[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 49, Volume 6]
[Revised as of October 1, 2003]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 49CFR630.12]

[Page 47-50]
 
                        TITLE 49--TRANSPORTATION
 
                             TRANSPORTATION
 
PART 630--UNIFORM SYSTEM OF ACCOUNTS AND RECORDS AND REPORTING SYSTEM--
Table of Contents
 
Sec. 630.12  Display of OMB control numbers.

    All of the information collection requests in this part have been 
approved by the Office of Management and Budget under control number 
2132-0008.

   Appendix A to Part 630--Overview and Explanation of the Urban Mass 
   Transportation Industry Uniform System of Accounts and Records and 
                            Reporting System

                             A. Introduction

    Section 15 of the Federal Transit Act, as amended, provides for 
establishment of two information-gathering analytic systems: A Uniform 
System of Accounts and Records, and a Reporting System for the 
collection and dissemination of public mass transportation financial and 
operating data by uniform categories. The purpose of these two Systems 
is to provide information on which to base public transportation 
planning and public sector investment decisions. The section 15 system 
is administered by the Federal Transit Administration (FTA).

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    The Uniform System of Accounts and Records consists of:
     Various categories of accounts and records for classifying 
financial and operating data;
     Precise definitions as to what data elements are to be 
included in these categories; and
     Definitions of practices for systematic colloection and 
recording of such information.
     While a specific accounting system is recommended for this 
recordkeeping, it is possible to make a translation from most existing 
accounting systems to comply with the Section 15 Reporting System, which 
consists of forms and procedures:
     For transmitting data from transit agencies to the FTA;
     For editing and storing the data; and
     For the FTA to report information to various groups.
    Under the terms of section 15 of the Federal Transit Act, as 
amended, all applicants for, and beneficiaries of, Federal assistance 
under section 9 of the Act (under the formula grant programs) must 
comply with the Reporting System and the Uniform System of Accounts and 
Records in order to be eligible for Federal grants. It should be noted 
that separate and complete Section 15 reports must be submitted by or 
for each purchased transportation service provider that operates 100 or 
more revenue vehicles for the purchased service during the maximum 
service period.

                       B. Purpose of This Appendix

    This appendix presents a general introduction to the structure and 
operation of the two Systems. It is not a detailed set of instructions 
for completion of a Section 15 report or establishment of a System of 
Accounts and Records. Persons in need of more information should refer 
to the current editions of the Urban Mass Transportation Industry 
Uniform System of Accounts and Records and the Reporting Manual, 
available from: Federal Transit Administration, Audit Review and 
Analysis Division, Office of Capital and Formula Assistance, P.O. Box 
61126, Washington, DC 20039-1126.
    The FTA periodically updates these reference documents or 
supplements them to revise or clarify section 15 definitions, reporting 
forms and instructions. Section 630.4 makes clear that reporting 
agencies must use the most recent edition of reference documents and 
reporting forms to comply with the section 15 requirements. The FTA 
therefore encourages local officials to check with the FTA before 
completing a Section 15 report to avoid unnecessary efforts and delays.

               C. Special (Reduced) Reporting Requirements

    Certain information collection and recording requirements were 
tailored to accommodate the unique characteristics of certain 
transportation modes. Reduced requirements were permitted during limited 
time periods to ease transition to complete reporting for these modes. 
Reduced reporting requirements for commuter rail systems and vanpool 
services ended in the 1987 report year. In addition, the reduced 
reporting requirements for private subscription and private noncontract 
conventional bus service is eliminated for the 1992 report year.

  D. A Single Required Level of Section 15 Reporting and Recordkeeping

    The FTA has developed a single required reporting format for use by 
all transit agencies. The single required level accommodates variations 
in size, local laws, and modes of transport.
    The Uniform Systems also contain a limited amount of additional more 
detailed financial and operational data that can be submitted at the 
reporting agency's option. Because the optional subcategories of data 
can be aggregated to the required level, these subcategories define the 
more aggregated data. The definitions for data reported at the required 
level are consistent with, and summarized from, those for the more 
detailed optional data.

              E. The Uniform System of Accounts and Records

    The Uniform System of Accounts and Records (USOA) consists of a 
financial accounting and operational recordkeeping system designed for 
mass transportation managers and planners. Its uniformity permits more 
thorough and accurate comparisons and analyses of different transit 
agencies' operating costs and efficiencies than if each had a unique 
recordkeeping and accounting system. The System establishes various 
categories of accounts and records for classifying mass transportation 
operating and financial data, and includes precise definitions of 
transportation terminology to ensure that all users share a common 
understanding of how to use and interpret the collected data.

               (1) Use of the Accounts and Records System

    Beneficiaries of, and applicants for, Federal assistance are not 
required to use the Uniform System of Accounts and Records in keeping 
their own records. If an applicant or beneficiary chooses not to use the 
System, however, it must nevertheless be able to translate its accounts 
and records system to the accounts prescribed in the System. The 
accounting system that the reporting agency uses must permit preparation 
of financial and operating data that conform to the Uniform System 
directly from its records at the

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end of the fiscal year, and must be consistent with the following:
    (i) The data must have been developed using the accrual method of 
accounting. Those transit systems that use cash-basis accounting, in 
whole or in part, must make work sheet adjustments in their account 
books to record the data on the accrual basis.
    (ii) Reporting agencies must follow or be able to directly translate 
their system to the accounting treatment specified in the publication 
``Uniform System of Accounts and Records.''
    (iii) The reporting agency's accounting categories (chart of 
accounts) must be correctly related, using a clear audit trail, to the 
accounting categories prescribed in the Uniform System of Accounts and 
Records.

     (2) General Structure of Uniform System of Accounts and Records

    In the Section 15 Uniform System of Accounts and Records, operating 
expenses incurred by the transit system are classified by transit mode. 
The FTA developed expense classifications in two dimensions for 
uniformity and to enhance the usefulness of the data collected under 
section 15. The classifications are typical of those of most transit 
accounting systems. The two dimensions are:
    (i) The type of expenditure (expense object class); and
    (ii) The function or activity performed.
    Operating expenses can be identified either in function or object 
class categories, or cross-classified, allowing identification using 
both categories. The Uniform System also categorizes expenditures by 
four basic functions submitted by all reporting agencies. A limited 
number of additional details are optional. All reporting agencies are 
required to use a single set of object class categories.
    The Uniform System has a single set of revenue object classes to be 
used by all reporting agencies, and provides a limited number of 
additional details that are optional.
    The Uniform System provides a classification for sources and uses of 
capital to be submitted by all reporting agencies. These classifications 
replace capital information previously required on the balance sheet and 
capital subsidiary schedule.
    The Uniform System of Accounts and Records also includes collecting 
and recording of certain operating data elements.
    Details and definitions of the expense object classes, functions, 
revenue object classes, sources and uses of capital, and operating data 
elements are contained in the current edition of the ``Reporting 
Manual,'' which is updated annually, and the USOA reference documents.

                         F. The Reporting System

    (1) The Section 15 Reporting System consists of forms and procedures 
for transmitting data from transit agencies to the FTA. All 
beneficiaries of Federal financial assistance must submit the required 
forms and information in order to allow the FTA to: (1) Store and 
generate information on the Nation's mass transportation systems; and 
(2) calculate apportionment allocations for the section 9 formula grant 
program (for urbanized areas of 200,000 or more inhabitants). Agencies 
submitting Section 15 reports may only submit data for transit services 
which they directly operate and purchase under contract from public 
agencies and/or private carriers.
    Separate and complete Section 15 reports must be submitted by or for 
each purchased transportation service provider that operates 100 or more 
revenue vehicles for the purchased service during the maximum service 
period. The reporting requirements include the following major segments, 
which are based on information assembled through the Uniform System of 
Accounts and Records:
    1. Capital report.
    2. Revenue report.
    3. Expense report.
    4. Nonfinancial operating data reports.
    5. Miscellaneous auxiliary questionnaires and subsidiary schedules.
    6. Data declarations.
    (2) The Section 15 Reporting System includes two data declarations.
    (a) The Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Certification.
    The CEO of each reporting agency is required to submit a 
certification with each annual Section 15 report. The certification must 
attest:
     To the accuracy of all data contained in the Section 15 
report;
     That all data submitted in the Section 15 report are in 
accord with Section 15 definitions;
     If applicable, that the reporting agency's accounting 
system used to derive all data submitted in the Section 15 report is the 
section 15 Uniform System of Accounts and Records and that a Section 15 
report using this system was certified by an independent auditor in a 
previous report year;
     If applicable, the fact that the reporting agency's 
internal accounting system is other than the Uniform System of Accounts 
and Records, and that its: (i) accounting system uses the accrual basis 
of accounting, (ii) accounting system is directly translated, using a 
clear audit trail, to the accounting treatment and categories specified 
by the section 15 Uniform System of Accounts and Records, and (iii) 
accounting system and direct translation to the Uniform System of 
Accounts and Records are the same as those certified

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by an independent auditor in a previous reporting year; and
     That a 100% count of passenger mile data was conducted or 
that the sampling method used to collect passenger mile data for each 
mode/type of service meets the FTA requirements.
    (b) Auditor Statement on Section 15 Financial Data Reporting Forms 
and Section 9 Data.
    Reporting agencies must submit with their Section 15 report a 
statement signed by an independent public accountant or other 
responsible independent entity such as a state audit agency. This 
statement must express an opinion on whether the financial data 
reporting forms in the Section 15 report present fairly, in all material 
respects, the information required to be set forth therein in accordance 
with the Uniform System of Accounts and Records. The statement shall 
also indicate whether any of the reporting forms or data elements do not 
conform to the section 15 requirements, and describe the discrepancies. 
The statement must consider both required and optional data entries.
    Each agency is required to file an Auditor Statement unless it 
received a written waiver from the FTA. The criteria in either Condition 
I or Condition II for granting a financial data waiver are:
    Condition I. The reporting agency (1) has adopted the Industry 
Uniform System of Accounts and Records (USOA) and (2) has previously 
submitted a Section 15 report that was compiled using the USOA and was 
reviewed by an independent auditor; or
    Condition II. The reporting agency (1) uses an internal accounting 
system other than the accounting system prescribed by the USOA, (2) uses 
the accrual basis of accounting, (3) directly translates the system and 
accounting categories, using a clear audit trail, to the accounting 
treatment and categories specified by the USOA, and (4) has previously 
submitted a Section 15 report that was compiled using the same internal 
accounting system and translation to the USOA and was reviewed by an 
independent auditor.
    For agencies that have received a waiver, the CEO annual 
Certification must verify that the financial data meet one of the above 
two conditions.
    Additionally, all reporting agencies that are in or serve urbanized 
areas with populations of 200,000 or more and whose report covers 100 or 
more vehicles in annual maximum service across all modes and types of 
service must have an independent auditor review all section 15 data used 
in the section 9 formula allocation. The statement should discuss, by 
mode and type of service: directional route miles, vehicle revenue 
miles, passenger miles, and operating cost, and include both directly 
operated and purchased service. The independent, certified public 
accountant shall perform the verification in accordance with the 
``Statements on Standards for Attestation Engagements'' issued by the 
American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. The specific 
procedures to be reviewed are described in the most recent Section 15 
Reporting Manual.