Toxics Release Inventory 2006 Burden Reduction, 57871-57872 [05-19709]
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Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 191 / Tuesday, October 4, 2005 / Notices
facilities. Owners and operators must
also submit periodic reports
(semiannual or according to the
schedule for Title V), and leak detection
and repair (LDAR) semiannual reports
which could be submitted with the
periodic reports. The specific
monitoring and recordkeeping
requirements will vary for each of the
four source categories depending on the
required control equipment and
monitoring equipment. All records and
reports are to be maintained by the
facility for a minimum of five years.
All reports are sent to the delegated
state or local authority. In the event that
there is no such delegated authority, the
reports are sent directly to the EPA
regional office.
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,
and are identified on the form and/or
instrument, if applicable.
Burden Statement: The annual public
reporting and recordkeeping burden for
this collection of information is
estimated to average 133 hours per
response. Burden means the total time,
effort, or financial resources expended
by persons to generate, maintain, retain,
disclose or provide information to or for
a Federal agency. This includes the time
needed to review instructions; to
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; to adjust the
existing ways to comply with any
previously applicable instructions and
requirements; to train personnel to be
able to respond to a collection of
information; to search data sources; to
complete and review the collection of
information; and to transmit or
otherwise disclose the information.
Respondents/Affected Entities:
Owners or operators of acetal resins
production, acrylic and modacrylic
fibers production, hydrogen fluoride
production, and polycarbonates
production.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
10.
Frequency of Response: On occasion,
semiannually, and initally.
Estimated Total Annual Hour Burden:
4,004 hours.
Estimated Total Annual Costs:
$438,560, which includes $0 annualized
Capital/startup costs, $107,414 in
annual O&M costs, and $331,146 in
Respondent Labor costs.
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:55 Oct 03, 2005
Jkt 205001
Changes in the Estimates: There is a
decrease of 73 hours in the estimated
burden currently identified in the OMB
Inventory of Approved ICR Burdens.
This is due to minor calculation errors
in the active ICR. There is an increase
in the labor costs associated with this
ICR, which is due to an updated hourly
wage rate that is provided by the United
States Department of Labor. Because
there are no new sources with reporting
requirements, no capital/startup costs
are incurred. A cost of $107,414 per
year, is incurred for operation and
maintenance of the emission monitoring
equipment with this ICR.
Dated: September 21, 2005.
Oscar Morales,
Director, Collection Strategies Division.
[FR Doc. 05–19866 Filed 10–3–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–7532–9]
Toxics Release Inventory 2006 Burden
Reduction
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA’s Toxics Release
Inventory Program is today announcing
its intent to explore potential
approaches for modification of the
reporting frequency of facilities that
report to TRI. Among the options to be
considered is alternate year reporting,
which would require Congressional
notification as discussed in section
313(i) of the Emergency Planning and
Community Right-to-Know-Act
(EPCRA). EPA has notified Congress, as
required by this provision, of its intent
to initiate a rulemaking to modify TRI
reporting frequency. Today’s notice is in
addition to the Agency’s recent
proposal, Toxics Release Inventory
Burden Reduction Proposed Rule
elsewhere in Today’s Federal Register,
designed to reduce reporting burden on
facilities reporting to TRI by increasing
eligibility for the Form A Certification
Statement.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Suzanne Ackerman,
ackerman.suzanne@epa.gov, 202–564–
4355, Office of Public Affairs. Details
and additional information will also be
posted on EPA’s TRI Web site, https://
www.epa.gov/tri, as they become
available.
In the
coming months, the Agency will give
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
57871
consideration to additional measures
that would provide burden relief to TRI
reporting facilities on an every other
year basis. These options may include a
modification in reporting frequency as
discussed in EPCRA section 313(i). 42
U.S.C. 11023(i). In order to modify TRI
reporting frequency, section 313(i) of
EPCRA requires EPA to make a finding
that modifying the reporting frequency
is consistent with the purposes of the
TRI as listed in section 313(h) of
EPCRA. See, 42 U.S.C. 11023(h). This
finding must be based on previous
experience gained from past TRI
reporting, the extent to which the public
has used TRI data, the extent to which
information is readily available from
other sources and the extent to which
the change would impose additional
and unreasonable burdens on reporting
facilities. 42 U.S.C. 11023(i)(2)–(3). As
outlined in EPCRA, the Agency must
first notify Congress of its intent to
initiate a rulemaking to modify the
reporting frequency. After notifying
Congress, EPA must delay initiating the
rulemaking for 12 months but no more
than 24 months. In following the
process described in EPCRA to make
such a change, the Agency recently
notified Congress of its intent to initiate
a rulemaking to modify the reporting
frequency. EPA’s Assistant
Administrator Kimberly T. Nelson
mailed the letter below to the following
individuals: The Honorable Richard B.
Cheney, President, United States Senate,
The Honorable William H. Frist,
Majority Leader, United States Senate,
The Honorable Harry Reid, Minority
Leader, United States Senate, The
Honorable J. Dennis Hastert, Speaker,
United States House of Representatives,
The Honorable Tom DeLay, Majority
Leader, United States House of
Representatives, The Honorable Nancy
Pelosi, Minority Leader, United States
House of Representatives, and The
Honorable David M. Walker,
Comptroller General of the United
States, Government Accountability
Office.
Since the late 1980s, the United States
(U.S.) Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) Toxics Release Inventory (TRI)
program has been an important source
of public information on releases of
toxic chemicals and a successful tool in
our efforts at promoting pollution
prevention. Under Section 313 of the
Emergency Planning and Community
Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) of 1986,
facilities annually report data to EPA on
releases and transfers of certain listed
toxic chemicals, which EPA compiles
and makes available to the public. The
Pollution Prevention Act (PPA) of 1990
E:\FR\FM\04OCN1.SGM
04OCN1
57872
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 191 / Tuesday, October 4, 2005 / Notices
expanded the program to include
information on other waste management
activities such as recycling of chemicals.
In addition, EPA has several times
expanded the scope of the program by
rulemaking by doubling the number of
covered chemicals, adding seven
industrial sectors, and significantly
lowering reporting thresholds for
chemicals identified as persistent,
bioaccumlative and toxic (PBT). EPA
believes that each of these expansions
has increased the usefulness of the TRI
data to the public and furthered the
statutory goals of the program.
Over the years, EPA has been mindful
of the reporting burden this program
imposes on covered facilities. In 1994,
EPA introduced ‘‘Form A’’ to streamline
reporting for small dischargers. In July
of this year, we finalized a rule that
would revise the TRI reporting forms to
eliminate information not used, simplify
reporting codes and improve the
accuracy of facility identification and
location data by using the data already
available in EPA’s information systems.
In addition, EPA will soon publish a
proposed rule to expand the use of Form
A to allow more facilities to use the
short form while retaining the full Form
R reporting on over 99% of releases and
other waste management activities. Both
of these efforts involved extensive
consultations with all program
stakeholders and help address the
concerns expressed about the reporting
burden under TRI.
The purpose of this letter is to inform
you of the third and final phase of our
current efforts to reduce burden and
streamline program operations.
Specifically, we believe a rulemaking to
modify the reporting frequency from
annual to biennial deserves further
consideration. Not only would alternate
year reporting result in significant
burden reduction for covered facilities,
citizens would benefit from the
redirection of federal and state taxpayer
dollars to improve the quality, clarity,
usefulness and accessibility of TRI
information products and services.
EPCRA Sec 313(i) authorizes EPA to
make such a modification, but only after
providing at least one-year’s advance
notification to Congress before initiating
a rulemaking and only after making
several specific findings, which we
address below. Accordingly, we are
notifying you that we plan to initiate a
rulemaking to consider modifications to
the reporting frequency for the TRI
program within 12 to 24 months after
the date of this letter. Over the next 12
months, EPA plans to continue its
consultations with stakeholders in order
to gather the data necessary to support
the statutory determinations required
VerDate Aug<31>2005
16:55 Oct 03, 2005
Jkt 205001
under the law and to ensure the
rulemaking appropriately balances the
needs of data users with the concerns of
data reporters and states.
We are taking this step because we
believe that alternate year reporting not
only offers burden reduction, but also
offers other potential advantages that
merit consideration. First, EPA and
states would be able to use the saved
resources from the non-reporting years
to improve the TRI database and
conduct additional analyses that would
enhance the value of the data to the
public. For example, EPA could
enhance its TRI reporting software, TRIMade Easy, thereby improving data
quality and consistency; conduct
analyses of data trends, sector or
chemical specific patterns of waste
management, innovations in pollution
prevention, and risk implications of
toxic chemical releases thereby making
the TRI data more useful to citizens,
communities, researchers and
government agencies; and improve its
web-based software to make the data
more accessible and user friendly and to
improve opportunities for Internetbased reporting. Internet reporting
provides savings not only to reporters,
but also to taxpayers as it reduces EPA
and State processing costs and allows us
to meet Paperwork Reduction and
Electronic Government requirements. It
also provides greater confidence to both
reporters and data users in the integrity
of the data by increasing the use of
electronic data quality checks.
Alternate year reporting would
provide more simplified burden
reduction to TRI reporters than many
options previously considered. For
instance, a common complaint about
Form A is that it requires a significant
amount of time to track and calculate
data to determine eligibility. Alternate
year reporting, in contrast, would
eliminate in non-reporting years all
burden for eligible reporters. Although
EPA believes that a carefully structured
alternate year reporting provision could
provide substantial benefits to both data
users and data reporters, EPA also
recognizes that there will be legitimate
concerns about data loss during the nonreporting years and will carefully
consider those concerns as we develop
any proposals for public comment and
consideration.
EPA will be examining the impact on
data users carefully as it addresses the
statutory requirements for modifying
reporting frequency. Specifically,
EPCRA requires one finding and three
determinations before changing the
reporting frequency. The required
finding is that any modification is
consistent with the intended uses of the
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
TRI data as described in Sec 313(h),
while the determinations are designed
to ensure that EPA give full
consideration to: (1) The impact of the
modifications on data users, including
State and local governments, health
professionals, the general public, other
federal agencies and EPA itself; (2) the
availability of the data from other
sources; and (3) the impact of the
modifications on data reporters. EPA
intends to gather data related to these
issues during the next 12 months, prior
to initiating a rulemaking.
EPA believes that this action will
enhance data quality and user
friendliness by supplementing existing
data with additional analysis. EPA looks
forward to working with all
stakeholders in the coming year to
gather the necessary information to
ensure that any modification of TRI
reporting frequency considers the needs
of TRI data users and will consider a
range of options to minimize impacts.
Enclosed for your benefit is a fact
sheet with more details about the TRI
program. Should you have any
questions or would like to provide your
views, please contact me at 202–564–
6665 or your staff may contact James
Blizzard in EPA’s Office of
Congressional and Intergovernmental
Relations.
Dated: September 21, 2005.
Kimberly T. Nelson,
Assistant Administrator for Office of
Environmental Information and, Chief
Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 05–19709 Filed 10–3–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[OPPT–2004–0096; FRL–7731–3]
Asbestos-Containing Materials in
Schools; State Request for Waiver
from Requirements; Notice of Final
Decision
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: EPA is issuing a final decision
which approves the request from Illinois
for a waiver from the Agency’s asbestosin-schools program. A waiver of these
requirements is granted since EPA has
determined, after notice and comment
and opportunity for a public hearing,
that Illinois is implementing or intends
to implement a program of asbestos
inspection and management for schools
that is at least as stringent as EPA’s
program. This notice announces the
official grant of the waiver.
E:\FR\FM\04OCN1.SGM
04OCN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 191 (Tuesday, October 4, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 57871-57872]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-19709]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[FRL-7532-9]
Toxics Release Inventory 2006 Burden Reduction
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA's Toxics Release Inventory Program is today announcing its
intent to explore potential approaches for modification of the
reporting frequency of facilities that report to TRI. Among the options
to be considered is alternate year reporting, which would require
Congressional notification as discussed in section 313(i) of the
Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know-Act (EPCRA). EPA has
notified Congress, as required by this provision, of its intent to
initiate a rulemaking to modify TRI reporting frequency. Today's notice
is in addition to the Agency's recent proposal, Toxics Release
Inventory Burden Reduction Proposed Rule elsewhere in Today's Federal
Register, designed to reduce reporting burden on facilities reporting
to TRI by increasing eligibility for the Form A Certification
Statement.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Suzanne Ackerman,
ackerman.suzanne@epa.gov, 202-564-4355, Office of Public Affairs.
Details and additional information will also be posted on EPA's TRI Web
site, https://www.epa.gov/tri, as they become available.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In the coming months, the Agency will give
consideration to additional measures that would provide burden relief
to TRI reporting facilities on an every other year basis. These options
may include a modification in reporting frequency as discussed in EPCRA
section 313(i). 42 U.S.C. 11023(i). In order to modify TRI reporting
frequency, section 313(i) of EPCRA requires EPA to make a finding that
modifying the reporting frequency is consistent with the purposes of
the TRI as listed in section 313(h) of EPCRA. See, 42 U.S.C. 11023(h).
This finding must be based on previous experience gained from past TRI
reporting, the extent to which the public has used TRI data, the extent
to which information is readily available from other sources and the
extent to which the change would impose additional and unreasonable
burdens on reporting facilities. 42 U.S.C. 11023(i)(2)-(3). As outlined
in EPCRA, the Agency must first notify Congress of its intent to
initiate a rulemaking to modify the reporting frequency. After
notifying Congress, EPA must delay initiating the rulemaking for 12
months but no more than 24 months. In following the process described
in EPCRA to make such a change, the Agency recently notified Congress
of its intent to initiate a rulemaking to modify the reporting
frequency. EPA's Assistant Administrator Kimberly T. Nelson mailed the
letter below to the following individuals: The Honorable Richard B.
Cheney, President, United States Senate, The Honorable William H.
Frist, Majority Leader, United States Senate, The Honorable Harry Reid,
Minority Leader, United States Senate, The Honorable J. Dennis Hastert,
Speaker, United States House of Representatives, The Honorable Tom
DeLay, Majority Leader, United States House of Representatives, The
Honorable Nancy Pelosi, Minority Leader, United States House of
Representatives, and The Honorable David M. Walker, Comptroller General
of the United States, Government Accountability Office.
Since the late 1980s, the United States (U.S.) Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) program has been
an important source of public information on releases of toxic
chemicals and a successful tool in our efforts at promoting pollution
prevention. Under Section 313 of the Emergency Planning and Community
Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) of 1986, facilities annually report data to
EPA on releases and transfers of certain listed toxic chemicals, which
EPA compiles and makes available to the public. The Pollution
Prevention Act (PPA) of 1990
[[Page 57872]]
expanded the program to include information on other waste management
activities such as recycling of chemicals. In addition, EPA has several
times expanded the scope of the program by rulemaking by doubling the
number of covered chemicals, adding seven industrial sectors, and
significantly lowering reporting thresholds for chemicals identified as
persistent, bioaccumlative and toxic (PBT). EPA believes that each of
these expansions has increased the usefulness of the TRI data to the
public and furthered the statutory goals of the program.
Over the years, EPA has been mindful of the reporting burden this
program imposes on covered facilities. In 1994, EPA introduced ``Form
A'' to streamline reporting for small dischargers. In July of this
year, we finalized a rule that would revise the TRI reporting forms to
eliminate information not used, simplify reporting codes and improve
the accuracy of facility identification and location data by using the
data already available in EPA's information systems. In addition, EPA
will soon publish a proposed rule to expand the use of Form A to allow
more facilities to use the short form while retaining the full Form R
reporting on over 99% of releases and other waste management
activities. Both of these efforts involved extensive consultations with
all program stakeholders and help address the concerns expressed about
the reporting burden under TRI.
The purpose of this letter is to inform you of the third and final
phase of our current efforts to reduce burden and streamline program
operations. Specifically, we believe a rulemaking to modify the
reporting frequency from annual to biennial deserves further
consideration. Not only would alternate year reporting result in
significant burden reduction for covered facilities, citizens would
benefit from the redirection of federal and state taxpayer dollars to
improve the quality, clarity, usefulness and accessibility of TRI
information products and services. EPCRA Sec 313(i) authorizes EPA to
make such a modification, but only after providing at least one-year's
advance notification to Congress before initiating a rulemaking and
only after making several specific findings, which we address below.
Accordingly, we are notifying you that we plan to initiate a rulemaking
to consider modifications to the reporting frequency for the TRI
program within 12 to 24 months after the date of this letter. Over the
next 12 months, EPA plans to continue its consultations with
stakeholders in order to gather the data necessary to support the
statutory determinations required under the law and to ensure the
rulemaking appropriately balances the needs of data users with the
concerns of data reporters and states.
We are taking this step because we believe that alternate year
reporting not only offers burden reduction, but also offers other
potential advantages that merit consideration. First, EPA and states
would be able to use the saved resources from the non-reporting years
to improve the TRI database and conduct additional analyses that would
enhance the value of the data to the public. For example, EPA could
enhance its TRI reporting software, TRI-Made Easy, thereby improving
data quality and consistency; conduct analyses of data trends, sector
or chemical specific patterns of waste management, innovations in
pollution prevention, and risk implications of toxic chemical releases
thereby making the TRI data more useful to citizens, communities,
researchers and government agencies; and improve its web-based software
to make the data more accessible and user friendly and to improve
opportunities for Internet-based reporting. Internet reporting provides
savings not only to reporters, but also to taxpayers as it reduces EPA
and State processing costs and allows us to meet Paperwork Reduction
and Electronic Government requirements. It also provides greater
confidence to both reporters and data users in the integrity of the
data by increasing the use of electronic data quality checks.
Alternate year reporting would provide more simplified burden
reduction to TRI reporters than many options previously considered. For
instance, a common complaint about Form A is that it requires a
significant amount of time to track and calculate data to determine
eligibility. Alternate year reporting, in contrast, would eliminate in
non-reporting years all burden for eligible reporters. Although EPA
believes that a carefully structured alternate year reporting provision
could provide substantial benefits to both data users and data
reporters, EPA also recognizes that there will be legitimate concerns
about data loss during the non-reporting years and will carefully
consider those concerns as we develop any proposals for public comment
and consideration.
EPA will be examining the impact on data users carefully as it
addresses the statutory requirements for modifying reporting frequency.
Specifically, EPCRA requires one finding and three determinations
before changing the reporting frequency. The required finding is that
any modification is consistent with the intended uses of the TRI data
as described in Sec 313(h), while the determinations are designed to
ensure that EPA give full consideration to: (1) The impact of the
modifications on data users, including State and local governments,
health professionals, the general public, other federal agencies and
EPA itself; (2) the availability of the data from other sources; and
(3) the impact of the modifications on data reporters. EPA intends to
gather data related to these issues during the next 12 months, prior to
initiating a rulemaking.
EPA believes that this action will enhance data quality and user
friendliness by supplementing existing data with additional analysis.
EPA looks forward to working with all stakeholders in the coming year
to gather the necessary information to ensure that any modification of
TRI reporting frequency considers the needs of TRI data users and will
consider a range of options to minimize impacts.
Enclosed for your benefit is a fact sheet with more details about
the TRI program. Should you have any questions or would like to provide
your views, please contact me at 202-564-6665 or your staff may contact
James Blizzard in EPA's Office of Congressional and Intergovernmental
Relations.
Dated: September 21, 2005.
Kimberly T. Nelson,
Assistant Administrator for Office of Environmental Information and,
Chief Information Officer.
[FR Doc. 05-19709 Filed 10-3-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P