Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Massachusetts; Amendment to Massachusetts' State Implementation Plan for Transit System Improvements, 62422-62427 [E7-21691]
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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.)
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone,
Particulate matter, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur
oxides, Volatile organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: October 23, 2007.
Robert W. Varney,
Regional Administrator, EPA New England.
[FR Doc. E7–21690 Filed 11–2–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R01–OAR–2006–1018; A–1–FRL–
8491–1]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans;
Massachusetts; Amendment to
Massachusetts’ State Implementation
Plan for Transit System Improvements
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The EPA is proposing to
approve a State Implementation Plan
(SIP) revision submitted by the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts. This
revision changes completion dates of
delayed transit projects, provides
interim deadlines for projects, maintains
interim emission reduction offsets for
delays in projects, modifies the project
substitution process, revises the list of
required transit projects, and expands
public participation and oversight of the
transit transportation control measure
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projects. The intended effect of this
action is to propose approval of specific
named substitution projects to the State
Implementation Plan’s transportation
control measure projects, and approve
modifications to the delay and
substitution procedures for transit
projects. This action is being taken
under the Clean Air Act.
DATES: Written comments must be
received on or before December 5, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID Number EPA–
R01–OAR–2006—1018 by one of the
following methods:
1. https://www.regulations.gov: Follow
the on-line instructions for submitting
comments.
2. E-mail: arnold.anne@epa.gov.
3. Fax: (617) 918–0047.
4. Mail: ‘‘Docket Identification
Number EPA–R01–OAR–2006–1018’’,
Anne Arnold, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, EPA New England
Regional Office, One Congress Street,
Suite 1100 (mail code CAQ), Boston,
MA 02114–2023.
5. Hand Delivery or Courier: Deliver
your comments to: Anne Arnold,
Manager, Air Quality Planning Unit,
Office of Ecosystem Protection, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, EPA
New England Regional Office, One
Congress Street, 11th floor, (CAQ),
Boston, MA 02114–2023. Such
deliveries are only accepted during the
Regional Office’s normal hours of
operation. The Regional Office’s official
hours of business are Monday through
Friday, 8:30 to 4:30, excluding legal
holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to
Docket ID No. EPA–R01–OAR–2006–
1018. 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
claimed to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
Do not submit through https://
www.regulations.gov, or e-mail,
information that you consider to be CBI
or otherwise protected. 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
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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.
Docket: All documents in the
electronic docket are listed in the
https://www.regulations.gov index.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
i.e., 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
Office of Ecosystem Protection, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, EPA
New England Regional Office, One
Congress Street, Suite 1100, Boston,
MA. EPA requests that if at all possible,
you contact the contact listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section to
schedule your inspection. The Regional
Office’s official hours of business are
Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30,
excluding legal holidays.
In addition, copies of the state
submittal are also available for public
inspection during normal business
hours, by appointment at the Bureau of
Waste Prevention, Massachusetts
Department of Environmental
Protection, One Winter Street, 8th Floor,
Boston, MA 02108.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Donald O. Cooke, Air Quality Planning
Unit, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, EPA New England Regional
Office, One Congress Street, Suite 1100
(CAQ), Boston, MA 02114–2023,
telephone number (617) 918–1668, fax
number (617) 918–0668, e-mail
cooke.donald@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document whenever
‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’ and ‘‘our’’ is used, we mean
EPA.
Organization of this document. The
following outline is provided to aid in
locating information in this preamble.
I. Background and Purpose
II. Summary of Changes to 310 CMR 7.00 and
7.36
III. Results of EOT’s Demonstration of Air
Quality Emission Reductions
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IV. Criteria for Approving Amendments to
the Transit System Improvements
Regulation into the SIP
V. Transportation Control Measure (TCM)
Substitution and SAFETEA–LU
VI. Proposed Action
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
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I. Background and Purpose
EPA approved the Massachusetts
Transit System Improvements
Regulation (the Regulation), 310 CMR
7.36 (effective December 6, 1991), into
the Massachusetts State Implementation
Plan (SIP) on October 4, 1994 (59 FR
50495—50498). The transit system
improvement projects contained in the
Regulation include transportation
control measures deemed necessary to
mitigate the air quality impacts of the
Central Artery and Third Harbor Tunnel
Project in Metropolitan Boston.
On December 13, 2006, the
Massachusetts Department of
Environmental Protection (MA DEP)
submitted a revision to its SIP amending
its Transit System Improvements
Regulation. The revision consists of MA
DEP’s final amendments to 310 CMR
7.36, ‘‘Transit System Improvements,’’
effective December 1, 2006. MA DEP
held a hearing on the amendments to
the Regulation on December 21, 2005.
On June 1, 2007, MA DEP supplemented
its SIP revision with a letter determining
that Massachusetts Executive Office of
Transportation (EOT) had met the
requirements of 310 CMR 7.36 (8),
Demonstration of Air Quality Emissions
Reductions, along with EOT’s air quality
modeling analysis (‘‘Description of
Modeling Assumptions and Analysis
Methodology for the State
Implementation Plan Transit
Commitment Projects Current and
Proposed Substitutions,’’ dated March
15, 2007). EOT held a public comment
period on this supplemental material for
a 45-day period commencing on January
2, 2007. The document was amended
based on comments received and an
additional two-week public comment
period began on March 21, 2007,
following posting in the ‘‘Environmental
Monitor.’’ DEP submitted EOT’s
responses to public comments received
as part of the supplemental materials.
On August 22, 2007, we issued our
determination that the Massachusetts
SIP package is administratively and
technically complete. In our
completeness determination, we also
highlighted EPA’s interest in seeing that
the transit projects are implemented in
a timely manner and requested that MA
DEP keep us apprised of the status of
the replacement projects as they move
forward. In addition, we specifically
mentioned hearing recent reports of
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potential delays in the Green Line
extension project and encouraged
Massachusetts Executive Office of
Transportation (EOT) to address this
issue on the record at the upcoming
September 6, 2007 public meeting.
On September 6, 2007, the MA DEP
held a public meeting to address EOT’s
annual status report on transit
commitments. EOT presented the status
of the uncompleted transit projects and
took public comment. David Mohler,
Acting Deputy Secretary for Planning,
EOT, explained the Commonwealth’s
efforts in seeking Federal funds for the
Green Line, which could delay the
completion of the Green Line for up to
two years. Mohler emphasized EOT’s
position to make up any time delay, and
if a delay occurred, to propose
mitigation projects and adequate
emission offsets as required by the
regulation. EOT also made available at
the public meeting a September 4, 2007,
letter from David Mohler to MA DEP’s
Acting Commissioner, Arlene
O’Donnell, committing to accelerate the
planning, design and environmental
review and permitting of the project in
order to meet the 2014 completion date.
II. Summary of Changes to 310 CMR
7.00 and 7.36
Listed below are the changes in
Massachusetts Department of
Environmental Protection’s Air
Pollution Control Regulations 310 CMR
7.00, ‘‘Statutory Authority; Legend;
Preamble; Definitions,’’ and 310 CMR
7.36, ‘‘U Transit System Improvements’’
which went into effect on December 1,
2006 at the state level. EPA is proposing
approval of these changes as a SIP
revision.
Definitions
The following definition of ‘‘Boston
Metropolitan Planning Organization’’
(MPO) is added and included in 310
CMR 7.00: ‘‘BOSTON METROPOLITAN
PLANNING ORGANIZATION means the
organization designated for maintaining
a continuing, cooperative, and
comprehensive (3C) transportation
planning process under Section 134 of
the Federal Aid Highway Act and
Section 5303 of the Federal Transit Act,
as amended, in the Boston metropolitan
region.’’
Revisions to the List of Required Projects
The Green Line Arborway
Restoration, the Blue Line Connection
from Bowdoin Station to the Red Line
at Charles Station, and the Green Line
extension to Ball Square/Tufts
University, will be replaced by the
Fairmont Line Project (construction to
be completed and opened to full public
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use by December 31, 2011), 1000 new
park and ride parking spaces
(construction to be completed and
opened to full public use by December
31, 2011) and an enhanced Green Line
Extension Project (construction to be
completed and opened to full public use
by December 31, 2014). The Green Line
Arborway Restoration was originally
assigned a completion date of December
31, 1997, with an extension to December
31, 2000 previously granted pursuant to
the Regulation, and project emission
offsets required to mitigate the delay
after December 31, 2000 until project
completion. The Blue Line connection
and the Green Line extension to Ball
Square/Tufts University were originally
assigned a completion date of December
31, 2011.
The New Replacement/Substitution
Projects
‘‘The Fairmount Line Project.’’ The
Fairmount commuter rail line is
approximately 9.2 miles long, running
from South Station to Readville, passing
through the communities of Dorchester,
Roxbury and Mattapan. Fairmount Line
improvements will consist of:
Enhancements of existing stations
including, without limitation, platform
extensions, improved lighting and
improved access; a new Four Corners
Station plus a new station in each of the
neighborhoods of Dorchester, Mattapan
and Roxbury; and bridge upgrades and
other measures to improve service and
increase ridership.
‘‘1000 new park and ride parking
spaces.’’ These 1000 new park and ride
parking spaces are in addition to those
required by 310 CMR 7.36(2)(c)3 and
310 CMR 7.36(2)(d), and will serve
commuter transit facilities, within the
101 cities and towns constituting the
Boston Metropolitan Planning
Organization.
‘‘The Green Line Extension Project.’’
The Green Line extension consists of
extending the Green Line from
Lechmere Station to Medford Hillside
and construction of a spur to Union
Square.
‘‘The Red Line/Blue Line Connector.’’
The revision requires final design of the
connection from the Blue Line at
Government Center to the Red Line at
Charles Station before December 31,
2011, but no longer commits to its
construction.
Revised Deadlines
Old Colony Commuter Rail Extension
Greenbush Line, originally assigned a
completion date of December 31, 1996,
must now be completed and open to full
public use before December 31, 2007.
Project emission offsets were required to
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mitigate the delay of the Greenbush spur
after December 31, 1999 until project
completion.
Blue Line Platform Lengthening and
Modernization, originally assigned a
completion date of December 31, 1998,
with an extension to December 31, 2008
previously granted pursuant to the
Regulation, must now be completed and
open to full public use before December
31, 2008. Project emission offsets were
required to mitigate the delay after
December 31, 2001 until project
completion.
Project substitutions may proceed
after MA DEP determines in writing that
EOT has met the substitution provisions
of the Regulation.
Project Interim Deadlines
Public Process Requirements
EOT is required to conduct an annual
public meeting to provide a thorough
update and status report on each project
and to disclose any need for potential or
actual project delays and/or
substitutions.
EOT is required to submit an annual
certification to MA DEP with a
commitment to complete and fund
projects and disclose project delays/
substitutions/interim offset measures to
be implemented.
MA DEP has added interim project
deadlines for the Fairmount Line
improvements, the Green Line extension
to Medford Hillside, the Green Line
Union Square spur, and the 1000 Park
and Ride parking spaces. EPA believes
these interim milestones, in
combination with the EOT’s annual
reporting on the status of the transit
commitments, will help keep the transit
system improvements projects
construction on schedule.
New Requirements Added To Address
Potential Project Delays of the New
Projects
If the Fairmount Line improvements,
the Green Line extension to Medford
Hillside, the Green Line Union Square
spur, or 1000 Park and Ride spaces are
delayed, interim air quality offset
projects are required to be implemented.
The revised regulation does not place a
limit on the amount of time EOT may
delay a project, as long as it obtains
offsets for the delay.
EOT is required to petition MA DEP
to delay a project, and the petition will
undergo ‘‘public review’’ before MA
DEP acts on the petition.
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Substitution Criteria
Projects may be substituted after
completion of specified interim project
deadlines. The revised Regulation no
longer requires a finding that the project
to be replaced is ‘‘infeasible.’’
Substitution determinations require
an EOT public meeting and a public
comment period.
The proposed substitute project must
achieve 110% of the emission
reductions that would have been
achieved by the original project to be
replaced.
EOT must implement interim
emission reduction offsets to address
any delay in achieving the emission
reductions that would have been
achieved had all components of the
original project been completed on time.
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Potential Future Project Substitutions
The Green Line Extension may be
substituted with transit projects in
Boston, Cambridge, Somerville, or
Medford.
The Fairmount Line project may be
substituted with transit projects in
Dorchester, Hyde Park, Mattapan, or
Roxbury.
Development of Emission Reduction
Baseline
MA DEP added a new Subsection 8 to
provide substantive public comment on
the air quality modeling for the
Regulation and EOT’s remodeling of the
revised transit projects.
EOT must calculate baseline emission
reductions by modeling the original
three projects, the Green Line Arborway
Restoration, the Blue Line-Red Line
Connection, and the Green Line
extension to Ball Square, and adding
10% to the total.
EOT is required to demonstrate that
new projects will deliver the required
baseline emission reductions. If the new
projects do not deliver the baseline
emission reductions, EOT is required to
implement additional projects in the
same geographic areas.
EOT is required to take public
comment on the results of the emission
analysis and respond to those
comments.
Demonstration of Emission Reductions
When all projects required by 310
CMR 7.36 are substantially complete,
EOT shall complete an analysis of the
total air quality benefits of such
projects. EOT shall perform such
analysis in accordance with EPA
requirements in effect at the time of the
analysis.
III. Results of EOT’s Demonstration of
Air Quality Emission Reductions
MA DEP’s supplemental SIP revision
submitted to EPA on June 1, 2007,
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contained MA DEP’s determination that
EOT had met the requirements of 310
CMR 7.36(8)(d) and (e) and that the
‘‘administrative record reasonably
supports the results and conclusions of
the report required pursuant to 310
CMR 7.36(8)(c).’’ Thus, MA DEP agreed
that EOT has demonstrated that the new
projects achieve at least 110% of the
emissions reductions that would have
been achieved by the projects being
replaced.
In addition, the supplement included
EOT’s air quality modeling
demonstration mandated by 310 CMR
7.36(8)(a) through (8)(e) entitled,
‘‘Description of Modeling Assumptions
and Analysis Methodology for the State
Implementation Plan Transit
Commitment Projects Current and
Proposed Substitutions March 15,
2007,’’ prepared by the Boston MPO’s
Central Transportation Planning Staff
for the Executive Office of
Transportation Office of Transportation.
These documents are part of the
publicly available docket materials
accessible for inspection electronically
in the Federal Docket Management
System at https://www.regulations.gov,
Docket Number EPA–R01–OAR–2006–
1018.
EOT’s air quality analysis modeled
the emissions reductions of: (1) The
original SIP-approved package of
projects; (2) the replacement/
substitution package of projects; and (3)
the no-build or baseline scenario. This
analysis concluded that the substitution
projects (Green Line to Union Square
and Medford Hillside, Fairmont Line
Improvements, and Additional Parking)
results in reductions of 435 kilograms
per day of Carbon Monoxide (CO), 11
kilograms per day of Nitrogen Oxides
(NOX), and 17 kilograms of Volatile
Organic Compounds (VOC) over the nobuild baseline. The package of transit
projects are estimated to result in
emission reductions in 2025 of 149%
CO, 137.5% NOX and 154% VOC of the
original SIP-approved projects, which
are in excess of the 110% emission
reduction required by subsection (5)(f)
of the amended transit system
improvements regulation. For all three
pollutants, CO, NOX and VOC [MA
DEP’s regulations refers to hydrocarbon
emissions (VOC) as non-methane
hydrocarbons—NMHC], MA DEP’s
requirement of 110% threshold is met.
Please see Table 1 ‘‘EOT Air Quality
Analysis Comparison of Project
Packages Benefits in the Year 2025,’’
below.
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TABLE 1.—EOT AIR QUALITY ANALYSIS COMPARISON OF PROJECT PACKAGES BENEFITS IN THE YEAR 2025
Daily emission benefits in kilograms (kg.)
Carbon
monoxide
(CO)
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SIP Approved Projects (Package):
Arborway Restoration, Green Line Extension to Ball Square/Tufts University, and Blue
Line/Red Line Connection (Bowdoin Station to Charles Station) ....................................
SIP Approved Projects (Package) Plus Ten Percent ..................................................................
Replacement/Substitution Projects (Package):
Green Line to Union Square and Medford Hillside, Fairmont Line Improvements, and Additional Parking .................................................................................................................
IV. Criteria for Approving Amendments
to the Transit System Improvements
Regulation Into the SIP
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the Clean Air Act. An adequate SIP
revision is one that meets the Clean Air
Act’s requirement under section 110(l)
that a SIP revision must not interfere
with attainment and maintenance of
national ambient air quality standards
(NAAQSs). The Commonwealth has
flexibility to revise SIP-approved
transportation control measures (TCMs),
provided the revisions are consistent
with attaining and maintaining
compliance with the NAAQSs. In
addition, the Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity
Act: A Legacy For Users (SAFETEA–LU)
section 6011(d) amended the Clean Air
Act by adding a new section 176(c)(8)
that establishes specific criteria and
procedures for replacing TCMs in an
existing approved SIP with new TCMs
and adding TCMs to an approved SIP.
As discussed below, MA DEP’s
Regulation does not need to comply
with all elements of section 176(c)(8) to
be approvable as a SIP revision, but it
must not conflict with any of those
elements.
The Federal executive policy on
environmental justice is established by
Executive Order (EO) 12898, ‘‘Federal
Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations,’’ (59 FR 7629
(Feb. 16, 1994)). Its main provision
directs federal agencies, to the greatest
extent practicable and permitted by law,
to make environmental justice part of
their mission by identifying and
addressing, as appropriate,
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects
of their programs, policies, and
activities on minority populations and
low-income populations in the United
States. Here the Clean Air Act directs
EPA to approve a SIP revision unless it
does not meet the Act’s requirements.
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Although the Act does not provide EPA
the authority to modify the
Commonwealths’ regulatory decision
solely on the basis of environmental
justice considerations, EPA continues to
encourage EOT to consider
environmental justice concerns when
deciding the location of the additional
Park and Ride spaces and the new
stations along the Fairmount commuter
rail line and the Green Line extension
project. EPA also urges EOT and DEP to
consider environmental justice concerns
when deciding whether to meet project
deadlines, to approve proposals for
project delays, and to approve offset or
substitute projects.
V. Transportation Control Measure
(TCM) Substitution and SAFETEA–LU
Clean Air Act section 176(c)(8), added
by SAFETEA–LU, establishes the
procedures for ensuring that substitute
TCMs provide equal or greater
emissions reductions than the TCMs
that are being replaced. It also
establishes the process for EPA and state
air agency concurrence on the
substitution or addition of TCM
projects. Finally, it ensures that the state
and EPA maintain up-to-date
information on the TCMs in approved
SIPs so that the public is aware of the
TCMs that are to be implemented. EPA
and U.S. Department of Transportation
(DOT) issued joint guidance on
February 14, 2006, on the
implementation of all of the Clean Air
Act amendments made by SAFETEA–
LU. This guidance clarified EPA and
DOT expectations for how TCM
substitutions and additions are to be
carried out by state and local agencies.
The guidance is available at https://
www.epa.gov/otaq/stateresources/
transconf/420b06901.pdf.1
1 EPA has proposed regulations to implement
SAFETEA–LU, but specifically declined to propose
regulations addressing section 176(c)(8), finding
that the statute is already sufficiently detailed and
that the EPA/DOT guidance would address
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292
321.2
435
Volatile
organic
compounds
(VOC)
Nitrogen
oxides
(NOX)
8
8.8
11
11
12.1
17
As explained in the guidance, section
176(c)(8) applies directly to any TCM
substitution made in a SIP, whether or
not the SIP already includes a
substitution mechanism designed by a
state and approved by EPA. The section
does not eliminate the requirement to
comply with any such substitution
procedures in a SIP, even if the state
includes requirements that go beyond
the minimum elements required under
section 176(c)(8). Correspondingly,
complying with the substitution process
in the SIP does not eliminate the
requirement to meet all the elements of
the process laid out in section 176(c)(8).
In the unlikely event there is a conflict
between section 176(c)(8) and the SIP
substitution process, the substitution
must comply with section 176(c)(8). See
EPA/DOT Guidance at pages 20–21,
section 5.2.
Therefore, for the purposes of this SIP
approval, EPA must determine whether
any element of the MA DEP Transit
System Improvements Regulation
conflicts with section 176(c)(8). EPA
sees no conflict between the
requirements of the MA DEP Regulation
and section 176(c)(8). There are
provisions in the MA DEP Regulation
that go beyond the requirements of
section 176(c)(8), such as the
requirement to demonstrate that the
substitution achieves an extra 10%
emissions reduction beyond that
achieved by the projects being replaced
or the specific geographic limits on
substitute projects. But EPA has found
no instance in which complying with
the MA DEP regulation would result in
a conflict with or violate any
corresponding requirement of section
176(c)(8).
In addition, EPA must work with MA
DEP to ensure that any requirements in
section 176(c)(8) that are not addressed
in its Regulation will be met. There
appear to be two requirements in
questions that might arise about TCM substitutions.
(72 FR 24472, 24485–24486; May 2, 2007).
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section 176(c)(8) that are not provided
for in the MA DEP Regulation.
First, in addition to the state air
pollution control agency, section
176(c)(8)(A)(v) specifically requires both
the MPO and EPA to concur with the
equivalency of the substitute TCM
before the substitution can take effect.
On May 3, 2007, Massachusetts
Secretary of Transportation, Bernard
Cohen, submitted EOT’s air quality
modeling analysis for the substitution
projects to MA DEP. This analysis
demonstrates that the required emission
reductions set forth in section 7.36(8) of
the Regulation will be achieved by the
new projects. All that remains is for the
MPO to submit evidence to EPA that the
MPO concurs in that analysis. For EPA’s
concurrence on the substitutions
included in this SIP revision, the
Agency will send a letter,
contemporaneous with our final action
on this SIP revision, to document EPA’s
concurrence on the substitutions being
approved with the revisions to MA
DEP’s regulation.2 For any future
substitutions, EPA will work with MA
DEP to coordinate EPA’s review with
DEP’s review of the proposed
substitution so that the substitution can
take effect as a matter of federal law if
both DEP and EPA approve it.
Second, section 176(c)(8) now
requires all substitutions of TCM’s to be
submitted to EPA for incorporation into
the codification of the SIP. For the
purposes of the substitutions provided
for in the revisions of the Regulation,
EPA is proposing that any codification
that results from our final action on this
SIP revision will address this
requirement. For future substitutions,
although the Regulation does not
specifically require MA DEP to forward
to EPA the results of MA DEP’s
substitution determinations, it should
be a routine matter for MA DEP to
submit any substitution it approves
under section 7.36(5)(h) so that the
federally approved SIP can accurately
2 Both the authority to approve this SIP revision
and the authority to concur on TCM substitutions
under section 176(c)(8) have been delegated to the
Regional Administrator. See EPA Delegations of
Authority Nos. 7–10 (Approval/Disapproval of State
Implementation Plans) and 7–158 (Transportation
Control Measure Substitutions and Additions). Note
that while EPA is using an informal rulemaking to
act on this proposed SIP revision, we are not
interpreting section 176(c)(8)(A)(v) to require a
rulemaking to accomplish EPA’s concurrence. See
EPA/DOT Guidance at page 27, section 5.17.
Indeed, section 176(c)(8) was added to the Act
precisely to avoid the need for a full SIP revision
to implement TCM substitutions in the routine case.
In this instance, where the TCM substitution is
occurring as part of a proposed SIP revision, EPA
is simply acting on the SIP in a rulemaking under
section 110 of the Act contemporaneous with any
concurrence on the substitution in a letter to MA
DEP under section 176(c)(8) of the Act.
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reflect the current requirements under
the Regulation.
EPA’s review of Massachusetts’ SIP
Revision indicates the amendments to
the SIP-approved Massachusetts Transit
System Improvements, with substitution
projects and changes to projects
timelines, adequately demonstrate
continued emission reductions and do
not relax current provisions in the SIP.
EPA is proposing to approve the
Massachusetts SIP revision for Transit
System Improvements, which was
submitted on December 13, 2006, and
supplemented on June 1, 2007.3 EPA is
soliciting public comments on the
issues discussed in this notice or on
other relevant matters. These comments
will be considered before taking final
action. Interested parties may
participate in the Federal rulemaking
procedure by submitting written
comments to the EPA New England
Regional Office listed in the ADDRESSES
section of this Federal Register.
VI. Proposed Action
EPA is proposing to approve
Massachusetts’ amendments to Transit
System Improvements Regulation, 310
CMR 7.36, and Definition Regulation,
310 CMR 7.00 (which were filed with
the Massachusetts Secretary of State on
November 16, 2006 and were effective
on December 1, 2006,) as a revision to
the Massachusetts SIP. EPA finds that
the transit measures in the revised
transit system improvements regulation
remain directionally sound and that all
proposed substitution projects
identified in the Regulation will
collectively contribute to achieving the
national ambient air quality standard for
ozone and maintaining the carbon
monoxide standard, thereby satisfying
requirements set forth in Section 110(l)
of the Clean Air Act.
VII. 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
3 In addition, EPA is planning to concur pursuant
to section 176(c)(8) that the substitute TCM’s
achieve equivalent or greater emission reductions
than the measures being replaced.
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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), because it 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), or
Executive Order 12898 ‘‘Federal Actions
to Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations,’’ because it approves a
state rule implementing a Federal
standard.
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
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Federal Register / Vol. 72, No. 213 / Monday, November 5, 2007 / Proposed Rules
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
ycherry on PRODPC74 with PROPOSALS
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
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Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen
dioxide, Ozone, Particulate matter,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Volatile organic
compounds.
Dated: October 25, 2007.
Robert W. Varney,
Regional Administrator, EPA New England.
[FR Doc. E7–21691 Filed 11–2–07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 72, Number 213 (Monday, November 5, 2007)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 62422-62427]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E7-21691]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R01-OAR-2006-1018; A-1-FRL-8491-1]
Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans;
Massachusetts; Amendment to Massachusetts' State Implementation Plan
for Transit System Improvements
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The EPA is proposing to approve a State Implementation Plan
(SIP) revision submitted by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. This
revision changes completion dates of delayed transit projects, provides
interim deadlines for projects, maintains interim emission reduction
offsets for delays in projects, modifies the project substitution
process, revises the list of required transit projects, and expands
public participation and oversight of the transit transportation
control measure projects. The intended effect of this action is to
propose approval of specific named substitution projects to the State
Implementation Plan's transportation control measure projects, and
approve modifications to the delay and substitution procedures for
transit projects. This action is being taken under the Clean Air Act.
DATES: Written comments must be received on or before December 5, 2007.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID Number EPA-
R01-OAR-2006--1018 by one of the following methods:
1. https://www.regulations.gov: Follow the on-line instructions for
submitting comments.
2. E-mail: arnold.anne@epa.gov.
3. Fax: (617) 918-0047.
4. Mail: ``Docket Identification Number EPA-R01-OAR-2006-1018'',
Anne Arnold, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA New England
Regional Office, One Congress Street, Suite 1100 (mail code CAQ),
Boston, MA 02114-2023.
5. Hand Delivery or Courier: Deliver your comments to: Anne Arnold,
Manager, Air Quality Planning Unit, Office of Ecosystem Protection,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA New England Regional Office,
One Congress Street, 11th floor, (CAQ), Boston, MA 02114-2023. Such
deliveries are only accepted during the Regional Office's normal hours
of operation. The Regional Office's official hours of business are
Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 4:30, excluding legal holidays.
Instructions: Direct your comments to Docket ID No. EPA-R01-OAR-
2006-1018. 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 claimed to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other information whose
disclosure is restricted by statute. Do not submit through https://
www.regulations.gov, or e-mail, information that you consider to be CBI
or otherwise protected. 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.
Docket: All documents in the electronic docket are listed in the
https://www.regulations.gov index. Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available, i.e., 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 Office of Ecosystem Protection,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA New England Regional Office,
One Congress Street, Suite 1100, Boston, MA. EPA requests that if at
all possible, you contact the contact listed in the FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT section to schedule your inspection. The Regional
Office's official hours of business are Monday through Friday, 8:30 to
4:30, excluding legal holidays.
In addition, copies of the state submittal are also available for
public inspection during normal business hours, by appointment at the
Bureau of Waste Prevention, Massachusetts Department of Environmental
Protection, One Winter Street, 8th Floor, Boston, MA 02108.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Donald O. Cooke, Air Quality Planning
Unit, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA New England Regional
Office, One Congress Street, Suite 1100 (CAQ), Boston, MA 02114-2023,
telephone number (617) 918-1668, fax number (617) 918-0668, e-mail
cooke.donald@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Throughout this document whenever ``we,''
``us'' and ``our'' is used, we mean EPA.
Organization of this document. The following outline is provided to
aid in locating information in this preamble.
I. Background and Purpose
II. Summary of Changes to 310 CMR 7.00 and 7.36
III. Results of EOT's Demonstration of Air Quality Emission
Reductions
[[Page 62423]]
IV. Criteria for Approving Amendments to the Transit System
Improvements Regulation into the SIP
V. Transportation Control Measure (TCM) Substitution and SAFETEA-LU
VI. Proposed Action
VII. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background and Purpose
EPA approved the Massachusetts Transit System Improvements
Regulation (the Regulation), 310 CMR 7.36 (effective December 6, 1991),
into the Massachusetts State Implementation Plan (SIP) on October 4,
1994 (59 FR 50495--50498). The transit system improvement projects
contained in the Regulation include transportation control measures
deemed necessary to mitigate the air quality impacts of the Central
Artery and Third Harbor Tunnel Project in Metropolitan Boston.
On December 13, 2006, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental
Protection (MA DEP) submitted a revision to its SIP amending its
Transit System Improvements Regulation. The revision consists of MA
DEP's final amendments to 310 CMR 7.36, ``Transit System
Improvements,'' effective December 1, 2006. MA DEP held a hearing on
the amendments to the Regulation on December 21, 2005. On June 1, 2007,
MA DEP supplemented its SIP revision with a letter determining that
Massachusetts Executive Office of Transportation (EOT) had met the
requirements of 310 CMR 7.36 (8), Demonstration of Air Quality
Emissions Reductions, along with EOT's air quality modeling analysis
(``Description of Modeling Assumptions and Analysis Methodology for the
State Implementation Plan Transit Commitment Projects Current and
Proposed Substitutions,'' dated March 15, 2007). EOT held a public
comment period on this supplemental material for a 45-day period
commencing on January 2, 2007. The document was amended based on
comments received and an additional two-week public comment period
began on March 21, 2007, following posting in the ``Environmental
Monitor.'' DEP submitted EOT's responses to public comments received as
part of the supplemental materials.
On August 22, 2007, we issued our determination that the
Massachusetts SIP package is administratively and technically complete.
In our completeness determination, we also highlighted EPA's interest
in seeing that the transit projects are implemented in a timely manner
and requested that MA DEP keep us apprised of the status of the
replacement projects as they move forward. In addition, we specifically
mentioned hearing recent reports of potential delays in the Green Line
extension project and encouraged Massachusetts Executive Office of
Transportation (EOT) to address this issue on the record at the
upcoming September 6, 2007 public meeting.
On September 6, 2007, the MA DEP held a public meeting to address
EOT's annual status report on transit commitments. EOT presented the
status of the uncompleted transit projects and took public comment.
David Mohler, Acting Deputy Secretary for Planning, EOT, explained the
Commonwealth's efforts in seeking Federal funds for the Green Line,
which could delay the completion of the Green Line for up to two years.
Mohler emphasized EOT's position to make up any time delay, and if a
delay occurred, to propose mitigation projects and adequate emission
offsets as required by the regulation. EOT also made available at the
public meeting a September 4, 2007, letter from David Mohler to MA
DEP's Acting Commissioner, Arlene O'Donnell, committing to accelerate
the planning, design and environmental review and permitting of the
project in order to meet the 2014 completion date.
II. Summary of Changes to 310 CMR 7.00 and 7.36
Listed below are the changes in Massachusetts Department of
Environmental Protection's Air Pollution Control Regulations 310 CMR
7.00, ``Statutory Authority; Legend; Preamble; Definitions,'' and 310
CMR 7.36, ``U Transit System Improvements'' which went into effect on
December 1, 2006 at the state level. EPA is proposing approval of these
changes as a SIP revision.
Definitions
The following definition of ``Boston Metropolitan Planning
Organization'' (MPO) is added and included in 310 CMR 7.00: ``BOSTON
METROPOLITAN PLANNING ORGANIZATION means the organization designated
for maintaining a continuing, cooperative, and comprehensive (3C)
transportation planning process under Section 134 of the Federal Aid
Highway Act and Section 5303 of the Federal Transit Act, as amended, in
the Boston metropolitan region.''
Revisions to the List of Required Projects
The Green Line Arborway Restoration, the Blue Line Connection from
Bowdoin Station to the Red Line at Charles Station, and the Green Line
extension to Ball Square/Tufts University, will be replaced by the
Fairmont Line Project (construction to be completed and opened to full
public use by December 31, 2011), 1000 new park and ride parking spaces
(construction to be completed and opened to full public use by December
31, 2011) and an enhanced Green Line Extension Project (construction to
be completed and opened to full public use by December 31, 2014). The
Green Line Arborway Restoration was originally assigned a completion
date of December 31, 1997, with an extension to December 31, 2000
previously granted pursuant to the Regulation, and project emission
offsets required to mitigate the delay after December 31, 2000 until
project completion. The Blue Line connection and the Green Line
extension to Ball Square/Tufts University were originally assigned a
completion date of December 31, 2011.
The New Replacement/Substitution Projects
``The Fairmount Line Project.'' The Fairmount commuter rail line is
approximately 9.2 miles long, running from South Station to Readville,
passing through the communities of Dorchester, Roxbury and Mattapan.
Fairmount Line improvements will consist of: Enhancements of existing
stations including, without limitation, platform extensions, improved
lighting and improved access; a new Four Corners Station plus a new
station in each of the neighborhoods of Dorchester, Mattapan and
Roxbury; and bridge upgrades and other measures to improve service and
increase ridership.
``1000 new park and ride parking spaces.'' These 1000 new park and
ride parking spaces are in addition to those required by 310 CMR
7.36(2)(c)3 and 310 CMR 7.36(2)(d), and will serve commuter transit
facilities, within the 101 cities and towns constituting the Boston
Metropolitan Planning Organization.
``The Green Line Extension Project.'' The Green Line extension
consists of extending the Green Line from Lechmere Station to Medford
Hillside and construction of a spur to Union Square.
``The Red Line/Blue Line Connector.'' The revision requires final
design of the connection from the Blue Line at Government Center to the
Red Line at Charles Station before December 31, 2011, but no longer
commits to its construction.
Revised Deadlines
Old Colony Commuter Rail Extension Greenbush Line, originally
assigned a completion date of December 31, 1996, must now be completed
and open to full public use before December 31, 2007. Project emission
offsets were required to
[[Page 62424]]
mitigate the delay of the Greenbush spur after December 31, 1999 until
project completion.
Blue Line Platform Lengthening and Modernization, originally
assigned a completion date of December 31, 1998, with an extension to
December 31, 2008 previously granted pursuant to the Regulation, must
now be completed and open to full public use before December 31, 2008.
Project emission offsets were required to mitigate the delay after
December 31, 2001 until project completion.
Project Interim Deadlines
MA DEP has added interim project deadlines for the Fairmount Line
improvements, the Green Line extension to Medford Hillside, the Green
Line Union Square spur, and the 1000 Park and Ride parking spaces. EPA
believes these interim milestones, in combination with the EOT's annual
reporting on the status of the transit commitments, will help keep the
transit system improvements projects construction on schedule.
New Requirements Added To Address Potential Project Delays of the New
Projects
If the Fairmount Line improvements, the Green Line extension to
Medford Hillside, the Green Line Union Square spur, or 1000 Park and
Ride spaces are delayed, interim air quality offset projects are
required to be implemented. The revised regulation does not place a
limit on the amount of time EOT may delay a project, as long as it
obtains offsets for the delay.
EOT is required to petition MA DEP to delay a project, and the
petition will undergo ``public review'' before MA DEP acts on the
petition.
Substitution Criteria
Projects may be substituted after completion of specified interim
project deadlines. The revised Regulation no longer requires a finding
that the project to be replaced is ``infeasible.''
Substitution determinations require an EOT public meeting and a
public comment period.
The proposed substitute project must achieve 110% of the emission
reductions that would have been achieved by the original project to be
replaced.
EOT must implement interim emission reduction offsets to address
any delay in achieving the emission reductions that would have been
achieved had all components of the original project been completed on
time.
Project substitutions may proceed after MA DEP determines in
writing that EOT has met the substitution provisions of the Regulation.
Potential Future Project Substitutions
The Green Line Extension may be substituted with transit projects
in Boston, Cambridge, Somerville, or Medford.
The Fairmount Line project may be substituted with transit projects
in Dorchester, Hyde Park, Mattapan, or Roxbury.
Public Process Requirements
EOT is required to conduct an annual public meeting to provide a
thorough update and status report on each project and to disclose any
need for potential or actual project delays and/or substitutions.
EOT is required to submit an annual certification to MA DEP with a
commitment to complete and fund projects and disclose project delays/
substitutions/interim offset measures to be implemented.
Development of Emission Reduction Baseline
MA DEP added a new Subsection 8 to provide substantive public
comment on the air quality modeling for the Regulation and EOT's
remodeling of the revised transit projects.
EOT must calculate baseline emission reductions by modeling the
original three projects, the Green Line Arborway Restoration, the Blue
Line-Red Line Connection, and the Green Line extension to Ball Square,
and adding 10% to the total.
EOT is required to demonstrate that new projects will deliver the
required baseline emission reductions. If the new projects do not
deliver the baseline emission reductions, EOT is required to implement
additional projects in the same geographic areas.
EOT is required to take public comment on the results of the
emission analysis and respond to those comments.
Demonstration of Emission Reductions
When all projects required by 310 CMR 7.36 are substantially
complete, EOT shall complete an analysis of the total air quality
benefits of such projects. EOT shall perform such analysis in
accordance with EPA requirements in effect at the time of the analysis.
III. Results of EOT's Demonstration of Air Quality Emission Reductions
MA DEP's supplemental SIP revision submitted to EPA on June 1,
2007, contained MA DEP's determination that EOT had met the
requirements of 310 CMR 7.36(8)(d) and (e) and that the
``administrative record reasonably supports the results and conclusions
of the report required pursuant to 310 CMR 7.36(8)(c).'' Thus, MA DEP
agreed that EOT has demonstrated that the new projects achieve at least
110% of the emissions reductions that would have been achieved by the
projects being replaced.
In addition, the supplement included EOT's air quality modeling
demonstration mandated by 310 CMR 7.36(8)(a) through (8)(e) entitled,
``Description of Modeling Assumptions and Analysis Methodology for the
State Implementation Plan Transit Commitment Projects Current and
Proposed Substitutions March 15, 2007,'' prepared by the Boston MPO's
Central Transportation Planning Staff for the Executive Office of
Transportation Office of Transportation. These documents are part of
the publicly available docket materials accessible for inspection
electronically in the Federal Docket Management System at https://
www.regulations.gov, Docket Number EPA-R01-OAR-2006-1018.
EOT's air quality analysis modeled the emissions reductions of: (1)
The original SIP-approved package of projects; (2) the replacement/
substitution package of projects; and (3) the no-build or baseline
scenario. This analysis concluded that the substitution projects (Green
Line to Union Square and Medford Hillside, Fairmont Line Improvements,
and Additional Parking) results in reductions of 435 kilograms per day
of Carbon Monoxide (CO), 11 kilograms per day of Nitrogen Oxides
(NOX), and 17 kilograms of Volatile Organic Compounds (VOC)
over the no-build baseline. The package of transit projects are
estimated to result in emission reductions in 2025 of 149% CO, 137.5%
NOX and 154% VOC of the original SIP-approved projects,
which are in excess of the 110% emission reduction required by
subsection (5)(f) of the amended transit system improvements
regulation. For all three pollutants, CO, NOX and VOC [MA
DEP's regulations refers to hydrocarbon emissions (VOC) as non-methane
hydrocarbons--NMHC], MA DEP's requirement of 110% threshold is met.
Please see Table 1 ``EOT Air Quality Analysis Comparison of Project
Packages Benefits in the Year 2025,'' below.
[[Page 62425]]
Table 1.--EOT Air Quality Analysis Comparison of Project Packages Benefits in the Year 2025
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daily emission benefits in kilograms (kg.)
--------------------------------------------
Volatile
Carbon Nitrogen organic
monoxide oxides (NOX) compounds
(CO) (VOC)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SIP Approved Projects (Package):
Arborway Restoration, Green Line Extension to Ball Square/Tufts 292 8 11
University, and Blue Line/Red Line Connection (Bowdoin Station
to Charles Station)...........................................
SIP Approved Projects (Package) Plus Ten Percent................... 321.2 8.8 12.1
Replacement/Substitution Projects (Package):
Green Line to Union Square and Medford Hillside, Fairmont Line 435 11 17
Improvements, and Additional Parking..........................
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Criteria for Approving Amendments to the Transit System
Improvements Regulation Into the SIP
EPA's role is to approve state choices, provided that they meet the
criteria of the Clean Air Act. An adequate SIP revision is one that
meets the Clean Air Act's requirement under section 110(l) that a SIP
revision must not interfere with attainment and maintenance of national
ambient air quality standards (NAAQSs). The Commonwealth has
flexibility to revise SIP-approved transportation control measures
(TCMs), provided the revisions are consistent with attaining and
maintaining compliance with the NAAQSs. In addition, the Safe,
Accountable, Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy
For Users (SAFETEA-LU) section 6011(d) amended the Clean Air Act by
adding a new section 176(c)(8) that establishes specific criteria and
procedures for replacing TCMs in an existing approved SIP with new TCMs
and adding TCMs to an approved SIP. As discussed below, MA DEP's
Regulation does not need to comply with all elements of section
176(c)(8) to be approvable as a SIP revision, but it must not conflict
with any of those elements.
The Federal executive policy on environmental justice is
established by Executive Order (EO) 12898, ``Federal Actions to Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations,'' (59 FR 7629 (Feb. 16, 1994)). Its main provision directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent practicable and permitted by
law, to make environmental justice part of their mission by identifying
and addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects of their programs, policies, and
activities on minority populations and low-income populations in the
United States. Here the Clean Air Act directs EPA to approve a SIP
revision unless it does not meet the Act's requirements. Although the
Act does not provide EPA the authority to modify the Commonwealths'
regulatory decision solely on the basis of environmental justice
considerations, EPA continues to encourage EOT to consider
environmental justice concerns when deciding the location of the
additional Park and Ride spaces and the new stations along the
Fairmount commuter rail line and the Green Line extension project. EPA
also urges EOT and DEP to consider environmental justice concerns when
deciding whether to meet project deadlines, to approve proposals for
project delays, and to approve offset or substitute projects.
V. Transportation Control Measure (TCM) Substitution and SAFETEA-LU
Clean Air Act section 176(c)(8), added by SAFETEA-LU, establishes
the procedures for ensuring that substitute TCMs provide equal or
greater emissions reductions than the TCMs that are being replaced. It
also establishes the process for EPA and state air agency concurrence
on the substitution or addition of TCM projects. Finally, it ensures
that the state and EPA maintain up-to-date information on the TCMs in
approved SIPs so that the public is aware of the TCMs that are to be
implemented. EPA and U.S. Department of Transportation (DOT) issued
joint guidance on February 14, 2006, on the implementation of all of
the Clean Air Act amendments made by SAFETEA-LU. This guidance
clarified EPA and DOT expectations for how TCM substitutions and
additions are to be carried out by state and local agencies. The
guidance is available at https://www.epa.gov/otaq/stateresources/
transconf/420b06901.pdf.\1\
_____________________________________-
\1\ EPA has proposed regulations to implement SAFETEA-LU, but
specifically declined to propose regulations addressing section
176(c)(8), finding that the statute is already sufficiently detailed
and that the EPA/DOT guidance would address questions that might
arise about TCM substitutions. (72 FR 24472, 24485-24486; May 2,
2007).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As explained in the guidance, section 176(c)(8) applies directly to
any TCM substitution made in a SIP, whether or not the SIP already
includes a substitution mechanism designed by a state and approved by
EPA. The section does not eliminate the requirement to comply with any
such substitution procedures in a SIP, even if the state includes
requirements that go beyond the minimum elements required under section
176(c)(8). Correspondingly, complying with the substitution process in
the SIP does not eliminate the requirement to meet all the elements of
the process laid out in section 176(c)(8). In the unlikely event there
is a conflict between section 176(c)(8) and the SIP substitution
process, the substitution must comply with section 176(c)(8). See EPA/
DOT Guidance at pages 20-21, section 5.2.
Therefore, for the purposes of this SIP approval, EPA must
determine whether any element of the MA DEP Transit System Improvements
Regulation conflicts with section 176(c)(8). EPA sees no conflict
between the requirements of the MA DEP Regulation and section
176(c)(8). There are provisions in the MA DEP Regulation that go beyond
the requirements of section 176(c)(8), such as the requirement to
demonstrate that the substitution achieves an extra 10% emissions
reduction beyond that achieved by the projects being replaced or the
specific geographic limits on substitute projects. But EPA has found no
instance in which complying with the MA DEP regulation would result in
a conflict with or violate any corresponding requirement of section
176(c)(8).
In addition, EPA must work with MA DEP to ensure that any
requirements in section 176(c)(8) that are not addressed in its
Regulation will be met. There appear to be two requirements in
[[Page 62426]]
section 176(c)(8) that are not provided for in the MA DEP Regulation.
First, in addition to the state air pollution control agency,
section 176(c)(8)(A)(v) specifically requires both the MPO and EPA to
concur with the equivalency of the substitute TCM before the
substitution can take effect. On May 3, 2007, Massachusetts Secretary
of Transportation, Bernard Cohen, submitted EOT's air quality modeling
analysis for the substitution projects to MA DEP. This analysis
demonstrates that the required emission reductions set forth in section
7.36(8) of the Regulation will be achieved by the new projects. All
that remains is for the MPO to submit evidence to EPA that the MPO
concurs in that analysis. For EPA's concurrence on the substitutions
included in this SIP revision, the Agency will send a letter,
contemporaneous with our final action on this SIP revision, to document
EPA's concurrence on the substitutions being approved with the
revisions to MA DEP's regulation.\2\ For any future substitutions, EPA
will work with MA DEP to coordinate EPA's review with DEP's review of
the proposed substitution so that the substitution can take effect as a
matter of federal law if both DEP and EPA approve it.
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\2\ Both the authority to approve this SIP revision and the
authority to concur on TCM substitutions under section 176(c)(8)
have been delegated to the Regional Administrator. See EPA
Delegations of Authority Nos. 7-10 (Approval/Disapproval of State
Implementation Plans) and 7-158 (Transportation Control Measure
Substitutions and Additions). Note that while EPA is using an
informal rulemaking to act on this proposed SIP revision, we are not
interpreting section 176(c)(8)(A)(v) to require a rulemaking to
accomplish EPA's concurrence. See EPA/DOT Guidance at page 27,
section 5.17. Indeed, section 176(c)(8) was added to the Act
precisely to avoid the need for a full SIP revision to implement TCM
substitutions in the routine case. In this instance, where the TCM
substitution is occurring as part of a proposed SIP revision, EPA is
simply acting on the SIP in a rulemaking under section 110 of the
Act contemporaneous with any concurrence on the substitution in a
letter to MA DEP under section 176(c)(8) of the Act.
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Second, section 176(c)(8) now requires all substitutions of TCM's
to be submitted to EPA for incorporation into the codification of the
SIP. For the purposes of the substitutions provided for in the
revisions of the Regulation, EPA is proposing that any codification
that results from our final action on this SIP revision will address
this requirement. For future substitutions, although the Regulation
does not specifically require MA DEP to forward to EPA the results of
MA DEP's substitution determinations, it should be a routine matter for
MA DEP to submit any substitution it approves under section 7.36(5)(h)
so that the federally approved SIP can accurately reflect the current
requirements under the Regulation.
EPA's review of Massachusetts' SIP Revision indicates the
amendments to the SIP-approved Massachusetts Transit System
Improvements, with substitution projects and changes to projects
timelines, adequately demonstrate continued emission reductions and do
not relax current provisions in the SIP. EPA is proposing to approve
the Massachusetts SIP revision for Transit System Improvements, which
was submitted on December 13, 2006, and supplemented on June 1,
2007.\3\ EPA is soliciting public comments on the issues discussed in
this notice or on other relevant matters. These comments will be
considered before taking final action. Interested parties may
participate in the Federal rulemaking procedure by submitting written
comments to the EPA New England Regional Office listed in the ADDRESSES
section of this Federal Register.
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\3\ In addition, EPA is planning to concur pursuant to section
176(c)(8) that the substitute TCM's achieve equivalent or greater
emission reductions than the measures being replaced.
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VI. Proposed Action
EPA is proposing to approve Massachusetts' amendments to Transit
System Improvements Regulation, 310 CMR 7.36, and Definition
Regulation, 310 CMR 7.00 (which were filed with the Massachusetts
Secretary of State on November 16, 2006 and were effective on December
1, 2006,) as a revision to the Massachusetts SIP. EPA finds that the
transit measures in the revised transit system improvements regulation
remain directionally sound and that all proposed substitution projects
identified in the Regulation will collectively contribute to achieving
the national ambient air quality standard for ozone and maintaining the
carbon monoxide standard, thereby satisfying requirements set forth in
Section 110(l) of the Clean Air Act.
VII. 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), because it 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), or Executive Order 12898
``Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in Minority
Populations and Low-Income Populations,'' because it approves a state
rule implementing a Federal standard.
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
[[Page 62427]]
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Intergovernmental relations, Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate
matter, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Volatile organic
compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: October 25, 2007.
Robert W. Varney,
Regional Administrator, EPA New England.
[FR Doc. E7-21691 Filed 11-2-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P