Approval and Promulgation of Air Quality Implementation Plans; Massachusetts; Amendment to Massachusetts' State Implementation Plan for Transit System Improvements, 44654-44663 [E8-17595]
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 148 / Thursday, July 31, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
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[FR Doc. E8–17557 Filed 7–30–08; 8:45 am]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R01–OAR–2006–1018; A–1–FRL–
8691–5]
Approval and Promulgation of Air
Quality Implementation Plans;
Massachusetts; Amendment to
Massachusetts’ State Implementation
Plan for Transit System Improvements
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The EPA is approving 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 requirements for
interim emission reduction offsets in the
event a project becomes delayed,
modifies the project substitution
process, revises the list of required
transit projects, and expands public
participation in and oversight of the
projects. The intended effect of this
action is to substitute specific transit
projects and 1,000 park and ride spaces
to replace certain transit projects
currently approved into the SIP, and
approve modifications to the delay and
substitution procedures for transit
projects. This action is being taken
under the Clean Air Act.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is
effective on July 31, 2008.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket
Identification Number EPA–R01–OAR–
2006–1018. All documents in the docket
are listed on the https://
www.regulations.gov Web site. 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 through https://
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the 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 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., excluding legal holidays.
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Copies of the documents relevant to
this action are also available for public
inspection during normal business
hours, by appointment at the Bureau of
Waste Prevention, 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,’’ or ’’our’’ is used, we mean
EPA.
Organization of this document: We
are providing the following outline to
aid in locating information in this
preamble.
I. Background and Purpose
II. Response to Comments
III. Compliance With Clean Air Act TCM
Substitution Requirements
IV. Final Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background and Purpose
On November 5, 2007 (72 FR 62422–
62427), EPA published a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPR) for the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The
NPR proposed approval of
Massachusetts’ amendments to its
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 proposed to
find 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 (CAA or Act).
On December 13, 2006, the
Massachusetts Department of
Environmental Protection (MA DEP)
submitted its formal SIP revision
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
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December 21, 2005. On June 1, 2007,
MA DEP supplemented its SIP revision
with a letter determining that the
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 EOT
to address this issue on the record at its
upcoming September 6, 2007 public
status report 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
plan 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.
On January 4, 2008, EOT submitted
copies of its ‘‘State Implementation
Plan—Transit Commitments, 2007
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Annual Status Report, Agency
Responses to Public Comments’’ to MA
DEP and EPA. EOT’s submittal provided
a summary of and responses to public
comments, a written certification that
the public process requirements were
met, and a written certification that
complete information was provided on
any actual or known project delays,
project substitutions, and interim
offsets. MA DEP determined that EOT
met the public process and other
requirements of 310 CMR 7.36(7)(d) by
letter on March 4, 2008.
The Arborway Restoration, the Blue
Line/Red Line connection, and the
Green Line extension to Ball Square/
Tufts University which were approved
into the Massachusetts SIP on October
4, 1994 (59 FR 50495–50498), will be
substituted with the Fairmount Line
commuter rail improvements, 1,000 new
park and ride parking spaces (serving
MBTA transit and commuter rail in the
Metropolitan Boston Area), and the
Green Line transit line extension to
Medford Hillside with a spur to Union
Square. Air quality modeling
demonstrates that the substitution
projects will achieve a minimum of
110% of the emissions reductions that
would have been achieved if the
original projects had been built. In
addition to the substitution of transit
projects, EPA is today approving the
other specific requirements of
Massachusetts’ amendments to the
Transit System Improvements
Regulation. The rationale for EPA’s
proposed action to approve those
amendments is explained in the NPR
and will not be restated here.
II. Response to Comments
EPA received twenty-three public
comments on our proposal to amend
Massachusetts’ Transit System
Improvements Regulation (Transit
Regulation). Copies of the public
comments have been placed in the
public docket without change and are
available online at www.regulations.gov,
docket number EPA–R01–OAR–2006–
1018, document number EPA–R01–
OAR–2006–1018–0022 through EPA–
R01–OAR–2006–1018–0044. EPA’s full
Technical Support Document—
Response to Comments is also available
in the public docket, as well as at the
Regional Office.
Comment: A number of commenters
supported the transit system
improvement projects. Six commenters
supported all of the transit system
improvement projects, three
commenters expressed strong support
for the Fairmount Line; two commenters
supported the Green Line Extension;
and one commenter supported the
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Design of Red Line/Blue Line
Connector.
EPA Response: EPA acknowledges the
commenters’ support for the transit
system improvement projects.
Comment: Three commenters wanted
the transit system improvement projects
originally approved into the SIP in 1994
to be implemented without any
substitutions or changes.
EPA Response: As a threshold matter,
EPA notes that nothing in our approval
of these revisions to the Transit
Regulation into the SIP in any way
prevents the Commonwealth from
completing the projects originally
included in the regulation as EPA
approved it in 1994. Although the
projects are being dropped from the SIPapproved Transit Regulation, if any of
the projects have merit, the
Commonwealth’s transportation
planning process may include them in
the statewide transportation
improvement program. The only
question before EPA is whether
Massachusetts has the option of revising
the set of projects to which it will attach
the specific requirements under the
CAA that come when transit measures
are specifically required in a SIP.
EPA does not underestimate the
importance of a state’s decision to drop
transit projects from a SIP. EPA’s
approval of this SIP revision will have
the effect of eliminating the requirement
under the CAA to complete the projects
dropped from the regulation. That
requirement allowed direct enforcement
of the project deadlines pursuant to
state law and sections 113 or 304 of the
Act. The SIP mandate for these projects
also required the Commonwealth to
demonstrate in the conformity process
under section 176(c) of the Act that
Massachusetts’ transportation plan and
transportation improvement program
supported and would not interfere with
completion of those projects. EPA agrees
that these compliance mechanisms
provide an incentive to complete SIPapproved transit projects.
But precisely because the decision to
incorporate transit projects into a SIP is
a significant commitment, subject to
compliance mechanisms under the Act,
a state should only include in its SIP
those transit projects to which it is
clearly committed. And the state is in
the best position to determine the mix
of transit measures that best meets the
state’s transit and air quality goals and
that merits this high level of
commitment. Accordingly, the Act
assigns to EPA a limited role in
reviewing a state’s choice of transit
measures. Essentially, EPA is required
to approve a SIP revision if it meets the
basic requirements of the Act, most
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importantly in this case that the
substitute transit projects will achieve
equivalent or greater emissions
reductions than the projects to be
replaced. See CAA section
176(c)(8)(A)(i).
Below in Table 1 is a summary of
EOT’s March 2007 Modeling Analysis
for daily air quality emission benefits
from the original 1994 SIP-approved
transit system improvement projects, as
well as the new transit system
improvement projects. EPA has
reviewed the modeling analysis report
and concurs in the air quality benefits
attributed to the transit system
improvement projects. EPA addresses
EOT’s modeling analysis and air quality
benefits in several of EPA’s responses to
comments below.
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 .......................................................................................................
The action before EPA is to approve
or reject the Commonwealth’s transit
project substitution as part of the
Commonwealth’s revision to its Transit
System Improvements regulations 310
CMR 7.36. Approval of the changes to
the Transit System Improvements
regulation including the substitute
transit projects into the SIP extends
federal-enforcement to the design,
construction and in most cases
operation of the transit projects. The fact
that a project is not specifically
approved into a SIP does not affect the
Commonwealth’s ability to include a
transit project in its transportation plan
process, seek future federal-funding or
undertake a specific transit as a state
initiative funded by State, City, public
or private funding.
Indeed, outside the context of the
Act’s SIP process, there are several signs
of activity in connection with the
projects or project areas that will no
longer be subject to a SIP mandate. On
November 15, 2007, Ian A. Bowles,
Secretary of Massachusetts Executive
Office of Energy and Environmental
Affairs, determined that the Red Line/
Blue Line Connector (EEA Number
14101) requires the preparation of a
mandatory Environmental Impact
Report (EIR) initiating the
Commonwealth’s Massachusetts
Environmental Policy Act for the
proposed project. And in the Transit
Settlement Agreement that resolved the
case Conservation Law Foundation v.
Romney et al., Civil Action No. 05–
10487–NG, is the following statement:
‘‘The parties agree that they will work
in good faith with the City of Boston
and other relevant parties to develop
and agree upon recommended public
transportation improvements to the
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Arborway corridor over the course of
the next year. All Parties agree to
commit to and participate in a public
process to identify and recommend any
agreed upon improvements for the
Arborway Corridor.’’ (The settlement
agreement dated November 28, 2006 is
available at
https://www.clf.org/uploadedFiles/
Transit_settlement_signed
_Jan2007.pdf.) EPA encourages all
parties involved to fully implement this
agreement.
Comment: Two commenters requested
EPA reject EOT’s request to remove the
Arborway project from the SIP.
EPA Response: The Commonwealth
has flexibility to revise SIP-approved
transportation control measures (TCMs),
provided the revisions are consistent
with attaining and maintaining
compliance with the national ambient
air quality standards (NAAQSs). This
flexibility to substitute projects follows
the intent of the Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity
Act: A Legacy For Users (SAFETEA–
LU). Section 6011(d) of SAFETEA–LU
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.
The action before EPA is to approve
or reject the Commonwealth’s transit
project substitution as part of the
Commonwealth’s revision to its Transit
System Improvements regulation 310
CMR 7.36. Under the Clean Air Act, the
EPA Administrator is required to
approve a SIP submission that complies
with the provisions of the Act and
applicable Federal regulations. 42
U.S.C. 7410(k)(3); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
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Nitrogen oxides
(NOX)
Volatile organic
compounds
(VOC)
8
8.8
11
12.1
292
321.2
435
11
17
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions,
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the Clean Air Act. Here, DEP’s SIP
submission meets all the requirements
of the Act, specifically the elements in
section 176(c)(8) for substituting TCMs,
including a demonstration that the new
TCMs achieve emissions reductions
equivalent to the projects being
substituted.
Comment: Three commenters objected
to the substitution of the Red Line/Blue
Line Connector with a commitment only
to design the connector but dropping
the SIP commitment to construct the
project. Four commenters supported the
construction of the Red Line/Blue Line
Connector and outlined benefits of
constructing and operating the Red
Line/Blue Line Connector.
EPA Response: EPA is aware of the
merits and benefits of the operation of
the Red Line/Blue Line Connector. EPA
acknowledges the commenters’ support
for construction of the Red Line Blue
Line Connector by 2014. However, the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts has
taken advantage of the flexibility
provided under the Clean Air Act to
revise SIP-approved TCMs, provided the
revisions are consistent with attaining
and maintaining compliance with the
NAAQSs. Here, the Commonwealth has
decided to drop the commitment to
construct the Connector as part of a
larger package of substitute projects
designed to achieve an equivalent
emission reduction. Again, this
flexibility to substitute projects follows
the requirements of the new Clean Air
Act section 176(c)(8) that establishes
specific criteria and procedures for
replacing TCMs in an existing approved
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SIP with new TCMs and adding TCMs
to an approved SIP.
Comment: Eight commenters wanted
EPA to enforce the transit system
improvement project deadlines. One
commenter supported a two year delay
of the Medford Green Line Extension,
asserting that completion of the transit
project by 2014 was optimistic.
EPA Response: EPA concurs in the
need for an enforceable deadline for the
transit system improvement projects.
EPA’s approval of Massachusetts’
Transit System Improvements
regulation into the SIP will make the
design, construction and operation
deadlines in the Commonwealth’s
regulation federally-enforceable. In
addition, transportation air quality
conformity determinations required by
section 176(c) of the Clean Air Act will
require the Boston Metropolitan
Planning Organization as well as the
U.S. Department of Transportation to
make a positive finding that all SIPapproved transportation control
measures are being implemented in a
timely manner and in accordance with
established SIP deadlines (40 CFR
93.113) prior to approving the long
range transportation plans and
transportation improvement programs
for Eastern Massachusetts.
EPA notes that in at least one respect,
the compliance deadlines provided for
in this new version of 310 CMR 7.36 are
more firm than the deadlines in the
version EPA approved in 1994. The
original ‘‘Project Delays and Project
Deadline Extensions,’’ (310 CMR 7.36
(3)) previously approved into the SIP
allowing up to three years delay in
project completion has been removed.
In further support of the 2014
completion date for the Green Line
Extension, the Massachusetts Executive
Office of Transportation and Public
Works (EOTPW) has committed to make
up delays in the Green Line Extension
Project, associated with seeking federal
funding and addressing federal
requirements, to the maximum extent
possible.
Comment: Four commenters
requested enhancements to the transit
system improvement projects. One
Commenter raised concerns with a
transit system improvement project’s
impact on transportation, environment,
social and economic impacts and lack of
community involvement. Two
commenters wanted alternatives to the
Green Line extension to be evaluated,
while another commenter wanted more
specificity in the broad terms of the
regulation providing for the Green Line
extension terminus station.
EPA Response: EPA acknowledges the
commenters’ support for the transit
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system improvement projects. EPA must
accept the transit system improvement
projects as presented, or reject the
Transit Project substitutions, based on
the Act’s criteria established for
approving SIPs (i.e., substitution
projects must provide for equivalent
emissions reductions in the same time
frame). EPA has no authority to dictate
specific enhancements to any of the
proposed transit project substitutions.
However, EPA believes the submitted
projects could be enhanced during the
public participation process associated
with the Commonwealth’s state
environmental process and design of the
transit measure.
The action before EPA is to approve
or reject the Commonwealth’s transit
project substitution as part of the
Commonwealth’s revision to its Transit
System Improvements regulation 310
CMR 7.36. The concerns raised by the
commenters regarding transportation,
environmental, social and economic
impacts of the Green Line Extension
project should be addressed and
mitigated during the Commonwealth’s
state environmental process. See MGL c.
30 § 61–62 and regulations, 301 CMR
11.00. And should the Green Line
Expansion Project receive federal
funding, these concerns may also be
addressed under any future federal
environmental review and public
participation process conducted in
accordance with the National
Environmental Policy Act. 42 U.S.C.
4321–4370f.
Comment: Two commenters wanted
Massachusetts EOT to specify the
location of the 1,000 park and ride
locations, and identify an
implementation schedule.
EPA Response: The Park and Ride
provisions in section 7.36 provide that
before December 31, 2011, construction
shall be completed and 1,000 new park
and ride parking spaces opened to full
public use serving commuter transit
facilities within the 101 cities and
towns constituting the Boston
Metropolitan Planning Organization.
These park and ride facilities are subject
to ‘‘Project Interim Deadlines,’’
established under 310 CMR 7.36(3),
which identifies timeframes for hiring a
design consultant, completing a
conceptual design, filing an
Environmental Notification Form (ENF)
with MEPA, completing the
Environmental Impact Report,
completing final design, applying for
necessary permits and funding, and
proceeding to construction. Therefore,
there is still considerable work to be
done before the specific location of
these lots can be determined.
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EPA agrees with the commenters that
it is impossible to fully assess the
emissions reductions that these 1,000
spaces will accomplish without
knowing where they will be located.
And EPA recognizes that the individual
transit substitution projects will
undergo project refinement as these
projects proceed through environmental
evaluation, public participation and
project design. Nevertheless, EPA has
concluded that the uncertainty about
the location of these parking spaces
does not prevent EPA from approving
the entire package of transit project
substitutions. First, the package of new
transit projects demonstrates equivalent
emissions reductions to the substituted
projects even if one were to eliminate
entirely any credit for the lots.
Therefore, EPA does not believe that
EOT’s inability to specify the location of
these lots provides EPA a basis to
disapprove this SIP revision. Second,
EPA has reviewed the assumptions EOT
made about the park and ride lots in
modeling their emissions impact. EPA
agrees that EOT made reasonably
conservative assumptions in assigning
any emissions reductions value to the
lots.
Comment: Four commenters repeated
modeling questions and concerns
previously addressed through the
Commonwealth’s public participation
process.
EPA Response: These questions and
concerns were raised during the
Commonwealth’s approval of the
revised Transit System Improvements
regulations. Based on EPA’s review of
the Commonwealth’s Response to
Comments as well as EOT’s Response to
Public Comments identified during the
public participation process on the
Transit Commitments 2007 Annual
Status Report, EPA believes the
commenters’ concerns have been
adequately addressed.
The March 15, 2007, ‘‘Description of
Modeling Assumptions and Analysis
Methodology for the State
Implementation Plan Transit
Commitment Projects Current and
Proposed Substitutions,’’ prepared by
the Central Transportation Planning
Staff is consistent with methodology
and assumptions used in developing the
SIP and developing the long range
transportation plans and transportation
improvement program. It is also
consistent with the methodology and
assumptions used in the transportation
conformity process to determine that
transportation planning is consistent
with the air quality plan for the SIP.
EPA recognizes that the transit
substitution projects will continuously
undergo refinement as they proceed
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through the environmental development
phase and project design phase;
however, EPA has determined the
current project delineation to be
sufficient in defining the project and for
air quality evaluation.
Comment: One of the commenters
submitted a number of modeling issues
regarding the Green Line Arborway
Restoration Project that were previously
submitted during the Commonwealth’s
public participation process.
EPA Response: These Arborway
modeling concerns were addressed in a
June 27, 2005 Central Transportation
Planning Staff memorandum from Karl
Quackenbush and Scott Peterson to
Dennis DiZoglio and Joe Cosgrove of the
Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority, as
well as addressed in EOT’s ‘‘Summary
of Comments Received on Modeling
Analysis for Proposed Substitute State
Implementation Plan Transit Projects
and Agency Responses’’ dated May 3,
2007.
EPA concurs with the
Commonwealth’s modeling to evaluate
air quality impacts associated with the
original 1994 SIP-approved transit
improvement projects and the proposed
transit system improvement substitution
projects. EPA did not assign or grant
specific emission reduction credit to the
1994 SIP-approved projects, so to model
the original projects and new
substitution projects on an equal basis is
the only fair way to evaluate potential
air quality emission benefits from the
transit improvement projects.
After review of the transportation and
air quality modeling submitted as part
of the SIP revision package, EPA has
determined that the modeling is
consistent with methodology and
assumptions used in developing the SIP,
consistent with developing the long
range transportation plans and
transportation improvement programs,
as well as consistent with the
methodology and assumptions used in
the transportation conformity process to
determine that transportation planning
is consistent with the air quality
planning for the SIP. See March 2007 reevaluation submitted to EPA June 1,
2007, conducted to satisfy subsection (8)
‘‘Determination of Air Quality Emission
Reductions’’ of the Transit System
Improvements regulation, 310 CMR
7.36; CTPS’s March 15, 2007
‘‘Description of Modeling Assumptions
and Analysis Methodology for the State
Implementation Plan Transit
Commitment Projects Current and
Proposed Substitutions’’; CTPS’s June
16, 2005 Memorandum on ‘‘SIP Transit
Modeling Assumptions’’; and CTPS
Memorandum dated June 27, 2005 on
‘‘Responses to Arborway Comments.’’
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EPA has evaluated the submitted SIP
revision package, including Central
Transportation Planning Staff’s March
15, 2007 ‘‘Description of Modeling
Assumptions and Analysis Methodology
for the State Implementation Plan
Transit Commitment Projects Current
and Proposed Substitutions.’’ EPA
independently concurs with the
Massachusetts Department of
Environmental Protection’s June 1,
2007, determination that the emission
reductions associated with the transit
improvement projects in the revised
State Regulation 310 CMR 7.36 ‘‘Transit
System Improvements’’ will achieve in
excess of the requirement in the state
regulations that the substitute projects
must achieve an emissions reduction of
at least 110 percent of the reductions
that would be expected from eliminated
projects. As presented in Table 1, above,
the reductions expected from the new
projects when compared to the original
SIP-approved projects as a percentage
are for volatile organic compounds
154%, nitrogen oxides 137.5%, and
carbon monoxide 149%.
Comment: Five commenters
expressed their belief that there were no
real substitutions for the Green Line
Extension project. The commenters did
not want further substitutions, and
wanted air quality benefits to remain in
the proposed Green Line Extension
project area which they assert is an
environmental justice area.
EPA Response: The Transit System
Improvements Regulation provides for
substitution of this project at 310 CMR
7.36(5) should the Commonwealth wish
to take advantage of this flexibility in its
regulation in the future. This
substitution procedure for the Green
Line Extension requires Massachusetts
EOT to:
1. Identify the reasons for seeking a
project substitution;
2. Conduct a public participation
process for the substitution process;
3. Achieve interim emission reduction
offsets of non-methane hydrocarbons,
carbon monoxide, and nitrogen oxides;
4. Comply with original project
interim deadlines;
5. Prioritize funding in the long range
transportation plan and transportation
improvement program of the Boston
Metropolitan Planning Organization
(MPO);
6. Require substitute project(s) that
enhance or improve existing public
transit service, or provide new transit
service within the municipalities of
Boston, Cambridge, Somerville, and
Medford;
7. Demonstrate that the proposed
substitute project will achieve 110% of
the emission reductions of that would
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have been achieved had all components
of the original project been completed;
and to require that the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental Protection
determine in writing whether the
substitution requirements of 310 CMR
7.36(5) have been met and whether the
administrative record reasonably
supports EOT’s substitution
determination.
Finally, any future substitution would
have to meet the requirements of CAA
section 176(c)(8), which governs
substitution of transportation control
measures in a SIP. In addition to
concurrence from the state air pollution
control agency as provided by the
substitution provision of the state
regulation, CAA section 176(c)(8) also
requires formal concurrence by the
metropolitan planning organization and
the EPA New England Regional
Administrator to adopt substitute or
additional control measures into the
SIP. The requirements in the CAA
overlap substantially with the
requirements in the new section 7.36.
Indeed, section 7.36 sets a higher hurdle
for emissions reductions than the Act,
requiring not just mere equivalency, but
reductions of at least 110% compared
with the substituted projects.
With respect to a Green Line
Extension substitution transit project
trading off air quality benefits with
other neighborhoods, the regulations
define the geographic area of Boston,
Cambridge, Somerville, and Medford for
Green Line Extension substitution
transit projects. This delineation is more
restrictive than how the CAA requires
EPA to evaluate emissions reductions in
an ozone nonattainment area. As long as
the emissions reductions come from
within the applicable nonattainment
area, in this case Eastern Massachusetts,
they would qualify under the federal
CAA. Here again, the state requirement
in section 7.36 sets a higher bar by
restricting the geographic area for an
allowed substitution to only four
municipalities within the Eastern
Massachusetts nonattainment area.
Comment: One commenter raised the
issue of timely implementation of TCMs
adopted into the SIP.
EPA Response: EPA believes the
Transit System Improvements
regulation, with its defined project
deadlines, interim project deadlines,
and annual public reporting of update
and status of SIP-approved TCMs,
(which is open to public participation
and requires a written determination by
Massachusetts Department of
Environmental Protection whether the
public process and other requirements
of 310 CMR 7.36(7) ‘‘Public Process
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Requirements,’’ were met) will assist in
completing the SIP-approved TCMs on
time.
Transportation conformity is required
under Clean Air Act section 176(c) (42
U.S.C. 7506(c)) to ensure that federally
supported highway and transit project
activities are consistent with (‘‘conform
to’’) the purpose of the SIP. EPA’s
transportation conformity rule
establishes the criteria and procedures
for determining whether transportation
activities conform to the SIP. One
criterion established at 40 CFR 93.113 is
that all SIP-approved transportation
control measures are being implemented
in a timely manner and in accordance
with established SIP deadlines. EPA
believes the conformity process will
ensure the timely implementation of
these TCMs.
If a SIP-approved TCM identified in
the transportation improvement
program does fall behind schedule, a
positive conformity determination can
still be made in accordance with 40 CFR
93.113 if:
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(1) * * * The MPO and DOT have
determined that past obstacles to
implementation of the TCMs have been
identified and have been or are being
overcome, and that all State and local
agencies with influence over approvals or
funding for TCMs are giving maximum
priority to approval or funding of TCMs over
other projects within their control, including
projects in locations outside the
nonattainment or maintenance area.
(2) If TCMs in the applicable
implementation plan have previously been
programmed for Federal funding but the
funds have not been obligated and the TCMs
are behind the schedule in the
implementation plan, then the transportation
improvement program (TIP) cannot be found
to conform if the funds intended for those
TCMs are reallocated to projects in the TIP
other than TCMs, or if there are no other
TCMs in the TIP, if the funds are reallocated
to projects in the TIP other than projects
which are eligible for Federal funding
intended for air quality improvement
projects, e.g., the Congestion Mitigation and
Air Quality Improvement Program.
(3) Nothing in the TIP may interfere with
the implementation of any TCM in the
applicable implementation plan.
See 40 CFR 93.113(c).
Comment: Two commenters
expressed concern that past
transportation air quality conformity
evaluations did not adequately address
timely implementation of TCMs.
EPA Response: EPA is finalizing an
action to approve a TCM substitution
and revisions to the Massachusetts
Transit System Improvements
regulation. EPA is not re-evaluating past
transportation conformity
determinations. The timely
implementation of the substitute TCMs
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will be evaluated in future
transportation conformity
determinations to ensure that the
requirements of Clean Air Act section
176(c)(2)(B) and 176(c)(3)(A)(ii) and the
transportation conformity rule (49 CFR
93.113) are satisfied.
Comment: A commenter claimed that
the air quality benefit associated with
the substituted transit projects ignores
the fact that the 1990 Conservation Law
Foundation (CLF) Agreement and EPA
intervention were intended to
complement the parking restrictions in
and near downtown Boston.
EPA Response: While the
metropolitan Boston parking freezes
complement traffic reduction strategies,
the approval of the proposed transit
improvement substitution projects is
independent of the parking freezes, in
the sense that nothing in the Act,
including section 176(c)(8), requires
EPA to link one set of TCMs with
another. Admittedly, if the success of
the state’s proffered TCM substitutions
relied heavily on the enforcement of
TCMs that the state was not prepared to
make part of the SIP, EPA would need
to consider whether it could credit the
substitute TCMs with the level of
reduction the state was assuming from
their combined effect with the TCMs
outside the SIP. Here, however, the
relevant parking freezes are part of the
SIP, and DEP has not abandoned the use
of parking freeze requirements as part of
the strategy included in its SIP.
Therefore that question is not before
EPA.
EPA has approved Parking Freezes for
Cambridge, Downtown Boston, South
Boston, East Boston and Logan Airport.
Since the 1994 adoption of the transit
system improvement projects into the
SIP, EPA has approved the South
Boston Parking Freeze and amended the
East Boston/Logan Parking Freeze.
On October 15, 1996, EPA approved
the South Boston Parking Freeze SIP
Amendment as a revision to the
Massachusetts SIP (61 FR 53628).
Massachusetts Air Pollution Control
Regulation 310 CMR 7.33 entitled ‘‘City
of Boston/South Boston Parking
Freeze,’’ established and requires the
Boston Air Pollution Control
Commission (BAPCC) and the
Massachusetts Port Authority
(MassPort) to control the growth of
parking spaces in the South Boston
neighborhood of Boston. The effect of
controlling parking growth is
anticipated to be a decrease in vehicle
miles traveled (VMT), thereby holding
automobile usage to levels within the
practical capacity of the local street
network.
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44659
On March 12, 2001, EPA approved
revisions to the Massachusetts Port
Authority/Logan Airport Parking Freeze,
310 CMR 7.30, and City of Boston/East
Boston Parking Freeze, 310 CMR 7.31,
into the Massachusetts SIP (66 FR
14318). The revisions allow the
Commonwealth to automatically
approve the transfer of parking spaces
from the East Boston Parking Freeze to
the Logan Parking Freeze provided the
total parking space inventory number
for the Logan Parking Freeze remains at
or below 21,790 parking spaces. Future
modifications in the parking freeze
inventories for the Logan Airport and
East Boston Parking Freezes will be
regulated by the Commonwealth’s
revisions to Massachusetts State
Regulations 310 CMR 7.30 and 310 CMR
7.31.
Comment: A commenter stated that
the SIP substitution proposal shifts the
responsibility to enforce the
Environmental Justice Executive Order
from EPA, the Federal agency required
to comply with the Executive Order, to
the state. Another commenter identified
Jamaica Plain, served by the Green Line
Arborway Restoration Project, as an
environmental justice neighborhood
with a high asthma hospitalization rate
among children under age 5 (11.1 per
1,000).
EPA Response: It is not this SIP
revision, but rather the structure of the
CAA as Congress designed it, that rests
consideration of environmental justice
issues here primarily with the state.
Under the Clean Air Act, the
Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the
provisions of the Act and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C.
7410(k)(3); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in
reviewing SIP submissions, EPA’s role
is to approve state choices, provided
that they meet the criteria of the Clean
Air Act. Accordingly, this action merely
approves state law as meeting Federal
requirements and does not impose
additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. For that reason,
this action does not provide EPA with
the discretionary authority to address,
as appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
‘‘Federal Actions to Address
Environmental Justice in Minority
Populations and Low-Income
Populations,’’ (59 FR 7629, February 16,
1994).
The Federal executive policy on
environmental justice is established by
Executive Order 12898. Its main
provision directs federal agencies, to the
greatest extent practicable and
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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
Commonwealth’s 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 and when implementing public
transportation improvements to the
Arborway corridor promised in the
Transit Settlement Agreement that
resolved the case Conservation Law
Foundation v. Romney et al., Civil
Action No. 05–10487–NG. EPA believes
the transit improvement substitution
projects can be enhanced and additional
consideration be given to minority
populations and low-income
populations during the public
participation process associated with
the environmental evaluation phase and
engineering design phase of the transit
measures. 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.
Comment: One commenter identified
the Commonwealth’s transit
substitutions as contrary to the
Commonwealth’s financial interests and
claimed that restoring the Arborway
Green Line would result in significant
operating cost savings. Another
commenter questioned whether the
Commonwealth had accurately
compared the relative costs of
constructing and operating the Red-Blue
Line connector with the proposed
substitute projects.
EPA Response: The CAA assigns to
the state the responsibility for assessing
the cost implications of SIP measures.
Indeed, EPA has no authority to
disapprove a SIP revision solely because
the Agency might disagree with the
cost-effectiveness of a state’s chosen
control strategy. See Union Electric Co.
v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246 (1976), rehearing
denied 429 U.S. 873 (1976).
Massachusetts EOT’s position in
responding to this issue during the state
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public participation process is that the
restoration of Green Line Arborway
service is not a cost-effective way to
achieve the desired transportation and
air quality benefits. Correspondingly,
the CAA provides EPA no basis for
disapproving this SIP revision even if
EPA did not agree with the
Commonwealth’s weighing of the costs
of the Red-Blue Line connector with the
substitute projects.
Comment: Two commenters stated
that particulate matter impacts are
particularly harmful and expressed
concern about the particulate matter and
other emissions from diesel trains used
on the Fairmount/Indigo Line.
EPA Response: The Massachusetts
transit system improvement projects
were originally approved into the SIP in
1994 as control strategies for carbon
monoxide and ozone (control of
precursors volatile organic compounds
and nitrogen oxides), but no emission
credits were assigned to these projects.
EPA has also established National
Ambient Air Quality Standards for
Particulate Matter (PM10—Particles less
than 10 micrometers in diameter, and
PM2.5—Particles less than 2.5
micrometers in diameter and referred to
as ‘‘fine’’ particles). Currently air quality
monitoring within the Boston
Metropolitan area indicates attainment
of the PM10 annual standard, as well as
the PM2.5 annual and 24-hour standards.
As such, the area is not subject to the
CAA conformity requirements for
particulate matter.
EPA supports the Commonwealth’s
on-going efforts to reduce particulate
matter from mobile sources through the
use of lower sulfur fuel, alternative
fuels, and retrofits for diesel equipment
and vehicles including construction
equipment and school buses.
Comment: One commenter looking at
an earlier version of the air quality
modeling analysis stated that ‘‘Attempts
to deduce the benefits of the
incremental extension of the Green
Line, by subtracting the benefits claimed
for the new Green Line extension from
the benefits attributable to the Existing
SIP Commitments, yield an incredible
result: by increasing the number of
stations by three, nitrogen oxides (NOX)
benefits increase nearly 300 percent and
hydrocarbon (HC) benefits increase by
nearly 400 percent. This result strains
credulity and requires far more detailed
background to justify such an
anomalous result.’’
EPA Response: The air quality
modeling submitted with the SIP
revision showed that extending the
Green Line from Tufts University/Ball
Square to Medford Hillside and adding
the Green Line spur to Union Square
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Somerville would add the following
daily emission benefits to the original
Green Line Extension: 7 kilograms of
nitrogen oxides; 12 kilograms of volatile
organic compounds; and 212 kilograms
of carbon monoxide. As a result, the
demonstration submitted to EPA shows
that the extension of the Green Line
project to Medford Hillside and Union
Square accounted for only a 0.025%
increase in emission reduction benefits
for NOX and 0.041% for VOC when
compared to the no-build emissions for
the modeled area. It is more realistic to
compare the marginal emission benefits
for the expanded Green Line extension
alternative with the overall emission
benefits of the entire original Green Line
to Tufts University/Ball Square. EPA
finds these incremental benefits to be
reasonable.
Comment: One commenter raised a
number of concerns about how the
modeling analysis handled assumptions
for the proposed ‘‘West Medford Green
Line extension with a Union Square
spur’’ and the ‘‘Fairmount Commuter
Rail project’’ such as headways, fares,
number of transit stations and transfers.
The commenter asserted that modeling
assumptions would have a significant
impact on the forecast of ridership and
corresponding emissions.
EPA Response: The Central
Transportation Planning Staff (CTPS)
maintains a regional travel demand
model set that is used to measure a
variety of impacts associated with
changes to existing transportation
infrastructure, one of which is air
quality emissions. CTPS’s model set is
continuously improved as newer
information is made available. This
process of updating inputs and methods
has led to several intermediate sets of
results during the process of evaluating
the SIP transit commitments. The
commenter based his concerns on a
review of an early state air quality
modeling analysis and not the final
analysis submitted June 1, 2007 with a
supplement to the December 13, 2006
SIP revision. The March 2007 reevaluation submitted to EPA June 1,
2007, was conducted to satisfy
subsection (8) ‘‘Determination of Air
Quality Emission Reductions’’ of the
Transit System Improvements
regulation, 310 CMR 7.36. Technical
documentation identifying and
explaining the model and modeling
assumptions is addressed in the CTPS’s
March 15, 2007 ‘‘Description of
Modeling Assumptions and Analysis
Methodology for the State
Implementation Plan Transit
Commitment Projects Current and
Proposed Substitutions.’’ Additional
modeling support documents provided
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to EPA as part of the SIP revision
include CTPS’s June 16, 2005
Memorandum on ‘‘SIP Transit Modeling
Assumptions,’’ and a second CTPS
Memorandum dated June 27, 2005 on
‘‘Responses to Arborway Comments.’’
These updates and refinements to the
modeling appear to address the
concerns about fares, number of transit
stations and transfers and represent the
most recent information about and
analysis of the emissions effect of the
project substitutions.
Even with the refinement of the
model and the supporting
documentation, it remained unclear to
EPA how the state’s submittal
responded to a comment concerning
headways, specifically the potential for
three minute headways on the Green
Line Extension when the service from
the two new branches is combined and
travels through the Lechmere Station.
One commenter indicated that the
model’s assumption of three minute
headways was unrealistic. EPA
contacted CTPS and the Massachusetts
Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA)
and learned that the Green Line has
operated in the past on three minute
headways outbound from Government
Center Subway Station as well as
inbound from Lechmere Station. The
MBTA has made structural
improvements to the Lechmere viaduct
to allow 3 (2-car) trains per direction
operating at 25 miles per hour. Finally,
a 1999 operational analysis of the Green
Line showed that within the Lechmere
to Government Center area, the segment
of the Green Line between the North
Station and Haymarket stations serves
as the capacity ‘‘pinch point,’’ with a
maximum number of trains per hour on
this segment of 34. Under the proposed
Green Line Extension operating plan,
the C, D and E Lines on the Green Line
would operate through this pinch point
with 34 trains per hour during the peak
period. Therefore, it does not appear to
be unrealistic that the new service could
operate at three minute headways.
As explained in the response above,
EPA has determined that the modeling
is consistent with methodology and
assumptions used in developing the
State Implementation Plan, consistent
with developing the long range
transportation plans and transportation
improvement programs, as well as
consistent with the methodology and
assumptions used in the transportation
conformity process to determine that
transportation planning is consistent
with the air quality planning for the SIP.
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III. Compliance With Clean Air Act
TCM Substitution Requirements
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 MPO, 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, a copy of which has been placed in
the electronic docket. 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
On June 1, 2007, MA DEP concurred
in EOT’s determination that the
substitute projects achieved at least
equivalent emissions reductions. 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 TCMs 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. In a May 1, 2008 letter to EPA,
the Boston MPO concurred in the
finding that the transit system
improvements projects will achieve
emission benefits equivalent to or
greater than the benefits from the
original transit system improvements
projects being replaced. For EPA’s
concurrence on the substitutions
included in this SIP revision, the
Agency sent a letter to the Boston MPO,
contemporaneous with our final action
on this SIP revision, to document EPA’s
concurrence on the substitutions being
1 EPA issued regulations to implement
SAFETEA–LU, and concluded that no regulations
were needed to implement section 176(c)(8),
because the statute is already sufficiently detailed.
Additionally, EPA/DOT have issued guidance that
addresses questions that might arise about TCM
substitutions. (73 FR 4420–4441; January 24, 2008).
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44661
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.
Section 176(c)(8) now also 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, the
codification that results from the final
action on this SIP revision will address
this requirement. For future
substitutions, although the state
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.
IV. Final Action
EPA is approving 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.
EPA has determined that today’s rule
falls under the ‘‘good cause’’ exemption
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, section
176(c)(8)(A)(v) does not 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 its concurrence on the
substitution in a letter to the Boston MPO under
section 176(c)(8) of the Act.
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in section 553(d)(3) of the
Administrative Procedures Act (APA)
which, upon finding ‘‘good cause,’’
allows an agency to make a rule
effective immediately (thereby avoiding
the 30-day delayed effective date
otherwise provided for in the APA).
EPA has concluded that it is not
necessary to delay the effectiveness of
this rule for 30 days because the entities
that will be directly affected by the
transit system improvements regulation
have had ample notice of the
requirements in the regulation, and they
wish to use the substitute transit
projects as soon as possible in the
conformity process under the Clean Air
Act. First, the requirements of the
transit system improvements regulation
have been effective as a matter of state
law since December 1, 2006. Therefore,
it is unnecessary to wait an additional
thirty days to make the regulation
federally enforceable, because the
entities subject to the regulation have
already had ample time to anticipate the
compliance requirements of this
regulation under state law. Second, the
state and U.S. Departments of
Transportation (DOTs) and the Boston
Metropolitan Planning Organization
(Boston MPO) must use timely
implementation of these SIP-approved
transportation control measures to
determine whether their long range
transportation plans and transportation
improvement programs conform with
the state’s implementation plan. The
DOTs and Boston MPO will be most
immediately affected by EPA’s approval
of these transit system improvements
and their transportation planning
obligations are directly impacted by
changes in the SIP-approved list of
transportation control projects. EPA and
the Massachusetts DEP have been
consulting extensively with the DOTs
and the Boston MPO about the transit
system improvements. The DOTs and
Boston MPO are not only ready to use
the new list of transit system
improvement projects without waiting
30 days, they are eager to use them as
soon as possible to avoid delays in the
transportation planning process.
Therefore, since the entities that are
most directly impacted by this approval
are ready to use the transit system
improvements and prefer to use them
immediately, EPA is making this rule
effective immediately. This rule will be
effective July 31, 2008.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the
Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the
provisions of the Act and applicable
VerDate Aug<31>2005
15:05 Jul 30, 2008
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Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k);
40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in reviewing SIP
submissions, EPA’s role is to approve
state choices, provided that they meet
the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this action merely
approves state law as meeting Federal
requirements and does not impose
additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. For that reason,
this action:
• Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Public Law 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;
and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have
tribal implications as specified by
Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,
November 9, 2000), because the SIP is
not approved to apply in Indian country
located in the state, and EPA notes that
it will not impose substantial direct
costs on tribal governments or preempt
tribal law.
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
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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 action 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 September 29,
2008. Filing a petition for
reconsideration by the Administrator of
this final rule does not affect the finality
of this action 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 in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Lead,
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate
matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile
organic compounds.
Dated: July 5, 2008.
Robert W. Varney,
Regional Administrator, EPA New England.
Part 52 of 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 W—Massachusetts
2. Section 52.1120 is amended by
adding paragraph (c)(136) to read as
follows:
I
§ 52.1120
Identification of plan
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(136) Revisions to the State
Implementation Plan submitted by the
Massachusetts Department of
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Federal Register / Vol. 73, No. 148 / Thursday, July 31, 2008 / Rules and Regulations
Environmental Protection on December
13, 2006 and June 1, 2007.
7.36 entitled ‘‘Transit System
Improvements.’’
(i) Incorporation by reference.
(A) Massachusetts Regulation 310 CMR
7.00 entitled ‘‘Definitions,’’ adding the
definition for the term ‘‘Boston Metropolitan
Planning Organization,’’ effective in the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts on
December 1, 2006.
(B) Massachusetts Regulation 310 CMR
7.36 entitled ‘‘Transit System
Improvements,’’ effective in the
Commonwealth of Massachusetts on
December 1, 2006.
(C) Massachusetts Regulation Filing, dated
November 16, 2006, substantiating December
1, 2006, State effective date for amended 310
CMR 7.00 entitled ‘‘Definition,’’ (addition of
term ‘‘Boston Metropolitan Planning
Organization,’’ which appears on the
replaced page 173 of the State’s Code of
Massachusetts Regulations,) and 310 CMR
(A) Letter from the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental Protection
dated December 13, 2006 submitting a
revision to the Massachusetts State
Implementation Plan.
(B) Letter from the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental Protection
dated June 1, 2007 submitting a revision to
the Massachusetts State Implementation
Plan.
(C) Letter from the Massachusetts
Executive Office of Transportation dated
September 4, 2007 identifying its
commitment to the Green Line extension and
to make every effort to accelerate the
planning, design and environmental review
and permitting of the project in order to work
towards the 2014 completion date.
(D) Letter from the Chair of the Boston
Region Metropolitan Planning Organization
(ii) Additional Materials.
dated May 1, 2008 concurring in the finding
that the transit system improvements projects
will achieve emission benefits equivalent to
or greater than the benefits from the original
transit system improvements projects being
replaced.
(E) Letter from EPA New England Regional
Administrator dated July 5, 2008 concurring
in the finding that the transit system
improvements projects will achieve emission
benefits equivalent to or greater than the
benefits from the original transit system
improvements projects being replaced.
3. In § 52.1167, Table 52.1167 is
amended by adding two new citations to
the existing entry for 310 CMR 7.00 and
two new citations to the existing entry
for 310 CMR 7.36 to read as follows:
I
§ 52.1167 EPA-approved Massachusetts
State regulations
*
*
*
*
*
TABLE 52.1167—EPA-APPROVED RULES AND REGULATIONS
State citation
*
310 CMR
7.00.
Date
submitted by
State
Title/subject
Date approved
by EPA
12/13/06
07/31/08
......................
*
310 CMR
7.36.
*
Definitions ....
12/13/06
07/31/08
*
Transit system improvements
regulation.
......................
yshivers on PROD1PC62 with RULES
*
*
*
12/13/06
07/31/08
12/13/06
07/31/08
*
Federal Register
citation
*
[Insert Federal Register page number
where the document begins].
[Insert Federal Register page number
where the document begins].
*
[Insert Federal Register page number
where the document begins].
[Insert Federal Register page number
where the document begins].
*
*
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
47 CFR Part 1
[FCC 08–154]
Inflation Adjustment of Maximum
Forfeiture Penalties
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
AGENCY:
15:05 Jul 30, 2008
Federal Communications
Commission.
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136
136
136
136
*
*
Addition of the term, ‘‘Boston Metropolitan Planning Organization.’’
Massachusetts Regulation Filing,
dated November 16, 2006, substantiating December 1, 2006,
State effective date for amended
310 CMR 7.00 entitled ‘‘Definition,’’ (addition of term ‘‘Boston
Metropolitan Planning Organization,’’ which appears on the replaced page 173 of the State’s
Code of Massachusetts Regulations.).
*
*
Amendments to Transit System Improvements Regulation.
Massachusetts Regulation Filing,
dated November 16, 2006, substantiating December 1, 2006,
State effective date for amended
310 CMR 7.36 entitled ‘‘Transit
System Improvements.’’
*
[FR Doc. E8–17595 Filed 7–30–08; 8:45 am]
VerDate Aug<31>2005
Comments/unapproved sections
*
*
Notes: 1. This table lists regulations
adopted as of 1972. It does not depict
regulatory requirements which may have
been part of the Federal SIP before this date.
2. The regulations are effective statewide
unless otherwise stated in comments or title
section.
52.1120(c)
Sfmt 4700
*
ACTION:
*
Final rule.
SUMMARY: This document increases the
maximum monetary forfeiture penalties
available to the Commission under its
rules governing monetary forfeiture
proceedings to account for inflation.
The inflationary adjustment is necessary
to implement the Debt Collection
Improvement Act of 1996, which
requires federal agencies to adjust ‘‘civil
E:\FR\FM\31JYR1.SGM
31JYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 73, Number 148 (Thursday, July 31, 2008)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 44654-44663]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E8-17595]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R01-OAR-2006-1018; A-1-FRL-8691-5]
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: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The EPA is approving 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 requirements for interim emission
reduction offsets in the event a project becomes delayed, modifies the
project substitution process, revises the list of required transit
projects, and expands public participation in and oversight of the
projects. The intended effect of this action is to substitute specific
transit projects and 1,000 park and ride spaces to replace certain
transit projects currently approved into the SIP, and approve
modifications to the delay and substitution procedures for transit
projects. This action is being taken under the Clean Air Act.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is effective on July 31, 2008.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket
Identification Number EPA-R01-OAR-2006-1018. All documents in the
docket are listed on the https://www.regulations.gov Web site. 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
through https://www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at the 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 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., excluding legal holidays.
Copies of the documents relevant to this action are also available
for public inspection during normal business hours, by appointment at
the Bureau of Waste Prevention, 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,'' or ''our'' is used, we mean EPA.
Organization of this document: We are providing the following
outline to aid in locating information in this preamble.
I. Background and Purpose
II. Response to Comments
III. Compliance With Clean Air Act TCM Substitution Requirements
IV. Final Action
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. Background and Purpose
On November 5, 2007 (72 FR 62422-62427), EPA published a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking (NPR) for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The
NPR proposed approval of Massachusetts' amendments to its 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 proposed to find
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 (CAA or
Act).
On December 13, 2006, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental
Protection (MA DEP) submitted its formal SIP revision 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
[[Page 44655]]
December 21, 2005. On June 1, 2007, MA DEP supplemented its SIP
revision with a letter determining that the 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 EOT to address this issue on the
record at its upcoming September 6, 2007 public status report 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 plan 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.
On January 4, 2008, EOT submitted copies of its ``State
Implementation Plan--Transit Commitments, 2007 Annual Status Report,
Agency Responses to Public Comments'' to MA DEP and EPA. EOT's
submittal provided a summary of and responses to public comments, a
written certification that the public process requirements were met,
and a written certification that complete information was provided on
any actual or known project delays, project substitutions, and interim
offsets. MA DEP determined that EOT met the public process and other
requirements of 310 CMR 7.36(7)(d) by letter on March 4, 2008.
The Arborway Restoration, the Blue Line/Red Line connection, and
the Green Line extension to Ball Square/Tufts University which were
approved into the Massachusetts SIP on October 4, 1994 (59 FR 50495-
50498), will be substituted with the Fairmount Line commuter rail
improvements, 1,000 new park and ride parking spaces (serving MBTA
transit and commuter rail in the Metropolitan Boston Area), and the
Green Line transit line extension to Medford Hillside with a spur to
Union Square. Air quality modeling demonstrates that the substitution
projects will achieve a minimum of 110% of the emissions reductions
that would have been achieved if the original projects had been built.
In addition to the substitution of transit projects, EPA is today
approving the other specific requirements of Massachusetts' amendments
to the Transit System Improvements Regulation. The rationale for EPA's
proposed action to approve those amendments is explained in the NPR and
will not be restated here.
II. Response to Comments
EPA received twenty-three public comments on our proposal to amend
Massachusetts' Transit System Improvements Regulation (Transit
Regulation). Copies of the public comments have been placed in the
public docket without change and are available online at
www.regulations.gov, docket number EPA-R01-OAR-2006-1018, document
number EPA-R01-OAR-2006-1018-0022 through EPA-R01-OAR-2006-1018-0044.
EPA's full Technical Support Document--Response to Comments is also
available in the public docket, as well as at the Regional Office.
Comment: A number of commenters supported the transit system
improvement projects. Six commenters supported all of the transit
system improvement projects, three commenters expressed strong support
for the Fairmount Line; two commenters supported the Green Line
Extension; and one commenter supported the Design of Red Line/Blue Line
Connector.
EPA Response: EPA acknowledges the commenters' support for the
transit system improvement projects.
Comment: Three commenters wanted the transit system improvement
projects originally approved into the SIP in 1994 to be implemented
without any substitutions or changes.
EPA Response: As a threshold matter, EPA notes that nothing in our
approval of these revisions to the Transit Regulation into the SIP in
any way prevents the Commonwealth from completing the projects
originally included in the regulation as EPA approved it in 1994.
Although the projects are being dropped from the SIP-approved Transit
Regulation, if any of the projects have merit, the Commonwealth's
transportation planning process may include them in the statewide
transportation improvement program. The only question before EPA is
whether Massachusetts has the option of revising the set of projects to
which it will attach the specific requirements under the CAA that come
when transit measures are specifically required in a SIP.
EPA does not underestimate the importance of a state's decision to
drop transit projects from a SIP. EPA's approval of this SIP revision
will have the effect of eliminating the requirement under the CAA to
complete the projects dropped from the regulation. That requirement
allowed direct enforcement of the project deadlines pursuant to state
law and sections 113 or 304 of the Act. The SIP mandate for these
projects also required the Commonwealth to demonstrate in the
conformity process under section 176(c) of the Act that Massachusetts'
transportation plan and transportation improvement program supported
and would not interfere with completion of those projects. EPA agrees
that these compliance mechanisms provide an incentive to complete SIP-
approved transit projects.
But precisely because the decision to incorporate transit projects
into a SIP is a significant commitment, subject to compliance
mechanisms under the Act, a state should only include in its SIP those
transit projects to which it is clearly committed. And the state is in
the best position to determine the mix of transit measures that best
meets the state's transit and air quality goals and that merits this
high level of commitment. Accordingly, the Act assigns to EPA a limited
role in reviewing a state's choice of transit measures. Essentially,
EPA is required to approve a SIP revision if it meets the basic
requirements of the Act, most
[[Page 44656]]
importantly in this case that the substitute transit projects will
achieve equivalent or greater emissions reductions than the projects to
be replaced. See CAA section 176(c)(8)(A)(i).
Below in Table 1 is a summary of EOT's March 2007 Modeling Analysis
for daily air quality emission benefits from the original 1994 SIP-
approved transit system improvement projects, as well as the new
transit system improvement projects. EPA has reviewed the modeling
analysis report and concurs in the air quality benefits attributed to
the transit system improvement projects. EPA addresses EOT's modeling
analysis and air quality benefits in several of EPA's responses to
comments below.
Table 1--EOT Air Quality Analysis Comparison of Project Packages Benefits in the Year 2025
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daily emission benefits in kilograms (kg.)
--------------------------------------------------
Volatile
Carbon monoxide Nitrogen oxides organic
(CO) (NOX) compounds
(VOC)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SIP Approved Projects (Package):
Arborway Restoration, Green Line Extension to Ball Square/ 292 8 11
Tufts 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 435 11 17
Line Improvements, and Additional Parking...............
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The action before EPA is to approve or reject the Commonwealth's
transit project substitution as part of the Commonwealth's revision to
its Transit System Improvements regulations 310 CMR 7.36. Approval of
the changes to the Transit System Improvements regulation including the
substitute transit projects into the SIP extends federal-enforcement to
the design, construction and in most cases operation of the transit
projects. The fact that a project is not specifically approved into a
SIP does not affect the Commonwealth's ability to include a transit
project in its transportation plan process, seek future federal-funding
or undertake a specific transit as a state initiative funded by State,
City, public or private funding.
Indeed, outside the context of the Act's SIP process, there are
several signs of activity in connection with the projects or project
areas that will no longer be subject to a SIP mandate. On November 15,
2007, Ian A. Bowles, Secretary of Massachusetts Executive Office of
Energy and Environmental Affairs, determined that the Red Line/Blue
Line Connector (EEA Number 14101) requires the preparation of a
mandatory Environmental Impact Report (EIR) initiating the
Commonwealth's Massachusetts Environmental Policy Act for the proposed
project. And in the Transit Settlement Agreement that resolved the case
Conservation Law Foundation v. Romney et al., Civil Action No. 05-
10487-NG, is the following statement: ``The parties agree that they
will work in good faith with the City of Boston and other relevant
parties to develop and agree upon recommended public transportation
improvements to the Arborway corridor over the course of the next year.
All Parties agree to commit to and participate in a public process to
identify and recommend any agreed upon improvements for the Arborway
Corridor.'' (The settlement agreement dated November 28, 2006 is
available at https://www.clf.org/uploadedFiles/Transit_settlement_
signed_Jan2007.pdf.) EPA encourages all parties involved to fully
implement this agreement.
Comment: Two commenters requested EPA reject EOT's request to
remove the Arborway project from the SIP.
EPA Response: The Commonwealth has flexibility to revise SIP-
approved transportation control measures (TCMs), provided the revisions
are consistent with attaining and maintaining compliance with the
national ambient air quality standards (NAAQSs). This flexibility to
substitute projects follows the intent of the Safe, Accountable,
Flexible, Efficient Transportation Equity Act: A Legacy For Users
(SAFETEA-LU). Section 6011(d) of SAFETEA-LU 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.
The action before EPA is to approve or reject the Commonwealth's
transit project substitution as part of the Commonwealth's revision to
its Transit System Improvements regulation 310 CMR 7.36. Under the
Clean Air Act, the EPA Administrator is required to approve a SIP
submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(3); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in
reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act. Here, DEP's
SIP submission meets all the requirements of the Act, specifically the
elements in section 176(c)(8) for substituting TCMs, including a
demonstration that the new TCMs achieve emissions reductions equivalent
to the projects being substituted.
Comment: Three commenters objected to the substitution of the Red
Line/Blue Line Connector with a commitment only to design the connector
but dropping the SIP commitment to construct the project. Four
commenters supported the construction of the Red Line/Blue Line
Connector and outlined benefits of constructing and operating the Red
Line/Blue Line Connector.
EPA Response: EPA is aware of the merits and benefits of the
operation of the Red Line/Blue Line Connector. EPA acknowledges the
commenters' support for construction of the Red Line Blue Line
Connector by 2014. However, the Commonwealth of Massachusetts has taken
advantage of the flexibility provided under the Clean Air Act to revise
SIP-approved TCMs, provided the revisions are consistent with attaining
and maintaining compliance with the NAAQSs. Here, the Commonwealth has
decided to drop the commitment to construct the Connector as part of a
larger package of substitute projects designed to achieve an equivalent
emission reduction. Again, this flexibility to substitute projects
follows the requirements of the new Clean Air Act section 176(c)(8)
that establishes specific criteria and procedures for replacing TCMs in
an existing approved
[[Page 44657]]
SIP with new TCMs and adding TCMs to an approved SIP.
Comment: Eight commenters wanted EPA to enforce the transit system
improvement project deadlines. One commenter supported a two year delay
of the Medford Green Line Extension, asserting that completion of the
transit project by 2014 was optimistic.
EPA Response: EPA concurs in the need for an enforceable deadline
for the transit system improvement projects. EPA's approval of
Massachusetts' Transit System Improvements regulation into the SIP will
make the design, construction and operation deadlines in the
Commonwealth's regulation federally-enforceable. In addition,
transportation air quality conformity determinations required by
section 176(c) of the Clean Air Act will require the Boston
Metropolitan Planning Organization as well as the U.S. Department of
Transportation to make a positive finding that all SIP-approved
transportation control measures are being implemented in a timely
manner and in accordance with established SIP deadlines (40 CFR 93.113)
prior to approving the long range transportation plans and
transportation improvement programs for Eastern Massachusetts.
EPA notes that in at least one respect, the compliance deadlines
provided for in this new version of 310 CMR 7.36 are more firm than the
deadlines in the version EPA approved in 1994. The original ``Project
Delays and Project Deadline Extensions,'' (310 CMR 7.36 (3)) previously
approved into the SIP allowing up to three years delay in project
completion has been removed.
In further support of the 2014 completion date for the Green Line
Extension, the Massachusetts Executive Office of Transportation and
Public Works (EOTPW) has committed to make up delays in the Green Line
Extension Project, associated with seeking federal funding and
addressing federal requirements, to the maximum extent possible.
Comment: Four commenters requested enhancements to the transit
system improvement projects. One Commenter raised concerns with a
transit system improvement project's impact on transportation,
environment, social and economic impacts and lack of community
involvement. Two commenters wanted alternatives to the Green Line
extension to be evaluated, while another commenter wanted more
specificity in the broad terms of the regulation providing for the
Green Line extension terminus station.
EPA Response: EPA acknowledges the commenters' support for the
transit system improvement projects. EPA must accept the transit system
improvement projects as presented, or reject the Transit Project
substitutions, based on the Act's criteria established for approving
SIPs (i.e., substitution projects must provide for equivalent emissions
reductions in the same time frame). EPA has no authority to dictate
specific enhancements to any of the proposed transit project
substitutions. However, EPA believes the submitted projects could be
enhanced during the public participation process associated with the
Commonwealth's state environmental process and design of the transit
measure.
The action before EPA is to approve or reject the Commonwealth's
transit project substitution as part of the Commonwealth's revision to
its Transit System Improvements regulation 310 CMR 7.36. The concerns
raised by the commenters regarding transportation, environmental,
social and economic impacts of the Green Line Extension project should
be addressed and mitigated during the Commonwealth's state
environmental process. See MGL c. 30 Sec. 61-62 and regulations, 301
CMR 11.00. And should the Green Line Expansion Project receive federal
funding, these concerns may also be addressed under any future federal
environmental review and public participation process conducted in
accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act. 42 U.S.C. 4321-
4370f.
Comment: Two commenters wanted Massachusetts EOT to specify the
location of the 1,000 park and ride locations, and identify an
implementation schedule.
EPA Response: The Park and Ride provisions in section 7.36 provide
that before December 31, 2011, construction shall be completed and
1,000 new park and ride parking spaces opened to full public use
serving commuter transit facilities within the 101 cities and towns
constituting the Boston Metropolitan Planning Organization. These park
and ride facilities are subject to ``Project Interim Deadlines,''
established under 310 CMR 7.36(3), which identifies timeframes for
hiring a design consultant, completing a conceptual design, filing an
Environmental Notification Form (ENF) with MEPA, completing the
Environmental Impact Report, completing final design, applying for
necessary permits and funding, and proceeding to construction.
Therefore, there is still considerable work to be done before the
specific location of these lots can be determined.
EPA agrees with the commenters that it is impossible to fully
assess the emissions reductions that these 1,000 spaces will accomplish
without knowing where they will be located. And EPA recognizes that the
individual transit substitution projects will undergo project
refinement as these projects proceed through environmental evaluation,
public participation and project design. Nevertheless, EPA has
concluded that the uncertainty about the location of these parking
spaces does not prevent EPA from approving the entire package of
transit project substitutions. First, the package of new transit
projects demonstrates equivalent emissions reductions to the
substituted projects even if one were to eliminate entirely any credit
for the lots. Therefore, EPA does not believe that EOT's inability to
specify the location of these lots provides EPA a basis to disapprove
this SIP revision. Second, EPA has reviewed the assumptions EOT made
about the park and ride lots in modeling their emissions impact. EPA
agrees that EOT made reasonably conservative assumptions in assigning
any emissions reductions value to the lots.
Comment: Four commenters repeated modeling questions and concerns
previously addressed through the Commonwealth's public participation
process.
EPA Response: These questions and concerns were raised during the
Commonwealth's approval of the revised Transit System Improvements
regulations. Based on EPA's review of the Commonwealth's Response to
Comments as well as EOT's Response to Public Comments identified during
the public participation process on the Transit Commitments 2007 Annual
Status Report, EPA believes the commenters' concerns have been
adequately addressed.
The March 15, 2007, ``Description of Modeling Assumptions and
Analysis Methodology for the State Implementation Plan Transit
Commitment Projects Current and Proposed Substitutions,'' prepared by
the Central Transportation Planning Staff is consistent with
methodology and assumptions used in developing the SIP and developing
the long range transportation plans and transportation improvement
program. It is also consistent with the methodology and assumptions
used in the transportation conformity process to determine that
transportation planning is consistent with the air quality plan for the
SIP. EPA recognizes that the transit substitution projects will
continuously undergo refinement as they proceed
[[Page 44658]]
through the environmental development phase and project design phase;
however, EPA has determined the current project delineation to be
sufficient in defining the project and for air quality evaluation.
Comment: One of the commenters submitted a number of modeling
issues regarding the Green Line Arborway Restoration Project that were
previously submitted during the Commonwealth's public participation
process.
EPA Response: These Arborway modeling concerns were addressed in a
June 27, 2005 Central Transportation Planning Staff memorandum from
Karl Quackenbush and Scott Peterson to Dennis DiZoglio and Joe Cosgrove
of the Massachusetts Bay Transit Authority, as well as addressed in
EOT's ``Summary of Comments Received on Modeling Analysis for Proposed
Substitute State Implementation Plan Transit Projects and Agency
Responses'' dated May 3, 2007.
EPA concurs with the Commonwealth's modeling to evaluate air
quality impacts associated with the original 1994 SIP-approved transit
improvement projects and the proposed transit system improvement
substitution projects. EPA did not assign or grant specific emission
reduction credit to the 1994 SIP-approved projects, so to model the
original projects and new substitution projects on an equal basis is
the only fair way to evaluate potential air quality emission benefits
from the transit improvement projects.
After review of the transportation and air quality modeling
submitted as part of the SIP revision package, EPA has determined that
the modeling is consistent with methodology and assumptions used in
developing the SIP, consistent with developing the long range
transportation plans and transportation improvement programs, as well
as consistent with the methodology and assumptions used in the
transportation conformity process to determine that transportation
planning is consistent with the air quality planning for the SIP. See
March 2007 re-evaluation submitted to EPA June 1, 2007, conducted to
satisfy subsection (8) ``Determination of Air Quality Emission
Reductions'' of the Transit System Improvements regulation, 310 CMR
7.36; CTPS's March 15, 2007 ``Description of Modeling Assumptions and
Analysis Methodology for the State Implementation Plan Transit
Commitment Projects Current and Proposed Substitutions''; CTPS's June
16, 2005 Memorandum on ``SIP Transit Modeling Assumptions''; and CTPS
Memorandum dated June 27, 2005 on ``Responses to Arborway Comments.''
EPA has evaluated the submitted SIP revision package, including
Central Transportation Planning Staff's March 15, 2007 ``Description of
Modeling Assumptions and Analysis Methodology for the State
Implementation Plan Transit Commitment Projects Current and Proposed
Substitutions.'' EPA independently concurs with the Massachusetts
Department of Environmental Protection's June 1, 2007, determination
that the emission reductions associated with the transit improvement
projects in the revised State Regulation 310 CMR 7.36 ``Transit System
Improvements'' will achieve in excess of the requirement in the state
regulations that the substitute projects must achieve an emissions
reduction of at least 110 percent of the reductions that would be
expected from eliminated projects. As presented in Table 1, above, the
reductions expected from the new projects when compared to the original
SIP-approved projects as a percentage are for volatile organic
compounds 154%, nitrogen oxides 137.5%, and carbon monoxide 149%.
Comment: Five commenters expressed their belief that there were no
real substitutions for the Green Line Extension project. The commenters
did not want further substitutions, and wanted air quality benefits to
remain in the proposed Green Line Extension project area which they
assert is an environmental justice area.
EPA Response: The Transit System Improvements Regulation provides
for substitution of this project at 310 CMR 7.36(5) should the
Commonwealth wish to take advantage of this flexibility in its
regulation in the future. This substitution procedure for the Green
Line Extension requires Massachusetts EOT to:
1. Identify the reasons for seeking a project substitution;
2. Conduct a public participation process for the substitution
process;
3. Achieve interim emission reduction offsets of non-methane
hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, and nitrogen oxides;
4. Comply with original project interim deadlines;
5. Prioritize funding in the long range transportation plan and
transportation improvement program of the Boston Metropolitan Planning
Organization (MPO);
6. Require substitute project(s) that enhance or improve existing
public transit service, or provide new transit service within the
municipalities of Boston, Cambridge, Somerville, and Medford;
7. Demonstrate that the proposed substitute project will achieve
110% of the emission reductions of that would have been achieved had
all components of the original project been completed; and to require
that the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection determine
in writing whether the substitution requirements of 310 CMR 7.36(5)
have been met and whether the administrative record reasonably supports
EOT's substitution determination.
Finally, any future substitution would have to meet the requirements of
CAA section 176(c)(8), which governs substitution of transportation
control measures in a SIP. In addition to concurrence from the state
air pollution control agency as provided by the substitution provision
of the state regulation, CAA section 176(c)(8) also requires formal
concurrence by the metropolitan planning organization and the EPA New
England Regional Administrator to adopt substitute or additional
control measures into the SIP. The requirements in the CAA overlap
substantially with the requirements in the new section 7.36. Indeed,
section 7.36 sets a higher hurdle for emissions reductions than the
Act, requiring not just mere equivalency, but reductions of at least
110% compared with the substituted projects.
With respect to a Green Line Extension substitution transit project
trading off air quality benefits with other neighborhoods, the
regulations define the geographic area of Boston, Cambridge,
Somerville, and Medford for Green Line Extension substitution transit
projects. This delineation is more restrictive than how the CAA
requires EPA to evaluate emissions reductions in an ozone nonattainment
area. As long as the emissions reductions come from within the
applicable nonattainment area, in this case Eastern Massachusetts, they
would qualify under the federal CAA. Here again, the state requirement
in section 7.36 sets a higher bar by restricting the geographic area
for an allowed substitution to only four municipalities within the
Eastern Massachusetts nonattainment area.
Comment: One commenter raised the issue of timely implementation of
TCMs adopted into the SIP.
EPA Response: EPA believes the Transit System Improvements
regulation, with its defined project deadlines, interim project
deadlines, and annual public reporting of update and status of SIP-
approved TCMs, (which is open to public participation and requires a
written determination by Massachusetts Department of Environmental
Protection whether the public process and other requirements of 310 CMR
7.36(7) ``Public Process
[[Page 44659]]
Requirements,'' were met) will assist in completing the SIP-approved
TCMs on time.
Transportation conformity is required under Clean Air Act section
176(c) (42 U.S.C. 7506(c)) to ensure that federally supported highway
and transit project activities are consistent with (``conform to'') the
purpose of the SIP. EPA's transportation conformity rule establishes
the criteria and procedures for determining whether transportation
activities conform to the SIP. One criterion established at 40 CFR
93.113 is that all SIP-approved transportation control measures are
being implemented in a timely manner and in accordance with established
SIP deadlines. EPA believes the conformity process will ensure the
timely implementation of these TCMs.
If a SIP-approved TCM identified in the transportation improvement
program does fall behind schedule, a positive conformity determination
can still be made in accordance with 40 CFR 93.113 if:
(1) * * * The MPO and DOT have determined that past obstacles to
implementation of the TCMs have been identified and have been or are
being overcome, and that all State and local agencies with influence
over approvals or funding for TCMs are giving maximum priority to
approval or funding of TCMs over other projects within their
control, including projects in locations outside the nonattainment
or maintenance area.
(2) If TCMs in the applicable implementation plan have
previously been programmed for Federal funding but the funds have
not been obligated and the TCMs are behind the schedule in the
implementation plan, then the transportation improvement program
(TIP) cannot be found to conform if the funds intended for those
TCMs are reallocated to projects in the TIP other than TCMs, or if
there are no other TCMs in the TIP, if the funds are reallocated to
projects in the TIP other than projects which are eligible for
Federal funding intended for air quality improvement projects, e.g.,
the Congestion Mitigation and Air Quality Improvement Program.
(3) Nothing in the TIP may interfere with the implementation of
any TCM in the applicable implementation plan.
See 40 CFR 93.113(c).
Comment: Two commenters expressed concern that past transportation
air quality conformity evaluations did not adequately address timely
implementation of TCMs.
EPA Response: EPA is finalizing an action to approve a TCM
substitution and revisions to the Massachusetts Transit System
Improvements regulation. EPA is not re-evaluating past transportation
conformity determinations. The timely implementation of the substitute
TCMs will be evaluated in future transportation conformity
determinations to ensure that the requirements of Clean Air Act section
176(c)(2)(B) and 176(c)(3)(A)(ii) and the transportation conformity
rule (49 CFR 93.113) are satisfied.
Comment: A commenter claimed that the air quality benefit
associated with the substituted transit projects ignores the fact that
the 1990 Conservation Law Foundation (CLF) Agreement and EPA
intervention were intended to complement the parking restrictions in
and near downtown Boston.
EPA Response: While the metropolitan Boston parking freezes
complement traffic reduction strategies, the approval of the proposed
transit improvement substitution projects is independent of the parking
freezes, in the sense that nothing in the Act, including section
176(c)(8), requires EPA to link one set of TCMs with another.
Admittedly, if the success of the state's proffered TCM substitutions
relied heavily on the enforcement of TCMs that the state was not
prepared to make part of the SIP, EPA would need to consider whether it
could credit the substitute TCMs with the level of reduction the state
was assuming from their combined effect with the TCMs outside the SIP.
Here, however, the relevant parking freezes are part of the SIP, and
DEP has not abandoned the use of parking freeze requirements as part of
the strategy included in its SIP. Therefore that question is not before
EPA.
EPA has approved Parking Freezes for Cambridge, Downtown Boston,
South Boston, East Boston and Logan Airport. Since the 1994 adoption of
the transit system improvement projects into the SIP, EPA has approved
the South Boston Parking Freeze and amended the East Boston/Logan
Parking Freeze.
On October 15, 1996, EPA approved the South Boston Parking Freeze
SIP Amendment as a revision to the Massachusetts SIP (61 FR 53628).
Massachusetts Air Pollution Control Regulation 310 CMR 7.33 entitled
``City of Boston/South Boston Parking Freeze,'' established and
requires the Boston Air Pollution Control Commission (BAPCC) and the
Massachusetts Port Authority (MassPort) to control the growth of
parking spaces in the South Boston neighborhood of Boston. The effect
of controlling parking growth is anticipated to be a decrease in
vehicle miles traveled (VMT), thereby holding automobile usage to
levels within the practical capacity of the local street network.
On March 12, 2001, EPA approved revisions to the Massachusetts Port
Authority/Logan Airport Parking Freeze, 310 CMR 7.30, and City of
Boston/East Boston Parking Freeze, 310 CMR 7.31, into the Massachusetts
SIP (66 FR 14318). The revisions allow the Commonwealth to
automatically approve the transfer of parking spaces from the East
Boston Parking Freeze to the Logan Parking Freeze provided the total
parking space inventory number for the Logan Parking Freeze remains at
or below 21,790 parking spaces. Future modifications in the parking
freeze inventories for the Logan Airport and East Boston Parking
Freezes will be regulated by the Commonwealth's revisions to
Massachusetts State Regulations 310 CMR 7.30 and 310 CMR 7.31.
Comment: A commenter stated that the SIP substitution proposal
shifts the responsibility to enforce the Environmental Justice
Executive Order from EPA, the Federal agency required to comply with
the Executive Order, to the state. Another commenter identified Jamaica
Plain, served by the Green Line Arborway Restoration Project, as an
environmental justice neighborhood with a high asthma hospitalization
rate among children under age 5 (11.1 per 1,000).
EPA Response: It is not this SIP revision, but rather the structure
of the CAA as Congress designed it, that rests consideration of
environmental justice issues here primarily with the state. Under the
Clean Air Act, the Administrator is required to approve a SIP
submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and applicable
Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(3); 40 CFR 52.02(a). Thus, in
reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act. Accordingly,
this action merely approves state law as meeting Federal requirements
and does not impose additional requirements beyond those imposed by
state law. For that reason, this action does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as appropriate, disproportionate
human health or environmental effects, using practicable and legally
permissible methods, under Executive Order 12898 ``Federal Actions to
Address Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations,'' (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
The Federal executive policy on environmental justice is
established by Executive Order 12898. Its main provision directs
federal agencies, to the greatest extent practicable and
[[Page 44660]]
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
Commonwealth's 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 and
when implementing public transportation improvements to the Arborway
corridor promised in the Transit Settlement Agreement that resolved the
case Conservation Law Foundation v. Romney et al., Civil Action No. 05-
10487-NG. EPA believes the transit improvement substitution projects
can be enhanced and additional consideration be given to minority
populations and low-income populations during the public participation
process associated with the environmental evaluation phase and
engineering design phase of the transit measures. 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.
Comment: One commenter identified the Commonwealth's transit
substitutions as contrary to the Commonwealth's financial interests and
claimed that restoring the Arborway Green Line would result in
significant operating cost savings. Another commenter questioned
whether the Commonwealth had accurately compared the relative costs of
constructing and operating the Red-Blue Line connector with the
proposed substitute projects.
EPA Response: The CAA assigns to the state the responsibility for
assessing the cost implications of SIP measures. Indeed, EPA has no
authority to disapprove a SIP revision solely because the Agency might
disagree with the cost-effectiveness of a state's chosen control
strategy. See Union Electric Co. v. EPA, 427 U.S. 246 (1976), rehearing
denied 429 U.S. 873 (1976). Massachusetts EOT's position in responding
to this issue during the state public participation process is that the
restoration of Green Line Arborway service is not a cost-effective way
to achieve the desired transportation and air quality benefits.
Correspondingly, the CAA provides EPA no basis for disapproving this
SIP revision even if EPA did not agree with the Commonwealth's weighing
of the costs of the Red-Blue Line connector with the substitute
projects.
Comment: Two commenters stated that particulate matter impacts are
particularly harmful and expressed concern about the particulate matter
and other emissions from diesel trains used on the Fairmount/Indigo
Line.
EPA Response: The Massachusetts transit system improvement projects
were originally approved into the SIP in 1994 as control strategies for
carbon monoxide and ozone (control of precursors volatile organic
compounds and nitrogen oxides), but no emission credits were assigned
to these projects. EPA has also established National Ambient Air
Quality Standards for Particulate Matter (PM10--Particles
less than 10 micrometers in diameter, and PM2.5--Particles
less than 2.5 micrometers in diameter and referred to as ``fine''
particles). Currently air quality monitoring within the Boston
Metropolitan area indicates attainment of the PM10 annual
standard, as well as the PM2.5 annual and 24-hour standards.
As such, the area is not subject to the CAA conformity requirements for
particulate matter.
EPA supports the Commonwealth's on-going efforts to reduce
particulate matter from mobile sources through the use of lower sulfur
fuel, alternative fuels, and retrofits for diesel equipment and
vehicles including construction equipment and school buses.
Comment: One commenter looking at an earlier version of the air
quality modeling analysis stated that ``Attempts to deduce the benefits
of the incremental extension of the Green Line, by subtracting the
benefits claimed for the new Green Line extension from the benefits
attributable to the Existing SIP Commitments, yield an incredible
result: by increasing the number of stations by three, nitrogen oxides
(NOX) benefits increase nearly 300 percent and hydrocarbon
(HC) benefits increase by nearly 400 percent. This result strains
credulity and requires far more detailed background to justify such an
anomalous result.''
EPA Response: The air quality modeling submitted with the SIP
revision showed that extending the Green Line from Tufts University/
Ball Square to Medford Hillside and adding the Green Line spur to Union
Square Somerville would add the following daily emission benefits to
the original Green Line Extension: 7 kilograms of nitrogen oxides; 12
kilograms of volatile organic compounds; and 212 kilograms of carbon
monoxide. As a result, the demonstration submitted to EPA shows that
the extension of the Green Line project to Medford Hillside and Union
Square accounted for only a 0.025% increase in emission reduction
benefits for NOX and 0.041% for VOC when compared to the no-
build emissions for the modeled area. It is more realistic to compare
the marginal emission benefits for the expanded Green Line extension
alternative with the overall emission benefits of the entire original
Green Line to Tufts University/Ball Square. EPA finds these incremental
benefits to be reasonable.
Comment: One commenter raised a number of concerns about how the
modeling analysis handled assumptions for the proposed ``West Medford
Green Line extension with a Union Square spur'' and the ``Fairmount
Commuter Rail project'' such as headways, fares, number of transit
stations and transfers. The commenter asserted that modeling
assumptions would have a significant impact on the forecast of
ridership and corresponding emissions.
EPA Response: The Central Transportation Planning Staff (CTPS)
maintains a regional travel demand model set that is used to measure a
variety of impacts associated with changes to existing transportation
infrastructure, one of which is air quality emissions. CTPS's model set
is continuously improved as newer information is made available. This
process of updating inputs and methods has led to several intermediate
sets of results during the process of evaluating the SIP transit
commitments. The commenter based his concerns on a review of an early
state air quality modeling analysis and not the final analysis
submitted June 1, 2007 with a supplement to the December 13, 2006 SIP
revision. The March 2007 re-evaluation submitted to EPA June 1, 2007,
was conducted to satisfy subsection (8) ``Determination of Air Quality
Emission Reductions'' of the Transit System Improvements regulation,
310 CMR 7.36. Technical documentation identifying and explaining the
model and modeling assumptions is addressed in the CTPS's March 15,
2007 ``Description of Modeling Assumptions and Analysis Methodology for
the State Implementation Plan Transit Commitment Projects Current and
Proposed Substitutions.'' Additional modeling support documents
provided
[[Page 44661]]
to EPA as part of the SIP revision include CTPS's June 16, 2005
Memorandum on ``SIP Transit Modeling Assumptions,'' and a second CTPS
Memorandum dated June 27, 2005 on ``Responses to Arborway Comments.''
These updates and refinements to the modeling appear to address the
concerns about fares, number of transit stations and transfers and
represent the most recent information about and analysis of the
emissions effect of the project substitutions.
Even with the refinement of the model and the supporting
documentation, it remained unclear to EPA how the state's submittal
responded to a comment concerning headways, specifically the potential
for three minute headways on the Green Line Extension when the service
from the two new branches is combined and travels through the Lechmere
Station. One commenter indicated that the model's assumption of three
minute headways was unrealistic. EPA contacted CTPS and the
Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (MBTA) and learned that the
Green Line has operated in the past on three minute headways outbound
from Government Center Subway Station as well as inbound from Lechmere
Station. The MBTA has made structural improvements to the Lechmere
viaduct to allow 3 (2-car) trains per direction operating at 25 miles
per hour. Finally, a 1999 operational analysis of the Green Line showed
that within the Lechmere to Government Center area, the segment of the
Green Line between the North Station and Haymarket stations serves as
the capacity ``pinch point,'' with a maximum number of trains per hour
on this segment of 34. Under the proposed Green Line Extension
operating plan, the C, D and E Lines on the Green Line would operate
through this pinch point with 34 trains per hour during the peak
period. Therefore, it does not appear to be unrealistic that the new
service could operate at three minute headways.
As explained in the response above, EPA has determined that the
modeling is consistent with methodology and assumptions used in
developing the State Implementation Plan, consistent with developing
the long range transportation plans and transportation improvement
programs, as well as consistent with the methodology and assumptions
used in the transportation conformity process to determine that
transportation planning is consistent with the air quality planning for
the SIP.
III. Compliance With Clean Air Act TCM Substitution Requirements
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 MPO, 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, a copy of which
has been placed in the electronic docket. 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 issued regulations to implement SAFETEA-LU, and
concluded that no regulations were needed to implement section
176(c)(8), because the statute is already sufficiently detailed.
Additionally, EPA/DOT have issued guidance that addresses questions
that might arise about TCM substitutions. (73 FR 4420-4441; January
24, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On June 1, 2007, MA DEP concurred in EOT's determination that the
substitute projects achieved at least equivalent emissions reductions.
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 TCMs 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. In a May 1, 2008
letter to EPA, the Boston MPO concurred in the finding that the transit
system improvements projects will achieve emission benefits equivalent
to or greater than the benefits from the original transit system
improvements projects being replaced. For EPA's concurrence on the
substitutions included in this SIP revision, the Agency sent a letter
to the Boston MPO, 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\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, section
176(c)(8)(A)(v) does not 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 its concurrence on the substitution in a letter
to the Boston MPO under section 176(c)(8) of the Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 176(c)(8) now also 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, the codification that results from the final action on
this SIP revision will address this requirement. For future
substitutions, although the state 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.
IV. Final Action
EPA is approving 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.
EPA has determined that today's rule falls under the ``good cause''
exemption
[[Page 44662]]
in section 553(d)(3) of the Administrative Procedures Act (APA) which,
upon finding ``good cause,'' allows an agency to make a rule effective
immediately (thereby avoiding the 30-day delayed effective date
otherwise provided for in the APA). EPA has concluded that it is not
necessary to delay the effectiveness of this rule for 30 days because
the entities that will be directly affected by the transit system
improvements regulation have had ample notice of the requirements in
the regulation, and they wish to use the substitute transit projects as
soon as possible in the conformity process under the Clean Air Act.
First, the requirements of the transit system improvements regulation
have been effective as a matter of state law since December 1, 2006.
Therefore, it is unnecessary to wait an additional thirty days to make
the regulation federally enforceable, because the entities subject to
the regulation have already had ample time to anticipate the compliance
requirements of this regulation under state law. Second, the state and
U.S. Departments of Transportation (DOTs) and the Boston Metropolitan
Planning Organization (Boston MPO) must use timely implementation of
these SIP-approved transportation control measures to determine whether
their long range transportation plans and transportation improvement
programs conform with the state's implementation plan. The DOTs and
Boston MPO will be most immediately affected by EPA's approval of these
transit system improvements and their transportation planning
obligations are directly impacted by changes in the SIP-approved list
of transportation control projects. EPA and the Massachusetts DEP have
been consulting extensively with the DOTs and the Boston MPO about the
transit system improvements. The DOTs and Boston MPO are not only ready
to use the new list of transit system improvement projects without
waiting 30 days, they are eager to use them as soon as possible to
avoid delays in the transportation planning process. Therefore, since
the entities that are most directly impacted by this approval are ready
to use the transit system improvements and prefer to use them
immediately, EPA is making this rule effective immediately. This rule
will be effective July 31, 2008.
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Under the Clean Air Act, the Administrator is required to approve a
SIP submission that complies with the provisions of the Act and
applicable Federal regulations. 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, EPA's role is to approve state
choices, provided that they meet the criteria of the Clean Air Act.
Accordingly, this action merely approves state law as meeting Federal
requirements and does not impose additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. For that reason, this action:
Is not a ``significant regulatory action'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Order
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993);
Does not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
Is certified as not having a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
Does not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Public Law 104-4);
Does not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Is not an economically significant regulatory action based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Is not a significant regulatory action subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
Is not subject to requirements of section 12(d) of the
National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272
note) because application of those requirements would be inconsistent
with the Clean Air Act; and
Does not provide EPA with the discretionary authority to
address, as appropriate, disproportionate human health or environmental
effects, using practicable and legally permissible methods, under
Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
In addition, this rule does not have tribal implications as specified
by Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000), because the
SIP is not approved to apply in Indian country located in the state,
and EPA notes that it will not impose substantial direct costs on
tribal governments or preempt tribal law.
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 action 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 September 29, 2008. Filing a
petition for reconsideration by the Administrator of this final rule
does not affect the finality of this action 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 in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Incorporation by reference, Intergovernmental relations, Lead, Nitrogen
dioxide, Ozone, Particulate matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile organic compounds.
Dated: July 5, 2008.
Robert W. Varney,
Regional Administrator, EPA New England.
0
Part 52 of chapter I, title 40 of the Code of Federal Regulations is
amended as follows:
PART 52--[AMENDED]
0
1. The authority citation for part 52 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Subpart W--Massachusetts
0
2. Section 52.1120 is amended by adding paragraph (c)(136) to read as
follows:
Sec. 52.1120 Identification of plan
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(136) Revisions to the State Implementation Plan submitted by the
Massachusetts Department of
[[Page 44663]]
Environmental Protection on December 13, 2006 and June 1, 2007.
(i) Incorporation by reference.
(A) Massachusetts Regulation 310 CMR 7.00 entitled
``Defi