while appropriate for the type of transit 
projects that have been developed over several decades, poses 
particular challenges for project sponsors using alternative approaches 
for their transit projects. The challenges they raised include (1) 
delays, (2) additional costs, and (3) the loss of other potential 
benefits, such as enhanced efficiencies and improved quality. 

Delays: 

The sequential and phased New Starts project approval process can 
create schedule delays as project sponsors await federal approval. The 
amount of time it takes for FTA to determine whether a project can 
advance can be significant. A 2007 study on the New Starts program by 
Deloitte, commissioned by FTA to review the New Starts process and 
identify opportunities for streamlining or simplifying the process, 
found that the New Starts process is perceived by project sponsors as 
intensive, lengthy, and burdensome. The Deloitte study found that FTA's 
prescribed review times of 30 and 120 days for entry into the 
preliminary engineering and final design phases, respectively, are 
apparently arbitrary and actual review times are generally longer. In 
particular, the study found that FTA's risk-assessment process delayed 
project development.[Footnote 21] Consultants to the Dulles Silver Line 
project sponsor told us that through the New Starts process, FTA has 
complete control over a project's schedule, and project sponsors have 
to put project work on hold while waiting for FTA's approval to advance 
into the next project phase. They also told us that construction 
activities on the Dulles Silver Line could not begin until the approval 
of a full funding grant agreement--as design and construction 
activities cannot be completed at the same time--and so some of the 
time-savings benefits of the design-build approach were lost. For the 
East Corridor and Gold Line pilot projects, Denver Regional 
Transportation District officials also told us that since enough design 
work will be completed during the New Starts preliminary engineering 
phase to request bids from the private sector, no additional design 
work is needed during final design and construction of the project. 
However, Denver officials said that, as required by New Starts, they 
will again prepare the design documentation for the final design and 
full funding grant agreement approval phases, potentially contributing 
to schedule delays. FTA officials told us that the resubmission of the 
documentation is necessary because the private sector can bid to 
provide something different than what was agreed upon under preliminary 
engineering. Houston Metro's private sector partner told us it would 
like to begin some construction activities on the North and Southeast 
Corridors, but will not be able to begin until a full funding grant 
agreement is awarded. As a result, the private sector partner has to 
delay its work until the funding process is completed. FTA officials 
responded that they allowed Houston Metro to carry out some 
construction activities in advance of their receiving a full funding 
grant agreement. Moreover, Houston Metro officials told us that FTA 
required them to submit and resubmit entire project documents to FTA 
multiple times, which led to delays. FTA officials told us the length 
of time for reviews depends on a number of factors, most importantly 
the completeness and accuracy of the project sponsor's submissions, and 
that project sponsors could help to avoid such delays by improving 
their submissions.[Footnote 22] For example, FTA officials stated that 
Houston Metro's projects have changed repeatedly, thus requiring 
multiple submittals. 

Additional Costs: 

In addition to the costs of delays, the design of the New Starts 
project approval process--which is closely aligned with the 
conventional design-bid-build approach--may also contribute to 
additional project costs borne by the public sector when other 
alternative approaches are used. Project sponsors and other 
stakeholders for Denver Regional Transportation District's East 
Corridor and Gold Line pilot projects told us that the private sector 
must maintain its financial commitment to a project for up to several 
months to allow for FTA, Office of Management and Budget, and 
congressional review of the full funding grant agreement.[Footnote 23] 
For example, Denver Regional Transportation District officials 
anticipate adhering to the sequential and phased New Starts approach to 
its project in order to accommodate delays from waiting for the 
reauthorization of the existing transportation bill, the Safe, 
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy 
for Users, and awarding a full funding grant agreement for the project. 
However, Denver Regional Transportation District officials told us that 
following this approach will likely increase the cost of the project. 
FTA officials told us that these additional costs stem from a lack of 
funding available in a surface transportation authorization period 
rather than FTA's New Starts requirements. Additionally, for the Dulles 
Silver Line, tax-increment financing funding--funding from incremental 
tax revenue increases generated by new construction or rehabilitation 
projects around the new transit line--was a major funding source for 
the project, contributing up to $400 million to the $2.6 billion 
project. The Duller Silver Line project consultants told us that the 
project risked losing the tax increment financing funding as it took 5 
years to receive a full funding grant agreement when the project 
sponsor originally estimated that it would take 2 to 3 years. FTA 
officials stated that several factors, including the decision to 
reexamine a tunnel option, contributed to challenges surrounding the 
Dulles Silver Line. 

Loss of Other Potential Benefits: 

FTA's New Starts project approval process may also limit other 
potential benefits, such as enhanced efficiencies and design 
improvements, when transit projects use alternative approaches. For 
example, Denver Regional Transportation District officials told us that 
the New Starts project approval process requires that specific design 
details be included and that this requirement can prohibit a project 
sponsor from instead leaving such design specifications to the private 
sector, thus possibly limiting the ability to find innovative and cost- 
effective solutions for the project. When a project sponsor specifies 
the exact number of vehicles for the project, the private sector 
partners must incorporate that design detail into their scope, whether 
or not that exact number of vehicles is really needed. Due to the New 
Starts requirements, another project sponsor told us that it had been 
discouraged from using an alterative project delivery approach again 
after having what it believed to be a prior successful experience that 
included enhanced efficiencies and design improvements. A Minnesota 
Metro Transit official told us it initially wanted to use the design- 
build approach for its ongoing Central Corridor project based on the 
success of previously using this approach for the Hiawatha Corridor--a 
completed New Starts project that received a full funding grant 
agreement in 2000. However, Minnesota Metro Transit determined that it 
would have to complete 60 percent of the Central Corridor project's 
design to meet FTA's New Starts requirements for final design. DOT's 
2007 Report to Congress also cited a similar challenge regarding 
project design requirements. These requirements are not consistent with 
alternative approaches where project sponsors look to involve the 
private sector after only one-third, for example, of the design work is 
completed. Therefore, Minnesota Metro Transit decided to use the 
conventional design-bid-build approach to construct the project. In 
commenting on a draft of our report, FTA officials recognize that while 
additional steps could be taken to facilitate alternative approaches to 
transit projects, they also believe that other barriers beyond the 
federal approval process affect the use of these approaches, including 
those beyond the immediate reach of the program such as reduced 
available private equity capital resulting from the recent economic 
recession. 

Greater Use of Existing Tools and an Evaluation Plan Can Help 
Strengthen FTA's Pilot Program: 

To address these challenges of the New Starts project approval process 
for transit projects that use alternative approaches, Congress and FTA 
have taken steps to streamline New Starts by establishing the Public- 
Private Partnership Pilot Program. And to date, FTA has agreed to 
provide all three of the pilot program project sponsors with some level 
of relief, including expediting its risk assessment and providing 
Letters of No Prejudice earlier than traditionally allowed in the New 
Starts process to Houston Metro, and granting a waiver from federal 
performance bonding requirements to the Bay Area Rapid Transit Oakland 
Airport Connector pilot project, which FTA has also done for non-pilot 
program projects.[Footnote 24] FTA has also stated its amenability to 
waiving its risk assessment--which aims to identify issues that could 
affect a project's schedule or cost--and financial reviews, 
concurrently approving the project into the New Starts final design 
phase[Footnote 25] while awarding an Early Systems Work Agreement for 
Denver Regional Transportation District's East Corridor and Gold Line 
pilot projects.[Footnote 26] 

However, because FTA officials told us that none of the pilot projects 
has demonstrated a sufficient transfer of risk or financial investment 
by the private sector to enable FTA to relax its normal New Starts 
evaluation requirements for such approvals, FTA has yet to grant three 
pilot project sponsors any major streamlining modifications of the New 
Starts project approval process, such as the awarding of concurrent 
approvals into the New Starts phases. Thus far, FTA has only assessed 
the Houston Metro pilot project to determine the extent to which FTA 
could streamline the New Starts process. In its November 2008 report, 
FTA determined that it would not relax, modify, or waive its risk 
assessment and financial capacity reviews prior to advancement into 
final design because Houston Metro retains risks in a number of 
critical risk areas including finance since there is no equity capital 
investment by the private sector partner.[Footnote 27] Houston Metro 
officials said that they considered transferring more risk to the 
private sector to meet FTA's threshold to waive certain New Starts 
evaluation requirements, but decided against doing so because of their 
concern that the private sector assuming certain risks to meet FTA's 
threshold may potentially increase private sector bids and that they 
would still be able to achieve some of the benefits of using an 
alternative approach without equity capital investment by the private 
sector. 

While it may be too early for FTA to grant major streamlining 
modifications with the other two pilot projects, FTA still has the 
ability as part of its pilot program to further experiment with the use 
of existing tools that could encourage a greater private sector role 
while continuing to balance the need to protect the public interest. 
FTA has the ability to use conditional approvals in the New Starts 
process, such as (1) Letters of Intent that announce FTA's intention to 
issue a full funding grant agreement that would in turn agree to 
obligate a New Starts project's full federal share from future 
available budget authority, subject to the availability of 
appropriations, provided that a project meets all the terms of a full 
funding grant agreement and (2) Early Systems Work Agreements that 
obligate only a portion of a New Starts project's federal share for 
preliminary project activities, such as land acquisition. Over the past 
30 years, FTA has made very limited use of these tools by only granting 
three Letters of Intent and four Early Systems Work Agreements to 
transit projects. The Deloitte study noted that New Starts project 
sponsors miss the opportunity to use alternative methods including 
design-build and design-build-finance-operate-maintain because of the 
lack of early commitment of federal funding for the projects, 
suggesting that the greater use of these tools could be beneficial. 
However, use of these tools is not without risk. We have previously 
noted that limitations to FTA making greater use of these tools, 
including Letters of Intent, could be misinterpreted as an obligation 
of federal funds when they only signal FTA's intention to obligate 
future funds. Furthermore, Early Systems Work Agreements require a 
project to have a record of decision for the environmental review 
process that must be completed under the National Environmental Policy 
Act[Footnote 28] and require the Secretary to find that a full funding 
grant agreement for the project will be made and that the agreement 
will promote more-rapid and less-costly completion of the 
project.[Footnote 29] Finally, under current statute, both of these 
tools--Letters of Intent and Early Systems Work Agreement--count 
against FTA's available funding for New Starts projects under the 
current surface transportation authorization. 

We found that the governments of the United Kingdom and Canada use 
conditional approvals to help encourage a greater private sector role 
in transit projects. The United Kingdom's Department for Transport 
grants a conditional approval announcing the government's intent to 
fund a project before it receives private sector bids provided that 
cost, risk transference, and scope do not change. If those conditions 
are not met, the project loses its government funding. This conditional 
approval occurs after the department reviews projects, in part to 
address the risk of cost increases, and thus provides a signal of 
project quality to the private sector to help maintain a competitive 
bidding process. Similarly, Transport Canada officials told us that it 
makes a formal announcement to state its intent to provide federal 
funds to a transit project after conducting its initial review of a 
project and before formally committing funds that allow project 
sponsors to move forward in development and engaging the private 
sector. If the agreed-upon cost, schedule, and risk transference are 
not met, the government withdraws its funding. United Kingdom 
Department for Transport officials told us that they have experience 
withdrawing funding when such conditions have not been met. 

We also found that other U.S. Department of Transportation modal 
administrations use similar conditional approvals to help encourage 
greater private sector involvement in projects. The Federal Aviation 
Administration uses Letters of Intent in its Airport Improvement 
Program to establish multiyear funding schedules for projects that 
officials said allow project sponsors to proceed with greater certainty 
regarding future federal funding compared to the broader program and 
also help prevent project stops and starts.[Footnote 30] The Federal 
Aviation Administration has granted 90 of these multiyear awards since 
1988. The Federal Highway Administration grants early conditional 
approvals to highway project sponsors seeking Transportation 
Infrastructure Finance and Innovation Act funds to streamline the 
process and allow private sector bidders to incorporate these funds 
into their financial plans without having to individually apply as 
otherwise required. The Federal Highway Administration has also carried 
out three pilot programs that have allowed projects to move more 
efficiently through its grant process by modifying some of its 
requirements. These pilot projects waived certain aspects of the 
federal-aid highway procurement provisions, such as moving forward with 
final decision prior to a National Environmental Policy Act decision, 
and allowed federally funded highway projects to use alternative 
approaches including design-build. One of these pilot programs is cited 
by the Federal Highway Administration as having helped pave the way for 
design-build to become the standard project delivery approach in 
highway projects. Another pilot program allowed the Federal Highway 
Administration to waive regulations and policies so project sponsors in 
two states could contract with the private sector at a much earlier 
point in the project development cycle than was previously allowed. 

In addition to not yet granting project sponsors any major streamlining 
modifications to the New Starts process, FTA does not have an 
evaluation plan to accurately and reliably assess the pilot program's 
results, including the effect of its efforts to streamline the New 
Starts projects for pilot project sponsors. We have previously reported 
that to evaluate the effectiveness of a pilot program, a sound 
evaluation plan is needed and should incorporate key features 
including: well-defined, clear, and measurable objectives; measures 
that are directly linked to the program objectives; criteria for 
determining pilot program performance; a way to isolate the effects of 
the pilot program; a data analysis plan for the evaluation design; and 
a detailed plan to ensure that data collection, entry, and storage are 
reliable and error-free.[Footnote 31] Without such an evaluation plan, 
FTA is limited in its decision making regarding its pilot program, and 
Congress will be limited in its decision making about the pilot 
program's potential broader application. FTA officials told us that 
they have not yet developed an evaluation plan for its pilot program 
given that the projects are all ongoing, far from completion, and still 
working through the New Starts project approval process. 

Project Sponsors Have Sought to Protect the Public Interest in Various 
Ways and DOT Can Provide Guidance and Technical Assistance: 

Project Sponsors Protect the Public Interest in Various Ways, Including 
through Competitive Procurement Practices as Well as Performance 
Specifications and Standards: 

The alternative approaches we reviewed have protected the public 
interest in various ways to ensure the public receives the best price 
for a project and to create incentives for the private sector partner 
so that the project progresses and operates based on agreed-upon 
objectives. 

Competitive Procurement Practices: 

Project sponsors we interviewed have attempted in part to protect the 
public interest in transit projects that use alternative approaches by 
ensuring the use of competitive procurement practices. These practices 
are not unique to alternative approaches and are sometimes used in 
conventional procurements. Competitive procurement practices are 
generally required to be used for federal funding. For example, federal 
law and regulations generally require federal contracts to be competed 
unless they fall under specific exceptions to full and open 
competition. Nevertheless, project sponsors told us that maximizing the 
use of these competitive procurement practices--such as encouraging 
multiple bidders to value and price projects--helps to ensure that the 
public sector receives the best bid when using these partnerships and 
approaches. European Union countries are required to have multiple 
bidders for procurements. Procurements with only one bidder are less 
competitive and can result in less attractive bids. For example, 
although Bay Area Rapid Transit prequalified three contractors for the 
first version of its Oakland Airport Connector, two contractors 
withdrew during the negotiation period due to concerns about the 
project affordability. Bay Area Rapid Transit negotiated with the sole 
remaining bidder on costs for nearly a year but then let the Request 
for Proposals expire with no proposals submitted.[Footnote 32] To 
encourage the participation of multiple bidders, Minnesota Metro 
Transit Hiawatha Corridor and Denver's Regional Transportation 
District's Transportation Expansion light rail offered proposal 
stipends to private sector entities that submitted formal bids to help 
defray the costs of developing proposals. However, while serving as an 
incentive for potential private sector partners, stipends add costs 
that must be weighed against the benefits they provide. 

Project sponsors that we interviewed have also encouraged early and 
sustained interaction with the private sector to test the project's 
marketability and whether and in what form private sector participation 
is advantageous. Such feedback can be obtained through bidder 
information sessions and from consultants. Project sponsors then 
conduct a request for qualified bidders to gain more detailed input 
from the private sector on a project prior to the issuance of a request 
for proposals (which solicits the formal bids). The request for 
qualified bidders can establish a higher threshold of responsibility 
for private partners compared to traditional procurements in which a 
private partner is selected based primarily on bid price. Thus, 
sustained and iterative interaction between the project sponsor and the 
private sector can refine the project's scope and terms and determine 
how best to include the private sector. For example, all three of FTA's 
pilot projects as well as Minnesota Metro Transit's Hiawatha Corridor 
project used a request for qualifications to select bidders and solicit 
the private sector's review of project details. In addition, Minnesota 
Metro Transit told us that input from the private sector produced 
several good ideas that were incorporated into the project, such as a 
shared risk fund to provide an incentive for the private sector to 
reduce construction delays. Furthermore, the Canada Line project 
sponsor used a list of essential elements agreed upon by the public 
agencies funding the project as a basis for negotiating with potential 
bidders. 

Performance Specifications and Standards: 

Project sponsors that we interviewed seek to protect the public 
interest in alternative approaches through an emphasis on performance. 
Performance specifications focus on desired project performance (such 
as frequency of train arrivals at a station) and not design details 
(such as the type of train). Project sponsors and consultants told us 
that detailed specifications that have been in conventional project 
delivery approaches can restrict what bidders can offer. When 
specifications are focused on performance, bidders can offer a range of 
design and technology options as well as follow best practices that 
meet overall project objectives. According to Denver's Regional 
Transportation District, the East Corridor and Gold Line pilot projects 
initially had a 700-page design specification document for their 
commuter rail vehicles. After industry review and feedback that the 
specifications would lead to customized vehicles that would be 
expensive and difficult to operate and maintain, the project sponsor 
responded by creating a 15-page performance specifications document for 
the vehicles. An advisor to the project sponsor noted that the use of 
design specifications is more challenging with transit projects than in 
highways and other sectors given the technology issues and 
environmental concerns. The advisor also said that projects with a 
range of technology options must undergo the environmental review 
process at the highest possible level of design given the effect of 
different technologies on the environment. In contrast, one project 
sponsor noted that performance specifications should not be used when 
conditions of the facility or surrounding environment, for example, are 
unknown as unforeseen circumstances could occur that would require more 
specific design specifications. 

Project sponsors we interviewed have also sought to use performance 
standards to protect the public interest. These standards are what the 
private sector partner must meet to be compensated during the project's 
construction, operations, and maintenance phases, helping to ensure 
adequate performance. If the private sector partner does not meet the 
standards, then it is penalized with no, reduced, or delayed payments, 
and penalties can escalate if poor performance continues. Standards for 
construction include delivering a completed project or project element 
within a set schedule. For example, the Canada Line private sector 
partner had 400 milestones that it needed to complete and have 
certified in order to continue to receive timely payments during the 
project's construction period. Performance standards for operations and 
maintenance, also called key performance indicators, cover all aspects 
of service including the availability, frequency, and reliability of 
service and conditions of facilities. For example, the London 
Underground chose to emphasize key performance indicators in four 
areas--availability, capability, ambience, and service points--by 
creating performance targets and to tie monthly payments to these based 
on the private sector partner's actual performance. Some projects have 
also incorporated standards that link to increased ridership to provide 
incentives for the private sector partner to provide good customer 
service. For example, Nottingham Express Transit has 20 percent of its 
payments to the private sector based on ridership. Additionally, the 
draft concession agreement for Denver's Regional Transportation 
District East Corridor and Gold Line pilot projects incorporate levels 
of payment deductions that accelerate when low performance, such as 
delayed trains and littered or unclean railcars, persists. If low 
performance continues over a period, the project sponsor can terminate 
the concession agreement and rebid the project to another private 
partner. 

Financial Mechanisms: 

Project sponsors we interviewed also protect the public interest in 
transit public-private partnership and other alternative approaches 
through the incorporation of private equity capital. When a private 
sector partner finances a project using equity capital, the private 
sector uses payments received from the project sponsor to repay its 
costs plus provide a return on investment. Since the private sector 
partner borrows to finance its costs--that is, it has equity at risk if 
it does not meet standards--it will be unable to meet its financial 
obligations from these milestone payments if those standards are not 
met. This situation can create incentives for the private sector 
partner to deliver according to the terms of the agreement. At the same 
time, financial advisors to project sponsors told us that bank lenders 
protect their investments by ensuring that the private sector properly 
develops a concession agreement and then delivers on it. The public 
interest is thus further protected by this integration of 
responsibilities because the bank lender and concessionaire provide 
additional project oversight through the monitoring of cost overruns 
and schedule delays, among other issues. According to the Canada Line 
private sector partner, it provided 17 percent equity in the project. 
For the Croydon Tramlink, the private sector partner contributed 30 
percent of project costs. In the case of the Canada Line, the private 
sector partner did not miss any of its 400 payment milestones. 

Flexibility: 

To better protect the public interest, project sponsors have also 
incorporated clauses into project agreements that allow for flexibility 
under certain circumstances. Project sponsors that we interviewed noted 
the importance of having the ability to periodically revisit agreement 
terms in long-term concessions to protect the public interest given 
that unforeseen circumstances may occur that make the concessionaire 
unable to meet performance standards. For example, Houston Metro's 
North and Southeast Corridor projects' concession agreement 
incorporated this flexibility by including an operations and 
maintenance agreement for the first 5 years after service begins with 
the option for renewal. According to a consultant that works on the 
project, this approach was chosen in part because the project sponsor 
wanted an option to revisit the contract. Internationally, both of the 
London Underground's maintenance 30-year concession agreements are 
reviewed for scope of work and costs by a public-private partnerships 
arbiter every 7.5 years. Moreover, the concessionaire has the ability 
to request an extraordinary review by the arbiter if costs rise above a 
specified threshold due to circumstances outside the private sector 
partner's control. 

Periodically revisiting terms, or shorter concession periods, can also 
allow for changes such as system extension. One of the Docklands Light 
Railway extensions has breakpoints at the years 2013 and 2020 in its 
concession agreement that give the project sponsor an option to break 
and buy back the agreement for a set price. In contrast, in the 
previously mentioned example of Manchester Metrolink, concessions for 
phase 2 were terminated by the project sponsor to allow for system 
expansion in a third phase which was not procured as a public-private 
partnership. According to consultants we interviewed, the terminations 
could have been avoided if the initial concessions had been shorter. 
Shorter concession periods are thus being used as a means to revisit 
terms and rebid if desired. 

In addition to clauses that allow project sponsors to revisit 
concession agreement terms, other clauses that allow for flexibility 
can also protect the public interest. For example, Denver Regional 
Transportation District's draft concession agreement includes clauses 
specifying both triggers that could lead to default and terms of 
compensation in case of default as well as termination provisions that 
detail the condition of the transit asset at the end of the concession 
when it is transferred back to the project sponsor. These provisions 
help to minimize disputes. Other advisors to project sponsors told us 
that a clause specifying the sharing of "refinancing gains" between the 
project sponsor and concessionaire could also help to protect the 
public interest. Refinancing gains refer to savings that occur when the 
private sector revises its repayment schedule for its equity investment 
by taking advantage of better financial terms. As we have noted in our 
report on highway public-private partnerships, the private sector can 
potentially benefit through gains achieved in refinancing their 
investments and these gains can be substantial. The governments of the 
United Kingdom as well as Victoria and New South Wales, Australia, 
require that any refinancing gains achieved by private concessionaires 
generally be shared with the government. 

Project Sponsors Also Protect the Public Interest by Using Financial 
Assessments: 

Some foreign governments have recognized the importance of protecting 
the public interest in public-private partnerships through the use of 
quantitative and qualitative public interest assessments. We have also 
previously reported that more rigorous, up-front analysis could better 
secure potential benefits and protect the public interest. [Footnote 
33] The use of quantitative and qualitative public interest tests and 
tools before entering into transit public-private partnerships can help 
lay out the expected benefits, costs, and risks of the project. 
Conversely, not using such tools can potentially allow aspects of the 
public interest to be overlooked. For example, a Value for Money 
analysis is a tool used to evaluate if entering into a project as a 
public-private partnership is the best project delivery option 
available. Internationally, the United Kingdom, and British Columbia in 
Canada, among others, require a Value for Money analysis for all 
transportation projects over a certain cost threshold. For example, all 
transportation projects in the United Kingdom that exceed about $24 
million must undergo a Value for Money analysis to receive project 
funding, while projects in British Columbia must conduct a Value for 
Money analysis if project costs total more than about $46 million. 
Domestically, Florida requires a Value for Money analysis for public- 
private partnerships, one of which was recently conducted on the I-595 
Corridor Roadway Improvements Project in Broward County. A Value for 
Money assessment was also completed for the Bay Area Rapid Transit's 
Oakland Airport Connector at the request of FTA. 

In general, Value for Money evaluations examine total project costs and 
benefits and are used to determine if a public-private partnership 
approach is in the public interest for a given project. Value for Money 
tests are often done by comparing the costs of doing a proposed project 
as a public-private partnership against an estimate of the costs of 
procuring that project using a public delivery model.[Footnote 34] 
Value for Money tests examine not only the economic value of a project 
but also other factors that are hard to quantify, such as design 
quality and functionality, quality in construction, and the value of 
unquantifiable risks transferred to the private sector. In the United 
Kingdom, Value for Money analysis includes qualitative factors such as 
the viability, desirability, and achievability of the project in 
addition to the quantitative factors. 

Provinces such as Canada's British Columbia and Australia's Victoria 
also include qualitative factors in their financial assessments, 
including Value for Money analysis. Government officials stated that 
including both quantitative and qualitative factors in financial 
assessments such as Value for Money analysis provides a more 
comprehensive project assessment. In addition to determining whether a 
public-private partnership is advantageous over a publicly delivered 
project, project sponsors and government officials noted that a Value 
for Money analysis is also a useful management tool for considering up 
front all project costs and risks that can occur during a project's 
lifetime, which is not always done in a conventional procurement. 

Project sponsors can also use financial assessments such as Value for 
Money analysis for other reasons. For example, Value for Money analysis 
can assist in determining which project delivery approach provides more 
value. Project sponsors can assess if one public-private partnership 
option is more advantageous than another if it is decided that private 
participation in a project is beneficial. For example, Bay Area Rapid 
Transit used a Value for Money analysis in its original iteration of 
the Oakland Airport Connector to assess which alternative project 
delivery approach (design-build-operate-maintain or design-build- 
finance-operate-maintain) would be more advantageous. Project sponsors 
can also use Value for Money to give a range of possible project costs 
when coupled with a sensitivity analysis. For example, a sensitivity 
analysis developed for the Canada Line suggested that project costs 
could have varied from $47 million more to $270 million less than 
expected, depending on the level of risk. A further example of how 
project sponsors can use Value for Money is to enhance communication 
about a project. Project sponsors noted that since Value for Money 
analyses are often publicly available, such as in the United Kingdom, 
they can lead to more-informed discussions and provide transparency in 
the selection of the project delivery approach. Thus, they can be good 
planning and communication tools for decision makers. 

Government officials and consultants that perform financial 
assessments, such as Value for Money analysis, cautioned that the 
assessments are not without limitations. For example, officials and 
consultants told us that these analyses are inherently subjective and 
rely on assumptions that can introduce bias. Assessments can include 
the assumption that the public sector will likely have higher 
construction costs due to a history of cost overruns. In the United 
Kingdom, an "optimism bias" of 15 percent is added to the public sector 
comparator in part to account for this. Consultants noted that there is 
subjectivity in valuing risks as detailed data on the probability of 
particular project risks occurring are unavailable. Thus consultants 
use data from past projects and their own professional views to conduct 
the analysis. In sum, government officials and consultants noted that 
Value for Money analysis should be considered as a tool rather than the 
sole factor in assessing whether to do a public-private partnership. 

Although Limited in the United States, Some Other Countries Further 
Protect the Public Interest by Providing Guidance and Technical 
Assistance: 

Some countries have further protected the public interest in transit 
projects that use alternative approaches by establishing quasi- 
governmental entities to assist project sponsors in implementing these 
arrangements. Entities such as Partnerships UK, Partnerships Victoria, 
and Partnerships BC are often fee-for-service and associated with 
Treasury Departments on the provincial and national levels. These quasi-
governmental entities all develop guidance such as standardized 
contracts and provide technical assistance to support transit projects 
that use alternative approaches. According to an advisor for project 
sponsors, contracts for these partnerships and approaches generally 
follow a standard model such as a framework for assigned risk between 
the project sponsor and private sector, with the particularities of 
local legislation and project specifics written into them. The United 
Kingdom's standard contract outlines requirements as well as factors to 
consider from a project's service commencement through termination, 
which is periodically updated to reflect lessons learned.[Footnote 35] 
For example, after the government of the United Kingdom required the 
private sector to share any refinancing gains with the project sponsor, 
the standard contract was subsequently updated. Furthermore, the quasi- 
governmental entities provide technical assistance to support transit 
projects that use alternative approaches. For example, Partnerships BC 
provides project sponsors assistance on conducting a Value for Money 
assessment to determine whether private sector participation in a 
project is beneficial. In addition to this assistance, these entities 
provide other varied services to facilitate public-private partnerships 
across different sectors. For example, Partnerships UK reviews project 
proposals for the government; Partnerships Victoria offers training for 
the province; and Partnerships BC advises project sponsors to help 
develop and close public-private partnership contracts in British 
Columbia. 

Quasi-governmental entities can further protect the public interest 
through the benefits they provide. According to government officials in 
the United Kingdom and Canada, these entities create a consistent 
approach to considering public-private partnerships, such as 
understanding a project's main risks, which can reduce the time and 
costs incurred when negotiating a contract. Further, by using 
standardized contracts developed by these entities, project sponsors 
can reduce transaction costs--such as legal, financial, and 
administrative fees--of implementing transit projects that use 
alternative approaches. Moreover, project sponsors and consultants told 
us that entities like Partnerships UK and Partnerships BC can foster 
good public-private partnerships and help further protect the public 
interest by ensuring consistency in contracts and serving as a 
repository of institutional knowledge. Without the services provided by 
these quasi-governmental entities, project sponsors that plan to or use 
alternative approaches for a transit project will develop them on a 
case-by-case basis because they lack institutional knowledge and a 
centralized resource for assistance. 

While DOT has established an office to support project sponsors of 
highway-related public-private partnerships, DOT does not provide 
similar support for transit projects. In a previous GAO report, we 
noted that formal consideration and analysis of public interest issues 
had been conducted in U.S. highway public-private partnerships, and 
that DOT has done much to promote the benefits, but comparatively 
little to assist states and localities weigh potential costs and trade- 
offs of these partnerships.[Footnote 36] Since that report, the Federal 
Highway Administration's Office of Innovative Program Delivery has been 
established to provide support for highway-related public-private 
partnerships by providing an easy, single-point of access for project 
sponsors and other stakeholders. The office is intended to offer 
outreach, professional capacity building, technical assistance, and 
decision-making tools for highway-related public-private partnerships. 
In addition, FTA officials told us that they have plans to develop an 
online toolset for employees to help them provide technical assistance 
to project sponsors on these alternative approaches. This assistance is 
to include checklists to help determine whether a project should use an 
alternative approach, risk matrices that provide an overview and 
explanation of risks transferred using such an approach, and a 
financial feasibility model that can be used to quantitatively compare 
the use of an alternative approach with the conventional approach to 
transit projects. Furthermore, in June 2009, the House of 
Representatives' Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure's 
surface transportation reauthorization blueprint proposed that an 
Office of Expedited Project Delivery be created within FTA to provide 
assistance to transit project sponsors much as we have outlined earlier 
in this report.[Footnote 37] However, such support is not currently 
available for project sponsors of transit projects that use alternative 
approaches. Project sponsors and their advisors noted that as there is 
little public sector institutional knowledge about public-private 
partnerships in the United States, projects may be carried out without 
the benefit of previous experiences. It is even more challenging to 
conduct transit projects that use alternative approaches in the United 
States given the variation in relevant state laws and local ordinances 
that project sponsors and other stakeholders must navigate. 
Furthermore, FTA's New Starts evaluation requirements for transit 
projects seeking federal funding do not include an evaluation of 
whether the public is receiving the best value for its money as 
compared to other delivery approaches. Thus project sponsors, advisors, 
and government officials noted that such an entity in the United States 
could be valuable in further protecting the public interest in public- 
private partnerships. 

Conclusions: 

FTA distributes billions of dollars of federal funding to transit 
agencies for the construction of new, large-scale projects; as such, it 
is critical that the public interest is protected and federal funding 
is spent responsibly. Project sponsors are looking to transit projects 
that use alternative approaches to deliver and finance new transit 
projects, along with federal funds. However, because of its sequential 
and phased structure, FTA's New Starts program is incompatible with 
transit projects that use these approaches. Congress recognized this 
concern when it authorized FTA to establish the Public-Private 
Partnership Pilot Program to illustrate how New Starts evaluation 
requirements can be streamlined to better accommodate the use of 
alternative approaches in transit projects. However, the pilot program 
has not yet illustrated how this can be done. This is because, on the 
one hand, FTA has determined that no pilot project has demonstrated 
enough of a transfer of risk--in particular a financial investment by 
the private sector--for FTA to consider granting major modifications to 
streamline its New Starts evaluation requirements. On the other hand, 
the potential challenges posed by the New Starts requirements, 
including delays and additional costs, may discourage the private 
sector from assuming enhanced financial responsibility in these 
alternative approaches. 

Despite this apparent impasse, FTA sill has the unique opportunity to 
take advantage of the fundamental characteristic of a pilot program-- 
flexibility--to gain valuable insight on how to streamline the New 
Starts process to facilitate a greater private sector role in transit 
projects through the use of alternative approaches. FTA can introduce 
additional flexibility into its three pilot projects through, among 
other things, the use of existing, long-standing tools, such as Letters 
of Intent and Early Systems Work Agreements. Other agencies within DOT 
have used such tools successfully in the past to provide flexibility to 
their funding and approval processes and to advance and promulgate 
alternative project finance and delivery approaches. Moreover, some 
other countries have used conditional approvals to incorporate more 
flexibility into their funding processes and help encourage a greater 
private sector role in transit projects. FTA may want to turn to the 
experiences of these other modal administrations and governments and 
use existing, long-standing tools to incorporate more flexibility in 
the New Starts process to help facilitate transit projects that use 
alternative approaches. 

Without an evaluation plan to assess the results of its pilot program, 
FTA may also lose some valuable information Congress intended the 
agency to obtain through the pilot program's establishment, including 
how the New Starts project approval process can be further streamlined. 
As more transit projects use alternative approaches, FTA may not be 
able to readily accommodate these approaches, ultimately disadvantaging 
transit project sponsors that seek to deliver their projects more 
quickly and efficiently and at a lesser cost to the public. 

In the past, DOT has done much to promote the potential benefits of 
transportation public-private partnerships. While these benefits are 
not assured and should be evaluated by weighing them against potential 
costs and trade-offs, DOT has done comparatively little to equip 
project sponsors to weigh the potential costs and trade-offs. Recently, 
DOT has taken a more integrated approach to a greater private sector 
role in transportation, as evidenced by its newly established Office of 
Innovative Program Delivery for public-private partnerships. Congress 
has taken a greater interest in facilitating alternative approaches as 
well. Quasi-governmental entities established by foreign governments 
have better equipped project sponsors to implement alternative 
approaches, including public-private partnerships, by creating a 
uniform method to considering the implications of alternative 
approaches, reducing transaction costs, ensuring consistency in 
contracts, and serving as a repository of institutional knowledge. FTA 
could consider these international models and expand its current 
efforts in transportation public-private partnerships to support a 
greater private sector role in transit directly to project sponsors. 
Expanded FTA efforts could facilitate the implementation of transit 
projects that use alternative approaches and protect the public 
interest through the use of tools such as standardized contracts, 
technical assistance, and financial assessments. 

Recommendations for Executive Action: 

To facilitate a better understanding of the potential benefits of 
alternative approaches in FTA's Public-Private Partnership Pilot 
Program, if reauthorized, we recommend that the Secretary of 
Transportation direct the FTA Administrator to take the following 
actions: 

* Incorporate greater flexibility, as warranted, in the Public-Private 
Partnership Pilot Program than has occurred to date by making greater 
use of existing tools such as Letters of Intent and Early Systems Work 
Agreements in order to streamline the New Starts process. 

* Develop a sound evaluation plan for the Public-Private Partnership 
Pilot Program to accurately and reliably assess the pilot programs' 
results that includes key factors such as: well-defined, clear, and 
measurable objectives; measures that are directly linked to the program 
objectives; criteria for determining pilot program performance; a way 
to isolate the effects of the pilot program; a data analysis plan for 
the evaluation design; and a detailed plan to ensure that data 
collection, entry, and storage are reliable and error-free. 

* Beyond its pilot program, build upon efforts underway in DOT to 
better equip transit project sponsors in implementing transit projects 
that use alternative approaches, including developing guidance, 
providing technical assistance, and sponsoring greater use of financial 
assessments to consider the potential costs and trade-offs. 

Agency Comments and Our Evaluation: 

We provided a draft of this report to DOT and FTA for review and 
comment. DOT has agreed to consider our recommendations and provided 
comments through e-mail from FTA officials. In their comments, FTA 
officials stated that the agency has ongoing and planned efforts as 
part of its Public-Private Partnership Pilot Program that they believe 
address the intent of our recommendations. For example, FTA officials 
noted that the agency has, as we reported, made use of tools such as 
Letters of Intent and Early Systems Work Agreements in the past in 
order to streamline the New Starts process, and that it will evaluate 
the potential for greater use of these existing tools in the future to 
incorporate greater flexibility into the pilot program. Additionally, 
FTA officials acknowledged the need for an evaluation plan to assess 
the pilot program's results and stated they will be working to develop 
one. Further, FTA officials stated that FTA is working to develop 
technical assistance for its staff on how to structure and evaluate 
alternative approaches to transit projects; we revised our draft report 
to reflect FTA's efforts. Because these efforts are either planned or 
in their early stages, we are retaining our recommendations. Finally, 
FTA officials provided technical comments, which we incorporated as 
appropriate. 

We are sending copies of this report to appropriate congressional 
committees and DOT. The report also is available at no charge on the 
GAO Web site at [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov]. 

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

Susan A. Fleming: 
Director, Physical Infrastructure Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Scope and Methodology: 

Our work was focused on transit projects that involve greater private 
sector participation than is typical in conventional projects. In 
particular, we focused on (1) the role of the private sector in the 
delivering and financing of U.S. transit projects compared with other 
countries; (2) the benefits and limitations of and the barriers, if 
any, to greater private sector involvement in transit projects and how 
these barriers are addressed in the Department of Transportation's 
(DOT) Public-Private Partnership Pilot Program; and (3) how project 
sponsors and DOT can protect the public interest in transit projects 
that use alternative approaches. Our scope was limited to identifying 
the primary issues associated with using public-private partnerships 
for transit infrastructure and not in conducting a detailed financial 
analysis of the specific arrangements. 

In order to clearly delineate alternative delivery and financing 
approaches used in transit, first we identified three categories-- 
traditional, innovative, and alternative--that describe the evolution 
of such practices. We defined traditional financing to include federal 
grants (such as New Starts program grants), state and local public 
grants, taxes, and municipal bonds, and defined conventional project 
delivery to refer to the design-bid-build approach. We defined 
innovative financing to include loan or credit assistance such as the 
Transportation Infrastructure Financing and Innovation Act, Private 
Activity Bonds, Tax Increment Financing, State Infrastructure Banks, 
Grant Anticipation Notes, and Revenue Bonds, and innovative project 
delivery to refer to the design-build approach. Finally, we defined 
alternative financing to refer to public-private partnerships that 
involve private equity capital such as concession agreements and 
defined alternative approaches as ones that transfer greater risk to 
the private sector including: design-build, design-build-finance, 
design-build-operate-maintain, build-operate-maintain, design-build- 
finance-operate, design-build-finance-operate-maintain, build-operate- 
own, and build-own-operate, among others. 

We took several steps and considered various criteria in selecting 
which domestic transit projects to study as part of our review of 
alternative financing and project delivery practices. First, we 
reviewed transit project information from DOT, GAO, the Congressional 
Research Service, and other reports as well as conducted interviews 
with DOT officials, project sponsors, industry representatives, and 
academic experts to identify the potential universe of projects that 
fit at least one (alternative project delivery or alternative 
financing) or both of our established definitions. We also selected 
projects that were either completed or had already carried out 
substantial planning. The potential universe of projects contained 10 
completed projects including: Denver Regional Transportation District 
Transportation Expansion Light Rail (design-build), South Florida 
Commuter Rail Upgrades (design-build), Minnesota Metro Transit Hiawatha 
Corridor Light Rail Transit (design-build), Bay Area Rapid Transit 
Extension to San Francisco International Airport (design-build), 
Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority Largo Metrorail 
Extension (design-build), Hudson-Bergen Light Rail Transit Minimum 
Operating Segment 1 (design-build-operate-maintain), Hudson-Bergen 
Light Rail Transit Minimum Operating Segment 2 (design-build-operate- 
maintain), John F. Kennedy Airtrain (design-build-operate-maintain), 
Portland MAX Airport Extension (design-build), and Las Vegas Monorail 
(design-build-finance-operate-maintain). We also included 3 ongoing 
transit projects as part of the universe: Bay Area Rapid Transit 
Oakland Airport Connector (design-build-operate-maintain), Denver 
Regional Transportation District East Corridor and Gold Line pilot 
projects (design-build-finance-operate-maintain), and Houston Metro 
North and Southeast Corridor pilot projects (design-build-operate- 
maintain). Second, we determined that we would focus solely on projects 
that have or are expected to go through the Federal Transit 
Administration's (FTA) New Starts process given that this is the 
largest capital grant program for transit projects and that any such 
projects would be reviewed to protect the public interest (i.e., 
projects not entirely funded by the private sector). This eliminated 
the John F. Kennedy Airtrain, Portland MAX Airport Extension, and Las 
Vegas Monorail projects. Third, we applied three of four criteria from 
FTA's Report to Congress[Footnote 38] to the remaining projects, 
including (1) project costs were reduced, (2) project duration was 
shortened, and (3) project quality was maintained or enhanced.[Footnote 
39] This eliminated the South Florida Commuter Rail Upgrades, Hudson- 
Bergen Light Rail Transit Minimum Operating Segment 1 and Minimum 
Operating Segment 2, and the Bay Area Rapid Transit Extension to San 
Francisco International Airport. 

We decided to select all three of the ongoing pilot projects--Bay Area 
Rapid Transit Oakland Airport Connector, Denver Regional Transportation 
District East Corridor and Gold Line, and Houston Metro North and 
Southeast Corridors--given that FTA views these projects as currently 
having the most private sector potential and thus designated them as 
their three Public-Private Partnership Pilot Program projects. We also 
decided, given our limited resources, to select two of the remaining 
three completed projects--Minnesota Metro Transit Hiawatha Corridor and 
Denver Regional Transportation District Transportation Expansion--as 
DOT's Report to Congress identified these two projects as having 
successful collaborations with their respective departments of 
transportation, including their highway counterparts, which have 
greater experience than transit in using alternative project delivery 
and alternative financing. This eliminated the Washington Metropolitan 
Area Transit Authority Largo Metrorail Extension. These projects were 
selected because they are recent examples of ongoing and completed 
transit projects in the United States that incorporated greater private 
sector involvement through the use of alternative project delivery or 
financing approaches or both. 

To select which international countries we would include as part of our 
review of alternative financing and project delivery practices, we 
conducted a literature review of international transit public-private 
partnerships as well as conducted interviews with DOT officials, 
project sponsors, industry representatives, and academic experts to 
identify the potential universe of countries with significant 
experience in transit public-private partnerships, including projects 
that fit at least one (alternative project delivery or alternative 
financing) or both of our established definitions. Second, we 
determined that we would collect the most valuable and relevant 
information from countries that share a similar political and cultural 
structure to the United States. Third, given our limited resources, we 
decided to select only two of the three remaining countries. Thus, we 
ultimately identified Canada and the United Kingdom for our 
international site visits. Issues discussed in the report related to 
the interpretation of foreign law, including the character of public- 
private partnership agreements, and their limitations, were evaluated 
as questions of fact based upon interviews and other supporting 
documentation. 

To determine how transit projects that use alternative approaches have 
been used in the United States, we collected and reviewed descriptions 
of the projects, copies of the concession or development agreements, 
planning documents, and documentation related to the financial 
structure of the projects in addition to academic, corporate, and 
government reports. We conducted, summarized, and analyzed in-depth 
interviews with project sponsors and private sector participants about 
their experiences with alternative financing and procurement in transit 
projects. We also reviewed pertinent federal legislation and 
regulations, including: Federal Register Notices and guidance for FTA's 
Public-Private Partnership Pilot Program and the New Starts Program; 
DOT's Report to Congress on the Costs, Benefits, and Efficiencies of 
Public-Private Partnerships for Fixed Guideway Capital Projects; and 
other DOT reports. 

To identify the potential benefits and potential limitations of transit 
projects that use alternative approaches, and what barriers project 
sponsors face in the United States, we conducted, summarized, and 
analyzed in-depth interviews with domestic project sponsors and private 
sector participants including private investors, financial and legal 
advisors, project managers, and contractors. In addition to these 
domestic experts, we conducted extensive interviews with various 
international stakeholders, experts, and private sector officials from 
Canada and the United Kingdom that were knowledgeable in greater 
private sector participation in the financing and procurement of 
transit projects. We also conducted a literature review; summarized and 
analyzed key benefits, limitations, and barriers to greater private 
sector participation; and interviewed FTA and other federal and local 
officials associated with the projects we selected as well as private 
sector officials involved with United States transit public-private 
partnership arrangements. 

To determine how project sponsors and DOT can protect the public 
interest in transit projects that use alternative approaches, we 
conducted site visits of selected transit public-private partnerships 
and visited the United Kingdom and Canada, which both had more 
experience conducting transit public-private partnerships. We 
conducted, summarized, and analyzed in-depth interviews with project 
sponsors, private sector participants, international stakeholders, and 
experts regarding the competitive procurement process, robust 
concession agreements, and Value for Money analyses, among other 
topics. We also examined international mechanisms that were implemented 
for projects including Croydon Tramlink, Docklands Light Railway, 
London Underground, Manchester Metrolink, and Nottingham Express 
Transit in the United Kingdom and the Canada Line in Vancouver, Canada, 
to provide insight on how project sponsors and DOT can protect the 
public interest in transit projects that use alternative approaches. We 
also held in-depth interviews with FTA on its steps to protect the 
public interest in federally funded transit projects with greater 
private sector participation including programs like FTA's Public- 
Private Partnership Pilot Program and the New Starts Program. 

We conducted this performance audit from October 2008 through October 
2009 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 II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Susan Fleming, (202) 512-2834 or FlemingS@gao.gov: 

Staff Acknowledgments: 

In addition to the individual named above, Steve Cohen, Assistant 
Director; Jay Cherlow; Patrick Dudley; Carol Henn; Bert Japikse; Joanie 
Lofgren; Maureen Luna-Long; Amanda K. Miller; Tina Paek; Amy Rosewarne; 
Tina Won Sherman; and Jim Wozny made key contributions to this report. 

[End of section] 

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12, 2009. 

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[hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-09-784]. Washington, 
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[End of section] 

Footnotes:  

[1] As used in this report, "New Starts program" refers generally to 
that part of the Capital Investment Grants program that funds new fixed-
guideway capital projects. See 49 U.S.C. § 5309. These systems use and 
occupy a separate right-of-way for the exclusive use of public 
transportation services. They include fixed rail, exclusive lanes for 
buses and other high-occupancy vehicles, and other systems. Selection 
of a project for assistance under this program results in the signing 
of a full funding grant agreement which establishes the terms and 
conditions for federal funds for the project, including the maximum 
amount of federal funds available, subject to available appropriations. 

[2] GAO, Highway Public-Private Partnerships: More Rigorous Up-front 
Analysis Could Better Secure Potential Benefits and Protect the Public 
Interest, [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-
44](Washington, D.C.: Feb. 8, 2008). 

[3] Design-bid-build is the approach with which FTA's New Starts 
project evaluation process is aligned. 

[4] As used in this report, "New Starts program" refers generally to 
the capital investment grants program. See 49 U.S.C. § 5309. 

[5] Full funding grant agreements establish the terms and conditions 
for federal funds available for the project, including the maximum 
amount of federal funds available, subject to the availability of 
appropriated funds. 

[6] To gain approval for entry into preliminary engineering, a project 
must (1) be identified through the alternatives analysis process; (2) 
be included in the region's long-term transportation plan; (3) meet the 
statutorily defined project justification and financial criteria; and 
(4) demonstrate that the sponsors have the technical capability to 
manage the project during the preliminary engineering phase. 

[7] Final design is the last phase of project development before 
construction and may include right-of-way acquisition, utility 
relocation, and the preparation of final construction plans and cost 
estimates. 

[8] GAO, Public Transportation: Improvements Are Needed to More Fully 
Assess Predicted Impacts of New Starts Projects, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-44] (Washington, D.C.: July 
25, 2008). 

[9] 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/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-09-784] (Washington, 
D.C.: July 31, 2009); [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-
08-44]; and GAO, 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/cgi-
bin/getrpt?GAO-07-917] (Washington, D.C.: July 27, 2007). 

[10] Safe, Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: 
A Legacy for Users, Pub. L. No. 109-59, title III, § 3011 (c). 

[11] Equity capital is money raised by a business by selling shares of 
ownership, or potential ownership, of the business. DOT has noted that 
transit public-private partnerships typically do not require the 
private partner to take on certain project risks (such as ridership/ 
revenue) or involve a significant equity investment by the private 
partner. 

[12] Letters of No Prejudice also allow a project sponsor to incur 
costs using nonfederal resources, with the understanding that the costs 
incurred subsequent to the issuance of the letters may be reimbursable 
as eligible expenses or eligible for credit toward the local match 
should FTA approve the project for funding at a later date. 

[13] Through a Letter of Intent, FTA announces its intention to 
obligate an amount from future available budget authority to a project, 
subject to the availability of appropriations. 

[14] GAO, Highways and Transit: Private Sector Sponsorship of and 
Investment in Major Projects Has Been Limited, [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-419] (Washington, D.C.: Mar. 
25, 2004). 

[15] Department of Transportation, Report to Congress on the Costs, 
Benefits, and Efficiencies of Public-Private Partnerships for Fixed 
Guideway Capital Projects (December 2007). 

[16] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-44]. 

[17] The East Corridor and Gold Line projects are part of Denver 
Regional Transportation District's 12-year FasTracks initiative to 
expand transit by building six new transit corridors and extending 
three existing corridors. 

[18] Although Canada Line structured its concession agreement to 
transfer 10 percent of ridership risk to the private sector, a 
financial advisor ran sensitivity tests on the ridership risk and 
determined that the actual ridership risk transferred was 1 percent 
once risk variance was accounted for. 

[19] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-44]. 

[20] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-04-419]. 

[21] Deloitte Development LLC, New Starts Program Assessment (Feb. 12, 
2007). 

[22] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-09-784]. 

[23] FTA's funding recommendations are made in the President's budget 
and are included in FTA's annual New Starts Report to Congress, which 
is released each February in conjunction with the President's budget. 
There is a 60-day statutory review period for Congress before the award 
of a full funding grant agreement. 

[24] The purpose of a performance bond is to provide project sponsor 
funds to complete the project in the event the private sector partner 
defaults on the contract. FTA's standard contract language requires 
contractors on federally funded projects to hold performance bonds for 
100 percent of the contract price to ensure the performance of the 
private sector partner. 

[25] As part of the New Starts process, FTA approves projects into 
three phases: preliminary engineering (in which the designs of project 
proposals are refined), final design (the end of project development in 
which final construction plans and cost estimates, among other 
activities, are completed), and construction (in which FTA awards the 
project a full funding grant agreement, providing a federal commitment 
of funds subject to the availability of appropriations). 

[26] Because of limited funding commitment authority, FTA cannot 
entertain a full funding grant agreement at this time. 

[27] This report was prepared with the assistance of 
PricewaterhouseCoopers. 

[28] The National Environmental Policy Act requires federal agencies to 
evaluate and in some instances prepare detailed statements assessing 
the environmental impact of and alternatives to major federal actions 
significantly affecting the environment. In the transportation context, 
the National Environmental Policy Act evaluation may measure the impact 
of different alternatives by the extent to which the alternative meets 
the project purpose, need, and consistency with the goals and 
objectives of any local urban planning. 

[29] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-09-784]. 

[30] According to Federal Aviation Administration officials, the agency 
annually grants a onetime, set amount of funding to project sponsors 
under the broader Airport Improvement Program. 

[31] Bay Area Rapid Transit is currently undertaking another request 
for proposals for the project and is allowing a less-expensive cable- 
propelled technology to compete. 

[32] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-44]. 

[33] This is known as the Public Sector Comparator, which is a 
hypothetical scenario that estimates the Net Present Value of the 
expected life-cycle costs to the public agency if it were to pursue the 
public-private partnerships project versus a traditional procurement. 

[34] Her Majesty's Treasury, Standardisation of Private Finance 
Initiative Contracts, Version 4 (London: March 2007). 

[35] [hyperlink, http://www.gao.gov/cgi-bin/getrpt?GAO-08-44]. 

[36] House of Representatives, Committee on Transportation and 
Infrastructure, "The Surface Transportation Authorization Act of 2009: 
A Blueprint for Investment and Reform" (June 18, 2009). 

[37] Department of Transportation, Report to Congress on the Costs, 
Benefits, and Efficiencies of Public-Private Partnerships for Fixed 
Guideway Capital Projects (December 2007). 

[38] FTA did not have sufficient information for most projects related 
to the fourth criterion--procuring agencies funding sources were 
leveraged or enhanced. Therefore, we omitted this criterion. 

[End of section] 

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