Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Medford-Ashland PM10 Attainment Plan, Maintenance Plan and Redesignation Request, 35163-35174 [06-5509]
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Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
enforce its requirements. (See section
307(b)(2).)
§ 52.1973
Subpart MM—Oregon
List of Subjects
2. Section 52.1970 is amended by
adding paragraph (c)(146) to read as
follows:
I
40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Particulate matter, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
40 CFR Part 81
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, National parks,
Wilderness areas.
Dated: May 23, 2006.
Richard B. Parkin,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 10.
Chapter I, title 40 of the Code of
Federal Regulations is amended as
follows:
I
PART 52—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
I
§ 52.1970
Approval of plans.
*
Identification of plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(146) On October 25, 2005, the Oregon
Department of Environmental Quality
submitted a PM10 maintenance plan
and requested redesignation of the La
Grande PM10 nonattainment area to
attainment for PM10. The State’s
maintenance plan and the redesignation
request meet the requirements of the
Clean Air Act.
(i) Incorporation by reference.
(A) Oregon Administrative Rule 340–
204–0030 and 0040, as effective
September 9, 2005.
I 3. Section 52.1973 is amended by
adding paragraph (e)(3) to read as
follows:
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(3) EPA approves as a revision to the
Oregon State Implementation Plan, the
La Grande PM10 maintenance plan
adopted by the Oregon Environmental
Quality Commission on August 11, 2005
and submitted to EPA on October 25,
2005.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 81—[AMENDED]
4. The authority citation for part 81
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
5. In § 81.338, the table entitled
‘‘Oregon PM–10’’ is amended by
revising the entry for ‘‘La Grande (the
Urban Growth Boundary Area)’’ to read
as follows:
I
§ 81.338
*
*
Oregon.
*
*
*
OREGON—PM–10
Designation
Classification
Designated area
Date
*
*
*
*
La Grande (the Urban Growth Boundary area) .................................................
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
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[FR Doc. 06–5510 Filed 6–16–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 52 and 81
[EPA–R10–OAR–2006–0316; FRL–8175–7]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans;
Medford-Ashland PM10 Attainment
Plan, Maintenance Plan and
Redesignation Request
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Direct final rule.
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AGENCY:
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*
7/19/06
aerodynamic diameter less than or equal
to a nominal ten micrometers. Also in
this action, EPA is approving revisions
to Oregon’s statewide industrial source
rules for new and modified major
industrial sources of PM10 and
revisions to the area-specific industrial
source rules that apply in the MedfordAshland NAA. EPA is approving the SIP
revisions and redesignation request
because the State adequately
demonstrates that the control measures
being implemented in the MedfordAshland NAA result in attainment and
maintenance of the PM10 National
Ambient Air Quality Standards and all
other requirements of the Clean Air Act
for redesignation to attainment are met.
This direct final rule will be
effective August 18, 2006, without
further notice, unless EPA receives
adverse comments by July 19, 2006. If
adverse comments are received, EPA
will publish a timely withdrawal of the
direct final rule in the Federal Register
informing the public that the rule will
not take effect.
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Date
Type
*
*
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Attainment.
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DATES:
SUMMARY: EPA is taking direct final
action to approve a PM10 attainment
and maintenance plan for the MedfordAshland, Oregon nonattainment area
(Medford-Ashland NAA) and to
redesignate the area from nonattainment
to attainment for PM10. PM10 air
pollution is particulate matter with an
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Type
Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R10–
OAR–2006–0316, by one of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the on-line
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Gina Bonifacino, Office of Air,
Waste and Toxics, AWT–107, EPA,
Region 10, 1200 Sixth Ave., Seattle,
Washington 98101.
• Hand Delivery: EPA, Region 10 Mail
Room, 9th Floor, 1200 Sixth Ave.,
Seattle, Washington 98101. Attention:
Gina Bonifacino, Office of Air, Waste
and Toxics, AWT–107. Such deliveries
are only accepted during normal hours
of operation, and special arrangements
should be made for deliveries of boxed
information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–R10–OAR–2006–
0316. EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change and may be
made available online at https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes information
ADDRESSES:
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claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Do not submit information that you
consider to be CBI or otherwise
protected through https://
www.regulations.gov. The https://
www.regulations.gov Web site is an
‘‘anonymous access’’ system, which
means EPA will not know your identity
or contact information unless you
provide it in the body of your comment.
If you send an e-mail comment directly
to EPA without going through https://
www.regulations.gov, your e-mail
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the comment
that is placed in the public docket and
made available on the Internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA
recommends that you include your
name and other contact information in
the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD–ROM you submit. If EPA
cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact
you for clarification, EPA may not be
able to consider your comment.
Electronic files should avoid the use of
special characters, any form of
encryption, and be free of any defects or
viruses. For additional information
about EPA’s public docket visit the EPA
Docket Center homepage at https://
www.epa.gov/epahome/dockets.htm.
Docket: All documents in the docket
are listed in the https://
www.regulations.gov index. Although
listed in the index, some information is
not publicly available, such as CBI or
other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Certain other
material, such as copyrighted material,
is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy
form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either
electronically in https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
EPA Region 10, Office of Air, Waste and
Toxics, 1200 Sixth Avenue, Seattle,
Washington. EPA requests that, if
possible, you contact the person listed
in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section to schedule your
inspection.
Gina
Bonifacino at telephone number: (206)
553–2970, e-mail address:
bonifacino.gina@epa.gov, fax number:
(206) 553–0110, or the above EPA,
Region 10 address.
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FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document wherever
‘‘we’’, ‘‘us’’ or ‘‘our’’ are used, we mean
EPA.
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Table of Contents
I. What action are we taking?
II. Review of the May 14, 2004 submittal
III. Review of the March 10, 2005 submittal:
Medford-Ashland attainment and
maintenance plan, redesignation request
and industrial source rule revisions
A. Background of the Medford-Ashland
nonattainment area
1. Description of the Medford-Ashland
nonattainment area
2. PM10 emissions in the Medford-Ashland
nonattainment area
3. Attainment history of the MedfordAshland nonattainment area
B. Attainment and maintenance plan
requirements
C. Review of the March 10, 2005 Oregon
State submittal addressing the
attainment and maintenance plan
requirements
1. Permit program for the construction and
operation of new and modified major
stationary sources of PM10
2. RACM and RACT
3. Attainment demonstration
4. Quantitative milestones which are to be
achieved every three years and which
demonstrate reasonable further progress
(RFP) toward attainment by December
31, 1994
5. PM10 precursors
6. Attainment and maintenance emissions
inventory
7. Air quality monitoring requirements
8. Demonstration of maintenance
9. Contingency measures and contingency
provisions
10. Conclusion
D. Clean Air Act requirements for
redesignation of nonattainment areas
E. Review of the Oregon State submittal
addressing the requirements for
redesignation of nonattainment areas
1. Attainment of the applicable NAAQS
2. Fully approved attainment plan
3. Section 110 and Part D requirements
4. Permanent and enforceable
improvements in air quality
5. Fully approved maintenance plan
6. Transportation and general conformity
7. Rule revisions submitted on March 10,
2005
IV. Conclusion and Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What action are we taking?
We are taking direct final action to
approve SIP revisions contained in two
separate packages submitted by the
State of Oregon. On May 14, 2004, the
Department of Environmental Quality
(DEQ or State) submitted a SIP revision
of the State’s industrial source rules for
new and modified major sources, and
on March 10, 2005, the State submitted
an attainment and maintenance plan
and redesignation request for the
Medford-Ashland, Oregon PM10
nonattainment area (Medford-Ashland
NAA). Also contained in the March 10,
2005 submittal were additional
revisions to Oregon’s statewide
industrial source rules for new and
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modified major sources and revisions to
the area-specific industrial source rules
applying in the Medford-Ashland NAA.
We are approving the State’s SIP
revisions submitted in both packages
and the request for redesignation
submitted with the March 10, 2005
package because the State adequately
demonstrates that the control measures
being implemented in the MedfordAshland area result in maintenance of
the PM10 National Ambient Air Quality
Standards (NAAQS) and all other
requirements of the Clean Air Act (the
Act or CAA) for redesignation to
attainment are met.
II. Review of the May 14, 2004
submittal
On May 14, 2004 Oregon submitted
revisions to Oregon Administrative
Rules, Chapter 340, Division 224 (Major
New Source Review), and Division 225
(Air Quality Analysis Requirements) to
clarify the requirements for creating and
using emission offsets and to make other
minor revisions. The primary rule
revision allows offsets that provide a net
air quality benefit to come from outside
a designated maintenance area instead
of only from inside the maintenance
area. This change is approvable because
there are no Federal requirements for
offsets for new or modified sources in
maintenance areas. The rules were also
revised to add cross-references between
Division 224 and Division 225 to
improve the clarity of the rules. We
have reviewed the May 14, 2004
submittal and found the revisions to be
approvable. The Technical Support
Document (TSD) for this action contains
a description of the revisions and EPA’s
analysis of the revisions.
III. Review of the March 10, 2005
Submittal: Medford-Ashland
Attainment and Maintenance Plan,
Redesignation Request and Industrial
Source Rule Revisions
A. Background of the Medford-Ashland
Nonattainment Area
1. Description of the Medford-Ashland
Nonattainment Area
The Medford-Ashland NAA is an
irregularly shaped polygon covering
roughly 228 miles in the Rogue Valley
of Southwest Oregon and includes the
communities of Ashland, Talent,
Phoenix, Medford, Central Point,
Jacksonville, White City, Eagle Point,
and the intervening lands of Jackson
County. The Rogue Valley is a mountain
valley formed by the Rogue River and
one of its tributaries, Bear Creek. The
major portion of the valley ranges in
elevation from 1,300 to 1,400 feet above
sea level. Mountains surround the
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valley on all sides; to the east, the
Cascades ranging up to 9500 feet, to the
south, the Siskiyous ranging up to 7,600
feet, and to the west and north, the
Coast Range and Umpqua Divide,
ranging up to 5,500 feet above sea level.
For a legal description of the boundaries
of the Medford-Ashland NAA, see 40
CFR 81.338.
The Medford-Ashland NAA has a
moderate climate with marked seasonal
characteristics. Late fall, winter and
early spring months are damp, cloudy
and cool under the influence of marine
air. Late spring, summer and early fall
are warm, dry and sunny due to the dry
continental nature of the prevailing
winds aloft that cross this area. The area
is in a rain shadow afforded by the
Siskiyous and Coast Range and therefore
receives light annual rainfall most of
which is concentrated over the winter
season. Temperatures lack extremes
generally rising to just below 90 in the
hottest months of summer, and Valley
winds are usually very light and prevail
from the north or northwest much of the
year. Winter stagnation events may
occur when temperature inversion
events trap particulate pollution near
the ground.
The Rogue Valley’s economy, once
heavily dependent on the wood
products industry, has shifted from
natural resource-based economy to an
economy based in the service, retail,
health care, communications and
technology sectors. Between 1990 and
2000, employment in the lumber and
wood products industry declined by
29%. However, employment in the rest
of the manufacturing sector increased by
34%. In addition, in-migration has
contributed to an increasing population
in the Rogue Valley. Population growth
is expected to continue through 2015.
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2. PM10 Emissions in the MedfordAshland Nonattainment Area
In the 1980s, PM10 emissions from
primarily woodstoves, mobile sources,
road dust, residential open burning and
forestry burning, and industrial point
sources contributed to exceedences of
the 24 hour and annual PM10 NAAQS 1
in the Medford-Ashland NAA. Historic
high PM10 levels in the MedfordAshland NAA include 309 µg/m3 over
24 hours in December 1985 and 68 µg/
m3 for the annual period July 1985–June
1986. Since the 1980s, Oregon has
implemented control strategies to
1 The 24-hour primary PM10 standard is 150
micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3), with no more
than one expected exceedance per year over a three
year period. The annual primary PM10 standard is
50 µg/m3 expected annual arithmetic mean over a
three year period. The secondary PM10 standards
are identical to the primary standards.
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decrease PM10 emissions. These
strategies have reduced industrial point
source emissions, area source emissions
including residential heating sources,
and emissions from road dust,
residential open burning and prescribed
forestry burning. The attainment and
maintenance plan contains emission
inventory summaries for the MedfordAshland for the years 1985, 1998 and
2015. In 1985, point source emissions
and emissions from home heating
devices (e.g. residential woodstoves)
comprised the largest portions of the
PM10 emissions inventory at 27% (1275
tons per year) and 38% (1777 tons per
year) respectively. In 1998, point source
PM10 emissions were cut nearly in half
to 535 tons per year, and there was a
75% decrease in home heating
emissions to 412 tons per year. See the
Technical Support Document
accompanying this notice for further
discussion of the PM10 emissions in the
area.
3. Attainment History of MedfordAshland Nonattainment Area
On August 7, 1987 (52 FR 29383),
EPA identified the Medford-Ashland,
Oregon area as a PM10 ‘‘Group I’’ area
of concern, i.e., an area with a 95% or
greater likelihood of violating the PM10
NAAQS and requiring substantial SIP
revisions. The area was subsequently
designated as a moderate PM10
nonattainment area upon enactment of
the Clean Air Act amendments of 1990
under sections 107(d)(4)(B) and 188(a)
of the Clean Air Act. See 56 FR 56694
(November 6, 1991).
The 1990 revisions to the CAA
required, among other things, that the
State of Oregon submit to EPA by
November 15, 1991, an attainment plan
which contained provisions to assure
that Reasonably Available Control
Measures (RACM) including Reasonably
Available Control Technology (RACT)
for stationary sources, are implemented
by December 10, 1993 and the state
demonstrate either that the PM10
NAAQS will be attained by December
31, 1994 or that attainment by such date
is not practicable. See sections 172(c)(1)
and 189(a) of the CAA.
Oregon, in response to the
requirements of the CAA of 1990,
submitted an attainment plan for the
Medford-Ashland NAA on November
15, 1991, but later withdrew the
attainment plan on January 6, 1997
because the emissions budget in the
1997 update to the Rogue Valley
Transportation Plan did not conform to
the emissions budget in the attainment
plan submitted to EPA. As a result of
the State’s withdrawal of the attainment
plan, EPA issued a finding of failure to
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submit a SIP by the applicable
attainment dates and commenced an 18
month sanction clock for Oregon to
submit an attainment plan. See 62 FR
32207 (June 13, 1997).
In 1997, EPA adopted new NAAQS
for particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5)
resulting in a change in the planning
requirements for PM10 nonattainment
areas. See 62 FR 38652 (July 18, 1997).
However, on May 4, 1999, the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia vacated the revised 1997
PM10 NAAQS. American Trucking
Association et al., and consolidated
cases. The 1987 PM10 NAAQS and all
of the associated requirements remained
in place and the Medford-Ashland
retained its designation as a moderate
nonattainment area for PM10. See 69 FR
45592 (July 30, 2004).
On March 10, 2005 Oregon submitted
an attainment plan, maintenance plan,
and redesignation request for the
Medford-Ashland NAA. Also included
in this submittal were additional
revisions to Oregon’s industrial source
rules. The remaining sections of this
action describe the March 10, 2005
submittal and our basis for approving
these submittals and redesignating the
Medford-Ashland NAA to attainment.
B. Attainment and Maintenance Plan
Requirements
Subparts 1 and 4 of Part D, Title 1 of
the Act contain air quality planning
requirements for PM10 nonattainment
areas. Subpart 1 of Part D contains
general requirements for areas
designated as nonattainment. Subpart 4
of Part D contains specific planning and
scheduling requirements for particulate
matter nonattainment areas. Subpart 4
of Part D, section 189(a), (c) and (e)
requirements apply to any moderate
PM10 nonattainment area before the
area can be redesignated to attainment.
These requirements include:
(1) An approved permit program for
construction of new or modified major
stationary sources of PM10.
(2) Provisions to assure that
reasonably available control technology
(RACT) and reasonably available control
measures (RACM) are implemented;
(3) A demonstration that the plan
provides for attainment by the
applicable attainment date or that
attainment by such date is
impracticable;
(4) Quantitative milestones which
were achieved every 3 years and which
demonstrate reasonable further progress
(RFP) toward attainment by the
applicable attainment date; and
(5) Provisions to assure that the
control requirements applicable to
major stationary sources of PM10 also
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apply to major stationary sources of
PM10 precursors except where the
Administrator determined that such
sources do not contribute significantly
to PM10 levels which exceed the
NAAQS in the area.
In addition to these specific
requirements for moderate PM10
nonattainment areas, moderate PM10
nonattainment areas must also meet the
general planning requirements in
Subpart 1 section 172(c). A thorough
discussion of these requirements may be
found in the General Preamble to the
Act and in 57 FR 13538 (April 16, 1992).
The following paragraphs describe
additional nonattainment plan
provisions as they apply to the MedfordAshland NAA.
(6) Section 172(c)(3)—Emissions
inventory. Section 172(c)(3) of the Act
contains requirements for attainment
plans to include a comprehensive,
accurate, current inventory of actual
emissions from all sources in the PM10
nonattainment area.
(7) Section 172(c)(7) compliance with
CAA section 110(a)(2). Section 172(c)(7)
requires that states shall meet applicable
provisions of section 110(a)(2) including
the operation of an appropriate air
monitoring network in accord with 40
CFR part 58 to verify attainment status
of the area.
(8) Section 172(c)(9) contingency
measures—
Section 172(c)(9) contains
requirements for plans to include
contingency measures which were to be
implemented by November 15, 1993,
and to become effective without further
action by the state or EPA, upon a
determination by EPA that the area has
failed to achieve RFP or to attain the
PM10 NAAQS by the applicable
statutory deadline (see Section 172(c)(9)
and 57 FR 13543–13544).
Section 175A of the Act provides the
requirements for maintenance plans.
These requirements are further clarified
in a policy and guidance memorandum
from John Calcagni, Director, Air
Quality Management Division, EPA
Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards dated September 4, 1992,
‘‘Procedures for Processing Requests to
Redesignate Areas to Attainment’’ (the
Calcagni memo). The required
provisions for maintenance plans are:
(9) An attainment emissions inventory
to identify the level of emissions in the
area sufficient to attain the NAAQS;
(10) A demonstration of maintenance
of the NAAQS for 10 years after
redesignation;
(11) Verification of continued
attainment through operation of an
appropriate air quality monitoring
network; and
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(12) Contingency provisions to
promptly correct any violation of the
NAAQS that occurs after redesignation
of the area.
C. Review of the March 10, 2005 Oregon
State Submittal Addressing the
Attainment Plan Requirements and
Maintenance Plan Requirements
1. Permit Program for the Construction
and Operation of New and Modified
Major Stationary Sources of PM10
Section 189(a)(1)(A) of the Act
requires that, for the purpose of meeting
the requirements of section 172(c)(5),
SIPs contain a permit program
providing that permits meeting the
requirements of section 173 are required
for the construction and operation of
new and modified major stationary
sources of PM10.
Oregon has a fully-approved
nonattainment New Source Review
(NSR) program, most recently approved
on January 22, 2003 (68 FR 29530).
Oregon also has a fully approved
Prevention of Significant Deterioration
(PSD) program, also approved on
January 22, 2003 (68 FR 29530). See
Oregon Administrative Rules Chapter
340, Divisions 200, 202, 209, 212, 216,
222, 224, 225 and 268.
Upon the effective date of
redesignation of an area from
nonattainment to attainment, the
requirements of the Part D NSR program
will be replaced by the PSD program
and the maintenance area NSR program.
2. RACM and RACT
Section 189(a)(1)(C) of the Act
requires that moderate area SIPs contain
‘‘reasonably available control measures’’
(RACM) for the control of PM10
emissions. Section 172(c)(1) of the Act,
in turn, provides that RACM for
nonattainment areas shall include ‘‘such
reductions in emissions from existing
sources in the area as may be obtained
through the adoption, at a minimum, of
reasonably available control
technology’’. Read together, these
provisions require that moderate PM10
SIPs include RACM and ‘‘reasonably
available control technology’’ (RACT)
for existing sources of PM10 emissions.
The General Preamble provides
further guidance on interpretation of the
requirements for RACM and RACT.
Congress, in enacting the amended Act,
did not use the word ‘‘all’’ in
conjunction with RACM and RACT.
Thus, it is possible that a State could
demonstrate that an existing source in
an area should not be subject to a
control technology especially where
such a control is unreasonable in light
of the specific area’s individual
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attainment needs or is infeasible. EPA
recommends that available control
technology be applied to those existing
sources in the nonattainment area that
are reasonable to control in light of the
feasibility of such controls and the
individual attainment needs of the
specific area.
In section 4.14.7 of the attainment and
maintenance plan, Oregon describes
that attainment and maintenance of the
PM10 standard in Medford-Ashland
NAA is based primarily on the
following control strategies: industrial
controls, residential woodsmoke
controls, residential open burning
controls, road dust controls, prescribed
forestry burning controls and strategies
to control PM10 from agricultural
trackout. We note that in separate
actions EPA has approved PM10 control
strategies for the Medford-Ashland area
as well as other areas in the state into
the SIP on July 30, 1991, June 9, 1992
and February 23, 1993. See 57 FR
36006, 57 FR 24373 and 55 FR 10972.
However, EPA made no determination
of RACM or RACT when it approved
these control strategies into the SIP
because these rules did not contain the
complete suite of PM10 control
measures relied upon to demonstrate
attainment of the PM10 NAAQS in
Medford-Ashland and Oregon did not
provide EPA with a demonstration of
attainment based on these control
measures. See 55 FR 10972 (February
23, 1993). The following describes the
control measures contained in Oregon’s
March 10, 2005 submittal that constitute
RACT/RACM.
(a) Industrial controls
Oregon adopted specific industrial
rules for the wood products industries
in the Medford-Ashland Air Quality
Maintenance Area (AQMA) in 1978,
1983, 1989. Oregon revised and
resubmitted the 1989 rules to EPA in
1991 based on EPA’s comments on
deficient sections of the 1989 rules. The
1979 and 1983 rules include: (1) Tighter
pollution control requirements for
particle dryers, fiber dryers, veneer
dryers, large wood-fired boilers,
charcoal furnaces, and air conveying
systems for sander dust and sawdust; (2)
additional source testing requirements;
(3) operation and maintenance plans to
prevent or minimize excess emissions;
and (4) site-specific fugitive dust control
plans. These industrial requirements
resulted in a 70% reduction in
industrial particulate emissions between
1978 and 1986.
The 1991 PM10 strategies for major
industry require: (1) Tighter emission
limits and better pollution control
equipment on veneer dryers and large
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wood-fired boilers; (2) more extensive
source testing and continuous emission
monitoring in order to maximize
performance of pollution control
equipment; and (3) more restrictive
emission offset requirements for new or
expanding industries. These rules were
last approved into the SIP in 2003. See
68 FR 2891 (January 22, 2003). See the
TSD for this action for a complete list
of industrial source rules applying in
the Medford-Ashland NAA.
As explained above, Oregon
submitted revisions to the industrial
source rules applying in the MedfordAshland NAA to EPA on March 10,
2005 with the attainment and
maintenance plan. These revisions are
described below in section III.E.9., and
in the TSD for this action.
(b) Residential Woodsmoke Controls
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Curtailment
Throughout the 1980s, the local
jurisdictions in the Medford-Ashland
NAA developed and implemented
strategies to reduce emissions from
residential wood burning. Jackson
County led the effort with a voluntary
wood burning curtailment program
which began on November 19, 1985
(25% compliance), followed by the City
of Medford’s mandatory curtailment
program adopted on November 2, 1989
(80% compliance). The City of Central
Point also adopted a mandatory
curtailment program on December 21,
1989 and subsequently, Jackson County
converted its voluntary curtailment
program to a mandatory curtailment
program. Curtailment surveys have
indicated compliance rates of 90% in
the Medford area, and 88% in the core
Medford-Central Point area. Compliance
was about 66% in other parts of the
curtailment area.
In 1998, a unified ordinance was
developed to align approaches in
Medford and Central Point to the
existing Jackson County ordinance. The
unified Jackson County ordinance
includes a prohibition on burning in
noncertified woodstoves on yellow and
red advisory days, a no visible
emissions standard for certified
woodstoves on yellow and red advisory
days and a 50% opacity limit on
woodstove smoke at all other times.
This unified ordinance applies in most
of the Medford-Ashland nonattainment
area, including portions of Jackson
County, and the cities of Ashland,
Central Point, Jacksonville, Medford,
Phoenix and Talent. These woodstove
curtailment ordinances are required by
local law and contain enforcement
mechanisms.
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In addition to these local curtailment
programs, OAR 340–262–0200 to 0250
contain mandatory woodstove
curtailment provisions that apply
statewide. These statewide curtailment
provisions ensure that local
governments implement prohibitions on
wood burning in uncertified
woodstoves, fireplaces or wood burning
appliances during periods of stagnation.
This rule was last approved into the
Oregon SIP on March 24, 2003. See 68
FR 2891 (January 22, 2003).
Woodstove Replacement
In 1988, the Jackson County housing
authority began the Cooperative Local
Effort for Air Resources (CLEAR) to
replace woodstoves with cleaner
burning units and provide cost-effective
weatherization in low-income homes.
About $1.8 million has been obtained
for CLEAR, and the Jackson County
Housing Authority has replaced
approximately 580 noncertified
woodstoves in low income houses. A
similar project called Save Our
Livability, View and Environment
(SAVE) was implemented in Ashland in
1990.
Home Weatherization
Weatherization of homes prior to
installation of a new woodstove has
been required by ordinances in the City
of Medford (No. 4732) and Jackson
County (No. 82–60) since 1982.
Certification
A statewide certification program for
residential woodstoves consistent with
EPA’s New Source Performance
Standard for woodstoves (40 CFR part
60, subpart AAA) was adopted in 1989
and approved into the SIP in 1992. See
57 FR 24373 (June 9, 1992). The most
recent revisions to the Oregon rules
containing provisions for the statewide
certification (OAR 340–262–0100 to
0130) were approved on March 23,
2003. See 68 FR 2891 (January 22,
2003).
(c) Other Area Source Strategies
Open Burning
Open burning of domestic waste is
controlled in the Medford-Ashland
NAA through State regulations in OAR
340–240–0250. These rules have been
approved into the SIP. See 68 FR 2891
(January 22, 2003). In addition to the
open burning rules already approved
into the SIP, local ordinances
throughout the AQMA restrict the
practice of open burning. Within the
Medford-Ashland NAA, ordinances
prohibit open burning inside the
Domestic Open Burning Boundary
except by special permit. These
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residential open burning ordinances are
required by local law and contain
enforcement mechanisms.
Road Dust
PM10 emissions generated through
motor vehicle traffic (road dust) have
been reduced by paving unpaved roads,
and curb and gutter shoulders on paved
roads. In addition, Jackson County
recently used Congestion, Mitigation
and Air Quality (CMAQ) funding to
purchase a high-efficiency, vacuum
street sweeper for use in the MedfordWhite City area. At a minimum, the
cleaning program must continue to use
the sweeper at least two times a month
and cover Medford, White City and
intervening major corridors. This
measure is a Transportation Control
Measure that Jackson County must
implement to meet Transportation
Conformity requirements (TCM).
Fugitive Dust
OAR 340–240–0180 directs sawmills,
plywood mills and veneer
manufacturing plants, particleboard and
hardboard plants, charcoal
manufacturing plants, asphalt plants,
rock crushers, animal feed
manufacturers, and other major
industrial facilities as identified by
Oregon in the Medford-Ashland NAA to
prepare and implement site-specific
plans for the control of fugitive
emissions. This rule is in the federally
approved SIP. See 68 FR 2891 (January
22, 2003). In addition, the cities of
Ashland and Jacksonville have
ordinances to control dust track out.
Prescribed Forestry Burning
The Oregon Smoke Management Plan
(SMP) is a program designed to manage
smoke impacts from burning of
silivcultural wastes and prescribed
forestry burning. The SMP established a
Special Protection Zone around the
Medford-Ashland NAA wherein
mandatory restrictions on slash burning
are implemented based on
meteorological conditions and other
factors. EPA approved the Smoke
Management Plan into the SIP as part of
the Oregon Visibility Plan on
November 1, 2001 (66 FR 55105).
Where sources of PM10 contribute
insignificantly to the PM10 problem in
the area, EPA’s policy is that it would
be unreasonable (and would not
constitute RACM) to require the sources
to implement all potentially available
control measures. See 57 FR 13540
(April 16, 1992 and 58 FR 13233
(March 10, 1993). Pages 62 and 63 of the
emissions inventory submitted with the
attainment and maintenance plan
contain a summary of area source
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emissions in 1998. Based on the 1998
emissions inventory, EPA believes that
sources other than residential wood
smoke, fugitive dust, mobile sources,
residential domestic burning, and
industrial point sources contribute
insignificantly to the emissions
inventory, and therefore additional
control measures are not necessary to
constitute RACM/RACT.
Statewide and local industrial source
control rules, local ordinances that
control residential wood smoke, local
ordinances controlling residential open
burning, statewide wood stove
certification and curtailment rules, local
dust track out ordinances, and the
Oregon Smoke Management Plan are
permanent control measures with
enforcement mechanisms. Based on the
1998 emissions inventory for the
Medford-Ashland NAA and air quality
monitoring and modeling data that
show that the controls submitted with
the attainment and maintenance plan
have resulted in the Medford-Ashland
NAA attaining the PM10 NAAQS, EPA
is determining that the PM10 controls
submitted with the attainment and
maintenance plan meet RACT and
RACM requirements. The technical
support document for this action
contains a list of control strategies that
EPA is concluding meets RACT and
RACM and the State effective date for
these rules.
3. Attainment Demonstration
Initial moderate PM10 areas were
required to submit either a
demonstration (including air quality
modeling) that the plan will provide for
attainment as expeditiously as
practicable, but no later than
December 31, 1994, or a demonstration
that attainment by that date is
impracticable. To demonstrate
attainment, the State must rely on a
combination of supporting evidence.
First, the State must demonstrate that an
area has attained the PM10 NAAQS
through analysis of ambient air quality
data from an ambient air monitoring
network representing peak PM10
concentrations, and stored in the EPA
Air Quality System (AQS) database.
Second, the State must provide EPAapproved air quality modeling data that
demonstrates that the area has attained
the applicable NAAQS. The following
describes how Oregon meets monitoring
and modeling requirements for the
attainment demonstration in the
Medford-Ashland NAA.
The 24-hour PM10 NAAQS is 150 µg/
m3. An area has attained the 24-hour
standard when the average number of
expected exceedences per year is less
than or equal to one, when averaged
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over a three-year period (40 CFR 50.6).
To make this determination, three
consecutive years of complete ambient
air quality data must be collected in
accordance with Federal requirements
(40 CFR part 58, including appendices).
The annual PM10 NAAQS is 50 µg/m3.
To determine attainment with the
annual PM10 NAAQS, the standard is
compared to the expected annual mean,
which is the average of the weighted
annual mean for three consecutive
years.
Section 4.12.2.2 of the attainment and
maintenance plan contains monitoring
data from the Medford-Ashland
monitoring network. The monitor at the
intersection of Welch Street and Jackson
Street in Medford since 1989 is the
design monitor for the Medford-Ashland
NAA and has met EPA design and siting
criteria. Data from the Welch and
Jackson monitor has been quality
assured by the Oregon Department of
Environmental Quality and stored in the
AQS database. The last exceedence of
the 24-hour PM10 NAAQS at the Welch
and Jackson monitor was in 1991. The
highest 24-hour values over a year since
1991 have ranged from 124 µg/m3 in
1992 to 58 µg/m3 in 2003, and there has
been a general decline in ambient
concentrations of 24-hour PM10 since
1991.
The monitor located at the White City
Post Office and operating since 1985 is
the design monitor for White City. The
monitor has met EPA design and siting
criteria and based on quality assured
monitoring data has not recorded
exceedences of the 24-hour PM10
NAAQS since 1991. The highest 24hour concentration at this monitor since
1991 has ranged from 118 µg/m3 in 1992
to 68 µg/m3 in 2003. The PM10 levels
measured at this monitor have not
exceeded the annual PM10 NAAQS
since 1990.
Based on quality assured monitoring
data from the Medford-Ashland
monitoring network, there have been no
exceedences of the 24-hour PM10
NAAQS or the annual PM10 NAAQS in
the Medford-Ashland NAA since 1991.
Therefore, the Medford-Ashland NAA
reached attainment of the PM10 NAAQS
during the three year period following
the year of the last exceedence (1992–
1994), and attained the PM10 NAAQS
by the applicable attainment date of
December 31, 1994.
For the modeling demonstration,
generally EPA recommends that
attainment be demonstrated according
to the PM–10 SIP Development
Guideline (June 1987), which presents
three methods. Federal regulations
require demonstration of attainment ‘‘by
means of a proportional model or
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dispersion model or other procedure
which is shown to be adequate and
appropriate for such purposes’’. 40 CFR
51.112. The preferred method is the use
of both dispersion and receptor
modeling in combination, but the
regulations and the guideline also
allows the use of dispersion modeling
alone, or in combination with
proportional rollback modeling. In this
instance, Oregon selected CALPUFF, a
multi-layer, multi-species, non-steadystate puff dispersion model that
simulates the effects of time- and spacevarying meteorological conditions on
pollution transport, transformation and
removal to model attainment with the
PM10 NAAQS in the Medford-Ashland
NAA.
Section 4.14.5 of the attainment and
maintenance plan contains Oregon’s
documentation and technical analysis of
the modeling results. Oregon modeled
an area encompassing at least the
Medford-Ashland NAA. Inputs to the
model included topographic data, worst
case meteorology from 1998, 1999 and
2000, and land use and emissions
inventory data for the year 1998. The
meteorological domain for the model
extends from just west of Grants Pass to
approximately 12 kilometers east of Mt.
McLoughlin and from Crater Lake to
about 10 kilometers into California.
As explained above, the 24-hour
standard is attained when the expected
number of days per calendar year
exceeding 150 µg/m3 24-hour NAAQS is
<= 1. To determine compliance with the
24-hour standard by modeling, the 4th
highest modeled PM10 value is
compared with the standard. To
determine compliance with the annual
PM10 standard, the modeled annual
average values are compared with the
annual PM10 standard of 50 µg/m3. In
this case, the model did not predict any
4th high daily values above the 24-hour
PM10 standard, and did not predict any
annual average PM10 values above the
annual PM10 standard. Therefore,
Oregon’s CALPUFF model runs, using
worst case meteorology predicted
compliance with the 24-hour and
annual PM10 standards.
Because Oregon has used an approved
model that has performed within EPA
parameters to simulate ambient air
quality during the attainment period of
1998 and the simulation has predicted
compliance with the PM10 NAAQS in
all areas in the modeling domain,
Oregon has provided modeling that
demonstrates attainment of the 24-hour
and annual PM10 NAAQS. The
modeling demonstration of attainment
combined with the monitoring data
submitted on March 10, 2005 is an
adequate showing that the Medford-
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Ashland area has attained the PM10
NAAQS.
4. Quantitative Milestones Which are To
Be Achieved Every Three Years and
Which Demonstrate Reasonable Further
Progress (RFP) Toward Attainment by
December 31, 1994
Qualitative milestones are no longer
required in the Medford-Ashland NAA
since this requirement relates to the
applicable attainment date, and we have
determined based on an analysis of
monitoring and modeling data that the
area attained the PM10 NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date.
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5. PM10 Precursors
The control requirements which are
applicable to major stationary sources of
PM10 also apply to major stationary
sources of PM10 precursors unless EPA
determines such sources do not
contribute significantly to PM10 levels
in excess of the NAAQS in the area. See
section 189(e) of the Act. The General
Preamble contains guidance addressing
how EPA intends to implement section
189(e). See 57 FR 13539–13542 (April
16, 1992).
As stated above in section III.C.3.,
there are no measured or modeled PM10
levels in excess of the NAAQS in the
Medford-Ashland NAA. Therefore,
major stationary sources of PM10
precursors may be excluded from
control requirements based on the
determination that PM10 levels in the
area have not exceeded the NAAQS
since the early nineteen nineties.
6. Attainment and Maintenance
Emissions Inventory
Section 172(c)(3) of the Act requires a
comprehensive, accurate, current
inventory of actual emissions from all
sources in the Medford-Ashland PM10
nonattainment area and section 175A of
the Act and the Calcagni memo require
an attainment emissions inventory to
identify the level of emissions in the
area sufficient to attain the NAAQS.
Where the State has made an adequate
demonstration that air quality has
improved as a result of the SIP, the
attainment inventory will generally be
an inventory of actual emissions at the
time the area attained the standard.
Oregon included in the plan an
attainment year emissions inventory for
the calendar year 1998, and a
maintenance emissions inventory which
represents 24-hour and annual
emissions for the year 2015. Oregon
chose 1998 as its base year to estimate
actual emissions for attainment because
it is the most recent year for which
Oregon had complete meteorological
data, and because 1998 meteorology
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included inversions and stagnation
events that are representative of the
worst case meteorology inputs necessary
for modeling attainment. EPA has
reviewed the attainment year and
maintenance year emissions inventories
and has determined that they are
accurate and comprehensive and
therefore meet the requirements of
Section 172(c)(3) of the Act.
Based on the 1998 emissions
inventory, the major sources of PM10
emissions over 24-hours were: total area
sources including residential wood
combustion (43%), mobile sources
(45%), major point sources (10%) and
nonroad mobile sources (2%).
Residential fuel combustion alone
accounted for 29% of the daily worst
case 1998 emissions. Annual 1998
emissions were comprised of mobile
emissions (67%), area source emissions
(18%), major point source emissions
(14%), and nonroad mobile sources
(2%). Residential fuel combustion
comprised 11% of the area source
fraction of the 1998 annual emissions.
7. Air Quality Monitoring Requirements
Section 172(c)(7) requires that States
meet the applicable requirements in
section 110(a)(2) of the Act which
includes the requirement to operate an
appropriate air monitoring network in
accord with 40 CFR part 58 to verify
attainment status of the area. In
addition, section 175(A) of the Act
requires that states verify continued
attainment of the NAAQS through
operation of an appropriate air quality
monitoring network. The State of
Oregon operates two PM10 State and
Local Air Monitoring Stations (SLAMS)
in the Medford-Ashland NAA. There is
a monitor at the intersection of Welch
and Jackson Streets in the City of
Medford, and a monitor at the White
City Post Office. Both monitoring sites
meet EPA SLAMS network design and
siting requirements set forth at 40 CFR
part 58, appendices D and E, and have
been monitoring for PM10 since 1991.
In section 4.14.12.9 of the attainment
and maintenance plan, the State
commits to continued operation of the
monitoring network. Based on meeting
SLAMS network design and siting
requirements and its commitment to
continue to operate the monitoring
network, the State has met air quality
monitoring requirements.
8. Demonstration of Maintenance
Section 175(A) of the Act requires a
demonstration of maintenance of the
NAAQS for 10 years after designation. A
State may generally demonstrate
maintenance of the NAAQS by either
showing that future emissions of a
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pollutant or its precursors will not
exceed the level of the attainment
inventory, or by modeling to show that
the future anticipated mix of sources
and emission rates will not cause a
violation of the NAAQS. Under the Act,
the showing should be based on the
same level of modeling used for the
attainment demonstration required as
part of the approved attainment plan.
In this case, Oregon submitted
CALPUFF modeling results that
demonstrate maintenance for the
Medford-Ashland NAA in the year
2015. Since CALPUFF was also used for
the modeled attainment demonstration,
the level of modeling submitted for the
maintenance demonstration is
equivalent to the level of modeling used
in the attainment demonstration.
Emissions inputs to the model were
developed from the 1998 base year
inventory using growth factors and
allowable emissions. Emissions inputs
into the model were calculated with the
controls that the State submitted with
the attainment and maintenance plan in
place, and maintenance was projected to
2015. Based on the CALPUFF modeling
results submitted with the plan, EPA
believes that the State is demonstrating
maintenance of the PM10 NAAQS for
the ten-year period 2005–2015. Oregon,
in section 4.14.6.2 of the attainment and
maintenance plan, provided a summary
of the modeling results. For the annual
PM10 NAAQS, Oregon provided a table
with the top 1% of the model predicted
and a figure with all of the model’s
predicted annual average PM10 values.
None of the predicted annual average
values exceeded the annual PM10
NAAQS, 50 µg/m3. Based on our review
of this information, EPA is determining
that the model did not predict any
violations of the annual PM10 NAAQS
in any grids and the State has
demonstrated that the Medford-Ashland
area will continue to maintain the
annual PM10 NAAQS in 2015.
Oregon also provided a table of the
top 1% of the fourth highest predicted
24-hour PM10 values in the plan. To
determine compliance with the 24-hour
NAAQS using modeling, the fourth
highest predicted 24-hour PM10 value is
used to represent the expected 24-hour
PM10 ambient air quality level over a
three-year period. Based on the top 1%
of the fourth highest predicted 24-hour
PM10 values in the plan, there were no
predicted 24-hour values that exceeded
150 µg/m3. Therefore the model did not
predict any violations of the 24-hour
PM10 NAAQS. Oregon has
demonstrated maintenance with the 24hour PM10 NAAQS in the year 2015.
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9. Contingency Measures and
Contingency Provisions
As described in section 172(c)(9) of
the Act, all attainment plans must
include contingency measures. See 57
FR 13543–13544 (April 16, 1992).
Section 175A of the Act requires that a
maintenance plan include contingency
provisions, as necessary, to promptly
correct any violation of the NAAQS that
occurs after redesignation. These
contingency provisions are
distinguished from those contingency
measures generally required under
section 172(c)(9). Contingency measures
described in section 172(c)(9) of the Act
should consist of other available
measures which were to become
effective without further action by the
State or EPA, upon a determination by
EPA that the area has failed to achieve
RFP or to attain the PM10 NAAQS by
the applicable statutory deadline. See 57
FR 13543–13544 (April 16, 1992). In
this case, contingency measures are no
longer required in the Medford-Ashland
NAA since the requirement relates to
the applicable attainment date, and the
area has attained the PM10 NAAQS by
the applicable attainment date. For the
purposes of section 175A, contingency
provisions are required. However, the
State is not required to have fully
adopted contingency measures that will
take effect without further action by the
State in order for the maintenance plan
to be approved.
Section 4.14.9.0 of the attainment and
maintenance plan provides the process
for identification of contingency
measures if monitored air quality values
exceed early warning thresholds of 120
µg/m3 (24-hour average) or 40 µg/m3
(annual average) or if there is a violation
of the PM10 NAAQS. In the event of a
monitored value over the threshold, or
a violation, Oregon will first review the
relevant air quality data to determine
the cause of the event. Following this
review, it may convene the MedfordAshland Air Quality Advisory
Committee to assist in this review and
to determine if a corrective action is
needed. These contingency provisions
meet the requirements of section 175(A)
of the Act.
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10. Conclusion
As discussed above, Oregon is
meeting all of the requirements in
Subparts 1 and 4 of Part D, Title 1 of the
Act for PM10 nonattainment areas and
attainment plans, and section 175(A)
planning requirements for PM10
nonattainment areas and maintenance
plans for the Medford-Ashland NAA. In
this action, EPA is approving Oregon’s
March 10, 2005 submittal of the
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attainment and maintenance plan for
the Medford-Ashland NAA which
includes implementation of RACT/
RACM, the calendar year 1998
attainment year emissions inventory,
the calendar year 2015 maintenance
emissions inventory, the attainment and
maintenance demonstrations through air
quality monitoring data and CALPUFF
modeling, continued operation of an
EPA approved monitoring network, and
implementation of a major new source
permitting program.
D. Clean Air Act Requirements for
Redesignation of Nonattainment Areas
Nonattainment areas can be
redesignated to attainment after the area
has measured air quality data showing
it has attained the NAAQS and when
certain planning requirements are met.
Section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act, and the
General Preamble to Title I of the Act
provide the criteria for redesignation.
See 57 FR 13498 (April 16, 1992). These
criteria are further clarified in the
Calcagni Memo. The criteria for
redesignation are:
(1) The Administrator has determined
that the area has attained the applicable
NAAQS;
(2) The Administrator has fully
approved the applicable SIP for the area
under section 110(k) of the Act;
(3) The state containing the area has
met all requirements applicable to the
area under section 110 and part D of the
Act;
(4) The Administrator has determined
that the improvement in air quality is
due to permanent and enforceable
reductions in emissions; and
(5) The Administrator has fully
approved a maintenance plan for the
area as meeting the requirements of
section 175A of the Act.
E. Review of the Oregon State Submittal
Addressing the Requirements for
Redesignation of Nonattainment Areas
and Maintenance Plans
1. Attainment of the Applicable NAAQS
States must demonstrate that an area
has attained the PM10 NAAQS through
analysis of ambient air quality data from
an ambient air monitoring network
representing peak PM10 concentrations.
The data should be stored in the EPA
Air Quality System (AQS) database. As
explained above in III.C.3. of this action,
the Medford-Ashland NAA has attained
the PM10 NAAQS based on quality
assured air quality monitoring data from
the Welch and Jackson monitor and
from the White City Post Office monitor
which has been stored in the AQS
database. Current monitoring data
shows that the area has continued to
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meet the annual and 24-hour PM
NAAQS for every three-year period
since the attainment date.
2. Fully Approved Attainment Plan
In order to qualify for redesignation,
the SIP for the area must be fully
approved under section 110(k) of the
Act, and must satisfy all requirements
that apply to the area. In this case, the
Medford-Ashland area must have an
approved moderate area plan as
described above in section III.B. As
explained above in section III.C. of this
action, the State has met the attainment
plan requirements for the MedfordAshland NAA. As also described above
in section III.C. , EPA is approving the
attainment plan for the Medford
Ashland NAA. Therefore, upon the
effective date for this action, Oregon
will have a fully approved attainment
plan under section 175(A) of the Act.
3. Section 110 and Part D Requirements
Section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act
requires that a State containing a
nonattainment area must meet all
applicable requirements under section
110 and Part D of the Act for an area to
be redesignated to attainment. EPA
interprets this to mean that the State
must meet all requirements that applied
to the area prior to, and at the time of,
the submission of a complete
redesignation request. As explained
above in section III.C. of this action,
based on EPA’s review of the attainment
and maintenance plan, Oregon has met
the Part D requirements for the
Medford-Ashland NAA. The following
is a summary of how Oregon meets the
Clean Air Act section 110 requirements.
Section 110(a)(2) of the Act contains
general requirements for
implementation plans. These
requirements include, but are not
limited to, submittal of a SIP that has
been adopted by the State after
reasonable notice and public hearing;
provisions for establishment and
operation of appropriate apparatus,
methods, systems and procedures
necessary to monitor ambient air
quality; provisions for Part C—
Prevention of Significant Deterioration
(PSD) and Part D—New Source Review
(NSR) permit programs; criteria for
stationary source emission control
measures, monitoring and reporting;
provisions for modeling; and provisions
for public and local agency
participation. See the General Preamble
for further explanation of these
requirements. See 57 FR 13498 (April
16, 1992).
EPA has approved Oregon’s plan for
the attainment and maintenance of the
national standards under Section 110.
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See 40 CFR 52.1972. Therefore, for
purposes of redesignation, the State has
satisfied all requirements under section
110(a)(2) of the Act.
4. Permanent and Enforceable
Improvements in Air Quality
The State must be able to reasonably
attribute the improvement in air quality
to permanent and enforceable emission
reductions. In making this showing, the
State must demonstrate that air quality
improvements are the result of actual
enforceable emission reductions. This
showing should consider emission rates,
production capacities, and other related
information. The analysis should
assume that sources are operating at
permitted levels (or historic peak levels)
unless evidence is presented that such
an assumption is unrealistic.
Oregon has demonstrated that the air
quality improvements in the MedfordAshland NAA are the result of
permanent emission reductions and not
a result of either economic trends or
meteorology. Medford-Ashland’s
attainment history corresponds with the
adoption of PM10 controls in the area.
In the 1980’s, Oregon adopted rules
containing control measures for the
Medford-Ashland NAA, and in 1991,
the Oregon Environmental Quality
Commission (EQC) adopted the more
comprehensive suite of controls that are
currently in place. See 57 FR 24373
(June 9, 1992), 58 FR 10972 (February
23, 1993) and 56 FR 36006 (July 30,
1991). In 1992, the year following the
EQC’s adoption of the full suite of PM10
controls in Medford-Ashland, there
were no exceedences of the PM10
NAAQS in the Medford-Ashland NAA.
Since 1992, there has been a decreasing
trend in PM10 emissions, despite
population and economic growth.
Section 4.14.3.3 of the attainment and
maintenance plan describes population
and emission growth in the MedfordAshland NAA. From 1976–1996
population growth in the MedfordAshland NAA was estimated at 2.6%/
year for urban areas and .05%/year for
rural areas.
In addition, CALPUFF modeling
submitted with the plan demonstrates
that the reductions in emissions are not
due to temporary meteorological effects.
The meteorology used for CALPUFF
modeling represents a worst case
meteorological scenario, and is
comparable to 1985 meteorology, the
year that Medford-Ashland experienced
PM10 levels higher than 300 µg/m3 over
24 hours. Thus, based on a review of
control measures contained in the
attainment plan and the corresponding
emission reductions, we have
determined that the air quality
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improvements in the Medford-Ashland
NAA are due to permanent and
enforceable reductions.
5. Fully Approved Maintenance Plan
As described above in section III.C. ,
EPA is approving the maintenance plan
for the Medford-Ashland NAA.
Therefore, upon the effective date for
this action, Oregon will have a fully
approved maintenance plan under
section 175(A) of the Act.
6. Transportation and General
Conformity
Transportation Conformity
Under section 176(c) of the Act,
transportation plans, programs and
projects in nonattainment or
maintenance areas that are funded or
approved under the Federal Transit Act
must conform to the applicable SIP. In
short, a transportation plan is deemed to
conform to the applicable SIP if the
emissions resulting from the
implementation of that transportation
plan are less than or equal to the motor
vehicle emissions budget (MVEB)
established in the SIP for the
maintenance year and other analysis
years.
Section 4.14.4.0 of the plan contains
a description of the air quality
conformity process for the MedfordAshland NAA. The Rogue Valley
Council of Governments is the local
agency that creates and maintains the
Rogue Valley Transportation Plan which
must conform at planning intervals
established in 40 CFR 93 with the
MVEB for the year 2015. Table 1.
contains the MVEB established in the
attainment and maintenance plan.
TABLE 1.—MOTOR VEHICLE EMISSIONS
BUDGET (PM10)
[Annual PM10 (tons/year)]
Year ..............................................
Motor Vehicle Emissions Budget
2015
3754
In addition to conforming to the
MVEB in the SIP, the local agency must
show at planning intervals established
in 40 CFR part 93 that transportation
control measures (TCMs) are being
implemented. The street cleaning
program for reducing particulate
pollution in the City of Medford and
White City is the only transportation
control measure in the attainment and
maintenance plan. At a minimum, the
cleaning program must continue to use
a high efficiency, vacuum street sweeper
or equivalent, and cover an area that
includes Medford, White City and
significant intervening travel corridors,
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35171
and provide cleaning frequency no less
than twice per month.
The transportation conformity rule
establishes adequacy criteria for MVEBs
(40 CFR 93.118). In section 4.14.4.0 of
the plan, Oregon lists the adequacy
criteria and how it meets these criteria.
On February 3, 2005, EPA posted a
proposal to find the Medford-Ashland
MVEB adequate for transportation
conformity purposes on EPA’s
conformity Web site: https://
www.epa.gov/oms/traq. MVEBs
established in the plan are posted on
this Web site to provide the public with
an opportunity to review and comment
on the MVEB in the plan. The comment
period for the adequacy posting for the
Medford-Ashland NAA ended on March
15, 2005. EPA did not receive any
comments on this posting.
General Conformity
For Federal actions which are
required to address the specific
requirements of the general conformity
rule, one set of requirements applies
particularly to ensuring that emissions
from the action will not cause or
contribute to new violations of the
NAAQS, exacerbate current violations,
or delay timely attainment. To satisfy
this requirement to the State may
allocate a budget in the SIP for future
Federal actions that could result in
emissions. This budget can be used to
demonstrate that ‘‘the total of direct and
indirect emissions from the action (or
portion thereof), would not exceed the
emissions budgets specified in the
applicable SIP.’’ and therefore not cause
or contribute to new violations of the
NAAQS, exacerbate current violations
or delay timely attainment 40 CFR
93.158(a)(5)(i)(A). The decision about
whether to include specific allocations
of allowable emissions increases to
sources is one made by the state and
local air quality agencies. These
emissions budgets are unlike, and are
not to be confused with, those used in
transportation conformity. Emissions
budgets in transportation conformity are
required to limit and restrain emissions
from motor vehicles. Emissions budgets
in general conformity allow increases in
emissions up to specified levels for
Federal actions. Oregon has not chosen
to include specific emissions allocations
for Federal projects that would be
subject to the provisions of general
conformity.
Based on our review of the Medford
PM10 attainment and maintenance plan
and for the reasons discussed above, we
conclude that the requirements for an
approvable maintenance plan under the
Act have been met. Therefore, we are
approving the attainment and
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maintenance plan for PM10 submitted
for the Medford nonattainment area. In
addition, based on our evaluation of
Oregon’s March 10, 2005 SIP submittal,
we conclude the requirements for
redesignation in section 107(d)(3)(E)
have been met. Therefore, we are
redesignating the Medford-Ashland
PM10 nonattainment area to attainment.
7. Rule Revisions Submitted on March
10, 2005
Oregon submitted revisions to OAR
Chapter 340 Divisions 204 (Designation
of Air Quality Areas), 224 (Major New
Source Review), 225 (Air Quality
Analysis Requirements) and 240 (Rules
for Areas with Unique Air Quality
Needs) with the attainment and
maintenance plan on March 10, 2005.
EPA has reviewed these revisions and
determined that the revisions are
approvable because they are either
nonsubstantive changes or they exceed
the requirements in the Clean Air Act.
Below is a summary of these revisions
and EPA’s basis for finding these
revisions approvable. The TSD for this
action contains a complete description
of the rule revisions and EPA’s analysis.
wwhite on PROD1PC61 with RULES
Divisions 200, 204, 224 and 225
EPA is not taking action on OAR
Chapter 340 Division 200 because the
revised section describes the State’s
procedures for adopting its SIP and
incorporates by reference all of the
revisions adopted by the Environmental
Quality Commission (EQC) for approval
into the Oregon SIP (as a matter of state
law) and is not needed as part of the
federally enforceable SIP for Oregon.
The revisions to OAR Chapter 340
Divisions 204, 224 and 225 submitted
on March 10, 2005 clean up the rules
and address the New Source Review
program changes permitted by the Clean
Air Act upon redesignation of an area to
attainment. Once an area is redesignated
to attainment and becomes a
maintenance area, the PSD and
maintenance NSR programs apply
instead of the more stringent
nonattainment NSR program. However,
for the Medford-Ashland PM10
Maintenance Area, Oregon is retaining
in its maintenance NSR rules the same
requirements that applied under the
nonattainment NSR rules [i.e., the State
is continuing the requirement to install
lowest achievable emission rate
technology (LAER), the requirement to
obtain emission offsets and demonstrate
an air quality benefit, and the lower
threshold for triggering NSR]. By having
maintenance NSR requirements in
addition to PSD requirements, the
Medford-Ashland PM10 attainment and
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Jkt 208001
maintenance plan goes beyond what is
required by the CAA.
We are taking no action on OAR
Chapter 340 Division 204–0030, 224–
0060, or 225–020 at this time because
they have been revised by ODEQ (state
effective September 9, 2005) since the
submittal of the Medford-Ashland
attainment and maintenance plan.
Sections 204–0030, 224–0060, and 225–
0020 were revised and submitted to EPA
on October 25, 2005 as part of the
Lakeview and La Grande PM10
Maintenance Plans and redesignation
requests. We reviewed these rule
changes and acted on them in Federal
Register notices on March 22, 2006. See
71 FR 14393–14399, and 70 FR 14399–
14406. To be consistent with those
actions, we are incorporating by
reference the more recent version
(September 9, 2005) of these sections.
With the exception of OAR Chapter 340
Division 204–0030, 224–0060, or 225–
020, EPA is approving the revisions to
Divisions 204, 224, and 225 included in
the March 10, 2005 submittal because
they are either minor, nonsubstantive
revisions or meet or go beyond the
requirements of the CAA.
Division 240
Sections in this Division were cleaned
up to remove provisions with past
implementation dates and to make other
non-substantive changes. OAR 340–
240–0220 (Source Testing) was revised
to allow boilers to exceed their normal
steaming rates by up to 10% to allow for
variations in fuel changes and
meteorological conditions. We are
approving this revision since this
additional allowance would not result
in emissions in excess of emission
limits.
IV. Conclusion and Action
Based on our review of the MedfordAshland PM10 attainment and
maintenance plan, and for the reasons
discussed above, we conclude that the
CAA requirements for an approvable
attainment and maintenance plan have
been met. Therefore, we are approving
the attainment and maintenance plan
for PM10 submitted for the MedfordAshland NAA. Also based on our
evaluation of DEQ’s March 10, 2005
submittal, we conclude that all the
requirements for redesignation in
section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act have been
met. Therefore, we are redesignating the
Medford-Ashland PM10 nonattainment
area to attainment. Finally, we have
reviewed the revisions to Oregon’s
industrial source rules submitted on
May 14, 2004 and March 10, 2005 and,
with the exceptions discussed above,
find them approvable. Accordingly, in
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Fmt 4700
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this action we are approving the rule
revisions submitted on May 14, 2004
and March 10, 2005 with the exception
of the four sections we are not acting on
for reasons described above.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under Executive Order 12866 (58 FR
51735, October 4, 1993), this action is
not a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’ and
therefore is not subject to review by the
Office of Management and Budget. For
this reason, this action is also not
subject to Executive Order 13211,
‘‘Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use’’ (66 FR 28355, May
22, 2001). This action merely approves
state law as meeting Federal
requirements and imposes no additional
requirements beyond those imposed by
state law. Accordingly, the
Administrator certifies that this rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities under the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). Because this
rule approves pre-existing requirements
under state law and does not impose
any additional enforceable duty beyond
that required by state law, it does not
contain any unfunded mandate or
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments, as described in the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Pub. L. 104–4).
This rule also does not have tribal
implications because it will not have a
substantial direct effect on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship
between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes,
as specified by Executive Order 13175
(65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). This
action also does not have Federalism
implications because it does not have
substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government, as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255,
August 10, 1999). This action merely
approves a state rule implementing a
Federal standard, and does not alter the
relationship or the distribution of power
and responsibilities established in the
Clean Air Act. This rule also is not
subject to Executive Order 13045
‘‘Protection of Children from
Environmental Health Risks and Safety
Risks’’ (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997),
because it is not economically
significant.
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In reviewing SIP submissions, EPA’s
role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the Clean Air Act. In this context, in the
absence of a prior existing requirement
for the state to use voluntary consensus
standards (VCS), EPA has no authority
to disapprove a SIP submission for
failure to use VCS. It would thus be
inconsistent with applicable law for
EPA, when it reviews a SIP submission,
to use VCS in place of a SIP submission
that otherwise satisfies the provisions of
the Clean Air Act. Thus, the
requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C.
272 note) do not apply. This rule does
not impose an information collection
burden under the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
The Congressional Review Act, 5
U.S.C. 801 et seq., as added by 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. A major rule
cannot take effect until 60 days after it
is published in the Federal Register.
This action is not a ‘‘major rule’’ as
defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Under section 307(b)(1) of the Clean
Air Act, petitions for judicial review of
this action must be filed in the United
States Court of Appeals for the
appropriate circuit by August 18, 2006.
Filing a petition for reconsideration by
the Administrator of this final rule does
not affect the finality of this rule for the
purposes of judicial review nor does it
extend the time within which a petition
for judicial review may be filed, and
shall not postpone the effectiveness of
such rule or action. This action may not
be challenged later in proceedings to
enforce its requirements. See section
307(b)(2).
List of Subjects
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40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Incorporation by
reference, Intergovernmental relations,
Particulate matter, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
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15:59 Jun 16, 2006
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40 CFR Part 81
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, National parks,
Wilderness areas.
Dated: May 16, 2006.
L. Michael Borgert,
Regional Administrator, Region 10.
Chapter I, title 40 of the Code of
Federal Regulations is amended as
follows:
I
PART 52—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
I
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
Subpart MM—Oregon
2. Section 52.1970 is amended by
adding paragraph (c)(148) to read as
follows:
I
§ 52.1970
Identification of plan.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(148) On March 10, 2005, the Oregon
Department of Environmental Quality
submitted a PM10 attainment and
maintenance plan and requested
redesignation of the Medford-Ashland
PM10 nonattainment area to attainment
for PM10. On May 14, 2004, the Oregon
Department of Environmental Quality
submitted revisions to Oregon
Administrative Rules, Chapter 340,
Divisions 224 and 225 to clarify the
requirements for creating and using
emission offsets and to make other
minor revisions. The State’s attainment
and maintenance plan, redesignation
request, and rule revisions meet the
requirements of the Clean Air Act.
(i) Incorporation by reference.
(A) The following sections of Oregon
Administrative Rules 340: 204–0010,
224–0070, 225–0045, 225–0090, 240–
0030, 240–0100, 240–0110, 240–0120,
240–0130, 240–0140, 240–0150, 240–
0180, 240–0190, 240–0210, 240–0220,
and 240–0230 as effective January 4,
2005; 224–0010, 224–0030, 224–0050,
224–0080, and 225–0050 as effective
April 14, 2004 and; 224–0060, and 225–
0020 as effective September 9, 2005.
(B) The following sections of the
Codified Ordinances of Jackson County:
1810.01, as effective May 2, 1990;
1810.02, as effective August 22, 2001;
1810.03, as effective December 20, 1989;
1810.04, as effective May 2, 1990;
1810.05, as effective May 2, 1990;
1810.06, as effective December 4, 1985;
1810.07, as effective August 22, 2001;
1810.08, as effective December 20, 1989;
Exhibit A, as effective May 2, 1990;
Exhibit B, as effective May 2, 1990;
Exhibit C, as effective May 2, 1990; and
Exhibit D, as effective May 2, 1990.
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35173
(C) The following sections of the Code
of the City of Medford, Oregon: 5.550 as
effective March 16, 2000; 7.220, as
effective September 17, 1998; 7.222, as
effective September 17, 1998; 7.224, as
effective September 17, 1998; 7.240 as
effective August 2, 1990, and 7.242 as
effective September 17, 1998.
(D) The following sections of the City
of Central Point Municipal Code:
8.01.010, 8.01.012, 8.01.014, 8.01.020,
8.01.030, and 8.01.032 as effective 1998;
8.04.040 H., as effective 1979; and
8.04.095 as effective 1994.
(E) The following sections of the City
of Ashland Municipal Code: 10.30.005
and 10.30.010 as effective 1998;
10.30.020, as effective 2000; 10.30.030
and 10.30.040, as effective 1993;
9.24.010, 9.24.020, 9.24.030, 9.24.040,
and 9.24.050 as effective 1998.
(F) The following sections of the City
of Talent ordinances: Ordinance #565,
as effective August 20, 1992; and
Ordinance #98–635–0, as effective
March 4, 1998.
(G) The following sections of the City
of Phoenix code: 8.16.040, as effective
1982; 8.16.050, as effective 1982;
8.16.090, as effective 1982; 8.20.010, as
effective 1998; 8.20.020, as effective
1998; 8.20.030 as effective 1998;
8.20.040, as effective 1998; and 8.20.050
as effective 1998.
(H) The following sections of the City
of Jacksonville code: Ordinance 375,
amending 8.08.100 of the Jacksonville
Municipal Code as effective April 21,
1992; City of Jacksonville Code Chapter
8.10, as effective February 1992.
(I) The following sections of the City
of Eagle Point Code: 8.08.160, as
effective 2000; 8.08.170, as effective
1990; 8.08.180, as effective 1990;
8.08.190 as effective 1990; and 8.08.200
as effective 1990.
(J) Remove the following old sections
of the Oregon Administrative Rules 340
from the current incorporation by
reference: 240–0200, 240–0240, and
240–0270.
(ii) Additional Material.
(A) The following sections of the
Codified Ordinances of Jackson County:
1810.09 as effective December 20, 1989,
and 1810.99, as effective October 29,
2003.
(B) The following sections of the Code
of the City of Medford, Oregon: 7.226,
as effective November 20, 1989; and
7.300 as effective April 6, 2000.
(C) The following sections of the City
of Central Point Municipal Code:
8.04.100, 8.04.110, 8.04.120, 8.04.130,
and 8.04.140 as effective 1966, and
8.04.150 as effective 1995.
(D) The following sections of the City
of Ashland Municipal Code: 10.30.050,
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 117 / Monday, June 19, 2006 / Rules and Regulations
Medford PM10 attainment and
maintenance plan adopted by the
Oregon Environmental Quality
Commission on December 10, 2004 and
submitted to EPA on March 10, 2005.
*
*
*
*
*
as effective 1993; and 9.24.060, as
effective 1998.
I 3. Section 52.1973 is amended by
adding paragraph (e)(5) to read as
follows:
§ 52.1973
Approval of plans.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(5) EPA approves as a revision to the
Oregon State Implementation Plan, the
PART 81—[AMENDED]
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
5. In § 81.338, the table entitled
‘‘Oregon PM–10’’ is amended by
revising the entry for ‘‘Medford Air
Quality Maintenance Area (including
White City)’’ to read as follows:
I
§ 81.338
4. The authority citation for part 81
continues to read as follows:
I
*
Oregon.
*
*
*
*
OREGON—PM–10
Designation
Classification
Designated area
Date
*
*
*
*
Medford Air Quality Maintenance Area (including White City) .............................
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
Type
*
8/18/06
*
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
If you want to determine
whether a particular community was
suspended on the suspension date,
contact the appropriate FEMA Regional
Office or the NFIP servicing contractor.
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
William H. Lesser, Mitigation Division,
500 C Street SW., Washington, DC
20472, (202) 646–2807.
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
[Docket No. FEMA–7931]
Suspension of Community Eligibility
Mitigation Division, Federal
Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA), Department of Homeland
Security.
ACTION: Final rule.
wwhite on PROD1PC61 with RULES
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: This rule identifies
communities, where the sale of flood
insurance has been authorized under
the National Flood Insurance Program
(NFIP), that are scheduled for
suspension on the effective dates listed
within this rule because of
noncompliance with the floodplain
management requirements of the
program. If FEMA receives
documentation that the community has
adopted the required floodplain
management measures prior to the
effective suspension date given in this
rule, the suspension will not occur and
a notice of this will be provided by
publication in the Federal Register on a
subsequent date.
DATES: Effective Dates: The effective
date of each community’s scheduled
suspension is the third date (‘‘Susp.’’)
listed in the third column of the
following tables.
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15:59 Jun 16, 2006
The NFIP
enables property owners to purchase
flood insurance which is generally not
otherwise available. In return,
communities agree to adopt and
administer local floodplain management
aimed at protecting lives and new
construction from future flooding.
Section 1315 of the National Flood
Insurance Act of 1968, as amended, 42
U.S.C. 4022, prohibits flood insurance
coverage as authorized under the NFIP,
42 U.S.C. 4001 et seq.; unless an
appropriate public body adopts
adequate floodplain management
measures with effective enforcement
measures. The communities listed in
this document no longer meet that
statutory requirement for compliance
with program regulations, 44 CFR part
59 et seq. Accordingly, the communities
will be suspended on the effective date
in the third column. As of that date,
flood insurance will no longer be
available in the community. However,
some of these communities may adopt
and submit the required documentation
of legally enforceable floodplain
management measures after this rule is
published but prior to the actual
suspension date. These communities
will not be suspended and will continue
their eligibility for the sale of insurance.
A notice withdrawing the suspension of
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
44 CFR Part 64
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Type
*
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Attainment.
*
ADDRESSES:
[FR Doc. 06–5509 Filed 6–16–06; 8:45 am]
Date
the communities will be published in
the Federal Register.
In addition, FEMA has identified the
Special Flood Hazard Areas (SFHAs) in
these communities by publishing a
Flood Insurance Rate Map (FIRM). The
date of the FIRM, if one has been
published, is indicated in the fourth
column of the table. No direct Federal
financial assistance (except assistance
pursuant to the Robert T. Stafford
Disaster Relief and Emergency
Assistance Act not in connection with a
flood) may legally be provided for
construction or acquisition of buildings
in identified SFHAs for communities
not participating in the NFIP and
identified for more than a year, on
FEMA’s initial flood insurance map of
the community as having flood-prone
areas (section 202(a) of the Flood
Disaster Protection Act of 1973, 42
U.S.C. 4106(a), as amended). This
prohibition against certain types of
Federal assistance becomes effective for
the communities listed on the date
shown in the last column. The
Administrator finds that notice and
public comment under 5 U.S.C. 553(b)
are impracticable and unnecessary
because communities listed in this final
rule have been adequately notified.
Each community receives 6-month,
90-day, and 30-day notification letters
addressed to the Chief Executive Officer
stating that the community will be
suspended unless the required
floodplain management measures are
met prior to the effective suspension
date. Since these notifications were
made, this final rule may take effect
within less than 30 days.
National Environmental Policy Act.
This rule is categorically excluded from
the requirements of 44 CFR part 10,
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 117 (Monday, June 19, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 35163-35174]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-5509]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Parts 52 and 81
[EPA-R10-OAR-2006-0316; FRL-8175-7]
Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans;
Medford-Ashland PM10 Attainment Plan, Maintenance Plan and
Redesignation Request
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Direct final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is taking direct final action to approve a PM10 attainment
and maintenance plan for the Medford-Ashland, Oregon nonattainment area
(Medford-Ashland NAA) and to redesignate the area from nonattainment to
attainment for PM10. PM10 air pollution is particulate matter with an
aerodynamic diameter less than or equal to a nominal ten micrometers.
Also in this action, EPA is approving revisions to Oregon's statewide
industrial source rules for new and modified major industrial sources
of PM10 and revisions to the area-specific industrial source rules that
apply in the Medford-Ashland NAA. EPA is approving the SIP revisions
and redesignation request because the State adequately demonstrates
that the control measures being implemented in the Medford-Ashland NAA
result in attainment and maintenance of the PM10 National Ambient Air
Quality Standards and all other requirements of the Clean Air Act for
redesignation to attainment are met.
DATES: This direct final rule will be effective August 18, 2006,
without further notice, unless EPA receives adverse comments by July
19, 2006. If adverse comments are received, EPA will publish a timely
withdrawal of the direct final rule in the Federal Register informing
the public that the rule will not take effect.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-R10-
OAR-2006-0316, by one of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the on-line instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Gina Bonifacino, Office of Air, Waste and Toxics,
AWT-107, EPA, Region 10, 1200 Sixth Ave., Seattle, Washington 98101.
Hand Delivery: EPA, Region 10 Mail Room, 9th Floor, 1200
Sixth Ave., Seattle, Washington 98101. Attention: Gina Bonifacino,
Office of Air, Waste and Toxics, AWT-107. Such deliveries are only
accepted during normal hours of operation, and special arrangements
should be made for deliveries of boxed information.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID No. EPA-R10-OAR-
2006-0316. EPA's policy is that all comments received will be included
in the public docket without change and may be made available online at
https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided, unless the comment includes information
[[Page 35164]]
claimed to be Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Do not submit
information that you consider to be CBI or otherwise protected through
https://www.regulations.gov. The https://www.regulations.gov Web site is
an ``anonymous access'' system, which means EPA will not know your
identity or contact information unless you provide it in the body of
your comment. If you send an e-mail comment directly to EPA without
going through https://www.regulations.gov, your e-mail address will be
automatically captured and included as part of the comment that is
placed in the public docket and made available on the Internet. If you
submit an electronic comment, EPA recommends that you include your name
and other contact information in the body of your comment and with any
disk or CD-ROM you submit. If EPA cannot read your comment due to
technical difficulties and cannot contact you for clarification, EPA
may not be able to consider your comment. Electronic files should avoid
the use of special characters, any form of encryption, and be free of
any defects or viruses. For additional information about EPA's public
docket visit the EPA Docket Center homepage at https://www.epa.gov/
epahome/dockets.htm.
Docket: All documents in the docket are listed in the https://
www.regulations.gov index. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available, such as CBI or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute. Certain other material, such
as copyrighted material, is not placed on the Internet and will be
publicly available only in hard copy form. Publicly available docket
materials are available either electronically in https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at EPA Region 10, Office of Air,
Waste and Toxics, 1200 Sixth Avenue, Seattle, Washington. EPA requests
that, if possible, you contact the person listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section to schedule your inspection.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Gina Bonifacino at telephone number:
(206) 553-2970, e-mail address: bonifacino.gina@epa.gov, fax number:
(206) 553-0110, or the above EPA, Region 10 address.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document wherever ``we'',
``us'' or ``our'' are used, we mean EPA.
Table of Contents
I. What action are we taking?
II. Review of the May 14, 2004 submittal
III. Review of the March 10, 2005 submittal: Medford-Ashland
attainment and maintenance plan, redesignation request and
industrial source rule revisions
A. Background of the Medford-Ashland nonattainment area
1. Description of the Medford-Ashland nonattainment area
2. PM10 emissions in the Medford-Ashland nonattainment area
3. Attainment history of the Medford-Ashland nonattainment area
B. Attainment and maintenance plan requirements
C. Review of the March 10, 2005 Oregon State submittal
addressing the attainment and maintenance plan requirements
1. Permit program for the construction and operation of new and
modified major stationary sources of PM10
2. RACM and RACT
3. Attainment demonstration
4. Quantitative milestones which are to be achieved every three
years and which demonstrate reasonable further progress (RFP) toward
attainment by December 31, 1994
5. PM10 precursors
6. Attainment and maintenance emissions inventory
7. Air quality monitoring requirements
8. Demonstration of maintenance
9. Contingency measures and contingency provisions
10. Conclusion
D. Clean Air Act requirements for redesignation of nonattainment
areas
E. Review of the Oregon State submittal addressing the
requirements for redesignation of nonattainment areas
1. Attainment of the applicable NAAQS
2. Fully approved attainment plan
3. Section 110 and Part D requirements
4. Permanent and enforceable improvements in air quality
5. Fully approved maintenance plan
6. Transportation and general conformity
7. Rule revisions submitted on March 10, 2005
IV. Conclusion and Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What action are we taking?
We are taking direct final action to approve SIP revisions
contained in two separate packages submitted by the State of Oregon. On
May 14, 2004, the Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ or State)
submitted a SIP revision of the State's industrial source rules for new
and modified major sources, and on March 10, 2005, the State submitted
an attainment and maintenance plan and redesignation request for the
Medford-Ashland, Oregon PM10 nonattainment area (Medford-Ashland NAA).
Also contained in the March 10, 2005 submittal were additional
revisions to Oregon's statewide industrial source rules for new and
modified major sources and revisions to the area-specific industrial
source rules applying in the Medford-Ashland NAA. We are approving the
State's SIP revisions submitted in both packages and the request for
redesignation submitted with the March 10, 2005 package because the
State adequately demonstrates that the control measures being
implemented in the Medford-Ashland area result in maintenance of the
PM10 National Ambient Air Quality Standards (NAAQS) and all other
requirements of the Clean Air Act (the Act or CAA) for redesignation to
attainment are met.
II. Review of the May 14, 2004 submittal
On May 14, 2004 Oregon submitted revisions to Oregon Administrative
Rules, Chapter 340, Division 224 (Major New Source Review), and
Division 225 (Air Quality Analysis Requirements) to clarify the
requirements for creating and using emission offsets and to make other
minor revisions. The primary rule revision allows offsets that provide
a net air quality benefit to come from outside a designated maintenance
area instead of only from inside the maintenance area. This change is
approvable because there are no Federal requirements for offsets for
new or modified sources in maintenance areas. The rules were also
revised to add cross-references between Division 224 and Division 225
to improve the clarity of the rules. We have reviewed the May 14, 2004
submittal and found the revisions to be approvable. The Technical
Support Document (TSD) for this action contains a description of the
revisions and EPA's analysis of the revisions.
III. Review of the March 10, 2005 Submittal: Medford-Ashland Attainment
and Maintenance Plan, Redesignation Request and Industrial Source Rule
Revisions
A. Background of the Medford-Ashland Nonattainment Area
1. Description of the Medford-Ashland Nonattainment Area
The Medford-Ashland NAA is an irregularly shaped polygon covering
roughly 228 miles in the Rogue Valley of Southwest Oregon and includes
the communities of Ashland, Talent, Phoenix, Medford, Central Point,
Jacksonville, White City, Eagle Point, and the intervening lands of
Jackson County. The Rogue Valley is a mountain valley formed by the
Rogue River and one of its tributaries, Bear Creek. The major portion
of the valley ranges in elevation from 1,300 to 1,400 feet above sea
level. Mountains surround the
[[Page 35165]]
valley on all sides; to the east, the Cascades ranging up to 9500 feet,
to the south, the Siskiyous ranging up to 7,600 feet, and to the west
and north, the Coast Range and Umpqua Divide, ranging up to 5,500 feet
above sea level. For a legal description of the boundaries of the
Medford-Ashland NAA, see 40 CFR 81.338.
The Medford-Ashland NAA has a moderate climate with marked seasonal
characteristics. Late fall, winter and early spring months are damp,
cloudy and cool under the influence of marine air. Late spring, summer
and early fall are warm, dry and sunny due to the dry continental
nature of the prevailing winds aloft that cross this area. The area is
in a rain shadow afforded by the Siskiyous and Coast Range and
therefore receives light annual rainfall most of which is concentrated
over the winter season. Temperatures lack extremes generally rising to
just below 90 in the hottest months of summer, and Valley winds are
usually very light and prevail from the north or northwest much of the
year. Winter stagnation events may occur when temperature inversion
events trap particulate pollution near the ground.
The Rogue Valley's economy, once heavily dependent on the wood
products industry, has shifted from natural resource-based economy to
an economy based in the service, retail, health care, communications
and technology sectors. Between 1990 and 2000, employment in the lumber
and wood products industry declined by 29%. However, employment in the
rest of the manufacturing sector increased by 34%. In addition, in-
migration has contributed to an increasing population in the Rogue
Valley. Population growth is expected to continue through 2015.
2. PM10 Emissions in the Medford-Ashland Nonattainment Area
In the 1980s, PM10 emissions from primarily woodstoves, mobile
sources, road dust, residential open burning and forestry burning, and
industrial point sources contributed to exceedences of the 24 hour and
annual PM10 NAAQS \1\ in the Medford-Ashland NAA. Historic high PM10
levels in the Medford-Ashland NAA include 309 [mu]g/m3 over
24 hours in December 1985 and 68 [mu]g/m3 for the annual
period July 1985-June 1986. Since the 1980s, Oregon has implemented
control strategies to decrease PM10 emissions. These strategies have
reduced industrial point source emissions, area source emissions
including residential heating sources, and emissions from road dust,
residential open burning and prescribed forestry burning. The
attainment and maintenance plan contains emission inventory summaries
for the Medford-Ashland for the years 1985, 1998 and 2015. In 1985,
point source emissions and emissions from home heating devices (e.g.
residential woodstoves) comprised the largest portions of the PM10
emissions inventory at 27% (1275 tons per year) and 38% (1777 tons per
year) respectively. In 1998, point source PM10 emissions were cut
nearly in half to 535 tons per year, and there was a 75% decrease in
home heating emissions to 412 tons per year. See the Technical Support
Document accompanying this notice for further discussion of the PM10
emissions in the area.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The 24-hour primary PM10 standard is 150 micrograms per
cubic meter ([mu]g/m3), with no more than one expected
exceedance per year over a three year period. The annual primary
PM10 standard is 50 [mu]g/m3 expected annual arithmetic
mean over a three year period. The secondary PM10 standards are
identical to the primary standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Attainment History of Medford-Ashland Nonattainment Area
On August 7, 1987 (52 FR 29383), EPA identified the Medford-
Ashland, Oregon area as a PM10 ``Group I'' area of concern, i.e., an
area with a 95% or greater likelihood of violating the PM10 NAAQS and
requiring substantial SIP revisions. The area was subsequently
designated as a moderate PM10 nonattainment area upon enactment of the
Clean Air Act amendments of 1990 under sections 107(d)(4)(B) and 188(a)
of the Clean Air Act. See 56 FR 56694 (November 6, 1991).
The 1990 revisions to the CAA required, among other things, that
the State of Oregon submit to EPA by November 15, 1991, an attainment
plan which contained provisions to assure that Reasonably Available
Control Measures (RACM) including Reasonably Available Control
Technology (RACT) for stationary sources, are implemented by December
10, 1993 and the state demonstrate either that the PM10 NAAQS will be
attained by December 31, 1994 or that attainment by such date is not
practicable. See sections 172(c)(1) and 189(a) of the CAA.
Oregon, in response to the requirements of the CAA of 1990,
submitted an attainment plan for the Medford-Ashland NAA on November
15, 1991, but later withdrew the attainment plan on January 6, 1997
because the emissions budget in the 1997 update to the Rogue Valley
Transportation Plan did not conform to the emissions budget in the
attainment plan submitted to EPA. As a result of the State's withdrawal
of the attainment plan, EPA issued a finding of failure to submit a SIP
by the applicable attainment dates and commenced an 18 month sanction
clock for Oregon to submit an attainment plan. See 62 FR 32207 (June
13, 1997).
In 1997, EPA adopted new NAAQS for particulate matter (PM10 and
PM2.5) resulting in a change in the planning requirements for PM10
nonattainment areas. See 62 FR 38652 (July 18, 1997). However, on May
4, 1999, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia vacated
the revised 1997 PM10 NAAQS. American Trucking Association et al., and
consolidated cases. The 1987 PM10 NAAQS and all of the associated
requirements remained in place and the Medford-Ashland retained its
designation as a moderate nonattainment area for PM10. See 69 FR 45592
(July 30, 2004).
On March 10, 2005 Oregon submitted an attainment plan, maintenance
plan, and redesignation request for the Medford-Ashland NAA. Also
included in this submittal were additional revisions to Oregon's
industrial source rules. The remaining sections of this action describe
the March 10, 2005 submittal and our basis for approving these
submittals and redesignating the Medford-Ashland NAA to attainment.
B. Attainment and Maintenance Plan Requirements
Subparts 1 and 4 of Part D, Title 1 of the Act contain air quality
planning requirements for PM10 nonattainment areas. Subpart 1 of Part D
contains general requirements for areas designated as nonattainment.
Subpart 4 of Part D contains specific planning and scheduling
requirements for particulate matter nonattainment areas. Subpart 4 of
Part D, section 189(a), (c) and (e) requirements apply to any moderate
PM10 nonattainment area before the area can be redesignated to
attainment. These requirements include:
(1) An approved permit program for construction of new or modified
major stationary sources of PM10.
(2) Provisions to assure that reasonably available control
technology (RACT) and reasonably available control measures (RACM) are
implemented;
(3) A demonstration that the plan provides for attainment by the
applicable attainment date or that attainment by such date is
impracticable;
(4) Quantitative milestones which were achieved every 3 years and
which demonstrate reasonable further progress (RFP) toward attainment
by the applicable attainment date; and
(5) Provisions to assure that the control requirements applicable
to major stationary sources of PM10 also
[[Page 35166]]
apply to major stationary sources of PM10 precursors except where the
Administrator determined that such sources do not contribute
significantly to PM10 levels which exceed the NAAQS in the area.
In addition to these specific requirements for moderate PM10
nonattainment areas, moderate PM10 nonattainment areas must also meet
the general planning requirements in Subpart 1 section 172(c). A
thorough discussion of these requirements may be found in the General
Preamble to the Act and in 57 FR 13538 (April 16, 1992). The following
paragraphs describe additional nonattainment plan provisions as they
apply to the Medford-Ashland NAA.
(6) Section 172(c)(3)--Emissions inventory. Section 172(c)(3) of
the Act contains requirements for attainment plans to include a
comprehensive, accurate, current inventory of actual emissions from all
sources in the PM10 nonattainment area.
(7) Section 172(c)(7) compliance with CAA section 110(a)(2).
Section 172(c)(7) requires that states shall meet applicable provisions
of section 110(a)(2) including the operation of an appropriate air
monitoring network in accord with 40 CFR part 58 to verify attainment
status of the area.
(8) Section 172(c)(9) contingency measures--
Section 172(c)(9) contains requirements for plans to include
contingency measures which were to be implemented by November 15, 1993,
and to become effective without further action by the state or EPA,
upon a determination by EPA that the area has failed to achieve RFP or
to attain the PM10 NAAQS by the applicable statutory deadline (see
Section 172(c)(9) and 57 FR 13543-13544).
Section 175A of the Act provides the requirements for maintenance
plans. These requirements are further clarified in a policy and
guidance memorandum from John Calcagni, Director, Air Quality
Management Division, EPA Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards
dated September 4, 1992, ``Procedures for Processing Requests to
Redesignate Areas to Attainment'' (the Calcagni memo). The required
provisions for maintenance plans are:
(9) An attainment emissions inventory to identify the level of
emissions in the area sufficient to attain the NAAQS;
(10) A demonstration of maintenance of the NAAQS for 10 years after
redesignation;
(11) Verification of continued attainment through operation of an
appropriate air quality monitoring network; and
(12) Contingency provisions to promptly correct any violation of
the NAAQS that occurs after redesignation of the area.
C. Review of the March 10, 2005 Oregon State Submittal Addressing the
Attainment Plan Requirements and Maintenance Plan Requirements
1. Permit Program for the Construction and Operation of New and
Modified Major Stationary Sources of PM10
Section 189(a)(1)(A) of the Act requires that, for the purpose of
meeting the requirements of section 172(c)(5), SIPs contain a permit
program providing that permits meeting the requirements of section 173
are required for the construction and operation of new and modified
major stationary sources of PM10.
Oregon has a fully-approved nonattainment New Source Review (NSR)
program, most recently approved on January 22, 2003 (68 FR 29530).
Oregon also has a fully approved Prevention of Significant
Deterioration (PSD) program, also approved on January 22, 2003 (68 FR
29530). See Oregon Administrative Rules Chapter 340, Divisions 200,
202, 209, 212, 216, 222, 224, 225 and 268.
Upon the effective date of redesignation of an area from
nonattainment to attainment, the requirements of the Part D NSR program
will be replaced by the PSD program and the maintenance area NSR
program.
2. RACM and RACT
Section 189(a)(1)(C) of the Act requires that moderate area SIPs
contain ``reasonably available control measures'' (RACM) for the
control of PM10 emissions. Section 172(c)(1) of the Act, in turn,
provides that RACM for nonattainment areas shall include ``such
reductions in emissions from existing sources in the area as may be
obtained through the adoption, at a minimum, of reasonably available
control technology''. Read together, these provisions require that
moderate PM10 SIPs include RACM and ``reasonably available control
technology'' (RACT) for existing sources of PM10 emissions.
The General Preamble provides further guidance on interpretation of
the requirements for RACM and RACT. Congress, in enacting the amended
Act, did not use the word ``all'' in conjunction with RACM and RACT.
Thus, it is possible that a State could demonstrate that an existing
source in an area should not be subject to a control technology
especially where such a control is unreasonable in light of the
specific area's individual attainment needs or is infeasible. EPA
recommends that available control technology be applied to those
existing sources in the nonattainment area that are reasonable to
control in light of the feasibility of such controls and the individual
attainment needs of the specific area.
In section 4.14.7 of the attainment and maintenance plan, Oregon
describes that attainment and maintenance of the PM10 standard in
Medford-Ashland NAA is based primarily on the following control
strategies: industrial controls, residential woodsmoke controls,
residential open burning controls, road dust controls, prescribed
forestry burning controls and strategies to control PM10 from
agricultural trackout. We note that in separate actions EPA has
approved PM10 control strategies for the Medford-Ashland area as well
as other areas in the state into the SIP on July 30, 1991, June 9, 1992
and February 23, 1993. See 57 FR 36006, 57 FR 24373 and 55 FR 10972.
However, EPA made no determination of RACM or RACT when it approved
these control strategies into the SIP because these rules did not
contain the complete suite of PM10 control measures relied upon to
demonstrate attainment of the PM10 NAAQS in Medford-Ashland and Oregon
did not provide EPA with a demonstration of attainment based on these
control measures. See 55 FR 10972 (February 23, 1993). The following
describes the control measures contained in Oregon's March 10, 2005
submittal that constitute RACT/RACM.
(a) Industrial controls
Oregon adopted specific industrial rules for the wood products
industries in the Medford-Ashland Air Quality Maintenance Area (AQMA)
in 1978, 1983, 1989. Oregon revised and resubmitted the 1989 rules to
EPA in 1991 based on EPA's comments on deficient sections of the 1989
rules. The 1979 and 1983 rules include: (1) Tighter pollution control
requirements for particle dryers, fiber dryers, veneer dryers, large
wood-fired boilers, charcoal furnaces, and air conveying systems for
sander dust and sawdust; (2) additional source testing requirements;
(3) operation and maintenance plans to prevent or minimize excess
emissions; and (4) site-specific fugitive dust control plans. These
industrial requirements resulted in a 70% reduction in industrial
particulate emissions between 1978 and 1986.
The 1991 PM10 strategies for major industry require: (1) Tighter
emission limits and better pollution control equipment on veneer dryers
and large
[[Page 35167]]
wood-fired boilers; (2) more extensive source testing and continuous
emission monitoring in order to maximize performance of pollution
control equipment; and (3) more restrictive emission offset
requirements for new or expanding industries. These rules were last
approved into the SIP in 2003. See 68 FR 2891 (January 22, 2003). See
the TSD for this action for a complete list of industrial source rules
applying in the Medford-Ashland NAA.
As explained above, Oregon submitted revisions to the industrial
source rules applying in the Medford-Ashland NAA to EPA on March 10,
2005 with the attainment and maintenance plan. These revisions are
described below in section III.E.9., and in the TSD for this action.
(b) Residential Woodsmoke Controls
Curtailment
Throughout the 1980s, the local jurisdictions in the Medford-
Ashland NAA developed and implemented strategies to reduce emissions
from residential wood burning. Jackson County led the effort with a
voluntary wood burning curtailment program which began on November 19,
1985 (25% compliance), followed by the City of Medford's mandatory
curtailment program adopted on November 2, 1989 (80% compliance). The
City of Central Point also adopted a mandatory curtailment program on
December 21, 1989 and subsequently, Jackson County converted its
voluntary curtailment program to a mandatory curtailment program.
Curtailment surveys have indicated compliance rates of 90% in the
Medford area, and 88% in the core Medford-Central Point area.
Compliance was about 66% in other parts of the curtailment area.
In 1998, a unified ordinance was developed to align approaches in
Medford and Central Point to the existing Jackson County ordinance. The
unified Jackson County ordinance includes a prohibition on burning in
noncertified woodstoves on yellow and red advisory days, a no visible
emissions standard for certified woodstoves on yellow and red advisory
days and a 50% opacity limit on woodstove smoke at all other times.
This unified ordinance applies in most of the Medford-Ashland
nonattainment area, including portions of Jackson County, and the
cities of Ashland, Central Point, Jacksonville, Medford, Phoenix and
Talent. These woodstove curtailment ordinances are required by local
law and contain enforcement mechanisms.
In addition to these local curtailment programs, OAR 340-262-0200
to 0250 contain mandatory woodstove curtailment provisions that apply
statewide. These statewide curtailment provisions ensure that local
governments implement prohibitions on wood burning in uncertified
woodstoves, fireplaces or wood burning appliances during periods of
stagnation. This rule was last approved into the Oregon SIP on March
24, 2003. See 68 FR 2891 (January 22, 2003).
Woodstove Replacement
In 1988, the Jackson County housing authority began the Cooperative
Local Effort for Air Resources (CLEAR) to replace woodstoves with
cleaner burning units and provide cost-effective weatherization in low-
income homes. About $1.8 million has been obtained for CLEAR, and the
Jackson County Housing Authority has replaced approximately 580
noncertified woodstoves in low income houses. A similar project called
Save Our Livability, View and Environment (SAVE) was implemented in
Ashland in 1990.
Home Weatherization
Weatherization of homes prior to installation of a new woodstove
has been required by ordinances in the City of Medford (No. 4732) and
Jackson County (No. 82-60) since 1982.
Certification
A statewide certification program for residential woodstoves
consistent with EPA's New Source Performance Standard for woodstoves
(40 CFR part 60, subpart AAA) was adopted in 1989 and approved into the
SIP in 1992. See 57 FR 24373 (June 9, 1992). The most recent revisions
to the Oregon rules containing provisions for the statewide
certification (OAR 340-262-0100 to 0130) were approved on March 23,
2003. See 68 FR 2891 (January 22, 2003).
(c) Other Area Source Strategies
Open Burning
Open burning of domestic waste is controlled in the Medford-Ashland
NAA through State regulations in OAR 340-240-0250. These rules have
been approved into the SIP. See 68 FR 2891 (January 22, 2003). In
addition to the open burning rules already approved into the SIP, local
ordinances throughout the AQMA restrict the practice of open burning.
Within the Medford-Ashland NAA, ordinances prohibit open burning inside
the Domestic Open Burning Boundary except by special permit. These
residential open burning ordinances are required by local law and
contain enforcement mechanisms.
Road Dust
PM10 emissions generated through motor vehicle traffic (road dust)
have been reduced by paving unpaved roads, and curb and gutter
shoulders on paved roads. In addition, Jackson County recently used
Congestion, Mitigation and Air Quality (CMAQ) funding to purchase a
high-efficiency, vacuum street sweeper for use in the Medford-White
City area. At a minimum, the cleaning program must continue to use the
sweeper at least two times a month and cover Medford, White City and
intervening major corridors. This measure is a Transportation Control
Measure that Jackson County must implement to meet Transportation
Conformity requirements (TCM).
Fugitive Dust
OAR 340-240-0180 directs sawmills, plywood mills and veneer
manufacturing plants, particleboard and hardboard plants, charcoal
manufacturing plants, asphalt plants, rock crushers, animal feed
manufacturers, and other major industrial facilities as identified by
Oregon in the Medford-Ashland NAA to prepare and implement site-
specific plans for the control of fugitive emissions. This rule is in
the federally approved SIP. See 68 FR 2891 (January 22, 2003). In
addition, the cities of Ashland and Jacksonville have ordinances to
control dust track out.
Prescribed Forestry Burning
The Oregon Smoke Management Plan (SMP) is a program designed to
manage smoke impacts from burning of silivcultural wastes and
prescribed forestry burning. The SMP established a Special Protection
Zone around the Medford-Ashland NAA wherein mandatory restrictions on
slash burning are implemented based on meteorological conditions and
other factors. EPA approved the Smoke Management Plan into the SIP as
part of the Oregon Visibility Plan on November 1, 2001 (66 FR 55105).
Where sources of PM10 contribute insignificantly to the PM10
problem in the area, EPA's policy is that it would be unreasonable (and
would not constitute RACM) to require the sources to implement all
potentially available control measures. See 57 FR 13540 (April 16, 1992
and 58 FR 13233 (March 10, 1993). Pages 62 and 63 of the emissions
inventory submitted with the attainment and maintenance plan contain a
summary of area source
[[Page 35168]]
emissions in 1998. Based on the 1998 emissions inventory, EPA believes
that sources other than residential wood smoke, fugitive dust, mobile
sources, residential domestic burning, and industrial point sources
contribute insignificantly to the emissions inventory, and therefore
additional control measures are not necessary to constitute RACM/RACT.
Statewide and local industrial source control rules, local
ordinances that control residential wood smoke, local ordinances
controlling residential open burning, statewide wood stove
certification and curtailment rules, local dust track out ordinances,
and the Oregon Smoke Management Plan are permanent control measures
with enforcement mechanisms. Based on the 1998 emissions inventory for
the Medford-Ashland NAA and air quality monitoring and modeling data
that show that the controls submitted with the attainment and
maintenance plan have resulted in the Medford-Ashland NAA attaining the
PM10 NAAQS, EPA is determining that the PM10 controls submitted with
the attainment and maintenance plan meet RACT and RACM requirements.
The technical support document for this action contains a list of
control strategies that EPA is concluding meets RACT and RACM and the
State effective date for these rules.
3. Attainment Demonstration
Initial moderate PM10 areas were required to submit either a
demonstration (including air quality modeling) that the plan will
provide for attainment as expeditiously as practicable, but no later
than December 31, 1994, or a demonstration that attainment by that date
is impracticable. To demonstrate attainment, the State must rely on a
combination of supporting evidence. First, the State must demonstrate
that an area has attained the PM10 NAAQS through analysis of ambient
air quality data from an ambient air monitoring network representing
peak PM10 concentrations, and stored in the EPA Air Quality System
(AQS) database. Second, the State must provide EPA-approved air quality
modeling data that demonstrates that the area has attained the
applicable NAAQS. The following describes how Oregon meets monitoring
and modeling requirements for the attainment demonstration in the
Medford-Ashland NAA.
The 24-hour PM10 NAAQS is 150 [mu]g/m3. An area has
attained the 24-hour standard when the average number of expected
exceedences per year is less than or equal to one, when averaged over a
three-year period (40 CFR 50.6). To make this determination, three
consecutive years of complete ambient air quality data must be
collected in accordance with Federal requirements (40 CFR part 58,
including appendices). The annual PM10 NAAQS is 50 [mu]g/m3. To
determine attainment with the annual PM10 NAAQS, the standard is
compared to the expected annual mean, which is the average of the
weighted annual mean for three consecutive years.
Section 4.12.2.2 of the attainment and maintenance plan contains
monitoring data from the Medford-Ashland monitoring network. The
monitor at the intersection of Welch Street and Jackson Street in
Medford since 1989 is the design monitor for the Medford-Ashland NAA
and has met EPA design and siting criteria. Data from the Welch and
Jackson monitor has been quality assured by the Oregon Department of
Environmental Quality and stored in the AQS database. The last
exceedence of the 24-hour PM10 NAAQS at the Welch and Jackson monitor
was in 1991. The highest 24-hour values over a year since 1991 have
ranged from 124 [mu]g/m3 in 1992 to 58 [mu]g/m3
in 2003, and there has been a general decline in ambient concentrations
of 24-hour PM10 since 1991.
The monitor located at the White City Post Office and operating
since 1985 is the design monitor for White City. The monitor has met
EPA design and siting criteria and based on quality assured monitoring
data has not recorded exceedences of the 24-hour PM10 NAAQS since 1991.
The highest 24-hour concentration at this monitor since 1991 has ranged
from 118 [mu]g/m3 in 1992 to 68 [mu]g/m3 in 2003.
The PM10 levels measured at this monitor have not exceeded the annual
PM10 NAAQS since 1990.
Based on quality assured monitoring data from the Medford-Ashland
monitoring network, there have been no exceedences of the 24-hour PM10
NAAQS or the annual PM10 NAAQS in the Medford-Ashland NAA since 1991.
Therefore, the Medford-Ashland NAA reached attainment of the PM10 NAAQS
during the three year period following the year of the last exceedence
(1992-1994), and attained the PM10 NAAQS by the applicable attainment
date of December 31, 1994.
For the modeling demonstration, generally EPA recommends that
attainment be demonstrated according to the PM-10 SIP Development
Guideline (June 1987), which presents three methods. Federal
regulations require demonstration of attainment ``by means of a
proportional model or dispersion model or other procedure which is
shown to be adequate and appropriate for such purposes''. 40 CFR
51.112. The preferred method is the use of both dispersion and receptor
modeling in combination, but the regulations and the guideline also
allows the use of dispersion modeling alone, or in combination with
proportional rollback modeling. In this instance, Oregon selected
CALPUFF, a multi-layer, multi-species, non-steady-state puff dispersion
model that simulates the effects of time- and space-varying
meteorological conditions on pollution transport, transformation and
removal to model attainment with the PM10 NAAQS in the Medford-Ashland
NAA.
Section 4.14.5 of the attainment and maintenance plan contains
Oregon's documentation and technical analysis of the modeling results.
Oregon modeled an area encompassing at least the Medford-Ashland NAA.
Inputs to the model included topographic data, worst case meteorology
from 1998, 1999 and 2000, and land use and emissions inventory data for
the year 1998. The meteorological domain for the model extends from
just west of Grants Pass to approximately 12 kilometers east of Mt.
McLoughlin and from Crater Lake to about 10 kilometers into California.
As explained above, the 24-hour standard is attained when the
expected number of days per calendar year exceeding 150 [mu]g/m\3\ 24-
hour NAAQS is <= 1. To determine compliance with the 24-hour standard
by modeling, the 4th highest modeled PM10 value is compared with the
standard. To determine compliance with the annual PM10 standard, the
modeled annual average values are compared with the annual PM10
standard of 50 [mu]g/m\3\. In this case, the model did not predict any
4th high daily values above the 24-hour PM10 standard, and did not
predict any annual average PM10 values above the annual PM10 standard.
Therefore, Oregon's CALPUFF model runs, using worst case meteorology
predicted compliance with the 24-hour and annual PM10 standards.
Because Oregon has used an approved model that has performed within
EPA parameters to simulate ambient air quality during the attainment
period of 1998 and the simulation has predicted compliance with the
PM10 NAAQS in all areas in the modeling domain, Oregon has provided
modeling that demonstrates attainment of the 24-hour and annual PM10
NAAQS. The modeling demonstration of attainment combined with the
monitoring data submitted on March 10, 2005 is an adequate showing that
the Medford-
[[Page 35169]]
Ashland area has attained the PM10 NAAQS.
4. Quantitative Milestones Which are To Be Achieved Every Three Years
and Which Demonstrate Reasonable Further Progress (RFP) Toward
Attainment by December 31, 1994
Qualitative milestones are no longer required in the Medford-
Ashland NAA since this requirement relates to the applicable attainment
date, and we have determined based on an analysis of monitoring and
modeling data that the area attained the PM10 NAAQS by the applicable
attainment date.
5. PM10 Precursors
The control requirements which are applicable to major stationary
sources of PM10 also apply to major stationary sources of PM10
precursors unless EPA determines such sources do not contribute
significantly to PM10 levels in excess of the NAAQS in the area. See
section 189(e) of the Act. The General Preamble contains guidance
addressing how EPA intends to implement section 189(e). See 57 FR
13539-13542 (April 16, 1992).
As stated above in section III.C.3., there are no measured or
modeled PM10 levels in excess of the NAAQS in the Medford-Ashland NAA.
Therefore, major stationary sources of PM10 precursors may be excluded
from control requirements based on the determination that PM10 levels
in the area have not exceeded the NAAQS since the early nineteen
nineties.
6. Attainment and Maintenance Emissions Inventory
Section 172(c)(3) of the Act requires a comprehensive, accurate,
current inventory of actual emissions from all sources in the Medford-
Ashland PM10 nonattainment area and section 175A of the Act and the
Calcagni memo require an attainment emissions inventory to identify the
level of emissions in the area sufficient to attain the NAAQS. Where
the State has made an adequate demonstration that air quality has
improved as a result of the SIP, the attainment inventory will
generally be an inventory of actual emissions at the time the area
attained the standard.
Oregon included in the plan an attainment year emissions inventory
for the calendar year 1998, and a maintenance emissions inventory which
represents 24-hour and annual emissions for the year 2015. Oregon chose
1998 as its base year to estimate actual emissions for attainment
because it is the most recent year for which Oregon had complete
meteorological data, and because 1998 meteorology included inversions
and stagnation events that are representative of the worst case
meteorology inputs necessary for modeling attainment. EPA has reviewed
the attainment year and maintenance year emissions inventories and has
determined that they are accurate and comprehensive and therefore meet
the requirements of Section 172(c)(3) of the Act.
Based on the 1998 emissions inventory, the major sources of PM10
emissions over 24-hours were: total area sources including residential
wood combustion (43%), mobile sources (45%), major point sources (10%)
and nonroad mobile sources (2%). Residential fuel combustion alone
accounted for 29% of the daily worst case 1998 emissions. Annual 1998
emissions were comprised of mobile emissions (67%), area source
emissions (18%), major point source emissions (14%), and nonroad mobile
sources (2%). Residential fuel combustion comprised 11% of the area
source fraction of the 1998 annual emissions.
7. Air Quality Monitoring Requirements
Section 172(c)(7) requires that States meet the applicable
requirements in section 110(a)(2) of the Act which includes the
requirement to operate an appropriate air monitoring network in accord
with 40 CFR part 58 to verify attainment status of the area. In
addition, section 175(A) of the Act requires that states verify
continued attainment of the NAAQS through operation of an appropriate
air quality monitoring network. The State of Oregon operates two PM10
State and Local Air Monitoring Stations (SLAMS) in the Medford-Ashland
NAA. There is a monitor at the intersection of Welch and Jackson
Streets in the City of Medford, and a monitor at the White City Post
Office. Both monitoring sites meet EPA SLAMS network design and siting
requirements set forth at 40 CFR part 58, appendices D and E, and have
been monitoring for PM10 since 1991. In section 4.14.12.9 of the
attainment and maintenance plan, the State commits to continued
operation of the monitoring network. Based on meeting SLAMS network
design and siting requirements and its commitment to continue to
operate the monitoring network, the State has met air quality
monitoring requirements.
8. Demonstration of Maintenance
Section 175(A) of the Act requires a demonstration of maintenance
of the NAAQS for 10 years after designation. A State may generally
demonstrate maintenance of the NAAQS by either showing that future
emissions of a pollutant or its precursors will not exceed the level of
the attainment inventory, or by modeling to show that the future
anticipated mix of sources and emission rates will not cause a
violation of the NAAQS. Under the Act, the showing should be based on
the same level of modeling used for the attainment demonstration
required as part of the approved attainment plan.
In this case, Oregon submitted CALPUFF modeling results that
demonstrate maintenance for the Medford-Ashland NAA in the year 2015.
Since CALPUFF was also used for the modeled attainment demonstration,
the level of modeling submitted for the maintenance demonstration is
equivalent to the level of modeling used in the attainment
demonstration. Emissions inputs to the model were developed from the
1998 base year inventory using growth factors and allowable emissions.
Emissions inputs into the model were calculated with the controls that
the State submitted with the attainment and maintenance plan in place,
and maintenance was projected to 2015. Based on the CALPUFF modeling
results submitted with the plan, EPA believes that the State is
demonstrating maintenance of the PM10 NAAQS for the ten-year period
2005-2015. Oregon, in section 4.14.6.2 of the attainment and
maintenance plan, provided a summary of the modeling results. For the
annual PM10 NAAQS, Oregon provided a table with the top 1% of the model
predicted and a figure with all of the model's predicted annual average
PM10 values. None of the predicted annual average values exceeded the
annual PM10 NAAQS, 50 [mu]g/m3. Based on our review of this
information, EPA is determining that the model did not predict any
violations of the annual PM10 NAAQS in any grids and the State has
demonstrated that the Medford-Ashland area will continue to maintain
the annual PM10 NAAQS in 2015.
Oregon also provided a table of the top 1% of the fourth highest
predicted 24-hour PM10 values in the plan. To determine compliance with
the 24-hour NAAQS using modeling, the fourth highest predicted 24-hour
PM10 value is used to represent the expected 24-hour PM10 ambient air
quality level over a three-year period. Based on the top 1% of the
fourth highest predicted 24-hour PM10 values in the plan, there were no
predicted 24-hour values that exceeded 150 [mu]g/m3.
Therefore the model did not predict any violations of the 24-hour PM10
NAAQS. Oregon has demonstrated maintenance with the 24-hour PM10 NAAQS
in the year 2015.
[[Page 35170]]
9. Contingency Measures and Contingency Provisions
As described in section 172(c)(9) of the Act, all attainment plans
must include contingency measures. See 57 FR 13543-13544 (April 16,
1992). Section 175A of the Act requires that a maintenance plan include
contingency provisions, as necessary, to promptly correct any violation
of the NAAQS that occurs after redesignation. These contingency
provisions are distinguished from those contingency measures generally
required under section 172(c)(9). Contingency measures described in
section 172(c)(9) of the Act should consist of other available measures
which were to become effective without further action by the State or
EPA, upon a determination by EPA that the area has failed to achieve
RFP or to attain the PM10 NAAQS by the applicable statutory deadline.
See 57 FR 13543-13544 (April 16, 1992). In this case, contingency
measures are no longer required in the Medford-Ashland NAA since the
requirement relates to the applicable attainment date, and the area has
attained the PM10 NAAQS by the applicable attainment date. For the
purposes of section 175A, contingency provisions are required. However,
the State is not required to have fully adopted contingency measures
that will take effect without further action by the State in order for
the maintenance plan to be approved.
Section 4.14.9.0 of the attainment and maintenance plan provides
the process for identification of contingency measures if monitored air
quality values exceed early warning thresholds of 120 [mu]g/
m3 (24-hour average) or 40 [mu]g/m3 (annual
average) or if there is a violation of the PM10 NAAQS. In the event of
a monitored value over the threshold, or a violation, Oregon will first
review the relevant air quality data to determine the cause of the
event. Following this review, it may convene the Medford-Ashland Air
Quality Advisory Committee to assist in this review and to determine if
a corrective action is needed. These contingency provisions meet the
requirements of section 175(A) of the Act.
10. Conclusion
As discussed above, Oregon is meeting all of the requirements in
Subparts 1 and 4 of Part D, Title 1 of the Act for PM10 nonattainment
areas and attainment plans, and section 175(A) planning requirements
for PM10 nonattainment areas and maintenance plans for the Medford-
Ashland NAA. In this action, EPA is approving Oregon's March 10, 2005
submittal of the attainment and maintenance plan for the Medford-
Ashland NAA which includes implementation of RACT/RACM, the calendar
year 1998 attainment year emissions inventory, the calendar year 2015
maintenance emissions inventory, the attainment and maintenance
demonstrations through air quality monitoring data and CALPUFF
modeling, continued operation of an EPA approved monitoring network,
and implementation of a major new source permitting program.
D. Clean Air Act Requirements for Redesignation of Nonattainment Areas
Nonattainment areas can be redesignated to attainment after the
area has measured air quality data showing it has attained the NAAQS
and when certain planning requirements are met. Section 107(d)(3)(E) of
the Act, and the General Preamble to Title I of the Act provide the
criteria for redesignation. See 57 FR 13498 (April 16, 1992). These
criteria are further clarified in the Calcagni Memo. The criteria for
redesignation are:
(1) The Administrator has determined that the area has attained the
applicable NAAQS;
(2) The Administrator has fully approved the applicable SIP for the
area under section 110(k) of the Act;
(3) The state containing the area has met all requirements
applicable to the area under section 110 and part D of the Act;
(4) The Administrator has determined that the improvement in air
quality is due to permanent and enforceable reductions in emissions;
and
(5) The Administrator has fully approved a maintenance plan for the
area as meeting the requirements of section 175A of the Act.
E. Review of the Oregon State Submittal Addressing the Requirements for
Redesignation of Nonattainment Areas and Maintenance Plans
1. Attainment of the Applicable NAAQS
States must demonstrate that an area has attained the PM10 NAAQS
through analysis of ambient air quality data from an ambient air
monitoring network representing peak PM10 concentrations. The data
should be stored in the EPA Air Quality System (AQS) database. As
explained above in III.C.3. of this action, the Medford-Ashland NAA has
attained the PM10 NAAQS based on quality assured air quality monitoring
data from the Welch and Jackson monitor and from the White City Post
Office monitor which has been stored in the AQS database. Current
monitoring data shows that the area has continued to meet the annual
and 24-hour PM NAAQS for every three-year period since the attainment
date.
2. Fully Approved Attainment Plan
In order to qualify for redesignation, the SIP for the area must be
fully approved under section 110(k) of the Act, and must satisfy all
requirements that apply to the area. In this case, the Medford-Ashland
area must have an approved moderate area plan as described above in
section III.B. As explained above in section III.C. of this action, the
State has met the attainment plan requirements for the Medford-Ashland
NAA. As also described above in section III.C. , EPA is approving the
attainment plan for the Medford Ashland NAA. Therefore, upon the
effective date for this action, Oregon will have a fully approved
attainment plan under section 175(A) of the Act.
3. Section 110 and Part D Requirements
Section 107(d)(3)(E) of the Act requires that a State containing a
nonattainment area must meet all applicable requirements under section
110 and Part D of the Act for an area to be redesignated to attainment.
EPA interprets this to mean that the State must meet all requirements
that applied to the area prior to, and at the time of, the submission
of a complete redesignation request. As explained above in section
III.C. of this action, based on EPA's review of the attainment and
maintenance plan, Oregon has met the Part D requirements for the
Medford-Ashland NAA. The following is a summary of how Oregon meets the
Clean Air Act section 110 requirements.
Section 110(a)(2) of the Act contains general requirements for
implementation plans. These requirements include, but are not limited
to, submittal of a SIP that has been adopted by the State after
reasonable notice and public hearing; provisions for establishment and
operation of appropriate apparatus, methods, systems and procedures
necessary to monitor ambient air quality; provisions for Part C--
Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) and Part D--New Source
Review (NSR) permit programs; criteria for stationary source emission
control measures, monitoring and reporting; provisions for modeling;
and provisions for public and local agency participation. See the
General Preamble for further explanation of these requirements. See 57
FR 13498 (April 16, 1992).
EPA has approved Oregon's plan for the attainment and maintenance
of the national standards under Section 110.
[[Page 35171]]
See 40 CFR 52.1972. Therefore, for purposes of redesignation, the State
has satisfied all requirements under section 110(a)(2) of the Act.
4. Permanent and Enforceable Improvements in Air Quality
The State must be able to reasonably attribute the improvement in
air quality to permanent and enforceable emission reductions. In making
this showing, the State must demonstrate that air quality improvements
are the result of actual enforceable emission reductions. This showing
should consider emission rates, production capacities, and other
related information. The analysis should assume that sources are
operating at permitted levels (or historic peak levels) unless evidence
is presented that such an assumption is unrealistic.
Oregon has demonstrated that the air quality improvements in the
Medford-Ashland NAA are the result of permanent emission reductions and
not a result of either economic trends or meteorology. Medford-
Ashland's attainment history corresponds with the adoption of PM10
controls in the area. In the 1980's, Oregon adopted rules containing
control measures for the Medford-Ashland NAA, and in 1991, the Oregon
Environmental Quality Commission (EQC) adopted the more comprehensive
suite of controls that are currently in place. See 57 FR 24373 (June 9,
1992), 58 FR 10972 (February 23, 1993) and 56 FR 36006 (July 30, 1991).
In 1992, the year following the EQC's adoption of the full suite of
PM10 controls in Medford-Ashland, there were no exceedences of the PM10
NAAQS in the Medford-Ashland NAA. Since 1992, there has been a
decreasing trend in PM10 emissions, despite population and economic
growth. Section 4.14.3.3 of the attainment and maintenance plan
describes population and emission growth in the Medford-Ashland NAA.
From 1976-1996 population growth in the Medford-Ashland NAA was
estimated at 2.6%/year for urban areas and .05%/year for rural areas.
In addition, CALPUFF modeling submitted with the plan demonstrates
that the reductions in emissions are not due to temporary
meteorological effects. The meteorology used for CALPUFF modeling
represents a worst case meteorological scenario, and is comparable to
1985 meteorology, the year that Medford-Ashland experienced PM10 levels
higher than 300 [mu]g/m3 over 24 hours. Thus, based on a
review of control measures contained in the attainment plan and the
corresponding emission reductions, we have determined that the air
quality improvements in the Medford-Ashland NAA are due to permanent
and enforceable reductions.
5. Fully Approved Maintenance Plan
As described above in section III.C. , EPA is approving the
maintenance plan for the Medford-Ashland NAA. Therefore, upon the
effective date for this action, Oregon will have a fully approved
maintenance plan under section 175(A) of the Act.
6. Transportation and General Conformity
Transportation Conformity
Under section 176(c) of the Act, transportation plans, programs and
projects in nonattainment or maintenance areas that are funded or
approved under the Federal Transit Act must conform to the applicable
SIP. In short, a transportation plan is deemed to conform to the
applicable SIP if the emissions resulting from the implementation of
that transportation plan are less than or equal to the motor vehicle
emissions budget (MVEB) established in the SIP for the maintenance year
and other analysis years.
Section 4.14.4.0 of the plan contains a description of the air
quality conformity process for the Medford-Ashland NAA. The Rogue
Valley Council of Governments is the local agency that creates and
maintains the Rogue Valley Transportation Plan which must conform at
planning intervals established in 40 CFR 93 with the MVEB for the year
2015. Table 1. contains the MVEB established in the attainment and
maintenance plan.
Table 1.--Motor Vehicle Emissions Budget (PM10)
[Annual PM10 (tons/year)]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Annual
PM10
(tons/
year)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Year......................................................... 2015
Motor Vehicle Emissions Budget............................... 3754
------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to conforming to the MVEB in the SIP, the local agency
must show at planning intervals established in 40 CFR part 93 that
transportation control measures (TCMs) are being implemented. The
street cleaning program for reducing particulate pollution in the City
of Medford and White City is the only transportation control measure in
the attainment and maintenance plan. At a minimum, the cleaning program
must continue to use a high efficiency, vacuum street sweeper or
equivalent, and cover an area that includes Medford, White City and
significant intervening travel corridors, and provide cleaning
frequency no less than twice per month.
The transportation conformity rule establishes adequacy criteria
for MVEBs (40 CFR 93.118). In section 4.14.4.0 of the plan, Oregon
lists the adequacy criteria and how it meets these criteria. On
February 3, 2005, EPA posted a proposal to find the Medford-Ashland
MVEB adequate for transportation conformity purposes on EPA's
conformity Web site: https://www.epa.gov/oms/traq. MVEBs established in
the plan are posted on this Web site to provide the public with an
opportunity to review and comment on the MVEB in the plan. The comment
period for the adequacy posting for the Medford-Ashland NAA ended on
March 15, 2005. EPA did not receive any comments on this posting.
General Conformity
For Federal actions which are required to address the specific
requirements of the general conformity rule, one set of requirements
applies particularly to ensuring that emissions from the action will
not cause or contribute to new violations of the NAAQS, exacerbate
current violations, or delay timely attainment. To satisfy this
requirement to the State may allocate a budget in the SIP for future
Federal actions that could result in emissions. This budget can be used
to demonstrate that ``the total of direct and indirect emissions from
the action (or portion thereof), would not exceed the emissions budgets
specified in the applicable SIP.'' and therefore not cause or
contribute to new violations of the NAAQS, exacerbate current
violations or delay timely attainment 40 CFR 93.158(a)(5)(i)(A). The
decision about whether to include specific allocations of allowable
emissions increases to sources is one made by the state and local air
quality agencies. These emissions budgets are unlike, and are not to be
confused with, those used in transportation conformity. Emissions
budgets in transportation conformity are required to limit and restrain
emissions from motor vehicles. Emissions budgets in general conformity
allow increases in emissions up to specified levels for Federal
actions. Oregon has not chosen to include specific emissions
allocations for Federal projects that would be subject to the
provisions of general conformity.
Based on our review of the Medford PM10 attainment and maintenance
plan and for the reasons discussed above, we conclude that the
requirements for an approvable maintenance plan under the Act have been
met. Therefore, we are approving the attainment and
[[Page 35172]]
maintenance plan for PM10 submitted for the Medford nonattainment area.
In addition, based on our evaluation of Oregon's March 10, 2005 SIP
submittal, we conclude the requirements for redesignation in section
107(d)(3)(E) have been met. Therefore, we are redesignating the
Medford-Ashland PM10 nonattainment area to attainment.
7. Rule Revisions Submitted on March 10, 2005
Oregon submitted revisions to OAR Chapter 340 Divisions 204
(Designation of Air Quality Areas), 224 (Major New Source Review), 225
(Air Quality Analysis Requirements) and 240 (Rules for Areas with
Unique Air Quality Needs) with the attainment and maintenance plan on
March 10, 2005. EPA has reviewed these revisions and determined that
the revisions are approvable because they are either nonsubstantive
changes or they exceed the requirements in the Clean Air Act. Below is
a summary of these revisions and EPA's basis for finding these
revisions approvable. The TSD for this action contains a complete
description of the rule revisions and EPA's analysis.
Divisions 200, 204, 224 and 225
EPA is not taking action on OAR Chapter 340 Division 200 because
the revised section describes the State's procedures for adopting its
SIP and incorporates by reference all of the revisions adopted by the
Environmental Quality Commission (EQC) for approval into the Oregon SIP
(as a matter of state law) and is not needed as part of the federally
enforceable SIP for Oregon.
The revisions to OAR Chapter 340 Divisions 204, 224 and 225
submitted on March 10, 2005 clean up the rules and address the New
Source Review program changes permitted by the Clean Air Act upon
redesignation of an area to attainment. Once an area is redesignated to
attainment and becomes a maintenance area, the PSD and maintenance NSR
programs apply instead of the more stringent nonattainment NSR program.
However, for the Medford-Ashland PM10 Maintenance Area, Oregon is
retaining in its maintenance NSR rules the same requirements that
applied under the nonattainment NSR rules [i.e., the State is
continuing the requirement to install lowest achievable emission rate
technology (LAER), the requirement to obtain emission offsets and
demonstrate an air quality benefit, and the lower threshold for
triggering NSR]. By having maintenance NSR requirements in addition to
PSD requirements, the Medford-Ashland PM10 attainment and maintenance
plan goes beyond what is required by the CAA.
We are taking no action on OAR Chapter 340 Division 204-0030, 224-
0060, or 225-020 at this time because they have been revised by ODEQ
(state effective September 9, 2005) since the submittal of the Medford-
Ashland attainment and maintenance plan. Sections 204-0030, 224-0060,
and 225-0020 were revised and submitted to EPA on October 25, 2005 as
part of the Lakeview and La Grande PM10 Maintenance Plans and
redesignation requests. We reviewed these rule changes and acted on
them in Federal Register notices on March 22, 2006. See 71 FR 14393-
14399, and 70 FR 14399-14406. To be consistent with those actions, we
are incorporating by reference the more recent version (September 9,
2005) of these sections. With the exception of OAR Ch