98-21746. Revision of Existing Variance and Exemption Regulations To Comply With Requirements of the Safe Drinking Water Act  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 157 (Friday, August 14, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 43834-43851]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-21746]
    
    
    
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    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part IV
    
    
    
    
    
    Environmental Protection Agency
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    40 CFR Parts 141 and 142
    
    
    
    Revision of Existing Variance and Exemption Regulations To Comply With 
    Requirements of the Safe Drinking Water Act; Final Rule
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 157 / Friday, August 14, 1998 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
    [[Page 43834]]
    
    
    
    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
    
    40 CFR Parts 141 and 142
    
    [FRL-6144-2]
    RIN 2020-AA37
    
    
    Revision of Existing Variance and Exemption Regulations To Comply 
    With Requirements of the Safe Drinking Water Act
    
    AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Agency is promulgating regulations to revise the existing 
    regulations regarding Safe Drinking Water Act variances and exemptions. 
    These revisions are based on the 1996 Safe Drinking Water Act 
    Amendments. In addition to revising the existing language regarding 
    variances and exemptions, the rule includes procedures and conditions 
    under which a primacy State/Tribe or the EPA Administrator may issue 
    small system variances to public water systems serving less than 10,000 
    persons. This rule-making is intended to provide regulatory relief to 
    all public water systems, particularly small systems.
    
    DATES: This rule is effective September 14, 1998. Solely for judicial 
    review purposes, this final rule is promulgated as of 1 p.m. eastern 
    time on August 28, 1998 as provided in 40 CFR 23.7.
    
    ADDRESSES: The rule-making record is available for inspection at the 
    Water Docket, mailcode MC4101, Room EB57, Environmental Protection 
    Agency, 401 M Street, SW., Washington, DC, 20460, from 9 a.m. to 4 
    p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. For access to 
    docket materials, please call (202) 260-3027 to schedule an 
    appointment.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Andrew J. Hudock, Office of 
    Enforcement and Compliance Assurance, Office of Regulatory Enforcement, 
    Water Enforcement Division (Mailcode: 2243-A), Environmental Protection 
    Agency, 401 M Street, SW., Washington, DC, 20460. Phone: (202) 564-
    6032.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Table of Contents
    
    I. Statutory Authority
        A. Overview
        B. New Small System Variances
        C. General Variances and Exemptions
    II. Consultation with Public Water Systems, State, Tribal and Local 
    Governments, Environmental Groups, and Public Interest Groups
    III. Discussion of Final Rule
        A. Purpose and Applicability
        B. Effective Date
        C. Primacy Requirements
        D. ``Plain English'' Format of New Subpart
        E. General Provisions in Subpart K
        F. Small System Variance Requirements
        1. Section 142.306. Compliance Options Analysis
        2. Section 142.306(b). Documentation of State Considerations in 
    Reviewing Small System Variances
        3. Section 142.306(b)(2). Affordability Criteria
        4. Section 142.306(b)(3). Availability of Approved Variance 
    Technologies
        5. Section 142.306(b)(5). Adequate Protection of Public Health
        6. Section 142.307. Terms and Conditions of Small System 
    Variances
        7. Section 142.307(c)(4). Compliance Period for Small System 
    Variances
        8. Sections 142.308-142.310. Public Participation Requirements 
    for Issuance of a Small System Variance
        G. Sections 142.311 and 142.312. Bases for Administrator's 
    Objections to State-Proposed Small System Variances
        H. Section 142.313. Bases for Administrator's Review of State 
    Small System Variance Program
        I. General Variances: Time Limitation
        J. Relationship of Exemptions and Small System Variances
        K. State Revolving Fund and Capacity Development Plan Linkage to 
    Exemptions and Small System Variances
        L. Exemptions: Renewals for Small Systems
    IV. Cost of Rule
    V. Other Administrative Requirements
        A. Executive Order 12866
        B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
        C. Paperwork Reduction Act
        D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
        E. Enhancing Intergovernmental Partnerships
        F. Risk to Children Analysis and Environmental Justice
        G. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
        H. Congressional Review Act
    VI. Response to Public Comments
    
    Regulated Entities
    
        Potentially regulated entities are public water systems (PWSs).
    
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               Category                  Example of regulated entities      
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Industry.....................  Privately-owned utilities, ancillary     
                                    water systems, homeowner's associations,
                                    mobile home parks, municipalities;      
                                    county governments; water districts;    
                                    water and sewer authorities.            
    State/Local/Tribal             Publicly-owned PWSs, municipalities,     
     governments.                   county governments, water districts,    
                                    State governments.                      
    Federal government...........  Federally-owned PWSs.                    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        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 the Agency is now 
    aware could potentially be regulated by this action. Other types of 
    entities not listed in this table could also be regulated. If you have 
    questions regarding the applicability of this action to a particular 
    entity, consult the person listed in the preceding section, FOR FURTHER 
    INFORMATION CONTACT. Please note that elsewhere throughout this 
    preamble and rule, the term ``State'' has the same definition as 
    currently exists in 40 CFR 141.2, i.e., ``State means the agency of the 
    State or Tribal government which has jurisdiction over public water 
    systems* * *.''
    
    I. Statutory Authority
    
        Sections 115-117 of the Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) Amendments 
    of 1996 (Pub. L. 104-182), enacted August 6, 1996, amended sections 
    1415 and 1416 of the Act (42 U.S.C. 300g-4, 300g-5) concerning 
    variances and exemptions. This rulemaking codifies, interprets, and 
    implements these new provisions.
    
    A. Overview
    
        As provided under the Act, under certain conditions, variances are 
    available to public water systems that cannot (due to source water 
    quality, or, in the case of small systems, affordability) comply with 
    the national primary drinking water standards. Variances generally 
    allow a system to provide drinking water that may be above the maximum 
    contaminant level on the condition that the quality of the drinking 
    water is still protective of public health. In the case of small system 
    variances, the duration of the variance generally coincides with the 
    life of the technology. An exemption, on the other hand, is intended to 
    allow a system with compelling circumstances an extension of time 
    before the system must comply with applicable Safe Drinking Water Act 
    requirements. An exemption is limited to three years after the 
    otherwise applicable compliance date, although extensions up to a total
    
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    of six additional years may be available to small systems under certain 
    conditions.
    
    B. New Small System Variances
    
        Section 1415(e) establishes new provisions by which a small public 
    water system may obtain a variance from complying with National Primary 
    Drinking Water Regulations (NPDWR) under certain specified conditions. 
    These provisions were discussed in detail in the proposal (63 FR 19439-
    40).
    
    C. General Variances and Exemptions
    
        As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule, Congress 
    modified the language governing general variances (i.e., those 
    variances available to systems of any size). First, a variance may now 
    be granted on the condition that the system install the best 
    technology, treatment technique, or other means, which the 
    Administrator finds are available. This new modification changes the 
    previous requirement that mandated that the system install variance 
    technologies before a variance could be issued. Second, before a 
    variance can be issued, Congress also requires primacy States/Tribes to 
    conduct an evaluation that satisfies the State/Tribe that alternative 
    sources of water are not reasonably available to a system. Today's rule 
    codifies these changes.
        Congress made several changes to the exemption provisions as well. 
    First, the new provisions require the schedule for an exemption to 
    require compliance with each contaminant level and treatment technique 
    for which the exemption was granted as soon as practicable, but not 
    later than three years after the otherwise applicable compliance date 
    established in section 1412(b)(10) of the Act.
        The only exception to this exemption time period is in section 
    1416(b)(2)(C) of the Act, for small systems serving less than 3,300 
    persons, under certain specified conditions, for which extensions may 
    be renewed for one or more additional two-year periods, but not to 
    exceed a total of six years of extensions, in addition to the three-
    year original exemption.
        Second, the Amendments also modified section 1416 of the Act to 
    specify a wider set of factors that need to be considered before an 
    exemption is granted from the requirements of the NPDWR. Section 
    1416(a) of the Act now requires the State/Tribe, in determining whether 
    an exemption may be granted, to consider whether the public water 
    system is a ``disadvantaged community'' and whether management or 
    restructuring changes can be made that will result in compliance or, if 
    compliance cannot be achieved, would improve the quality of the 
    drinking water. Section 1416(a)(4) also requires a State/Tribe to 
    consider measures to develop an alternative source of water supply. 
    Finally, section 1416(b)(2)(D) of the Act states that a small system 
    that has received a variance under section 1415(e) cannot receive an 
    exemption under section 1416.
    
    II. Consultation With Public Water Systems, State, Tribal and Local 
    Governments, Environmental Groups, and Public Interest Groups
    
        As required under section 1415 of the SDWA, as amended, the Agency 
    has consulted with State representatives, as well as a broad range of 
    other interested parties, in the development of this rule. These 
    consultations are described in the preamble to the proposed rule (63 FR 
    19440-41). The rule being promulgated today has been developed in 
    consultation with, and takes into consideration suggestions from, 
    public water systems, environmental groups, public interest groups, the 
    States, Tribes, and other interested parties.
    
    III. Discussion of Final Rule
    
    A. Purpose and Applicability
    
        Through this regulation, the Agency seeks to codify the 1996 SDWA 
    amendments addressing general variances and exemptions provisions, as 
    well as providing a new subpart which addresses the procedures for 
    issuance of small system variances. This rule will be applicable to all 
    eligible public water systems and primacy agencies (States, Tribes, and 
    the Agency).
    
    B. Effective Date
    
        The effective date of this rule will be September 14, 1998. The 30-
    day effective date in the final regulations allows for a State to issue 
    variances and exemptions as soon as the State adopts regulations no 
    less stringent than today's regulations and submits any revisions to 
    the State's rules to EPA for approval under 40 CFR 142.12(a)(1). A 
    State may adopt these regulations at any time before or after the 30-
    day effective date.
        Upon the effective date, the issuance of all variances and 
    exemptions must meet requirements which are no less stringent than 
    today's rule. If a State has existing regulations which are less 
    stringent than today's rule and the State wishes to issue variances or 
    exemptions, the State must adopt regulations which are no less 
    stringent than today's rule.
        In response to commenters who were concerned that the 30-day time 
    period is too short for implementation by the State, EPA wishes to 
    clarify that the effective date in the regulation does not require that 
    a State adopt the regulation and modify its program within 30 days of 
    promulgation. A State may choose not to issue variances or exemptions 
    or may choose to delay implementation until new applicable drinking 
    water regulations are promulgated. The effective date provision in the 
    regulation does not limit the State in its decision whether to 
    implement these regulations.
    
    C. Primacy Requirements
    
        Primacy States/Tribes, if they choose to issue variances and 
    exemptions, are required under section 1413(a)(4) of the Safe Drinking 
    Water Act to issue such variances and exemptions under conditions and 
    in a manner which is not less stringent than the variance and exemption 
    provisions of the Act. In addition, section 1415(e)(7)(A) of the Safe 
    Drinking Water Act requires the Administrator to promulgate regulations 
    that specify procedures to be used by the Administrator or the State to 
    grant or deny variances. In reading these two provisions together, EPA 
    believes that Congress intended that States adopt procedures no less 
    stringent than those identified in this rule for issuance of small 
    system variances. Therefore, the Agency has amended Sec. 142.10(d) of 
    the regulations accordingly. Thus, if a primacy State wishes to issue 
    small system variances, it must first enact State regulations which are 
    no less stringent than the requirements in section 1415(e) of the Act 
    and as embodied in this rule, and seek EPA approval of such regulations 
    by submitting a program revision package.
    
    D. ``Plain English'' Format of New Subpart
    
        As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule, the Agency has 
    drafted Subpart K of these regulations in a question-and-answer format 
    in ``plain English'', in accordance with current Agency policy for 
    regulation development. The intent of ``plain English'' is to produce 
    rules which are clear, concise, straight-forward, understandable, and 
    enforceable, without extensive ``legalese''. Public comments supported 
    this approach.
        On June 1, 1998, President Clinton issued a memorandum directing 
    that federal government documents generally be drafted in ``plain 
    language''. Although the Presidential Memorandum does not apply to 
    rules, such as this one, which are proposed before 1999, EPA believes 
    that this rule incorporates and is fully consistent with
    
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    the plain language concepts outlined in the Memorandum.
    
    E. General Provisions in Subpart K
    
        Sections 142.301-142.305 of the small system variance regulations 
    essentially codify the statutory provisions governing who can apply 
    for, and who can grant, these variances. EPA has promulgated these 
    provisions as proposed, with slight modifications to address public 
    comments.
        For small system variances, section 1415(e)(6) of the Safe Drinking 
    Water Act states that such variances are not available for (1) any 
    maximum contaminant level (MCL) or treatment technique for a 
    contaminant for which a NPDWR was promulgated prior to January 1, 1986, 
    or (2) a NPDWR for a microbial contaminant or an indicator or treatment 
    technique for microbial contaminant. As discussed in the preamble to 
    the proposed rule, the Agency will not be listing small system variance 
    technologies for microbial contaminants. In addition, the Agency will 
    not be listing any variance technology for an MCL or treatment 
    technique for a contaminant for which a NPDWR was promulgated prior to 
    January 1, 1986 and not subsequently revised or allowing any variances 
    for such contaminants (see Sec. 142.304). With respect to this latter 
    category, the Agency interprets the section 1415(e)(6)(A) prohibition 
    in the Act to apply to the level at which any contaminant was regulated 
    before 1986; therefore, variances are not available to systems above 
    the pre-1986 level even if that level was subsequently revised. 
    However, if the Agency revises a pre-1986 level and makes it more 
    stringent (i.e., makes the MCL lower), then a variance would be 
    available for that contaminant, but only up to the pre-1986 MCL.
        Generally, public comments were supportive of this interpretation. 
    One public commenter suggested that the Agency allow small system 
    variances above the pre-1986 MCL. As noted in the preamble to the 
    proposed rule (63 FR 19442), EPA believes that the scope of the 
    prohibition on issuing a variance for an MCL or treatment technique for 
    a contaminant with respect to which an NPDWR was promulgated prior to 
    1986 is somewhat ambiguous. However, EPA believes that the best 
    interpretation of this provision is that the prohibition attaches to 
    the pre-1986 level for the contaminant and that no variances are 
    allowable for revisions to these levels that are less stringent. The 
    interpretation suggested by the commenter would allow variances for 
    revised, less stringent MCLs even where compliance with an earlier, 
    more stringent MCL was required years ago. This interpretation is 
    inconsistent with what EPA surmises as the intent behind this 
    provision, i.e., to disallow variances for contaminants where 
    compliance should have been achieved long ago. Therefore, EPA is 
    finalizing the regulation as proposed, but with a note stating EPA's 
    interpretation of this provision.
        The Agency also received a comment suggesting that the Agency 
    prohibit issuance of the small system variance for acute contaminants. 
    EPA believes that such a prohibition is unnecessary. Congress has 
    already prohibited the issuance of small system variances for microbial 
    contaminants, including many of the acute contaminants. For any other 
    contaminants, EPA may not list a variance technology unless the Agency 
    makes a finding that the use of that technology for that contaminant is 
    protective of public health. In addition, prior to issuance of any 
    small system variance, the primacy agency must also make a finding that 
    the specific terms and conditions of the variance will ensure adequate 
    protection of human health. EPA believes that these determinations will 
    appropriately limit variances for acute contaminants.
    
    F. Small System Variance Requirements
    
        Sections 142.306-142.310 of the rule establish the conditions under 
    which the primacy agency can grant small system variances. The Agency 
    attempted in the proposed rule to provide flexibility in the process of 
    applying and reviewing requests for small system variances. For 
    example, the Agency did not specify any particular form of a variance 
    application or who (the system or the State) needs to provide the 
    relevant information; rather, the Agency only specified that the 
    information must be sufficient for the primacy agency to make certain 
    findings and that those findings must be documented in writing.
        Some commenters requested that the Agency clarify who has the 
    burden of ensuring that the information necessary to issue a small 
    system variance is available. The Agency recognizes that States may 
    have helpful technical information that may not be readily available to 
    a small system, such as sanitary surveys. States are encouraged to work 
    with the small systems to determine compliance options and to develop 
    information which may improve the quality of the water served by the 
    system. States may provide valuable assistance to small systems that do 
    not have the capacity to obtain necessary information on their own. 
    States may use elements in their Capacity Development Strategies to 
    assist public water systems in gathering all necessary information for 
    the variance to be issued. However, the ultimate responsibility for 
    providing the information necessary to support a variance rests with 
    the public water system requesting a small system variance as 
    prescribed in section 142.306(a) of the regulation. EPA has modified 
    the regulations to clarify this.
    1. Section 142.306. Compliance Options Analysis
        Sections 1415(e)(1)-(3) of the Act identify the conditions under 
    which small systems may receive a small system variance. In the rule, 
    Sec. 142.306(b) codifies these conditions and includes concepts related 
    to the State Capacity Development Strategy. The compliance options 
    analysis is an integral element of sections 1415 and 1416 of the Act, 
    as well as under the rule at Sec. 142.306(b). Similar in concept to 
    capacity development, a compliance options analysis can allow the State 
    to consider the underlying reasons for noncompliance, and what options 
    are available to the system to return to compliance for the long term. 
    This portion of the regulations is final as proposed.
    2. Section 142.306(b). Documentation of State Considerations in 
    Reviewing Small System Variances
        The regulations require that States document their findings 
    regarding a small system's eligibility for a small system variance. 
    Where the State does not have primary enforcement responsibility under 
    section 1413 of the Safe Drinking Water Act, the Agency will document 
    its findings for the record, if it grants a small system variance.
        Some public comments on the proposed regulations indicated that 
    documentation of State findings and subsequent submittal to the 
    Administrator (as required under Sec. 142.311) imposed an unnecessary 
    and unreasonable burden on the regulatory agency, and stated that this 
    burden should lie more heavily on the public water system. EPA believes 
    that it is imperative for the regulatory agency to clearly specify and 
    document any information used in determining whether to grant a small 
    system variance. A thorough record must be available for interested 
    members of the public to understand, comment on, or possibly object to 
    a proposed variance or otherwise make informed decisions relating to 
    the public water system. In addition, this information is necessary
    
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    for EPA to adequately review proposed small system variances issued as 
    well as for the EPA periodic review of the State variance program as 
    required by the Act. Because the State or the Administrator would be 
    the actual decision makers, they are in a better position than the 
    public water system to document and maintain their findings.
        Documentation required in the rule must indicate not only that a 
    certain factor listed in Sec. 142.306 of the regulations was 
    considered, but must also include the rationale for decisions by the 
    State or EPA regarding each of the required findings, as well as the 
    underlying facts supporting that decision. Note, however, that EPA does 
    not believe that this documentation necessarily needs to be extensive. 
    Rather, the documentation needs to be sufficient to explain how the 
    variance will meet the statutory and regulatory requirements in enough 
    detail that interested members of the public and EPA can understand the 
    basis for the decision and determine whether to object to the variance.
    3. Section 142.306(b)(2). Affordability Criteria
        Section 142.306(b)(2) of the rule codifies the statutory 
    requirement that States undertake a compliance options analysis in 
    accordance with the State's own affordability criteria (including 
    noncommunity systems). One commenter expressed concern that, depending 
    on the level of detail required, the cost of undertaking and 
    documenting such an analysis could be excessive relative to the cost of 
    installing an appropriate variance technology. As an example, the 
    commenter indicated that in their experience, the cost of evaluating 
    restructuring and consolidation options for a given project area ranged 
    from $50,000 to $100,000. EPA understands that a rigorous compliance 
    options analysis may be resource-intensive and expects that States and 
    public water systems will tailor the level of analysis to the needs and 
    resource constraints of the specific situation. EPA received no other 
    comments on this section and is promulgating the rule as proposed.
    4. Section 142.306(b)(3). Availability of Approved Variance 
    Technologies
        Section 1412(b)(15)(D) of the Act requires that, not later than 
    August 6, 1998, the Agency issue guidance or regulations regarding the 
    available variance technologies for each national primary drinking 
    water regulation for which a variance may be granted. The variance 
    regulations include, in various sections (including Sec. 142.306), the 
    requirement that, during review of an application for a small system 
    variance, a primacy State or the Administrator make a finding whether, 
    among other things, the Administrator has published a variance 
    technology in accordance with section 1412(b)(15) for the applicable 
    maximum contaminant level or treatment technique for which that 
    variance is sought.
        Pursuant to section 1412(b)(15)(A) of the Act, variance 
    technologies may not suffice to achieve compliance with the relevant 
    maximum contaminant level or treatment technique, but the variance 
    technologies must achieve the maximum reduction or inactivation 
    efficiency that is affordable considering the size of the system and 
    the quality of the source water. In addition, section 1412(b)(15)(B) 
    requires that any identified variance technology be determined by the 
    Administrator to be protective of public health.
        Some public comments requested clarification of whether an 
    alternative technology, not listed by the Administrator pursuant to 
    section 1412(b)(15) of the Act, may be installed through a small system 
    variance. Section 142.307(b)(1) of the regulation requires that the 
    terms and conditions of the small system variance include installation 
    of the technology specified under section 1412(b)(15)(D) of the Act. 
    The Agency recognizes the importance and beneficial value of new 
    alternative technologies. However, Congress specifically mandated that 
    the Administrator publish a list of technologies for small systems and 
    that only the listed technologies may be installed through issuance of 
    a small system variance technology. A State or any other party may 
    petition the Administrator to consider the listing of any new 
    alternative technology. However, section 1415(e)(2) of the Act makes 
    clear that the Agency must specifically list a small system technology 
    before a State may allow a system to install such technology through a 
    small system variance.
    5. Section 142.306(b)(5). Adequate Protection of Public Health
        Section 142.306(b)(5) of the rule codifies the statutory 
    requirement that the primacy agency grant a small system variance only 
    where the terms ensure adequate protection of public health, 
    considering the source water quality and removal efficiencies and 
    expected useful life of the small systems variance technology. Under 
    section 1412(b)(15)(B) of the Act, the Administrator, in identifying 
    variance technologies for small systems, must determine that the 
    technology is protective of public health considering the quality of 
    the source water to be treated and the expected useful life of the 
    technology. As explained in the preamble to the proposed rule, the 
    Agency believes that Congress intended the Administrator to make a 
    determination that, on a national level, any variance technology 
    identified is generally protective of public health when applied within 
    general source water conditions and operating and maintenance 
    procedures. However, recognizing that the level of public health 
    protection afforded by a specific technology could be dependent on 
    site-specific factors that may vary system by system, Congress provided 
    for a corresponding requirement that the State also make a 
    determination that the terms of the variance as applied to a particular 
    system adequately protect public health.
        As required under section 1412(b)(15)(C) of the Act, the variance 
    technology guidance under section 1412(b)(15)(D) will identify 
    assumptions used by the Administrator in determining that each 
    technology is protective of public health. In doing so, the guidance 
    will identify the typical removal efficiency achieved by each variance 
    technology listed by the Administrator, considering the overall 
    capabilities of the treatment process and the source waters on which 
    the technology would typically be applied. The guidance will also 
    discuss source water characteristics that can adversely affect the 
    removal of the contaminant by the process. The State may use this 
    information in the guidance to set specific terms and conditions on the 
    operation of the technology that will ensure adequate protection of 
    public health.
        In the proposed rule, EPA solicited comment on whether it would be 
    useful and appropriate to provide additional technology-specific 
    guidance on site-specific factors that should be considered and 
    appropriate terms and conditions that may be needed to ensure adequate 
    protection of public health. In general, commenters were strongly 
    supportive of this idea. Therefore, EPA plans to develop such guidance 
    and make it available as expeditiously as possible after promulgation 
    of this rule. This guidance will cover those contaminants, if any, and 
    available small system variance technologies which are identified in 
    the initial listing prepared under section 1412(b)(15)(C). As 
    additional contaminants and small system variance technologies are 
    identified in the future, the new guidance listing these technologies 
    will include information on consideration of
    
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    site-specific factors and appropriate terms and conditions that may be 
    needed to ensure adequate protection of public health.
        Several commenters, while endorsing the need for such guidance, 
    also indicated that it should be informational in nature, and not 
    undermine the statutory authority of primacy States to determine that 
    the terms of the variance ensure adequate protection of public health. 
    As stated in the preamble to the proposed rule, EPA understands that 
    Congress clearly left the responsibility to consider site-specific 
    factors and define appropriate terms and conditions to ensure adequate 
    protection of public health to the primacy agencies, and EPA does not 
    wish to diminish that responsibility. At the same time, the Agency 
    believes (and commenters seem to agree) that it may be efficient for 
    EPA to identify, in the context of its determination that a technology 
    is protective, those factors of which the Agency is aware that may be 
    appropriate for the State to consider on a site-specific basis and to 
    suggest appropriate responses to situations which pose additional 
    risks. It is in this spirit that EPA has decided to develop the 
    guidance discussed in this section.
        EPA also requested comment in the proposed rule regarding the 
    appropriateness of including, in the final rule, a requirement that 
    States specifically consider impacts on sensitive subpopulations in 
    their determination of adequate public health protection. Commenters 
    were not supportive of such a requirement and EPA has decided not to 
    include it in the final rule. As an alternative, EPA indicated that it 
    may include, in the guidance discussed above, information on specific 
    factors that may result in special risks to sensitive subpopulations 
    and suggestions on how to address such risks. States could then use 
    this information as appropriate to support their determination of 
    adequate protection of public health. Commenters were supportive of 
    this alternative approach. Consequently, EPA will include, in the 
    guidance on site-specific factors and appropriate terms and conditions, 
    information on special risks to sensitive subpopulations, where such 
    risks have been identified, and suggestions on how to address them.
    6. Section 142.307. Terms and Conditions of Small System Variances
        Section 142.307 outlines what terms and conditions must be included 
    in a small system variance. The Agency received no comments on this 
    section and is thus promulgating it as proposed.
    7. Section 142.307(c)(4). Compliance Period for Small System Variances
        Section 142.307(c)(4) of the rule codifies the statutory language 
    regarding the duration of variances. The Agency is promulgating this 
    section as proposed.
        As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule, the Agency 
    interprets section 1415(e)(4) to allow the primacy agency to grant the 
    two-year extension to the compliance period at the time of issuance of 
    the variance, upon a determination by the primacy State or the 
    Administrator that those two additional years are necessary to ensure 
    compliance. Such a determination should be supported with sufficient 
    documentation. Therefore, it is possible, under certain conditions, 
    that small systems may receive a five-year compliance schedule to 
    achieve compliance with the terms and conditions of the small system 
    variance.
    8. Sections 142.308-142.310. Public Participation Requirements for 
    Issuance of a Small System Variance
    a. Overview
        The Agency is required under section 1415(e)(7)(A)(i) of the Act to 
    promulgate regulations specifying requirements for notifying the 
    consumers of the public water system that a small system variance is 
    proposed to be granted (including information regarding the contaminant 
    and variance) and requirements for a public hearing on the small system 
    variance before the variance is granted. Today's rule addresses this 
    statutory mandate through Secs. 142.308-142.310 of the regulations. 
    These requirements are also intended to ensure that persons served by 
    the system who may wish to file a petition with the Administrator to 
    object to the variance, as provided for in section 1415(e)(10)(B) of 
    the Act, have adequate information and time to do so.
        The overall structure of the process intended by today's 
    regulations for granting a small system variance has been modified in 
    response to public comment. This process, as modified, is outlined 
    below, with changes to the process discussed in further detail in the 
    paragraphs which follow the outline:
        (1) A small public water system submits an application to the 
    primacy agency for a small system variance;
        (2) The primacy agency reviews the small system's application and 
    performs a compliance options analysis to determine if a small system 
    variance should be issued to the public water system.
        (3) If a small system variance can be issued in accordance with the 
    Act and the regulations, and upon finding and documenting the required 
    information under Section 142.307 of the rule, the primacy agency 
    establishes the terms and conditions of the proposed small system 
    variance;
        (4) The primacy agency or public water system provides notice to 
    persons served by the system of the primacy agency's intent to propose 
    the small system variance and of a public hearing on the proposed 
    variance, including information on the contaminant and its potential 
    health effects, the compliance options considered, and the terms and 
    conditions of the proposed variance; this information must be provided 
    at least 30 days prior to the date of the public meeting;
        (5) The primacy agency prepares a draft of the small system 
    variance, including terms and conditions, and, if the public meeting 
    occurs prior to proposal of the small system variance, makes the draft 
    variance available to the public no later than the public meeting;
        (6) The primacy agency proposes the variance by publishing a notice 
    in the State equivalent of the Federal Register, or in a newspaper 
    widely distributed through the State, or, in the case of the 
    Administrator, in the Federal Register;
        (7) Either before, or within 15 days after publication of this 
    notice that the variance has been proposed, the primacy agency conducts 
    a public hearing on the draft proposed small system variance;
        (8) If a State proposes to issue a small system variance to a 
    public water system serving 3,300 or fewer persons, the State must 
    submit the proposed small system variance and all supporting 
    documentation to EPA for review; if a State proposes to issue a small 
    system variance to a public water system serving a population of more 
    than 3,300 and fewer than 10,000 persons, the State must submit the 
    proposed small system variance and all supporting documentation, 
    including any public comments received prior to this submission, to EPA 
    for review and approval of the proposed variance;
        (9) Within thirty days of the proposal date (the date on which the 
    primacy agency publishes the notice of the proposed variance) of any 
    small system variance, persons served by the system may petition the 
    Administrator to object to the proposed small system variance; and
        (10) The Administrator must respond to all such petitions within 60 
    days of receiving them and may object to a proposed small system 
    variance within 90 days of the proposal date.
        After reviewing public comments on the proposed regulations, EPA 
    has
    
    [[Page 43839]]
    
    modified these regulations to provide that either the State or public 
    water system must provide the notice for a public meeting on the small 
    system variance at the same time that the State notifies the public 
    that it intends to propose the small system variance. EPA received many 
    public comments indicating that, in many circumstances, the public 
    water system would be in a better position than the State to identify 
    the persons served by the system and the public water system should 
    have the burden of providing public notice. The revised regulation 
    allows the State to direct the public water system to conduct the 
    public notification requirements in the regulation.
        In addition, the Agency received comments that not all States may 
    be able to publish such public notice in a State equivalent to the 
    Federal Register. In response, the regulations now provide that the 
    State may publish the notice of the proposed variance in a newspaper 
    with wide circulation in the State.
        In summary, the regulation requires that at least one public notice 
    must be provided to the system's consumers (as defined in section 
    III.F.8.d. of the preamble) (in addition to publishing notice of the 
    proposed variance in the State Register or Federal Register or in a 
    newspaper widely distributed in the State) to fulfill the requirement 
    of notifying the public of the public hearing and proposal of the small 
    system variance. In any case, the Administrator encourages States and 
    small systems to engage the public in the development and issuance of 
    the small system variance early in the process.
    b. Notice by Public Water Systems at the Time that a Small System 
    Variance Application Is Submitted
        Based on public comments on the proposed regulations, the Agency is 
    not mandating that the public water system provide notice to the 
    persons served by the system that the system is applying for a small 
    system variance. (Such additional requirements may be imposed through 
    State regulations.) Other regulations, such as the public notification 
    rule and the consumer confidence rule, will ensure that the persons 
    served by the system are aware that the system is operating in 
    violation of the applicable drinking water regulation. Therefore, 
    requiring this initial notice may be redundant in nature and may not be 
    an efficient manner of notifying the public of the condition of the 
    drinking water being supplied by the public water system. Even though 
    this regulation does not require the proposed early notice, the Agency 
    encourages early involvement of the public in the small system variance 
    process.
    c. Public Meeting Requirement
        Section 142.309 of the regulations addresses the requirements for a 
    public meeting on a draft proposed small system variance and notice of 
    the public meeting. Consistent with section 1415(e)(7)(A)(i) of the 
    Act, a State or the Administrator is required to provide for at least 
    one (1) public meeting on the small system variance before it is 
    granted. However, before holding a public meeting, the State or the 
    Administrator must make public a draft of the proposed small system 
    variance along with various supporting information as specified in 
    Sec. 142.308(c) of the regulations, to ensure that the public is 
    adequately informed of the terms and conditions likely to be in the 
    proposed small system variance. The State or the Administrator must 
    notify the public of the public meeting (and provide the required 
    supporting information) at least 30 days before the date of the 
    meeting. EPA is promulgating this section as proposed.
    d. Manner of Public Notification
        Section 142.308 of the proposed regulations codifies the Safe 
    Drinking Water Act provision that any person served by the system may 
    petition the Administrator to object to the granting of a variance.
        Public comments requested that the Agency clarify the terms 
    ``customers'', ``consumers'', and ``persons served'' as it is used in 
    this regulation. EPA interprets ``customers'' to mean billing units or 
    other service connections to which water is delivered by the public 
    water system. (Other service connections could include, for example, 
    municipal facilities which receive service but which might not be 
    billed.) On the other hand, EPA interprets ``consumers'' and ``persons 
    served'' more broadly to mean persons who receive drinking water from 
    the public water system on a regular basis. The term ``person served'' 
    or ``consumer'' includes customers, as defined above, and other persons 
    who are served by the public water system on a regular basis, such as 
    factory workers and tenants of apartment houses and condominiums, who 
    may not receive water bills. The notice requirements in these 
    regulations are intended to provide adequate notice for persons who may 
    wish to participate in the variance process or petition the 
    Administrator to object to the variance. The Agency sought to ensure 
    that these definitions are consistent with other supporting regulations 
    currently in development, including the Consumer Confidence Report 
    regulations.
        Based on public comments, the Agency is clarifying whether the 
    primacy agency or the public water system has the burden for the public 
    notice. The Agency recognizes that there may be certain small systems 
    that would require assistance from the primacy agency to satisfy the 
    public notification requirements within the small system variance 
    process. The Agency encourages the primacy agency to work with such 
    systems to ensure that the public is involved in the variance process. 
    However, the Agency does not intend to place the actual burden of the 
    public notice on the primacy agency in these regulations. In order to 
    clarify the Agency's intention, the final regulations make clear that 
    either the primacy agency or the public water system must provide the 
    public notice. The primacy agency maintains flexibility to direct the 
    public water system to provide such notice. For purposes of Agency 
    review and/or approval of a small system variance, the Agency is 
    concerned that the public notification requirements within the 
    regulations are satisfied, not with which entity actually conducts the 
    notice.
        Operators of small systems requested that the Agency address the 
    issue of whether persons who are not billing customers of the system 
    must be provided a notice by direct mail considering the burden 
    associated with identifying and obtaining mailing addresses for non-
    billed consumers of a system's water. In light of all comments, the 
    Agency is retaining the requirement that individual notice only need be 
    provided to billed customers of the system. In addition, notice must be 
    provided in a brief and concise manner to regular consumers who are not 
    billing customers, by some other reasonable method, such as publication 
    in a local newspaper, posting in public places, or delivery to 
    community organizations. Although this might not reach persons outside 
    the service area, it would reach factory workers and tenants of 
    apartment houses and condominiums, even if those persons do not receive 
    water bills. At the time of variance proposal, however, the State must 
    publish a notice in a State-wide publication, thereby reaching 
    interested persons who might not receive water bills or live in the 
    service area. Today's rule would therefore require a State or public 
    water system to provide some form of notice to all persons served by 
    the system on a regular basis.
    
    [[Page 43840]]
    
    e. Content of Notices
        Section 1415(e)(7)(A)(i) of the Safe Drinking Water Act requires 
    that public notification include information regarding the contaminant 
    and variance. Section 142.308(c) of the regulations implements this 
    statutory requirement. In this provision, the Agency is requiring, 
    along with other information, specific health effects language to be 
    used in the notices. The Agency is requiring use of the health effects 
    language developed for the Consumer Confidence Report Rule. The Agency 
    believes that there are many benefits to the use of standard health 
    effects language in the various public notice provisions of the amended 
    Safe Drinking Water Act, particularly in reducing confusion for the 
    systems and the public.
        In addition, in response to comments, EPA has revised the 
    multilingual notification requirement in Sec. 142.308(c)(7) of the 
    proposed regulations. With this revision, the primacy agency will 
    determine what constitutes a large proportion of non-English-speaking 
    residents, and thus when the multilingual notification requirements are 
    applicable. The multilingual notification requirement is consistent 
    with the Agency's Consumer Confidence Report Rule.
        The Agency received several comments expressing concern that small 
    public water systems lack the resources to provide public notification 
    materials in foreign languages, and suggesting that EPA either 
    eliminate this requirement or develop such materials in the ten most 
    frequently used languages. In response, the Agency notes that systems 
    are not required to provide a translation of the materials listed in 
    section 142.308(c), but only ``information in the appropriate language 
    regarding the content and importance of the notice.'' (Section 
    142.308(c)(7)) EPA envisions that in many cases this would entail a 
    relatively short statement indicating that the enclosed materials 
    contain information on a proposed variance from national drinking water 
    regulations which could affect the level of public health protection 
    afforded to consumers of the system's water. Of course, EPA would 
    encourage systems that do have the resources to provide more complete 
    translations of the public notification materials in cases where a 
    significant non-English-speaking population is present.
    f. Consumer Petition Process
        Section 1415(e)(10)(B) of the Safe Drinking Water Act allows for 
    persons served by the system to petition the Administrator to object to 
    the granting of a small system variance; such petitions must be 
    submitted not later than thirty days after a State proposes to issue a 
    small system variance. This statutory provision is implemented in 
    section 142.310 of today's rule. EPA has clarified the regulation to 
    specify that the date of ``proposal'' is the date upon which the State 
    publishes its notice of proposal in a State-wide publication. Consumer 
    petitions should be mailed to the EPA Regional Administrator.
    
    G. Sections 142.311 and 142.312. Bases for Administrator's Objections 
    to State-Proposed Small System Variances
    
        Pursuant to section 1415(e)(9) of the Act, Sec. 142.312(a) of the 
    rule requires a primacy State, which is proposing to grant a small 
    system variance to a public water system serving more than 3,300 and 
    fewer than 10,000 persons, to submit that variance to the Administrator 
    for review and approval prior to issuance. Section 142.312(c) requires 
    that, if the Administrator disapproves the variance, the Administrator 
    notify the State in writing of the reasons for such disapproval. Such 
    disapproval must be based upon a determination that the small system 
    did not meet the requirements for a variance under the Act and 
    regulations, including the requirement that the system cannot afford to 
    comply with the maximum contaminant level (MCL) or treatment technique 
    for which the variance is being sought, in accordance with the State 
    affordability criteria.
        In addition, Sec. 142.311(a) of the rule requires a primacy State, 
    which is proposing to grant a small system variance to a public water 
    system serving 3,300 or fewer persons, to submit that variance to the 
    Administrator for review prior to issuance. Some public comments to the 
    proposed regulations suggested that the Administrator does not have the 
    statutory authority to review proposed small system variances for 
    systems serving fewer than 3,300 persons and that the proposed 
    regulations are therefore in conflict with section 1415(e)(1) and 
    1415(e)(8) of the Act. The Agency does not believe that this 
    interpretation of the statute is appropriate since it is inconsistent 
    with the Administrator's broad review authority provided in section 
    1415(e)(10)(A) of the Act.
        The Act specifies two different and distinct procedures for 
    reviewing and objecting to any proposed small system variance proposed 
    by a State. Section 1415(e)(10)(A) of the Act addresses EPA review of 
    ``any'' variance proposed by the State and its ability to object to 
    ``any'' proposed variance. Section 1415(e)(10)(B) of the Act addresses 
    consumer petitions to the Administrator requesting that the 
    Administrator exercise objection authority under section 1415(e)(10)(A) 
    of the Act. Section 1415(e)(10)(B) does not limit EPA's authority to 
    review and object to a proposed small system variance and is 
    independent from the Administrator's authority under section 
    1415(e)(10)(A).
        The Agency's interpretation of section 1415(e)(10) of the Act is 
    not in conflict with section 1415(e)(1) and 1415(e)(8) of the Act. 
    Section 1415(e)(1) allows the primacy agency to issue small system 
    variances in accordance with the Act and regulations. EPA's review and/
    or objection to a small system variance does not diminish a State's 
    responsibility to decide whether to issue a small system variance. 
    Section 1415(e)(8) of the Act does not conflict with the Agency's 
    ability to review and/or object to a small system variance. Section 
    1415(e)(8) solely addresses EPA's review of a State's variance program 
    as a whole and is independent from EPA's authority under section 
    1415(e)(10)(A) to object to a specific proposed variance.
        In addition, Congress mandated under section 1415(e)(9) that the 
    State submit for review and approval by the Administrator any small 
    system variance proposed for a system serving more than 3,300 and fewer 
    than 10,000 persons. Before a State grants a small system variance for 
    a public water system serving this population, the Administrator must 
    formally approve the variance. Without such approval, a State may not 
    grant the variance. The Administrator's approval of variances under 
    section 1415(e)(9) of the Act is independent from the Administrator's 
    authority to review ``any'' variance under section 1415(e)(10) of the 
    Act.
        Section 142.311(a) of the regulations, which requires that the 
    State submit the proposed small system variance and all supporting 
    information to the Administrator, is necessary to implement section 
    1415(e)(10)(A) of the Act, which allows the Administrator to review and 
    object to any proposed small system variance. Section 142.311(b) of the 
    regulation is simply the codification of section 1415(e)(10)(A) of the 
    Act included in the regulation for purposes of clarity.
    
    H. Section 142.313. Bases for Administrator's Review of State Small 
    System Variance Program
    
        Pursuant to section 1415(e)(8)(A) of the Safe Drinking Water Act, 
    Sec. 142.313 of the rule requires the Administrator to periodically 
    review the primacy State's
    
    [[Page 43841]]
    
    variance program to determine whether variances granted by the State 
    comply with the requirements of the Act. EPA received no comments on 
    this section and is promulgating it as proposed.
    
    I. General Variances: Time Limitation
    
        Section 1415(a)(1)(A)(ii) of the Safe Drinking Water Act states 
    that a schedule prescribed under a general variance must require 
    compliance, by the public water system, with each maximum contaminant 
    level or treatment technique requirement with respect to which the 
    variance was granted, as expeditiously as practicable (as the State may 
    reasonably determine) but sets no specific final date for compliance 
    other than that in the compliance schedule. EPA requested comment on 
    whether the Agency should specify a time-frame in the final rule, 
    consistent with the time frame for small system variances in the Act. 
    Commenters were generally opposed to this approach.
        The Agency recognizes that in issuing a general variance the State 
    has the flexibility to prescribe time frames within a schedule to reach 
    compliance with the conditions of the variance and the Act, including 
    installation of the best available technology. However, consistent with 
    section 1415(e) of the Act, the Agency presumes that a reasonable time 
    frame for public water systems to install the best available technology 
    is within five years of granting of the variance. The Agency recognizes 
    that there may be situations in which five years may not be a feasible 
    time frame to install such technology. However, when such situations 
    are presented, efforts must be made to ensure that the public be 
    notified and involved in the variance process. Today's regulations 
    require that if a State prescribes a schedule in a general variance 
    that requires compliance beyond five years of the issuance date the 
    State must (1) document its rationale for the extended compliance 
    schedule, (2) discuss the rationale for the extended compliance 
    schedule in the required public notice and opportunity for public 
    hearing, and (3) provide the shortest practicable time schedule 
    feasible under the circumstances. Such requirements are consistent with 
    the theme of the 1996 Amendments to the Safe Drinking Water to maximize 
    public participation in major decisions affecting drinking water. Under 
    this approach, the State retains flexibility in determining the time 
    frame for compliance under a general variance as expeditiously as 
    practicable.
    
    J. Relationship of Exemptions and Small System Variances
    
        Under section 1416(b)(2)(D) of the Safe Drinking Water Act, a 
    public water system may not receive an exemption under section 1416 if 
    the system was granted a small system variance under section 1415(e) of 
    the Act. The Act is silent on whether a small system variance under 
    section 1415(e) may be issued after the issuance of an exemption under 
    section 1416. In the proposal, EPA asked for comment on this and 
    commenters were generally in favor of allowing a variance after an 
    exemption. However, after consideration of public comment, policy 
    considerations and the statutory framework in sections 1415(e) and 
    1416, the Agency believes that public water systems should generally 
    not receive a variance after receiving an exemption for the same 
    contaminant.
        The Agency interprets section 1416(b)(1)(A) to require that the 
    endpoint of a compliance schedule established under an exemption be 
    full compliance with the maximum contaminant level or treatment 
    technique for which the exemption was granted. During the stakeholders 
    process and the public comment period, the Agency received comments 
    indicating that the regulations should implement the exemption 
    provisions of the Act to allow a public water system which has received 
    an exemption to subsequently receive a variance for that same 
    contaminant if it turns out that there is no affordable compliance 
    technology for the system. While the final rule promulgated today does 
    not explicitly prohibit the issuance of a variance after an exemption, 
    EPA believes that it is generally inappropriate. Rather, EPA believes 
    that the determination of whether there is an affordable compliance 
    technology for the system should be made in the initial compliance 
    options analysis. However, if, during the course of the compliance 
    schedule established for a small public water system's exemption, the 
    regulations for the contaminant for which the exemption was granted 
    were revised and the MCL was made more stringent, then the system, with 
    a new regulatory compliance date and new MCL, would have the option of 
    seeking full compliance with the new MCL by the compliance date, 
    seeking a small system variance or seeking an exemption.
        Congress established two distinct mechanisms to allow systems 
    regulatory alternatives. Exemptions were established to allow public 
    water systems more time to comply with a newly promulgated national 
    primary drinking water regulation under certain conditions. Under an 
    exemption, under certain conditions, a small system may have up to 9 
    years, including extensions, to achieve full compliance. Small system 
    variances were established to allow small public water systems up to a 
    possible 5 years to install alternative technologies under certain 
    conditions. Upon completion of the compliance options analysis, the 
    public water system should know whether an exemption or small system 
    variance is the proper route to pursue. If a small system cannot afford 
    to install a small system technology within the maximum allowable 5-
    year period, the primacy agency must consider other alternatives to 
    address the noncompliance of the system. To grant a small system 
    variance after an exemption could prolong the installation of the 
    proper treatment technology well beyond the statutory time frames 
    provided for either an exemption or a variance. Therefore, the Agency 
    believes that it is generally inappropriate to grant a small system 
    variance after an exemption.
        The Agency also notes that, for a primacy agency to grant a small 
    system variance, it must determine that compliance with the MCL is not 
    affordable, according to the primacy agency's affordability criteria, 
    through treatment, alternate sources of water supply, restructuring or 
    consolidation, or obtaining financial assistance from the drinking 
    water State Revolving Fund (SRF) or any other Federal or State program. 
    In contrast, an exemption must include a schedule to achieve compliance 
    within three years (with up to three two-year extensions for small 
    systems in some circumstances). EPA believes that it would generally be 
    difficult for a primacy agency to determine that compliance with the 
    MCL is not affordable for a system that had previously been granted an 
    exemption, unless there has been a significant unforeseen change in 
    circumstances since the initial compliance options analysis upon which 
    the exemption was based. By ``unforeseen changes in circumstances'' 
    that may cause a primacy agency to determine that a system cannot 
    afford to comply after an initial compliance determination, EPA means 
    the following circumstances:
    
        (1) Significant changes in source water due to natural disasters 
    in the community;
        (2) Small public water systems or primacy agencies could not 
    have reasonably obtained all information related to source water 
    quality and the absence of such information led to an improper 
    determination that an
    
    [[Page 43842]]
    
    exemption, as opposed to a small system variance, should be granted;
        (3) Significant unforeseen change in economic circumstances, such 
    as a severe economic downturn in the community, which would make the 
    cost of the compliance technology unaffordable according to the primacy 
    agency's affordability criteria. Failure to obtain funding from any 
    particular source (e.g., State or Federal assistance program) would not 
    automatically indicate that the compliance technology is unaffordable. 
    The primacy agency should consider all financial circumstances, 
    including alternate funding sources, in determining affordability; or,
        (4) The public water system installs and is properly operating the 
    best available technology, as designated by the Administrator, and is 
    in compliance with all other requirements of the Act and regulations, 
    but continues to be in non-compliance with the MCL or treatment 
    technique for which the exemption was granted.
    
        If such a change should occur, and a system will not be able to 
    comply with the MCL within the established time frame, the system 
    should notify the primacy agency immediately, rather than waiting for 
    the next compliance deadline to pass, and the primacy agency should 
    take appropriate action. The Agency believes that the most appropriate 
    mechanism to address such a system is through an administrative order 
    or consent order allowing the small system to install a small system 
    variance technology, as designated by the Administrator, as an interim 
    measure toward achieving full compliance in the future. Regardless of 
    the mechanism selected, however, the primacy agency must ensure that 
    the terms of any variance or order provide adequate protection of 
    public health.
    
    K. State Revolving Fund and Capacity Development Plan Linkage to 
    Exemptions and Small System Variances
    
        Strong statutory linkage exists between the small system variance 
    and exemption provisions in sections 1415(e) and 1416 of the Safe 
    Drinking Water Act and the State Revolving Fund provisions of section 
    1452 of the Act. This linkage was discussed in the proposal (63 FR 
    19448). The State Revolving Fund provisions and the variance and 
    exemption provisions can be used together to complete two important 
    tasks: (1) Ensure that State Revolving Fund assistance is targeted 
    toward those public water systems most in need of such assistance, and 
    (2) allow systems which receive such assistance to be able to use it in 
    a way that will either produce full compliance with an MCL within the 
    compliance schedule established by the State (in the case of systems 
    receiving an exemption), or improve the quality of water delivered to 
    consumers (in the case of systems receiving a variance).
        This linkage is reflected in today's final rule. Section 
    142.20(b)(1) requires that before finding that management and 
    restructuring changes cannot be made, as part of the compliance options 
    analysis required for an exemption, the State must consider the 
    availability of SRF loan fund assistance to implement, among other 
    alternatives, activities consistent with the State's Capacity 
    Development Strategy to help the public water system acquire and 
    maintain technical, financial and managerial capacity to come into 
    compliance with the Act. Section 142.306(b)(2)(iv) requires 
    consideration of the possibility of obtaining financial assistance from 
    the drinking water SRF as part of the compliance options analysis 
    required for a small system variance.
        Commenters expressed two concerns with these provisions. One 
    commenter was concerned that the provisions not be interpreted in a way 
    that would undermine State authority to develop individual Capacity 
    Development Strategies in accordance with section 1420 of the Act, or 
    used as grounds for withholding SRF funds because of a State decision 
    regarding a particular system. EPA is well aware that under section 
    1420(c)(4) of the Act, State decisions regarding implementation of the 
    Capacity Development Strategy with respect to individual systems are 
    not subject to review by the Administrator and may not serve as the 
    basis of withholding funds under section 1452 of the Act. EPA has no 
    intention of using its oversight of the variance and exemption 
    provisions of the Act as grounds for withholding funds under section 
    1452 of the Act, and does not see any conflict between these rules and 
    State authority with respect to Capacity Development Strategies under 
    section 1420 of the Act. Rather, the linkages in these rules are 
    provided to highlight a State's opportunity to use its Capacity 
    Development Strategy to assist systems in acquiring the technical, 
    financial and managerial capacity needed to either come into compliance 
    with an MCL or treatment technique after an appropriate period of time, 
    or to install and operate an appropriate variance technology.
        Several commenters expressed concern with the requirement that the 
    SRF be considered as a possible funding source as part of the 
    compliance options analysis to obtain a small system variance. These 
    commenters indicated that small systems may lack the overall capacity 
    required to qualify for SRF loans, and that this requirement in today's 
    rule could be interpreted as limiting State flexibility in managing its 
    SRF programs. EPA does not believe that this is an issue. The 
    requirement to consider the SRF as a possible funding source does not 
    mean that the State must provide SRF assistance to a system seeking a 
    variance (or exemption), only that this option should be considered as 
    part of the initial compliance options analysis. States retain full 
    authority to allocate SRF funds in accordance with the provisions of 
    the Act. EPA believes that the requirement to consider the SRF as a 
    possible funding source to assist small systems in achieving compliance 
    is fully consistent with those provisions.
    
    L. Exemption: Renewals for Small Systems
    
        Under section 1416(b)(2)(A) of the Safe Drinking Water Act, an 
    exemption issued to a public water system must prescribe a schedule 
    requiring compliance by the system with each contaminant level and 
    treatment technique requirement with respect to which the exemption was 
    granted as expeditiously as practicable (as the State may reasonably 
    determine) but not later than three years after the otherwise 
    applicable compliance date established in section 1412(b)(10). Section 
    1416(b)(2)(C) states ``[i]n the case of a system which does not serve 
    more than a population of 3,300 and which needs financial assistance 
    for the necessary improvements, an exemption * * * may be renewed for 
    one or more additional 2-year periods, but not to exceed a total of 6 
    years, if the system establishes that it is taking all practicable 
    steps'' to meet the requirements of the established compliance 
    schedule.
        The intensive compliance options analysis required, under 
    Sec. 142.20(b)(1) and Sec. 142.50(a), to be performed before an 
    exemption is initially granted should indicate whether an exemption is 
    appropriate. If an exemption is appropriate after the compliance 
    options analysis, the primacy agency should facilitate and work with 
    the system to ensure compliance as soon as practicable, but within 
    three years of the otherwise applicable compliance date, including 
    providing financial assistance under section 1452 of the Act. Under 
    Sec. 142.20(b)(2) and Sec. 142.56 of the rule, two-year extensions of 
    exemptions pursuant to section 1416(b)(2)(C) of the Act may only be 
    granted to systems which serve 3,300 or fewer people and which need 
    financial assistance, and upon State review of the small system's
    
    [[Page 43843]]
    
    progress and the State's subsequent determination that the small system 
    is taking all practicable steps to meet the requirements of the Act.
        As discussed in the preamble to the proposed rule, the Agency 
    interprets the extension provisions for public water systems serving 
    less than 3,300 persons to allow the primacy agency to grant the 
    additional two-year periods at the time of initial issuance of the 
    exemption for those small systems that need financial assistance for 
    the necessary improvements. Public comments on this issue in the 
    proposed rule were generally supportive of this approach.
        This interpretation is based on the statute and EPA's recognition 
    that there may be some instances where certain small systems serving 
    less than 3,300 persons may require more than three years to achieve 
    full compliance under an exemption. Additional time may allow for the 
    small system to acquire the necessary financial assistance, 
    restructure, find an alternative source water and/or make necessary 
    capital improvements. Compliance schedules under exemptions should 
    reflect a practical time line for the small public water system to meet 
    the established milestones as expeditiously as possible. The Agency 
    anticipates that most small systems will achieve full compliance under 
    exemptions in less than 3 years after the otherwise applicable 
    compliance date but recognizes that this determination should be made 
    on a case-by-case basis considering specific factors of the given small 
    public water system. Therefore, a system which serves less than 3,300 
    persons and which needs financial assistance for the necessary 
    improvements may receive a compliance schedule under an exemption with 
    milestone dates later than three years from the issuance date of the 
    exemption. In any case, the primacy agency is required to establish a 
    schedule requiring compliance as expeditiously as practicable but no 
    later than the statutory time frames.
        This interpretation does not affect the requirement under section 
    1416(b)(2)(C) of the Act that the primacy agency must ``renew'' the 
    exemption every two years after the first 3 years to ensure that the 
    system is taking all practicable steps to meet the requirements of the 
    Act and the established compliance schedule. EPA interprets the 
    ``renewal'' requirement to mean that the primacy agency must review the 
    system's compliance with the exemption and document its findings of 
    continued eligibility. The Agency anticipates that the primacy agency's 
    review of the public water system will involve a review of the public 
    water system's efforts to comply with the established milestones and 
    other requirements of the Act. Even though not required by section 1416 
    of the Act, the primacy State may wish to consider the incorporation of 
    public participation into this review process. If the primacy agency 
    determines that a small system is not taking all practical steps to 
    comply with the requirements, the exemption should not be continued and 
    the public water system would be subject to an enforcement response to 
    address violations of the established compliance schedule. Where an 
    exemption is continued, the primacy agency must ensure that at the end 
    of the exemption period, the public water system is in full compliance 
    with applicable national primary drinking water regulation.
        The Agency received public comments requesting that the Agency 
    clarify how the 6-year limit on renewals of exemptions for small 
    systems applies to existing exemptions issued before enactment of the 
    1996 Amendments. As discussed above, under section 1416(b)(2)(C), a 
    State may renew an exemption issued to a small system serving less than 
    3,300 persons for one or more additional 2-year periods under certain 
    conditions, but not to exceed a total of 6 years. The Agency interprets 
    this provision to be effective upon the effective date of the 1996 
    Amendments to the Safe Drinking Water Act. Therefore, the six-year 
    limit on renewals of exemptions is effective as of August 6, 1996. 
    Therefore, for example, if a three-year, small system exemption was 
    issued by a primacy agency in 1993, the primacy agency may, under 
    certain conditions as specified in the Act, renew the exemption, 
    through extensions and the requisite reviews, until 2002. No existing 
    exemption for a small system may remain in effect for more than nine 
    years beyond the date that it was initially issued.
    
    IV. Cost of Rule
    
        The cost of the rule and economic analysis were described in detail 
    in the preamble to the proposed rule. (63 FR 19448-50)
        Based upon this economic impact analysis (EIA), public water 
    systems would realize net economic benefits as a result of today's 
    rule. Results of the impact analysis show that, if all eligible public 
    water systems in all 56 States and territories apply for and are 
    granted variances under sections 1415(a) or 1415(e), or exemptions 
    under today's rule, for the rules considered in this analysis, then the 
    regulation will show a net annualized economic benefit of $573,706 to 
    the Agency, States, and public water systems, not including benefits 
    due to increased public health protection or savings associated with 
    the installation of affordable technologies. A summary of this EIA is 
    available in the Office of Water Docket, #W-97-26.
        Based on this economic impact analysis, the variance and exemption 
    rule is not considered to have a significant impact in the form of an 
    unfunded mandate of $100,000,000 or more or in any year as identified 
    under the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act, nor would it have a significant 
    adverse economic impact on a substantial number of small entities, as 
    discussed in the section entitled ``Unfunded Mandates Reform Act'' in 
    the preamble to today's rule.
    
    V. Other Administrative Requirements
    
    A. Executive Order 12866
    
        Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993), the 
    Agency must determine whether the regulatory action is ``significant'' 
    and therefore subject to review by the Office of Management and Budget 
    and the requirements of the Executive Order. The Order defines 
    ``significant regulatory action'' as one that is likely to result in a 
    rule that may:
        (1) Have an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more, 
    or adversely affect in a material way the economy, a sector of the 
    economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
    health or safety, 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 the 
    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.
        Pursuant to the terms of Executive Order 12866, it has been 
    determined that this rule is a ``significant regulatory action'' 
    because it may raise novel legal or policy issues. The rule seeks to 
    improve public health protection while providing regulatory relief to 
    small systems by encouraging the adoption, by small systems unable to 
    comply with drinking water standards, of affordable technologies that 
    will improve the quality of their water even if they do not achieve 
    full compliance with the MCL or treatment technique requirement for a 
    particular contaminant. Therefore, EPA submitted this action to OMB for
    
    [[Page 43844]]
    
    review. Substantive changes made in response to OMB suggestions or 
    recommendations have been documented in the public record.
    
    B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), as amended by the Small 
    Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act (SBREFA), generally 
    requires the Agency to consider explicitly the effect of regulations on 
    small entities. However, under section 605(b) of the RFA, if the Agency 
    certifies that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on 
    a substantial number of small entities, the Agency is not required to 
    prepare an RFA.
        Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 
    U.S.C. 605(b), the Administrator certifies that this rule will not have 
    a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
    entities. Regulations on variances and exemptions provide regulatory 
    relief from the costs of complying with a maximum contaminant level or 
    a treatment technique under a given national primary drinking water 
    regulation. As directed in the Safe Drinking Water Act, this rule 
    describes procedures and criteria by which small public water systems 
    which cannot afford the appropriate treatment to comply with a given 
    national primary drinking water regulation can receive a variance or 
    exemption. Thus, public water systems show a net economic benefit under 
    today's rule as a result of being granted a variance or exemption, 
    rather than bear process costs associated with litigation and 
    enforcement. Please see section IV, ``Cost of Rule'', in the preamble 
    to the proposed rule (63 FR 19448-50) for a more detailed discussion of 
    the economic costs and benefits of today's rule.
    
    C. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The information collection requirements in this rule have been 
    submitted for approval to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
    under the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. An 
    Information Collection Request (ICR) document has been prepared by EPA 
    (ICR No. 270.39) to amend the current public Water System Supervision 
    Program ICR (OMB control number 2040-0090), and a copy may be obtained 
    from Sandy Farmer by mail at OP Regulatory Information Division; U.S. 
    Environmental Protection Agency (2137); 401 M St., SW.; Washington, DC 
    20460, by email at farmer.sandy@epamail.epa.gov, or by calling (202) 
    260-2740. A copy may also be downloaded off the internet at http://
    www.epa.gov/icr. The information requirements are not effective until 
    OMB approves them.
        Information required by this regulation allows the State or the 
    Administrator to determine that the circumstances at a public water 
    system satisfy the statutory conditions for granting a small system 
    variance or an exemption. Some of the required information allows the 
    Administrator and the public to determine that the public had adequate 
    opportunity to review and comment on a decision to grant a small system 
    variance. The information collection requirements of this rule are 
    mandatory for public water systems applying for either a variance or an 
    exemption and for primacy States that review and either grant or deny 
    these applications. Information collected by this rule will be provided 
    to the public to facilitate public involvement in this process.
        Although it is impossible to determine the burden this rule would 
    impose with respect to seeking a variance or an exemption from a 
    drinking water regulation not yet promulgated, EPA did estimate the 
    burden with respect to the two regulations from which a variance or 
    exemption may hypothetically be sought. With respect to the lead and 
    copper rule and the phase II/V rule, the distribution of burden between 
    public water systems and states is approximately 13,050 hours and 
    109,080 hours respectively, for a total annualized burden of 122,130 
    hours. Expressed another way, in a monetization of these hours, all 
    public water systems would bear a total annual cost of approximately 
    $348,716, while States would bear an annual cost of $5,041,694.
        Promulgation of this rule, however, is also expected to result in 
    significant reductions in the burden associated with litigation and 
    enforcement actions. EPA has estimated that public water systems would 
    reduce their annual burden by 54,648 hours or by $3,342,616 (a 
    monetization of these hours). States would reduce their annual burden 
    by 62,766 hours or by $2,863,321 (a monetization of these hours). The 
    projected burden reduction has not been netted out of the burden 
    estimate in the ICR because the Agency does not generally include 
    litigation and enforcement actions in its paperwork burden estimates 
    for the Public Water Supply Supervision Program. A more detailed 
    explanation of how EPA calculated these results can be found in the 
    Information Collection Request. Burden means the total time, effort, or 
    financial resources expended by persons to generate, maintain, retain, 
    or disclose or provide information to or for a Federal agency. This 
    includes the time needed to review instructions; develop, acquire, 
    install, and utilize technology and systems for the purposes of 
    collecting, validating, and verifying information, processing and 
    maintaining information, and disclosing and providing information; 
    adjust the existing ways to comply with any previously applicable 
    instructions and requirements; train personnel to be able to respond to 
    a collection of information; search data sources; complete and review 
    the collection of information; and transmit or otherwise disclose the 
    information.
        An Agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required 
    to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a 
    currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers for EPA's 
    regulations are listed in 40 CFR part 9 and 48 CFR Chapter 15.
        Send comments on the Agency's need for this information, the 
    accuracy of the provided burden estimates, and any suggested methods 
    for minimizing respondent burden, including through the use of 
    automated collection techniques to the Director, OP Regulatory 
    Information Division; U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (2137); 401 
    M St., SW.; Washington, DC 20460; and to the Office of Information and 
    Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th St., NW., 
    Washington, DC 20503, marked ``Attention: Desk Officer for EPA.'' 
    Comments are requested by September 14, 1998. Include the ICR number in 
    any correspondence.
    
    D. 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 their regulatory actions on State, Tribal, and local 
    governments and the private sector. Under section 202 of the UMRA, the 
    Agency 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, Tribal, and local 
    governments, in the aggregate, or to the private sector, of $100 
    million or more in any one year.
        Before promulgating an Agency rule for which a written statement is 
    needed, section 205 of the UMRA generally requires the Agency to 
    identify and consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives 
    and adopt the least costly, most cost-effective, or least burdensome 
    alternative that achieves
    
    [[Page 43845]]
    
    the objectives of the rule. The provisions of section 205 of the UMRA 
    do not apply when they are inconsistent with applicable law. Moreover, 
    section 205 of the UMRA allows the Agency 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 the Agency establishes any regulatory requirements that may 
    significantly or uniquely affect small governments, including Tribal 
    governments, it must have developed a small government agency plan 
    under section 203 of the UMRA. 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 Agency regulatory proposals with significant Federal 
    intergovernmental mandates, and informing, educating, and advising 
    small governments on compliance with the regulatory requirements.
        Today's rule contains no Federal mandates (under the regulatory 
    provisions of Title II of the UMRA) for State, local, or tribal 
    governments or the private sector. This rule imposes no enforceable 
    duty on any State, local or tribal governments or the private sector. 
    States or Tribes may choose whether to acquire or maintain primacy 
    under the Safe Drinking Water Act. Further, States and Tribes with 
    primacy may choose whether to issue variances and exemptions; they can 
    decide to not issue any exemptions or variances at all. If they choose 
    to issue variances or exemptions, they are only required to issue 
    variances and exemptions in a manner not less stringent than the 
    conditions under, and the manner in which, variances and exemptions may 
    be granted under section 1415 and 1416 of the SDWA. Thus, today's rule 
    is not subject to the requirements of section 202 and 205 of the UMRA.
        Moreover, because this rule establishes procedures and criteria for 
    public water systems to obtain variances and exemptions from Safe 
    Drinking Water Act requirements, the Agency has determined that this 
    rule contains no regulatory requirements that might significantly or 
    uniquely adversely affect small governments and thus this rule is not 
    subject to the requirement of section 203 of UMRA.
    
    E. Enhancing Intergovernmental Partnerships
    
        To reduce the burden of Federal regulations on States and small 
    governments, the President issued Executive Order 12875, entitled 
    Enhancing the Intergovernmental Partnership, on October 28, 1993 (48 FR 
    58093). Under Executive Order 12875, EPA may not issue a regulation 
    that is not required by statute and that creates a mandate upon a 
    State, local or Tribal government unless the Federal government 
    provides the necessary funds to pay the direct costs incurred by the 
    State, local or Tribal government or EPA provides to the Office of 
    Management and Budget a description of the extent of the Agency's prior 
    consultation and written communications with elected officials and 
    other representatives of affected State, local and Tribal governments, 
    the nature of their concerns, and an Agency statement supporting the 
    need to issue the regulation. In addition, Executive Order 12875 
    requires EPA to develop an effective process permitting elected 
    officials and other representatives of State, local and Tribal 
    governments ``to provide meaningful and timely input in the development 
    of regulatory proposals containing significant unfunded mandates.''
        As described in the preamble to the proposed rule (63 FR 19440-41), 
    the Agency held several meetings with a wide variety of State and local 
    representatives, who provided meaningful and timely input toward the 
    development of the proposed rule. Summaries of these meetings have been 
    included in the public docket for this rulemaking. In addition, the 
    Agency conducted outreach efforts to contact and inform Tribal groups 
    regarding this rulemaking.
    
    F. Risk to Children Analysis and Environmental Justice
    
        On April 21, 1997, the President issued Executive Order 13045 
    entitled Protection of Children From Environmental Health Risks and 
    Safety Risks (62 FR 19883). Under section 5 of the Order, a Federal 
    agency submitting a ``covered regulatory action'' to OMB for review 
    under Executive Order 12866 must provide information regarding the 
    environmental health or safety effects of the planned regulation on 
    children. A ``covered regulatory action'' is defined in section 2-202 
    as a substantive action in a rulemaking that (a) is likely to result in 
    a rule that may be economically significant'' under Executive Order 
    12866 and (b) concerns an environmental health risk or safety risk that 
    an agency has reason to believe may disproportionally affect children. 
    If the regulatory action meets both criteria, the Agency must evaluate 
    the environmental health or safety effects of the planned rule on 
    children and explain why the planned regulation is preferable to other 
    potentially effective and reasonably feasible alternatives considered 
    by the agency. While this rule is not a `` covered regulatory action'' 
    as defined in the Order because it is not economically significant (see 
    section IV above), EPA believes that the rule has the potential to 
    reduce risks to children, as discussed in more detail below.
        In addition, under Executive Order 12898, entitled ``Federal 
    Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and 
    Low-Income Populations'', dated February 11, 1994, the Agency must make 
    achieving environmental justice part of its mission.
        The Agency believes that this rule has the potential to 
    significantly reduce risks to children caused by inadequate drinking 
    water and address environmental justice problems. After a small public 
    water system applies for a small system variance, Sec. 142.306(b) of 
    the rule requires the State to perform a compliance options analysis 
    for the system. Small noncompliant public water systems are often 
    financially distressed as a result of the service population's 
    inability to pay for safe drinking water and other factors. The public 
    water system could have unprotected source waters or be unable to 
    afford the appropriate treatment technology or technique, certified 
    operator, and/or adequate transmission and distribution systems. As 
    required by Sec. 142.306(b) of the rule, an analysis of the applicant 
    system's compliance options will provide insight into alternative means 
    of compliance. This might include some form of restructuring or 
    consolidation with another system, development of a cleaner, safer 
    water source, or using some alternative treatment technique or 
    technology.
        If according to a State's affordability criteria, these compliance 
    options are unaffordable for a drinking water system, the State may 
    grant the system a variance. Prior to issuing a variance, 
    Sec. 142.306(b)(5) of the rule requires that the State find that the 
    terms and conditions of a small system variance ensure ``adequate 
    protection of human health.'' Similarly, an exemption can only be 
    granted if its conditions ensure that there is no ``unreasonable risk 
    to health.'' Both findings are made at the State level on a case-
    specific basis.
        The intent of the small system variance subpart of the rule is to 
    move a system, which is not complying with Safe Drinking Water Act 
    standards because the treatment required is unaffordable, toward or 
    into compliance
    
    [[Page 43846]]
    
    status by requiring the system to install, operate and maintain 
    treatment which is affordable and protective of human health. Although 
    the level of treatment provided may not meet the maximum contaminant 
    level, it must be determined to be protective of human health--both by 
    the Agency in identifying the approved variance technology and by the 
    primacy State in making such a finding--if the variance is granted.
        The Agency believes that a system operating under a small system 
    variance will provide better treatment than that provided by a system 
    in noncompliance. Although the drinking water system may not be able to 
    provide water that is consistently below the maximum contaminant level, 
    a water system operating under a variance will be able to create a net 
    gain in the quality of its finished water above what it could provide 
    before installing a variance technology. In turn, this will lead to a 
    net gain in public health protection for infants, children, and nursing 
    or pregnant women as well as for persons in low-income areas, thus 
    protecting children's health as well as alleviating environmental 
    justice problems.
        In addition to requirements that ensure public participation in 
    granting variances and exemptions, section 142.308(c)(7) of the rule 
    requires that, in communities with a large proportion of non-English 
    speaking persons, as defined by the primacy agency, notices provided to 
    the public must include information in the appropriate language 
    regarding the content and importance of the notice. EPA believes that 
    this provision also addresses Executive Order 12898.
        For these reasons, the Agency believes that this rule is consistent 
    with, and implements, the Executive Order on protecting children as 
    well as the Executive Order addressing environmental justice.
    
    G. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
    
        Under section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and 
    Advancement Act, 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 practices, 
    etc.) that are developed or adopted by voluntary consensus standards 
    bodies. Where available and potentially applicable voluntary consensus 
    standards are not used by the Agency, 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. Because this 
    rule is procedural and does not involve or require the use of any 
    technical standards, the Agency does not believe that this Act is 
    applicable to this rule. Moreover, the Agency is unaware of any 
    voluntary consensus standards relevant to this rulemaking. Therefore, 
    even if the Act were applicable to this kind of rulemaking, the Agency 
    does not believe that there are any ``available or potentially 
    applicable'' voluntary consensus standards.
    
    H. Congressional Review Act
    
        The Congressional Review Act, 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq., as enacted 
    under the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996, 
    generally provides that before a rule may take effect, the agency 
    promulgating the rule must submit a rule report, which includes a copy 
    of the rule, to each House of the Congress and to the Comptroller 
    General of the United States. EPA will submit 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 United States 
    prior to publication of the rule in the Federal Register. This action 
    is not a ``major rule'' as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2). This rule will 
    be effective on September 14, 1998.
    
    VI. Response to Public Comments
    
        The record for this rulemaking has been established under docket 
    number W-97-26, and includes the Agency's response to all comments 
    submitted, supporting documentation, and copies of comments received, 
    including printed paper versions of electronic comments.
    
    List of Subjects in 40 CFR Parts 141 and 142
    
        Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedures, 
    Chemicals, Indian-lands, Intergovernmental relations, Radiation 
    protection, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Water supply.
    
        Dated: August 6, 1998.
    Carol M. Browner,
    Administrator.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, the Environmental 
    Protection Agency amends 40 CFR parts 141 and 142 as follows:
    
    PART 141--NATIONAL PRIMARY DRINKING WATER REGULATIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 141 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 300f, 300g-1, 300g-2, 300g-3, 300g-4, 300g-
    5, 300g-6, 300j-4, 300j-9, and 300j-11.
    
        2. Section 141.4(a) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 141.4  Variances and exemptions.
    
        (a) Variances or exemptions from certain provisions of these 
    regulations may be granted pursuant to sections 1415 and 1416 of the 
    Act and subpart K of part 142 of this chapter (for small system 
    variances) by the entity with primary enforcement responsibility, 
    except that variances or exemptions from the MCL for total coliforms 
    and variances from any of the treatment technique requirements of 
    subpart H of this part may not be granted.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 142--NATIONAL PRIMARY DRINKING WATER REGULATIONS 
    IMPLEMENTATION
    
        3. The authority citation for part 142 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 42 U.S.C. 300g, 300g-1, 300g-2, 300g-3, 300g-4, 300g-
    5, 300g-6, 300j-4, and 300j-9.
    
        4. Section 142.10 is amended by revising paragraph (d) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 142.10  Requirements for a determination of primary enforcement 
    responsibility.
    
    * * * * *
        (d) Variances and exemptions.
        (1) If it permits small system variances pursuant to Section 
    1415(e) of the Act, it must provide procedures no less stringent than 
    the Act and Subpart K of this part.
        (2) If it permits variances (other than small system variances) or 
    exemptions, or both, from the requirements of the State primary 
    drinking water regulations, it shall do so under conditions and in a 
    manner no less stringent than the requirements of Sections 1415 and 
    1416 of the Act. In granting these variances, the State must adopt the 
    Administrator's findings of best available technology, treatment 
    techniques, or other means available as specified in Subpart G of this 
    part. (States with primary enforcement responsibility may adopt 
    procedures different from those set forth in Subparts E and F of this 
    part, which apply to the issuance of variances (other than small system 
    variances) and exemptions by the Administrator in States that do not 
    have primary enforcement responsibility, provided that the State 
    procedures meet the requirements of this paragraph); and
    * * * * *
    
    [[Page 43847]]
    
        5. Section 142.20 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 142.20  State-issued variances and exemptions under Section 
    1415(a) and Section 1416 of the Act.
    
        (a) States with primary enforcement responsibility may issue 
    variances to public water systems (other than small system variances) 
    from the requirements of primary drinking water regulations under 
    conditions and in a manner which are not less stringent than the 
    requirements under Section 1415(a) of the Act. In States that do not 
    have primary enforcement responsibility, variances may be granted by 
    the Administrator pursuant to Subpart E of this part.
        (1) A State must document all findings that are required under 
    Section 1415(a) of the Act.
        (2) If a State prescribes a schedule pursuant to section 1415(a) of 
    the Act requiring compliance with a contaminant level for which the 
    variance is granted later than five years from the date of issuance of 
    the variance the State must--
        (i) Document its rationale for the extended compliance schedule;
        (ii) Discuss the rationale for the extended compliance schedule in 
    the required public notice and opportunity for public hearing; and
        (iii) Provide the shortest practicable time schedule feasible under 
    the circumstances.
        (b) States with primary enforcement responsibility may issue 
    exemptions from the requirements of primary drinking water regulations 
    under conditions and in a manner which are not less stringent than the 
    requirements under Section 1416 of the Act. In States that do not have 
    primary enforcement responsibility, exemptions may be granted by the 
    Administrator pursuant to Subpart F of this part.
        (1) A State must document all findings that are required under 
    Section 1416 of the Act:
        (i) Before finding that management and restructuring changes cannot 
    be made, a State must consider the following measures, and the 
    availability of State Revolving Loan Fund assistance, or any other 
    Federal or State program, that is reasonably likely to be available 
    within the period of the exemption to implement these measures:
        (A) Consideration of rate increases, accounting changes, the 
    appointment of a State-certified operator under the State's Operator 
    Certification program, contractual agreements for joint operation with 
    one or more public water systems;
        (B) Activities consistent with the State's Capacity Development 
    Strategy to help the public water system acquire and maintain 
    technical, financial, and managerial capacity to come into compliance 
    with the Act; and
        (C) Ownership changes, physical consolidation with another public 
    water system, or other feasible and appropriate means of consolidation 
    which would result in compliance with the Act;
        (ii) The State must consider the availability of an alternative 
    source of water, including the feasibility of partnerships with 
    neighboring public water systems, as identified by the public water 
    system or by the State consistent with the Capacity Development 
    Strategy.
        (2) In the case of a public water system serving a population of 
    not more than 3,300 persons and which needs financial assistance for 
    the necessary improvements under the initial compliance schedule, an 
    exemption granted by the State under section 1416(b)(2)(B)(i) or (ii) 
    of the Act may be renewed for one or more additional 2-year periods, 
    but not to exceed a total of 6 additional years, only if the State 
    establishes that the public water system is taking all practicable 
    steps to meet the requirements of Section 1416(b)(2)(B) of the Act and 
    the established compliance schedule to achieve full compliance with the 
    contaminant level or treatment technique for which the exemption was 
    granted. A State must document its findings in granting an extension 
    under this paragraph.
    
    Subpart E--Variances Issued by the Administrator Under Section 
    1415(a) of the Act
    
        6. The heading for Subpart E is revised to read as set forth above.
        7. Section 142.42 is amended by revising paragraph (c) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 142.42  Consideration of a variance request.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) A variance may be issued to a public water system on the 
    condition that the public water system install the best technology, 
    treatment techniques, or other means, which the Administrator finds are 
    available (taking costs into consideration) and based upon an 
    evaluation satisfactory to the Administrator that indicates that 
    alternative sources of water are not reasonably available to the public 
    water system.
    * * * * *
    
    Subpart F--[Amended]
    
        8. Section 142.50 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 142.50  Requirements for an exemption.
    
        (a) The Administrator may exempt any public water system within a 
    State that does not have primary enforcement responsibility from any 
    requirement regarding a maximum contaminant level or any treatment 
    technique requirement, or from both, of an applicable national primary 
    drinking water regulation upon a finding that--
        (1) Due to compelling factors (which may include economic factors, 
    including qualification of the public water system as a system serving 
    a disadvantaged community pursuant to section 1452(d) of the Act), the 
    public water system is unable to comply with such contaminant level or 
    treatment technique requirement or to implement measures to develop an 
    alternative source of water supply;
        (2) The public water system was in operation on the effective date 
    of such contaminant level or treatment technique requirement, or for a 
    public water system that was not in operation by that date, no 
    reasonable alternative source of drinking water is available to such 
    new public water system;
        (3) The granting of the exemption will not result in an 
    unreasonable risk to health; and
        (4) Management or restructuring changes (or both), as provided in 
    Sec. 142.20(b)(1)(i), cannot reasonably be made that will result in 
    compliance with the applicable national primary drinking water 
    regulation or, if compliance cannot be achieved, improve the quality of 
    the drinking water.
        (b) No exemption shall be granted unless the public water system 
    establishes that the public water system is taking all practicable 
    steps to meet the standard; and
        (1) The public water system cannot meet the standard without 
    capital improvements which cannot be completed prior to the date 
    established pursuant to Section 1412(b)(10) of the Act;
        (2) In the case of a public water system which needs financial 
    assistance for the necessary improvements, the public water system has 
    entered into an agreement to obtain such financial assistance or 
    assistance pursuant to Section 1452 of the Act, or any other Federal or 
    State program that is reasonably likely to be available within the 
    period of the exemption; or
        (3) The public water system has entered into an enforceable 
    agreement to
    
    [[Page 43848]]
    
    become a part of a regional public water system.
        (c) A public water system may not receive an exemption under this 
    subpart if the public water system was granted a variance under Section 
    1415(e) of the Act.
        9. Section 142.53 is amended by revising paragraph (c)(1) to read 
    as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 142.53  Disposition of an exemption request.
    
    * * * * *
        (c) * * *
        (1) Compliance (including increments of progress or measures to 
    develop an alternative source of water supply) by the public water 
    system with each contaminant level requirement or treatment technique 
    requirement with respect to which the exemption was granted; and
    * * * * *
        10. Section 142.55 is amended by revising paragraph (b) and 
    removing and reserving paragraph (c) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 142.55  Final Schedule.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Such schedule must require compliance with each contaminant 
    level and treatment technique requirement with respect to which the 
    exemption was granted as expeditiously as practicable but not later 
    than 3 years after the otherwise applicable compliance date established 
    in section 1412(b)(10) of the Act.
        (c) [Reserved].
        11. Section 142.56 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 142.56  Extension of date for compliance.
    
        In the case of a public water system which serves a population of 
    not more than 3,300 persons and which needs financial assistance for 
    the necessary improvements, an exemption granted under Sec. 142.50(b) 
    (1) or (2) may be renewed for one or more additional 2-year periods, 
    but not to exceed a total of 6 additional years, if the public water 
    system establishes that the public water system is taking all 
    practicable steps to meet the requirements of section 1416(b)(2)(B) of 
    the Act and the established compliance schedule.
        12. Subpart K is added to read as follows:
    
    Subpart K--Variances for Small System
    
    Sec.
    
    General Provisions
    
    142.301  What is a small system variance?
    142.302  Who can issue a small system variance?
    142.303  Which size public water systems can receive a small system 
    variance?
    142.304  For which of the regulatory requirements is a small system 
    variance available?
    142.305  When can a small system variance be granted by a State?
    
    Review of Small System Variance Application
    
    142.306  What are the responsibilities of the public water system, 
    State and the Administrator in ensuring that sufficient information 
    is available and for evaluation of a small system variance 
    application?
    142.307  What terms and conditions must be included in a small 
    system variance?
    
    Public Participation
    
    142.308  What public notice is required before a State or the 
    Administrator proposes to issue a small system variance?
    142.309  What are the public meeting requirements associated with 
    the proposal of a small system variance?
    142.310  How can a person served by the public water system obtain 
    EPA review of a State proposed small system variance?
    
    EPA Review and Approval of Small System Variances
    
    142.311  What procedures allow for the Administrator to object to a 
    proposed small system variance or overturn a granted small system 
    variance for a public water system serving 3,300 or fewer persons?
    142.312  What EPA action is necessary when a State proposes to grant 
    a small system variance to a public water system serving a 
    population of more than 3,300 and fewer than 10,000 persons?
    142.313  How will the Administrator review a State's program under 
    this subpart?
    
    Subpart K--Variances for Small System
    
    General Provisions
    
    
    Sec. 142.301  What is a small system variance?
    
        Section 1415(e) of the Act authorizes the issuance of variances 
    from the requirement to comply with a maximum contaminant level or 
    treatment technique to systems serving fewer than 10,000 persons. The 
    purpose of this subpart is to provide the procedures and criteria for 
    obtaining these variances. The regulations in this subpart shall take 
    effect on September 14, 1998.
    
    
    Sec. 142.302  Who can issue a small system variance?
    
        A small system variance under this subpart may only be issued by 
    either:
        (a) A State that is exercising primary enforcement responsibility 
    under Subpart B for public water systems under the State's 
    jurisdiction; or
        (b) The Administrator, for a public water system in a State which 
    does not have primary enforcement responsibility.
    
    
    Sec. 142.303  Which size public water systems can receive a small 
    system variance?
    
        (a) A State exercising primary enforcement responsibility for 
    public water systems (or the Administrator for other systems) may grant 
    a small system variance to public water systems serving 3,300 or fewer 
    persons.
        (b) With the approval of the Administrator pursuant to 
    Sec. 142.312, a State exercising primary enforcement responsibility for 
    public water systems may grant a small system variance to public water 
    systems serving more than 3,300 persons but fewer than 10,000 persons.
        (c) In determining the number of persons served by the public water 
    system, the State or Administrator must include persons served by 
    consecutive systems. A small system variance granted to a public water 
    system would also apply to any consecutive system served by it.
    
    
    Sec. 142.304  For which of the regulatory requirements is a small 
    system variance available?
    
        (a) A small system variance is not available under this subpart for 
    a national primary drinking water regulation for a microbial 
    contaminant (including a bacterium, virus, or other organism) or an 
    indicator or treatment technique for a microbial contaminant.
        (b) A small system variance under this subpart is otherwise only 
    available for compliance with a requirement specifying a maximum 
    contaminant level or treatment technique for a contaminant with respect 
    to which;
        (1) a national primary drinking water regulation was promulgated on 
    or after January 1, 1986; and
        (2) the Administrator has published a small system variance 
    technology pursuant to Section 1412(b)(15) of the Act.
    
        Note to paragraph (b)(1): Small system variances are not 
    available for public water systems above the pre-1986 maximum 
    contaminant level even if subsequently revised. If the Agency 
    revises a pre-1986 maximum contaminant level and makes it more 
    stringent, then a variance would be available for that contaminant, 
    but only up to the pre-1986 maximum contaminant level.
    
    
    Sec. 142.305  When can a small system variance be granted by a State?
    
        No small system variance can be granted by a State until the later 
    of the following:
        (a) 90 days after the State proposes to grant the small system 
    variance;
    
    [[Page 43849]]
    
        (b) If a State is proposing to grant a small system variance to a 
    public water system serving 3,300 or fewer persons and the 
    Administrator objects to the small system variance, the date on which 
    the State makes the recommended modifications or responds in writing to 
    each objection; or
        (c) If a State is proposing to grant a small system variance to a 
    public water system serving a population more than 3,300 and fewer than 
    10,000 persons, the date the Administrator approves the small system 
    variance. The Administrator must approve or disapprove the variance 
    within 90 days after it is submitted to the Administrator for review.
    
    Review of Small System Variance Application
    
    
    Sec. 142.306  What are the responsibilities of the public water system, 
    State and the Administrator in ensuring that sufficient information is 
    available and for evaluation of a small system variance application?
    
        (a) A public water system requesting a small system variance must 
    provide accurate and correct information to the State or the 
    Administrator to issue a small system variance in accordance with this 
    subpart. A State may assist a public water system in compiling 
    information required for the State or the Administrator to issue a 
    small system variance in accordance with this subpart.
        (b) Based upon an application for a small system variance and other 
    information, and before a small system variance may be proposed under 
    this subpart, the State or the Administrator must find and document the 
    following:
        (1) The public water system is eligible for a small system variance 
    pursuant to Secs. 142.303 (i.e., the system serves a population of 
    fewer than 10,000 persons) and 142.304 (i.e., the contaminant for which 
    the small system variance is sought is not excluded from variance 
    eligibility);
        (2) The public water system cannot afford to comply, in accordance 
    with the affordability criteria established by the State (or by the 
    Administrator in States which do not have primary enforcement 
    responsibility), with the national primary drinking water regulation 
    for which a small system variance is sought, including by:
        (i) Treatment;
        (ii) Alternative sources of water supply;
        (iii) Restructuring or consolidation changes, including ownership 
    change and/or physical consolidation with another public water system; 
    or
        (iv) Obtaining financial assistance pursuant to Section 1452 of the 
    Act or any other Federal or State program;
        (3) The public water system meets the source water quality 
    requirements for installing the small system variance technology 
    developed pursuant to guidance published under section 1412(b)(15) of 
    the Act;
        (4) The public water system is financially and technically capable 
    of installing, operating and maintaining the applicable small system 
    variance technology; and
        (5) The terms and conditions of the small system variance, as 
    developed through compliance with Sec. 142.307, ensure adequate 
    protection of human health, considering the following:
        (i) The quality of the source water for the public water system; 
    and
        (ii) Removal efficiencies and expected useful life of the small 
    system variance technology.
    
    
    Sec. 142.307  What terms and conditions must be included in a small 
    system variance?
    
        (a) A State or the Administrator must clearly specify enforceable 
    terms and conditions of a small system variance.
        (b) The terms and conditions of a small system variance issued 
    under this subpart must include, at a minimum, the following 
    requirements:
        (1) Proper and effective installation, operation and maintenance of 
    the applicable small system variance technology in accordance with 
    guidance published by the Administrator pursuant to section 1412(b)(15) 
    of the Act, taking into consideration any relevant source water 
    characteristics and any other site-specific conditions that may affect 
    proper and effective operation and maintenance of the technology;
        (2) Monitoring requirements, for the contaminant for which a small 
    system variance is sought, as specified in 40 CFR part 141; and
        (3) Any other terms or conditions that are necessary to ensure 
    adequate protection of public health, which may include:
        (i) Public education requirements; and
        (ii) Source water protection requirements.
        (c) The State or the Administrator must establish a schedule for 
    the public water system to comply with the terms and conditions of the 
    small system variance which must include, at a minimum, the following 
    requirements:
        (1) Increments of progress, such as milestone dates for the public 
    water system to apply for financial assistance and begin capital 
    improvements;
        (2) Quarterly reporting to the State or Administrator of the public 
    water system's compliance with the terms and conditions of the small 
    system variance;
        (3) Schedule for the State or the Administrator to review the small 
    system variance under paragraph (d) of this section; and
        (4) Compliance with the terms and conditions of the small system 
    variance as soon as practicable but not later than 3 years after the 
    date on which the small system variance is granted. The Administrator 
    or State may allow up to 2 additional years if the Administrator or 
    State determines that additional time is necessary for the public water 
    system to:
        (i) Complete necessary capital improvements to comply with the 
    small system variance technology, secure an alternative source of 
    water, or restructure or consolidate; or
        (ii) Obtain financial assistance provided pursuant to section 1452 
    of the Act or any other Federal or State program.
        (d) The State or the Administrator must review each small system 
    variance granted not less often than every 5 years after the compliance 
    date established in the small system variance to determine whether the 
    public water system continues to meet the eligibility criteria and 
    remains eligible for the small system variance and is complying with 
    the terms and conditions of the small system variance. If the public 
    water system would no longer be eligible for a small system variance, 
    the State or the Administrator must determine whether continuing the 
    variance is in the public interest. If the State or the Administrator 
    finds that continuing the variance is not in the public interest, the 
    variance must be withdrawn.
    
    Public Participation
    
    
    Sec. 142.308  What public notice is required before a State or the 
    Administrator proposes to issue a small system variance?
    
        (a) At least fifteen (15) days before the date of proposal, and at 
    least thirty (30) days prior to a public meeting to discuss the 
    proposed small system variance, the State, Administrator, or public 
    water system as directed by the State or Administrator, must provide 
    notice to all persons served by the public water system. For billed 
    customers, identified in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, this notice 
    must include the information listed in paragraph (c) of this section. 
    For other persons regularly served by the system, identified in 
    paragraph (a)(2) of this section, the notice shall include the 
    information identified in paragraph (d) of this section. Notice must be 
    provided to all persons served by:
    
    [[Page 43850]]
    
        (1) Direct mail or other home delivery to billed customers or other 
    service connections, and
        (2) Any other method reasonably calculated to notify, in a brief 
    and concise manner, other persons regularly served by the system. Such 
    methods may include publication in a local newspaper, posting in public 
    places or delivery to community organizations.
        (b) At the time of proposal, the State must publish a notice in the 
    State equivalent to the Federal Register or a newspaper or newspapers 
    of wide circulation in the State, or, in the case of the Administrator, 
    in the Federal Register. This notice shall include the information 
    listed in paragraph (c) of this section.
        (c) The notice in paragraphs (a)(1) and (b) of this section must 
    include, at a minimum, the following:
        (1) Identification of the contaminant[s] for which a small system 
    variance is sought;
        (2) A brief statement of the health effects associated with the 
    contaminant[s] for which a small system variance is sought using 
    language in Appendix C of Part 141 Subpart O of this chapter;
        (3) The address and telephone number at which interested persons 
    may obtain further information concerning the contaminant and the small 
    system variance;
        (4) A brief summary, in easily understandable terms, of the terms 
    and conditions of the small system variance;
        (5) A description of the consumer petition process under 
    Sec. 142.310 and information on contacting the EPA Regional Office;
        (6) a brief statement announcing the public meeting required under 
    Sec. 142.309(a), including a statement of the purpose of the meeting, 
    information regarding the time and location for the meeting, and the 
    address and telephone number at which interested persons may obtain 
    further information concerning the meeting; and
        (7) In communities with a large proportion of non-English-speaking 
    residents, as determined by the primacy agency, information in the 
    appropriate language regarding the content and importance of the 
    notice.
        (d) The notice in paragraph (a)(2) of this section must provide 
    sufficient information to alert readers to the proposed variance and 
    direct them where to receive additional information.
        (e) At its option, the State or the Administrator may choose to 
    issue separate notices or additional notices related to the proposed 
    small system variance, provided that the requirements in paragraphs (a) 
    through (d) of this section are satisfied.
        (f) Prior to promulgating the final variance, the State or the 
    Administrator must respond in writing to all significant public 
    comments received relating to the small system variance. Response to 
    public comment and any other documentation supporting the issuance of a 
    variance must be made available to the public after final promulgation.
    
    
    Sec. 142.309  What are the public meeting requirements associated with 
    the proposal of a small system variance?
    
        (a) A State or the Administrator must provide for at least one (1) 
    public meeting on the small system variance no later than 15 days after 
    the small system variance is proposed.
        (b) At the time of the public meeting, the State or Administrator 
    must prepare and make publicly available, in addition to the 
    information listed in Sec. 142.308(c), either:
        (1) The proposed small system variance, if the public meeting 
    occurs after proposal of the small system variance; or
        (2) A draft of the proposed small system variance, if the public 
    meeting occurs prior to proposal of the proposed small system variance.
        (c) Notice of the public meeting must be provided in the manner 
    required under Sec. 142.308 at least 30 days in advance of the public 
    meeting. This notice must be provided by the State, the Administrator, 
    or the public water system as directed by the State or Administrator.
    
    
    Sec. 142.310  How can a person served by the public water system obtain 
    EPA review of a State proposed small system variance?
    
        (a) Any person served by the public water system may petition the 
    Administrator to object to the granting of a small system variance 
    within 30 days after a State proposes to grant a small system variance 
    for a public water system.
        (b) The Administrator must respond to a petition filed by any 
    person served by the public water system and determine whether to 
    object to the small system variance under Sec. 142.311, no later than 
    60 days after the receipt of the petition.
    
    EPA Review And Approval of Small System Variances
    
    
    Sec. 142.311  What procedures allow the Administrator to object to a 
    proposed small system variance or overturn a granted small system 
    variance for a public water system serving 3,300 or fewer persons?
    
        (a) At the time a State proposes to grant a small system variance 
    under this subpart, the State must submit to the Administrator the 
    proposed small system variance and all supporting information, 
    including any written public comments received prior to proposal.
        (b) The Administrator may review and object to any proposed small 
    system variance within 90 days of receipt of the proposed small system 
    variance. The Administrator must notify the State in writing of each 
    basis for the objection and propose a modification to the small system 
    variance to resolve the concerns of the Administrator. The State must 
    make the recommended modification, respond in writing to each 
    objection, or withdraw the proposal to grant the small system variance.
        (c) If the State issues the small system variance without resolving 
    the concerns of the Administrator, the Administrator may overturn the 
    State decision to grant the variance if the Administrator determines 
    that the State decision does not comply with the Act or this rule.
    
    
    Sec. 142.312  What EPA action is necessary when a State proposes to 
    grant a small system variance to a public water system serving a 
    population of more than 3,300 and fewer than 10,000 persons?
    
        (a) At the time a State proposes to grant a small system variance 
    to a public water system serving a population of more than 3,300 and 
    fewer than 10,000 persons, the State must submit the proposed small 
    system variance and all supporting information, including public 
    comments received prior to proposal, to the Administrator.
        (b) The Administrator must approve or disapprove the small system 
    variance within 90 days of receipt of the proposed small system 
    variance and supporting information. The Administrator must approve the 
    small system variance if it meets each requirement within the Act and 
    this rule.
        (c) If the Administrator disapproves the small system variance, the 
    Administrator must notify the State in writing of the reasons for 
    disapproval and the small system variance does not become effective. 
    The State may resubmit the small system variance for review and 
    approval with modifications to address the objections stated by the 
    Administrator.
    
    
    Sec. 142.313  How will the Administrator review a State's program under 
    this subpart?
    
        (a) The Administrator must periodically review each State program 
    under this subpart to determine whether small system variances granted 
    by the State comply with the requirements of
    
    [[Page 43851]]
    
    the Act, this rule and the affordability criteria developed by the 
    State.
        (b) If the Administrator determines that small system variances 
    granted by a State are not in compliance with the requirements of the 
    Act, this rule or the affordability criteria developed by the State, 
    the Administrator shall notify the State in writing of the deficiencies 
    and make public the determinations.
        (c) The Administrator's review will be based in part on quarterly 
    reports prepared by the States pursuant to Sec. 142.15(a)(1) relating 
    to violations of increments of progress or other violated terms or 
    conditions of small system variances.
    
    [FR Doc. 98-21746 Filed 8-13-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6560-50-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
9/14/1998
Published:
08/14/1998
Department:
Environmental Protection Agency
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-21746
Dates:
This rule is effective September 14, 1998. Solely for judicial review purposes, this final rule is promulgated as of 1 p.m. eastern time on August 28, 1998 as provided in 40 CFR 23.7.
Pages:
43834-43851 (18 pages)
Docket Numbers:
FRL-6144-2
RINs:
2020-AA37: Revision of Existing Variances and Exemptions Regulation to Comply with Requirements of the Safe Drinking Water Act
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/2020-AA37/revision-of-existing-variances-and-exemptions-regulation-to-comply-with-requirements-of-the-safe-dri
PDF File:
98-21746.pdf
CFR: (23)
40 CFR 142.309(a)
40 CFR 142.20(b)(1)(i)
40 CFR 141.4
40 CFR 142.10
40 CFR 142.20
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