96-7295. Areas Unusually Sensitive to Environmental Damage  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 59 (Tuesday, March 26, 1996)]
    [Proposed Rules]
    [Pages 13144-13146]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-7295]
    
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    
    Research and Special Programs Administration
    
    49 CFR Part 195
    
    [Docket PS-140(c), Notice 5]
    RIN 2137-AC34
    
    
    Areas Unusually Sensitive to Environmental Damage
    
    AGENCY: Research and Special Programs Administration (RSPA), DOT.
    
    ACTION: Public workshop.
    
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    SUMMARY: RSPA invites industry, government agencies, and the public to 
    the fourth workshop on unusually sensitive areas (USAs). The purpose of 
    this workshop is to openly discuss the terms to be used in describing 
    USAs, and the scope and objectives of the additional USA workshops. 
    This workshop is a continuation of the USA workshops held June 15-16, 
    1995; October 17, 1995; and January 18, 1996.
    
    DATES: The workshop will be held on April 10-11, 1996 from 8:30 a.m. to 
    4:00 p.m. Persons who are unable to attend may submit written comments 
    in duplicate by May 28, 1996. However, persons submitting comments to 
    be considered at the April 10-11 workshop must do so by April 3, 1996. 
    Interested persons should submit as part of their written comments all 
    material that is relevant to a statement of fact or argument. Late 
    filed comments will be considered so far as practicable.
    
    ADDRESSES: The workshop will be held at the U.S. DOT, Nassif Building, 
    400 Seventh Street SW., Room 8236-40, Washington, DC. Non-federal 
    employee visitors are admitted into the DOT building through the 
    southwest entrance at Seventh and E Streets, SW. Persons who want to 
    participate in the workshop should call (202) 366-2392 or e-mail their 
    name, affiliation, and phone number to samesc@rspa.dot.gov before close 
    of business April 3, 1996.
        Send written comments in duplicate to the Dockets Unit, Room 8421, 
    RSPA, U.S. DOT, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20590-0001. 
    Identify the docket and notice numbers stated in the heading of this 
    notice.
        All comments and docketed materials will be available for 
    inspection and copying in Room 8421 between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. 
    each business day. A summary of the workshop will be available from the 
    Dockets Unit about three weeks after the workshop.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Christina Sames, (202) 366-4561, about 
    this document, or the Dockets Unit,
    
    [[Page 13145]]
    (202) 366-5046, for copies of this document or other material in the 
    docket.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The pipeline safety laws (49 U.S.C. 
    Sec. 60109) require the Secretary of Transportation to prescribe 
    regulations that establish criteria for identifying each hazardous 
    liquid pipeline facility and gathering line, whether otherwise subject 
    to 49 U.S.C. Chapter 601, located in an area that the Secretary, in 
    consultation with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), describes 
    as unusually sensitive to environmental damage if there is a hazardous 
    liquid pipeline accident.
        Consistent with the President's regulatory policy (E.O. 12866), 
    RSPA wants to accomplish this congressional mandate at the least cost 
    to society. Toward this end, RSPA is seeking early public participation 
    in the rulemaking process by holding public workshops at which 
    participants, including RSPA staff, may exchange views on relevant 
    issues. RSPA hopes these workshops will enable government and industry 
    to reach a better understanding of the problem and the potential 
    solutions before proposed rules are issued.
        On June 15 and 16, 1995, RSPA held the first public workshop to 
    openly discuss the criteria being considered to determine USAs (60 FR 
    27948; May 26, 1995). Participants included representatives from the 
    hazardous liquid pipeline industry; the Departments of Interior, 
    Agriculture, Transportation, and Commerce; EPA; non-government 
    agencies; and the public. Participants requested that additional 
    workshops be held to further discuss this complex topic .
        On October 17, 1995, RSPA held a second public workshop that 
    focused on developing a process that could be used to determine if an 
    area is a USA (60 FR 44824; August 29, 1995). Participants asked that 
    the process include a series of workshops on topics such as guiding 
    principles, the definition of terms that may be used when referring to 
    USAs, drinking water source protection, biological resources, and human 
    use resources.
        The American Petroleum Institute (API) provided information on its 
    current USA research and suggested that any final definition consider 
    the resource to be protected, the likelihood of a given pipeline 
    impacting that resource, and what can be done to reduce the risk to the 
    resource. Other participants suggested integrating factors on the 
    likelihood of a rupture occurring and the severity of the consequence 
    into the USA definition. Participants also brainstormed guiding 
    principles that could be used when determining if a given area is a 
    USA.
        RSPA held a third workshop on January 18, 1996, to further discuss 
    the guiding principles for determining USAs (61 FR 342; January 4, 
    1996). The primary concerns voiced in this workshop were that drinking 
    water resources and significant ecological resources be considered USA 
    but that economic or recreational areas not be intrinsically considered 
    USAs. A secondary concern voiced by the participants was the need to 
    consider cultural resources as USAs.
        Indian tribal concerns were also identified and participants 
    requested that additional research be conducted in this area.
        Participants at the workshop also discussed the following guiding 
    principles for the USA identification process and asked that the 
    following be considered:
        1. A functional definition of significance must be developed to 
    determine USAs.
        2. Human health and safety.
        3. Serious threat of contamination.
        4. Only areas in the trajectory of a potential spill, e.g. down 
    gradient.
        5. Not all areas identified as USAs will require preventative 
    measures but all candidates for USAs will require protection through 
    response planning under 49 CFR part 194. The process should clarify how 
    sensitive areas are protected under the Pipeline Safety Act separate 
    and apart from protection under the 49 CFR part 194.
        6. Operators that have voluntarily taken measures that exceed the 
    regulatory requirements to minimize the potential for spills in their 
    operations should receive credit for these measures in other 
    rulemakings, thereby resulting in exemptions from these additional 
    rulemakings.
        7. It is expected that no pipeline operator will be required to 
    collect natural field resource data to determine USAs.
        8. USAs should be subject to a systematic review process. USAs may 
    change through time as species migrate, change location or for other 
    reasons. The USA definition should be explicit and practical in 
    application.
        9. All phases of the USA definition process should be pilot tested 
    for validity, practicality, and workability, to the extent practical.
        10. The government agencies must describe and identify USAs so that 
    the data will not be subject to various interpretations and will be 
    applied consistently. The standards and criteria for resource 
    sensitivity should be uniform on a national basis such that equivalent 
    resources receive equivalent sensitivity assessments regardless of 
    regionally based response priorities.
        11. Sources of USA data must be readily available to the public and 
    uniform in criteria and standards. The standards and criteria for 
    resource sensitivity should be uniform on a national basis such that 
    equivalent resources receive equivalent sensitivity assessments 
    regardless of regionally based priorities.
        The following diagram was created to display how the process could 
    work:
    
    BILLING CODE 4910-60-P
    
    [[Page 13146]]
    [GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP26MR96.012
    
    
    
    BILLING CODE 4910-60-C
        Finally, participants brain stormed and identified the USA terms 
    that they thought needed to be clarified. The following list is the 
    result of that discussion. The workshop on April 10 will focus on the 
    criteria, components, and parameters of these terms. This list is not 
    final and RSPA invites comments on these terms and submissions of 
    additional terms. This list and any additional terms that are submitted 
    to the docket before April 3 will be considered at the April 10 
    workshop:
    
    1. Serious threat
    2. Contamination
    3. Significant
    4. Ecological
    5. Economic areas
    6. Recreational areas
    7. Cultural areas
    8. Readily available
    9. Uniform
    
        The workshop on April 11 will focus on the scope and objectives of 
    the additional USA workshops on drinking water sources, ecological 
    resources, cultural resources, and Indian tribal concerns. RSPA invites 
    comments on the scope and objectives of these additional workshops. 
    Items that are submitted to the docket before April 3 will be 
    considered at the April 11 workshop.
        Persons interested in receiving a transcript of the first or third 
    workshop, the summary of the second workshop, material presented at the 
    workshops, or comments submitted to the docket should contact the 
    Dockets Unit at (202) 366-5046 and reference docket PS-140, PS-140(b), 
    and PS-140(c).
    
        Issued in Washington, DC on March 21, 1996.
    Richard B. Felder,
    Associate Administrator for Pipeline Safety.
    [FR Doc. 96-7295 Filed 3-25-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-60-P
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/26/1996
Department:
Research and Special Programs Administration
Entry Type:
Proposed Rule
Action:
Public workshop.
Document Number:
96-7295
Dates:
The workshop will be held on April 10-11, 1996 from 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Persons who are unable to attend may submit written comments in duplicate by May 28, 1996. However, persons submitting comments to be considered at the April 10-11 workshop must do so by April 3, 1996. Interested persons should submit as part of their written comments all material that is relevant to a statement of fact or argument. Late filed comments will be considered so far as practicable.
Pages:
13144-13146 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Docket PS-140(c), Notice 5
RINs:
2137-AC34: Pipeline Safety: Areas Unusually Sensitive to Environmental Damage (USAs)
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2137-AC34/pipeline-safety-areas-unusually-sensitive-to-environmental-damage-usas-
PDF File:
96-7295.pdf
CFR: (1)
49 CFR 60109)