Notice of a Project Waiver of Section 1605 (Buy American Requirement) of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) to Warren County, OH (Warren County), 25244-25246 [2010-10911]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 88 / Friday, May 7, 2010 / Notices
of high-speed, high-efficiency magnetic
bearing turbo-compressors that are
manufactured in Sweden.
Section 1605 of the ARRA requires
that none of the appropriated funds may
be used for the construction, alteration,
maintenance, or repair of a public
building or public work unless all of the
iron, steel, and manufactured goods
used in the project are produced in the
United States, or unless a waiver is
provided to the recipient by the head of
the appropriate agency, here EPA. A
waiver may be provided if EPA
determines that (1) applying these
requirements would be inconsistent
with the public interest; (2) iron, steel,
and the relevant manufactured goods
are not produced in the United States in
sufficient and reasonably available
quantities and of a satisfactory quality;
or (3) inclusion of iron, steel, and the
relevant manufactured goods produced
in the United States will increase the
cost of the overall project by more than
25 percent.
These manufactured goods will
provide aeration for Auburn’s activated
sludge treatment process. The city
selected the magnetic bearing
technology because of its ability to
avoid overheating and its track record of
providing long-standing reliable
service—key advantages over the
competing airfoil bearing technology.
Auburn’s submissions clearly
articulated functional reasons that
justified their technical specifications
and requirements.
The April 28, 2009 EPA HQ
Memorandum, ‘‘Implementation of Buy
American provisions of Public Law
111–5, the ‘American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009’,’’ defines
reasonably available quantity as ‘‘the
quantity of iron, steel, or relevant
manufactured good is available or will
be available at the time needed and
place needed, and in the proper form or
specification as specified in the project
plans and design.’’
The applicant met the requirements
specified for the availability inquiry as
appropriate to the circumstances by
conducting an extensive investigation
into all possible sources for high-speed,
high-efficiency turbo-compressors.
Based on the investigation, five
companies were found to manufacture
these machines, but only two (ABS and
one other company) used magnetic
bearings. Moreover, both of the
companies that use magnetic bearings
manufacture their machines overseas.
Auburn believes that since ABS has
multiple municipal wastewater
treatment plant installations in the
Midwest and that its competitor has
none, that the ABS turbo-compressor
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19:19 May 06, 2010
Jkt 220001
technology has been proven and would
perform reliably in this specific
application. Therefore, Auburn
contends that there is no domestic
product of satisfactory quality available.
EPA’s national contractor prepared a
technical assessment report dated
January 27, 2010, based on the
submitted waiver request. The report
determined that the waiver request
submittal was complete, that adequate
technical information was provided,
and that there were no significant
weaknesses in the justification
provided. Therefore, based on the
information provided to EPA and to the
best of our knowledge at this time, the
high-speed, high-efficiency magnetic
bearing turbo-compressors necessary for
this project are not manufactured in the
United States, and no other U.S.
manufactured product can meet
Auburn’s project performance
specifications and requirements.
The purpose of the ARRA is to
stimulate economic recovery in part by
funding current infrastructure
construction, not to delay projects that
are ‘‘shovel ready’’ by requiring
communities such as Auburn to revise
their standards and specifications and to
start the bidding process again. The
imposition of ARRA Buy American
requirements on such projects otherwise
eligible for ARRA State Revolving Fund
assistance would result in unreasonable
delay and thus displace the ‘‘shovel
ready’’ status for this project. To further
delay project implementation is in
direct conflict with a fundamental
economic purpose of the ARRA, which
is to create or retain jobs.
The State and Tribal Programs Branch
has reviewed this waiver request and
has determined that the supporting
documentation provided by Auburn is
sufficient to meet the criteria listed
under Section 1605(b) of the ARRA and
in the April 28, 2009, ‘‘Implementation
of Buy American provisions of Public
Law 111–5, the ‘American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009’
Memorandum’’: Iron, steel, and the
manufactured goods are not produced in
the United States in sufficient and
reasonably available quantities and of a
satisfactory quality. The basis for this
project waiver is the authorization
provided in Section 1605(b)(2) of the
ARRA. Due to the lack of production of
this item in the United States in
sufficient and reasonably available
quantities and of a satisfactory quality
in order to meet Auburn’s project
performance specifications and
requirements, a waiver from the Buy
American requirement is justified.
The March 31, 2009, Delegation of
Authority Memorandum provided
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Sfmt 4703
Regional Administrators with the
authority to issue exceptions to Section
1605 of the ARRA within the geographic
boundaries of their respective regions
and with respect to requests by
individual grant recipients. Having
established both a proper basis to
specify the particular good required for
this project, and that this manufactured
good was not available from a producer
in the United States, Auburn is hereby
granted a waiver from the Buy American
requirements of Section 1605(a) of
Public Law 111–5 for the purchase of
high-speed, high efficiency magnetic
bearing turbo-compressors using ARRA
funds as specified in the community’s
request of December 21, 2009. This
supplementary information constitutes
the detailed written justification
required by Section 1605(c) for waivers
‘‘based on a finding under subsection
(b).’’
Authority: Pub. L. 111–5, section 1605.
Dated: March 25, 2010.
Walter W. Kovalick,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2010–10918 Filed 5–6–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–9145–4]
Notice of a Project Waiver of Section
1605 (Buy American Requirement) of
the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) to
Warren County, OH (Warren County)
AGENCY: Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: The EPA is hereby granting a
project waiver of the Buy American
requirements of ARRA Section 1605
under the authority of Section
1605(b)(2) [manufactured goods are not
produced in the United States of a
satisfactory quality] to Warren County
for the purchase of a Trojan UV 4000
Plus medium-pressure, high-intensity
ultraviolet disinfection system to treat
effluent from the Lower Little Miami
River Wastewater Treatment Plant. This
is a project-specific waiver and only
applies to the use of the specified
product for the ARRA funded project
being proposed. Any other ARRA
project that may wish to use the same
product must apply for a separate
waiver based on project-specific
circumstances. This disinfection system,
which is supplied by Trojan
Technologies of London, Ontario, is
manufactured in Canada and meets
E:\FR\FM\07MYN1.SGM
07MYN1
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 88 / Friday, May 7, 2010 / Notices
Warren County’s performance
specifications and requirements. The
Acting Regional Administrator is
making this determination based on the
review and recommendations of EPA
Region 5’s Water Division. Warren
County has provided sufficient
documentation to support its request.
The Assistant Administrator of the
Office of Administration and Resources
Management has concurred on this
decision to make an exception to
Section 1605 of ARRA. This action
permits the purchase of a Trojan UV
4000 Plus medium-pressure, highintensity ultraviolet disinfection system
for the Lower Little Miami River
Wastewater Treatment Plant that may
otherwise be prohibited under Section
1605(a) of the ARRA.
DATES: Effective Date: January 26, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Andrew Lausted, SRF Program Manager
(312) 886–0189, or Puja Lakhani, Office
of Regional Counsel, (312) 353–3190,
U.S. EPA Region 5, 77 W. Jackson Blvd.,
Chicago, IL 60604.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In
accordance with ARRA section 1605(c)
and pursuant to section 1605(b)(2) of
Public Law 111–5, the Buy American
requirements, EPA hereby provides
notice that it is granting a project waiver
to Warren County for the acquisition of
a Trojan 4000 Plus medium-pressure,
high-intensity ultraviolet disinfection
system that is manufactured in Canada.
Section 1605 of the ARRA requires
that none of the appropriated funds may
be used for the construction, alteration,
maintenance, or repair of a public
building or public work unless all of the
iron, steel, and manufactured goods
used in the project are produced in the
United States, or unless a waiver is
provided to the recipient by the head of
the appropriate agency, here EPA. A
waiver may be provided if EPA
determines that (1) Applying these
requirements would be inconsistent
with the public interest; (2) iron, steel,
and the relevant manufactured goods
are not produced in the United States in
sufficient and reasonably available
quantities and of a satisfactory quality;
or (3) inclusion of iron, steel, and the
relevant manufactured goods produced
in the United States will increase the
cost of the overall project by more than
25 percent.
These manufactured goods will
provide wastewater effluent disinfection
for Warren County’s Lower Little Miami
River Wastewater Treatment Plant. Early
in the design process, the County
decided to use a UV system that utilizes
a medium pressure UV lamp. Warren
County’s plant is relatively large and a
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19:19 May 06, 2010
Jkt 220001
medium pressure UV system uses many
fewer UV lamps than a low pressure
system, and consequently has reduced
operation and maintenance costs and
requires a much smaller building to
house the UV system.
While there are two companies that
manufacture medium pressure UV
systems that are marketed in the United
States for use in wastewater
disinfection, each manufacturer
implements the technology differently
which generally requires a completely
different facility layout. Based on cost
and technical concerns, the County
decided in 2008—prior to the enactment
of ARRA—to finalize plant design using
the Trojan 4000 Plus medium-pressure,
high intensity ultraviolet disinfection
system with an open-channel
configuration that will meet the capacity
requirements of the project.
The April 28, 2009 EPA HQ
Memorandum, ‘‘Implementation of Buy
American provisions of Public Law
111–5, the ‘American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009’,’’ defines
reasonably available quantity as ‘‘the
quantity of iron, steel, or relevant
manufactured good is available or will
be available at the time needed and
place needed, and in the proper form or
specification as specified in the project
plans and design.’’
Here, the applicant met the
requirements specified for the
availability inquiry by conducting an
extensive investigation into all possible
sources for medium-pressure, high
intensity ultraviolet disinfection
systems that can meet the capacity
requirements of the project. The one
potential alternative to the Trojan 4000
Plus system, an Americanmanufactured, medium-pressure
ultraviolet disinfection system for
wastewater, was a closed-vessel, in-pipe
system rather than an open-channel
system. Use of this alternative would
require a substantial and costly redesign
of the disinfection facility from the
project specifications as finalized in
2008. Based on the information
provided to EPA and to the best of our
knowledge at this time, because the
Trojan 4000 Plus is the only system that
can meet the design specification for an
open-channel medium-pressure highintensity UV disinfection system, EPA
believes that there is no domestic
product of satisfactory quality available
to meet this justified specification.
The purpose of the ARRA is to
stimulate economic recovery in part by
funding current infrastructure
construction, and not to delay projects
that are ‘‘shovel ready’’ by requiring
communities such as Warren County to
revise substantially their project design
PO 00000
Frm 00061
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
25245
and specifications, start the bidding
process again, and potentially choose a
more costly, less efficient project. In this
situation, the imposition of ARRA Buy
American requirements on a project
otherwise eligible for ARRA State
Revolving Fund assistance would result
in unreasonable delay and thus displace
the ‘‘shovel ready’’ status for this project.
To further delay project implementation
is in direct conflict with a fundamental
economic purpose of the ARRA, which
is to create or retain jobs.
Based on the submitted waiver
request, EPA’s national contractor
prepared a technical assessment report
dated November 3, 2009. The report
determined that the waiver request
submittal was complete, that adequate
technical information was provided,
and that there were no significant
weaknesses in the justification that was
provided. The report confirmed the
waiver applicant’s claim that there are
no comparable domestic products that
can meet the design specifications for
the project. Therefore, based on the
information provided to EPA and to the
best of our knowledge at this time, the
medium-pressure, high-intensity openchannel configuration ultraviolet
disinfection system necessary for this
project is not manufactured in the
United States, and no other U.S.
manufactured product can meet Warren
County’s project performance
specifications and requirements.
The State and Tribal Programs Branch
has reviewed this waiver request and
has determined that the supporting
documentation provided by Warren
County is sufficient to meet the criteria
listed under Section 1605(b) of the
ARRA and in the April 28, 2009,
‘‘Implementation of Buy American
provisions of Public Law 111–5, the
‘American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009’ Memorandum’’: Iron, steel,
and the manufactured goods are not
produced in the United States in
sufficient and reasonably available
quantities and of a satisfactory quality.
The basis for this project waiver is the
authorization provided in Section
1605(b)(2) of the ARRA. Due to the lack
of production of this item in the United
States in sufficient and reasonably
available quantities and of a satisfactory
quality to meet Warren County’s project
performance specifications and
requirements, a waiver from the Buy
American requirement is justified.
The March 31, 2009, Delegation of
Authority Memorandum provided
Regional Administrators with the
authority to issue exceptions to Section
1605 of the ARRA within the geographic
boundaries of their respective regions
and with respect to requests by
E:\FR\FM\07MYN1.SGM
07MYN1
25246
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 88 / Friday, May 7, 2010 / Notices
individual grant recipients. Having
established both a proper basis to
specify the particular good required for
this project, and that this manufactured
good was not available from a producer
in the United States, Warren County is
hereby granted a waiver from the Buy
American requirements of Section
1605(a) of Public Law 111–5 for the
purchase of a Trojan 4000 Plus mediumpressure, high-intensity ultraviolet
disinfection system using ARRA funds
as specified in the community’s request
of October 29, 2009. This
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION constitutes
the detailed written justification
required by Section 1605(c) for waivers
‘‘based on a finding under subsection
(b).’’
Authority: Pub. L. 111–5, section 1605.
Dated: January 26, 2010.
Walter W. Kovalick,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2010–10911 Filed 5–6–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–9146–9]
Notice of a Project Waiver of Section
1605 (Buy American Requirement) of
the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) to
the Albuquerque Bernalillo County
Water Utility Authority, New Mexico
jlentini on DSKJ8SOYB1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY: Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
SUMMARY: The Regional Administrator
of EPA Region 6 is hereby granting a
project waiver of the Buy American
requirements of ARRA Section 1605
under the authority of Section
1605(b)(2) [manufactured goods are not
produced in the United States in
sufficient and reasonably available
quantities and of a satisfactory quality]
to the Albuquerque Bernalillo County
Water Utility Authority (‘‘ABCWUA’’)
for the purchase of three hundred
acoustic leak detection sensors/loggers
(‘‘loggers’’) and one fully programmable
radio transceiver. The loggers and radio
transceiver under consideration are
manufactured by Gutermann, Inc., and
no United States manufacturer produces
an alternative that meets the ABCWUA’s
technical specifications. This is a
project specific waiver and only applies
to the use of the specified product for
the ARRA funded project being
proposed. Any other ARRA project that
may wish to use the same product must
apply for a separate waiver based on the
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19:19 May 06, 2010
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specific project circumstances. The
Regional Administrator is making this
determination based on the review and
recommendations of the EPA Region 6,
Water Quality Protection Division. The
ABCWUA has provided sufficient
documentation to support its request.
The Assistant Administrator of the
EPA’s Office of Administration and
Resources Management has concurred
on this decision to make an exception
to Section 1605 of ARRA. This action
permits the purchase of three hundred
loggers and one radio transceiver
containing goods not manufactured in
America, for the proposed project being
implemented by the ABCWUA.
DATES: Effective Date: April 28, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Nasim Jahan, Buy American
Coordinator, (214) 665–7522, SRF &
Projects Section, Water Quality
Protection Division, U.S. EPA Region 6,
1445 Ross Avenue, Dallas, Texas 75202–
2733.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In
accordance with ARRA Section 1605(c)
and 1605(b)(2), EPA hereby provides
notice that it is granting a project waiver
of the requirements of Section 1605(a) of
Public Law 111–5, Buy American
requirements to the ABCWUA for the
acquisition of three hundred loggers and
one radio transceiver (Model:
Gutermann Zonescan 820). The
ABCWUA has been unable to find an
American made logger manufacturer to
meet its specific requirements of cross
correlation functionality for pinpointing
leaks throughout its water distribution
system.
Section 1605 of the ARRA requires
that none of the appropriated funds may
be used for the construction, alteration,
maintenance, or repair of a public
building or public work unless all of the
iron, steel, and manufactured goods
used in the project are produced in the
United States unless a waiver is
provided to the recipient by EPA. A
waiver may be provided if EPA
determines that (1) applying these
requirements would be inconsistent
with public interest; (2) iron, steel, and
the relevant manufactured goods are not
produced in the United States in
sufficient and reasonably available
quantities and of a satisfactory quality;
or (3) inclusion of iron, steel, and the
relevant manufactured goods produced
in the United States will increase the
cost of the overall project by more than
25 percent.
The ABCWUA is implementing a
comprehensive asset management
program, and leak detection is critical to
better management of its water system
assets. The ABCWUA desires to quickly
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Frm 00062
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
and efficiently locate leaks in its
wastewater distribution system and
seeks ARRA funding to purchase loggers
that can easily be deployed on the water
distribution system, that are noninvasive, and are designed to detect
noise generated from vibrations of water
escaping from pipes. Efficient leak
detection provides timely data on the
types of leak and potential cause. It
helps the utility authority in identifying
high priority assets needing
rehabilitation/replacement, which can
effectively reduce the chances of
catastrophic failure.
Accordingly, the ABCWUA on
January 22, 2010 concluded an ARRA
assistance agreement with the State of
New Mexico to a fund a project to
procure and deploy leak detection
equipment for its distribution system.
The bid documents for the project
include the specifications for loggers
and one radio transceiver having cross
correlation functionality for exactly
pinpointing leaks throughout the water
distribution system. The ABCWUA had
received four bids for this project on
January 20, 2010, and upon identifying
Gutermann as the only bidder to
provide a data logger that included this
cross-correlation functionality,
submitted a timely waiver request to
EPA on February 5, 2010.
The ABCWUA is requesting a waiver
for the use of three hundred loggers and
one programmable radio transceiver
(Model: Gutermann Zonescan 820) on
the basis that there are no domestic
manufacturers of the loggers that will
meet the ABCWUA product
specifications.
The ABCWUA authority received four
bids for the acoustic leak detection
equipment project. Among the four
bidders, the bid submitted by
Gutermann was the only leak detection
logger that met ABCWUA’s
specifications. Specifically, the logger
was required to have the feature of cross
correlation functionality for pinpointing
leaks. Gutermann’s Zonescan 820
loggers automatically perform leak noise
correlation for pinpointing the leak
location. In addition, automatic multicorrelation provides precise positions
between all loggers in the same project
area. As this feature maximizes the
efficiency and effectiveness of the
crucial functions of enabling the
ABCWUA to conserve and prevent
contamination of scarce water supplies
that have already been treated to comply
with National Primary Drinking Water
Regulations, EPA finds that the
ABCWUA’s specification of this feature
is justified.
Although there are loggers that are
manufactured in the United States, the
E:\FR\FM\07MYN1.SGM
07MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 88 (Friday, May 7, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 25244-25246]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-10911]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[FRL-9145-4]
Notice of a Project Waiver of Section 1605 (Buy American
Requirement) of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009
(ARRA) to Warren County, OH (Warren County)
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The EPA is hereby granting a project waiver of the Buy
American requirements of ARRA Section 1605 under the authority of
Section 1605(b)(2) [manufactured goods are not produced in the United
States of a satisfactory quality] to Warren County for the purchase of
a Trojan UV 4000 Plus medium-pressure, high-intensity ultraviolet
disinfection system to treat effluent from the Lower Little Miami River
Wastewater Treatment Plant. This is a project-specific waiver and only
applies to the use of the specified product for the ARRA funded project
being proposed. Any other ARRA project that may wish to use the same
product must apply for a separate waiver based on project-specific
circumstances. This disinfection system, which is supplied by Trojan
Technologies of London, Ontario, is manufactured in Canada and meets
[[Page 25245]]
Warren County's performance specifications and requirements. The Acting
Regional Administrator is making this determination based on the review
and recommendations of EPA Region 5's Water Division. Warren County has
provided sufficient documentation to support its request. The Assistant
Administrator of the Office of Administration and Resources Management
has concurred on this decision to make an exception to Section 1605 of
ARRA. This action permits the purchase of a Trojan UV 4000 Plus medium-
pressure, high-intensity ultraviolet disinfection system for the Lower
Little Miami River Wastewater Treatment Plant that may otherwise be
prohibited under Section 1605(a) of the ARRA.
DATES: Effective Date: January 26, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Andrew Lausted, SRF Program Manager
(312) 886-0189, or Puja Lakhani, Office of Regional Counsel, (312) 353-
3190, U.S. EPA Region 5, 77 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, IL 60604.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In accordance with ARRA section 1605(c) and
pursuant to section 1605(b)(2) of Public Law 111-5, the Buy American
requirements, EPA hereby provides notice that it is granting a project
waiver to Warren County for the acquisition of a Trojan 4000 Plus
medium-pressure, high-intensity ultraviolet disinfection system that is
manufactured in Canada.
Section 1605 of the ARRA requires that none of the appropriated
funds may be used for the construction, alteration, maintenance, or
repair of a public building or public work unless all of the iron,
steel, and manufactured goods used in the project are produced in the
United States, or unless a waiver is provided to the recipient by the
head of the appropriate agency, here EPA. A waiver may be provided if
EPA determines that (1) Applying these requirements would be
inconsistent with the public interest; (2) iron, steel, and the
relevant manufactured goods are not produced in the United States in
sufficient and reasonably available quantities and of a satisfactory
quality; or (3) inclusion of iron, steel, and the relevant manufactured
goods produced in the United States will increase the cost of the
overall project by more than 25 percent.
These manufactured goods will provide wastewater effluent
disinfection for Warren County's Lower Little Miami River Wastewater
Treatment Plant. Early in the design process, the County decided to use
a UV system that utilizes a medium pressure UV lamp. Warren County's
plant is relatively large and a medium pressure UV system uses many
fewer UV lamps than a low pressure system, and consequently has reduced
operation and maintenance costs and requires a much smaller building to
house the UV system.
While there are two companies that manufacture medium pressure UV
systems that are marketed in the United States for use in wastewater
disinfection, each manufacturer implements the technology differently
which generally requires a completely different facility layout. Based
on cost and technical concerns, the County decided in 2008--prior to
the enactment of ARRA--to finalize plant design using the Trojan 4000
Plus medium-pressure, high intensity ultraviolet disinfection system
with an open-channel configuration that will meet the capacity
requirements of the project.
The April 28, 2009 EPA HQ Memorandum, ``Implementation of Buy
American provisions of Public Law 111-5, the `American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009','' defines reasonably available quantity as
``the quantity of iron, steel, or relevant manufactured good is
available or will be available at the time needed and place needed, and
in the proper form or specification as specified in the project plans
and design.''
Here, the applicant met the requirements specified for the
availability inquiry by conducting an extensive investigation into all
possible sources for medium-pressure, high intensity ultraviolet
disinfection systems that can meet the capacity requirements of the
project. The one potential alternative to the Trojan 4000 Plus system,
an American-manufactured, medium-pressure ultraviolet disinfection
system for wastewater, was a closed-vessel, in-pipe system rather than
an open-channel system. Use of this alternative would require a
substantial and costly redesign of the disinfection facility from the
project specifications as finalized in 2008. Based on the information
provided to EPA and to the best of our knowledge at this time, because
the Trojan 4000 Plus is the only system that can meet the design
specification for an open-channel medium-pressure high-intensity UV
disinfection system, EPA believes that there is no domestic product of
satisfactory quality available to meet this justified specification.
The purpose of the ARRA is to stimulate economic recovery in part
by funding current infrastructure construction, and not to delay
projects that are ``shovel ready'' by requiring communities such as
Warren County to revise substantially their project design and
specifications, start the bidding process again, and potentially choose
a more costly, less efficient project. In this situation, the
imposition of ARRA Buy American requirements on a project otherwise
eligible for ARRA State Revolving Fund assistance would result in
unreasonable delay and thus displace the ``shovel ready'' status for
this project. To further delay project implementation is in direct
conflict with a fundamental economic purpose of the ARRA, which is to
create or retain jobs.
Based on the submitted waiver request, EPA's national contractor
prepared a technical assessment report dated November 3, 2009. The
report determined that the waiver request submittal was complete, that
adequate technical information was provided, and that there were no
significant weaknesses in the justification that was provided. The
report confirmed the waiver applicant's claim that there are no
comparable domestic products that can meet the design specifications
for the project. Therefore, based on the information provided to EPA
and to the best of our knowledge at this time, the medium-pressure,
high-intensity open-channel configuration ultraviolet disinfection
system necessary for this project is not manufactured in the United
States, and no other U.S. manufactured product can meet Warren County's
project performance specifications and requirements.
The State and Tribal Programs Branch has reviewed this waiver
request and has determined that the supporting documentation provided
by Warren County is sufficient to meet the criteria listed under
Section 1605(b) of the ARRA and in the April 28, 2009, ``Implementation
of Buy American provisions of Public Law 111-5, the `American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act of 2009' Memorandum'': Iron, steel, and the
manufactured goods are not produced in the United States in sufficient
and reasonably available quantities and of a satisfactory quality. The
basis for this project waiver is the authorization provided in Section
1605(b)(2) of the ARRA. Due to the lack of production of this item in
the United States in sufficient and reasonably available quantities and
of a satisfactory quality to meet Warren County's project performance
specifications and requirements, a waiver from the Buy American
requirement is justified.
The March 31, 2009, Delegation of Authority Memorandum provided
Regional Administrators with the authority to issue exceptions to
Section 1605 of the ARRA within the geographic boundaries of their
respective regions and with respect to requests by
[[Page 25246]]
individual grant recipients. Having established both a proper basis to
specify the particular good required for this project, and that this
manufactured good was not available from a producer in the United
States, Warren County is hereby granted a waiver from the Buy American
requirements of Section 1605(a) of Public Law 111-5 for the purchase of
a Trojan 4000 Plus medium-pressure, high-intensity ultraviolet
disinfection system using ARRA funds as specified in the community's
request of October 29, 2009. This supplementary information constitutes
the detailed written justification required by Section 1605(c) for
waivers ``based on a finding under subsection (b).''
Authority: Pub. L. 111-5, section 1605.
Dated: January 26, 2010.
Walter W. Kovalick,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region 5.
[FR Doc. 2010-10911 Filed 5-6-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P