94-13326. Maryland Certification Requirements for Transporters of Oil or Controlled Hazardous Substances  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 106 (Friday, June 3, 1994)]
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    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-13326]
    
    
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    [Federal Register: June 3, 1994]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
    Research and Special Programs Administration
    [Preemption Determination No. PD-7(R); Docket No. PDA-12(R)]
    
     
    
    Maryland Certification Requirements for Transporters of Oil or 
    Controlled Hazardous Substances
    
    AGENCY: Research and Special Programs Administration (RSPA), DOT.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Administrative determination of Preemption by RSPA's 
    Associate Administrator for Hazardous Materials Safety.
    
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    APPLICANT: Chemical Waste Transportation Institute and National Tank 
    Truck Carriers, Inc.
    
    STATE LAWS AFFECTED: Code of Maryland Regulations 26.10.01.16.D and 
    26.13.04.01.F.
    
    APPLICABLE FEDERAL REQUIREMENTS: Hazardous Materials Transportation Act 
    (HMTA), 49 App. U.S.C. 1801 et seq., and the Hazardous Materials 
    Regulations (HMR), 49 CFR Parts 171-180.
    
    MODE AFFECTED: Highway.
    
    SUMMARY: Maryland regulations requiring certification of operators of 
    motor vehicles loading or unloading oil or ``controlled hazardous 
    substances'' in Maryland are preempted by 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a)(2) as 
    they apply to operators of vehicles transporting hazardous materials 
    not domiciled in Maryland. These requirements are stricter than 
    operator training requirements promulgated under the HMTA, and 
    therefore are obstacles to accomplishing the full purposes and 
    objectives of the HMTA. As applied to operators domiciled in Maryland, 
    the requirements are not preempted.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Charles B. Holtman, Office of the 
    Chief Counsel, Research and Special Programs Administration, U.S. 
    Department of Transportation, 400 Seventh Street SW, Washington, DC 
    20590-0001, telephone number (202) 366-4400.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Application for Preemption Determination
    
        On April 19, 1993, the Chemical Waste Transportation Institute 
    (CWTI) and the National Tank Truck Carriers, Inc. (NTTC) jointly 
    applied for a determination of preemption pursuant to 49 CFR 107.203. 
    The CWTI/NTTC application seeks an administrative determination that 
    the HMTA preempts State of Maryland certification requirements for 
    operators of vehicles loading or unloading oil or ``controlled 
    hazardous substances'' in Maryland.
        On May 19, 1993, RSPA published a Public Notice and Invitation to 
    Comment, providing for comments until June 23, 1993, and rebuttal 
    comments until August 29, 1993. 58 FR 29322. Eight transporters of oil, 
    hazardous waste or hazardous materials, one transporter association and 
    one environmental services firm submitted comments supporting 
    preemption of one or both sets of certification requirements. The 
    Maryland Department of the Environment, Waste Management Administration 
    (MDE), submitted comments opposing preemption of the requirements for 
    operators of oil transport vehicles, but took no position on the 
    requirements for operators of controlled hazardous substance transport 
    vehicles. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, Department of 
    Environmental Protection, Division of Hazardous Materials (MassDEP), 
    submitted comments opposing preemption in part. CWTI/NTTC submitted 
    rebuttal comments responding to those of MDE and MassDEP.
    
    A. Maryland Requirements for Operator Certification
    
        The two provisions of Maryland law for which CWTI/NTTC request a 
    determination of preemption impose certification requirements on 
    operators of motor vehicles used to transport oil or ``controlled 
    hazardous substances.''
    1. Oil Transporter's Certificate
        The first certification requirement for which CWTI/NTTC seek a 
    finding of preemption is Code of Maryland Regulations (COMAR) 
    26.10.01.16.D. This regulation, issued pursuant to general statutory 
    authority in Environment Article Sec. 4-405, Annotated Code Maryland, 
    prescribes that ``[a] vehicle used in the transport or transfer of oil 
    shall be operated by a driver possessing a valid Oil Vehicle Operator's 
    Certificate'' issued by MDE. Read in conjunction with COMAR 
    26.10.01.17.A, the requirement applies only to operators of oil cargo 
    tank vehicles. Further, it applies only to vehicles into which oil is 
    loaded, or from which it is unloaded, in Maryland; it does not apply to 
    operators of vehicles that simply pass through the State. COMAR 
    26.10.01.17.B. The certificate is issued ``after the driver has 
    completed an examination and has obtained a passing grade indicating 
    his knowledge of the procedures employed for the safe handling of oil, 
    oil spill control measures and oil spill reporting requirements.'' 
    COMAR 26.10.01.17.A(2). The operator must carry the certificate 
    whenever engaged in the transfer or transport of oil. COMAR 
    26.10.01.17.A(4).
        An operator must preregister for the examination, which is given at 
    five in-state locations and at out-of-state business locations as 
    approved by MDE. There is no fee for the examination or the 
    certificate. The certificate is valid for five years.
    2. Controlled Hazardous Substance Transporter's Certificate
        The second certification requirement for which a finding of 
    preemption is sought is COMAR 26.13.04.01.F(1). This provision, enacted 
    pursuant to Environment Article Sec. 7-252(b), Annotated Code of 
    Maryland, states:
    
        A person may not transport any CHS [controlled hazardous 
    substance] from any source in the State or to any CHS facility in 
    the State unless a driver certificate has been issued for the 
    vehicle driver.
    
        A ``controlled hazardous substance'' (CHS) is
        (1) Any hazardous substance that [MDE] identifies as a controlled 
    hazardous substance under th[e] subtitle; or
        (2) Low-level nuclear waste.
        Env't Article Sec. 7-201(b), Ann. Code Md. The term includes all 
    materials designated by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as 
    hazardous waste under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act 
    (RCRA), 40 U.S.C. Secs. 6901 et seq. Env't Article Sec. 7-201(m)(2). 
    Although the definition of CHS is broader, CWTI/NTTC states, and MDE 
    does not contest, that Maryland applies the certification requirement 
    only to transporters of RCRA hazardous waste. See also COMAR 
    26.13.04.01.A(1) (``These regulations establish standards which apply 
    to persons transporting hazardous waste within the State.'').
        The certificate is issued on evidence of ``satisfactory completion 
    of an approved training program,'' COMAR 26.13.04.01.F(3)(c), which 
    must cover:
    
        (a) Training in the requirements necessary to transport 
    hazardous waste. Emphasis should be placed on the ability to verify 
    proper DOT shipping names, hazard class and EPA waste codes. Special 
    attention should be directed to the Maryland Hazardous Waste 
    Manifest, other state manifest requirements, and the proper 
    disbursement of manifest copies.
        (b) Training in the required labeling and marking of all 
    containers of 110 gallons or less.
        (c) Training in Placarding. All drivers of vehicles transporting 
    hazardous waste shall be able to appropriately placard their truck 
    according to the DOT regulations under COMAR 11.16.01 (49 CFR 172 
    Subpart F).
        (d) Training in the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration 
    [sic] regulations including proper maintenance of a driver's daily 
    log.
        (e) Training in emergency procedures to follow in case of an 
    accident or spill.
        (f) Training in Maryland's hazardous waste regulations and law.
    
        COMAR 26.13.04.01.F(4). The regulations further stipulate that a 
    training program instructor must successfully have completed an 
    approved instruction training program or must have five years of 
    experience in the trucking industry, with at least two years of 
    involvement in safe driving activities or training. COMAR 
    26.13.04.01.F(5). MDE may require from an operator ``satisfactory 
    completion of an approved written examination.'' COMAR 
    26.13.04.01.F(6).
        The certificate must be carried in the vehicle during 
    transportation of CHS. COMAR 26.13.04.01.F(3)(b). It is valid for three 
    years, subject to payment of an annual $20 fee. COMAR 
    26.13.04.01.F(2),(3)(a).
    
    B. Hazardous Materials To Which Maryland Requirements Apply
    
        As summarized above, the Maryland certification requirements apply 
    to operators of motor vehicles transporting hazardous waste and cargo 
    tank vehicles transporting oil when those vehicles are loaded or 
    unloaded within the State of Maryland.
        An oil is a hazardous material subject to the HMTA and HMR if it 
    meets the criteria of any HMR hazard class. Most oils that are 
    designated as hazardous materials are designated because they meet 
    criteria for flammability, 49 CFR 173.120(a), or combustibility, 49 CFR 
    173.120(b). If an oil is not flammable or combustible, does not meet 
    the criteria for any other hazard class, and is not among a small 
    number of individually specified hazardous materials, 49 CFR 
    172.101(b)(1), it is not a designated hazardous material. Numerous 
    oils, such as lubricating and vegetable oils, are not ordinarily 
    designated hazardous materials.
        Accordingly, the Maryland oil cargo tank operator certification 
    requirement applies to the transport of both oils that are hazardous 
    materials and those that are not. Operator certification requirements 
    for the transport of oils that are not hazardous materials are not 
    subject to preemption by the HMTA. This preemption determination 
    pertains to the oil cargo tank operator certification requirement only 
    as it applies to the transport of oils that are hazardous materials.
        In addition, the HMR do not apply to the highway transportation of 
    oil by an intrastate carrier if that oil is not a hazardous waste, 
    hazardous substance, flammable cryogenic liquid or marine pollutant. 49 
    CFR 171.1(a)(3); but see 58 FR 36920 (July 9, 1993), correction at 58 
    FR 38111 (July 15, 1993)(notice of rulemaking proposing to extend the 
    HMR to intrastate highway carriage). Accordingly, this preemption 
    determination does not apply to the transportation by intrastate 
    highway carriers of oil not in the categories enumerated in 49 CFR 
    171.1(a)(3).
        The Maryland statute under which the CHS vehicle operator 
    certification requirement is enacted defines CHS broadly, to include 
    RCRA hazardous waste, low-level nuclear waste and any other substance 
    determined by MDE to be injurious to plant, animal or aquatic life. 
    Env't Article Sec. 7-201(b), Ann. Code Md. As noted above, however, the 
    certification requirement is applied only to operators of vehicles 
    transporting RCRA hazardous waste. Thus, hereafter, the CHS vehicle 
    certification requirement will be referred to as the hazardous waste 
    vehicle operator certification requirement.
        RCRA hazardous waste, as designated pursuant to 42 U.S.C. 6921 by 
    the Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), is 
    a hazardous material under the HMR. 49 CFR 171.8 (``Hazardous 
    material'') (as amended at 55 FR 52930, 52935 (Nov. 5, 1992)); see also 
    49 CFR 171.3(a) (``No person may offer for transportation or transport 
    a hazardous waste * * * in interstate or intrastate commerce except in 
    accordance with the requirements of [the HMR].''). Both interstate and 
    intrastate hazardous waste transporters are subject to the HMR. 49 CFR 
    171.1(a).
        In the preemption analysis that follows, the Maryland certification 
    requirements are compared to HMTA requirements under the ``dual 
    compliance'' and ``obstacle'' tests of 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a). See 
    Section II, below. For purposes of the dual compliance test, the 
    hazardous waste vehicle operator certification requirement is 
    considered as written. The obstacle test, however, looks at the 
    requirement ``as applied or enforced.'' 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a)(2). 
    Therefore, under this test, the requirement is considered only as it is 
    applied to the transportation of RCRA hazardous waste.
    
    C. HMTA Training and Certification Requirements for Motor Vehicle 
    Operators
    
        General training requirements for persons packaging, offering or 
    transporting hazardous materials are found in the HMR at 49 CFR 
    172.700-.704. These requirements apply to ``hazmat employees,'' which 
    term includes, among others, those who ``[o]perate[] a vehicle used to 
    transport hazardous materials.'' 49 CFR 172.702(b), 171.8 (``Hazmat 
    employee''). Each ``hazmat employee'' must receive, at least every two 
    years, three types of training: (1) Training to provide general 
    familiarity with the HMR and a general ability to recognize and 
    identify hazardous materials consistent with HMR standards; (2) 
    training specific to the hazardous material functions the employee 
    performs; and (3) training in workplace safety and emergency response. 
    49 CFR 172.704(a). Required training is not further specified; instead, 
    the regulations contemplate that hazmat employees will be trained in a 
    manner best suited to the hazardous materials transportation functions 
    they perform. See 57 FR 20944, 20949 (May 15, 1992)(preamble to final 
    rule enacting 49 CFR 172.700-.704).
        In addition, operators of motor vehicles transporting hazardous 
    materials must be trained in accordance with modal-specific 
    requirements of 49 CFR 177.816. Training subjects include vehicle 
    inspection and operation; requirements pertaining to attendance, 
    parking, smoking, routing and incident reporting; and loading and 
    unloading. 49 CFR 177.816(a). Cargo tank operators must receive 
    specialized training in tank emergency control features, special 
    vehicle handling characteristics, tank loading and unloading, 
    properties and hazards of materials transported, and tank retest and 
    inspection requirements. 49 CFR 177.816(b). Under section 177.816, 
    operators must be trained in applicable requirements of parts 383, 387 
    and 390 through 399 of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations 
    (FMCSR), 49 CFR parts 350-399.
        Part 383 specifies requirements for obtaining a Commercial Driver's 
    License (CDL), including requirements for the tank vehicle endorsement, 
    49 CFR 383.119, and the hazardous materials endorsement, 49 CFR 
    383.121. Section 177.816(c) provides that the training requirements of 
    sections 177.816(a) and (b) may be satisfied by compliance with the CDL 
    requirements for the tank vehicle or hazardous materials endorsement. 
    Sections 390.3(e)(2) and 392.1 together require operator training in 
    all aspects of the FMCSR. They are incorporated into the HMR as well by 
    49 CFR 177.804, as they apply to interstate operators of motor vehicles 
    transporting hazardous materials.
        Both 49 CFR 172.704(d) and 49 CFR 177.816 require that training 
    documentation be retained; 49 CFR 172.702(d) requires that an employer 
    test its employees. No provision of the HMR, however, requires that 
    evidence of training be submitted to, or that operators be tested or 
    certified by, a governmental body. A vehicle operator may comply with 
    49 CFR 177.816 by passing an examination and obtaining the CDL with a 
    tank vehicle or hazardous materials endorsement. 49 CFR 177.816(c)(1).
        Nonetheless, this is an alternative means of complying with the 
    regulation, and is not required.
    
    II. Preemption Under the HMTA
    
        The HMTA was enacted in 1975 to give the Department of 
    Transportation greater authority ``to protect the Nation adequately 
    against the risks to life and property which are inherent in the 
    transportation of hazardous materials in commerce.'' 49 App. U.S.C. 
    1801. It ``replace[d] a patchwork of state and federal laws and 
    regulations concerning hazardous materials with a scheme of uniform, 
    national regulations.'' Southern Pac. Transp. Co. v. Public Serv. 
    Comm'n, 909 F.2d 352, 353 (9th Cir. 1990).
        As enacted in 1975, the HMTA preempted ``any requirement, of a 
    State or political subdivision thereof, which is inconsistent with any 
    requirement set forth in [the HMTA], or in a regulation issued under 
    [the HMTA].'' HMTA, Pub. L. 93-633, Sec. 112(a), 88 Stat. 2161 (1975). 
    Congress intended this provision ``to preclude a multiplicity of State 
    regulations and the potential for varying as well as conflicting 
    regulations in the area of hazardous materials transportation.'' S. 
    Rep. No. 1192, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 37 (1974).
        Thereafter, DOT's Materials Transportation Bureau (MTB), 
    predecessor of RSPA's Office of Hazardous Materials Safety, implemented 
    HMTA preemption through the issuance of inconsistency rulings. 
    Inconsistency rulings, while advisory in nature, were ``an alternative 
    to litigation for a determination of the relationship of Federal and 
    State or local requirements'' and also a possible ``basis for an 
    application [for] a waiver of preemption pursuant to section 112(b) of 
    the HMTA.'' Inconsistency Ruling No. 2 (IR-2), 44 FR 75566, 76657 (Dec. 
    20, 1979).
        In the 1990 amendments to the HMTA, Pub. L. 101-615 (Nov. 16, 
    1990), preemption under the HMTA was strengthened on the basis of the 
    following Congressional findings:
    
        (3) many States and localities have enacted laws and regulations 
    which vary from Federal laws and regulations pertaining to the 
    transportation of hazardous materials, thereby creating the 
    potential for unreasonable hazards in other jurisdictions and 
    confounding shippers and carriers which attempt to comply with 
    multiple and conflicting registration, permitting, routing, 
    notification, and other regulatory requirements,
        (4) because of the potential risks to life, property, and the 
    environment posed by unintentional releases of hazardous materials, 
    consistency in laws and regulations governing the transportation of 
    hazardous materials is necessary and desirable,
        (5) in order to achieve greater uniformity and to promote the 
    public health, welfare, and safety at all levels, Federal standards 
    for regulating the transportation of hazardous materials in 
    intrastate, interstate, and foreign commerce are necessary and 
    desirable.
    
    49 App. U.S.C. 1801 note. In amending the HMTA, Congress affirmed that 
    ``uniformity was the linchpin'' of the statute. Colorado Pub. Util. 
    Comm'n v. Harmon, 951 F.2d 1571, 1575 (10th Cir. 1991). Unless a waiver 
    of preemption is granted by DOT, the HMTA as amended explicitly 
    preempts ``any requirement of a State or political subdivision thereof 
    or Indian tribe'' not ``otherwise authorized by Federal law'' if
    
        (1) Compliance with both the State or political subdivision or 
    Indian tribe requirement and any requirement of [the HMTA] or of any 
    regulation issued under [the HMTA] is not possible,
        (2) The State or political subdivision or Indian tribe 
    requirement as applied or enforced creates an obstacle to the 
    accomplishment and execution of [the HMTA] or the regulations issued 
    under [the HMTA], or
        (3) It is preempted under section 105(a)(4) [49 App. U.S.C. 
    Sec. 1804(a)(4), concerning ``covered subjects''] or section 105(b) 
    [49 U.S.C. Sec. 1804(b), concerning highway routing requirements].
    
    49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a).
        The first two paragraphs codify the ``dual compliance'' and 
    ``obstacle'' criteria that RSPA had applied in issuing inconsistency 
    rulings prior to the 1990 amendments to the HMTA. These criteria derive 
    from U.S. Supreme Court preemption decisions. E.g., Ray v. Atlantic 
    Richfield, Inc., 435 U.S. 151 (1978); Florida Lime & Avocado Growers, 
    Inc. v. Paul, 373 U.S. 132 (1963); Hines v. Davidowitz, 312 U.S. 52 
    (1941).
        The third paragraph, 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a)(3), in conjunction with 
    49 App. U.S.C. 1804(a)(4), specifies five ``covered subject'' areas in 
    which non-Federal requirements are given particular scrutiny:
    
        (i) The designation, description, and classification of 
    hazardous materials.
        (ii) The packing, repacking, handling, labeling, marking, and 
    placarding of hazardous materials.
        (iii) The preparation, execution, and use of shipping documents 
    pertaining to hazardous materials and requirements respecting the 
    number, content, and placement of such documents.
        (iv) The written notification, recording, and reporting of the 
    unintentional release in transportation of hazardous materials.
        (v) The design, manufacturing, fabrication, marking, 
    maintenance, reconditioning, repairing, or testing of a package or 
    container which is represented, marked, certified, or sold as 
    qualified for use in the transportation of hazardous materials.
    
        In these areas, a non-Federal requirement that is ``not otherwise 
    authorized by Federal law'' is preempted unless it is ``substantively 
    the same'' as the HMTA or HMR requirement. 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a). To 
    be ``substantively the same,'' the non-Federal requirement must 
    ``conform[] in every significant respect to the Federal requirement. 
    Editorial and other similar de minimis changes are permitted.'' 49 CFR 
    107.202(d).
        A more limited preemption test, independent of 49 App. U.S.C. 
    1811(a), applies when the non-Federal requirement is being compared to 
    FMCSR provisions incorporated into the HMR through 49 CFR 177.804. RSPA 
    has declared that in enacting 49 CFR 177.804, it did not intend to 
    change the preemptive effect of those FMCSR provisions incorporated. 
    See IR-22, 52 FR 46574 (Dec. 8, 1987). The preemptive effect of FMCSR 
    training requirements, 49 CFR 390.3(e)(2) and 392.1, is set forth at 49 
    CFR 390.9:
    
        Except as otherwise specifically indicated, subchapter B of this 
    chapter [49 CFR Parts 350-399] is not intended to preclude States or 
    subdivisions thereof from establishing or enforcing State or local 
    laws relating to safety, the compliance with which would not prevent 
    full compliance with these regulations by the person subject 
    thereto.
    
        This standard essentially is the ``dual compliance'' standard. See 
    IR-32, 55 FR 36736, 36741 (Sept. 6, 1990). Any FMSCR provision 
    incorporated into the HMR solely through 49 CFR 177.804 therefore 
    preempts a State or local requirement ``only if compliance with both is 
    impossible.'' IR-32, 55 FR at 36741.
        In place of the prior process for issuing advisory inconsistency 
    rulings, the HMTA authorizes any directly affected person to apply to 
    the Secretary of Transportation for a preemption determination with 
    respect to a requirement of a State, political subdivision or Indian 
    tribe. 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(c)(1). Preemption determinations under 
    authority of the HMTA address preemption only by the HMTA, and not by 
    the Commerce Clause of the Constitution or federal statutes other than 
    the HMTA. Other statutes may be relevant to determining HMTA 
    preemption, for instance in establishing whether a non-Federal 
    requirement is ``otherwise authorized by Federal law.'' 49 App. U.S.C. 
    1804(a)(4)(A).
        The Secretary of Transportation has delegated to RSPA the authority 
    to make preemption determinations, except for those concerning highway 
    routing, which are delegated to the Federal Highway Administration. 49 
    CFR 1.53(b). Under RSPA's regulations, preemption determinations are 
    issued by RSPA's Associate Administrator for Hazardous Materials 
    Safety. 49 CFR 107.209(a). If the HMTA preempts a requirement of a 
    State, a political subdivision of a State or an Indian tribe, that 
    jurisdiction may apply for a waiver of preemption under 49 CFR 107.215 
    through 107.227. A waiver may be granted if the Associate Administrator 
    finds that the non-Federal requirement affords the public a level of 
    safety equal to or greater than that afforded by the HMR, and that it 
    does not unreasonably burden commerce. Alternatively, the jurisdiction 
    may petition under 49 CFR 106.31 for adoption of a uniform Federal 
    rule.
        Preemption determinations under the HMTA are consistent with the 
    principles and policy set forth in Executive Order No. 12,612 
    (``Federalism''), 52 FR 41685 (Oct. 30, 1987). Section 4(a) of that 
    Executive Order authorizes preemption of State laws only when a statute 
    contains an express preemption provision, there is other clear evidence 
    of Congressional intent to preempt, or the exercise of State authority 
    directly conflicts with the exercise of Federal authority. The HMTA 
    contains an express preemption provision, implemented through RSPA 
    regulations.
    
    III. The CWTI/NTTC Application and Public Comment
    
    A. The CWTI/NTTC Application
    
        The CWTI/NTTC application asserts that the Maryland driver 
    certification requirements duplicate and conflict with Federal 
    standards. It observes that 49 CFR Part 383 of the FMCSR requires a 
    driver to have a CDL with a cargo tank endorsement when operating a 
    cargo tank, and a CDL with a hazardous materials endorsement when 
    transporting hazardous materials. It notes that the HMR do not impose 
    training certification requirements beyond the employer's duty, set 
    forth at 49 CFR 172.704(d)(5), to maintain training records.
        Citing 49 CFR 172.701, CWTI/NTTC object to the requirement that 
    operators not domiciled in Maryland be certified. This regulation 
    authorizes a State to impose training requirements more strict than HMR 
    requirements only on motor vehicle operators domiciled in that State. 
    They refer to the preamble to the final rule enacting 49 CFR 172.700-
    .704, 57 FR 20944, 20947 (May 15, 1992), which states that 49 CFR 
    172.701 reflects RSPA's recognition of the ``traditional regulation by 
    States of their own resident drivers * * * through drivers' licensing 
    requirements and procedures.'' CWTI/NTTC appear to argue that RSPA 
    intended to preserve State authority to regulate its own drivers only 
    when that authority is exercised by the State agency traditionally 
    responsible for driver licensing. If section 172.701 is read in this 
    way, CWTI/NTTC imply, it would authorize regulation only by the 
    Maryland Motor Vehicle Administration, the agency that issues the CDL, 
    and not by MDE.
        The CWTI/NTTC application maintains that the Maryland requirements 
    violate both the ``dual compliance'' test and the ``obstacle'' test 
    under 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a). The ``dual compliance'' test, CWTI/NTTC 
    assert, is violated in two respects:
    
        1. A driver cannot comply with both the Maryland requirements 
    and 49 CFR 383.21(a), which prohibits a commercial motor vehicle 
    operator from having more than one driver's license at any time.
        2. A non-domiciled driver cannot comply with both the Maryland 
    requirements and 49 CFR 172.701(b), which prohibits the application 
    of State training requirements stricter than those of the HMR to 
    non-domiciled drivers.
    
        According to CWTI/NTTC, the Maryland requirements also are 
    ``obstacles'' to accomplishing the purposes of the HMR because 
    transporters' burden of complying with paperwork and training 
    requirements of a potentially large number of States, particularly 
    burdens of pre-registering for and attending State-administered tests, 
    would be significant. CWTI/NTTC also suggest that the certification 
    requirements for hazardous waste transporters should be reviewed under 
    49 CFR 171.3(c), which strictly limits the ability of States to 
    regulate hazardous waste differently than do the HMR.
        Finally, CWTI/NTTC assert that the Maryland requirements are not 
    ``otherwise authorized by Federal law.'' See 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a).
    
    B. Comments Supporting Preemption
    
        RSPA has received comments supporting preemption of one or both 
    operator certification requirements from ten additional parties, 
    including one oil transporter, one hazardous materials transporter, six 
    hazardous waste transporters, an environmental services firm and the 
    Hazardous Materials Advisory Council (HMAC), an association 
    representing the hazardous materials transportation industry.
        With respect to Maryland's oil cargo tank operator certification, 
    COMAR 26.10.01.16.D, Amoco Oil Company, Nortru, Inc., Heritage 
    Transport, Inc. and Laidlaw Environmental Services Inc. share the view 
    of CWTI/NTTC that the Maryland requirements duplicate the HMR and the 
    CDL hazardous materials endorsement. Nortru asks how changes in Federal 
    requirements would be incorporated into the substantive requirements of 
    Maryland's certification process. Amoco, Nortru and Heritage Transport 
    emphasize the administrative burden that could result from a 
    determination that Maryland's certification requirements were not 
    preempted. They assert that these burdens, multiplied by the number of 
    States imposing separate requirements, would include paperwork burdens, 
    the difficulty of maintaining a current knowledge of changing State 
    requirements, and lost business opportunities and delays from failing 
    to obtain certifications before entering Maryland. Nortru and HMAC join 
    CWTI/NTTC in citing 49 CFR 172.701(a), which allows a State to impose 
    training requirements more strict than those of the HMR only on drivers 
    domiciled in that State.
        Regarding Maryland's hazardous waste vehicle operator 
    certification, COMAR 26.13.04.01.F, commenters' arguments mirror those 
    for the oil cargo tank operator certification. Nortru, Environmental 
    Transport, Inc., McCutcheon Enterprises, Inc., Dart Trucking Company, 
    Inc., Heritage Transport, Laidlaw and Custom Environmental Transport, 
    Inc. charge that the certification duplicates the HMR and the CDL 
    hazardous materials endorsement. Nortru, Environmental Transport and 
    Custom Environmental Transport assert that the certification 
    requirement fails to address how changes in Federal requirements will 
    affect the validity of existing certificates, or how such changes are 
    to be incorporated into revised training programs. Nortru, 
    Environmental Transport, McCutcheon, Heritage Transport, Custom 
    Environmental Transport and Eldredge, Inc. claim administrative burdens 
    similar to those claimed for the oil cargo tank operator certification. 
    Nortru and HMAC, again, point to the 49 CFR 172.701(a) prohibition on 
    imposing requirements stricter than the HMR on non-domiciled drivers. 
    HMAC argues that this conflict results in a violation of the dual 
    compliance test. Eldredge and Dart Trucking, concurring with CWTI/NTTC, 
    assert that the 49 CFR 383.21 prohibition against multiple licenses 
    makes dual compliance impossible.
    
    C. Comments Opposing Preemption
    
        MDE has filed comments opposing preemption of the oil cargo tank 
    operator certification requirement. It takes no position on preemption 
    of the hazardous waste vehicle operator certification requirement.
        MDE does not agree that the oil cargo tank operator certification 
    requirement violates the 49 CFR 383.21 prohibition against multiple 
    licenses. It maintains that the driver's certification is directed to 
    ensuring not the safe transport of oil, but its safe transfer, and that 
    the certificate is not a driver's license within the meaning of 49 CFR 
    383.21. It argues that the Maryland oil cargo tank operator 
    certification program is consistent with the training scheme of 49 CFR 
    172.700-.704, which sets a performance standard but does not stipulate 
    specific training elements. In particular, it points to 49 CFR 
    172.702(c), which encourages training by ``public sources.'' In 
    addition, it notes correctly that the CDL hazardous materials 
    endorsement is required only for the transport of placarded shipments, 
    and that not all oil movements require placards. (For example, oil that 
    is a hazardous waste, but that does not meet the criteria for any other 
    hazard class, is a Class 9 hazardous material not required to be 
    placarded. 49 CFR 172.504(f)(9).) Transportation of non-placarded oil 
    therefore does not require a hazmat endorsement and accordingly, MDE 
    concludes, there is no duplication of CDL requirements.
        Finally, MDE argues that the oil cargo tank operator certification 
    requirement is ``otherwise authorized by Federal law,'' and thus 
    protected from preemption under 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a). It finds this 
    authority under sections 102 and 104 of the Federal Water Pollution 
    Control Act (FWPCA), 33 U.S.C. 1252(a) and 1254(a)(1). According to 
    MDE, these sections empower States to institute training requirements 
    directed to preventing and reducing water pollution. MDE also states 
    that EPA approved Maryland's underground storage tank program under the 
    Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA) Subtitle I, 42 U.S.C. 
    6991 et seq., in part on the basis of the existence of the 
    certification requirement.
        MassDEP asserts that a State's ability to require documentation of 
    driver training is fundamental to effectively regulating hazardous 
    waste transporters. It also refers to ongoing proceedings under 49 App. 
    U.S.C. 1819, under which a working group, formed in part of State 
    representatives, has recommended uniform forms and procedures for State 
    registration and permitting of hazardous materials transporters. The 
    recommendations have been transmitted to the Secretary of 
    Transportation, and may form the basis for Department of Transportation 
    regulations. MassDEP suggests that a determination that the Maryland 
    requirement to document training is preempted would undermine both 
    State regulatory efforts and the working group process. It requests 
    that preemption be considered only to the extent that Maryland requires 
    non-domiciled operators to come into the State for certification.
    
    D. Rebuttal Comments
    
        In rebuttal, CWTI/NTTC reiterate their contention that the Maryland 
    requirements violate both the 49 CFR 172.701(a) prohibition on the 
    application of stricter State training requirements to non-domiciled 
    drivers and the ``one driver/one license'' rule of 49 CFR 383.21(a). 
    They concur with Nortru, Environmental Transport Group and Custom 
    Environmental Transport that delays inherent in the certification 
    process will cause lost business opportunities.
    
    IV. Discussion
    
        The Maryland regulations under examination concern driver training 
    and certification, and maintenance of training records. None of these 
    is a ``covered subject'' listed in 49 App. U.S.C. 1804(a)(4)(B). 
    Accordingly, the ``substantively the same'' preemption standard of 49 
    App. U.S.C. 1804(a)(4)(A) and 1811(a)(3) does not apply. Rather, the 
    Maryland regulations are preempted if:
    
        (1) compliance with both the State * * * requirement and any 
    requirement of [the HMTA or the HMR] is not possible
    
    [or]
    
        (2) the State * * * requirement as applied or enforced creates 
    an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of [the HMTA or the 
    HMR].
    
        49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a). Both standards, the ``dual compliance'' and 
    the ``obstacle'' standard, are employed to determine the preemptive 
    effect of 49 CFR 172.700-.704 and 177.816. In considering the 
    preemptive effect of 49 CFR 390.3(e)(2) and 392.1, however, only the 
    dual compliance test applies. As discussed in section II, above, these 
    provisions, due to their incorporation into the HMR through 49 CFR 
    177.804, have a narrower preemptive effect than do other HMR 
    provisions.
    
    A. The ``Dual Compliance'' Test
    
        HMR training requirements for motor vehicle operators appear at 49 
    CFR 172.700-.704 and 177.816 and, through incorporation, at 49 CFR 
    390.3(e)(2) and 392.1. Each of these requirements specifies training in 
    aspects of motor vehicle operation when hazardous materials are being 
    transported. Sections 172.702(d), 172.704 and 177.816 require that 
    operators be tested and records of training be maintained. To the 
    extent that the Maryland regulations impose training requirements 
    different from those of the HMR, they are additive. Neither CWTI/NTTC 
    nor any other commenter has suggested that an operator cannot comply 
    with both HMR training requirements and the applicable Maryland 
    certification requirements.
        CWTI/NTTC and other commenters do assert, however, that 
    transporters cannot comply with both the Maryland requirements and 
    certain other HMR provisions, namely 49 CFR 172.701 and 383.21(a). The 
    arguments advanced, however, are not persuasive.
        Section 172.701 prohibits States from imposing on non-domiciled 
    operators training requirements stricter than those of the HMR. The 
    fact that the regulation is a prohibition on what a State may do means 
    that it cannot create a dual compliance problem for an operator. The 
    dual compliance standard ensures that the regulated community is not 
    put in the position where a non-Federal jurisdiction commands it to do 
    an act that the HMR forbid, or, conversely, where the HMR require an 
    act that the non-Federal jurisdiction forbids. For example, a 
    transporter could not comply with a State requirement to placard a 
    vehicle not carrying hazardous materials without violating 49 App. 
    U.S.C. 1804(e)(2) and 49 CFR 171.2(f)(2), which prohibit representing 
    that a hazardous material is present in a motor vehicle when it is not. 
    See also 49 CFR 171.502(a). Because 49 CFR 172.701 is addressed solely 
    to the State as a regulator, it imposes no duty on an operator, and an 
    operator could not be found in violation of it. As discussed below, 49 
    CFR 172.701 is relevant to whether the Maryland requirements are an 
    ``obstacle'' to accomplishing the purposes of the HMTA. It does not, 
    however, present a dual compliance problem.
        Section 383.21(a) provides that no operator of a commercial motor 
    vehicle ``shall at any time have more than one driver's license.'' 
    Whether compliance with both this regulation and the Maryland 
    certification requirement is impossible hinges on whether the Maryland 
    operator's certificate is a ``driver's license'' within the meaning of 
    the regulation. The short answer to the claim, however, is that it is 
    not within the scope of HMTA preemption. Part 383, unlike Parts 390 
    through 397 of the FMCSR, is not incorporated into the HMR. See 49 CFR 
    177.804. Accordingly, Part 383 is not a regulation ``issued under'' the 
    HMTA within the meaning of 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a)(1), and cannot be the 
    basis for a determination of preemption under the statute.
    
    B. The ``Obstacle'' Test
    
        While neither operator certification requirement fails the dual 
    compliance test, either requirement nevertheless is preempted if it 
    ``stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full 
    purposes and objectives'' of the HMTA. Colorado Pub. Util. Comm'n v. 
    Harmon, 951 F.2d at 1580. The ``full purposes and objectives'' of the 
    HMTA are, foremost, furthering safe hazardous materials transportation 
    and establishing a uniform system of regulation that, by reducing 
    confusion and promoting compliance, contributes to enhanced safety.
        As noted in section I.B, above, we consider the oil cargo tank 
    operator certification requirement only as it applies to transportation 
    of oil that is a hazardous material under the HMTA. The HMTA does not 
    preempt Maryland's application of the regulation to the transportation 
    of oil that is not a designated hazardous material. In addition, in 
    determining whether the certification requirements are an ``obstacle,'' 
    we consider them ``as enforced and applied.'' 49 App. U.S.C. 
    1811(a)(2). Therefore, we consider the hazardous waste vehicle operator 
    certification requirement with respect to the transportation of RCRA-
    designated hazardous waste only. See section I.B, above.
        When a non-Federal requirement differs from the HMR, RSPA must 
    determine whether that difference is an obstacle to the statutory 
    purposes and objectives. The degree to which a requirement may differ 
    from the HMR before it becomes an obstacle depends on the subject 
    matter of the requirement. With respect to certain areas identified in 
    the HMTA, namely, the ``covered subjects'' of 49 App. U.S.C. 
    1804(a)(4)(B), uniformity is paramount and no material deviation is 
    permitted. 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a). In other areas, RSPA must determine 
    the necessary degree of uniformity in light of existing statutory and 
    regulatory language.
        In the area of training, the HMR already have established the 
    extent to which States may regulate differently. Under 49 CFR 172.701, 
    a State may impose training requirements more strict than those of the 
    HMR only if those requirements:
    
        (a) Do not conflict with the training requirements in [49 CFR 
    part 172, Subpart H and part 177]; and
        (b) Apply only to drivers domiciled in that State.
    
        The authority granted to States to impose stricter requirements on 
    their domiciled operators ``recognizes the traditional regulation by 
    States of their own resident drivers.'' 57 FR at 20947. It recognizes 
    as well that were States permitted to impose stricter requirements on 
    non-resident operators, operators potentially would be subject to 
    numerous sets of training requirements, with resulting confusion, cost 
    and paperwork burdens. The Federal regulation ``represents an 
    appropriate balancing of the interests of the States and the 
    transportation industry.'' 57 FR at 20947. Cf. IR-26, 54 FR 16314, 
    16322 (Apr. 21, 1989)(considering preemption of State training 
    requirements before promulgation of 49 CFR 172.701).
        The 49 CFR 172.701 limitation on State regulatory authority over 
    non-domiciled operators pertains only to State ``training 
    requirements.'' The term ``training,'' as defined at 49 CFR 172.700(b), 
    means:
    
        A systematic program that ensures a hazmat employee has 
    familiarity with the general provisions of [the HMR], is able to 
    recognize and identify hazardous materials, has knowledge of 
    specific requirements of [the HMR] applicable to functions performed 
    by the employee, and has knowledge of emergency response 
    information, self-protection measures and accident prevention 
    methods and procedures.
    
        The two Maryland regulations, see section I.A, above, require that 
    operators of motor vehicles transporting regulated materials, including 
    hazardous materials, pass an examination. The examination is to ensure 
    that the driver is trained in procedures for identifying and marking 
    regulated materials for transportation, safely transporting regulated 
    materials and instituting emergency procedures in the event of a spill. 
    The regulations stipulate the required areas of training, provide for 
    an examination to demonstrate training in those areas, and authorize 
    issuance of a driver's certificate to identify those who satisfactorily 
    have been trained. These are elements of a ``systematic program'' of 
    ``training requirements.'' Accordingly, the Maryland regulations, as 
    they apply to those transporting hazardous materials, are subject to 49 
    CFR 172.701.
        Both COMAR 26.10.01.16.D, the oil cargo tank operator 
    certification, and COMAR 26.13.04.01.F, the hazardous waste vehicle 
    operator certification, are stricter than the HMR. The HMR impose 
    general and function-specific training requirements on all hazmat 
    employees. Under 49 CFR 177.816, motor vehicle operators in particular 
    are required to be trained in an exhaustive number of areas related to 
    the safe transportation of hazardous materials in motor vehicles. In 
    addition, a hazmat employer must provide for ``appropriate'' testing of 
    its employees. 49 CFR 172.702(d). Unlike the Maryland regulations, 
    however, the HMR do not condition motor vehicle operation on passing an 
    examination administered by a governmental body. Cf. Colorado Pub. 
    Util. Comm'n v. Harmon, 951 F.2d at 1581 (requirement to submit proof 
    of training goes beyond HMR). In addition, COMAR 26.13.04.01.F requires 
    hazardous waste transporters to be trained in specific areas that the 
    HMR do not, namely, in hazardous waste transportation requirements 
    specific to Maryland laws and regulations. The HMR do not limit the 
    means by which a hazmat employer may train a driver, provided that 
    training meets the standard of 49 CFR 172.700(b). Conversely, training 
    received by the operator of a vehicle transporting hazardous waste does 
    not comply with COMAR 26.13.04.01.F unless the instructor meets the 
    experience requirements set forth at COMAR 26.13.04.01.F(5).
        MDE suggests that the training requirements are not an obstacle to 
    accomplishing the purposes of the HMTA because of 49 CFR 172.702(c), 
    which states: ``Training may be provided by the hazmat employer or 
    other public or private sources.'' This section, however, simply 
    encourages hazmat employers, in training their employees, to make use 
    of any resources, public or private, that offer training meeting the 
    requirements of the regulations. See 57 FR at 20949-50. It does not 
    authorize States or other non-Federal entities to impose additional 
    training obligations.
        Determining the extent to which State training requirements may 
    differ from those in the HMR before they become an obstacle to 
    accomplishing the purposes of the HMTA is a balancing of the State's 
    interest in ensuring the competence of drivers within its jurisdiction 
    against the cost and administrative burdens on transporters and the 
    confusion, reduced compliance and decreased safety that may result from 
    a multiplicity of potentially conflicting requirements. RSPA already 
    has performed that balancing, and the result is codified in 49 CFR 
    172.701. Because COMAR 26.10.01.16.D and COMAR 26.13.04.01.F are 
    stricter than HMR training requirements, they violate 49 CFR 172.701 to 
    the extent they apply to operators not domiciled in Maryland. 
    Therefore, as applied to non-domiciled operators, each Maryland 
    requirement is an obstacle to accomplishing the full objectives and 
    purposes of the HMTA, and is preempted. As applied to operators 
    domiciled in Maryland, COMAR 26.10.01.16.D and COMAR 26.13.04.01.F are 
    not preempted.
    
    V. ``Otherwise Authorized by Federal Law''
    
        The HMTA does not preempt a non-Federal requirement that is 
    ``otherwise authorized by Federal law.'' 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a). MDE 
    asserts that its oil cargo tank operator certification requirement is 
    authorized by sections 102 and 104 of the FWPCA, 33 U.S.C. 1252(a) and 
    1254(a)(1), and RCRA Subtitle I, 42 U.S.C. 6991 et seq.
        The FWPCA sections cited by MDE do not support its argument. In 
    relevant part, these read as follows:
    
        The [EPA] Administrator shall, after careful investigation, and 
    in cooperation with other Federal agencies, State water pollution 
    control agencies, interstate agencies, and the municipalities and 
    industries involved, prepare or develop comprehensive programs for 
    preventing, reducing, or eliminating the pollution of the navigable 
    waters and ground waters and improving the sanitary condition of 
    surface and underground waters. 33 U.S.C. 1252(a).
    
        The [EPA] Administrator shall establish national programs for the 
    prevention, reduction, and elimination of pollution and as part of such 
    programs shall--
    
        (1) in cooperation with other Federal, State, and local 
    agencies, conduct and promote the coordination and acceleration of 
    research, investigations, experiments, training, demonstrations, 
    surveys, and studies relating to the causes, effects, extent, 
    prevention, reduction, and elimination of pollution.
    
        33 U.S.C. 1254(a)(1).
        By their clear terms, these statutes delegate general authority to 
    the EPA Administrator to develop programs and undertake research to 
    protect surface and groundwater quality. While the Administrator is 
    directed to cooperate with the States in doing so, no regulatory 
    authority is conferred on the States. MDE argues as well that RCRA 
    Subtitle I, regulating underground oil storage tanks, authorizes the 
    oil cargo tank operator certification requirement of COMAR 
    26.10.01.16.D. Although Subtitle I regulates underground storage tank 
    systems, MDE states, ``it is the vehicle operator who transfers the 
    product into and out of these systems.'' According to MDE, ``EPA's 
    approval of the State of Maryland's underground storage tank (UST) 
    program was in part based on its oil vehicle operator's certification 
    requirements for the safe transfer of oil.'' The elements that a State 
    UST program must contain to qualify for EPA approval are set forth at 
    42 U.S.C. 6991c(a); these elements are elaborated in EPA regulations at 
    40 CFR part 281. The elements do not include, and the regulations do 
    not mention, regulation of oil transporters. MDE submits no evidence 
    that Maryland's certification requirement was necessary for EPA 
    approval of the State's UST program.
        RCRA Subtitle I, at 42 U.S.C. 6991g, provides:
    
        Nothing in this subtitle shall preclude or deny any right of any 
    State or political subdivision thereof to adopt or enforce any 
    regulation, requirement, or standard of performance respecting 
    underground storage tanks that is more stringent than a regulation, 
    requirement, or standard of performance in effect under this 
    subtitle.
    
        See also 40 CFR 281.12(a)(3). The fact that Subtitle I does not 
    prohibit a State from imposing more stringent regulations does not 
    protect those regulations from preemption under the HMTA. Indeed, 40 
    CFR 281.12(a)(3)(ii) states:
    
        Where an approved state program has a greater scope of coverage 
    than required by federal law, the additional coverage is not part of 
    the federally-approved program.
    
        See also PD-1, 57 FR 58848, 58855 (Dec. 11, 1992) (ruling similarly 
    on nearly identical language in RCRA Subtitle C, 42 U.S.C. 6929).
        In summary, the Maryland oil cargo tank operator certification 
    requirement is not ``otherwise authorized by Federal law'' within the 
    meaning of 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(a).
    
    VI. Ruling
    
        For the reasons set forth above, RSPA finds that 49 App. U.S.C. 
    1811(a)(2) preempts Maryland regulations COMAR 26.10.01.16.D and COMAR 
    26.13.04.01.F, requiring certification of operators of motor vehicles 
    loading or unloading hazardous materials in Maryland, as they apply to 
    vehicle operators not domiciled in Maryland. Specifically, these 
    requirements are stricter than Federal operator training requirements 
    and therefore are obstacles to accomplishing the full purposes and 
    objectives of the HMTA. As applied to vehicle operators domiciled in 
    Maryland, the requirements are not preempted.
    
    VII. Petition for Reconsideration/Judicial Review
    
        In accordance with 49 CFR 107.211(a), ``[a]ny person aggrieved'' by 
    RSPA's decision on the NTTC/CWTI application may file a petition for 
    reconsideration within 20 days of service of the decision. Any party to 
    this proceeding may seek review of RSPA's decision ``by the appropriate 
    district court of the United States * * * within 60 days after such 
    decision becomes final.'' 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(e).
        This decision will become RSPA's final decision 20 days after 
    service if no petition for reconsideration is filed within that time. 
    The filing of a petition for reconsideration is not a prerequisite to 
    seeking judicial review of this decision under 49 App. U.S.C. 1811(e).
        If a petition for reconsideration is filed within 20 days of 
    service, the action by RSPA's Associate Administrator for Hazardous 
    Materials Safety on the petition for reconsideration will constitute 
    final agency action. 49 CFR 107.211(d).
    
        Issued in Washington, DC on May 24, 1994.
    Alan I. Roberts,
    Associate Administrator for Hazardous Materials Safety.
    [FR Doc. 94-13326 Filed 6-2-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 4910-60-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/03/1994
Department:
Research and Special Programs Administration
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Notice of Administrative determination of Preemption by RSPA's Associate Administrator for Hazardous Materials Safety.
Document Number:
94-13326
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: June 3, 1994, Preemption Determination No. PD-7(R), Docket No. PDA-12(R)