Cross-Media Electronic Reporting: Authorized Program Revision Approval, State of Florida, 25474-25475 [2012-10322]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 83 / Monday, April 30, 2012 / Notices
(hamlet of Cementon), via horizontal
direction drilling (HDD). The HVDC
underwater cables would be located
within the Hudson River for
approximately 67 miles until reaching a
point north of Haverstraw Bay. As part
of the revised project route, the cables
would then exit the Hudson River at the
Town of Stony Point in Rockland
County, NY, to allow for a 7.7 mile
bypass of Haverstraw Bay; this portion
of the route would include three HDD
installations under the Stony Point State
Historic Park Site and Rockland Lake
State Park. After the HDD under the
parks, the cables would enter the
Hudson River via HDD and be buried in
the river for approximately 20.7 miles to
the Spuyten Duyvil, where it would
now extend south-easterly within the
Harlem River for approximately 6.6
miles before exiting the water to a
location along an existing railway ROW
in the borough of the Bronx, NY. The
cables would then continue along that
ROW for approximately 1.1 miles.
At this point, the revised route would
enter the East River via HDD, cross the
East River and make land-fall at Astoria,
Queens, NY. The cables would
terminate at a new converter station
proposed to be located near Luyster
Creek, north of 20th Avenue, for a total
length of approximately 330 miles from
the U.S. border with Canada. The
converter station would be installed on
properties owned by Con Edison located
in an industrial zone in Astoria and is
proposed to have a total footprint of
approximately five acres. The converter
station would interconnect via
underground circuit with the NYPA
substation near the site of the Charles
Poletti Power Project in Queens, NY.
The substation would be connected to
Con Edison’s Rainey Substation, located
in Astoria, via HVAC cables installed
under New York City streets. A map of
the proposed Champlain Hudson
transmission line project route can be
found at https://chpexpresseis.org.
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Previous Public Scoping
A public scoping period for the CHPE
EIS began with the publication of DOE’s
NOI in the Federal Register on June 18,
2010. The 45-day public scoping period
closed on August 2, 2010. DOE received
scoping comments in the form of 22
written letters or emails from private
citizens, government agencies, and
nongovernmental organizations. DOE
held public scoping meetings from July
8, through July 16, 2010, in Bridgeport,
Connecticut and Manhattan, Yonkers,
Kingston, Albany, Queensbury, and
Plattsburg, NY. A total of 33 people gave
verbal comments at the meetings, and
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:50 Apr 27, 2012
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their comments were transcribed by
court stenographers.
Commenters requested that the EIS
establish evidence that the Champlain
Hudson project is necessary to meet
electricity demands (either current or
future) in the project region, as well as
address concerns over the impact of
construction on existing transmission
infrastructure. Commenters expressed
concerns with regard to sediment
disturbance and the potential impacts of
contaminants in the water column on
humans and wildlife from burying the
transmission line in Lake Champlain
and the Hudson River. Commenters also
requested that the EIS specifically
analyze potential thermal effects and
effects of electromagnetic fields on
aquatic ecosystems, and noted concern
over impacts to visually important
resources from construction of the
transmission line. Commenters noted
potential environmental and
socioeconomic impacts from a proposed
electric converter station in Yonkers,
NY. Finally, commenters identified
additional alternatives that they
believed should be analyzed in the EIS.
A copy of the Scoping Summary Report
(December 2010) is available at https://
chpexpresseis.org. DOE will address
these comments, to the extent they are
still relevant, as well as those submitted
during the public comment period for
this Amended NOI, in the CHPE EIS.
Public Scoping for the Revised
Applicant Proposal
Pursuant to the submittal of the Joint
Proposal, the NY State Public Service
Commission is holding six public
statement hearings in April 2012 in a
variety of locations along the revised
Champlain Hudson project route,
including the municipalities of
Whitehall, Catskill, Ravena,
Schenectady, Garnerville, and Astoria,
NY. While DOE does not currently
intend to hold further public scoping
meetings, it recognizes that comments
provided by the public during the
Commission’s public statement hearings
may be relevant to DOE’s NEPA process.
Therefore, DOE intends to review the
April public statement hearing
transcripts, in addition to scoping
comments submitted directly to DOE,
and will consider them, to the extent
matters relevant to the federal
environmental review process arise, as
scoping comments for purposes of the
EIS.
Agency Purpose and Need, Proposed
Action, and Alternatives
The purpose and need for DOE’s
action is to decide whether to grant a
Presidential permit for the Champlain
Hudson project.
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Frm 00075
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
The proposed Federal action is the
granting of the Presidential permit for
the construction, operation,
maintenance, and connection of the
proposed new electric transmission line
across the U.S.-Canada border in
northeastern New York State. The EIS
will analyze potential environmental
impacts from the proposed action and
the No Action Alternative. Because the
proposed action may involve actions in
floodplains and wetlands, and in
accordance with 10 CFR part 1022,
Compliance with Floodplain and
Wetland Environmental Review
Requirements, the draft EIS will include
a floodplain and wetland assessment as
appropriate, and the final EIS or record
of decision will include a floodplain
statement of findings. If granted, the
Presidential permit would authorize
only that portion of the line that would
be constructed, operated and
maintained wholly within the U.S.
DOE is seeking comment on the scope
of the alternatives proposed and
potential environmental impacts for
analyses in the EIS and currently
proposes to analyze the following
alternatives in detail: (1) the Champlain
Hudson project, as proposed by the
Applicant in the Joint Proposal filed
with the New York Public Service
Commission on February 24, 2012 and
submitted to DOE on February 28, 2012
as an amended application for a
Presidential permit, and (2) the No
Action Alternative, which assumes that
DOE would not grant a Presidential
permit for the Champlain Hudson
project and that the proposed line and
associated facilities would not be
constructed.
Issued in Washington, DC, on April 24,
2012.
Brian Mills,
Deputy Assistant Secretary, Permitting, Siting
and Analysis, Office of Electricity Delivery
and Energy Reliability.
[FR Doc. 2012–10304 Filed 4–27–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL–9665–2]
Cross-Media Electronic Reporting:
Authorized Program Revision
Approval, State of Florida
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
This notice announces EPA’s
approval of the State of Florida’s request
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\30APN1.SGM
30APN1
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 83 / Monday, April 30, 2012 / Notices
to revise/modify certain of its EPAauthorized programs to allow electronic
reporting.
EPA’s approval is effective May
30, 2012 for the State of Florida’s
National Primary Drinking Water
Regulations Implementation program, if
no timely request for a public hearing is
received and accepted by the Agency,
and on April 30, 2012 for the State of
Florida’s other authorized programs.
DATES:
Evi
Huffer, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Office of Environmental
Information, Mail Stop 2823T, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20460, (202) 566–1697,
huffer.evi@epa.gov, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Office of
Environmental Information, Mail Stop
2823T, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20460, or Karen Seeh,
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,
Office of Environmental Information,
Mail Stop 2823T, 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20460,
(202) 566–1175, seeh.karen@epa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
On
October 13, 2005, the final Cross-Media
Electronic Reporting Rule (CROMERR)
was published in the Federal Register
(70 FR 59848) and codified as part 3 of
title 40 of the CFR. CROMERR
establishes electronic reporting as an
acceptable regulatory alternative to
paper reporting and establishes
requirements to assure that electronic
documents are as legally dependable as
their paper counterparts. Subpart D of
CROMERR requires that state, tribal or
local government agencies that receive,
or wish to begin receiving, electronic
reports under their EPA-authorized
programs must apply to EPA for a
revision or modification of those
programs and obtain EPA approval.
Subpart D provides standards for such
approvals based on consideration of the
electronic document receiving systems
that the State, Tribe, or local
government will use to implement the
electronic reporting. Additionally,
§ 3.1000(b) through (e) of 40 CFR part 3,
subpart D provides special procedures
for program revisions and modifications
to allow electronic reporting, to be used
at the option of the State, Tribe or local
government in place of procedures
available under existing programspecific authorization regulations. An
application submitted under the subpart
D procedures must show that the state,
tribe or local government has sufficient
legal authority to implement the
electronic reporting components of the
programs covered by the application
and will use electronic document
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:59 Apr 27, 2012
Jkt 226001
receiving systems that meet the
applicable subpart D requirements.
On February 22, 2011, the Florida
Department of Environmental Protection
(FDEP) submitted an application titled
‘‘e-Reporting System Electronic
Document Receiving System’’ for
revisions/modifications of its EPAauthorized programs under title 40 CFR.
EPA reviewed FDEP’s request to revise/
modify its EPA-authorized programs
and, based on this review, EPA
determined that the application met the
standards for approval of authorized
program revisions/modifications set out
in 40 CFR part 3, subpart D. In
accordance with 40 CFR 3.1000(d), this
notice of EPA’s decision to approve
Florida’s request to modify/revise its
following EPA-authorized programs to
allow electronic reporting under 40 CFR
parts 51, 60, 70, 141, 144, 146, 257–258,
262–265, 268, and 270–271 is being
published in the Federal Register:
Part 52—Approval and Promulgation
of State Implementation Plans;
Part 61—National Emission Standards
for Hazardous Air Pollutants, Subpart
M—National Emission Standard for
Asbestos;
Part 70—State Operating Permit
Programs;
Part 142—National Primary Drinking
Water Regulations Implementation;
Part 147—State, Tribal, and EPA–
Administered Underground Injection
Control Programs; and
Part 272—Approved State Hazardous
Waste Management Programs.
FDEP was notified of EPA’s
determination to approve its application
with respect to the authorized program
listed above.
Also, in today’s notice, EPA is
informing interested persons that they
may request a public hearing on EPA’s
action to approve the State of Florida’s
request to revise its authorized public
water system program under 40 CFR
part 142, in accordance with 40 CFR
3.1000(f). Requests for a hearing must be
submitted to EPA within 30 days of
publication of today’s Federal Register
notice. Such requests should include
the following information:
(1) The name, address and telephone
number of the individual, organization
or other entity requesting a hearing;
(2) A brief statement of the requesting
person’s interest in EPA’s
determination, a brief explanation as to
why EPA should hold a hearing, and
any other information that the
requesting person wants EPA to
consider when determining whether to
grant the request;
(3) The signature of the individual
making the request, or, if the request is
made on behalf of an organization or
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
25475
other entity, the signature of a
responsible official of the organization
or other entity.
In the event a hearing is requested
and granted, EPA will provide notice of
the hearing in the Federal Register not
less than 15 days prior to the scheduled
hearing date. Frivolous or insubstantial
requests for hearing may be denied by
EPA. Following such a public hearing,
EPA will review the record of the
hearing and issue an order either
affirming today’s determination or
rescinding such determination. If no
timely request for a hearing is received
and granted, EPA’s approval of the State
of Florida’s request to revise its Part
142—National Primary Drinking Water
Regulations Implementation program to
allow electronic reporting will become
effective 30 days after today’s notice is
published, pursuant to CROMERR
section 3.1000(f)(4).
Dated: April 16, 2012.
Andrew Battin,
Director, Office of Information Collection.
[FR Doc. 2012–10322 Filed 4–27–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OECA–2012–0331; FRL–9666–9]
Inquiry To Learn Whether Businesses
Assert Business Confidentiality Claims
Regarding Waste Import and Export
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice; request for comment.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) receives from time to time
Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
requests for documentation received or
issued by EPA or data contained in EPA
database systems pertaining to the
export and import of Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)
hazardous waste from/to the United
States, the export of cathode ray tubes
(CRTs) and spent lead acid batteries
(SLABs) from the United States, and the
export and import of RCRA universal
waste from/to the United States. These
documents and data may identify or
reference multiple parties, and describe
transactions involving the movement of
specified materials in which the parties
propose to participate or have
participated. The purpose of this notice
is to inform ‘‘affected businesses’’ about
the documents or data sought by these
types of FOIA requests in order to
provide the businesses with the
opportunity to assert claims that any of
the information sought that pertains to
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\30APN1.SGM
30APN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 83 (Monday, April 30, 2012)]
[Notices]
[Pages 25474-25475]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-10322]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[FRL-9665-2]
Cross-Media Electronic Reporting: Authorized Program Revision
Approval, State of Florida
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice announces EPA's approval of the State of Florida's
request
[[Page 25475]]
to revise/modify certain of its EPA-authorized programs to allow
electronic reporting.
DATES: EPA's approval is effective May 30, 2012 for the State of
Florida's National Primary Drinking Water Regulations Implementation
program, if no timely request for a public hearing is received and
accepted by the Agency, and on April 30, 2012 for the State of
Florida's other authorized programs.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Evi Huffer, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Office of Environmental Information, Mail Stop
2823T, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20460, (202) 566-
1697, huffer.evi@epa.gov, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office
of Environmental Information, Mail Stop 2823T, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue
NW., Washington, DC 20460, or Karen Seeh, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Office of Environmental Information, Mail Stop 2823T, 1200
Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20460, (202) 566-1175,
seeh.karen@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: On October 13, 2005, the final Cross-Media
Electronic Reporting Rule (CROMERR) was published in the Federal
Register (70 FR 59848) and codified as part 3 of title 40 of the CFR.
CROMERR establishes electronic reporting as an acceptable regulatory
alternative to paper reporting and establishes requirements to assure
that electronic documents are as legally dependable as their paper
counterparts. Subpart D of CROMERR requires that state, tribal or local
government agencies that receive, or wish to begin receiving,
electronic reports under their EPA-authorized programs must apply to
EPA for a revision or modification of those programs and obtain EPA
approval. Subpart D provides standards for such approvals based on
consideration of the electronic document receiving systems that the
State, Tribe, or local government will use to implement the electronic
reporting. Additionally, Sec. 3.1000(b) through (e) of 40 CFR part 3,
subpart D provides special procedures for program revisions and
modifications to allow electronic reporting, to be used at the option
of the State, Tribe or local government in place of procedures
available under existing program-specific authorization regulations. An
application submitted under the subpart D procedures must show that the
state, tribe or local government has sufficient legal authority to
implement the electronic reporting components of the programs covered
by the application and will use electronic document receiving systems
that meet the applicable subpart D requirements.
On February 22, 2011, the Florida Department of Environmental
Protection (FDEP) submitted an application titled ``e-Reporting System
Electronic Document Receiving System'' for revisions/modifications of
its EPA-authorized programs under title 40 CFR. EPA reviewed FDEP's
request to revise/modify its EPA-authorized programs and, based on this
review, EPA determined that the application met the standards for
approval of authorized program revisions/modifications set out in 40
CFR part 3, subpart D. In accordance with 40 CFR 3.1000(d), this notice
of EPA's decision to approve Florida's request to modify/revise its
following EPA-authorized programs to allow electronic reporting under
40 CFR parts 51, 60, 70, 141, 144, 146, 257-258, 262-265, 268, and 270-
271 is being published in the Federal Register:
Part 52--Approval and Promulgation of State Implementation Plans;
Part 61--National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants,
Subpart M--National Emission Standard for Asbestos;
Part 70--State Operating Permit Programs;
Part 142--National Primary Drinking Water Regulations
Implementation;
Part 147--State, Tribal, and EPA-Administered Underground Injection
Control Programs; and
Part 272--Approved State Hazardous Waste Management Programs.
FDEP was notified of EPA's determination to approve its application
with respect to the authorized program listed above.
Also, in today's notice, EPA is informing interested persons that
they may request a public hearing on EPA's action to approve the State
of Florida's request to revise its authorized public water system
program under 40 CFR part 142, in accordance with 40 CFR 3.1000(f).
Requests for a hearing must be submitted to EPA within 30 days of
publication of today's Federal Register notice. Such requests should
include the following information:
(1) The name, address and telephone number of the individual,
organization or other entity requesting a hearing;
(2) A brief statement of the requesting person's interest in EPA's
determination, a brief explanation as to why EPA should hold a hearing,
and any other information that the requesting person wants EPA to
consider when determining whether to grant the request;
(3) The signature of the individual making the request, or, if the
request is made on behalf of an organization or other entity, the
signature of a responsible official of the organization or other
entity.
In the event a hearing is requested and granted, EPA will provide
notice of the hearing in the Federal Register not less than 15 days
prior to the scheduled hearing date. Frivolous or insubstantial
requests for hearing may be denied by EPA. Following such a public
hearing, EPA will review the record of the hearing and issue an order
either affirming today's determination or rescinding such
determination. If no timely request for a hearing is received and
granted, EPA's approval of the State of Florida's request to revise its
Part 142--National Primary Drinking Water Regulations Implementation
program to allow electronic reporting will become effective 30 days
after today's notice is published, pursuant to CROMERR section
3.1000(f)(4).
Dated: April 16, 2012.
Andrew Battin,
Director, Office of Information Collection.
[FR Doc. 2012-10322 Filed 4-27-12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P