94-10055. Sediment Quality Criteria & Support Documents; Re-opening of Notice of Availability and Request for Comment  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 80 (Tuesday, April 26, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-10055]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: April 26, 1994]
    
    
    -----------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    [OW-FRL-4875-8]
    
     
    
    Sediment Quality Criteria & Support Documents; Re-opening of 
    Notice of Availability and Request for Comment
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency.
    
    SUMMARY: The purpose of this notice is to re-open the comment period 
    for OW-FRL-4827-2 entitled ``Sediment Quality Criteria'' for 60 days. 
    The comment period will close on June 27, 1994.
        The original notice was published on January 18, 1994, and the 
    public comment period closed on April 18, 1994. The notice announced 
    the availability of seven documents presenting proposed Sediment 
    Quality Criteria for the Protection of Benthic Organisms for five 
    priority pollutant (Section 307(a)) chemicals, guidelines for deriving 
    these criteria on a site-specific basis, and the technical basis for 
    deriving the criteria for public comment. The documents are entitled: 
    ``Technical Basis for Deriving Sediment Quality Criteria for Nonionic 
    Organic Contaminants for the Protection of Benthic Organisms by Using 
    Equilibrium Partitioning,'' ``Guidelines for Deriving Site-Specific 
    Sediment Quality Criteria for the Protection of Benthic Organisms,'' 
    and ``Sediment Quality Criteria for the Protection of Benthic 
    Organisms: Dieldrin, Endrin, Acenaphthene, Fluoranthene, Phenanthrene'' 
    (individual documents per chemical).
    
    DATES: Written comments must be postmarked or submitted by hand on or 
    before June 27, 1994, and should be addressed as indicated below.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments may be mailed or delivered to: Sediment Quality 
    Clerk, Water Docket MC-4101, Environmental Protection Agency, 401 M 
    Street, SW., room L102, Washington, DC 20460. Commenters are requested 
    to submit any references cited in their comments. Commenters are also 
    requested to submit an original and 3 copies of their written comments 
    and enclosures. Commenters who want receipt of their comments 
    acknowledged should include a self-addressed, stamped envelope. No 
    facsimiles (faxes) will be accepted.
        Requests for documents should be sent to: Sediment, U.S. 
    Environmental Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental 
    Publications and Information, 11029 Kenwood Road, Building 5, 
    Cincinnati, Ohio 45242; telephone: 513-891-6561, fax: 513-891-6685. 
    These documents are also available for public inspection and copying 
    during normal business hours at the Water Docket Room L-102 (basement), 
    Environmental Protection Agency, 401 M Street, SW., Washington, DC 
    20460. For access to Docket materials, call (202) 260-3027 between 9 
    a.m. and 3:30 p.m. for an appointment. Copies of these documents are 
    also available for review in the EPA Regional office libraries. For the 
    Regional Office library in your area contact: EPA Library, (202) 260-
    3944. EPA's response to public comment will be available upon request, 
    no sooner than December 1994, from the Office of Water Resource Center 
    (202) 260-7786 and Sediment Public Comment, U.S. Environmental 
    Protection Agency, National Center for Environmental Publications and 
    Information, 11029 Kenwood Road, Building 5, Cincinnati, OH 45242; 
    telephone: 513-891-6561, fax: 513-891-6685. As provided in 40 CFR Part 
    2, a reasonable fee may be charged for copying services.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mary C. Reiley, Sediment Quality 
    Criteria Program, Office of Science and Technology, Mail Code 4304, 401 
    M Street, SW., Washington, DC 20460, phone: 202-260-0658.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Agency has received requests to extend 
    the comment period for a minimum of 30 days to ensure an adequate and 
    thorough evaluation of the criteria's technical merit. In light of 
    this, the comment period is reopened for 60 days, June 27, 1994.
        The seven documents for which public comment is requested are:
         Sediment Quality Criteria for the Protection of Benthic 
    Organisms: Acenaphthene (EPA-822-R-93-013).
         Sediment Quality Criteria for the Protection of Benthic 
    Organisms: Dieldrin (EPA-822-R-93-015).
         Sediment Quality Criteria for the Protection of Benthic 
    Organisms: Endrin (EPA-822-R-93-016).
         Sediment Quality Criteria for the Protection of Benthic 
    Organisms: Fluoranthene (EPA-822-R-93-012).
         Sediment Quality Criteria for the Protection of Benthic 
    Organisms: Phenanthrene (EPA-822-R-93-014).
         Technical Basis for Deriving Sediment Quality Criteria for 
    Nonionic Organic Contaminants for the Protection of Benthic Organisms 
    by Using Equilibrium Partitioning (EPA-822-R-93-011).
         Guidelines for Deriving Site-Specific Sediment Quality 
    Criteria for the Protection of Benthic Organisms (EPA-822-R-93-017).
    
    Background Information
    
        Toxic contaminants in bottom sediments of the nation's lakes, 
    rivers, wetlands, and coastal waters create the potential for continued 
    environmental impact even where water column contaminant levels comply 
    with established water quality criteria. In addition, contaminated 
    sediments can have impacts on water quality even when additional 
    pollutants are no longer being added by any other source. It is 
    intended that sediment quality criteria be protective of benthic 
    organisms and be used to: Assess the extent of sediment contamination, 
    aid in implementing measures that limit or prevent additional 
    contamination, and identify when appropriate remediation activities are 
    needed.
        Section 304 (a)(1) of the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. 1314(a)(1)), 
    directs EPA to develop and publish criteria reflecting the latest 
    scientific knowledge on the identifiable effects of pollutants on 
    public health and welfare, aquatic life, wildlife and recreation. EPA 
    has periodically issued ambient water quality criteria guidance, 
    beginning with the publication of ``Water Quality Criteria 1972''. All 
    criteria guidance through late 1986 was summarized in an EPA document 
    entitled ``Quality Criteria for Water, 1986.'' EPA has subsequently 
    published, from time to time, new ambient water quality criteria 
    guidance for additional pollutants or revised existing criteria 
    guidance.
        EPA's criteria documents are intended to provide a comprehensive 
    toxicological evaluation of each chemical addressed therein, based on 
    available information. For toxic pollutants, the documents tabulate the 
    numeric acute and chronic toxicity information for aquatic life and, 
    where sufficient information is available, derive the numeric criteria 
    maximum concentrations (acute criteria) and the numeric criteria 
    continuous concentrations (chronic criteria) that the Agency recommends 
    to protect aquatic life resources. The documents also provide 
    recommended criteria to protect human health. EPA has published numeric 
    aquatic life criteria for 30 priority pollutants and human health 
    criteria for 91 priority pollutants. Aquatic life criteria address 
    potential water column impacts only.
        EPA is now proposing sediment quality criteria for five priority 
    pollutant chemicals (endrin, dieldrin, fluoranthene, phenanthrene, and 
    acenaphthene) that EPA has determined are present in the sediment of 
    the Nation's waters and cause or have the potential to cause adverse 
    effects to the water column and benthic assemblages and their 
    hierarchical foodchains including humans. Pursuant to Section 104 of 
    the Clean Water Act, the Agency has conducted research, experiments and 
    demonstrations and has studied the effects of contaminated sediment on 
    freshwater, marine, and estuarine aquatic life. EPA used this 
    information to develop the proposed sediment quality criteria, which 
    represent EPA's first effort to develop sediment quality criteria. 
    These five chemicals were selected because of their known toxicity, 
    hydrophobicity, and persistence.
        EPA developed the proposed sediment quality criteria using a 
    methodology called the Equilibrium Partitioning Approach which was 
    selected after considering a variety of approaches that could be used 
    to assess sediment contamination. Technical reviews of the methodology 
    and supporting science was conducted by the EPA Science Advisory Board 
    (SAB) in February 1989 and June 1992. Data collected in support of the 
    ambient aquatic life water quality criteria or an equivalent data base 
    were also used to derive the proposed sediment quality criteria. 
    Sediment criteria concentrations are expressed as micrograms chemical 
    per gram organic carbon and apply to sediments with >/=0.2% organic 
    carbon.
    
        Dated: April 20, 1994.
    Robert Perciasepe,
    Assistant Administrator for Water.
    [FR Doc. 94-10055 Filed 4-25-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
04/26/1994
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Document Number:
94-10055
Dates:
Written comments must be postmarked or submitted by hand on or
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: April 26, 1994, OW-FRL-4875-8