Notice of a Regional Project Waiver of Section 1605 (Buy American) of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) to the City of Lewiston, ME and the Auburn, Maine Water District, 58379-58380 [2010-23989]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 185 / Friday, September 24, 2010 / Notices
commercial and industrial (ICI) boilers,
vapor recovery at gas stations, large
above ground storage tanks, seaports,
aftermarket catalysts, lightering, and
non-road idling.
DATES: The meeting will be held on
November 10, 2010 starting at 9 a.m.
and ending at 4 p.m.
Location: Sheraton Boston, 39 Dalton
Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02199;
(617) 236–2000 or (888) 627–7054.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
documents and press inquiries contact:
Ozone Transport Commission, 444
North Capitol Street, NW., Suite 638,
Washington, DC 20001; (202) 508–3840;
e-mail: ozone@otcair.org; Web site:
https://www.otcair.org.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The Clean
Air Act Amendments of 1990 contain at
Section 184 provisions for the Control of
Interstate Ozone Air Pollution. Section
184(a) establishes an Ozone Transport
Region (OTR) comprised of the States of
Connecticut, Delaware, Maine,
Maryland, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New Jersey, New York,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont,
parts of Virginia and the District of
Columbia. The purpose of the OTC is to
deal with ground-level ozone formation,
transport, and control within the OTR.
Type of meeting: Open.
Agenda: Copies of the final agenda
will be available from the OTC office
(202) 508–3840; by e-mail:
ozone@otcair.org or via the OTC Web
site at https://www.otcair.org.
Dated: September 7, 2010.
W.C. Early,
Acting Regional Administrator, Region III.
[FR Doc. 2010–23994 Filed 9–23–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–9205–4]
Notice of a Regional Project Waiver of
Section 1605 (Buy American) of the
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009 (ARRA) to the City of
Lewiston, ME and the Auburn, Maine
Water District
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
AGENCY:
The EPA is hereby granting a
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]
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:12 Sep 23, 2010
Jkt 220001
to the City of Lewiston, Maine and the
Auburn, Maine Water District (‘‘AuburnLewiston’’) for the purchase of thirteen
separate types of ductile iron pipe
fittings (with various quantities for each
individual fitting configuration totaling
33 fittings) that are foreign
manufactured as part of an upgrade
project at the Auburn-Lewiston Water
Treatment Facility. This is a project
specific waiver and only applies to the
use of the specified product for the
ARRA project being proposed. Any
other ARRA recipient that wishes to use
the same product must apply for a
separate waiver based on project
specific circumstances. Based upon
information submitted by AuburnLewiston, it has been determined that
there are currently no domestically
manufactured pipe fittings available to
meet the Auburn-Lewiston’s project
construction schedule. The Regional
Administrator is making this
determination based on the review and
recommendations of the Municipal
Assistance Unit. 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 foreign
manufactured pipe fittings by AuburnLewiston, as specified in its July 28,
2010 request.
DATES: Effective Date: September 15,
2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Katie Connors, Environmental Engineer,
(617) 918–1658, or David Chin,
Environmental Engineer, (617) 918–
1764, Municipal Assistance Unit (CMU),
Office of Ecosystem Protection (OEP),
U.S. EPA, 5 Post Office Square, Suite
100, Boston, MA 02109–3912.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In
accordance with ARRA Section 1605(c),
the 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 City of Lewiston,
Maine and the Auburn, Maine Water
District for the purchase of foreign
manufactured pipe fittings as part of its
water treatment facility upgrade project.
The specific ductile iron fittings are not
available from a domestic manufacturer
to meet the project construction
schedule. 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 a public works
project unless all of the iron, steel, and
manufactured goods used in the project
is produced in the United States, or
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
58379
unless a waiver is provided to the
recipient by the head of the appropriate
agency, here the 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.
Consistent with the direction of the
OMB Guidance at 2 CFR 176.120, EPA
will generally regard waiver requests
with respect to components that were
specified in the bid solicitation or in a
general/primary construction contract as
‘‘late’’ if submitted after the contract
date. However, in this case EPA has
determined that the Auburn-Lewiston’s
request, though made after the date that
the contract was signed on March 11,
2010, can be evaluated as timely
because the supplier informed the
subcontractor of the recipient on July
19, 2010 that the domestic manufacturer
would not be able to deliver the
required type and number of fittings to
meet the project schedule/delivery date.
The need for a waiver was not
determined until after the subcontractor
had been informed of the extended
delivery delay and further research
indicated that there were no domestic
manufacturers that could provide the
necessary pipe fittings to meet the
required project delivery schedule. The
recipient could not reasonably foresee
the need for such a determination until
it was informed that the specific
domestic pipe fittings would not be
available at the originally scheduled
time frame. Accordingly, EPA will
evaluate the request as if it were timely.
Auburn-Lewiston is constructing a
new Ultraviolet (UV) disinfection
treatment facility in order to comply
with the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface
Water Treatment Rule requirements of
the Safe Drinking Water Act, and part of
the work involves the installation of
new pipe and pipe fittings. According to
information provided by AuburnLewiston, there are 13 different fitting
types of various sizes and connection
types, resulting in a total of 33
individual fittings. The fittings are also
required to meet the following
specifications: (1) Manufactured to
conform with ANSI/AWWA A21.51/
C151; (2) inside bituminous coating; and
(3) outside primer of TNEMEC
Omnithane Series 1.
E:\FR\FM\24SEN1.SGM
24SEN1
srobinson on DSKHWCL6B1PROD with NOTICES
58380
Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 185 / Friday, September 24, 2010 / Notices
According to Auburn-Lewiston, the
subcontract to furnish and install the
ductile iron pipe and pipe fittings was
awarded on March 11, 2010 and none of
the subcontractors raised any concerns
about getting the pipe fittings delivered
on time. A purchase order for the
ductile iron piping and fittings was
placed on April 29, 2010 with an agreed
upon shipping date of July 19, 2010 to
meet the project schedule.
On July 19, 2010, the supplier
received notification from the domestic
foundries manufacturing the subject
fittings that due to production order
backlog, delivery of standard fittings
would be delayed at least 4 weeks and
delivery of the special, non-standard
fittings (long radius bends and large
diameter tees) could be delayed at least
8 weeks. The project procurement
manager reported that the estimated 4
and 8 week delays were not guaranteed
and that the delays could be longer. The
possibility of delays was confirmed by
EPA’s national contractor in
conversation with the manufacturer.
The project schedule called for
delivery and installation of the ductile
iron pipe fittings between July 16, 2010
and August 12, 2010, so the testing of
the lines could be initiated prior to
September 1, 2010. In addition, the
ultraviolet disinfection treatment system
testing completion and operator training
milestone date is December 8, 2010,
with an overall project completion and
transfer of facility to the owner date of
January 5, 2011. If the delivery of the
pipe fittings is delayed until midSeptember of 2010, it is estimated that
final completion date will be pushed
back to at least several weeks. There
also has been no guarantee given by the
manufacturer that the fittings will be
delivered by mid-September, the revised
delivery date. According to AuburnLewiston, delivery times for certain
items are being quoted as long as six
months for existing orders.
The project procurement manager
solicited quotations and committed
delivery times for non-domestic
manufactured ductile iron fittings from
two local suppliers. Based on the
information that was obtained, the nondomestic manufactured ductile iron
pipe fittings necessary for the project,
with the exception of one 24″ x 4″ tee,
could be delivered within a time frame
to meet the project schedule. The work
could be coordinated to accommodate
the later delivery of the 24″ x 4″ tee and
preserve the December 8, 2010 overall
system testing and operator training
milestone date, as well as the January 5,
2011 overall project completion date.
Based on the review conducted by
EPA’s national contractor, Auburn-
VerDate Mar<15>2010
16:12 Sep 23, 2010
Jkt 220001
Lewiston’s claim that the specific
ductile iron fittings are not available
from a domestic manufacturer to meet
project schedule milestones is
supported by the available evidence. At
least eight additional potential domestic
manufacturers of ductile iron pipe
fittings were contacted and it was
determined that none would be able to
meet the required project delivery
schedule.
Furthermore, the purpose of the
ARRA is to stimulate economic recovery
by funding current infrastructure
construction, not to delay projects that
are ‘‘shovel ready’’ by requiring potential
SRF eligible recipients, such as the
Auburn-Lewiston to either revise their
design standards and specifications, or
in this situation significantly alter its
construction schedule. The imposition
of ARRA Buy American requirements in
this case would result in an
unreasonable delay for this project. To
delay this construction would directly
conflict with a fundamental economic
purpose of ARRA, which is to create or
retain jobs.
The April 28, 2009 EPA HQ
Memorandum, ‘‘Implementation of Buy
American provisions of Pub. L. 111–5,
the ‘American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009’ ’’
(‘‘Memorandum’’), 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 same Memorandum
defines ‘‘satisfactory quality’’ as ‘‘the
quality of steel, iron or manufactured
good specified in the project plans and
designs.’’
The Municipal Assistance Unit (CMU)
has reviewed this waiver request and
has determined that the supporting
documentation provided by AuburnLewiston establishes both a proper basis
to specify a particular manufactured
good, and that the domestic
manufactured good is currently not
available to meet the construction
schedule for the proposed project. The
information provided is sufficient to
meet the following criteria listed under
Section 1605(b) of the ARRA and in the
April 28, 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 March 31, 2009 Delegation of
Authority Memorandum provided
Regional Administrators with the
temporary authority to issue exceptions
to Section 1605 of the ARRA within the
geographic boundaries of their
PO 00000
Frm 00034
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
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,
the City of Lewiston, Maine and the
Auburn, Maine Water District are
hereby granted a waiver from the Buy
American requirements of Section
1605(a) of Public Law 111–5. This
waiver permits use of ARRA funds for
the purchase of non-domestic
manufactured pipe fittings documented
in Auburn-Lewiston’s waiver request
submittal dated July 28, 2010. 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: September 15, 2010.
Ira W. Leighton,
Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region
1—New England.
[FR Doc. 2010–23989 Filed 9–23–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–9206–3]
Notice of a Regional Project Waiver of
Section 1605 (Buy American) of the
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009 (ARRA) to the Town of
Bristol, RI
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The EPA is hereby granting a
waiver of the Buy American
requirements of ARRA Section 1605
under the authority of Section
1605(b)(1) [inconsistent with the public
interest] to the Town of Bristol, Rhode
Island (Town) for the utilization and
installation of two influent and two
effluent sluice gates for the facility’s two
final clarifiers as part of a larger overall
wastewater treatment plant upgrade
project. This is a project specific waiver
and only applies to the use of the
specified product for the ARRA project
being proposed. Any other ARRA
recipient that wishes to use the same
product must apply for a separate
waiver based on project specific
circumstances. The Town had been
assured by the manufacturer that the
sluice gates would be made in a facility
in Massachusetts. However, the
manufacturer informed the Town of
Bristol in writing on July 8, 2010 that
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\24SEN1.SGM
24SEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 185 (Friday, September 24, 2010)]
[Notices]
[Pages 58379-58380]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-23989]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[FRL-9205-4]
Notice of a Regional Project Waiver of Section 1605 (Buy
American) of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA)
to the City of Lewiston, ME and the Auburn, Maine Water District
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The EPA is hereby granting a 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 City of Lewiston, Maine and the Auburn, Maine Water
District (``Auburn-Lewiston'') for the purchase of thirteen separate
types of ductile iron pipe fittings (with various quantities for each
individual fitting configuration totaling 33 fittings) that are foreign
manufactured as part of an upgrade project at the Auburn-Lewiston Water
Treatment Facility. This is a project specific waiver and only applies
to the use of the specified product for the ARRA project being
proposed. Any other ARRA recipient that wishes to use the same product
must apply for a separate waiver based on project specific
circumstances. Based upon information submitted by Auburn-Lewiston, it
has been determined that there are currently no domestically
manufactured pipe fittings available to meet the Auburn-Lewiston's
project construction schedule. The Regional Administrator is making
this determination based on the review and recommendations of the
Municipal Assistance Unit. 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 foreign manufactured pipe fittings by Auburn-Lewiston, as
specified in its July 28, 2010 request.
DATES: Effective Date: September 15, 2010.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Katie Connors, Environmental Engineer,
(617) 918-1658, or David Chin, Environmental Engineer, (617) 918-1764,
Municipal Assistance Unit (CMU), Office of Ecosystem Protection (OEP),
U.S. EPA, 5 Post Office Square, Suite 100, Boston, MA 02109-3912.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In accordance with ARRA Section 1605(c), the
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 City of Lewiston, Maine and the Auburn, Maine
Water District for the purchase of foreign manufactured pipe fittings
as part of its water treatment facility upgrade project. The specific
ductile iron fittings are not available from a domestic manufacturer to
meet the project construction schedule. 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 a public works project unless all of the iron, steel, and
manufactured goods used in the project is produced in the United
States, or unless a waiver is provided to the recipient by the head of
the appropriate agency, here the 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.
Consistent with the direction of the OMB Guidance at 2 CFR 176.120,
EPA will generally regard waiver requests with respect to components
that were specified in the bid solicitation or in a general/primary
construction contract as ``late'' if submitted after the contract date.
However, in this case EPA has determined that the Auburn-Lewiston's
request, though made after the date that the contract was signed on
March 11, 2010, can be evaluated as timely because the supplier
informed the subcontractor of the recipient on July 19, 2010 that the
domestic manufacturer would not be able to deliver the required type
and number of fittings to meet the project schedule/delivery date. The
need for a waiver was not determined until after the subcontractor had
been informed of the extended delivery delay and further research
indicated that there were no domestic manufacturers that could provide
the necessary pipe fittings to meet the required project delivery
schedule. The recipient could not reasonably foresee the need for such
a determination until it was informed that the specific domestic pipe
fittings would not be available at the originally scheduled time frame.
Accordingly, EPA will evaluate the request as if it were timely.
Auburn-Lewiston is constructing a new Ultraviolet (UV) disinfection
treatment facility in order to comply with the Long Term 2 Enhanced
Surface Water Treatment Rule requirements of the Safe Drinking Water
Act, and part of the work involves the installation of new pipe and
pipe fittings. According to information provided by Auburn-Lewiston,
there are 13 different fitting types of various sizes and connection
types, resulting in a total of 33 individual fittings. The fittings are
also required to meet the following specifications: (1) Manufactured to
conform with ANSI/AWWA A21.51/C151; (2) inside bituminous coating; and
(3) outside primer of TNEMEC Omnithane Series 1.
[[Page 58380]]
According to Auburn-Lewiston, the subcontract to furnish and
install the ductile iron pipe and pipe fittings was awarded on March
11, 2010 and none of the subcontractors raised any concerns about
getting the pipe fittings delivered on time. A purchase order for the
ductile iron piping and fittings was placed on April 29, 2010 with an
agreed upon shipping date of July 19, 2010 to meet the project
schedule.
On July 19, 2010, the supplier received notification from the
domestic foundries manufacturing the subject fittings that due to
production order backlog, delivery of standard fittings would be
delayed at least 4 weeks and delivery of the special, non-standard
fittings (long radius bends and large diameter tees) could be delayed
at least 8 weeks. The project procurement manager reported that the
estimated 4 and 8 week delays were not guaranteed and that the delays
could be longer. The possibility of delays was confirmed by EPA's
national contractor in conversation with the manufacturer.
The project schedule called for delivery and installation of the
ductile iron pipe fittings between July 16, 2010 and August 12, 2010,
so the testing of the lines could be initiated prior to September 1,
2010. In addition, the ultraviolet disinfection treatment system
testing completion and operator training milestone date is December 8,
2010, with an overall project completion and transfer of facility to
the owner date of January 5, 2011. If the delivery of the pipe fittings
is delayed until mid-September of 2010, it is estimated that final
completion date will be pushed back to at least several weeks. There
also has been no guarantee given by the manufacturer that the fittings
will be delivered by mid-September, the revised delivery date.
According to Auburn-Lewiston, delivery times for certain items are
being quoted as long as six months for existing orders.
The project procurement manager solicited quotations and committed
delivery times for non-domestic manufactured ductile iron fittings from
two local suppliers. Based on the information that was obtained, the
non-domestic manufactured ductile iron pipe fittings necessary for the
project, with the exception of one 24'' x 4'' tee, could be delivered
within a time frame to meet the project schedule. The work could be
coordinated to accommodate the later delivery of the 24'' x 4'' tee and
preserve the December 8, 2010 overall system testing and operator
training milestone date, as well as the January 5, 2011 overall project
completion date.
Based on the review conducted by EPA's national contractor, Auburn-
Lewiston's claim that the specific ductile iron fittings are not
available from a domestic manufacturer to meet project schedule
milestones is supported by the available evidence. At least eight
additional potential domestic manufacturers of ductile iron pipe
fittings were contacted and it was determined that none would be able
to meet the required project delivery schedule.
Furthermore, the purpose of the ARRA is to stimulate economic
recovery by funding current infrastructure construction, not to delay
projects that are ``shovel ready'' by requiring potential SRF eligible
recipients, such as the Auburn-Lewiston to either revise their design
standards and specifications, or in this situation significantly alter
its construction schedule. The imposition of ARRA Buy American
requirements in this case would result in an unreasonable delay for
this project. To delay this construction would directly conflict with a
fundamental economic purpose of ARRA, which is to create or retain
jobs.
The April 28, 2009 EPA HQ Memorandum, ``Implementation of Buy
American provisions of Pub. L. 111-5, the `American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009' '' (``Memorandum''), 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 same Memorandum defines
``satisfactory quality'' as ``the quality of steel, iron or
manufactured good specified in the project plans and designs.''
The Municipal Assistance Unit (CMU) has reviewed this waiver
request and has determined that the supporting documentation provided
by Auburn-Lewiston establishes both a proper basis to specify a
particular manufactured good, and that the domestic manufactured good
is currently not available to meet the construction schedule for the
proposed project. The information provided is sufficient to meet the
following criteria listed under Section 1605(b) of the ARRA and in the
April 28, 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 March 31, 2009 Delegation of Authority Memorandum provided
Regional Administrators with the temporary 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, the City of Lewiston,
Maine and the Auburn, Maine Water District are hereby granted a waiver
from the Buy American requirements of Section 1605(a) of Public Law
111-5. This waiver permits use of ARRA funds for the purchase of non-
domestic manufactured pipe fittings documented in Auburn-Lewiston's
waiver request submittal dated July 28, 2010. 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: September 15, 2010.
Ira W. Leighton,
Acting Regional Administrator, EPA Region 1--New England.
[FR Doc. 2010-23989 Filed 9-23-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P