98-10401. Notice of Proposed Revisions to the Approved Program To Administer the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System Permitting Program in New York Resulting in Part From Adoption of the Water Quality Guidance for the Great Lakes System  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 75 (Monday, April 20, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 19490-19491]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-10401]
    
    
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    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    [FRL-5998-7]
    
    
    Notice of Proposed Revisions to the Approved Program To 
    Administer the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System 
    Permitting Program in New York Resulting in Part From Adoption of the 
    Water Quality Guidance for the Great Lakes System
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
    
    ACTION: Notice.
    
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    SUMMARY: Notice is hereby given that the Environmental Protection 
    Agency (EPA) has received for review and approval revisions to the 
    National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) program in New 
    York. Most of the proposed revisions were adopted to comply with 
    section 118(c) of the Clean Water Act and 40 CFR 132.4, although in 
    some cases, the State has also proposed revisions that are not related 
    to those required by section 118(c) of the CWA and 40 CFR 132.4. EPA 
    invites public comment on whether EPA should approve these revisions 
    pursuant to 40 CFR 123.62 and 132.5.
    
    DATES: Comments on whether EPA should approve the revisions to New 
    York's NPDES program must be received in writing by May 20, 1998.
    
    ADDRESSES: Written comments on these documents may be submitted to 
    Kathleen C. Callahan, Director, Division of Environmental Planning and 
    Protection, Attn: GLI Implementation Procedures, U.S. Environmental 
    Protection Agency, 290 Broadway, New York, New York 10007. In the 
    alternative, EPA will accept comments electronically. Comments should 
    be sent to the following Internet E-mail address: 
    jackson.wayne@epamail.epa.gov. Electronic comments must be submitted in 
    an ASCII file avoiding the use of special characters and any form of 
    encryption. EPA will print electronic comments in hard-copy paper form 
    for the official administrative record. EPA will attempt to clarify 
    electronic comments if there is an apparent error in transmission. 
    Comments provided electronically will be considered timely if they are 
    submitted electronically by 11:59 p.m. (Eastern time) May 20, 1998.
        Interested persons may request a public hearing regarding whether 
    EPA should approve, pursuant to 40 CFR 123.62, and 132.5(g), those 
    portions of the States' submissions that revise the States' approved 
    National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permitting 
    program. EPA will determine based on requests received if there is 
    significant interest to warrant a public hearing.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Wayne Jackson, Community and 
    Ecosystems Protection Branch, Division of Environmental Planning and 
    Protection, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 290 Broadway, New 
    York, New York, 10007, or telephone him at (212) 637-3807.
        Copies of the rules adopted by New York, and other related 
    materials submitted by the State in support of these revisions, are 
    available for review at: EPA, Region 2, 290 Broadway, 24th Floor, New 
    York, New York; and, NYSDEC, 50 Wolf Road, Room 310 C, Albany, New 
    York. To access the docket material in New York, call Wayne Jackson at 
    (212) 637-3807 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. (Eastern time) (Monday-
    Friday); in Albany, New York, call Teresa Deihsner at 518-457-7937 
    between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. (Eastern time) (Monday-Friday).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On March 23, 1995, EPA published the Final 
    Water Quality Guidance for the Great Lakes System (Guidance) pursuant 
    to section 118(c)(2) of the Clean Water Act, 33 U.S.C. 1268(c)(2). 
    (March 23, 1995, 60 FR 15366). The Guidance, which was codified at 40 
    CFR Part 132, requires the Great Lakes States to adopt and submit to 
    EPA for approval water quality criteria, methodologies, policies and 
    procedures that are consistent with the Guidance. 40 CFR 132.4. & 
    132.5. EPA is required to approve the State's submission within 90 days 
    or notify the State that EPA has determined that all or part of the 
    submission is inconsistent with the Clean Water Act or the Guidance and 
    identify any necessary changes to obtain EPA approval. If the State 
    fails to make the necessary changes within 90 days, EPA must publish a 
    notice in the Federal Register identifying the approved and disapproved 
    elements of the submission
    
    [[Page 19491]]
    
    and a final rule identifying the provisions of Part 132 that shall 
    apply for discharges within the State.
        The U.S. EPA received a submission from New York on February 27, 
    1998. The bulk of this submission consists of new, revised or existing 
    water quality standards which EPA is reviewing for consistency with the 
    Guidance in accordance with 40 CFR 131 and 132.5. EPA is not soliciting 
    comments on the following portions of this submission: water quality 
    criteria and methodologies, use designations, antidegradation, and 40 
    CFR Part 132, Appendix F: Implementation Procedures 1 (``Site Specific 
    Modifications''); and 3 (``Addivity'') because those requirements 
    constitute parts of the State's water quality standards, not its NPDES 
    program. EPA also is not soliciting comment on the Guidance itself.
        Instead, EPA is only requesting comment on whether it should 
    approve, pursuant to 40 CFR 123.62, and 132.5(g), those portions of 
    this submission that revise the State's approved National Pollutant 
    Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permitting program. These 
    revisions generally relate to the following provisions of 40 CFR Part 
    132, Appendix F: Procedure 2 (``Variances''); Procedure 3 (``Total 
    Maximum Daily Loads, Wasteload Allocations for Point Sources, Load 
    Allocations for Nonpoint Sources, Wasteload Allocations in the Absence 
    of a TMDL, and Preliminary Wasteload Allocations for Purposes of 
    Determining the Need for Water Quality Based Effluent Limits''); 
    Procedure 5 (``Reasonable Potential''); Procedure 6 (``Whole Effluent 
    Toxicity''); Procedure 7 (``Loading Limits''); Procedure 8: (``Water 
    Quality-based Effluent Limitations Below the Quantification Level''); 
    and Procedure 9 (``Compliance Schedules'').
        The revisions are found in the following: Technical Operational 
    Guidance Series (TOGS) 1.2.1: Industrial Permit Drafting; TOGS 1.3.1: 
    Procedures for developing TMDLs and Water Quality-based Effluent 
    Limits; and TOGS 1.3.2: Toxicity Testing in the SPDES Program, a 
    supplemental analysis to support the State's toxicity testing program 
    as being as protective as the Guidance, 6 NYCRR Sec. 702.17, and the 
    Amended NPDES Memorandum of Agreement between NYSDEC and EPA Relating 
    to the Implementation of the Requirements of the Great Lakes Water 
    Quality Guidance in the Great Lakes Basin.
        Under 40 CFR 123.62(b)(2) and 132.5(e), whenever EPA determines 
    that a proposed revision to a State NPDES program is substantial, EPA 
    must provide notice and allow public comment on the proposed revisions. 
    The extent to which the States have modified their NPDES programs to be 
    consistent with the Guidance varies significantly, depending on the 
    extent to which their existing programs already were ``as protective 
    as'' the implementation procedures in the Guidance. EPA has not 
    conducted a State-by-State review of the submissions to ascertain for 
    each state individually whether their changes constitute substantial 
    program modifications. However, in light of the fact that the states 
    have modified these programs in response to the explicit statutory 
    mandate contained in section 118(c) of the Clean Water Act, EPA 
    believes that it is appropriate to consider the NPDES component of the 
    States' submission to be substantial program modifications, and 
    therefore has decided to solicit public comment regarding those 
    provisions.
        Based on General Counsel Opinion 78-7 (April 18, 1978), EPA has 
    long considered a determination to approve or deny a State NPDES 
    program submission to constitute an adjudication because an 
    ``approval'', within the meaning of the APA, constitutes a ``license'', 
    which, in turn, is the product of an ``adjudication''. For this reason, 
    the statutes and Executive Orders that apply to rulemaking action are 
    not applicable here. Among these are provisions of the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. Under the RFA, whenever a 
    federal agency proposes or promulgates a rule under section 553 [of the 
    Administrative Procedures Act (APA)], after being required by that 
    section or any other law to publish a general notice of proposed 
    rulemaking, the agency must prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis 
    for the rule, unless the Agency certifies that the rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 
    If the Agency does not certify the rule, the regulatory flexibility 
    analysis must describe and assess the impact of a rule on small 
    entities affected by the rule.
        Even if the NPDES program modification were a rule subject to the 
    RFA, the Agency would certify that approval of the State's modified 
    program would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities. EPA's action to approve an NPDES program 
    modification merely recognizes revisions to the program which have 
    already been enacted as a matter of State law; it would, therefore, 
    impose no additional obligations upon those subject to the State's 
    program. Accordingly, the Regional Administrator would certify that 
    this program modification, even if a rule, would not have a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
    William Muszynski,
    Acting Regional Administrator, Region II.
    [FR Doc. 98-10401 Filed 4-17-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
04/20/1998
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice.
Document Number:
98-10401
Dates:
Comments on whether EPA should approve the revisions to New York's NPDES program must be received in writing by May 20, 1998.
Pages:
19490-19491 (2 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRL-5998-7
PDF File:
98-10401.pdf