98-9558. Financial Assurance Mechanisms for Corporate Owners and Operators of Municipal Solid Waste Landfill Facilities  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 69 (Friday, April 10, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 17706-17731]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-9558]
    
    
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    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    40 CFR Part 258
    
    [FRL-5994-7]
    RIN 2050-AD77
    
    
    Financial Assurance Mechanisms for Corporate Owners and Operators 
    of Municipal Solid Waste Landfill Facilities
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency is amending the financial 
    assurance regulations under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act 
    (RCRA) for owners and operators of municipal solid waste landfills. 
    Today's rule increases the flexibility available to owners and 
    operators by adding two mechanisms to those currently available: a 
    financial test for use by private owners and operators, and a corporate 
    guarantee that allows companies to guarantee the costs for another 
    owner or operator.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: This regulation is effective April 10, 1998. This rule 
    provides regulatory relief by establishing additional, less costly 
    mechanisms for owners and operators to comply with existing financial 
    assurance requirements.
    
    ADDRESSES: Supporting materials are available for viewing in the RCRA 
    Information Center (RIC), located at Crystal Gateway I, First Floor, 
    1235 Jefferson Davis Highway, Arlington, VA. The Docket Identification 
    Number is F-98-FTMF-FFFFF. The RIC is open from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., 
    Monday through Friday, excluding federal holidays. To review docket 
    materials during these hours, it is recommended that the public make an 
    appointment by calling 703 603-9230. The public may copy a maximum of 
    100 pages from any regulatory docket at no charge. Additional copies 
    cost $0.15/page. The docket index and some supporting materials are 
    available electronically. See the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for 
    information on accessing them.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For general information, contact the 
    RCRA Hotline at 800 424-9346 or TDD 800 553-7672 (hearing impaired). In 
    the Washington, DC, metropolitan area, call the RCRA Hotline at 703 
    412-9810 or TDD 703 412-3323. You may also contact Dale Ruhter at 703 
    308-8192, or by electronic mail at ruhter.dale@epamail.epa.gov.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Regulated entities
    
        Entities potentially regulated by this action are private owners or 
    operators of municipal solid waste landfills. Regulated categories and 
    entities include:
    
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                                                    Examples of regulated   
                     Category                             entities          
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Industry..................................  Privately owned municipal   
                                                 solid waste landfill       
                                                 facilities.                
                                                Privately operated municipal
                                                 solid waste landfill       
                                                 facilities.                
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        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 company is regulated by this action, you should carefully examine 
    the
    
    [[Page 17707]]
    
    applicability criteria in Secs. 258.1 and 258.70 of title 40 of the 
    Code of Federal Regulations. 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.
        The docket index and the following supporting materials are 
    available on the Internet: Comment Response Document for Financial Test 
    and Corporate Guarantee for Private Owners or Operators of Municipal 
    Solid Waste Landfill Facilities, October 12, 1994 Proposed Rule; 
    Description of Data Used in the Analysis of Subtitles C and D Financial 
    Tests; Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests in Response to Public 
    Comments; memorandum entitled Bond Ratings and Investment Grade Status; 
    memorandum entitled Updated Closure and Post Closure Cost Estimates for 
    Subtitle C; Issue Paper, Relevant Factors to Consider in a Financial 
    Test; Issue Paper, Recent Consolidation and Acquisitions Within the 
    Solid Waste Industry; Issue Paper, Issues Relating to the Bond Rating 
    Alternative of the Corporate Financial Test; Issue Paper, Accounting 
    Issues Affecting the Corporate Financial Test; Issue Paper, Domestic 
    Assets Requirement; Issue Paper, Reporting Timeframes; Issue Paper, 
    Effects of the Financial Test on the Surety Industry; Issue Paper, 
    Market Effects of the Financial Test; Issue Paper, Assessment of 
    Financial Assurance Risk of Subtitles C and D Corporate Financial Test 
    and Third-Party Financial Assurance Mechanisms; Issue Paper, 
    Performance of the Financial Test as a Predictor of Bankruptcy; Issue 
    Paper, Assessment of First Party Trust Funds; Issue Paper, Assessment 
    of Trust Fund/Surety Combination.
        Follow these instructions to access the information electronically:
        WWW: http://www.epa.gov/osw
        FTP: ftp.epa/gov
        Login: anonymous
        Password: your Internet address
        Files are located in /pub/OSWER.
    
    Preamble Outline
    
    I. Authority
    II. Background
    III. Summary of the Rule
        A. Corporate Financial Test (Sec. 258.74(e))
        1. Financial Component (Sec. 258.74(e)(1))
        a. Minimum Tangible Net Worth
        b. Bond Rating
        c. Financial Ratios
        d. Domestic Assets Requirement
        2. Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements (Sec. 258.74(e)(2))
        a. Chief Financial Officer (CFO) Letter
        b. Accountant's Opinion
        c. Special Report From the Independent Certified Public 
    Accountant
        d. Placement of Financial Test Documentation and Annual Updates 
    in the Operating Record
        e. Alternate Financial Assurance
        f. Current Financial Test Documentation
        B. Corporate Guarantee (Sec. 258.74(g))
        C. Calculation of Obligations
        D. Combining the Financial Test and Corporate Guarantee With 
    Other Mechanisms
        E. Use of Alternative Mechanisms After the Effective Date
    IV. National Solid Wastes Management Association (NSWMA) Petition
        A. Discussion of the Petition
        B. The Meridian Test
    V. State Program Approval
    VI. Response to Comments and Summary of Issues
        A. Minimum Tangible Net Worth
        1. Minimum Tangible Net Worth Requirement Is Too Low
        2. The $10 Million Net Worth Requirement Is Too Restrictive
        a. The Size of Closure Obligations
        b. Recognition of Closure Obligations
        c. Accuracy of the Test at Lower Net Worth Levels
        d. Public Costs of Lower Net Worth Levels
        3. Allow Firms To Include Closure and Post Closure Funds as Part 
    of Net Worth
        4. The Net Worth Requirement Reduces the Market for Sureties
        5. Tangible Net Worth Does Not Have To Be Liquid
        6. MSWLFs Should Have a Lower Minimum Net Worth Requirement Than 
    Subtitle C Facilities
        7. EPA's Proposed Net Worth Requirement Was Not the Best 
    Investigated
        8. The Tangible Net Worth Requirement Is Appropriate
        B. Bond Ratings
        C. Financial Ratios
        D. Domestic Assets
        E. Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements
        1. Qualified Accountant's Opinion
        2. Special Report From the Independent Certified Public 
    Accountant
        F. Annual Updates
        G. Current Financial Test Documentation
        H. Corporate Guarantee
        I. Impacts on Third Party Financial Assurance Providers
        J. General Support of and Opposition to the Financial Test
        K. First Party Trust
        L. Comments on the Notice of Data Availability
    VII. Miscellaneous
        A. Executive Order 12866
        B. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
        C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
        D. Submission to Congress and the General Accounting Office
        E. Paperwork Reduction Act
        F. Environmental Justice
        G. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
    
    I. Authority
    
        These amendments to Title 40, part 258, of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations are promulgated under the authority of sections 1003(a), 
    1008, 2002(a), 4004, 4005(c), and 4010(c) of the Resource Conservation 
    and Recovery Act (RCRA), as amended, 42 U.S.C. 6902(a), 6907, 6912(a), 
    6944, 6945(c), and 6949a(c).
    
    II. Background
    
        The Agency proposed revised criteria for municipal solid waste 
    landfills (MSWLFs), including financial assurance requirements, on 
    August 30, 1988 (see 53 FR 33314). The purpose of the financial 
    assurance requirements is to assure that adequate funds will be readily 
    available to cover the costs of closure, post-closure care, and, when 
    necessary, corrective action associated with MSWLFs.
        In the August 30, 1988 proposal, rather than proposing specific 
    financial assurance mechanisms, the Agency proposed a financial 
    assurance performance standard. The Agency solicited public comment on 
    this performance standard approach and, at the same time, requested 
    comment on whether the Agency should develop financial test mechanisms 
    for use by local governments and corporations. In response to comments 
    on the August 1988 proposal, the Agency added several specific 
    financial mechanisms to the financial assurance performance standard in 
    promulgating 40 CFR 258.74 as part of the October 9, 1991 final rule on 
    MSWLF criteria (56 FR 50978). That provision allows approved States to 
    use any State-approved mechanism that meets that performance standard 
    and thereby gives approved states considerable flexibility in 
    determining appropriate financial mechanisms.
        Commenters on the August 30, 1988 proposal also supported the 
    development of financial tests for local governments and for 
    corporations to demonstrate that they meet the financial assurance 
    performance standard, without the need to produce a third-party 
    instrument to assure that the obligations associated with their 
    landfill will be met. (For a description of the third-party instruments 
    available to MSWLF owners and operators, see 56 FR 50978.) The Agency 
    agreed with commenters and, in the October 9, 1991 preamble, announced 
    its intention to develop both a local government and corporate 
    financial test in advance of the effective date of the financial 
    assurance provisions.
        On April 7, 1995, the Agency delayed the date by which MSWLFs must 
    comply with the financial assurance requirements of the MSWLF criteria 
    until April 9, 1997 (see 60 FR 17649) (remote, very small landfills as 
    defined at 40 CFR 258.1(f)(1) must comply by October 9, 1997). See 40 
    CFR 258.70(b). EPA extended the compliance date to
    
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    provide additional time to promulgate financial tests for local 
    governments and for corporations before the financial assurance 
    provisions would take effect. The Agency proposed a local government 
    financial test and a corporate financial test on December 27, 1993 (see 
    58 FR 68353) and October 12, 1994 (see 59 FR 51523), respectively. The 
    proposed corporate financial test rule notice also included proposed 
    amendments to the domestic asset requirements of the RCRA Subtitle C 
    hazardous waste financial assurance rules. Promulgating these proposed 
    changes to the Subtitle C rule, after considering and addressing public 
    comments, will be part of an upcoming rulemaking on the Subtitle C 
    financial assurance rules.
        As part of the corporate test for MSWLFs rulemaking, on September 
    27, 1996 (61 FR 50787) EPA published a Notice of Data Availability for 
    a document that had been inadvertently omitted from the rulemaking 
    docket for part of the public comment period. This Notice provided a 30 
    day comment period on the missing document.
        On November 27, 1996, EPA promulgated a final local government 
    financial test rule for MSWLFs (61 FR 60328). That rule increases the 
    flexibility of the financial assurance requirements in four important 
    ways. First, it provides local governments owning or operating a MSWLF 
    with the option of demonstrating financial assurance through a 
    financial test. Second, it allows local governments to use the 
    financial test to provide a guarantee for financial assurance for the 
    owner or operator of a MSWLF. Third, the rule allows a State Director 
    to waive the financial assurance requirements for up to twelve months 
    until April 9, 1998 if the Director finds that an owner or operator 
    cannot practically comply by April 9, 1997. Fourth, a State Director 
    can allow the discounting of closure, post-closure, and corrective 
    action costs for MSWLFs under certain conditions.
        The flexibility to extend the effective date and to allow 
    discounting are available to both locally and privately owned and 
    operated MSWLFs under the November 27, 1996 final rule. In today's 
    notice, EPA is taking final action on the corporate financial test and 
    guarantee for MSWLFs under RCRA Subtitle D, that were proposed October 
    12, 1994. This notice extends to private owners and operators the 
    flexibility that local governments have as a result of the November 27, 
    1996 final rulemaking notice.
    
    III. Summary of the Rule
    
    A. Corporate Financial Test (Sec. 258.74(e))
    
        Today's rule allows private owners or operators of MSWLFs that meet 
    certain financial and recordkeeping and reporting requirements to use a 
    financial test to demonstrate financial assurance for MSWLF closure, 
    post-closure care and corrective action costs up to a calculated limit. 
    (Costs over the limit must be assured through a third-party mechanism 
    such as a surety bond or trust fund, or, in approved States, through 
    other appropriate mechanisms the State determines to meet the 
    performance standard at existing Sec. 258.74(l)). The financial test 
    allows a company to avoid incurring the expenses associated with the 
    existing financial assurance requirements which provide for 
    demonstrating financial assurance through the use of third-party 
    financial instruments, such as a trust fund, letter of credit, surety 
    bond, or insurance policy. With the financial test, private owners or 
    operators must demonstrate that they are capable of meeting their 
    financial obligations at their MSWLFs through ``self insurance.'' The 
    following sections discuss the requirements of the financial test in 
    greater detail.
    1. Financial Component (Sec. 258.74(e)(1))
        The financial component is designed to measure viability of the 
    owner or operator, based on its current financial condition. To satisfy 
    the financial component, a firm must: (1) have a minimum tangible net 
    worth of $10 million plus the costs it seeks to assure (e.g., closure, 
    post-closure care, or corrective action costs); (2) satisfy a bond 
    rating requirement or pass one of two financial ratios; and (3) meet a 
    domestic asset requirement.
        a. Minimum Tangible Net Worth. In Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(ii)(A), the 
    Agency is requiring firms using the financial test to have a tangible 
    net worth at least equal to the sum of the costs they seek to assure 
    through a financial test plus $10 million. Tangible net worth means the 
    tangible assets that remain after deducting liabilities. Tangible 
    assets do not include intangibles such as goodwill or rights to patents 
    and royalties.
        The Agency is also providing an exception to the minimum net worth 
    requirement in Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(ii)(B). In this exception, a State 
    Director may allow a firm that has already recognized all of its 
    environmental obligations on its financial statements to utilize the 
    financial test so long as it has a minimum tangible net worth of $10 
    million and meets all of the remaining requirements of the financial 
    test. The exception in Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(ii)(B) acknowledges that the 
    recognition of environmental obligations as liabilities in financial 
    statements has become more widespread. As explained more fully in the 
    Response to Comments and Summary of Issues (see section VI below), EPA 
    does not want to place a firm that has fully recognized these 
    obligations as liabilities at a disadvantage in its ability to use the 
    test.
        Under Sec. 258.74(e)(3), the costs an owner or operator seeks to 
    assure must be equal to the current cost estimates for closure, post-
    closure care, and corrective action or the sum of such costs to be 
    covered, and any other environmental obligations assured by a financial 
    test. The owner or operator must include cost estimates required for 
    municipal solid waste management facilities under this part, as well as 
    cost estimates required for the following environmental obligations, if 
    it assures them through a financial test: obligations associated with 
    underground injection control (UIC) facilities under 40 CFR 144.62, 
    petroleum underground storage tank facilities under 40 CFR part 280, 
    polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB) storage facilities under 40 CFR part 
    761, and hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal facilities 
    (TSDFs) under 40 CFR parts 264 and 265.
        The Agency is requiring this minimum tangible net worth requirement 
    to ensure that the costs of closure, post-closure care, and/or 
    corrective action do not force a firm into bankruptcy. The minimum net 
    worth is intended to help ensure that firms relying on the financial 
    test have viable net worth to cover potential costs. EPA received 
    several comments on the $10 million in net worth requirement which had 
    also been part of the proposal. For the reasons discussed more fully in 
    the Response to Comments and Summary of Issues section below, the 
    Agency has retained this requirement in the final rule. The Agency 
    believes that this minimum net worth should be required as an initial 
    screen for corporations in demonstrating financial responsibility for 
    the very large costs of closure, post-closure care, and corrective 
    action. This requirement in addition to other financial criteria 
    comprise the financial test adopted in this final rule.
        b. Bond Rating. The Agency is promulgating regulations allowing 
    firms that meet the minimum net worth requirement to satisfy the second 
    requirement of the financial test in one of two ways.
        Under Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(i)(A), a firm can satisfy the financial 
    component if its
    
    [[Page 17709]]
    
    senior unsecured bond rating is investment grade, that is, Aaa, Aa, A 
    or Baa, as issued by Moody's, or AAA, AA, A, or BBB, as issued by 
    Standard & Poor's. The Agency is promulgating this option because it 
    believes that a firm's bond rating incorporates an evaluation of a 
    firm's financial management practices. Bond ratings reflect the expert 
    opinion of bond rating services, which are organizations that have 
    established credibility in the financial community for their 
    assessments of firm financial conditions. An analysis of bond ratings 
    showed that bond ratings have been a good indicator of firm defaults, 
    and that few firms with investment grade ratings have in fact gone 
    bankrupt.
        Including a bond rating option in this financial test is consistent 
    with other Agency programs. For example, the regulations governing 
    TSDFs under 40 CFR parts 264 and 265, petroleum underground storage 
    tanks under 40 CFR part 280, UIC facilities under 40 CFR part 144, and 
    PCB commercial storage facilities under 40 CFR part 761 all consider 
    bond ratings as part of their financial tests. The local government 
    financial test for owners and operators of MSWLFs under 40 CFR part 
    258, which was promulgated on November 27, 1996 (61 FR 60328), also 
    allows a bond rating option.
        In the local government test, EPA restricted the use of bond 
    ratings to bonds which were not insured or collateralized. Insured 
    bonds are increasingly popular for municipal issues and reflect the 
    rating of the insurer, and not of the issuing municipality. Insured 
    bonds are used less frequently for corporations. Similarly, a 
    collateralized bond can receive a rating that is not indicative of the 
    overall strength of the firm that issues it, but rather of the 
    collateral backing it. In fact, a firm under financial distress may 
    only be successful in issuing a bond if it pledges assets to back it. 
    In this final rule, EPA is likewise adopting a regulation that 
    effectively disallows the use of ratings based on collateralized bonds.
        For the reasons described above, because bond ratings incorporate 
    an evaluation of a firm's financial management practices, reflect the 
    credible expert opinion of bond rating services and have been shown to 
    be a good indicator of defaults, EPA proposed to include a bond rating 
    option in the corporate financial test for MSWLFs. EPA proposed to 
    implement the bond rating option using the rating for the last bond 
    issued. (This is consistent with the current Subtitle C financial test 
    and the revisions proposed on July 1, 1991 (56 FR 30201)). The reason 
    for choosing the rating on the most recently issued bond was because 
    the Agency considered this to be the most accurate indication of the 
    firm's financial status. Under the assumption that the most recently 
    issued bond would have had the most current analysis of its 
    characteristics, EPA considered this the best indicator of the firm's 
    ability to fulfill its financial obligations.
        A commenter on the proposed corporate test for MSWLFs noted that 
    the rating on a firm's senior debt was the best indicator of the firm's 
    financial health. EPA reviewed its proposed position in response to the 
    comment and found that bond ratings for corporations are continually 
    being reviewed. Thus, there are more accurate indicators of a firm's 
    financial health than the most recently issued bond. By using the 
    rating on the firm's senior unsecured debt rather than on the most 
    recent issue, EPA is ensuring that firms that use the bond rating 
    alternative will not be qualifying on the basis of a secured 
    obligation.
        EPA recognizes that the use of a senior unsecured debt rating in 
    this rule is potentially inconsistent with the financial test bond 
    rating alternative in the hazardous waste financial assurance 
    regulations in 40 CFR Part 264, Subpart H. EPA considers the arguments 
    for adopting the use of the rating on senior unsecured debt to have 
    considerable merit and is similarly considering adopting it as part of 
    the revisions to the RCRA hazardous waste financial assurance 
    requirements (proposed 56 FR 30201).
        c. Financial Ratios. To provide the regulated community with 
    additional flexibility in meeting the financial test, the Agency 
    proposed to also allow financial test ratios that it is promulgating at 
    Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(i)(B)-(C) as an alternative to the bond rating. In 
    order to satisfy the ratio requirement, a firm must have either:
          a debt-to-equity ratio of less than 1.5 based on the 
    ratio of total liabilities to net worth. This ratio indicates the 
    degree to which a firm is leveraged, and financed through borrowing; or
          a profitability ratio of greater than 0.10 based on the 
    ratio of the sum of net income plus depreciation, depletion, and 
    amortization, minus $10 million, to total liabilities. This ratio 
    indicates cash flow from operations relative to the firm's total 
    liabilities.
        EPA is adopting these financial test ratios in 
    Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(i)(B)-(C) of today's rule. The Agency selected these 
    two specific financial ratios with their associated thresholds based on 
    their ability to differentiate between viable and bankrupt firms. The 
    Agency's analysis demonstrated that debt-to-equity ratios (e.g., total 
    liabilities/net worth) and profitability ratios (e.g. (cash flow minus 
    $10 million)/total liabilities) are particularly good discriminators of 
    financial health. The Agency selected as thresholds for these ratios 
    values that, together with the other financial test criteria, minimized 
    the costs associated with demonstrating financial responsibility. A 
    more detailed discussion of this analysis can be found in the 
    Background Document developed in support of the proposal, and the 
    report entitled ``Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests in Response to 
    Public Comment,'' which was developed to further assess the results of 
    the Background Document in light of public comments. Both documents are 
    available in the public docket for this rulemaking.
        d. Domestic Assets Requirement. In Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(iii), the 
    Agency is promulgating a requirement that it had earlier proposed that 
    all firms using the financial test have assets in the United States at 
    least equal to the costs they seek to assure through a financial test. 
    (See paragraph a. of this section, ``Minimum Tangible Net Worth,'' for 
    more discussion on assured costs.) The domestic asset requirement is 
    intended to ensure that the Agency has access to funds in the event of 
    bankruptcy. Without this requirement, the Agency could experience 
    substantial difficulty in accessing funds of bankrupt firms that have 
    their assets outside of the United States. The Response to Comments and 
    Summary of Issues section below discusses this requirement in more 
    detail.
    2. Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements (Sec. 258.74(e)(2))
        The rule requires that after a firm has determined that it is 
    eligible to use this corporate financial test, it must document its use 
    of the test by placing three items (discussed below) in the facility 
    operating record. These requirements will help ensure that the self-
    implementing aspect of the test requirements have been met. In the case 
    of closure and post-closure care, these items must be placed in the 
    operating record prior to the initial receipt of waste or upon the 
    effective date of the financial assurance requirements (see existing 40 
    CFR 258.70) whichever is later, or no later than 120 days after the 
    corrective action remedy has been selected. This language is consistent 
    with the language in the proposal, and in the other mechanisms 
    allowable under 40 CFR 258.74. For example, the language for letters of 
    credit in existing
    
    [[Page 17710]]
    
    258.74(c)(1) states ``The letter of credit must be effective before the 
    initial receipt of waste or before the effective date of this section * 
    * *  whichever is later, in the case of closure or post-closure care, 
    or no later than 120 days after the corrective action remedy has been 
    selected in accordance with the requirements of Sec. 258.58.''
        EPA seeks to make clear that the deadline provision in today's rule 
    allows the use of the financial test by an owner or operator of an 
    existing facility for whom the financial responsibility requirements 
    have already become effective. An owner or operator may change 
    mechanisms for providing financial assurance. The regulations require 
    that an owner or operator provide financial assurance without 
    interruption. See, for example, 40 CFR 258.71(b), 258.72(b) and 
    258.73(c). However, qualifying owners or operators may choose from the 
    mechanisms in Sec. 258.74(a) through (j), and may substitute one 
    mechanism for another in meeting financial assurance requirements 
    (assuming all such mechanisms are available under the Federally-
    approved State program). For further information on this point, please 
    see section III.E., below, Use of Alternative Mechanisms After the 
    Effective Date.
        The specific recordkeeping and reporting requirements are 
    summarized below. Owners and operators must update these items 
    annually, and must notify the State Director and obtain alternative 
    financial assurance if the firm is no longer able to pass the financial 
    test.
        a. Chief Financial Officer (CFO) letter. Under Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(i) 
    of today's rule, the owner or operator must submit a letter from the 
    firm's CFO. The letter must demonstrate that the firm has complied with 
    the criteria of the test. Specifically, the letter must list all cost 
    estimates covered by a financial test and provide evidence 
    demonstrating that the firm satisfies the financial criteria of the 
    test including: (1) The bond rating or financial ratios, (2) the 
    tangible net worth requirement, and (3) the domestic asset requirement. 
    The proposed regulatory language for the CFO's letter was inconsistent 
    with the proposed regulatory language in Sec. 258.74(e)(1) regarding 
    the financial test. The regulatory language inadvertently omitting a 
    cross-reference to the domestic asset requirement. The preamble to the 
    proposed rule clearly provides that the CFO letter would document that 
    the firm satisfies all the criteria of the financial test including the 
    domestic asset requirement. 59 FR 51525. The final language clarifies 
    that the letter must provide evidence that the owner or operator meets 
    all of the requirements of Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(i), (ii), and (iii).
        b. Accountant's Opinion. Under Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(i)(B), the Agency 
    requires an owner or operator to place in the facility's operating 
    record the opinion from the independent certified public accountant of 
    the firm's financial statements for the latest completed fiscal year. 
    EPA expects that the documentation of the independent accountant's 
    opinion will include the audited financial statements. An unqualified 
    opinion (i.e., a ``clean opinion'') from the accountant demonstrates 
    that the firm has prepared its financial statements in accordance with 
    generally accepted accounting principles. Generally, an adverse 
    opinion, disclaimer of opinion, or any qualification in the opinion 
    would automatically disqualify the owner or operator from using the 
    corporate financial test. The one potential exception is that the State 
    Director of an approved State may evaluate qualified opinions on a 
    case-by-case basis, and accept such opinions if the matters which form 
    the basis for the qualified opinion are insufficient to warrant 
    disallowance of the test.
        c. Special Report From the Independent Certified Public Accountant. 
    Under Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(i)(C), the third item to be placed in the 
    operating record is a special report of the independent certified 
    public accountant upon examination of the chief financial officer's 
    letter. In this report, the accountant would confirm that the data used 
    in the CFO letter to pass the financial ratio test were appropriately 
    derived from the audited, year-end financial statements or any other 
    audited financial statements filed with the SEC. This report would not 
    be required if the CFO uses financial test figures directly from the 
    audited year end financial statements, or any other audited financial 
    statements filed with the SEC. However, this report is required if the 
    CFO letter uses data that are derived from and are not identical to the 
    data in the audited annual financial statements or other audited 
    financial statements filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission 
    (SEC).
        EPA has partially revised the proposed CPA's report in light of 
    public comments. The proposal had included a requirement that the CPA 
    provide negative assurance that ``no matters came to his attention 
    which caused him to believe that the data in the chief financial 
    officer's letter should be adjusted.'' 51 FR 51535. This proposed 
    requirement is inconsistent with current American Institute of 
    Certified Public Accountants standards which direct auditors not to use 
    the types of language included in the proposed regulations. Instead the 
    new language specifies that the independent certified public accountant 
    should report on the findings from an agreed upon procedures 
    engagement. Additionally, the language in today's rule clarifies that 
    the accountant's report is about information used to calculate the 
    financial ratios. Information that is not a part of the audited 
    financial statements, such as the company's bond rating, is not subject 
    to this requirement.
        For example, in computing the financial ratios in 
    Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(i)(B) or (C) owners and operators are required to 
    recognize total liabilities, including those associated with ``post-
    retirement benefits other than pensions (OPEB).'' The Financial 
    Accounting Standards Board (FASB) allows the use of two different 
    methods when accounting for these liabilities in annual financial 
    statements. FASB 106 allows employers the option of accounting for OPEB 
    obligations in one year (immediate recognition) or over a consecutive 
    number of years (delayed recognition). Since both the immediate and 
    delayed recognition methods are allowed by FASB 106, EPA does not 
    require owners and operators that are demonstrating they meet the 
    requirements of the financial test to use the same accounting method 
    for OPEB obligations that is used for annual SEC submission purposes. 
    For example, the owner or operator may use the immediate recognition 
    method in the financial statement prepared for the SEC, but the delayed 
    recognition method in computing liabilities for the purpose of 
    demonstrating RCRA financial assurance.
        As reflected in today's rule, EPA does not believe a separate CPA 
    statement is needed where the CFO simply takes figures directly from an 
    audited financial statement. This is a straight forward process. On the 
    other hand, where the CFO ``derives'' the figures--for example, by 
    using different accounting procedures to determine OPEB liabilities--
    the process may require a high level of financial expertise. In these 
    cases, EPA believes review by an independent auditor is appropriate.
        Consistent with the policy to confirm the accuracy of the 
    information from the audited financial statement where it is not 
    readily discernible, Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(i)(D) of today's rule also 
    includes a requirement for a report from the independent certified 
    public
    
    [[Page 17711]]
    
    accountant when an owner or operator proposes to meet the tangible net 
    worth requirement on the basis of having recognized all of the 
    environmental obligations covered by a financial test as liabilities in 
    the audited financial statements. This requirement is necessary to 
    ensure that these liabilities have in fact been recognized since this 
    would be difficult for the State Director to ascertain. There is also a 
    requirement that the report ensure that at least $10 million in 
    tangible net worth remains after any guarantees have been extended.
        d. Placement of Financial Test Documentation and Annual Updates in 
    the Operating Record. Section 258.74(e)(2)(ii) of today's rule requires 
    firms to place the financial test documentation items specified in 
    Sec. 258.74(e)(2) in the operating record and notify the State Director 
    that these items are there. Because the financial condition of firms 
    can change over time, under Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(iii), firms are required 
    to update annually all financial test documentation, including each of 
    the items described above, within 90 days of the close of the firm's 
    fiscal year. The State Director is, however, allowed to extend this 
    time by up to 45 days for an owner or operator who can demonstrate that 
    90 days is insufficient time to acquire audited financial statements. 
    This could occur in the case of a privately held firm which does not 
    receive audited financial reports as early as publicly held firms. 
    Under Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(iv), the owner or operator is not required to 
    submit the items specified in Sec. 258.74(e)(2) when he substitutes 
    alternate financial assurance as specified in this section that is not 
    subject to these recordkeeping and reporting requirements; or is 
    released from the requirements of this section in accordance with 
    Sec. 258.71(b), Sec. 258.72(b), or Sec. 258.73(b).
        e. Alternate Financial Assurance. Under Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(v), if a 
    firm can no longer meet the terms of the financial test, the owner or 
    operator must notify the State Director and obtain alternative 
    financial assurance within 120 days of the close of the firm's fiscal 
    year. The alternative financial assurance selected by the owner or 
    operator would have to meet the terms of this section and the required 
    submissions for that assurance would have to be placed in the 
    facility's operating record. The owner or operator would have to notify 
    the State Director within 120 days of the close of the fiscal year that 
    he no longer meets the criteria of the financial test and that 
    alternate financial assurance has been obtained.
        f. Current Financial Test Documentation. Under 
    Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(vi), the Director of an approved State may, based on 
    a reasonable belief that the owner or operator no longer meets the 
    requirements of paragraph (e)(1) of this section, require the owner or 
    operator to provide current financial test documentation. Although the 
    Agency anticipates this provision will not be used often, it can be 
    important in situations where the financial condition of the owner or 
    operator comes into question. The State Director should have the 
    flexibility to require the owner or operator to provide current 
    financial test documents if information arises that raises questions 
    about the financial conditions of the owner or operator. For example, 
    an owner or operator may be forced into financial distress by a large, 
    well-publicized liability judgment. In such cases and other appropriate 
    situations, the State Director should be able to investigate the 
    owner's or operator's change in financial condition, and require the 
    owner or operator to demonstrate that it still meets the financial 
    test.
    
    B. Corporate Guarantee (Sec. 258.74(g))
    
        As in the proposal, this rule allows owners and operators to comply 
    with financial responsibility requirements for MSWLFs using a guarantee 
    provided by another private firm (the guarantor). The language of the 
    final rule includes clarifications of some of the deadlines in the 
    proposal. Under such a guarantee, the guarantor promises to pay for or 
    carry out closure, post-closure care, or corrective action activities 
    on behalf of the owner or operator of a MSWLF if the owner or operator 
    fails to do so. Guarantees, like other third-party mechanisms, such as 
    letters of credit or surety bonds, ensure that a third party is 
    obligated to cover the costs of closure, post-closure care, or 
    corrective action in the event that the owner or operator goes bankrupt 
    or fails to conduct the required activities. At the same time, a 
    guarantee is an attractive compliance option for owners and operators 
    because guarantees are generally much less expensive than other third-
    party mechanisms.
        Section 258.74(g)(1) of the rule allows three types of qualified 
    guarantors: (1) The parent corporation or principal shareholder of the 
    owner or operator (i.e., a corporate parent or grandparent), (2) a firm 
    whose parent company is also the parent company of the owner or 
    operator (a corporate sibling), and (3) other related and non-related 
    firms with a ``substantial business relationship'' with the owner or 
    operator (including subsidiaries of the owner or operator). Guarantors 
    also must meet the conditions of the corporate financial test.
        To comply with the requirements of the corporate guarantee, the 
    owner or operator must place in the facility operating record a 
    certified copy of the guarantee contract and copies of all of the 
    financial test documentation that is required of the guarantor as 
    specified in the corporate financial test requirements. Pursuant to 
    Sec. 258.74(g)(3), the terms of the guarantee contract must specify 
    that, if the owner or operator fails to perform closure, post-closure 
    care, or corrective action in accordance with the requirements of part 
    258, the guarantor will either: (1) Carry out those activities or pay 
    the costs of having them conducted by a third party (performance 
    guarantee), or (2) fund a trust to pay the costs of the activities 
    (payment guarantee). The required documentation must be placed in the 
    operating record, in the case of closure and post-closure care, prior 
    to the initial receipt of waste or before the effective date of the 
    financial assurance requirements (see existing Sec. 258.70), whichever 
    is later, or in the case of corrective action, no later than 120 days 
    following selection of a corrective action remedy. (See 
    Sec. 258.74(g)(2).) The financial test documentation from the guarantor 
    must be updated annually, in accordance with the requirements of the 
    corporate financial test.
        The documentation required of the guarantor is the same as that 
    required of a corporate financial test user with either one or two 
    additional requirements depending upon the relationship of the 
    guarantor to the owner or operator. First, for all users of the 
    guarantee, the letter from the guarantor's chief financial officer must 
    describe the value received in consideration of the guarantee. Second, 
    in cases where the guarantor is not a corporate parent, grandparent, or 
    sibling, the letter from the chief financial officer also must address 
    the ``substantial business relationship'' that exists between the owner 
    or operator and the guarantor. In particular, if the guarantor is a 
    firm with ``a substantial business relationship,'' the letter must 
    describe the relationship and the consideration received from the owner 
    or operator in exchange for the guarantee, which are necessary to 
    ensure that the contract is valid and enforceable.
        For purposes of its hazardous waste financial assurance 
    regulations, EPA has defined ``substantial business relationship'' in 
    40 CFR 264.141(h) as ``the extent of a business relationship necessary 
    under applicable State law to make a guarantee contract issued
    
    [[Page 17712]]
    
    incident to that relationship valid and enforceable.'' However, as 
    noted in the preamble to that regulation, ``No single legal definition 
    exists of what constitutes a business relationship between two firms 
    that would justify upholding a guarantee between them. Furthermore, 
    such a determination would depend upon the application of the laws of 
    the States of the involved parties.'' (53 FR 33942). The responsibility 
    for demonstrating that the guarantee contract is valid and enforceable 
    rests with the guarantor. (See Sec. 258.74(g)(1)).
        This regulation requires that guarantors agree to remain bound 
    under this guarantee for so long as the owner or operator must comply 
    with the applicable financial assurance requirements of Subpart G of 
    part 258, except that guarantors may initiate cancellation of the 
    guarantee by sending notice to the State Director and to the owner or 
    operator. The rule provides that such cancellation cannot become 
    effective earlier than 120 days after receipt of such notice by both 
    the State Director and the owner or operator. (See 
    Sec. 258.74(g)(3)(ii).)
        If notice of cancellation is given, the regulations require the 
    owner or operator to, within 90 days following receipt of the 
    cancellation notice by the owner or operator and the State Director, 
    obtain alternate financial assurance, place evidence of that alternate 
    financial assurance in the facility operating record, and notify the 
    State Director. If the owner or operator fails to provide alternate 
    financial assurance within the 90-day period, the guarantor must 
    provide that alternate assurance within 120 days of the notice of 
    cancellation, place evidence of the alternate assurance in the facility 
    operating record, and notify the State Director. (See 
    Sec. 258.74(g)(3)(iii).)
        Under Sec. 258.74(g)(4), if the corporate guarantor no longer meets 
    the requirements of the financial test, the owner or operator must, 
    within 90 days, obtain alternative assurance, place evidence of the 
    alternate assurance in the facility operating record, and notify the 
    State Director. If the owner or operator fails to provide alternate 
    financial assurance within the 90-day period, the guarantor must 
    provide that alternate assurance within the next 30 days, place 
    evidence of the alternate assurance in the facility operating record, 
    and notify the State Director. These requirements are designed to avoid 
    potential lapses in financial assurance.
    
    C. Calculation of Obligations
    
        EPA currently allows financial tests as mechanisms to demonstrate 
    financial assurance for environmental obligations under several 
    programs. These include hazardous waste treatment, storage, and 
    disposal facilities under 40 CFR parts 264 and 265, petroleum 
    underground storage tanks under 40 CFR part 280, UIC Class I hazardous 
    waste injection wells under 40 CFR part 144, and PCB commercial storage 
    facilities under 40 CFR part 761. Requiring that the owner or operator 
    include all of the costs it is assuring through a financial test when 
    it calculates its obligations prevents an owner or operator from using 
    the same assets to assure different obligations under different 
    programs. The Agency believes this is vital to assure the effectiveness 
    of the financial test and assure that assets are available for all of 
    the environmental obligations covered by the test. Thus, consistent 
    with Agency policy, Sec. 258.74(e)(3) of today's rule requires a firm 
    using a financial test for its MSWLF obligations also to include those 
    costs covered by a financial test under other Agency programs when it 
    calculates assured costs.
    
    D. Combining the Financial Test and Corporate Guarantee With Other 
    Mechanisms
    
        When EPA promulgated the financial test and guarantee for municipal 
    owners and operators of municipal solid waste landfills (61 FR 60328, 
    November 27, 1996), EPA inadvertently omitted the provisions allowing 
    private owners and operators to use the financial test and corporate 
    guarantee in combination with other mechanisms in 40 CFR 258.74(k). 
    Thus, EPA is clarifying in today's rule that an owner or operator may 
    use the financial test or guarantee and another payment mechanism at a 
    single facility, thereby realizing greater flexibility and cost savings 
    from this regulation. EPA is promulgating a change to 258.74(k) that 
    allows the use of the financial test and corporate guarantee with the 
    other mechanisms. In promulgating this change to add the omitted cross-
    references, EPA is repeating the entire paragraph solely for the 
    convenience of the reader.
    
    E. Use of Alternative Mechanisms After the Effective Date
    
        Consistent with the other existing financial assurance mechanisms 
    at 40 CFR 258.74, the language of today's regulations includes a 
    requirement that the financial test or guarantee must be effective 
    before the initial receipt of waste or before the effective date of the 
    basic requirement that owners or operators of MSWLF units have 
    financial assurance, whichever is later, in the case of closure or 
    post-closure care. See Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(ii) and Sec. 258.74(g)(2). The 
    effective date of the financial assurance requirement for owners or 
    operators of MSWLF units is established under existing 40 CFR 258.70. 
    For most, but not all, MSWLFs the effective date is April 9, 1997. The 
    provisions establishing the compliance deadlines are to ensure that an 
    existing MSWLF has financial assurance mechanisms in place by the 
    effective date of the regulations and that a new MSWLF has the 
    mechanisms in place by the first receipt of waste. In the case of 
    corrective action, today's regulations for the financial test and 
    guarantee, like the existing regulations for the other mechanisms, 
    provides that the mechanism has to be in place no later than 120 days 
    after the corrective action remedy has been selected in accordance with 
    the requirements of 40 CFR 258.58. See Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(ii) and 
    Sec. 258.74(g)(2).
        The requirement that financial assurance be in place by a specific 
    deadline does not in any way preclude an owner or operator from 
    subsequently switching to another eligible mechanism. The operative 
    requirement is for an owner or operator of an MSWLF unit to have an 
    eligible financial assurance mechanism in place by the specific 
    compliance deadlines that ensures that the funds necessary to meet the 
    costs of closure, post-closure care, and corrective action will be 
    available whenever they are needed, and to provide such coverage 
    continuously until the owner or operator is released from financial 
    assurance requirements. See existing 40 CFR 258.71(b), 258.72(b), and 
    258.73(c). An owner or operator in compliance with the financial 
    assurance requirement using one eligible mechanism may switch to 
    another eligible mechanism so long as the relevant requirements are 
    met.
        The Agency's regulations expressly allow an owner or operator to 
    substitute one mechanism for another in this manner. The regulations 
    establishing specific Federal mechanisms (40 CFR 258.74(a)-(h)) each 
    allow the termination of a financial assurance mechanism when a 
    substitute mechanism has been established (or, of course, if the owner 
    or operator is no longer subject to the requirement to have financial 
    assurance). Today's rules establish a similar substitution provision 
    for the financial test and the guarantee. See Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(iv) and 
    Sec. 258.74(g)(5). Thus, the Federal regulations would allow an owner 
    or
    
    [[Page 17713]]
    
    operator complying with the financial assurance requirements through, 
    for example, a letter of credit mechanism to switch to a financial test 
    or vice versa, assuming the owner or operator qualifies for the 
    mechanisms and the mechanisms are available under the approved State 
    program. In this way, the Federal regulations give owners and operators 
    of MSWLF units broad flexibility in the mechanisms used to satisfy the 
    financial assurance requirement.
        In switching mechanisms, the owner or operator would be subject to 
    the applicable requirements of the new mechanism. For example, each of 
    the Federal mechanisms contains a specific requirement to provide 
    notice to the State Director, to maintain particular documentation, 
    and/or satisfy other requirements. For an owner or operator of an MSWLF 
    unit to meet the operative requirement that it have an eligible 
    financial assurance mechanism in place by the specific compliance 
    deadlines that ensures that the funds necessary to meet the costs of 
    closure, post-closure care, and corrective action will be available 
    whenever they are needed, then the owner or operator must comply with 
    all of the relevant requirements upon switching mechanisms and may not 
    allow lapses in financial assurance compliance. Additionally, owners 
    and operators should be aware that a State may have more stringent 
    requirements in place and may not allow all of the mechanisms provided 
    for under the Federal rules.
    
    IV. National Solid Wastes Management Association (NSWMA) Petition
    
    A. Discussion of the Petition
    
        On February 16, 1990, NSWMA submitted a rulemaking petition to the 
    Agency requesting that EPA revise various financial assurance 
    requirements. The Agency noted in the preamble to the proposal of this 
    rule (59 FR 51523) that it had addressed many of the concerns raised in 
    the petition in a July 1, 1991 proposed rule (56 FR 30201) and a 
    September 16, 1992 final rule (57 FR 42832). Among the changes in the 
    September 16, 1992 final rule was the adoption of provisions allowing 
    for guarantees by non-parent firms for Subtitle C closure and post-
    closure care financial responsibility requirements. This request had 
    been part of the NSWMA petition. In adopting similar provisions in this 
    rulemaking, EPA is extending this flexibility to private owners and 
    operators of MSWLFs. Local governments already have the flexibility to 
    provide guarantees for MSWLFs under 40 CFR 258.74(h). See 61 FR 60328.
        In addition, when EPA promulgated the final rule on the local 
    government financial test for MSWLFs, it established regulations (40 
    CFR 258.75) giving State Directors the discretion to allow the 
    discounting of MSWLF costs (61 FR 60328). As noted in the Background 
    Section of today's preamble, this discretion applies to both municipal 
    and private owners and operators of MSWLFs. Discounting of costs was 
    another issue in the petition. While today's final rule addresses the 
    use of a financial test and guarantee for financial assurance for MSWLF 
    closure, post-closure care, and, as necessary, corrective action costs, 
    and one more issue (an alternative financial test) raised in this 
    petition, it does not represent the full Agency response to NSWMA's 
    petition. The Agency continues to examine the concerns raised in the 
    NSWMA petition.
    
    B. The Meridian Test
    
        As part of its rulemaking petition, NSWMA submitted an analysis 
    performed by Meridian Corporation which proposed an alternative to 
    EPA's current Subtitle C financial test. In the docket to the proposal 
    for today's rule, EPA included a copy of an analysis performed for EPA 
    that evaluated the test in comparison with the one that EPA proposed to 
    amend the current Subtitle C test. EPA also on September 27, 1996 
    published a Notice of Data Availability (61 FR 50787) providing 
    additional opportunity to comment on this analysis. A summary of the 
    comments EPA received on this notice and the Agency's response appear 
    in the Response to Comments and Summary of Issues section of this 
    preamble.
        In evaluating public comments for the Subtitle D rule adopted 
    today, EPA further examined the Meridian Test using the cost estimates 
    and financial information which it had developed to assess other 
    alternative tests. See Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests in 
    Response to Public Comments, which is available in the public docket. 
    This analysis allowed EPA to assess the Meridian Test along with 
    several other potential tests on a consistent basis using updated 
    information, and to determine whether the Meridian Test would be better 
    than the financial test EPA had proposed for private owners and 
    operators of MSWLFs.
        The analysis showed that the Meridian Test would have public costs 
    approximately 2.36 to 3.45 times larger than those of the test that EPA 
    proposed and is issuing in final form in this rulemaking. (The range in 
    estimates result from varying specifications of the net worth 
    requirements and interpretations of how firms are accounting for 
    financial responsibility requirements in their financial statements.) 
    As discussed in the preamble to the proposed amendments to the 
    financial test for Subtitle C owners and operators (56 FR 30201 at page 
    30210), selection of a test that results in lower public costs is 
    consistent with the Agency's position that it is equitable to make the 
    party that creates the environmental obligation pay for it.
        In its petition, NSWMA noted that the current Subtitle C financial 
    test is less available to some firms to cover large obligations than 
    other alternative tests. In the Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests 
    in Response to Public Comments, EPA found that the use of the financial 
    test being adopted in this rulemaking will allow private MSWLF owners 
    and operators to cover 71.67% of their obligations. Further, EPA's 
    analysis estimates that the private cost of the Meridian Test could 
    range from 42.1% to 122% of the private cost of EPA's test. Again, this 
    range depends upon the net worth specification and interpretations of 
    how firms are accounting for financial responsibility requirements in 
    their financial statements. However, in all the permutations analyzed, 
    the sums of the public and private costs for the Meridian Test are 
    higher than for the test being promulgated in this rule. This provides 
    an additional basis for rejecting the Meridian Test beyond EPA's 
    concern with its higher public cost. EPA believes that this analysis 
    further substantiates its decision not to establish a financial test 
    for private owners or operators of MSWLFs based upon the Meridian Test, 
    and that the Agency has adopted a test for MSWLF obligations that 
    reasonably addresses the concerns in the NSWMA petition about a test 
    that would be more available than the Subtitle C financial test.
    
    V. State Program Approval
    
        Section 4005(c) of RCRA provides that each State adopt and 
    implement a ``permit program or other system of prior approval and 
    conditions'' adequate to assure that each facility that may receive 
    household hazardous waste will comply with the revised MSWLF criteria. 
    EPA is to ``determine whether each State has developed an adequate 
    program'' pursuant to section 4005(c).
        The Agency has procedures for reviewing revised applications for 
    State program adequacy determinations should a State revise its permit 
    program in light of today's final rules. A State
    
    [[Page 17714]]
    
    that receives permit program approval prior to the promulgation of 
    today's rule and later elects to adopt the financial test and guarantee 
    mechanisms should work with its respective Regional EPA office as it 
    proceeds to make changes to its permit program.
        As stated above, today's proposal would amend part 258 by adding 
    options for corporations to use when demonstrating financial assurance 
    for the costs of closure, post-closure care, and clean-up of known 
    releases. EPA generally encourages States to adopt the additional 
    flexibility for financial assurance mechanisms reflected in these final 
    rules. EPA believes that these mechanisms will result in significant 
    cost savings for owners and operators subject to financial assurance 
    requirements. At the same time, EPA believes the financial assurance 
    mechanisms adopted today effectively delineate eligible owners and 
    operators who have a low probability of business failure from owners 
    and operators that are unable to meet their obligations. By restricting 
    the financial test and guarantee to viable firms, the mechanisms in 
    these final rule avoid undue public costs.
        However, States may choose to regulate more stringently than the 
    minimum federal requirements in Part 258. Thus, States may decline to 
    adopt options under this final rule that they deem undesirable. States 
    that have previously adopted Federally-approved financial assurance 
    requirements without this financial test and guarantee are not required 
    to take any action and may elect to retain only their current options. 
    Further, such States may choose to establish their own financial 
    assurance programs so long as they meet the minimum financial assurance 
    requirements in the Federal performance criteria detailed in the 
    October 9, 1991 final rule. (See existing Sec. 258.74(i))
        The criteria that the financial mechanism would need to meet are 
    the following: (1) Ensure that the amount of funds assured is 
    sufficient to cover the costs of closure, post-closure care, and 
    corrective action for known releases when needed; (2) ensure that funds 
    will be available in a timely fashion when needed; (3) guarantee the 
    availability of the required amount of coverage from the effective date 
    of the requirements under 40 CFR 258, Subpart G, or prior to the 
    initial receipt of waste, whichever is later, in the case of closure 
    and post-closure care, and no later than 120 days after the corrective 
    action remedy has been selected in accordance with the requirements of 
    Sec. 258.58, until the owner or operator is released from financial 
    assurance requirements under Secs. 258.71, 258.72 and 258.73; and (4) 
    be legally valid, binding, and enforceable under State and Federal law. 
    See generally 40 CFR 258.74(l).
        As a result, while the Agency has developed financial tests that 
    are designed to meet these performance criteria (the financial test 
    promulgated in this Federal Register and the financial test promulgated 
    November 27, 1996 (61 FR 60328)), approved States could develop their 
    own financial tests that could be used by owners and operators of 
    MSWLFs within those States for demonstrating financial responsibility 
    so long as those tests are determined to have met the performance 
    criteria.
        Similarly, States initially seeking approval for the financial 
    assurance portion of their MSWLF program would have flexibility in 
    adopting Federally-promulgated standards. The State can simply adopt 
    the Federal standard or could adopt a mechanism that meets the Federal 
    performance criteria described above. In the latter case, the mechanism 
    could be used by owners or operators for demonstrating financial 
    responsibility for their MSWLF obligations in that State.
        Owners and operators who can use the options in today's rule under 
    Federally-approved State programs would be required to maintain 
    appropriate documentation of the mechanism in the facility's operating 
    record. They would not be required by Federal rules to submit that 
    documentation to the State, but only to notify the State Director that 
    the required items have been placed in the operating record. However, 
    the Federal rules establish several minimum recordkeeping and reporting 
    requirements. For example, owners and operators using the financial 
    test or guarantee would also be required to update all required 
    financial test information on an annual basis, and retain this 
    information in their operating records. In addition, an owner or 
    operator (or guarantor) that becomes unable to meet the financial test 
    criteria would be required to notify the State Director and establish 
    alternate financial assurance within specified deadlines. Finally, in 
    order to cancel a guarantee, the guarantor would have to notify both 
    the State Director and the owner or operator at least 120 days prior to 
    cancellation.
        However, EPA cautions owners and operators that wish to use the 
    options in the Federal program that they should examine the options 
    available under State law. If the State's rules do not include the 
    option that the owner or operator wishes to use, the owner or operator 
    would run the risk of being out of compliance with State law.
        In unapproved States, if State law did not preclude the use of 
    options established today (either because it did not include any 
    financial assurance requirements, included only a general requirement 
    that left the choice of mechanism to the discretion of the owner or 
    operator, or included mechanisms like those promulgated today), an 
    owner or operator would be able to use the corporate test or guarantee 
    described in today's rule to satisfy both State and Federal law.
        The Agency believes that most Tribes have an accounting structure 
    similar or identical to those of most local governments. Tribes should 
    be eligible to use the local government financial test to demonstrate 
    financial responsibility for their obligations under the MSWLF criteria 
    to the extent that they meet the provisions of that test. However, the 
    Agency recognizes that there may be Tribes and local government units 
    that use an accounting system similar or identical to those of most 
    corporations. Those Tribes and local government units would be eligible 
    to use the corporate financial test established today to demonstrate 
    financial responsibility for their MSWLF obligations to the extent that 
    they meet the relevant requirements.
    
    VI. Response to Comments and Summary of Issues
    
        EPA has endeavored to provide ample opportunity to comment on its 
    October 12, 1994 proposed rule. EPA held a 60-day public comment period 
    on its proposed rule. 59 FR 51523. On September 27, 1996, EPA also 
    published a Notice of Data Availability for a document inadvertently 
    omitted from the docket, and provided additional opportunity to comment 
    on the information. 61 FR 50787.
        EPA received thirty comments (twenty-eight on the original proposal 
    and two on the supplemental notice of data availability) on the 
    proposed rule with the largest number of comments from insurance 
    companies and sureties. The States of Texas, Nebraska, Michigan, and 
    California also commented along with several corporations and 
    associations. EPA has considered and responded to all significant 
    comments in adopting its final rule. The Docket contains a compilation 
    of the comments and EPA's responses. See ``Comment Response Document 
    for Financial Test and Corporate Guarantee for Private Owners or 
    Operators of Municipal Solid Waste
    
    [[Page 17715]]
    
    Landfill Facilities, October 12, 1994 Proposed Rule.''
        Many of the comments raised issues that were outgrowths of topics 
    that had been dealt with in the original proposal, but that benefitted 
    from additional scrutiny in light of public comment. In performing this 
    analysis EPA studied particular topics in additional depth and prepared 
    issue papers on these topics which were used in responding to the 
    public comments. For example, several commenters questioned the 
    appropriateness of the $10 million tangible net worth requirement in 
    the financial test. The proposal had included this requirement, and the 
    analysis of public and private costs had examined the financial 
    information for firms with more than $10 million in net worth. To 
    assess the potential impact of changing this requirement, EPA assembled 
    financial information from Dun and Bradstreet on additional owners and 
    operators of MSWLFs, i.e. those with both more and less than $10 
    million in net worth. EPA then applied the same methodology it had used 
    in support of the proposal to determine the public and private costs of 
    alternative specifications of the financial test (including an 
    alternative test that had been developed by Meridian Research 
    Incorporated for the National Solid Wastes Management Association). The 
    results of this analysis appear in the docket in a report entitled 
    ``Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests in Response to Public 
    Comments.''
        The next sections summarize the major comments and the Agency's 
    response.
    
    A. Minimum Tangible Net Worth
    
        Several commenters raised a variety of issues with the requirement 
    in the proposed rule that firms have a minimum tangible net worth of 
    $10 million plus the amount of obligations being covered by the 
    financial test. One commenter suggested that the requirement was too 
    little, particularly in the case of firms owning multiple landfills. 
    Some comments agreed with its reasonableness. Others characterized the 
    requirement as overly strict because it limited the availability of the 
    test to larger firms.
        In evaluating comments on the impact of the net worth requirement, 
    EPA acquired updated financial information on the MSWLF industry. This 
    information allowed EPA to examine further the net worth requirements, 
    and determine whether the financial ratios were appropriate. The 
    additional analysis included firms with net worth lower than $10 
    million. This analysis relied upon financial information which EPA 
    acquired from Dun and Bradstreet, bond ratings from Standard and Poor's 
    and Moody's, and EPA cost estimates which had supported the proposal 
    analysis, and on which EPA had received no comments. A full description 
    of the data base and the analysis appears in the memoranda entitled 
    ``Description of Data Used in the Analysis of Subtitles C and D 
    Financial Tests,'' and ``Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests in 
    Response to Public Comments'' which are available in the public docket 
    for this rulemaking.
        As examined further below, EPA received comments that the proposed 
    minimum net worth requirement creates a competitive disadvantage for 
    and affects smaller firms. EPA emphasizes that today's rule does not 
    impose new regulatory requirments on any firm but would allow owners 
    and operators of MSWLFs additional flexibility in meeting the existing 
    financial assurance requirements. The existing financial assurance 
    requirements are to ensure that owners and operators of MSWLF units 
    will have the funds available to meet the costs of closure, post-
    closure care, and corrective action whenever they are needed. The 
    existing regulations meet that objective by establishing a number of 
    third-party mechanisms, as well as performance criteria for additional 
    State-approved mechanisms, that could be used by owners or operators in 
    meeting the financial assurance requirement. Today's rulemaking adds a 
    financial test and a corporate guarantee as two additional, less costly 
    mechanisms that could be used by eligible private owners or operators 
    of MSWLFs to demonstrate financial responsibility under the existing 
    regulatory requirements. Entities able to use these mechanisms would be 
    allowed to demonstrate financial responsibility without incurring the 
    costs of obtaining a third-party mechanism.
        No small or large entity will be required to use the alternative 
    mechanisms promulgated today. Further, as noted, States are not 
    required to make these mechanisms available under their programs. 
    However, all entities in States that allow these new mechanisms and 
    that choose to make use of, and meet the relevant criteria for, the 
    financial test or guarantee established by this rule will benefit from 
    the savings that these alternative mechanisms offer. While presumably 
    both small or large entities will choose to use one of the new 
    mechanisms only if it is in their interest to do so, requirements apply 
    to any firm ultimately seeking to use one of the alternative 
    mechanisms. EPA has endeavored to reasonably minimize the requirements 
    associated with the mechanisms and thereby promote private cost savings 
    while at the same time limiting the public costs.
        As noted above, the basic purpose of the financial assurance 
    program is to ensure that corporate owners and operators of MSWLF units 
    are financially able to meet their obligations for closure, post-
    closure care, and corrective action. The existing financial assurance 
    requirements apply to all such owners and operators, regardless of 
    their size, in view of the potential harm and public costs that can 
    result if an owner or operator is unable to meet its responsibility for 
    closure, post-closure care, and corrective action at a MSWLF unit. 
    Today's rule adds a financial test that allows a less costly means of 
    providing financial assurance to entities financially capable of 
    covering the costs themselves, through self-insurance, or relying on a 
    guarantor that meets the financial test. The basis for the financial 
    test is necessarily tied to the financial capability of the MSWLF or 
    guarantor. Later in the discussions of the public comments sections 
    entitled Tangible Net Worth Does Not Have to Be Liquid and Bond Rating, 
    EPA also examined the question of whether the financial test would 
    create an uneven playing field and did not find that the savings 
    potentially available from this rule would be sufficient to create a 
    significant competitive advantage.
        After examining the minimum net worth requirement in light of the 
    public comments on the proposal, EPA concluded that the increase in 
    public costs under a financial test that did not include this 
    requirement would not justify the anticipated reduction in private 
    costs. As noted in the section entitled Public Costs of Lower Net Worth 
    Levels, there is an equity issue involving higher public costs. Higher 
    public costs mean that costs that should have been borne by the owner 
    or operator (and customers) of a landfill that goes bankrupt are 
    unfairly transferred to society in general. Because of this fairness 
    issue and other factors discussed below, EPA determined that it was 
    appropriate to retain this component of the financial test even though 
    the test EPA is establishing has a higher calculated sum of public and 
    private costs than would have been the case had EPA selected this test 
    with a lower minimum tangible net worth requirement. The test EPA is 
    establishing has lower public costs and provides substantial private 
    savings. Of course, if contradictory new information
    
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    is presented to EPA in the future, EPA will further examine this issue.
        Further, EPA's existing rules for financial assurance under 40 CFR 
    part 258, subpart G provide States with broad flexibility to fashion 
    financial assurance mechanisms so long as the mechanisms meet the 
    performance criteria at 40 CFR 258.74(l). Thus, in implementing the 
    existing regulations, States can make specific judgments about 
    additional flexibility in meeting the financial assurance requirements. 
    Such judgments are more difficult in a general national rulemaking, 
    where broader delineations must be made. Indeed, EPA encourages States 
    to make reasoned judgments in implementing the performance criteria in 
    the existing rules, including providing flexibility for firms in 
    circumstances that States determine to reasonably balance the public 
    and private cost of financial assurance. However, in this national 
    rulemaking, EPA was faced with the choice of allowing eligible firms 
    the potential regulatory flexibility of a financial test or foregoing 
    the regulatory flexibility of a financial test altogether because it 
    may not benefit all firms in the MSWLF industry. Faced with that 
    choice, EPA determined it was reasonable to provide the regulatory 
    flexibility for qualifying firms.
    1. Minimum Tangible Net Worth Requirement Is Too Low
        Comment: The minimum tangible net worth requirement is inadequate 
    for firms with multiple facilities.
        Response: The concern that the net worth minimum is inadequate for 
    firms with multiple facilities overlooks the interrelationships between 
    the net worth requirement and the other components of the test. For a 
    firm to use the financial test, it can only assure an amount that is up 
    to $10 million less than its net worth, unless it has already 
    recognized all of its environmental obligations as liabilities. Firms 
    with multiple landfills will have high levels of assets which must be 
    matched by the sum of their liabilities and net worth. It is an axiom 
    of accounting that assets minus liabilities equals net worth. An 
    example will illustrate why a firm with more landfills and a 
    correspondingly higher level of assets will also have a higher level of 
    net worth than the $10 million minimum. Suppose a firm had multiple 
    landfills such that it had $200 million in assets. For it to meet the 
    liability to net worth (leverage) ratio of 1.5 under the financial test 
    adopted in today's rule, it would have liabilities of less than $120 
    million and a net worth of at least $80 million which is substantially 
    in excess of the $10 million minimum.
        If, on the other hand, the hypothetical firm with $200 million in 
    assets attempted to pass the financial test with only $20 million in 
    net worth and $180 million in liabilities through the profitability 
    ratio alternative of the test, it would have to show substantial 
    profitability to succeed. In the profitability ratio alternative of the 
    test, the ratio of the sum of net income plus depreciation, depletion, 
    and amortization, minus $10 million, to total liabilities must be 
    greater than 0.10. With $180 million in liabilities, the hypothetical 
    firm would have to have a cash flow (the sum of net income plus 
    depreciation, depletion, and amortization) of more than $28 million, 
    even after paying interest on a substantial debt. This amounts to over 
    140% of net worth, and would be difficult to achieve. Furthermore, the 
    additive requirement restricts the amount that could be covered through 
    the financial test. For firms that have not recognized all of their 
    environmental obligations as liabilities, the additive requirement 
    restricts the amount that can be covered to $10 million less than their 
    net worth. In this particular example, the firm would be able to cover 
    $10 million in environmental obligations which is much less than the 
    $28 million in net income plus depreciation, depletion and amortization 
    necessary to utilize the profitability ratio under the test. Like the 
    leverage ratio, the profitability ratio of the test favors firms with 
    relatively low debt ratios, and correspondingly high net worth ratios. 
    Additional information on this point appears in Issue Paper, Recent 
    Consolidation and Acquisitions in the Solid Waste Industry, which is 
    available in the public docket.
        Bond rating agencies also favor firms with relatively low debt 
    levels, and tend to grant more favorable ratings to firms with large 
    net worth. Thus, under the bond rating alternative as well as the 
    financial ratio alternatives, firms with several operations and large 
    assets would have to have substantially more than the $10 million 
    minimum net worth to utilize the financial test. For example, EPA's 
    analysis estimated that the two largest firms expected to be able to 
    use the financial test have MSWLF financial assurance obligations which 
    are approximately $1.7 and $1.4 billion, respectively. Their 
    corresponding net worth are $5.3 and $2.8 billion, figures 
    substantially higher than the $10 million minimum net worth 
    requirement.
        The additive requirement (tangible net worth of $10 million plus 
    the amount being assured), limits the amount of environmental 
    obligations that a firm can assure when it has passed the financial 
    test. For the firms in EPA's analysis with the third and fourth largest 
    number of landfills, EPA's estimate of their closure and post closure 
    financial assurance obligations exceeds their net worth. The additive 
    requirement means that these firms may need to provide a third party 
    instrument for some of their obligations.
    2. The $10 Million Net Worth Requirement Is Too Restrictive
        Comment: Several commenters objected to the $10 million in tangible 
    net worth requirement as being overly strict and restricting the test 
    to larger firms.
        Response: In analyzing these comments EPA considered several 
    factors including the value of the obligations that could potentially 
    be assured by the test, how these obligations are reflected in the 
    firms' financial statements, the accuracy of the financial test at 
    lower net worth levels, and the increase in costs that could be borne 
    by the public if a firm that uses the financial test would go bankrupt 
    and be unable to fulfill its obligations. Based upon analyses of these 
    factors, EPA has decided to retain the $10 million in net worth 
    requirement for the test being promulgated today.
        a. The Size of Closure Obligations. The net worth of a firm equals 
    the value of its assets minus the value of its liabilities. As provided 
    in 40 CFR 264.141, ``liabilities'' mean ``probable future sacrifices of 
    economic benefits arising from present obligations to transfer assets 
    or provide services to other entities in the future as a result of past 
    transactions or events.'' EPA estimated in the analysis supporting the 
    proposal that closure and post-closure obligations for MSWLFs range 
    from $5.1 million (for a landfill with less than 275 tons per day) to 
    $24 million for a landfill of more than 1125 tons per day. EPA received 
    no public comments on the accuracy of these estimates, and so in the 
    additional analysis supporting this notice merely updated them for 
    inflation so that they would be in 1995 dollars like the financial 
    information on the firms. This led to estimates ranging from $5.5 
    million to $26.1 million. (See the memorandum entitled ``Analysis of 
    Subtitle D Financial Tests in Response to Public Comments.'') These 
    costs represent substantial liabilities that are largely paid at the 
    end of the landfill's life when there would be no revenue from tipping 
    fees. Therefore it is
    
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    important to ensure that adequate provisions have been made for their 
    recognition and payment.
        These estimates can represent several multiples of a firm's 
    liabilities (and net worth). These cost estimates combined with the 
    financial information on firms with less than $10 million in net worth 
    show that firms with relatively small net worth can accrue relatively 
    large liabilities for closure and post-closure obligations. Under such 
    a circumstance a firm that would have to undertake closure would be 
    forced into bankruptcy (negative net worth) by closure.
        b. Recognition of Closure Obligations. The financial analysis of 
    firms with net worth between $1 million and $10 million show that these 
    environmental obligations may not be universally recognized. When EPA 
    examined the liabilities, net worth and estimated financial assurance 
    amounts for forty firms with net worth between $1 and $10 million, it 
    found that many of these firms had estimated financial assurance 
    obligations that exceeded their net worth (thirty-seven) and their 
    reported liabilities (thirty-five). In the instances of firms with 
    financial assurance obligations that exceed their liabilities, this 
    strongly implies that they are not recognizing these obligations as 
    liabilities, particularly because liabilities also include money owed 
    to creditors such as banks. This inconsistent reporting of landfill 
    closure obligations has been reported by the Financial Accounting 
    Standards Board (See, for example, pages 1 and 2 Exposure Draft, 
    Proposed Statement of Financial Accounting Standards, Accounting for 
    Certain Liabilities Related to Closure or Removal of Long-Lived Assets, 
    No. 158-B, February 7, 1996, Financial Accounting Standards Board).
        Firms that do not recognize their closure and post-closure care 
    obligations as liabilities also may be overstating their ability to 
    pass a financial test if they had to recognize their environmental 
    obligations as liabilities. This arises because both financial test 
    ratios utilize liabilities as a factor and require that the ratio meet 
    a particular threshold (e.g. total liabilities divided by net worth 
    must be less than 1.5). A higher amount of recorded liabilities for the 
    same net worth or cash flow can make it more difficult for a firm to 
    qualify for the financial test.
        EPA is interested in having more uniformity in the reporting of 
    financial assurance obligations. EPA is concerned that the absence of a 
    minimum net worth requirement may have the undesirable effect of 
    favoring firms that do not record their environmental obligations as 
    liabilities. The provision of the rule that requires a firm to have at 
    least $10 million in tangible net worth over the amount of 
    environmental obligations being covered ensures that firms that have 
    not recognized their obligations as liabilities will still have 
    adequate net worth to fulfill their obligations.
        If a firm has already recognized all of its environmental 
    obligations as liabilities, it could demonstrate less ability to cover 
    them through the financial test than if it had not recognized them as 
    liabilities. EPA received comments that the additive requirement would 
    have an impact on small owners or operators and effectively required a 
    higher coverage ratio for them. To address these concerns, and to 
    assist smaller owners or operators who have already recognized their 
    environmental obligations as liabilities, EPA is establishing a special 
    provision. Under this provision, a firm that has recognized all of its 
    MSWLF closure, post closure care, or corrective action liabilities 
    under 40 CFR 258.71, 258.72 and 285.73, obligations associated with UIC 
    facilities under 40 CFR 144.62, petroleum underground storage tank 
    facilities under 40 CFR part 280, PCB storage facilities under 40 CFR 
    part 761, and hazardous waste treatment, storage, and disposal 
    facilities under 40 CFR parts 264 and 265 can utilize the financial 
    test if it meets the other requirements of the test, receives the 
    approval of the State Director, and still maintains a tangible net 
    worth of at least $10 million plus the amount of any guarantees it has 
    undertaken that have not been recognized as liabilities. See 
    Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(ii)(B). This addition of any guarantees is necessary 
    because EPA does not expect that a guarantee extended by a corporation 
    will appear on that company's financial statement until it is drawn 
    upon and is recorded as a liability. The Agency believes that the 
    additional flexibility allowed by this provision creates an incentives 
    for owners or operators to fully recognize their environmental 
    obligations in their audited financial statements.
        For an owner or operator to qualify for this alternative, it will 
    be necessary for the letter from the chief financial officer to include 
    a report from the independent certified public accountant verifying 
    that all of the environmental obligations covered by a financial test 
    have been recognized as liabilities on the audited financial 
    statements, how these obligations have been measured and reporteed, and 
    that the net worth of the firm is at least $10 million plus the amount 
    of any guarantees provided. See Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(i)(D).
        EPA recognizes that its treatment in this rule of environmental 
    obligations that have already been recognized as liabilities differs 
    from the treatment in the hazardous waste financial test in 40 CFR 
    264.151(f) and in the proposed amendments to those rules (56 FR 30201, 
    July 1, 1991). In the current hazardous waste rules and the proposed 
    amendments, closure and post closure care obligations which have 
    already been recognized as liabilities can be deducted from the 
    liabilities and added back to net worth for purposes of calculating the 
    financial test. This adjustment provision was incorporated into the 
    regulations ``in order not to penalize those firms that do include 
    these costs in their liabilities'' (47 FR 15037, April 7, 1982). The 
    proposal for today's rule did not include a similar adjustment 
    provision, nor did the Agency receive comments suggesting incorporating 
    such a provision. The proposal was consistent with the research in the 
    Background Document which found a high availability of the test without 
    incorporating an adjustment of liabilities or net worth as allowed by 
    the current Subtitle C regulations. This finding was supported in the 
    analysis associated with the public comments which found that the 
    financial test would be available to cover approximately 72% of 
    obligations even in the absence of the adjustment.
        EPA does not have information on the extent to which companies have 
    recognized all of their environmental obligations as liabilities. 
    However, in its analysis of alternative tests, EPA examined a test 
    designated as Test 58-10 that required the same bond ratings and 
    financial ratios as the final rule, but would allow a firm with at 
    least $10 million in tangible net worth that passed the requirements to 
    cover any amount of environmental obligation with the financial test. 
    Conceptually, the results from this test provide an upper bound 
    estimate of approximately 82% for the maximum percent of obligations 
    that could be covered with the adjustment if allowed by the State 
    Director.
        EPA believes that substantial progress has been made since the 
    issuance of the 1982 hazardous waste financial assurance regulations in 
    the recognition of environmental obligations as liabilities. Further, 
    the rationale for allowing this adjustment was based upon fairness to 
    firms who had recognized these obligations as liabilities, rather than 
    a belief by EPA that these obligations should not be treated as 
    liabilities. The Agency
    
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    continues to consider environmental obligations for closure, post-
    closure care, and corrective action as meeting the definition of 
    liabilities as ``probable future sacrifices of economic benefits 
    arising from present obligations to transfer assets or provide services 
    to other entities in the future as a result of past transactions or 
    events.'' (40 CFR 264.141(f)) As more firms recognize these obligations 
    as liabilities, the basis for granting an adjustment to the liability 
    and net worth measures in financial statements because of fairness has 
    diminished, while their recognition as liabilities has become more 
    accepted in the financial community. Thus, there is less of a need to 
    allow an adjustment of liabilities and net worth in the calculation of 
    the financial ratios.
        This final rule allows those firms who have already recognized all 
    of their environmental obligations as liabilities in their financial 
    statements and who pass the financial test to assure for a potentially 
    higher amount of obligations than would otherwise be allowed. EPA 
    believes that this approach has preserved fairness while maintaining 
    the notion of these environmental obligations as liabilities, and 
    reduced the administrative burden of adjusting figures on the balance 
    sheets. EPA will continue to assess the utility of the adjustment 
    provision proposed for 264.151(f), and may determine that it is 
    appropriate to promulgate a final Subtitle C financial test regulation 
    that would take a similar approach to that used in this regulation.
        c. Accuracy of the Test at Lower Net Worth Levels. EPA also 
    examined whether its financial test would operate as well for firms 
    with less than $10 million in net worth. Practically, no financial test 
    can perfectly discriminate between firms that should be allowed to use 
    the financial test and, therefore, not have to pay the cost of a third 
    party mechanism, and firms that will go bankrupt and so should have to 
    use a third party instrument. As a test becomes less stringent so that 
    it becomes more available (such as by reducing the net worth 
    requirement), it carries a higher risk that firms will qualify for the 
    test that will enter bankruptcy. The worse the test is at screening out 
    firms that will enter bankruptcy, the higher its misprediction rate. 
    Moreover, since a test will not be perfect at screening out firms that 
    will enter bankruptcy, a test that allows more obligations to be 
    covered with a financial test will have a higher dollar amount of 
    misprediction. EPA's analysis assessed the misprediction of the various 
    tests and the attendant public costs. These public costs are the costs 
    to the public sector of paying for financial assurance obligations for 
    firms that pass the test but later go bankrupt without funding their 
    obligations. This analysis revealed that the financial test had a 66% 
    higher misprediction rate (1.067%) when applied to firms with less than 
    $10 million in net worth than to firms with more than $10 million 
    (0.644% to 0.233%) (See Issue Paper, Relevant Risk Factors to Consider 
    in a Financial Test, which is available in the public docket). This 
    means that without the $10 million net worth requirement, the test 
    would not be as good at screening out firms that will enter bankruptcy 
    at the lower net worth levels.
        d. Public Costs of Lower Net Worth Levels. The higher misprediction 
    rate for the test with a lower net worth requirement leads to higher 
    public costs. Since these public costs are the costs to the public 
    sector of paying for financial assurance obligations for firms that 
    pass the test and later go bankrupt without fulfilling their 
    obligations, an increase in public costs represents a departure from 
    the Agency's ``polluters pay'' philosophy. Higher public costs in this 
    instance would mean that costs that should have been borne by the owner 
    or operator (or the landfill's customers) were transferred to society 
    in general. This means that the customers of landfills that do not go 
    bankrupt unfairly subsidize the customers of landfills that did not 
    provide the funds for proper closure and post-closure care. This 
    subsidy is through government expenditures for closure and post-closure 
    care of the bankrupt landfills. EPA estimates that reducing the minimum 
    net worth requirement for the financial test from $10 million to $1 
    million would increase the public cost of the financial test from $11.7 
    million to $13.2 million annually. This would have represented a 13% 
    increase in public costs. In light of the substantial closure costs 
    involved compared to the net worth of firms with less than $10 million 
    in net worth, the reduced ability of the test to screen out firms that 
    will go bankrupt, and the increased public cost of reducing the net 
    worth requirement, EPA has declined to change this requirement. 
    However, as discussed above, in light of concerns about impacts on 
    smaller owners and operators, EPA has established a provision that 
    would allow firms that have recognized all of their environmental 
    obligations as liabilities additional flexibility in meeting the 
    minimum net worth requirement, subject to the approval of the State 
    Director.
    3. Allow Firms to Include Closure and Post Closure Funds as Part of Net 
    Worth
        Comment: One company suggested that EPA allow any funded liability 
    such as Closure/Post-Closure Trust Funds to be added to tangible net 
    worth when calculating the size requirement.
        Response: The financial test provides a mechanism that companies 
    may use to demonstrate financial responsibility for closure, post-
    closure and, if necessary, corrective action obligations. The 
    obligations covered by the financial test are those for which the 
    company has not already provided financial assurance through a third 
    party mechanism. Under the commenter's suggestion, funds in a trust for 
    closure costs not covered by the financial test would be added to 
    tangible net worth. EPA has historically deferred judgments on 
    accounting matters to generally accepted accounting principles (See, 
    for example, 40 CFR 264.141(f)). In this instance as well, EPA defers 
    to the application of generally accepted accounting principles to 
    determine the assets, liabilities and resultant net worth of the 
    company. If the application of generally accepted accounting principles 
    determines that the trust funds are assets of the company, then they 
    can be counted against the tangible net worth to the extent allowed by 
    the recognition of the company's liabilities.
        Furthermore, the information on firms' financial statements which 
    EPA used to assess the financial tests for the proposed and this 
    rulemaking were based upon the application of generally accepted 
    accounting principles. EPA used the information based upon generally 
    accepted accounting principles to determine the public and private 
    costs of the financial test. EPA does not have information on how a 
    test would operate based upon some other system of financial 
    measurement. Therefore EPA has declined to specify particular additions 
    to net worth for purposes of the financial test, but would interpret 
    the tangible net worth requirement to be determined consistent with 
    generally accepted accounting principles.
    4. The Net Worth Requirement Reduces the Market for Sureties
        Comment: Other commenters objected to the net worth requirement as 
    unnecessary because it would allow the financially stronger companies 
    with greater net worth to utilize the financial test and thereby remove 
    these companies from the market for sureties and other third party 
    instruments.
        Response: The financial test allows those companies with the lowest
    
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    probability of failure, and hence the least need for a third party 
    financial responsibility instrument, to self insure. EPA estimates that 
    the closure and post-closure obligations for private owners and 
    operators total approximately $6.4 billion. The cost for private owners 
    or operators to obtain third party mechanisms, such as letters of 
    credit or surety bonds, to assure these obligations is estimated at 
    approximately $123 million. With today's rule, EPA estimates that the 
    private cost of third party mechanisms would be $45.6 million for 
    obligations that cannot be covered by the financial test. This will 
    provide savings to owners and operators of MSWLFs of approximately $77 
    million annually.
        The effect of this rule may be to reduce the market for certain 
    types of third party financial responsibility instruments, but it does 
    not eliminate the market which would still total approximately $45.6 
    million annually. This rule does not eliminate any of the third party 
    instruments as options for a firm to use to comply with the 
    regulations. In addition to sureties, the allowable instruments include 
    trust funds, irrevocable standby letters of credit, insurance, or 
    state-approved mechanisms. Therefore, even if sureties or insurers were 
    to decide not to provide financial assurance (an outcome which EPA does 
    not expect), owners or operators would still have mechanisms available 
    for demonstrating financial assurance. EPA notes that the types of 
    instruments available for demonstrating financial assurance for MSWLFs 
    are similar to those for Subtitle C facilities, and other financial 
    responsibility programs which help to sustain this market. It is EPA's 
    experience that sureties provide financial assurance mechanisms for 
    Subtitle C facilities, even though many Subtitle C facilities are able 
    to utilize the financial test.
        EPA also examined whether the availability of the financial test 
    would cause some form of adverse selection whereby only ``bad risk'' 
    firms would form the market for third party instruments and these ``bad 
    risk'' firms would be unable to obtain a third party guarantee. EPA's 
    financial test maximizes the availability of the test to strong firms 
    while minimizing the number of firms allowed to use the test that later 
    go bankrupt without covering their environmental obligations. Since no 
    test can perfectly discriminate between financially viable firms and 
    nonviable firms, a number of viable, financially sound firms will be 
    unable to use the test. The financial test is a conservative predictor 
    of long term viability and therefore a particular firm's inability to 
    cover all or some of its obligations using the financial test does not 
    necessarily mean that it poses an unreasonable risk for third-party 
    guarantors of financial responsibility such as the insurance or surety 
    industry.
        Even though a firm does not pass the financial test, it remains a 
    viable candidate for third party instruments. While such firms are not 
    candidates for EPA's financial test, banks provide direct lending to 
    these types of firms. Banks, for example, have the flexibility to 
    require collateral or charge a higher interest rate to control their 
    risk. A surety company also has ways to control its risk such as filing 
    with a state a rating plan that decreases its rates for firms that meet 
    certain financial strength requirements and charges higher rates to 
    higher risk firms. For additional information on these points, please 
    see the Issue Paper in the docket entitled Effects of the Financial 
    Test on the Surety Industry.
    5. Tangible Net Worth Does Not Have To Be Liquid
        Comment: One commenter on the net worth requirement objected to the 
    selection of tangible net worth because there was not a requirement 
    that the assets had to be liquid, it can fluctuate dramatically so that 
    a firm could qualify and then not qualify for the financial test, and 
    it would create an uneven playing field with smaller owners and 
    operators being unable to utilize the financial test.
        Response: The proposed financial test did not include a requirement 
    that owners or operators maintain a certain amount of liquid assets in 
    addition to the other requirements such as minimum tangible net worth. 
    The proposal relied upon two financial ratios, a leverage ratio of less 
    than 1.5 based on the ratio of total liabilities to net worth, and a 
    profitability ratio of greater than 0.10 based on the ratio of the sum 
    of net income plus depreciation, depletion, and amortization, minus $10 
    million, to total liabilities. The leverage ratio and profitability 
    ratios are highly effective in discriminating between viable and 
    bankrupt firms, but liquidity ratios which measure firms' liquid assets 
    are not as effective in discriminating between viable and bankrupt 
    firms. In fact, liquidity ratios can be misleading as firms in 
    financial distress often liquidate fixed assets to generate cash to 
    continue operations. (For more information on these points, please see 
    Chapter 4 of the Background Document, Revisions to the Subtitle C 
    Financial Tests for Closure, Post-Closure Care and Liability Coverage, 
    which was prepared in support of the July 1, 1991 proposed changes to 
    the Subtitle C financial test 56 FR 30201).
        While the market valuation of a corporation's stock can vary 
    significantly, its net worth is a much more stable measure. Since net 
    worth reflects the accounting value of the corporation's assets minus 
    its liabilities, it will not have the volatility associated with the 
    value of the company's stock that varies with the stock market's 
    expectations of future dividends and interest rates. While it is 
    possible that a firm could have a tangible net worth value close to the 
    $10 million threshold, it seems unlikely that many would have a value 
    close to this requirement and have losses and profits that would 
    alternately bring them above or below the threshold. Also, the 
    requirement for at least $10 million in net worth is reasonable in 
    light of the substantial ($5.5 million for a 275 ton per day MSWLF to 
    $26 million for a 1125 ton per day MSWLF) closure and post-closure 
    costs for a MSWLF (See ``Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests in 
    Response to Public Comments''), and other factors analyzed above.
        Further, the use of the financial test does not create a 
    significant competitive advantage. The cost of providing financial 
    assurance through an alternative third party mechanism such as a letter 
    of credit is approximately $1.35 to $0.94 per ton for 375 to 1500 ton 
    per day landfills. This is not a large enough price difference to 
    change substantially the competitive structure in many markets. Other 
    factors are more important to competition within the industry. For 
    example, transportation costs for transfer facilities can amount to 
    $4.30 per ton, and an additional $4.30 to $7.50 per ton for every 100 
    miles for rail and truck hauling respectively. (For further information 
    please see Issue Paper, Market Effects of the Financial Test.) Further, 
    the alternative of maintaining the status quo would withhold greater 
    flexibility for financially viable firms. EPA believes it is reasonable 
    to extend regulatory flexibility to firms expected to be viable.
    6. MSWLFs Should Have a Lower Minimum Net Worth Requirement Than 
    Subtitle C Facilities
        Comment: One commenter suggested that since MSWLFs pose less risk 
    than hazardous waste activities, that the use of the same $10 million 
    threshold for entry into the industry is much more appropriate for 
    Subtitle C than for firms operating only in the MSWLF industry, and 
    that EPA should choose a lower threshold for the municipal solid waste 
    sector.
    
    [[Page 17720]]
    
        Response: This comment confuses the criteria for the financial 
    test, which is one of the mechanisms for demonstrating financial 
    responsibility, with EPA's broader requirement that companies 
    demonstrate financial responsibility. For municipal solid waste 
    landfills, EPA has long established financial assurance requirements at 
    40 CFR 258.71 for closure, 258.72 for post-closure care, and 258.73 for 
    corrective action. These provisions already made a distinction between 
    the financial responsibility requirements for MSWLFs and those for 
    hazardous waste operations. Under 40 CFR 264.147 and 265.147 hazardous 
    waste operations must maintain liability coverage for accidental 
    occurrences, while EPA has deferred a corresponding requirement for 
    MSWLFs (56 FR 51105). The fundamental requirements to maintain 
    financial responsibility are not the subject of this rulemaking. 
    Rather, this rule provides additional flexibility for private owners 
    and operators to meet the financial responsibility requirements.
        The demonstration of financial assurance can be through several 
    mechanisms, including a financial test. There is no net worth 
    requirement for firms to enter either the hazardous or municipal waste 
    industry. The $10 million in net worth is only to qualify for the use 
    of the financial test.
    7. EPA's Proposed Net Worth Requirement Was Not the Best Investigated
        Comment: Two commenters preferred a test with a net worth 
    requirement at least equal to the amount being assured to EPA's 
    proposal of at least $10 million plus the amount being assured. They 
    noted that the two tests had the same public and private costs, and 
    argued that this meant that the test EPA proposed was therefore not 
    preferable to the other.
        Response: The preamble to the proposed MSWLF financial test 
    includes calculated private and public costs for three candidate tests 
    which incorporate the same leverage and cash flow ratios or bond rating 
    requirements, but differ in the amount of obligations that could be 
    covered through the financial test. Test 562, which is the test that 
    EPA proposed, allows a firm to cover obligation up to $10 million less 
    than its net worth (i.e. the test requires a net worth at least $10 
    million greater than the amount being assured). Test 130 allows a firm 
    with at least $10 million in net worth to cover obligations up to the 
    amount of its net worth. Test 58 allows a firm with $10 million in net 
    worth to cover any amount of obligations. Based upon the commenters' 
    suggestion that EPA's proposal had wrongly rejected Test 130 in favor 
    of Test 562, EPA reviewed all three tests using updated financial 
    information from Dun and Bradstreet, Moody's and Standard & Poor's. 
    This analysis appears in the docket under the title ``Analysis of 
    Subtitle D Financial Tests in Response to Public Comments.''
        Under the proposed test (identified as number 562-10 in the 
    report), an owner or operator who meets the other test criteria can 
    assure obligations as long as the firm's tangible net worth is at least 
    $10 million larger than the obligation. This test has a private cost of 
    $45.6 million and a public cost of $11.7 million for a total cost of 
    $57.3 million. The private cost of the test represents the cost for 
    owners or operators to provide a third party instrument (e.g. letter of 
    credit) to demonstrate financial responsibility under the existing 
    financial assurance requirements. The public costs represent the costs 
    to the public sector of paying for financial assurance obligations 
    (e.g. closure or post-closure costs) for firms that pass the test but 
    later go bankrupt without funding their obligations. The cost figures 
    for this and the other tests analyzed differ from the costs in the 
    preamble to the proposal largely because the analysis performed in 
    response to public comments included firms with less than $10 million 
    in net worth. Therefore the private cost figures include not only the 
    cost of securing a third party instrument for firms with more than $10 
    million in net worth, but also for firms with less than $10 million in 
    net worth.
        Under Test 130-10 the owner or operator with at least $10 million 
    in net worth and meeting the other criteria of the test can assure 
    obligations up to the net worth of the firm. For this test the private 
    cost is lower at $43.2 million because a larger value of obligations 
    can be assured. However, the public cost is higher than for Test 562 at 
    $12.2 million for a total cost of $55.4 million.
        Under Test 58-10 the owner or operator who passes the other 
    criteria of the test could assure any amount of obligations so long as 
    the company has a tangible net worth of at least $10 million. This test 
    has a private cost of $32.9 million and a public cost of $14.1 million 
    for a total cost of $46.9 million.
        These cost estimates demonstrate that there are differences between 
    Test 562, Test 130 and Test 58. Most notably, Test 562 has the lowest 
    public costs of the three tests. EPA is concerned that allowing a 
    company to assure environmental obligations up to the amount of its net 
    worth, or any amount of obligations, could mean that these obligations 
    could, of themselves, cause a firm's bankruptcy and so in the final 
    rule adopted a regulation based upon the criteria in Test 562. However, 
    the commenter's suggestion that EPA re-examine the relative merits of 
    the tests led EPA to re-consider the appropriateness of Test 562 for 
    firms that fully recognize environmental obligations as liabilities in 
    financial statements. The provisions of today's rule which allow a firm 
    that has recognized all of its environmental obligations as liabilities 
    to assure them as long as it has at least $10 million in net worth 
    (plus the amount of any guarantees not recognized on its financial 
    statements) and meets the other criteria of the financial test means 
    that these provisions with these important qualifications, are 
    conceptually similar to the requirements of Test 58. As such these 
    companies can assure a higher level of obligations than they could 
    under Test 130. Therefore EPA believes that this provision potentially 
    provides a larger amount of regulatory relief than the adoption of Test 
    130 since Test 58 has a lower private cost.
    8. The Tangible Net Worth Requirement Is Appropriate
        In addition to comments objecting to the proposed tangible net 
    worth requirement, EPA also received comments supporting it. These 
    comments came from the Texas Natural Resources Conservation Commission, 
    and Browning-Ferris Industries. In addition, the State of Nebraska 
    commented that they had no objection to the proposed financial test.
    
    B. Bond Ratings
    
        Comment: One commenter suggested that the proposed financial test 
    accept ratings by Duff & Phelps, and Fitch in addition to bond ratings 
    by Moody's, and Standard & Poor's.
        Response: Both Standard & Poor's, and Moody's publish information 
    on how often bonds with various ratings have defaulted. This 
    information confirms that bonds with investment grade ratings from 
    these rating agencies have low default rates. The default rate 
    information allows EPA to determine the risk associated with accepting 
    particular bond ratings and to compare the default rates of bonds with 
    various ratings given by the rating agencies. While Duff & Phelps and 
    Fitch also provide bond ratings, they do not publish information on 
    default rates by bond rating and so EPA is unable to assess the default 
    rate for bonds rated by Duff & Phelps and Fitch. When EPA
    
    [[Page 17721]]
    
    promulgated the financial test for Subtitle C facilities on April 7, 
    1982 (47 FR 15036), it limited the use of bond ratings to the services 
    that could provide information on the performance of their bond ratings 
    over time. Today's rule is consistent with that policy.
        Long after the close of the public comment period and as this rule 
    was undergoing Agency review, EPA received information from Fitch 
    Investor Services about default rates. EPA has requested additional and 
    clarifying information about Fitch's default rates to help it evaluate 
    this issue. EPA decided not to delay the promulgation of this rule 
    while it is reviewing this issue. Instead, EPA consider this 
    information and other information it obtains on the accuracy of bond 
    ratings by services other than Standard & Poor's, and Moody's in the 
    forthcoming promulgation of changes to the Subtitle C financial test. A 
    copy of the information from Fitch and EPA's follow-up correspondence 
    is available in the public docket for the rulemaking proposing 
    revisions to the Subtitle C financial test. (56 FR 30201)
        Comment: While supporting the use of bond ratings, one commenter 
    noted that the proposed rule and preamble make no distinction relative 
    to the seniority of the debt.
        Response: The commenter correctly noted that the only qualification 
    on the bond to be rated was that it be the most recent. As noted above, 
    an analysis of bond ratings showed that bond ratings have been a good 
    indicator of firm defaults. Part of the basis of the bond ratings is 
    the assurances for timely repayment for the bond. A bond which is 
    collateralized or insured will, in general, carry a higher rating than 
    otherwise.
        The bond rating in the financial test is an indicator of the 
    certainty that environmental obligations being assured will be 
    fulfilled. A bond may be of investment grade only because it is 
    collateralized or insured. Because the financial test does not require 
    establishment of collateral or a third party assurance, allowing a 
    rating on an insured or collateralized bond could easily overestimate 
    the certainty of the fulfillment of environmental obligations which are 
    not collateralized or otherwise guaranteed. Since an investment rating 
    on the most recent bond would not require a firm to pass any of the 
    financial ratios, a firm using, for example, the investment rating on a 
    bond that it had been forced to collateralize, would inappropriately 
    pass the financial test.
        Therefore, in light of this public comment, EPA has decided to base 
    the bond rating alternative of the financial test on the rating of the 
    firm's senior debt. This rating is readily available, regularly 
    monitored by the rating agency, and avoids the issues of whether a 
    particular bond has been collateralized or insured. Because the rating 
    of the firm's senior debt reflects the rating agency's judgement of the 
    overall financial management of the firm, it is a better indication of 
    the financial health of the firm.
        Comment: One commenter noted that bond ratings while an indicator 
    of an owner/operator's financial standing, do not guarantee that funds 
    will be available for closure and post closure care. As evidenced by 
    recent events involving highly rated entities, bond ratings are not 
    infallible, and often times can fluctuate rapidly.
        Response: While not infallible, bond ratings are excellent 
    predictors of whether bonds will be repaid with more highly rated bonds 
    having lower default rates than bonds with lower ratings. Overall, the 
    annual assurance risk for investment grade bonds is 0.126% for Moody's 
    and 0.175% for Standard and Poor's. (See Issue Paper, Issues Relating 
    to the Bond Rating Alternative of the Corporate Financial Test in the 
    public docket.)
        Because bond rating organizations regularly re-evaluate the 
    financial soundness of the firms, bond ratings change with the 
    financial circumstances of the firm. These changes in ratings are 
    widely available through financial news sources and the Internet and so 
    would be available to a State more quickly than the update based upon 
    annual financial statements. EPA considers this re-evaluation of the 
    firm's financial outlook another advantage of the bond rating 
    alternative which, combined with the low default rate on investment 
    grade bonds, supports the use of bond ratings in the financial test. 
    Thus, EPA believes that bond ratings together with the other elements 
    of the financial test are sound reliable predictors of an owner or 
    operator's financial viability.
        Rating agencies can revise the ratings of bonds up or down for 
    several reasons which will be of interest to investors because of the 
    effect on the price of the bonds. (Higher grade bonds demand a higher 
    price than lower rated bonds.) In this process, rating agencies 
    frequently will place an issue on a ``watch list'' to signify that its 
    rating may change. However, most of these changes will be within a 
    ratings category (e.g. A to A-) or from one investment grade rating to 
    another (BBB to A) and be inconsequential for purposes of the financial 
    test. Studies from rating agencies demonstrate that the vast majority 
    of entities with investment grade ratings retain them. For example, 
    Standard & Poor's reports that from 1981 to 1996 an average of 93.87% 
    of entities with investments grade ratings at the beginning of the year 
    had an investment grade rating at the end of the year. (See Table 9 of 
    ``Ratings Performance 1996, Stability and Transition,'' Standard & 
    Poor's, February 1997.) These data, and similar results from Moody's 
    (See Exhibit 6 of ``Moody's Rating Migration and Credit Quality 
    Correlation, 1920-1996,'' Moody's, July 1997), do not substantiate the 
    commenter's claim that ratings often times can fluctuate rapidly. 
    (These studies do, however, provide additional substantiation for EPA's 
    use of the rating on the firm's senior unsecured debt as it is these 
    ratings that form the basis for default rate studies by Standard & 
    Poor's, and Moody's.) For the financial test, a change in rating only 
    matters if it moves a firm from investment grade to speculative. The 
    test does not distinguish between investment grade ratings. Therefore, 
    while bond ratings do fluctuate, the minor fluctuations will not often 
    affect a firm's ability to use the financial test.
        Comment: The bond rating alternative would be of advantage to only 
    three firms in the industry. This is a further anticompetitive 
    advantage for large firms. The proposed rules create a significant 
    competitive advantage for larger firms and will lead to less 
    competition and higher prices.
        Response: The use of bond ratings provides a financial test that is 
    highly reliable as shown by the low default rate on investment grade 
    bonds. In addition to the bond rating alternative, EPA has allowed the 
    use of financial ratios which also are accurate predictors of the 
    financial viability of a firm. These two mechanisms provide additional 
    flexibility for firms subject to the financial responsibility 
    requirements which already provide several mechanisms by which a 
    company can demonstrate financial assurance.
        While the commenter notes that only three firms in the industry 
    would meet the bond rating alternative, this appears to be an 
    incomplete picture. EPA obtained bond ratings from Standard & Poor's, 
    and Moody's for firms in the MSWLF industry. At the time of this data 
    gathering, EPA was able to obtain ratings for nine firms (with their 
    ratings in the parentheses): Allied Waste Industries, Inc. (BB-, B2); 
    Browning-Ferris Industries (A, Aa2); Laidlaw, Inc. (BBB+, Baa2); Mid-
    American Waste Systems (Ca1); Norcal Waste Systems, Inc. (BB-, B3); 
    Sanifill, Inc. (BB+); United Waste Systems, Inc. (BB+); USA
    
    [[Page 17722]]
    
    Waste Services, Inc. (BBB-), and WMX Technologies (A+, A1). Four of 
    these firms had investment grade ratings and so could have qualified to 
    use the financial test if they met the other qualifications, and four 
    others had BB ratings, just below investment grade. If the financial 
    situation for the four firms with BB ratings were to improve such that 
    the rating agencies were to upgrade their ratings, they would also have 
    been eligible to utilize the financial test. Were EPA not to adopt the 
    bond rating alternative, this compliance option would be foreclosed to 
    potentially more than the three firms suggested by the commenter.
        EPA notes that some of these firms no longer exist independently, 
    or have decided to sell their operations to other firms. For example, 
    Allied Waste Industries has acquired the solid waste operations of 
    Laidlaw, and USA Waste Services has acquired the operations of Mid-
    American Waste Systems, Sanifill, and United Waste Systems. These sales 
    have occurred between the time that EPA gathered this information and 
    the publication of this rule. This consolidation has occurred in the 
    absence of a corporate financial test, and indicates that factors 
    beyond this rule are influencing the number of competitors in the 
    industry. As the ownership patterns for municipal solid waste companies 
    has changed substantially in the past, it is difficult to predict 
    future directions. Eliminating the regulatory option of a bond rating 
    alternative could preclude a future company from being able to utilize 
    the financial test even if the analyses by bond rating agencies would 
    show the company to be a good credit risk. Conversely, because bond 
    ratings have been excellent predictors of bankruptcy, eliminating the 
    bond rating alternative would deny to State Directors an effective test 
    of companies' financial health. In response to this and other similar 
    comments, the Agency further examined whether the financial test would 
    change the relative competitiveness of large versus small operations. 
    (See Issue Paper, Market Effects of the Financial Test). The principal 
    findings of that investigation were that even if a large landfill were 
    to use a third-party financial assurance mechanism rather than the 
    financial test, it would still face lower costs per ton than a smaller 
    landfill. Further, for both small or large landfills third-party 
    financial assurance costs constitute only two to three percent of total 
    costs.
        Also, in the context of a host of other factors affecting tipping 
    fees, including location, fixed costs, and pricing strategies, 
    financial assurance costs are not likely to play a key role in 
    competition within the MSWLF industry. In particular, costs to 
    transport waste to a larger facility may more than offset potentially 
    lower tipping fees that the larger landfill might charge as a result of 
    using the financial test to demonstrate financial assurance. Therefore, 
    EPA does not believe that the financial assurance test will be a 
    significant factor in influencing the competitive nature of the 
    industry.
    
    C. Financial Ratios
    
        Comment: One commenter agreed with the use of bond ratings but 
    disagreed with the use of a financial test involving only a single 
    ratio. The commenter instead recommended at least three ratios to 
    determine a firm's changes in cash flow, revenues and expenditures, and 
    equity. The commenter stated that the use of three ratios would also be 
    consistent with the three ratios required in the local government test 
    and other Agency programs.
        Response: EPA's financial test adopted in today's rulemaking action 
    includes two alternative ratios that consider either the ratio of total 
    liabilities to net worth (Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(i)(B)), or the ratio of net 
    income plus depreciation, depletion, and amortization, minus $10 
    million, to total liabilities (Sec. 258.74(e)(1)(i)(C)). The analysis 
    supporting the proposal indicated that the two alternative ratios do 
    very well at allowing firms to qualify for the test while 
    distinguishing between firms which will and will not go bankrupt. (This 
    information can be found in Section VI of the preamble to the proposed 
    rule (59 FR 51523)). Additional analyses, conducted in response to this 
    and other comments confirmed these findings as shown by Exhibit 6 of 
    the Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests in Response to Public 
    Comments. This exhibit shows the high availability of the test (71.67% 
    of obligations) and its low public cost ($11.7 million). By comparison, 
    the current Subtitle C test, which uses three ratios, has a much lower 
    availability (24.44% of obligations). While the analysis of the current 
    Subtitle C test shows a low public cost of $4.3 million, this happens 
    because of its low availability rather than because it is a better 
    predictor of bankruptcy than the test being adopted today. A comparison 
    of the misprediction of a test (M(f)) divided by its availability 
    (A(f)) shows that the test EPA selected (Test 562-10) has a better 
    ratio (0.362) than the current Subtitle C test (0.380). These ratios 
    can also be taken from a single year's financial information.
        To design a test as recommended by this commenter would involve a 
    substantial degree of complexity, and with the variables cited (changes 
    in cash flow, and revenue and expenditures) could also lack reliability 
    and have a degree of redundancy. For example, measuring changes in cash 
    flow could discriminate against a firm which previously had an 
    exceptionally profitable year, but had only normal profitability in the 
    most recent year. This occurs because the change in cash flow would be 
    negative, even though the profitability was still acceptable. 
    Measurements of changes in revenues and expenditures will incorporate 
    much of the information in changes in cash flow and so may yield little 
    additional information. Further, the variables that the commenter 
    suggests do not directly include measures of debt which EPA's research 
    found are crucial in the prediction of bankruptcy.
        While the current Subtitle C financial test incorporates three 
    ratios, they involve different measures than suggested by the 
    commenter. Moreover, EPA has proposed changes to the Subtitle C test 
    (56 FR 30201) involving the same ratios, and the same number of ratios, 
    used in this test for corporate owners and operators of MSWLFs. 
    Consistency with the current Subtitle C financial test is not a 
    sufficient reason to include another test when the test being 
    promulgated here has shown that it does a very good job of 
    distinguishing between firms that will remain viable and those that 
    could go bankrupt. Furthermore, while the commenter noted that EPA's 
    proposed local government financial test incorporated three ratios, the 
    final test has two ratios (61 FR 60328).
        Comment: The profitability ratio incorporates a $10 million 
    subtraction from net cash flow in the comparison with liabilities. One 
    commenter recommended that the numerator instead subtract the lesser of 
    $10 million or a percentage of the costs being assured.
        Response: In light of public comments on its proposal, EPA has 
    examined several alternative specifications of the financial tests. The 
    results of these examinations appear in the report entitled ``Analysis 
    of Subtitle D Financial Tests in Response to Public Comments'' that is 
    included in the public docket of this rulemaking. The alternative 
    specifications included fractional specifications (e.g. 0.66 times the 
    financial assurance amount and identified as Test 94-10) of the amount 
    of the liabilities compared with cash flow, a lower decrement from cash 
    flow (e.g. Cash flow--$5 million and
    
    [[Page 17723]]
    
    identified as Test 544-10), no decrement from cash flow (Test 76-10) 
    and different ratio requirements (e.g. 0.05 rather than 0.1 and 
    identified as Test 127-10). None of these alternative specifications 
    were as good overall at minimizing both the public and private costs as 
    the tests that EPA had included in its proposed rule. Therefore, EPA is 
    promulgating the same cash flow requirement in this rule as that 
    proposed.
    
    D. Domestic Assets
    
        Comment: Several commenters supported the proposed domestic asset 
    requirement, but others recommended alternatives such as a six times 
    multiple, or assets in the United States equal to the minimum size 
    requirement, or domestic assets equal to 50% to 90% of total assets.
        Response: EPA has decided to promulgate the domestic asset 
    requirement as proposed. While commenters offered alternative 
    approaches for a domestic asset requirement, many of these were based 
    upon the use of a number from, for instance, EPA's current Subtitle C 
    financial test (e.g. the six times multiple which EPA proposed to 
    change in the October 12, 1994 notice for this rulemaking, see 59 FR 
    51527), or a separate component of the proposal (e.g. the minimum 
    tangible net worth) with little basis for adoption as part of the 
    domestic asset requirement. These approaches would have the effect of 
    potentially reducing the availability of the financial test, and 
    thereby increasing private costs, without a demonstration of how they 
    would make the test less available to firms which would enter 
    bankruptcy, and thereby decrease the public costs. The information that 
    the commenters provided did not demonstrate that requiring more 
    domestic assets would lead to a reduced risk of bankruptcy, which is 
    already a small probability. Both firms that only have domestic assets 
    and firms that also have foreign assets must meet the same ratios or 
    bond ratings to qualify for the test. The effect of a more stringent 
    domestic asset requirement would have limited the amount of obligations 
    that a firm qualifying for the financial test can cover. This would 
    potentially have increased the private cost of the test, but not have 
    made the test a better predictor of bankruptcy. Only in the unlikely 
    event of a bankruptcy would this more stringent requirement have had an 
    impact by having reduced the amount of costs covered. EPA believes that 
    requiring domestic assets equal to the amount assured represents a 
    balanced approach.
        Comment: One commenter noted that none of the domestic assets had 
    to be liquid and recommended that EPA should require that some or all 
    of the domestic assets should be liquid and readily accessible.
        Response: While liquid assets are more readily accessible than 
    fixed assets, EPA is not establishing a requirement that a certain 
    amount of domestic assets be liquid. During the normal course of 
    business, firms can be expected to maintain a portion of assets in 
    liquid form. However, liquidity can be a misleading predictor of 
    bankruptcy. This arises because firms that are under financial distress 
    tend to liquidate assets and thus appear more liquid as they move to 
    bankruptcy. Further, if the underlying concern is that a foreign firm 
    would withdraw from the US market and declare bankruptcy, a requirement 
    for liquid assets, which can be readily transferred, would prove to be 
    an ineffectual deterrent.
    
    E. Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements
    
        Comment: One State noted that its program does not follow the self-
    implementing requirement of the test which allows the owner or operator 
    to maintain the documentation as part of the operating record, but 
    instead requires the submission of the original financial assurance 
    documents.
        Response: In developing its regulations for MSWLFs, EPA has adopted 
    a self-implementing approach. However, EPA recognizes that some States 
    may have different programs. This rule does not preclude a State from 
    having more stringent requirements than EPA.
    1. Qualified Accountant's Opinions
        Comment: Some commenters suggested that the final rule disallow the 
    use of the financial test automatically if there was a qualification to 
    the accountant's opinion. These comments were based upon a concern that 
    allowing the use of a qualified opinion without specifying the basis 
    for that allowance could lead to inconsistent application by states or 
    that states would have insufficient resources to consider these 
    opinions. Others recommended that the rule provide narrower definitions 
    of what would constitute something other than a clean opinion.
        Response: The proposal and final rule provide that to be eligible 
    to use the financial test, the owner or operator's financial statements 
    must generally receive an unqualified opinion. However, the rule also 
    allows the State Director the discretion of allowing a firm on a case-
    by-case basis to use the financial test if it has received a qualified 
    opinion. The final rule provides that an adverse opinion, disclaimer of 
    opinion, or other qualified opinion will be cause for disallowance. See 
    Sec. 258.74(e)(2)(i)(B). However, this provision of the rule further 
    provides that the Director may evaluate qualified opinions on a case-
    by-case basis and allow use of the financial test in cases where the 
    Director determines that the matters which form the basis for the 
    qualification are insufficient to warrant a disallowance of the test. 
    Part III of this preamble also explains that an unqualified opinion 
    (i.e. a ``clean opinion'') from the accountant demonstrates that the 
    firm has prepared its financial statements in accordance with generally 
    accepted accounting principles. The Agency believes that, consistent 
    with these standards, this is an appropriate area for a State Director 
    to exercise judgment and does not see a need at this time to provide 
    further national guidance on how to consider submissions which do not 
    have unqualified opinions. A state that determines that reviewing 
    financial statements that have received a qualified opinion would 
    constitute an unreasonable resource burden would not have to adopt that 
    provision of the rule. However, EPA will consider providing additional 
    guidance if state implementation issues or other circumstances so 
    warrant.
    2. Special Report From the Independent Certified Public Accountant
        Comment: The American Institute of Certified Public Accountants 
    (AICPA) recommended that the regulations provide for a CPA to perform 
    an agreed-upon procedures engagement in accordance with standards 
    issued by AICPA to report his or her findings. This would replace the 
    review level or examination level procedure called for in the proposal.
        Response: Under the regulations the owner or operator does not need 
    to provide a report from the CPA if the Chief Financial Officer uses 
    financial test figures directly from the annual financial statements or 
    any other audited financial statements or data provided to the 
    Securities and Exchange Commission. In these cases, EPA does not see a 
    need for a special report from the CPA.
        Under EPA's proposed regulations, if the owner or operator used 
    financial test data that were different from the audited financial 
    statements or not taken directly from SEC filings, then the owner or 
    operator had to provide a special report from the independent
    
    [[Page 17724]]
    
    certified public accountant stating that ``In connection with that 
    examination, no matters came to his attention which caused him to 
    believe that the data in the chief financial officer's letter should be 
    adjusted.'' 59 FR 51535. EPA agrees with the comment from AICPA that 
    the special report required by the proposed rule was an inappropriate 
    type of engagement.
        In performing audits and other types of work, CPAs must follow 
    certain professional standards. The AICPA's Statement on Auditing 
    Standards no longer permits independent auditors to express negative 
    assurance (i.e. ``No matter came to his attention which caused him to 
    believe that the specified data should be adjusted.''). The current 
    AICPA standards require the auditor to present the results of 
    procedures performed in the form of findings, and explicitly disallow 
    issuing ``negative assurance.'' Thus, the proposed regulatory language 
    would have precluded an owner or operator who wanted to use adjusted 
    data in the financial test from having that option.
        If the owner or operator uses financial test figures that are not 
    taken directly from the audited financial statements or SEC filings, 
    then the owner or operator should include a report from the independent 
    certified public accountant that is based upon an agreed-upon 
    procedures engagement performed in accordance with AICPA standards. In 
    an agreed-upon procedures engagement an accountant is engaged by a 
    client to issue a report of findings based upon specific procedures 
    performed on specific items of a financial statement. The final 
    regulations require the report to describe the procedures performed in 
    comparing the data in the chief financial officer's letter derived from 
    the independently audited, year-end financial statements for the latest 
    fiscal year with the amounts in such financial statements, the findings 
    of that comparison, and the reasons for any differences. See 
    258.74(e)(2)(i)(C).
    
    F. Annual Updates
    
        Comment: Commenters suggested allowing a minimum of 120 days for 
    privately held firms (as opposed to publicly traded firms) to update 
    their financial information because they are not considered major 
    accounts and so frequently have their audits performed after publicly 
    held firms.
        Response: To address this comment, in the final rule, EPA has given 
    State Directors the discretion to allow firms that can demonstrate that 
    they cannot meet the annual requirement to acquire audited financial 
    statements within 90 days of the close of the fiscal year up to an 
    additional 45 days to demonstrate that they qualify. EPA believes that 
    this can be particularly valuable to smaller firms that are not 
    publicly traded and so may not have their audited financial statements 
    prepared as quickly as larger firms.
    
    G. Current Financial Test Documentation
    
        Comment: Some commenters objected to the provision in 
    258.74(e)(2)(vi) that allows the State Director to request current 
    financial test documentation when there is a reasonable belief that the 
    owner or operator no longer meets the requirement of 258.74(e)(2).
        Response: The Agency continues to believe that to promote and 
    verify compliance it is important that State Directors may request 
    additional information based upon a reasonable belief that the owner or 
    operator may no longer meet the requirements of the financial test. As 
    noted above and in the preamble to the proposed rule, the State 
    Director may wish to request additional information in the event of a 
    large liability judgment. Another example could be the reported 
    downgrading of a firm's bonds so that the firm could no longer qualify 
    by virtue of the bond rating alternative. While both of these 
    occurrences can be appropriate circumstances for such a request, EPA 
    does not consider this an exhaustive list. The final rule continues to 
    use the criteria of ``reasonable belief.''
        Comment: One commenter asserts that this requirement should be 
    deleted as it is not in the Subtitle C rules, and Subtitle D facilities 
    present less of a threat to human health and the environment.
        Response: In fact, this requirement appears in the Subtitle C 
    financial test regulations promulgated April 7, 1982 (47 FR 15032) 
    (See, for example, existing 40 CFR 264.143(f)(7)). It is important in 
    both the financial tests for the hazardous and the municipal waste 
    programs that the State Director have the ability to ensure that firms 
    qualifying for the financial test continue to demonstrate financial 
    viability.
        Comment: One comment suggested that EPA allow the use of internal 
    financial statements based upon the most recently unaudited quarterly 
    financial statements to respond to a request by the State Director for 
    additional information.
        Response: Section 258.74(e)(2)(vi) of the proposed rule would have 
    required the owner operator ``to provide current financial test 
    documentation as specified in paragraph (e)(2) of this section.'' This 
    may have been interpreted as merely the transmission to the State 
    Director of the types of documentation required to be maintained in the 
    facility's operating record. EPA agrees with the commenter that the 
    types of documentation may differ depending upon the nature of the 
    State Director's concern. The final rule modifies this requirement to 
    clarify that the State Director may require the documentation in 
    paragraph (e)(2) or additional information. This is consistent with the 
    general purpose of the requirement, to ensure the State Director can 
    obtain the information necessary to verify whether the firm still meets 
    the financial test. 59 FR 51526. This leaves to the State Director the 
    discretion to require the appropriate level of information, as 
    warranted by the circumstances.
    
    H. Corporate Guarantee
    
        Comment: Some commenters agreed with allowing the use of a 
    corporate guarantee, while others objected to its inclusion as a 
    mechanism because of concerns about the ability of States to implement 
    such a regulation.
        Response: The Agency continues to believe that a corporate 
    guarantee, like other third party mechanisms such as letters of credit 
    or surety bonds, can ensure that a third party is obligated to cover 
    the costs of closure, post-closure care, or corrective action in the 
    event that the owner or operator goes bankrupt or fails to conduct the 
    required activities. States concerned with implementation of a 
    corporate guarantee could decline to adopt this mechanism. Conversely, 
    if a state chooses to revise its permit program in response to today's 
    rule, the state should work with the respective EPA regional office as 
    it proceeds to make these changes.
        Comment: One State recommended not allowing the use of a corporate 
    guarantee based upon a substantial business relationship because it 
    would require a decision by the State's Attorney General on its ability 
    to enforce against a guarantor.
        Response: While the final rule allows the use of a guarantee by a 
    firm with a substantial business relationship, States do not have to 
    adopt this provision if, for example, a state believes it creates 
    undesirable administrative or enforcement burdens. EPA notes that its 
    regulations in the hazardous waste program already allow the use of a 
    corporate guarantee by a firm with ``a substantial business 
    relationship'' in demonstrating financial assurance in, for example, 40 
    CFR 264.143(f)(10) or 40 CFR 265.147(g). (See also 40 CFR 264.141(h) 
    for a definition of ``substantial business relationship.'') EPA expects 
    that the number of owners
    
    [[Page 17725]]
    
    or operators who would qualify to use this provision in the MSWLF 
    criteria will be substantially smaller than for coverage in the 
    Subtitle C program if for no other reason than the number of firms that 
    could need a guarantee is less than the number of Subtitle C firms.
        Comment: Another commenter suggested that limiting the use to firms 
    with a substantial business relationship was too restrictive.
        Response: Broadening the availability of the corporate guarantee to 
    firms which do not have a substantial business relationship could 
    affect the validity and enforceability of the guarantee. The scope of 
    the corporate guarantee is the same as in the Subtitle C regulations 
    that allow it for closure and post closure care liabilities (57 FR 
    42832). This rule was an extension to closure and post closure care 
    liabilities of an earlier rulemaking allowing the guarantee for 
    liability coverage by firms with a substantial business interest (53 FR 
    33938). In the preamble to the regulation establishing this mechanism 
    for Subtitle C liability (53 FR 33942), EPA addressed whether a broader 
    availability would be appropriate. The Agency determined that a 
    substantial business relationship was necessary to ensure that the 
    guarantee would be a valid and enforceable contract. ``EPA sought to 
    ensure that a valid and enforceable contract was created. To this end, 
    the Agency is requiring these firms to demonstrate a substantial 
    business relationship with the owner or operator to ensure that the 
    guarantee is a valid contract.'' As EPA noted in the preamble, ``A 
    guarantee contract, by itself would be inadequate to demonstrate a 
    substantial business relationship between two parties. However, an 
    existing contract to supply goods or services, separate from the 
    guarantee contract, could supply evidence of such a relationship. An 
    example of such a relationship might be a contract for hazardous waste 
    disposal between a generator and a disposal facility.'' The commenter 
    provided no information on how to ensure that a guarantee between firms 
    that do not have a substantial business relationship would be valid and 
    enforceable, and therefore the Agency has insufficient basis for 
    expanding the types of firms which can offer guarantees. To ensure the 
    enforceability of the guarantee, EPA has retained the requirement that 
    the guarantor have a substantial business relationship with the owner 
    or operator.
        Comment: One commenter suggested that the rule require a guarantor 
    to provide alternate financial assurance 30 days after the guarantor 
    discovers that it no longer meets the terms of the financial test. This 
    would limit the exposure to only 30 days versus possibly a year or 
    longer under the current proposed requirement.
        Response: Under the commenter's suggestion, a guarantor would have 
    thirty days once it discovers that it no longer meets the financial 
    test to provide an alternative mechanism. Under the proposed 
    regulation, the owner or operator must provide financial assurance 
    within 90 days of the close of the guarantor's fiscal year if the 
    guarantor no longer passes the financial test. If a guarantor no longer 
    met the requirements of the financial test by, for example, losing an 
    investment grade bond rating, the language in the proposal could have 
    delayed when the owner or operator, or the guarantor, would have had to 
    provide an alternative mechanism. In the rulemaking for the financial 
    test for local governments who own or operate MSWLFs (61 FR 60328), the 
    Agency faced similar issues. Today's rule adopts language consistent 
    with the guarantee provision in the local government rule to reduce 
    this potential delay. EPA has made this adjustment by essentially 
    removing the words ``following the close of the guarantor's fiscal 
    year'' in the proposal language. This clarifies that if a guarantor no 
    longer meets the criteria of the financial test in the middle of a 
    fiscal year, it would only have a total of 120 days to correct the 
    problem. In the case of a guarantor whose year-end financial statement 
    shows that the firm no longer meets the criteria of the financial test, 
    the owner or operator would have 90 days from the close of the 
    guarantor's fiscal year to obtain an alternative mechanism, and if the 
    owner or operator does not obtain an alternative, then the guarantor 
    must provide an alternative mechanism within the next 30 days.
        However, while the commenter suggested a 30 day deadline for the 
    guarantor to secure an alternative instrument, EPA believes that this 
    is an overly aggressive deadline to establish as a general rule. Thus, 
    EPA has retained the requirement that the owner or operator secure an 
    instrument within 90 days, and if the owner or operator fails to do so, 
    then the guarantor must secure an alternative instrument within 120 
    days. The 90 day deadline is consistent with the reporting deadlines of 
    the rule for firms using the financial test mechanism, and the overall 
    120 day deadline for the guarantor is consistent with the 120 day 
    deadline for an owner or operator who has failed the financial test to 
    obtain an alternative mechanism.
    
    I. Impacts on Third Party Financial Assurance Providers
    
        Comment: Several commenters felt that by allowing the financial 
    test, EPA would create a situation where the best risks would use the 
    financial test and the highest risk owners or operators would be left 
    to third party instruments. Sureties and insurance companies would be 
    uninterested in making a market for the highest risks.
        Response: The financial test will allow firms with the least chance 
    of bankruptcy to utilize the test rather than purchase third party 
    mechanisms. However, with this flexibility EPA expects that there will 
    still be a demand for third party instruments such as can be provided 
    by insurers and sureties. Further, in addition to the financial test 
    and guarantee, and sureties and insurance, the financial assurance 
    regulations allow firms to demonstrate financial responsibility with 
    trust funds, letters of credit, and other state-approved mechanisms 
    meeting the performance criteria. Thus, even if sureties or insurers 
    were no longer to provide a mechanism, firms that could not qualify for 
    the financial test would still have mechanisms available to provide 
    financial assurance.
        With the exception of the state-approved mechanisms, the RCRA 
    Subtitle D mechanisms are substantially the same as those that are 
    available for owners and operators of RCRA Subtitle C treatment, 
    storage and disposal facilities. In Subtitle C, a financial test has 
    been available since 1982, and firms demonstrate financial assurance 
    with the full range of mechanisms including surety bonds and insurance. 
    EPA believes that sureties and insurers will evaluate the market for 
    their products and, as demand warrants, will continue to provide 
    mechanisms, as they have in Subtitle C.
    
    J. General Support of and Opposition to the Financial Test
    
        Comments: States and others expressed both general support of and 
    opposition to the financial test. One State noted that a financial test 
    does not provide a State or EPA access to funds to complete closure, 
    post-closure, or corrective action should the financially responsible 
    corporation refuse to take the needed action. The recourse for the 
    State or EPA would be a lengthy and costly lawsuit.
        Response: While the commenter notes a circumstance in the financial 
    responsibility test where the owner or operator has the financial 
    wherewithal to comply but does not, this circumstance does not 
    distinguish itself
    
    [[Page 17726]]
    
    from others where EPA or a State must undertake enforcement to obtain 
    compliance. The likelihood of a financially sound firm nevertheless 
    being reluctant to fulfill its obligations is not affected by today's 
    final rule.
        Third party mechanisms do, however, provide easier access to funds 
    to fulfill financial obligations. A State may, therefore, decide that 
    it has facilities with poor compliance histories that do not make them 
    a good candidate for the financial test in order to eliminate potential 
    delays in obtaining closure, post-closure or corrective action. 
    Similarly, States may decide to forego altogether adoption of the 
    financial tests.
    
    K. First Party Trust
    
        Comment: As an alternative to a financial test and guarantee, one 
    commenter suggested allowing facility owners to establish funds under 
    their administration and management which would be regulated by a State 
    agency which would establish rules for deposits as a trust fund. Once 
    closure was complete, the funds would revert to the owner.
        Response: The current financial responsibility standards allow 
    owners and operators to establish financial responsibility through a 
    trust fund managed by a third party. Under the commenter's plan, the 
    facility would maintain control over the funds so the protections 
    inherent in having a third party manage the funds would be lost. This 
    plan would also require States to regulate these funds and ensure their 
    safety. Since the funds remain under the control of the owner or 
    operator, there could be concern for their safety unless the firm was 
    in excellent financial condition. The mechanism to ensure this 
    excellent financial condition could look substantially like a financial 
    test so it is unclear what has been gained over EPA's approach of 
    directly allowing a financial test. EPA does not consider this approach 
    superior to its current system of allowing trust funds and a financial 
    test and corporate guarantee.
    
    L. Comments on the Notice of Data Availability
    
        EPA received two comments on the September 27, 1996 Notice of Data 
    Availability (61 FR 50787) providing additional opportunity to comment 
    on EPA's analysis of the Meridian Corporation's alternate financial 
    test: one from a private operator of MSWLFs, and one from a State 
    regulatory agency.
        Comment: The private operator who commented on EPA's analysis of 
    the Meridian Report did not believe that each state should determine 
    which mechanism(s) and the terms of the mechanism that an owner or 
    operator should be able to use, but that the owner or operator should 
    be allowed to use one or any combination of the following historically 
    approved mechanisms: standby trust agreement, surety bond, letter of 
    credit, insurance, or the financial test and corporate guarantees for 
    closure, post closure, and/or corrective action.
        Response: The Subtitle D program is intended to be a state 
    implemented program. The Agency has therefore left it to the states to 
    determine what financial mechanism they will allow and specific details 
    regarding those mechanisms. Indeed, a Congressional objective of RCRA 
    is to establish a joint state and Federal partnership in administering 
    the law. RCRA 6902(a)(7). Further, Sec. 3009 of RCRA explicitly allows 
    a State to establish requirements more stringent than the federal 
    requirements. Accordingly, EPA believes it would be inappropriate for 
    policy and legal reasons to preempt disparate state requirements for 
    MSWLFs. At the same time, EPA has developed sound national regulations 
    that it encourages states to adopt that help to promote national 
    uniformity.
        Comment: The State regulatory agency was not in support of the 
    Meridian Test and generally supported the evaluation performed by ICF 
    Incorporated for EPA. The commenter also expressed concerns about the 
    following aspects of the Meridian Test. The commenter did not agree 
    with capping the period for which financial assurance would be 
    provided, assuming a three percent real interest rate when preparing 
    cost estimates because closure estimates are usually underfunded, 
    amending the requirements for financial assurance requirements for 
    contingent events to allow combined coverage within and across 
    programs, and amending the requirements for closure and post-closure 
    care by allowing owners or operators of multiple facilities to 
    demonstrate financial assurance for less than the total costs of all 
    facilities.
        Response: EPA's regulations do not allow for capping the period for 
    which financial assurance would be provided for MSWLFs. EPA's MSWLF 
    regulations at 40 CFR 258.71(a)(1) require that closure cost estimate 
    must equal the cost of closing the largest area of all MSWLF units ever 
    requiring a final cover at any time during the active life when the 
    extent and manner of its operation would make closure the most 
    expensive. 40 CFR 258.72(a) requires that post-closure cost estimates 
    include annual and periodic costs over the entire post-closure care 
    period, and 40 CFR 258.73(a) requires that the corrective action cost 
    estimate account for the total cost of the corrective action activities 
    for the entire corrective action period.
        EPA agrees that estimates of environmental obligations can be 
    underestimated and that discounting could exacerbate the attendant 
    problems of insufficient funds being available. In the previously 
    issued regulations allowing discounting, EPA requires that the State 
    Director determine that cost estimates are complete and accurate and 
    the owner or operator must submit a statement from a Registered 
    Professional Engineer so stating. 61 FR 60339 (codified at 40 CFR 
    258.75(a). This requirement is designed to ensure that the cost 
    estimates are not underestimated.
        EPA agrees with the commenter that amending the requirements for 
    contingent events is an irrelevant issue here because EPA has deferred 
    any requirement for liability coverage as part of the MSWLF criteria.
        Today's regulation requires that an owner or operator using the 
    financial test to demonstrate financial assurance must have a tangible 
    net worth that is greater than the sum of current closure, post-closure 
    care, corrective action cost estimates, and any other environmental 
    obligations covered by a financial test plus $10 million. The rules do, 
    however, provide that if an owner or operator has already recognized 
    the value of these obligations as liabilities on its financial 
    statements, then the State Director may allow the firm to use the 
    financial test if it meets the other criteria and has at least $10 
    million in net worth plus the amount of any guarantees extended by the 
    firm that have not been recognized as liabilities on the financial 
    statements. Thus, EPA's final rule requires that a firm must account 
    for the value of all obligations covered by a financial test or 
    guarantee.
    
    VII. Miscellaneous
    
        The discussion below addresses Executive Order 12866 (interagency 
    regulatory review), the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act, the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness 
    Act, the Paperwork Reduction Act, and Executive Order 12898 
    (Environmental Justice).
    
    A. Executive Order 12866
    
        Under Executive Order 12866, the Agency must determine whether a 
    regulatory action is ``significant'' and, therefore, subject to Office 
    of Management and Budget (OMB) review
    
    [[Page 17727]]
    
    and other requirements of the Executive Order. The Order defines 
    ``significant regulatory action'' as one 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, or 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 or the rights and obligations of recipients 
    thereof; or
        (4) Raise novel legal or policy issues arising out of legal 
    mandates, the President's priorities, or the principles set forth in 
    the Executive Order.
        Even though this rule provides owners and operators of MSWLFs with 
    regulatory relief in meeting the existing requirements for financial 
    assurance, EPA has submitted this rule to OMB for review because it 
    raises important policy issues. The text of the draft final rule 
    submitted to OMB, accompanying documents, and changes made in response 
    to OMB suggestions or recommendations are in the public docket listed 
    at the beginning of this notice.
        EPA has evaluated the economic impact of the final rule. The Agency 
    estimates that today's rule will save approximately $65.8 million 
    annually. This figure is higher than the estimate for the proposed rule 
    because it reflects additional analysis EPA performed in response to 
    public comments, using updated financial and cost information. As 
    explained above in the discussion of public comments, EPA's analysis 
    for this final rule includes the costs for firms with less than $10 
    million in net worth. The underlying analysis, which followed the same 
    methodology as the analysis supporting the proposed rule, can be found 
    in the public docket for today's rule.
        More specifically, EPA relied on updated (1995) financial 
    information from Dun and Bradstreet on the firms in the MSWLF industry, 
    bond rating information from Standard & Poor's, and Moody's, and 
    augmented information on the financial characteristics of firms that 
    entered bankruptcy. The economic impact analysis for this final rule 
    estimated the availability of the financial test to firms in the MSWLF 
    industry. If a firm was unable to cover any portion of its obligations, 
    the analysis estimated the cost of the third party instruments that 
    would be necessary. This inability to use the financial test could 
    arise if, for example, the firm did not meet the ratio or bond rating 
    requirements, or if its obligations were more than allowable under the 
    tangible net worth requirement. The cost of the third party instruments 
    was labeled the private cost of the test. It is the existing financial 
    assurance requirements for owners and operators of MSWLFs under 40 CFR 
    part 258 subpart G that imposes such costs, not the financial test 
    being promulgated today.
        As examined earlier in the notice, no financial test can perfectly 
    discriminate between firms that should be allowed to use the financial 
    test and therefore not have to pay the cost of a third party mechanism, 
    and firms that will go bankrupt and so should have to use a third party 
    instrument. Since a test will not be perfect at screening out firms 
    that will enter bankruptcy, such costs are borne by the public. These 
    public costs are the costs to the public sector of paying for financial 
    assurance obligations, such a closure or post-closure costs, for firms 
    that pass the test but later go bankrupt without funding their 
    obligations. EPA analyzed the public costs associated with today's 
    rulemaking. EPA's analysis assessed the misprediction of the various 
    tests and the attendant public costs. As noted earlier in the notice, 
    another relevant factor in designing a reasonable financial test is who 
    should bear the costs, or how they should be reasonably allocated. In 
    other words, there are public policy issues in deciding whether 
    financial assurance costs should be borne by the owners or operators of 
    MSWLFs (and their customers), or the public generally.
        To calculate the cost savings of today's rule, EPA first estimated 
    the cost for private owners or operators of MSWLFs of obtaining third 
    party mechanisms (e.g., letters of credit) to assure their MSWLF 
    obligations which the Agency estimates total approximately $7 billion 
    for closure and post-closure obligations. EPA estimates that the cost 
    of such financial assurance instruments under the existing financial 
    assurance requirements would total $123.0 million annually. (See 
    ``Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests in Response to Public 
    Comments'' in the docket to this rule.)
        There are a few potential adjustments to those costs. To the extent 
    that owners or operators are able to use alternative mechanisms such as 
    captive insurance that could be less expensive, this estimate of the 
    cost of financial responsibility in the absence of this rule would be 
    somewhat overstated. Also, on November 27, 1996 (61 FR 60328) EPA 
    promulgated 40 CFR 258.75 that provided State Directors with the 
    authority to allow the discounting of closure, post-closure and 
    corrective action costs. EPA did not estimate the potential cost 
    savings from that provision at that time, and does not have information 
    regarding the extent to which State Directors have provided this 
    allowance. However, to the extent that State Directors have provided 
    that allowance to privately owned or operated MSWLFs, this allowance 
    could lead to a relatively small overstatement of the savings 
    associated with this rule. For more information on the changes in costs 
    potentially associated with discounting, please see ``Analysis of 
    Subtitle D Financial Tests in Response to Public Comments'' in the 
    docket.
        As described earlier, in the analysis for this rule EPA has 
    evaluated the private and public costs and savings associated with a 
    number of regulatory alternatives. The regulatory alternative adopted 
    in today's final rule is estimated to result in an annual savings of 
    approximately $65.8 million or more, which puts it at the forefront in 
    cost savings among the regulatory alternatives. Under the alternative 
    adopted in today's final rule, an owner or operator could assure 
    obligations so long as the firm's tangible net worth is at least $10 
    million larger than the obligation. This test had a private cost of 
    $45.6 million annually and a public cost of $11.7 million annually for 
    a total annual cost of $57.3 million. Subtracting the total cost from 
    the cost of the existing requirement without a test ($123.0 million) 
    gives a savings of $65.8 million annually.
        Further, as noted earlier, EPA was concerned that this alternative 
    could discriminate against firms which had already recognized all of 
    their environmental obligations as liabilities on their audited 
    financial statements. Therefore, EPA has given to State Directors the 
    ability to allow firms that have their environmental obligations fully 
    reflected in their liabilities on their audited financial statements to 
    cover these obligations so long as they have a net worth of at least 
    $10 million plus the amount of any guarantees that do not appear on 
    their financial statements. The maximum annual savings from this rule 
    as a result of this allowance are estimated to total $ 73.1 million, or 
    $7.3 million more than $65.8 million.
        The document entitled ``Analysis of Subtitle D Financial Tests in 
    Response to Public Comments,'' contains additional information on the 
    estimated cost savings of this rule, and is available in the public 
    docket for this rulemaking.
    
    [[Page 17728]]
    
    B. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    
        Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), Pub. 
    L. 104-4, establishes requirements for Federal agencies to assess the 
    effects of certain 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 a final 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. Section 204 of UMRA requires each agency 
    to develop ``an effective process to permit elected officers of state, 
    local, and tribal governments . . . to provide meaningful and timely 
    input'' in the development of regulatory proposals containing a 
    significant Federal intergovernmental mandate.
        Today's rule is not subject to the requirements of sections 202, 
    203, 204, and 205 of the UMRA. EPA has 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. On the contrary, as 
    described above, the Agency estimates that today's rule will save $65.8 
    million annually by allowing the use of a financial test or a corporate 
    guarantee to demonstrate financial responsibility for environmental 
    obligations without incurring the costs of obtaining a third-party 
    mechanism. Further, as discussed previously in the notice, neither 
    State nor local governments are subject to the requirements under this 
    rule, but state governments have considerable flexibility in deciding 
    how to implement the regulatory relief provided in this rule.
    
    C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., 
    provides that, whenever an agency is required to publish a general 
    notice of rulemaking for a proposal, the agency must prepare an initial 
    regulatory flexibility analysis for the proposal unless the head of the 
    agency certifies that the rule will not, if promulgated, have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities 
    (section 605(b)). The EPA certified that the October 12, 1994 proposal 
    for today's rule would not have a significant economic impact on a 
    substantial number of small entities. 59 FR 51534. Accordingly, the 
    Agency did not prepare an initial regulatory flexibility analysis for 
    the proposed rule.
        EPA has not received any adverse public comments on its decision 
    under the RFA to certify the proposed rule and declining to prepare an 
    initial regulatory flexibility analysis for the proposed rule. As 
    discussed above, EPA did receive public comments that the tangible net 
    worth requirement under the financial test is unnecessary and has an 
    anticompetitive effect on small firms in the MSWLF industry, but these 
    comments did not raise questions regarding the RFA certification. In 
    the discussion of public comments, above, and in the ``Response to 
    Public Comments'' document accompanying this rulemaking, EPA addresses 
    the concerns about the proposed minimum net worth requirement. The 
    discussion of public comments in section VI.A. above regarding the 
    minimum tangible net worth requirement and other aspects of the 
    preamble help explain EPA's decision here to also certify that the 
    final rule will not have a significant adverse impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities.
        For the following reasons, EPA concludes that certification is 
    still proper. As noted above, the RFA requires a regulatory flexibility 
    analysis unless the rule ``will not have, if promulgated, a significant 
    economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.'' RFA 
    section 605(b). For purposes of the RFA, the ``impact'' of concern is 
    the impact the rule at issue will have on the small entities that will 
    have to comply with the rule. The stated purpose of the RFA, its 
    requirements for regulatory flexibility analyses, its legislative 
    history, the amendments made by the Small Business Regulatory 
    Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (SBREFA) (Pub. L. 104-121), and case 
    law all make clear that an agency must assess the impact of a rule on 
    small entities to the extent that small entities will be subject to the 
    requirements of the rule. Thus, the RFA is appropriately interpreted to 
    require a regulatory flexibility analysis only for rules imposing 
    requirements on small entities. See RFA Secs. 603 (b) & (c), and 
    604(a); Mid-Tex Electric Co-op., Inc. v. FERC, 773 F.2d 327, 340-43 
    (D.C. Cir. 1985) (holding the RFA does not require agencies to examine 
    the economic impact on small entities that are not directly regulated 
    by the rule or subject to the regulatory requirements of the rule); 
    United Distribution Companies v. FERC, 88 F.3d 1105 (D.C. Cir. 1996), 
    cert. denied, Associated Gas Distributors v. FERC, 117 S.Ct. 1723 
    (1997) (same).
        As discussed in greater detail in section VI.A. above and other 
    sections of this preamble, today's rule does not impose new regulatory 
    requirements on any firms, including small entities. Rather, the rule 
    provides additional flexibility for owners or operators of MSWLF units 
    in meeting the existing financial assurance requirements established 
    under 40 CFR part 258, subpart G.
        The comments discussed in section VI.A. do not relate to compliance 
    burdens imposed on firms subject to the rule, but rather to secondary 
    competitive effects that the commenters believe may result from a 
    minimum net worth requirement. These are not the kinds of effects that 
    a regulatory flexibility analysis is intended to address. Therefore, 
    after considering public comments and other relevant information, EPA 
    continues to believe that this deregulatory final rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 
    Accordingly, the Agency certifies that the rule will not have a 
    significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, 
    and EPA has not prepared a final regulatory flexibility analysis for 
    this rule.
    
    D. Submission to Congress and the General Accounting Office
    
        Under 5 U.S.C. 801(a)(1)(A) as added by the Small Business 
    Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, EPA
    
    [[Page 17729]]
    
    submitted a report containing this rule and other required information 
    to the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of Representatives, and the 
    Comptroller General of the General Accounting Office prior to 
    publication of the rule in today's Federal Register. This rule is not a 
    ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
    
    E. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        OMB approved the information collection requirements of the MSWLF 
    criteria, including financial assurance criteria, under the provisions 
    of the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501, et seq., and assigned 
    OMB control number 2050-0122. The burden estimate for the financial 
    assurance provisions included the burden associated with obtaining and 
    maintaining any one of the allowable financial assurance instruments, 
    including a financial test.
    
    F. Environmental Justice
    
        Executive Order 12898 requires that each Federal agency make 
    achieving environmental justice part of its mission by identifying and 
    addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse human 
    health or environmental effects of its programs, policies, and 
    activities on minorities and low-income populations. This regulation 
    provides additional mechanisms by which firms can demonstrate financial 
    assurance for their MSWLF closure, post-closure, and if necessary, 
    corrective action obligations. It is not expected to have any impact on 
    minorities or low-income populations.
    
    G. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
    
        Under section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and 
    Advancement Act (``NTTAA''), the Agency is required to use voluntary 
    consensus standards in its regulatory activities unless to do so would 
    be inconsistent with applicable law or otherwise impractical. Voluntary 
    consensus standards are technical standards (e.g., materials 
    specifications, test methods, sampling procedures, business practice, 
    etc.) which are developed or adopted by voluntary consensus standard 
    bodies. Where available and potentially applicable voluntary consensus 
    standards are not used by EPA, the Act requires the Agency to provide 
    Congress, through the Office of Management and Budget, an explanation 
    of the reasons for not using such standards. EPA identified no 
    potentially applicable voluntary consensus standards for today's final 
    rule.
    
    List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 258
    
        Environmental protection, Closure, Corrective action, Financial 
    assurance, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Waste treatment 
    and disposal, Water pollution control.
    
        Dated: April 3, 1998.
    Carol M. Browner,
    Administrator.
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, title 40, Chapter I of 
    the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    PART 258--CRITERIA FOR MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE LANDFILLS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 258 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1345(d) and (e); 42 U.S.C. 6902(a), 6907, 
    6912(a), 6944, 6945(c) and 6949a(c).
    
        2. Section 258.74 is amended by revising paragraphs (e), (g), and 
    (k) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 258.74  Allowable mechanisms.
    
    * * * * *
        (e) Corporate financial test. An owner or operator that satisfies 
    the requirements of this paragraph (e) may demonstrate financial 
    assurance up to the amount specified in this paragraph (e):
        (1) Financial component. (i) The owner or operator must satisfy one 
    of the following three conditions:
        (A) A current rating for its senior unsubordinated debt of AAA, AA, 
    A, or BBB as issued by Standard and Poor's or Aaa, Aa, A or Baa as 
    issued by Moody's; or
        (B) A ratio of less than 1.5 comparing total liabilities to net 
    worth; or
        (C) A ratio of greater than 0.10 comparing the sum of net income 
    plus depreciation, depletion and amortization, minus $10 million, to 
    total liabilities.
        (ii) The tangible net worth of the owner or operator must be 
    greater than: (A) The sum of the current closure, post-closure care, 
    corrective action cost estimates and any other environmental 
    obligations, including guarantees, covered by a financial test plus $10 
    million except as provided in paragraph (e)(1)(ii)(B) of this section.
        (B) $10 million in net worth plus the amount of any guarantees that 
    have not been recognized as liabilities on the financial statements 
    provided all of the current closure, post-closure care, and corrective 
    action costs and any other environmental obligations covered by a 
    financial test are recognized as liabilities on the owner's or 
    operator's audited financial statements, and subject to the approval of 
    the State Director.
        (iii) The owner or operator must have assets located in the United 
    States amounting to at least the sum of current closure, post-closure 
    care, corrective action cost estimates and any other environmental 
    obligations covered by a financial test as described in paragraph 
    (e)(3) of this section.
        (2) Recordkeeping and reporting requirements. (i) The owner or 
    operator must place the following items into the facility's operating 
    record:
        (A) A letter signed by the owner's or operator's chief financial 
    officer that:
        (1) Lists all the current cost estimates covered by a financial 
    test, including, but not limited to, cost estimates required for 
    municipal solid waste management facilities under this part 258, cost 
    estimates required for UIC facilities under 40 CFR part 144, if 
    applicable, cost estimates required for petroleum underground storage 
    tank facilities under 40 CFR part 280, if applicable, cost estimates 
    required for PCB storage facilities under 40 CFR part 761, if 
    applicable, and cost estimates required for hazardous waste treatment, 
    storage, and disposal facilities under 40 CFR parts 264 and 265, if 
    applicable; and
        (2) Provides evidence demonstrating that the firm meets the 
    conditions of either paragraph (e)(1)(i)(A) or (e)(1)(i)(B) or 
    (e)(1)(i)(C) of this section and paragraphs (e)(1)(ii) and (e)(1)(iii) 
    of this section.
        (B) A copy of the independent certified public accountant's 
    unqualified opinion of the owner's or operator's financial statements 
    for the latest completed fiscal year. To be eligible to use the 
    financial test, the owner's or operator's financial statements must 
    receive an unqualified opinion from the independent certified public 
    accountant. An adverse opinion, disclaimer of opinion, or other 
    qualified opinion will be cause for disallowance, with the potential 
    exception for qualified opinions provided in the next sentence. The 
    Director of an approved State may evaluate qualified opinions on a 
    case-by-case basis and allow use of the financial test in cases where 
    the Director deems that the matters which form the basis for the 
    qualification are insufficient to warrant disallowance of the test. If 
    the Director of an approved State does not allow use of the test, the 
    owner or operator must provide alternate financial assurance that meets 
    the requirements of this section.
        (C) If the chief financial officer's letter providing evidence of 
    financial assurance includes financial data showing that owner or 
    operator satisfies
    
    [[Page 17730]]
    
    paragraph (e)(1)(i)(B) or (e)(1)(i)(C) of this section that are 
    different from data in the audited financial statements referred to in 
    paragraph (e)(2)(i)(B) of this section or any other audited financial 
    statement or data filed with the SEC, then a special report from the 
    owner's or operator's independent certified public accountant to the 
    owner or operator is required. The special report shall be based upon 
    an agreed upon procedures engagement in accordance with professional 
    auditing standards and shall describe the procedures performed in 
    comparing the data in the chief financial officer's letter derived from 
    the independently audited, year-end financial statements for the latest 
    fiscal year with the amounts in such financial statements, the findings 
    of that comparison, and the reasons for any differences.
        (D) If the chief financial officer's letter provides a 
    demonstration that the firm has assured for environmental obligations 
    as provided in paragraph (e)(1)(ii)(B) of this section, then the letter 
    shall include a report from the independent certified public accountant 
    that verifies that all of the environmental obligations covered by a 
    financial test have been recognized as liabilities on the audited 
    financial statements, how these obligations have been measured and 
    reported, and that the tangible net worth of the firm is at least $10 
    million plus the amount of any guarantees provided.
        (ii) An owner or operator must place the items specified in 
    paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section in the operating record and notify 
    the State Director that these items have been placed in the operating 
    record before the initial receipt of waste or before the effective date 
    of the requirements of this section (April 9, 1997 or October 9, 1997 
    for MSWLF units meeting the conditions of Sec. 258.1(f)(1)), whichever 
    is later in the case of closure, and post-closure care, or no later 
    than 120 days after the corrective action remedy has been selected in 
    accordance with the requirements of Sec. 258.58.
        (iii) After the initial placement of items specified in paragraph 
    (e)(2)(i) of this section in the operating record, the owner or 
    operator must annually update the information and place updated 
    information in the operating record within 90 days following the close 
    of the owner or operator's fiscal year. The Director of a State may 
    provide up to an additional 45 days for an owner or operator who can 
    demonstrate that 90 days is insufficient time to acquire audited 
    financial statements. The updated information must consist of all items 
    specified in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section.
        (iv) The owner or operator is no longer required to submit the 
    items specified in this paragraph (e)(2) or comply with the 
    requirements of this paragraph (e) when:
        (A) He substitutes alternate financial assurance as specified in 
    this section that is not subject to these recordkeeping and reporting 
    requirements; or
        (B) He is released from the requirements of this section in 
    accordance with Sec. 258.71(b), Sec. 258.72(b), or Sec. 258.73(b).
        (v) If the owner or operator no longer meets the requirements of 
    paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the owner or operator must, within 
    120 days following the close of the owner or operator's fiscal year, 
    obtain alternative financial assurance that meets the requirements of 
    this section, place the required submissions for that assurance in the 
    operating record, and notify the State Director that the owner or 
    operator no longer meets the criteria of the financial test and that 
    alternate assurance has been obtained.
        (vi) The Director of an approved State may, based on a reasonable 
    belief that the owner or operator may no longer meet the requirements 
    of paragraph (e)(1) of this section, require at any time the owner or 
    operator to provide reports of its financial condition in addition to 
    or including current financial test documentation as specified in 
    paragraph (e)(2) of this section. If the Director of an approved State 
    finds that the owner or operator no longer meets the requirements of 
    paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the owner or operator must provide 
    alternate financial assurance that meets the requirements of this 
    section.
        (3) Calculation of costs to be assured. When calculating the 
    current cost estimates for closure, post-closure care, corrective 
    action, or the sum of the combination of such costs to be covered, and 
    any other environmental obligations assured by a financial test 
    referred to in this paragraph (e), the owner or operator must include 
    cost estimates required for municipal solid waste management facilities 
    under this part, as well as cost estimates required for the following 
    environmental obligations, if it assures them through a financial test: 
    obligations associated with UIC facilities under 40 CFR part 144, 
    petroleum underground storage tank facilities under 40 CFR part 280, 
    PCB storage facilities under 40 CFR part 761, and hazardous waste 
    treatment, storage, and disposal facilities under 40 CFR parts 264 and 
    265.
    * * * * *
        (g) Corporate Guarantee. (1) An owner or operator may meet the 
    requirements of this section by obtaining a written guarantee. The 
    guarantor must be the direct or higher-tier parent corporation of the 
    owner or operator, a firm whose parent corporation is also the parent 
    corporation of the owner or operator, or a firm with a ``substantial 
    business relationship'' with the owner or operator. The guarantor must 
    meet the requirements for owners or operators in paragraph (e) of this 
    section and must comply with the terms of the guarantee. A certified 
    copy of the guarantee must be placed in the facility's operating record 
    along with copies of the letter from the guarantor's chief financial 
    officer and accountants' opinions. If the guarantor's parent 
    corporation is also the parent corporation of the owner or operator, 
    the letter from the guarantor's chief financial officer must describe 
    the value received in consideration of the guarantee. If the guarantor 
    is a firm with a ``substantial business relationship'' with the owner 
    or operator, this letter must describe this ``substantial business 
    relationship'' and the value received in consideration of the 
    guarantee.
        (2) The guarantee must be effective and all required submissions 
    placed in the operating record before the initial receipt of waste or 
    before the effective date of the requirements of this section (April 9, 
    1997 or October 9, 1997 for MSWLF units meeting the conditions of 
    Sec. 258.1(f)(1), whichever is later, in the case of closure and post-
    closure care, or in the case of corrective action no later than 120 
    days after the corrective action remedy has been selected in accordance 
    with the requirements of Sec. 258.58.
        (3) The terms of the guarantee must provide that:
        (i) If the owner or operator fails to perform closure, post-closure 
    care, and/or corrective action of a facility covered by the guarantee, 
    the guarantor will:
        (A) Perform, or pay a third party to perform, closure, post-closure 
    care, and/or corrective action as required (performance guarantee); or
        (B) Establish a fully funded trust fund as specified in paragraph 
    (a) of this section in the name of the owner or operator (payment 
    guarantee).
        (ii) The guarantee will remain in force for as long as the owner or 
    operator must comply with the applicable financial assurance 
    requirements of this Subpart unless the guarantor sends prior notice of 
    cancellation by certified mail to the owner or operator and to the 
    State Director. Cancellation may not occur,
    
    [[Page 17731]]
    
    however, during the 120 days beginning on the date of receipt of the 
    notice of cancellation by both the owner or operator and the State 
    Director, as evidenced by the return receipts.
        (iii) If notice of cancellation is given, the owner or operator 
    must, within 90 days following receipt of the cancellation notice by 
    the owner or operator and the State Director, obtain alternate 
    financial assurance, place evidence of that alternate financial 
    assurance in the facility operating record, and notify the State 
    Director. If the owner or operator fails to provide alternate financial 
    assurance within the 90-day period, the guarantor must provide that 
    alternate assurance within 120 days of the cancellation notice, obtain 
    alternative assurance, place evidence of the alternate assurance in the 
    facility operating record, and notify the State Director.
        (4) If a corporate guarantor no longer meets the requirements of 
    paragraph (e)(1) of this section, the owner or operator must, within 90 
    days, obtain alternative assurance, place evidence of the alternate 
    assurance in the facility operating record, and notify the State 
    Director. If the owner or operator fails to provide alternate financial 
    assurance within the 90-day period, the guarantor must provide that 
    alternate assurance within the next 30 days.
        (5) The owner or operator is no longer required to meet the 
    requirements of this paragraph (g) when:
        (i) The owner or operator substitutes alternate financial assurance 
    as specified in this section; or
        (ii) The owner or operator is released from the requirements of 
    this section in accordance with Sec. 258.71(b), Sec. 258.72(b), or 
    Sec. 258.73(b).
    * * * * *
        (k) Use of multiple mechanisms. An owner or operator may 
    demonstrate financial assurance for closure, post-closure, and 
    corrective action, as required by Secs. 258.71, 258.72, and 258.73 by 
    establishing more than one mechanism per facility, except that 
    mechanisms guaranteeing performance rather than payment, may not be 
    combined with other instruments. The mechanisms must be as specified in 
    paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i), and (j) of this 
    section, except that financial assurance for an amount at least equal 
    to the current cost estimate for closure, post-closure care, and/or 
    corrective action may be provided by a combination of mechanisms rather 
    than a single mechanism.
    * * * * *
    [FR Doc. 98-9558 Filed 4-9-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/10/1998
Published:
04/10/1998
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-9558
Dates:
This regulation is effective April 10, 1998. This rule provides regulatory relief by establishing additional, less costly mechanisms for owners and operators to comply with existing financial assurance requirements.
Pages:
17706-17731 (26 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRL-5994-7
RINs:
2050-AD77: RCRA Subtitle D Corporate Financial Test and Guarantee
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2050-AD77/rcra-subtitle-d-corporate-financial-test-and-guarantee
PDF File:
98-9558.pdf
CFR: (16)
40 CFR 258.71(b)
40 CFR 258.73(b)
40 CFR 258.74(e)(2)
40 CFR 258.74(e)(2)(vi)
40 CFR 258.1(f)(1)
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