96-11080. Water Quality Standards for Surface Waters in Arizona  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 89 (Tuesday, May 7, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 20686-20694]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-11080]
    
    
    
    
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    Part IV
    
    
    
    
    
    Environmental Protection Agency
    
    
    
    
    
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    40 CFR Part 131
    
    
    
    Water Quality Standards for Surface Waters in Arizona; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 61, No. 89 / Tuesday, May 7, 1996 / Rules and 
    Regulations
    
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    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    40 CFR Part 131
    
    [FRL-5467-9]
    
    
    Water Quality Standards for Surface Waters in Arizona
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: This rule establishes water quality standards applicable to 
    waters of the United States in the State of Arizona. EPA is 
    promulgating this rule pursuant to a court order in Defenders of 
    Wildlife v. Browner (Docket No. Civ. 93-234 TUC ACM). The rule 
    designates fish consumption as a use for certain waters, and requires 
    implementation of a monitoring program regarding mercury's effects on 
    wildlife. On January 29, 1996, EPA published a proposed rule that 
    included other provisions which are not being promulgated as part of 
    today's rule because, after EPA's proposal, the Arizona Department of 
    Environmental Quality adopted revised regulations and policies in those 
    areas which EPA Region 9 has determined are in accordance with the 
    Clean Water Act.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: June 6, 1996.
    
    ADDRESSES: This action's administrative record is available for review 
    and copying at the Water Management Division, EPA, Region 9, 75 
    Hawthorne St., San Francisco, CA 94105. For access to the docket 
    materials, call (415) 744-1978 for an appointment. A reasonable fee 
    will be charged for copies.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gary Wolinsky, Permits and Compliance 
    Branch, W-5, Water Management Division, EPA, Region 9, 75 Hawthorne 
    St., San Francisco, CA 94105, telephone: 415 744-1978.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    A. Regulated Entities
    
        Entities potentially regulated by this action are those discharging 
    pollutants to waters of the United States in Arizona. Regulated 
    categories and entities include:
    
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              Category                  Examples of regulated entities      
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Industry....................  Industries discharging mercury to surface 
                                   waters in Arizona, or discharging        
                                   pollutants to particular surface waters  
                                   in Arizona listed in sec. 131.31(b) of   
                                   the rule.                                
    Municipalities..............  Publicly-owned treatment works discharging
                                   mercury to surface waters in Arizona, or 
                                   discharging pollutants to particular     
                                   surface waters listed in sec. 131.31(b)  
                                   of the rule.                             
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a 
    guide for readers regarding entities likely to be regulated by this 
    action. This table lists the types of entities that EPA is now aware 
    could potentially be regulated by this action. Other types of entities 
    not listed in the table could also be regulated. To determine whether 
    your facility is regulated by this action, you should examine the list 
    of waterbodies in section 131.31(b) of this rule, and examine 40 CFR 
    131.2 which describes the purpose of water quality standards such as 
    those established in this rule. If you have questions regarding the 
    applicability of this action to a particular entity, consult the person 
    listed in the preceding FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
    
    B. Background
    
        Under section 303 (33 U.S.C. 1313) of the Clean Water Act (CWA), 
    states are required to develop water quality standards for waters of 
    the United States within the state. Section 303(c) provides that a 
    water quality standard shall include a designated use or uses to be 
    made of the water and criteria necessary to protect those uses. States 
    are required to review their water quality standards at least once 
    every three years and, if appropriate, revise or adopt new standards. 
    33 U.S.C. 1313(c). States are required to submit the results of their 
    triennial review of their water quality standards to EPA. EPA is to 
    approve or disapprove any new or revised standards. Id.
        States may include in their standards policies generally affecting 
    the standards' application and implementation. See 40 CFR 131.13. These 
    policies are subject to EPA review and approval. 40 CFR 131.6(f), 40 
    CFR 131.13.
        Section 303(c)(4) of the CWA authorizes EPA to promulgate water 
    quality standards that supersede disapproved State water quality 
    standards, or in any case where the Administrator determines that a new 
    or revised water quality standard is needed to meet the CWA's 
    requirements.
        In September 1993, EPA, Region 9, disapproved portions of Arizona's 
    standards pursuant to section 303(c) of the CWA and 40 CFR 131.21. The 
    portions of Arizona's standards disapproved in September 1993 relate 
    to: the exclusion of mining-related impoundments from water quality 
    standards; the absence of ``fish consumption'' as a designated use for 
    certain water bodies; the absence of implementation procedures for the 
    State's narrative nutrient standard; the absence of biomonitoring 
    implementation procedures for the State's narrative toxicity criterion; 
    and the inclusion of practical quantitation limits (PQLs) in Arizona's 
    standards. In April 1994, EPA, Region 9, also disapproved Arizona's 
    lack of water quality criteria protective of wildlife for mercury.
        On November 1, 1995, the United States District Court for the 
    District of Arizona ordered EPA to prepare and publish proposed 
    regulations setting forth revised or new water quality standards for 
    those standards disapproved in September 1993 and April 1994 within 90 
    days. Defenders of Wildlife v. Browner, Docket No. Civ 93-234 TUC ACM.
        On December 29, 1995, the Arizona Department of Environmental 
    Quality (ADEQ) published proposed revisions to its standards. 1 Ariz. 
    Admin. Reg. 2811.
        Consistent with the Court's order, on January 29, 1996, EPA 
    published a Federal Register notice proposing standards related to the 
    mining exclusion, fish consumption designated use, PQLs, and 
    implementation policies and procedures. 61 FR 2766. The notice also 
    identified, and sought comment on, policies that EPA, Region 9, 
    intended to use to implement State narrative criteria as they relate to 
    toxicity, nutrients, and mercury.
        The Court order in Defenders of Wildlife directs EPA to promulgate 
    final water quality standards 90 days after EPA proposes such standards 
    unless Arizona has adopted revised or new water quality standards which 
    EPA determines are in accordance with the CWA. In January 1996, ADEQ 
    adopted implementation procedures for the State's narrative nutrient 
    criteria. In April 1996, ADEQ adopted implementation procedures for the 
    State's narrative toxic criteria. On April 26, 1996, EPA, Region 9, 
    approved Arizona's implementation procedures for the State's narrative 
    nutrient and toxic criteria. Because EPA has
    
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    determined that Arizona has addressed EPA's 1993 disapproval action 
    regarding the absence of appropriate implementation procedures for 
    toxicity and nutrients through the adoption of procedures that are in 
    accordance with the Act, EPA is not promulgating provisions in the 
    final rule related to these implementation procedures.
        ADEQ adopted revisions to its standards on March 22, 1996, and, 
    after obtaining the approval of the State's Regulatory Review Council, 
    filed revisions to its standards with Arizona's Secretary of State on 
    April 24, 1996. ADEQ's rulemaking repealed the mining related provision 
    (R18-11-103.2) disapproved by EPA, Region 9, in September 1993, and 
    established a revised exemption related to mining impoundments at R18-
    11-102. In addition, ADEQ's rulemaking added the fish consumption use 
    to most of the waters which would have been designated with the fish 
    consumption use under EPA's proposal. The State's rulemaking also 
    deleted the appendix which prescribed PQLs from the State's water 
    quality standards regulations. On April 26, 1996, EPA, Region 9 
    approved these revised regulations thereby removing the need to 
    promulgate a Federal regulation addressing these issues.
        ADEQ has also participated, with EPA, Region 9, and the U.S. Fish 
    and Wildlife Service, in the development of an interim approach to 
    protect predatory wildlife from mercury until appropriate numeric 
    criteria can be developed. In conjunction with Arizona's priority 
    pollutant program, ADEQ, in cooperation with the Arizona Game and Fish 
    Department, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and EPA will conduct a 
    tissue monitoring program to assess the magnitude and extent of mercury 
    bioaccumulation in the prey base of the bald eagle and other fish-
    eating birds in Arizona. The monitoring program identifies further 
    actions related to sampling, source identification and remedy selection 
    which the agencies will undertake if mercury levels in fish are found 
    above a specified action level. Because pursuit of this monitoring 
    program is an important component in addressing the problem of mercury 
    contamination in Arizona waters, EPA has included the proposed 
    regulatory provision related to mercury in the final rule. In addition, 
    EPA is promulgating the fish consumption use designation for 
    waterbodies identified in EPA's proposal for which the State did not 
    adopt the fish consumption use designation. As explained more fully 
    below, should EPA decide to approve ``use attainability analyses'' 
    recently submitted by Arizona, EPA will proceed expeditiously to 
    withdraw the revised use designations contained in today's rule.
    
    C. Summary of Final Rule and Response to Major Comments
    
        A description of EPA's final action, and a summary of major 
    comments regarding the proposal and EPA's response, are set forth 
    below. Additional comments and responses to comments are in the 
    administrative record.
    
    1. ``Fish Consumption'' Use
    
        Arizona has designated several uses for its waters, including uses 
    defined as ``fish consumption'', ``aquatic and wildlife (cold water 
    fishery)'', ``aquatic and wildlife (effluent dominated water)'', 
    ``aquatic and wildlife (ephemeral)'', and ``aquatic and wildlife (warm 
    water fishery)''. See, R-18-11-101, and Appendix B of Title 18, Chapter 
    11, Article 1, of Arizona Administrative Rules and Regulations.
        In September 1993, EPA disapproved the lack of the ``fish 
    consumption'' (FC) use for water bodies which Arizona designated as 
    having an ``aquatic and wildlife'' use. For the standards to be 
    approvable, EPA stated that the State must either revise its standards 
    to include the FC use, or submit ``use attainability analyses'' (UAAs), 
    for the subject waters. A UAA is a scientific assessment showing 
    whether it is feasible to attain a particular use. See, 40 CFR 131.3(g) 
    and 131.10(j).
        ADEQ subsequently completed UAAs showing that it need not designate 
    the FC use for those effluent dominated or ephemeral waters which it 
    had not already designated as having the FC use. EPA approved those 
    UAAs in November 1995.
        In December 1995, ADEQ proposed to revise its standards to add the 
    FC use to waters within the State which have the ``aquatic and wildlife 
    (cold water fishery)'' or ``aquatic and wildlife (warm water fishery)'' 
    use. See, 1 Ariz. Admin. Reg. 2811 (Dec. 29, 1995), proposed R-18-11-
    104 and Appendix B of Title 18, Chapter 11, Article 1, of Arizona 
    Administrative Rules and Regulations.
        In January 1996, EPA proposed to designate the fish consumption use 
    for those waters which Arizona had designated as having an ``aquatic 
    and wildlife'' use, in those cases where the requirements for 
    completing a UAA had not been met. The affected stream segments and 
    water bodies were listed in proposed section 131.31(c). Each of the 
    affected waters were, at the time of EPA's proposal, designated by 
    Arizona as having the ``aquatic and wildlife (cold water fishery)'' or 
    ``aquatic and wildlife (warm water fishery)'' use.
        With the exception of fifteen waterbodies, Arizona's April 1996 
    final rulemaking established the FC use for all the waterbodies subject 
    to EPA's proposal.
        EPA is not promulgating a Federal rule designating the FC use for 
    those waters which now have that designated use under Arizona's rules. 
    In addition, EPA is not promulgating a Federal rule designating the FC 
    use for Quarter Circle Bar Tank. EPA has determined that that waterbody 
    is located within the boundaries of the Navajo Reservation and this 
    rulemaking only applies to waters within the jurisdiction of the State 
    of Arizona. The spelling of two waterbodies has been corrected in the 
    final rule.
        On April 3 and April 10, 1996, ADEQ submitted UAAs in support of 
    its determination not to designate the FC use for eleven of the 
    fourteen State waterbodies listed in EPA's proposal which did not 
    receive the FC use designation under Arizona's April 1996 rulemaking. 
    EPA is currently reviewing the analyses provided by the State. In 
    accordance with Region 9 practice in this area, the Region has also 
    sent out the new analyses for public review and comment to persons and 
    organizations with interests related to water quality standards 
    determinations in Arizona. EPA has asked for comments by May 15, 1996. 
    ADEQ intends to submit a UAA in support of its determination not to 
    designate the FC use for the three remaining waterbodies (Davidson 
    Canyon and Tinaja Wash in the Santa Cruz River Basin, and Chase Creek 
    in the Upper Gila River Basin) listed in EPA's proposed rule. EPA, 
    Region 9, will send out that UAA for public review and comment.
        Because EPA is under court order to promulgate this regulation by 
    the end of April, and the State submitted UAAs with insufficient time 
    for the Agency to adequately review the documentation and solicit 
    public comment prior to its court-ordered deadline, EPA is promulgating 
    the fish consumption use designation for waterbodies identified in 
    EPA's proposal which do not now have the FC designated use. Should EPA 
    approve, after completing its review of the UAAs and public comments, 
    the State's determination that attaining the FC use is not feasible 
    with respect to a waterbody listed in today's rule, EPA will proceed 
    expeditiously to withdraw the revised use designation contained in 
    section 131.31(c) with respect to that waterbody. If EPA approves the 
    State's UAA prior to the effective date of this rule with respect to a 
    waterbody listed
    
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    in section 131.31(c), EPA intends to stay the effectiveness of the 
    Federal use designation with respect to that waterbody pending 
    withdrawal of that part of the rule by EPA.
        EPA received a number of comments opposing provisions of the 
    proposed rule relating to fish consumption. One commenter submitted 
    extensive comments objecting to EPA's proposal to promulgate the FC 
    designated use, particularly with respect to the segment of the Salt 
    River from the I-10 bridge to the 23rd Avenue WWTP discharge. The 
    commenter contended that EPA should not have disapproved the lack of 
    the FC use on waters designated by Arizona as having the aquatic and 
    wildlife (warm water fishery) use. The commenter stated that EPA's 
    disapproval did not explain how the Arizona standards were inconsistent 
    with section 101(a)(2) of the Act, that EPA's reliance upon 40 CFR 
    131.10(j)(1) in its disapproval was inappropriate, and that a UAA was 
    not required in order to avoid designating the FC use for the subject 
    waters. The commenter stated that EPA rules and guidance documents do 
    not require a FC designated use if other water quality standards are 
    sufficient to protect the health of persons who may consume harvested 
    aquatic life, and that the Act does not require a specific FC use for 
    any waters at all. This commenter further stated that EPA has generated 
    no evidence to support its hypothesis that the aquatic and wildlife 
    (warm water fishery) designated use is not sufficient for the minimal 
    harvesting of edible aquatic life that could potentially occur on the 
    Salt River segment between the I-10 Bridge and the 23rd Avenue 
    wastewater treatment plant. The commenter stated that Arizona's use 
    designations and criteria, taken as a whole, are entirely 
    ``consistent'' with the goals of the CWA, and that consistency is all 
    that is required in light of 40 CFR 131.5 and 131.6. The commenter 
    stated that the CWA and Arizona law require protection of only those 
    uses that are actually occurring or are reasonably foreseeable, and 
    that EPA erroneously assumed in this case that the Act requires the FC 
    use found in the Arizona water quality standards to apply to all river 
    segments regardless of local environmental conditions, the degree and 
    types of harvesting by humans, and the types of aquatic life in the 
    riverbed.
        EPA continues to believe that EPA Region 9's disapproval of the 
    absence of fish consumption use designations for certain waterbodies 
    was consistent with the requirements of the CWA. EPA regulations 
    regarding use designations provide that a State ``must conduct a use 
    attainability analysis as described in 40 CFR 131.3(g) whenever the 
    State designates or has designated uses that do not include the uses 
    specified in section 101(a)(2) of the Act.'' 40 CFR 131.10(j)(1). 
    Section 101(a)(2) of the CWA provides that water quality ``shall 
    provide for the protection of fish, shellfish, wildlife and recreation 
    in and on the water'', and, in EPA's view, the ``protection'' of fish, 
    shellfish, and recreation necessarily includes ensuring that fish are 
    not so contaminated that they are unhealthful for human consumption. 
    Nonetheless, the State had failed to include designated uses that would 
    protect such aquatic life for purposes of human consumption, or to 
    perform a UAA demonstrating that this use was not attainable. EPA, 
    Region 9, therefore appropriately concluded that the State's standards 
    were not ``consistent with'' the goals of the CWA. Finally, while this 
    commenter asserts that a FC designated use is not necessary if other 
    standards are sufficient to protect the health of persons, the State 
    has not contended that it has adopted criteria applicable to these 
    waters that would protect human health. The State's existing water 
    quality criteria were derived to protect aquatic life itself, not 
    humans who consume it. Unlike aquatic life criteria, human health 
    criteria take into account many factors that must be considered to 
    ensure that pollutant residues in fish, when consumed by humans, do not 
    result in adverse health effects. See generally 40 CFR Part 132, 
    Appendices A and C, 60 FR 15393-15411 (March 23, 1995) (containing 
    methodologies for deriving aquatic life and human health criteria for 
    the Great Lakes Basin). EPA therefore believes that there is not a 
    reasonable basis to conclude that the State's aquatic life criteria 
    will provide protection for persons consuming fish from these specified 
    waterbodies.
        This commenter apparently also would seek to place the burden on 
    EPA Regions to demonstrate that existing uses and criteria are not 
    adequate to protect human health, taking into account local 
    environmental conditions and consumption patterns, prior to 
    disapproving state standards that fail to include the uses reflected in 
    section 101(a)(2) of the Act. This position ignores the fact that, 
    under EPA regulations, a UAA is the appropriate mechanism by which 
    States can determine whether local environmental conditions and other 
    factors justify the absence of a use otherwise meriting protection 
    under the Act. Turning this process on its head and requiring EPA, 
    which has far less familiarity with local circumstances and conditions 
    than does the State agency, to make these determinations would be 
    impracticable and would significantly undermine the health protection 
    goals of the Act. Finally, the issue in Arizona was not whether the 
    State had reasonably concluded that existing standards for these 
    waterbodies would protect human health. Rather, it was the State's 
    failure to adopt standards protecting human health that precipitated 
    the Region's disapproval action.
        One commenter stated that, even if an additional use designation 
    were necessary and supported by an administrative record, EPA has 
    failed to promulgate scientifically supportable, reasonable and 
    necessary numeric criteria to protect the use. The commenter stated 
    that the CWA requires numeric criteria only for those toxic pollutants 
    for which criteria have been published under section 304(a) of the CWA, 
    the discharge or presence of which in the affected waters could 
    reasonably be expected to interfere with those designated uses adopted 
    by the State, as necessary to support such designated uses, and that 
    EPA has not conducted the analysis required by this section to 
    determine what numeric criteria would be appropriate to support the new 
    FC use on the affected surface waters. The commenter stated that there 
    is no administrative record to support EPA's FC use and associated 
    numeric criteria for all surface waters, and that EPA should have 
    considered whether any of the surface waters potentially subject to the 
    new FC use would be entitled to a modification of the use on the basis 
    of the factors in 40 CFR 131.10(g). The commenter also stated that the 
    social and economic impact of the FC designations would be severe in 
    Phoenix, noting that some of the Phoenix storm water outfalls discharge 
    into the Salt River segment that would be reclassified under the 
    proposed rule. The commenter stated that the proposed rule could have a 
    substantial impact on storm water discharges and substantially increase 
    costs to the public without any demonstrated improvement in public 
    health. The commenter further stated that the upgrading of the Salt 
    River and other segments with the FC use could also have a ripple 
    effect that would result in more costly standards for upstream 
    ephemeral segments, noting that Arizona water quality standards appear 
    to require that designated uses for upstream segments shall not cause a 
    violation of water quality standards in downstream segments, and that 
    economic impact of the proposed FC use could spread
    
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    upstream to ephemeral waters that clearly do not warrant the FC use.
        The comments regarding the appropriateness of criteria that will 
    now apply to these waterbodies appear to indicate that commenters have 
    misunderstood EPA's action. The State has itself adopted criteria that 
    it believes are appropriate for providing protection of persons 
    consuming fish from many State waters. EPA is not second-guessing this 
    determination by the State. EPA also disagrees that it was under a duty 
    to evaluate the attainability of the fish consumption use taking into 
    account the factors in 40 CFR 131.10(g). Again, under EPA regulations, 
    States have the opportunity and responsibility for conducting UAAs to 
    demonstrate that uses consistent with the goals of the CWA are not 
    attainable. The State had failed to do so here. EPA therefore was 
    within its authority to determine that the use designations needed to 
    be revised to be consistent with the goals in CWA section 101(a)(2). 
    The State remains free to determine, based on local environmental 
    conditions or the costs that it determines could be associated with the 
    revised use designations, to downgrade use designations in accordance 
    with 40 CFR 131.10(g). No commenters provided information during the 
    public comment period indicating that, in fact, the revised use 
    designations were not attainable according to the criteria contained in 
    section 131.10(g).
        Another commenter also questioned whether the segment of the Salt 
    River from the I-10 bridge to the 23rd Avenue WWTP discharge should be 
    designated as having the fish consumption use. The commenter stated 
    that, if EPA's rationale for promulgating the fish consumption use is 
    simply because the stream segment had been designated by Arizona as 
    having the ``aquatic and wildlife (warm water fishery)'' use, then the 
    process and rationale for designating the segment is suspect and should 
    be reviewed.
        Another commenter stated that the fish consumption designated use 
    should not be presumptively applied to all water bodies, and should be 
    applied only when it is shown that fishing is a legal, continuous, and 
    widespread use of a particular water body. The commenter objected to 
    allowing the addition of designated uses to a stream segment without 
    the requirement to make any particular showing while the removal of a 
    use may take place only after a comprehensive use attainability 
    analysis which is often beyond the financial or technical capability of 
    the individuals most directly affected by the inappropriately 
    designated use.
        Another commenter sought clarification that EPA's designation of 
    the fish consumption use would be limited to water bodies which are 
    waters of the United States.
        As explained previously, EPA believes that it was appropriate and 
    consistent with the requirements and goals of the CWA to promulgate 
    fish consumption use designations where the State has designated the 
    waters as supporting aquatic life. EPA disagrees that the CWA places a 
    burden on EPA or States to demonstrate legal, widespread and continuous 
    use of a waterbody before adopting a FC use designation. No such 
    restriction is evident in the language or legislative history of the 
    CWA. To support a particular use designation, it is sufficient that 
    such a use be attainable in the waterbody. Regarding the use 
    designation for the Salt River from the I-10 bridge to the 23rd Avenue 
    WWTP discharge, that segment is not addressed by today's rule since the 
    State adopted the FC use for this waterbody. See, R-18-11-101, and 
    Appendix B of Title 18, Chapter 11, Article 1, of Arizona 
    Administrative Rules and Regulations, as filed on April 24, 1996.
        The one commenter is correct that the revised use designations only 
    apply to waters that meet the definition of waters of the United 
    States.
    
    2. Water Quality Criteria Protective of Wildlife for Mercury
    
        Arizona has established numeric criteria for mercury for ``aquatic 
    and wildlife'', ``fish consumption'', ``domestic water source'' and 
    other uses designated for its waters. See, Appendix A of Title 18, 
    Chapter 11, Article 1, of Arizona Administrative Rules and Regulations. 
    As part of its consultation with EPA regarding Arizona's water quality 
    standards pursuant to section 7 of the Endangered Species Act, the U.S 
    Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) determined that Arizona's mercury 
    criteria for protection of aquatic and wildlife uses were developed 
    without consideration of bioaccumulative effects for predatory 
    wildlife, and the FWS identified the adoption of mercury criteria 
    protective of wildlife as a means to remove jeopardy to endangered and 
    threatened species in the context of the Endangered Species Act.
        Based upon FWS's determinations, EPA, Region 9, in April 1994 
    disapproved Arizona's lack of water quality criteria protective of 
    wildlife for mercury.
        While the FWS identified the adoption of a mercury criterion 
    protective of wildlife as a reasonable and prudent alternative to avoid 
    jeopardizing endangered and threatened wildlife species, further 
    discussions between EPA, ADEQ, Arizona Game and Fish Department, and 
    the FWS led to the development of an alternative program to address the 
    problem of mercury's impacts on endangered and threatened species. The 
    Service indicated its overall approval of this approach to dealing with 
    the problem of mercury as it relates to the protection of wildlife and, 
    on January 17, 1996, revised its determination which initially 
    identified adoption of a mercury criterion as a reasonable and prudent 
    alternative for removing jeopardy to endangered species. Accordingly, 
    in January 1996, EPA proposed section 131.31(f) to address the 
    deficiency in the State's standards related to mercury's effect on 
    wildlife, and solicited comment upon EPA's intent to implement a 
    monitoring and source identification program to assist EPA in 
    implementing Arizona's narrative toxicity criteria.
        ADEQ has continued to participate, with EPA, Region 9, and the U.S. 
    Fish and Wildlife Service, in the development of an interim program to 
    protect predatory wildlife from mercury until appropriate numeric 
    criteria can be developed. The program developed by the agencies is 
    described in ``Arizona Priority Pollutant Sampling Program, ADEQ/AGFD/
    USFWS/USEPA Cooperative Program'', March 29, 1996. Under that program, 
    ADEQ, in cooperation with the Arizona Game and Fish Department, the 
    U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and EPA will conduct a tissue 
    monitoring program to assess the magnitude and extent of mercury 
    bioaccumulation in the prey base of the bald eagle and other fish-
    eating birds in Arizona. This monitoring program identifies further 
    actions related to sampling, source identification, and remedy 
    selection which the agencies will undertake if mercury levels in fish 
    are found above a specified action level.
        EPA received comment upon its proposal to adopt section 131.31(f) 
    and upon the monitoring and source identification program identified in 
    the Federal Register notice. A commenter stated that, even with the 
    implementation procedures proposed by EPA, Arizona's narrative toxicity 
    criteria would not protect against food chain accumulation in birds and 
    other fish-eating species. The commenter contended that there was no 
    deadline for completion of the monitoring and stated that there is no 
    need to wait for further fish tissue monitoring because recent tests in 
    certain lakes have found mercury levels exceeding the 0.1 mg/kg level 
    identified under the proposed
    
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    monitoring program as the trigger for further control efforts. The 
    commenter also noted that a mercury criterion to protect against food 
    chain accumulation has been established for the Great Lakes, and that a 
    similar criterion could be developed for Arizona. The commenter stated 
    that the Arizona criterion might differ if there were evidence that 
    mercury uptake rates among Arizona fishes are markedly different than 
    among Great Lakes fishes, but that EPA has offered no evidence to 
    suggest this is so.
        EPA's long-term goal is the adoption of a mercury criterion for 
    wildlife. However, despite the claims by the commenter, the data 
    currently are not available to derive a mercury criterion for wildlife 
    in Arizona using the methodology developed for the Great Lakes. A 
    detailed discussion of the data needed to develop a criterion is 
    discussed below. In lieu of a numeric criterion, EPA believes that the 
    approach of using Arizona's narrative criterion in R18-11-108 for 
    toxicity in combination with the implementation of the tissue 
    monitoring program will satisfy the requirements of the CWA to provide 
    protection of designated uses, including wildlife protection and 
    propagation.
        With regard to the commenter's general point regarding the 
    necessity of having numeric criteria in order to meet the requirements 
    of the CWA, it should be emphasized that the absence of a numeric 
    criterion for a specific pollutant is not unusual. EPA has not 
    published criteria guidance for the protection of aquatic life for all 
    pollutants. To account for this unavoidable absence of numeric criteria 
    for all pollutants, States include narrative criteria as part of their 
    standards. Narrative criteria are intended to cover all pollutants and 
    endpoints for which the state has not adopted numeric criteria. The 
    role of narrative criteria in the CWA's regulatory program is evident 
    in EPA's permitting regulations which include explicit provisions 
    requiring permit limits to ensure narrative criteria are not exceeded. 
    40 CFR 122.44(d)(1)(vi).
        In addition, the commenter was concerned that there was no deadline 
    for completion of the tissue monitoring program. However, sampling will 
    commence in the spring of 1996 and continue through the year 2000. The 
    FWS biological opinion, and the FWS's revised determination regarding 
    reasonable and prudent alternatives, are included in the administrative 
    record for this rulemaking.
        The purpose of the tissue monitoring program is to provide 
    information that can be used to assist in evaluating the magnitude of 
    mercury contamination of wildlife in Arizona. The monitoring program 
    was developed in consultation with the FWS, ADEQ, and Arizona Game and 
    Fish Department. EPA believes the sampling program is a reasonable 
    first step for identifying those areas in the State where problems may 
    exist and for designing control strategies that will help remediate 
    such problems to benefit wildlife protection in Arizona. The program 
    will assist EPA in determining whether contaminated fish species are 
    isolated cases due to particular sources of pollution (in which case 
    development of permit limits for a particular discharger based on the 
    State's existing narrative criterion may be the best means of remedying 
    the problem) or whether they are indicative of a larger State-wide 
    problem which needs to be addressed (potentially based on state-wide 
    numeric criteria, when development of such criteria are technically 
    feasible). If during the tissue monitoring it is determined that the 
    mercury tissue levels are consistently found above the action level of 
    0.1 mg/kg in the prey base of bald eagle or Yuma clapper rail, then 
    steps will be taken to identify the sources of the contamination and 
    identify possible corrective measures.
        EPA is concerned with the elevated mercury levels at the 
    waterbodies identified by the commenter. While neither of the two lakes 
    specifically cited by the commenter were identified by FWS as priority 
    water bodies for sampling for mercury for threatened and endangered 
    species, EPA is seeking to identify the sources contributing to the 
    mercury levels detected in the two lakes and corrective measures for 
    them.
        The commenter is correct that a methodology for deriving wildlife 
    criteria and a mercury criterion for wildlife were recently established 
    in the Great Lakes Water Quality Initiative (``GLI''). It is important 
    to note that the GLI wildlife methodology and criteria were developed 
    over several years with input from two national conferences and several 
    consultations with EPA's Science Advisory Board along with over 5000 
    public comments on the proposed GLI. In addition to the large effort 
    undertaken to develop the methodology and criteria, EPA stated very 
    clearly in the Supplementary Information Document to the GLI that:
    
        EPA would like to reemphasize that the provisions in the 
    proposed and final Guidance are expressly applicable only to the 
    waters of the Great Lakes System * * * States or Tribes with waters 
    outside the Great Lakes Systems, in whole or in part, are encouraged 
    to implement any of the Guidance methodologies or procedures that 
    are scientifically and technically appropriate for their situations. 
    Supplementary Information Document, p. 82.
    
        EPA believes the methodology used in the GLI for deriving a mercury 
    wildlife criteria may be appropriate for use in Arizona with some 
    modifications based on the specific conditions in Arizona. This does 
    not mean, however, that a criterion can simply be developed using the 
    data from the Great Lakes. In addition, the commenter implies that the 
    only question which needs to be considered when applying the GLI 
    methodology is whether the mercury uptake rates among Arizona fishes 
    are markedly different than among Great Lakes fishes. In fact, the 
    bioaccumulation potential is only one component that goes into the 
    derivation of wildlife criteria.
        ADEQ reviewed the GLI methodology for deriving wildlife criteria to 
    evaluate its applicability to Arizona and submitted their comments to 
    EPA on May 12, 1995, which are part of the administrative record. EPA 
    agrees with ADEQ that ecological conditions differ in Arizona from the 
    Great Lakes region. Therefore direct application of the GLI methodology 
    without modification is probably not appropriate. Development of a 
    wildlife criterion to protect wildlife from mercury in Arizona will 
    likely require the completion of tasks analogous to those undertaken by 
    EPA in the GLI. This effort is necessary because several components 
    within the wildlife methodology are specific to the type of aquatic 
    ecosystem and associated wildlife species. It would not be 
    scientifically defensible to directly adopt the mercury wildlife 
    criterion for the Great Lakes in the regulation of Arizona ecosystems 
    without further analyses to support such a decision. Issues that will 
    require further data evaluation and analyses include: (1) The 
    establishment of representative wildlife species for aquatic ecosystems 
    in Arizona, including a determination of their water and food intake 
    rates and the prey that comprises their diets; (2) a determination of 
    appropriate mercury toxicity thresholds for the representative wildlife 
    species identified for Arizona ecosystems; and (3) the establishment of 
    mercury bioaccumulation factors appropriate for Arizona ecosystems and 
    their associated food chains.
        The technical analyses needed to establish the representative 
    species (and their associated attributes) and appropriate mercury 
    bioaccumulation factors will likely require the largest effort because 
    these items are most closely associated with the site-specific nature 
    of wildlife criteria. In addition to
    
    [[Page 20691]]
    
    the data evaluation and analyses, peer review would be appropriate for 
    any wildlife methodology and associated criteria developed in Arizona 
    given the numerous technical and scientific issues involved in 
    developing such a methodology.
        In summary, while EPA believes the development of a wildlife 
    criterion for mercury may be possible, with some modifications, using 
    the methodology developed in the GLI, the data to support the 
    development of such a criterion are not currently available. Therefore, 
    until this information is collected, EPA believes the approach of 
    relying on the narrative criterion combined with the tissue monitoring 
    program will provide protection of wildlife in a manner consistent with 
    the requirements of the Endangered Species Act and Clean Water Act.
        EPA is continuing to evaluate the comments upon the substance of 
    the monitoring program, for the purpose of determining whether 
    modifications to the program are warranted.
        Another commenter indicated that EPA's disapproval of Arizona's 
    lack of water quality criteria protective of wildlife for mercury 
    should have been limited to the need for a mercury criterion applicable 
    to only those surface waters where affected endangered species are 
    likely to be adversely impacted.
        EPA's disapproval action was based upon the biological opinion 
    issued by the FWS, which found that the State's existing criteria for 
    mercury failed to consider the effects of bioaccumulation of pollutants 
    on wildlife. Because bioaccumulative effects may extend beyond 
    threatened and endangered species to other species of wildlife, EPA's 
    disapproval appropriately extended to Arizona's waters generally.
    
    D. Summary of Provisions in Proposal Not Included in Final Rule
    
    1. Mining Exclusion
    
        In September 1993, EPA, Region 9, disapproved the exclusion related 
    to mining contained in the State's standards at Arizona Administrative 
    Rules and Regulations, R18-11-103.2. That exclusion provided that 
    Arizona's standards did not apply to certain impoundments and 
    associated ditches and conveyances used in the extraction, 
    beneficiation and processing of metallic ores.
        In EPA's January 1996 Federal Register notice of proposed 
    rulemaking, EPA sought comment on a proposed Federal rule that would 
    adopt standards for any waters of the United States not governed by 
    State standards due to R18-11-103.2, as that State rule then existed. 
    In the preamble to the proposed Federal rule, EPA also solicited 
    comment regarding revisions to R18-11-102 that the State had proposed 
    in December 1995 regarding the applicability of its standards to 
    impoundments and associated ditches and conveyances used in the 
    extraction, beneficiation and processing of metallic ores.
        In April 1996 Arizona repealed R18-11-103 in its entirety and 
    revised R18-11-102 by, among other things, adding provisions related to 
    the applicability of the State's standards to mining-related 
    impoundments. R18-11-102 as promulgated differs in certain respects 
    from the proposed revision upon which EPA sought comment in its January 
    1996 Federal Register notice.
        EPA has determined that Arizona's repeal of R18-11 103.2, and 
    Arizona's adoption of revisions to R18-11-102 regarding the 
    applicability of the State's standards to certain impoundments and 
    associated ditches and conveyances, are consistent with the CWA, and 
    that a Federal rule with respect to such impoundments and associated 
    ditches and conveyances is not therefore needed to meet the CWA's 
    requirements. EPA believes that the State's revision to R18-11-103.2 
    adequately addresses EPA's concerns because it excludes from standards 
    only those waters that are not waters of the United States. 
    Accordingly, EPA is not promulgating the provision which it proposed 
    regarding mining-related impoundments, and comments opposing the 
    adoption of the proposed Federal rule are moot.
        Other commenters objected to mining-related exclusions under 
    consideration in Arizona's rulemaking or encouraged adoption of a 
    Federal rule in order to clarify the applicability of water quality 
    standards to mining-related activities. One commenter supported the 
    application of water quality standards to surface water bodies that 
    have been converted into mining impoundments. The commenter also 
    indicated that EPA's rule should address the extent to which water 
    quality standards are applicable in cases involving stream diversions 
    and the placement of mining wastes in dammed creek beds or valleys. The 
    commenter indicated its support for broadening the protections 
    associated with water quality standards to cover impoundments built in 
    the drainages of diverted water bodies. Another commenter suggested 
    that uncertainty would be created if Arizona adopted the mining-related 
    revisions then under consideration. The commenter noted that it would 
    be difficult for persons to determine whether the particular conditions 
    for exempting water bodies under Arizona's proposal had been met. The 
    commenter suggested that accuracy and simplicity might be better served 
    by deleting the State's mining impoundment exemption. EPA considered 
    these comments prior to determining that Arizona's final rulemaking 
    with respect to mining impoundments is consistent with the CWA and that 
    a Federal rule is unneeded.
        Under section 303 of the CWA, States must adopt standards for all 
    waters of the United States within the State. See, Kentucky v. Train, 9 
    ERC 1280, 1281 (E.D. Ky. 1976). States, however, need not adopt 
    standards for any water body which is not a water of the United States. 
    EPA has defined waters of the United States to include, among other 
    waters, rivers and streams the use, degradation, or destruction of 
    which would affect or could affect interstate commerce; impoundments of 
    such waters are also waters of the United States. See, 40 CFR 122.2 and 
    40 CFR 230.3(s). Accordingly, EPA's disapproval was based on the 
    premise that Arizona must adopt standards governing mining impoundments 
    which are waters of the United States. In the view of EPA, Region 9, 
    the State's revised mining language accords with the CWA because only 
    impoundments that are not waters of the United States will not be 
    subject to standards. EPA agrees that additional guidance addressing 
    the extent to which water quality standards are applicable in cases 
    noted by the commenters is desirable.
    
    2. Practical Quantitation Limits
    
        At the time of EPA's actions disapproving portions of Arizona's 
    water quality standards, Arizona had prescribed practical quantitation 
    limits (PQLs) in the regulations establishing its water quality 
    standards. See, R18-11-120, and Appendix C of Title 18, Chapter 11, 
    Article 1, of Arizona Administrative Rules and Regulations (1992). 
    Under Arizona's regulations, ``practical quantitation limit means the 
    lowest level of quantitative measurement that can be reliably achieved 
    during routine laboratory operations.'' R18-11-101.37. In September 
    1993, EPA, Region 9, disapproved Arizona's inclusion of the PQLs in its 
    regulations. EPA, Region 9, stated that, in order for the standards to 
    be approvable under CWA section 303(c), they must protect the 
    designated uses and must not be compromised by constraints related to 
    analytical methods. EPA, Region 9, further stated that Arizona may 
    choose to include the
    
    [[Page 20692]]
    
    PQLs in a policy or guidance document separate from the standards 
    regulations.
        In December 1995, ADEQ proposed deleting the PQLs prescribed in 
    Appendix C from its regulations and adopting the PQLs in a guidance 
    document. See, 1 Ariz. Admin. Reg. 2811 (Dec. 29, 1995), proposed R18-
    11-120.
        In its January 1996 action, EPA proposed to adopt a Federal rule 
    that would provide that Appendix C of Arizona's regulations would not 
    be water quality standards for the purposes of the CWA.
        In its April 1996 rulemaking, Arizona deleted Appendix C from its 
    regulations. Accordingly, EPA is not promulgating a rule addressing 
    this issue.
    
    3. Implementation Policies
    
        In September 1993, EPA disapproved the lack of implementation 
    procedures for Arizona's narrative nutrient criteria. Arizona's 
    narrative nutrient criteria provides that navigable waters shall be 
    free from pollutants in amounts or combinations that cause the growth 
    of algae or aquatic plants that inhibit or prohibit the habitation, 
    growth or propagation of other aquatic life or that impair recreational 
    uses. See, R18-11-108.A.6. At the time of the disapproval, Arizona had 
    not adopted an implementation process for its narrative criteria.
        Also in September 1993, EPA, Region 9, disapproved the lack of 
    implementation procedures for Arizona's narrative toxicity criterion. 
    Arizona's narrative toxicity criterion provides that navigable waters 
    shall be free from pollutants in amounts or combinations that are toxic 
    to humans, animals, plants and other organisms. See, R18-11-108.A.5. At 
    the time of the disapproval, Arizona had not adopted implementation 
    procedures for toxicity.
        In its January 1996 proposal, EPA proposed to adopt a Federal rule 
    to address these deficiencies in the State's standards. Proposed 40 CFR 
    131.31(e). In its January 1996 proposal, EPA also solicited comment 
    regarding the Region's use of two policies to guide the Region's 
    implementation of the subject narrative criteria: ``EPA, Region 9, 
    Policy for the Implementation of Arizona's Narrative Nutrient 
    Criteria'' and ``EPA, Region 9, Policy on Using Biomonitoring to 
    Implement Arizona's Narrative Toxicity Criterion''. As noted in EPA's 
    January 1996 Federal Register notice, EPA does not believe that it is 
    necessary that the State itself adopt regulatory provisions addressing 
    these implementation issues. EPA explained in the Federal Register 
    notice that such policies and procedures may be contained either in 
    water quality standards regulations themselves, or may be included in a 
    standards submission as policy or guidance documents. EPA also stated 
    in its January 1996 preamble that, should the State adopt acceptable 
    policies and procedures prior to promulgation of a final rule by EPA, 
    the Agency would not include the subject regulatory provisions in the 
    final rule.
        In January 1996, Arizona adopted a policy for the implementation of 
    the State's narrative criteria for nutrients. ADEQ, Water Quality 
    Assessment Unit, ``Implementation Guidelines for the Narrative Nutrient 
    Standard''. In April 1996, Arizona adopted a policy for the 
    implementation of the State's narrative criteria for toxicity. ADEQ, 
    ``Interim Whole Effluent Toxicity Implementation Guidelines for 
    Arizona''.
        After reviewing the State-adopted implementation policies and the 
    comments received in response to the January 1996 Federal Register 
    notice, EPA, Region 9, approved the policies adopted by the State. With 
    respect to EPA's prior disapproval of Arizona's standards due to the 
    lack of implementation policies related to narrative criteria for 
    nutrients and toxicity, EPA has determined that Arizona's water quality 
    standards, as supplemented by the State's newly adopted implementation 
    plans, are consistent with the CWA and that no new Federal water 
    quality standard is necessary to meet the CWA's requirements. 
    Accordingly, EPA is not promulgating proposed 40 CFR 131.31(e).
        EPA received comments regarding its implementation policies in 
    response to the January 1996 Federal Register notice. Because EPA has 
    approved Arizona's implementation policies, and therefore not 
    promulgated a final rule related to these policies, those comments are 
    no longer relevant to this rulemaking action. However, those comments 
    regarding EPA's policies that are material to EPA's decision to approve 
    Arizona's policies have been considered by the Agency in its approval 
    action and responses to those comments have been prepared and are part 
    of the record supporting EPA's approval of Arizona's narrative toxicity 
    and narrative nutrient standards implementation policies. A number of 
    comments having to do with the appropriateness of adopting Federal 
    implementation policies, or the necessity of having State policies, are 
    moot since the State has now adopted its own implementation policies. 
    Other comments received were specific to EPA's own toxicity policy for 
    Arizona (``EPA, Region 9, Policy on Using Biomonitoring to Implement 
    Arizona's Narrative Toxicity Criterion''). These comments addressed the 
    purpose and function of toxicity requirements in permits. Since 
    Arizona's toxicity policy does not address how the narrative toxicity 
    standard will be implemented in permits, these comments have not been 
    responded to in EPA's action approving the Arizona toxicity policy. EPA 
    will take these comments into account as we further refine the 
    implementation of toxicity narrative standards in National Pollutant 
    Discharge Elimination System permits in Arizona.
    
    E. Endangered Species Act
    
        Pursuant to section 7 of the Endangered Species Act (16 U.S.C. 1656 
    et seq.), Federal agencies must assure that their actions are unlikely 
    to jeopardize the continued existence of listed threatened or 
    endangered species or adversely affect designated critical habitat of 
    such species. Today's action adds the fish consumption use to various 
    waters which previously did not have the protections afforded by that 
    designation, and establishes that a monitoring program will be 
    undertaken to implement the State's narrative water quality criteria 
    with respect to the effects of mercury on wildlife.
        EPA has completed section 7 consultation with the FWS regarding 
    this action.
    
    F. Executive Order 12866
    
        Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993) the 
    Agency must determine whether the regulatory action is ``significant'' 
    and therefore subject to Office of Management and Budget (OMB) review 
    and the requirements of the Executive Order. The Order defines 
    ``significant regulatory action'' as one that is likely to result in a 
    rule that may:
        (1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more or 
    adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the 
    economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
    health or safety, of State, local, or tribal governments or 
    communities;
        (2) Create a serious inconsistency or otherwise interfere with an 
    action taken or planned by another agency;
        (3) Materially alter the budgetary impact of entitlements, grants, 
    user fees, or loan programs of the rights and obligations of recipients 
    thereof; or
        (4) Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal 
    mandates, the
    
    [[Page 20693]]
    
    President's priorities, or the principles set forth in the Executive 
    Order.
        Because the annualized cost of this final rule would be 
    significantly less than $100 million and would meet none of the other 
    criteria specified in the Executive Order, it has been determined that 
    this rule is not a ``significant regulatory action'' under the terms of 
    Executive Order 12866, and is therefore not subject to OMB review.
    
    G. Executive Order 12875, Enhancing the Intergovernmental 
    Partnership
    
        In compliance with Executive Order 12875 EPA has involved state, 
    local, and tribal governments in the development of this rule. EPA, 
    Region 9, consulted with ADEQ through conference calls, meetings and 
    review of draft and final documents. EPA held a meeting on December 14, 
    1995, in Phoenix, AZ, with members of the potentially impacted public 
    (e.g., municipalities, industries and environmental groups) to discuss 
    the proposed action. EPA held a public hearing on the proposed action 
    on February 29, 1996.
    
    H. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires EPA 
    to assess whether its regulations create a disproportionate effect on 
    small entities. Among its provisions, the Act directs EPA to prepare 
    and publish an initial regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA) for any 
    proposed rule which may have a significant impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities. For purposes of this rulemaking, small 
    entities are small dischargers, whether industrial or municipal.
        Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 
    U.S.C. 605(b)), the Administrator certifies that this rule will not 
    have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities. This rule is limited to the designation of the fish 
    consumption use for fourteen waters within Arizona, and the requirement 
    that EPA or Arizona implement a monitoring program to assess attainment 
    of a specified State-adopted water quality standard. In light of the 
    limited geographic scope of the use designations included in the final 
    rule adopted by EPA (i.e., fourteen waterbodies), the Agency does not 
    believe that there will be significant impacts associated with this 
    aspect of the rule. The mercury monitoring program, moreover, will be 
    carried out by EPA and ADEQ, and does not itself impose any additional 
    obligations on small entities.
    
    I. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    
        Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Public 
    Law 104-4, establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the 
    effects of their regulatory actions on State, local, and tribal 
    governments and the private sector. Under section 202 of the UMRA, EPA 
    generally must prepare a written statement, including a cost-benefit 
    analysis, for proposed and final rules with ``Federal mandates'' that 
    may result in expenditures to State, local, and tribal governments, in 
    the aggregate, or to the private sector, of $100 million or more in any 
    one year. Before promulgating an EPA rule for which a written statement 
    is needed, section 205 of the UMRA generally requires EPA to identify 
    and consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives and adopt 
    the least costly, most cost-effective or least burdensome alternative 
    that achieves the objectives of the rule. The provisions of section 205 
    do not apply when they are inconsistent with applicable law. Moreover, 
    section 205 allows EPA to adopt an alternative other than the least 
    costly, most cost-effective or least burdensome alternative if the 
    Administrator publishes with the final rule an explanation why that 
    alternative was not adopted. Before EPA establishes any regulatory 
    requirements that may significantly or uniquely affect small 
    governments, including tribal governments, it must have developed under 
    section 203 of the UMRA a small government agency plan. The plan must 
    provide for notifying potentially affected small governments, enabling 
    officials of affected small governments to have meaningful and timely 
    input in the development of EPA regulatory proposals with significant 
    Federal intergovernmental mandates, and informing, educating, and 
    advising small governments on compliance with the regulatory 
    requirements.
        As noted above, this rule is limited to the designation of the fish 
    consumption use for fourteen waters within Arizona, and the requirement 
    that EPA or Arizona implement a monitoring program to assess attainment 
    of a State-adopted water quality standard. EPA has determined that this 
    rule contains no regulatory requirements that might significantly or 
    uniquely affect small governments. EPA has also determined that this 
    rule does not contain a Federal mandate that may result in expenditures 
    of $100 million or more for State, local, and tribal governments, in 
    the aggregate, or the private sector in any one year. Thus, today's 
    rule is not subject to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of the 
    UMRA.
    
    J. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        This action requires no information collection activities subject 
    to the Paperwork Reduction Act, and therefore no information collection 
    request (ICR) will be submitted to the Office of Management and Budget 
    (OMB) for review in compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 
    U.S.C. 3501 et seq. 
    
    List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 131
    
        Environmental protection, Water pollution control, Water quality 
    standards, Toxic pollutants.
    
        Dated: April 29, 1996.
    Carol M. Browner,
    Administrator.
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, part 131 of title 40 of 
    the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    PART 131--WATER QUALITY STANDARDS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 131 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.
    
    Subpart D--[Amended]
    
        2. Section 131.31 is amended by adding paragraphs (b), and (c), to 
    read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 131.31  Arizona.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) The following waters have, in addition to the uses designated 
    by the State, the designated use of fish consumption as defined in R18-
    11-101 (which is available from the Arizona Department of Environmental 
    Quality, Water Quality Division, 3033 North Central Ave., Phoenix, AZ 
    85012):
    
    COLORADO MAIN STEM RIVER BASIN:
        Hualapai Wash
    MIDDLE GILA RIVER BASIN:
        Agua Fria River (Camelback Road to Avondale WWTP)
        Galena Gulch
        Gila River (Felix Road to the Salt River)
        Queen Creek (Headwaters to the Superior WWTP)
        Queen Creek (Below Potts Canyon)
    SAN PEDRO RIVER BASIN:
        Copper Creek
    SANTA CRUZ RIVER BASIN:
        Agua Caliente Wash
        Nogales Wash
        Sonoita Creek (Above the town of Patagonia)
        Tanque Verde Creek
        Tinaja Wash
        Davidson Canyon
    UPPER GILA RIVER BASIN
    
    [[Page 20694]]
    
        Chase Creek
    
        (c) To implement the requirements of R18-11-108.A.5 with respect to 
    effects of mercury on wildlife, EPA (or the State with the approval of 
    EPA) shall implement a monitoring program to assess attainment of the 
    water quality standard.
    
    [FR Doc. 96-11080 Filed 5-6-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
6/6/1996
Published:
05/07/1996
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-11080
Dates:
June 6, 1996.
Pages:
20686-20694 (9 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRL-5467-9
PDF File:
96-11080.pdf
CFR: (1)
40 CFR 131.31