Determinations of Failure To Attain the One-Hour Ozone Standard by 2007, Current Attainment of the One-Hour Ozone Standard, and Attainment of the 1997 Eight-Hour Ozone Standards for the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island Nonattainment Area in Connecticut, New Jersey and New York, 36163-36170 [2012-14716]
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 117 / Monday, June 18, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
srobinson on DSK4SPTVN1PROD with RULES
property passing to the QDOT, and H’s estate
is allowed a marital deduction of $2,000,000
under section 2056(d) for the value of that
property. H’s taxable estate is $1,000,000. On
H’s estate tax return, H’s executor computes
H’s preliminary DSUE amount to be
$4,000,000. No taxable events within the
meaning of section 2056A occur during W’s
lifetime with respect to the QDOT. W makes
a taxable gift of $1,000,000 to X in December
2011 and a taxable gift of $1,000,000 to Y in
January 2012. W dies in September 2012, not
having married again, when the value of the
assets of the QDOT is $2,200,000.
(ii) Application. H’s DSUE amount is
redetermined to be $1,800,000 (the lesser of
the $5,000,000 basic exclusion amount in
2011, or the excess of H’s $5,000,000
applicable exclusion amount over $3,200,000
(the sum of the $1,000,000 taxable estate
augmented by the $2,200,000 of QDOT
assets)). On W’s gift tax return filed for 2011,
W cannot apply any DSUE amount to the gift
made to X. However, because W’s gift to Y
was made in the year that W died, W’s
executor will apply $1,000,000 of H’s
redetermined DSUE amount to the gift on
W’s gift tax return filed for 2012. The
remaining $800,000 of H’s redetermined
DSUE amount is included in W’s applicable
exclusion amount to be used in computing
W’s estate tax liability.
(e) Authority to examine returns of
deceased spouses. For the purpose of
determining the DSUE amount to be
included in the applicable exclusion
amount of the surviving spouse, the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) may
examine returns of each of the surviving
spouse’s deceased spouses whose DSUE
amount is claimed to be included in the
surviving spouse’s applicable exclusion
amount, regardless of whether the
period of limitations on assessment has
expired for any such return. The IRS’s
authority to examine returns of a
deceased spouse applies with respect to
each transfer by the surviving spouse to
which a DSUE amount is or has been
applied. Upon examination, the IRS
may adjust or eliminate the DSUE
amount reported on such a return;
however, the IRS may assess additional
tax on that return only if that tax is
assessed within the period of limitations
on assessment under section 6501
applicable to the tax shown on that
return. See also section 7602 for the
IRS’s authority, when ascertaining the
correctness of any return, to examine
any returns that may be relevant or
material to such inquiry.
(f) Availability of DSUE amount for
nonresidents who are not citizens. A
nonresident surviving spouse who was
not a citizen of the United States at the
time of making a transfer subject to tax
under chapter 12 of the Internal
Revenue Code shall not take into
account the DSUE amount of any
deceased spouse except to the extent
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allowed under any applicable treaty
obligation of the United States. See
section 2102(b)(3).
(g) Effective/applicability date. This
section applies to gifts made in calendar
year 2011 or in a subsequent year in
which the applicable exclusion amount
is determined under section 2010(c) of
the Code by adding the basic exclusion
amount and, in the case of a surviving
spouse, the DSUE amount.
(h) Expiration date. The applicability
of this section expires on or before June
15, 2015.
PART 602—OMB CONTROL NUMBERS
UNDER THE PAPERWORK
REDUCTION ACT
Par. 11. The authority citation for part
602 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 26 U.S.C. 7805.
Par. 12. In § 602.101, paragraph (b) is
amended by adding the following entry
in numerical order to the table to read
as follows:
■
§ 602.101
*
OMB Control numbers.
*
*
(b) * * *
*
*
CFR Part or section where
identified and described
*
*
*
20.2010–2T ...........................
*
*
*
Current OMB
Control No.
*
*
1545–0015
*
*
Steven T. Miller,
Deputy Commissioner for Services and
Enforcement.
Approved: June 12, 2012.
Emily S. McMahon,
Acting Assistant Secretary of Treasury (Tax
Policy).
[FR Doc. 2012–14781 Filed 6–15–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R02–OAR–2011–0956; FRL–9682–7]
Determinations of Failure To Attain the
One-Hour Ozone Standard by 2007,
Current Attainment of the One-Hour
Ozone Standard, and Attainment of the
1997 Eight-Hour Ozone Standards for
the New York-Northern New JerseyLong Island Nonattainment Area in
Connecticut, New Jersey and New
York
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
AGENCY:
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ACTION:
36163
Final rule.
EPA is finalizing four separate
and independent determinations related
to the New York-Northern New JerseyLong Island (NY-NJ-CT) one-hour and
1997 eight-hour ozone nonattainment
areas. The boundaries of the one-hour
and eight-hour ozone nonattainment
areas differ slightly. With respect to the
NY-NJ-CT one-hour nonattainment area,
EPA is determining that the area
previously failed to attain the one-hour
ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standard (NAAQS) by its applicable
attainment deadline of November 15,
2007 (based on complete, qualityassured and certified ozone monitoring
data for 2005–2007), and EPA is also
determining that the area is currently
attaining the now revoked one-hour
ozone standard based on complete,
quality-assured and certified ozone
monitoring data for 2008–2010.
Quality-assured ozone monitoring
data in the Air Quality System for 2011
indicate the area continues to attain the
revoked one-hour ozone standard. With
respect to the NY-NJ-CT 1997 eight-hour
ozone nonattainment area, EPA is
determining that the area attained the
1997 eight-hour ozone standard by the
applicable deadline, June 15, 2010,
based on complete, quality-assured and
certified ozone monitoring data for
2007–2009. EPA is also determining that
the area is currently attaining the 1997
eight-hour ozone standard based on
complete, quality-assured and certified
ozone monitoring data for 2008–2010.
Quality-assured ozone monitoring data
for 2011 indicate that the area continues
to attain the 1997 eight-hour ozone
standard.
EPA’s ozone implementation
regulation for the 1997 eight-hour ozone
standard provides that the requirements
for the States to submit certain
reasonable further progress plans,
attainment demonstrations, contingency
measures and any other planning
requirements of the Clean Air Act
related to attainment of that ozone
standard shall be suspended for as long
as the area continues to attain the
standard. A determination of attainment
does not constitute a redesignation to
attainment. Redesignation requires the
states to meet a number of additional
criteria, including EPA approval of a
state plan to maintain the air quality
standard for ten years after
redesignation.
SUMMARY:
Effective Date: This rule is
effective on July 18, 2012.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a
docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA–R02–OAR–2011–0956. All
DATES:
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 117 / Monday, June 18, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
documents in the docket are listed on
the www.regulations.gov Web site.
Although listed in the index, some
information is not publicly available,
e.g., 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
www.regulations.gov or in hard copy at
the Environmental Protection Agency,
Region 2 Office, Air Programs Branch,
290 Broadway, 25th Floor, New York,
New York 10007–1866. This Docket
Facility is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding
legal holidays. The Docket telephone
number is 212–637–4249.
If
you have questions concerning EPA’s
action related to New Jersey or New
York, please contact Paul Truchan, Air
Programs Branch, Environmental
Protection Agency, 290 Broadway, 25th
floor, New York, New York 10008–1866,
telephone number (212) 637–4249. If
you have questions concerning EPA’s
action related to Connecticut, please
contact Richard Burkhart, Air Quality
Planning Unit, Environmental
Protection Agency, EPA New England
Regional Office, 5 Post Office Square—
Suite 100, Mail Code OEP05–02, Boston,
MA 02109–3912, telephone number
(617) 918–1664, fax number (617) 918–
0664, email burkhart.richard@epa.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. What are the actions EPA is taking?
II. What is the background for these actions?
III. What comments were received on these
actions and what are EPA’s responses?
IV. Final Actions
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What are the actions EPA is taking?
EPA is finalizing four separate and
independent determinations for the
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long
Island (NY-NJ-CT) ozone nonattainment
area (hereafter, ‘‘the NY-NJ-CT area’’).
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A. Determination of Failure To Attain
the One-Hour Ozone Standard by
Applicable Attainment Date
EPA is determining that the NY-NJ-CT
one-hour ozone nonattainment area
previously failed to attain the one-hour
ozone National Ambient Air Quality
Standard (NAAQS) by its applicable
attainment deadline of November 15,
2007 (based on complete, qualityassured and certified ozone monitoring
data for 2005–2007).
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B. Determination of Current Attainment
of the One-Hour Ozone Standard
EPA is determining that the NY-NJ-CT
one-hour ozone nonattainment area is
currently attaining the one-hour ozone
standard based on complete, qualityassured and certified ozone monitoring
data for 2008–2010. Quality-assured
ozone monitoring data for 2011 in the
Air Quality System (AQS) indicate the
area continues to attain the one-hour
ozone standard.
C. Determination of Attainment of the
1997 Eight-Hour Ozone Standard by
Applicable Attainment Date
EPA is determining that the NY-NJ-CT
eight-hour ozone nonattainment area
attained the 1997 eight-hour standard by
the applicable deadline, June 15, 2010,
based on complete, quality-assured and
certified ozone monitoring data for
2007–2009.
D. Determination of Continued
Attainment of the 1997 Eight-Hour
Ozone Standard
EPA is determining that the area is
currently attaining the 1997 eight-hour
ozone standard based on complete,
quality-assured and certified ozone
monitoring data for 2008–2010. Qualityassured data available in the AQS for
2011 indicate that the area continues to
attain the 1997 eight-hour ozone
standard. Based on the determination
that the area is currently attaining the
1997 eight-hour standard, 40 CFR
51.918 1 of EPA’s ozone implementation
rule for the 1997 eight-hour ozone
standard provides that the requirements
for the States to submit certain
reasonable further progress plans,
attainment demonstrations, contingency
measures and any other planning
requirements of the Clean Air Act
related to attainment of that standard
shall be suspended for as long as the
area continues to attain the standard.
Quality-assured ozone monitoring data
for 2011 in AQS indicate the area
continues to attain the 1997 eight-hour
ozone standard.2
1 CFR refers to the Code of Federal Regulations,
in this case Title 40 part 51.
2 Greenwich Point Park, Connecticut (AQS
090010017) an ozone monitor in the New YorkNorthern New Jersey-Long Island one-hour and
1997 eight-hour ozone nonattainment areas was
taken out of service on August 28, 2011 in an
attempt to protect the site from the prediction of the
landfall of Hurricane Irene, at or near New York
City, New York. In the end, the Hurricane storm
surge and/or storm driven waves did submerge an
electric meter box, servicing the ozone monitor. The
meter box was replaced and power was restored by
January 4, 2012. The result of this power outage was
the loss of ozone data from August 28 to September
30, 2011. As a result of this loss of data, the
Greenwich Point Park ozone monitor fell just short
of 75 percent data completeness required.
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In addition, EPA is withdrawing
EPA’s proposed disapprovals of
Connecticut’s and New Jersey’s 1997
eight-hour ozone attainment
demonstrations, which were previously
published in the Federal Register on
May 8, 2009 (74 FR 21568 and 74 FR
21578).
In order to determine the areas’ air
quality status for purposes of this
action, EPA reviewed ozone monitoring
air quality data from the States, in
accordance with 40 CFR 50.9, 40 CFR
part 50 appendix H and appendix I, and
EPA policy and guidance, as well as
data processing, data rounding and data
completeness requirements. EPA’s
review of the air quality data and related
rationale for these determinations are
explained in the Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking (NPR) published in the
Federal Register on January 25, 2012
(77 FR 3720) and will not be restated
here.
II. What is the background for these
actions?
The boundaries for the NY-NJ-CT onehour and the eight-hour ozone
nonattainment areas are slightly
different. For the one-hour ozone
NAAQS of 0.12 parts per million (ppm),
the area is composed of: Bergen, Essex,
Hudson, Hunterdon, Middlesex,
Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Passaic,
Somerset, Sussex, and Union Counties
in New Jersey; Bronx, Kings, Nassau,
New York, Queens, Richmond,
Rockland, Suffolk, Westchester Counties
and part of Orange County in New York;
and parts of Fairfield and Litchfield
Counties in Connecticut. The 1997
eight-hour ozone nonattainment area is
composed of many of the same counties
as the one-hour ozone nonattainment
area but does not include Ocean County
in New Jersey, any part of Orange
County in New York or any part of
Litchfield County in Connecticut, and
does include Warren County in New
Jersey, and all of Fairfield, New Haven
and Middlesex Counties in Connecticut.
The one-hour ozone standard
designations were established by EPA
following the enactment of the Clean
Air Act (CAA) Amendments in 1990.
See 56 FR 56694 (November 6, 1991).
Each area of the country that was
Nevertheless, all available 2011 ozone data indicate
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island onehour and 1997 eight-hour ozone nonattainment
areas continue in attainment for both the 1-hour
and 8-hour ozone standards in 2011. Monitoring
data for all other monitors in the area for the states
of New York and Connecticut are certified as
complete and indicated attainment of both
standards. The ozone data for New Jersey is in AQS,
is quality assured, and is complete, but as of May
4, 2012 the NJ ozone data have not yet been
certified.
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 117 / Monday, June 18, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
designated nonattainment for the onehour ozone NAAQS was classified by
operation of law as marginal, moderate,
serious, severe, or extreme depending
on the severity of the area’s air quality
problem. See CAA sections 107(d)(1)(C)
and 181(a). The NY-NJ-CT one-hour
ozone nonattainment area was
designated nonattainment and classified
as severe-17, with an attainment
deadline of November 15, 2007.
On July 18, 1997, (62 FR 38856), EPA
promulgated a new, more protective
standard for ozone based on eight-hour
average concentrations (the ‘‘1997 eighthour ozone NAAQS’’). EPA designated
and classified most areas of the country
under the eight-hour ozone NAAQS in
an April 30, 2004 final rule (69 FR
23858). The NY-NJ-CT 1997 eight-hour
ozone nonattainment area was
designated nonattainment and classified
as moderate with an attainment
deadline of June 15, 2010.
On April 30, 2004, EPA also issued a
final rule (69 FR 23951) entitled ‘‘Final
Rule To Implement The 8-hour Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality
Standard—Phase 1,’’ referred to as the
Phase 1 Rule. Among other matters, this
rule revoked the one-hour ozone
NAAQS in most areas of the country,
effective June 15, 2005. See, 40 CFR
50.9(b); 69 FR 23996; and 70 FR 44470
(August 3, 2005). The Phase 1 Rule also
set forth how anti-backsliding principles
will ensure continued progress toward
attainment of the eight-hour ozone
NAAQS by identifying which one-hour
ozone requirements remain applicable
in an area after revocation of the onehour ozone NAAQS.
Although EPA revoked the one-hour
ozone standard (effective June 15, 2005),
eight-hour ozone nonattainment areas
remain subject to certain one-hour antibacksliding requirements based on their
one-hour ozone classification. Initially,
EPA’s rules to address the transition
from the one-hour to the eight-hour
ozone standard did not include onehour nonattainment area contingency
measures or major source penalty fee
programs among the measures retained
as one-hour ozone anti-backsliding
requirements.3 However, on December
23, 2006, the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit determined that EPA should not
have excluded these requirements (and
certain others not relevant here) from its
anti-backsliding requirements. South
Coast Air Quality Management District
v. EPA, 472 F.3d 882 (D.C. Cir. 2006)
reh’g denied 489 F.3d 1245 (clarifying
3 Final Rule to Implement The 8-Hour Ozone
National Ambient Air Quality Standard—Phase 1,
69 FR 23951 (April 30, 2004).
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that the vacatur was limited to the
issues on which the court granted the
petitions for review). Thus, the Court
vacated the provisions that excluded
these requirements. As a result, states
must continue to meet the obligations
for one-hour ozone NAAQS contingency
measures. EPA has issued a rule that,
among other things, removed the
vacated provisions of 40 CFR 51.905(e),
and addressed the anti-backsliding
requirement for contingency measures
for failure to attain or make reasonable
further progress toward attainment of
the one-hour standard. See 74 FR 2936
(January 16, 2009) (proposed rule); 74
FR 7027 (February 12, 2009) (notice of
public hearing and extension of
comment period), and 77 FR 28424
(May 14, 2012) (final rule).
III. What comments were received on
these actions and what are EPA’s
responses?
EPA received six distinct comments
from three parties: the New Jersey
Department of Environmental Protection
(NJDEP), Public Service Enterprise
Group, Inc. (PSEG) and Sierra Club. No
adverse comments were directed at
EPA’s monitoring data-based air quality
determinations, in and of themselves.
One commenter (Sierra Club) submitted
adverse comments concerning EPA’s
discussion of certain regulatory effects
and consequences of these
determinations. Below, EPA
summarizes those comments and sets
forth EPA’s responses.
1. Two commenters (NJDEP and
PSEG) urged EPA to determine that the
section 185 fee requirement under the
one-hour standard for the NY-NJ-CT
nonattainment area is no longer
applicable to the nonattainment area
because the area attained the one-hour
standard. One commenter (PSEG)
alternatively suggested EPA issue a
Termination Determination for the
section 185 fee requirement based upon
the complete, quality-assured
monitoring data showing attainment
with the one-hour ozone NAAQS in the
area due to permanent and enforceable
emission reductions implemented in the
area. The commenter contended that
such a Termination Determination
would not be dependent upon the
Agency’s previous section 185 fee
guidance, which was vacated by the
D.C. Circuit Court, but would instead be
consistent with the statutory objectives
of section 185 and the reasoning of the
Court in South Coast Air Quality
Management District v. EPA, 472 F.3d
882 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (South Coast).
Sierra Club, in its comments, requested
that EPA apply section 185
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36165
requirements for the period from 2007–
2010.
Response: On January 29, 2011, April
29, 2011 and June 16, 2011, the
Departments of Environmental
Protection for the States of New Jersey,
Connecticut and New York,
respectively, requested that EPA make a
determination that the NY-NJ-CT area
has attained the 1-hour ozone standard
due to permanent and enforceable
emissions reductions, and that therefore
the States should be relieved of any
obligation to implement the penalty fees
for that area under section 185. EPA is
considering these requests and will take
separate notice and comment
rulemaking shortly to address them.
EPA has not yet proposed any action on
these requests and thus cannot take any
final action with respect to them in this
rulemaking.
EPA in this rulemaking is finalizing
its determination that the area has
attained the 1-hour ozone standard
based on certified air quality data for
2008–2010, and continuing through
2011. No commenter has requested that
EPA require the States to implement the
section 185 penalty fee program in this
area in the period subsequent to the
area’s attainment of the 1-hour standard
in 2010. Below, EPA addresses one
commenter’s (Sierra Club) contentions
with respect to requiring penalty fees for
the period prior to 2010. EPA will be
addressing any remaining issues with
respect to terminating one-hour ozone
section 185 penalty fee requirements in
this area in future rulemaking actions.
2. A commenter (Sierra Club)
contends that EPA has no authority to
withdraw its proposed disapprovals of
the 1997 eight-hour ozone attainment
demonstration for the NY-NJ-CT eighthour nonattainment area. The
commenter cites 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(2)
and (3) as requiring EPA to act within
12 months of a finding of completeness.
Also, commenter asserts that a
determination of attainment (Clean Data
Determination) does not and cannot
suspend EPA’s obligation to approve or
disapprove a SIP submission after it has
been submitted to EPA.
Response: Assuming that, in a
situation where EPA has already
conducted notice and comment
rulemaking to determine that an area is
in attainment of the standard, the
Agency is nevertheless obliged to
conduct additional rulemaking on a
plan to accomplish what has been done,
under section 110(k)(2), EPA is not
obligated to finalize a prior version of a
proposed rulemaking on the plan after
circumstances have changed. In this
case, EPA’s determination, after notice
and comment rulemaking, that the area
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attained the 1997 eight-hour ozone
NAAQS by its attainment date,
eliminates the basis for the prior
proposed disapproval. Under these
circumstances, it is reasonable, proper
and correct for EPA to withdraw the
proposed disapproval. EPA may then
proceed to take into account the
determination that the area has attained,
in a subsequent proposed action to
approve the submitted attainment
demonstration SIPs. Alternatively, in
view of EPA’s final determination of
attainment for the area, the States of
Connecticut and New Jersey may choose
to withdraw their attainment
demonstrations. Thus, the commenter’s
concerns are misplaced. Withdrawal of
the proposed disapprovals is consistent
with, and in no way prohibits further
action with respect to the attainment
demonstrations in accordance with the
EPA’s determination that the monitoring
data show the area has attained the 1997
eight-hour standard since 2009.
3. A commenter (Sierra Club) argues
that the NY-NJ-CT area’s failure to attain
the one-hour ozone NAAQS by its
deadline of November 15, 2007 triggers
penalty fees for 2007–2010 and
contingency plan requirements under
the Clean Air Act.
A. Sierra Club states that the NY-NJCT nonattainment area did not attain by
its November 15, 2007 attainment date,
and cites South Coast, 472 F.3d at 903,
in support of its position that EPA must
enforce certain anti-backsliding
requirements, including section 185
fees. The commenter complains that
EPA in its proposed determination of
nonattainment for the NY-NJ-CT area
(see 77 FR 3724) did not require
payment of fees for 2007–2010.
Response: First, we wish to
emphasize, as EPA stated in its
proposal, that the purpose of this
rulemaking action is to make four
specific air quality determinations
regarding whether the NY-NJ-CT area
attained the one-hour and 1997 eighthour ozone standards. While EPA’s
proposal noted that these
determinations bear on one-hour antibacksliding requirements for
contingency measures and section 185
penalty fees, this action does not
attempt to address or resolve all the
implementation issues regarding those
requirements. Thus at the outset, Sierra
Club’s position that EPA’s specific
rulemakings on air quality
determinations must also include
resolutions of all anti-backsliding
implementation issues that may flow
from them is incorrect. While EPA
recognizes that the anti-backsliding
requirement for the one-hour
contingency measures and section 185
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fees are linked to the determination of
failure to meet the attainment deadline
for that standard, EPA’s rulemakings
here regarding those determinations do
not, and are not required to, dispose of
all implementation issues for those
requirements or for others, such as those
raised in Sierra Club’s comments
regarding milestones and additional
planning.
In its comments, Sierra Club argues
that EPA’s determination that the NYNJ-CT area failed to attain by its onehour ozone attainment deadline also
requires EPA to decide here that it must
retroactively collect penalties under
section 185 for the period before EPA
made its determination.4 We disagree.
Neither EPA’s determination, nor the
South Coast case, compels EPA to reach
this conclusion or even to decide that
issue here. EPA intends to address
issues regarding one-hour antibacksliding requirements in future
rulemakings on implementation of the
section 185 requirements for the NY-NJCT area. Nevertheless, we wish to state
our preliminary views on Sierra Club’s
comments below. EPA’s preliminary
views are set forth in the remainder of
the response below, and are not
necessary to and are independent of its
air quality determinations of attainment
contained in this final rulemaking.
Sierra Club’s comments quote at
length from South Coast, 472 F.3d at
902–903. While EPA acknowledges that
this decision established that section
185 fee requirements were to be
included as anti-backsliding measures,
the Court in that case did not direct any
specific means of enforcement of these
requirements, nor the method for
determining whether an area failed to
attain by its attainment date. That
decision established only that the
section 185 and contingency measure
requirements were ‘‘applicable.’’ It did
not establish or even address how those
requirements were to be implemented.5
The D.C. Circuit, however, has
previously upheld EPA’s longstanding
practice of making determinations of an
area’s failure to meet attainment
deadlines solely through notice and
comment rulemaking—Sierra Club v.
4 As explained above and elsewhere in our
response to comments, EPA disagrees with Sierra
Club’s contentions regarding retroactive collection
of fees. As a technical point, however, we note that
under section 185, the earliest year for which fees
could ever have been required to be paid is the
calendar year following the attainment date,
November 15, 2007. Thus, it is clear that under no
circumstances would fees be due for 2007.
5 Moreover, as EPA explained above, those issues
are ancillary to the determination of failure to attain
the one-hour ozone standard that EPA is finalizing
in this rulemaking.
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Whitman, 285 F.3d 63 (D.C. Cir. 2002).6
In that case—which similarly arose from
a determination of failure of a one-hour
ozone nonattainment area to meet its
attainment deadline, the D.C. Circuit
rejected a litigant’s 7 demand to make
the consequences of that determination
retroactive to the time period before
EPA made the determination. In that
case, Sierra Club similarly argued that
EPA’s overdue determination that the
St. Louis one-hour ozone nonattainment
area failed to attain by its attainment
deadline should apply retroactively, and
that the Court should require retroactive
reclassification of the area. The Court
rejected Sierra Club’s contention that
EPA’s rulemaking was not required to
determine a failure to attain: ‘‘No matter
what the Sierra Club thinks the Clean
Air Act or the APA required of EPA, the
fact remains that ‘EPA’s established
practice for making a final decision
concerning nonattainment and
reclassification is to conduct a
rulemaking under the APA, not to issue
a letter, a list, or some other informal
document.’ * * * [citations omitted.]’’
The Court concluded: ‘‘In other words,
if there has not been a rulemaking there
has not been an attainment
determination.’’ 285 F.3d at 66.
The Court also refused to accept
Sierra Club’s assertion that the Court
should compel EPA to give retroactive
effect to its determination, resulting in
reclassification as of the area’s
attainment date. The Court stated:
‘‘Although EPA failed to make the
nonattainment determination within the
statutory time frame, Sierra Club’s
proposed solution only makes the
situation worse. Retroactive relief would
likely impose large costs on the States,
which would face fines and suits for not
implementing air pollution prevention
plans [earlier], even though they were
not on notice at the time.’’ 285 F.3d at
68.
While it is true that the Clean Air Act
provides that both reclassification and
penalty fees are consequences of failure
to attain the ozone standard, the D.C.
Circuit in Sierra Club recognized that
these weighty consequences are not
triggered until EPA makes a
determination, after notice and
comment rulemaking, of failure to
attain. In that case the court also rejects
6 Sierra Club v. Whitman was discussed and
distinguished in a recent D.C. Circuit decision that
addressed retroactivity in a quite different context,
where, unlike the situation here, EPA sought to give
its regulations retroactive effect. National
Petrochemical and Refiners Ass’n v. EPA. 630 F.3d
145, 163 (D.C. Cir. 2010), rehearing denied 643 F.3d
958 (D.C. Cir. 2011), cert denied 132 S. Ct. 571
(2011).
7 In this case, also Sierra Club.
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the view that adverse consequences
from the determination should be
imposed retroactively, especially if they
would, as here, subject the States to
additional burdens caused by
retroactive requirements that were not
triggered prior to conclusion of the
rulemaking process.
Several features of our rulemaking for
the NY-NJ-CT area provide additional
grounds for application of a position
similar to that which the court took in
the St. Louis Sierra Club case. In the
case of St. Louis, when the question of
retroactive application arose, the area
remained in nonattainment of the onehour standard, which was also still the
only standard in effect. Here, unlike St.
Louis, EPA has determined that the NYNJ-CT area is currently attaining both
the one-hour and eight-hour standards,
and thus there is significantly less
reason to consider imposing retroactive
penalties that are intended to bring
about the attainment that has already
occurred.
Sierra Club here argues,
unpersuasively, that the South Coast
opinion supports retroactive imposition
of penalties, quoting the Court’s
statement that, unless section 185
requirements were applicable, ‘‘a state
could go unpenalized without ever
attaining even the original NAAQS
* * *.’’ 472 F.3d at 903. Here, however,
this possibility does not exist. EPA’s
final determinations in this rulemaking
establish that the NY-NJ-CT area has in
fact attained not only the original onehour standard, but also the 1997 eighthour NAAQS.
Sierra Club quotes the Court’s
statement in South Coast that ‘‘Congress
set the penalty deadline well into the
future, giving states and industry ample
notice and sufficient incentives to avoid
the penalties.’’ 372 F.3d at 903. Notice
of the existence of penalty provisions,
however, is not the same as notice that
these provisions have been triggered. As
the D.C. Circuit recognized in Sierra
Club v. EPA, only when EPA issues a
final notice determining that an area has
failed to attain by the attainment date
can that failure be definitively
established. The case of the NY-NJ-CT
area presents a particularly compelling
context in which to apply this principle.
The NY-NJ-CT area has been attaining
the one-hour standard since 2010 and
the eight-hour standard for the time
period 2007–2010, and data for 2011
continues this trend. No incentives—
and certainly no penalties—are required
for the area to reach attainment,8 a goal
that the area has met, preserved and
exceeded. Under these circumstances,
and based on the D.C. Circuit’s and
EPA’s long held position on the issue of
retroactive consequences of
determinations of failure to attain, EPA
cannot see a reason to impose penalties
on sources in the NY-NJ-CT area. As
explained above, EPA is determining
that the area is currently, and has for
some time been, attaining both the onehour and eight-hour ozone standards.
Thus no anti-backsliding purpose is
served by retroactive imposition of fees
for a failure to meet a deadline for a
revoked standard—under circumstances
that existed years ago, which have since
been eclipsed by continuous attainment.
EPA believes that compelling the States
and sources to address old penalties
now would also divert attention and
resources from efforts to achieve
current, forward-looking environmental
goals, including the stricter 2008 ozone
standard. In these circumstances, giving
retroactive effect to EPA’s determination
of failure to attain the standard here
would be unreasonable, and it would, as
the Court held in Sierra Club v.
Whitman, ‘‘only mak[e] the situation
worse.’’
B. Sierra Club asserts that the NY-NJCT nonattainment area is subject to
contingency plan requirements for
failure to attain the one-hour standard
and that EPA failed to impose this
requirement on the States. Sierra Club
argues that EPA must ensure that the
contingency measures approved for
New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut
in 67 FR 5170, 67 FR 5152, and 66 FR
63921 are implemented and enforced,
and Sierra Club contends that EPA has
improperly failed to carry out this
obligation. Sierra Club asserts that
EPA’s determination that the area has
attained the one-hour ozone standard
(Clean Data Determination) does not
allow removal of these contingency
measures, which Sierra Club states
became applicable in 2007 and which
must remain in place to prevent
backsliding.
Response: Contingency measures for
the one-hour ozone standard were
previously approved and have been
implemented in the NY-NJ-CT
nonattainment area. See for New York:
67 FR 5170 (February 4, 2002) and 40
CFR 52.1683(i)(3); for New Jersey: 67 FR
5152 (February 4, 2002) and 40 CFR
52.1582(h)(4); for Connecticut: 66 FR
63921 (December 11,2001) and 40 CFR
52.377. There is no need for EPA to
require the states to implement the
contingency measures, because all the
8 Sierra Club appears to recognize this, since it
does not request EPA to impose penalties for the
time period after the area attained the standard
(2010 to the present).
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identified measures are part of the
applicable SIP and have already been
implemented. The States have not
requested removal of the contingency
measures from their respective SIPs and
therefore they continue in effect. EPA
has never proposed to remove the
measures approved as contingency
measures in this area. The States would
have to request a SIP revision if they
wanted to remove these measures from
their applicable SIP and would have to
demonstrate compliance with section
110(l). Thus, the measures identified as
contingency measures continue to
remain in SIP. Moreover, as explained
in EPA’s Clean Data Policy,9 the
purpose of contingency measures for
failure to attain is linked to attainment.
EPA in this rulemaking has determined
that the area has already attained the
one-hour ozone standard, and therefore
no additional contingency measures are
needed.
C. Sierra Club argues that the NY-NJCT ozone nonattainment area is subject
to the milestone one-hour ozone antibacksliding requirements of the Act.
The commenter asserts that EPA errs in
failing to impose rate of progress (ROP)
or reasonable further progress (RFP)
milestones on the nonattainment area.
The commenter asserts that 42 U.S.C.
7511(d) requires the states to submit
revised SIPs that incorporate updated
ROP plans for the one-hour ozone
standard.
Response: As stated in the proposed
rulemaking, EPA has previously
approved one-hour RFP and ROP plans
for the NY-NJ-CT area. See for New
York: 67 FR 5170 February 4, 2002 and
40 CFR 52.1683(i)(2); for New Jersey: 67
FR 5152 February 4, 2002 and 40 CFR
52.1582(h)(3); for Connecticut: 66 FR
63921 December 11, 2001 and 40 CFR
52.377. Nowhere in its January 25, 2012
proposal (77 FR 3720), did EPA propose
to remove from the approved SIPs the
measures that resulted in satisfying the
ROP or RFP plan requirements for the
area. Nor have the States requested
removal of those provisions.
Sierra Club’s comment relies on
section 181(b)(4)(A), and quotes
language providing that, if a severe area
fails to attain, certain reductions
continue ’’ until the standard is
attained.’’ Here, EPA’s determinations
in this rulemaking establish that the
area has attained the one-hour ozone
standard, so any such obligation would
now be at an end. And, as explained in
9 Memorandum from John S. Sietz, Director,
OAQPS, dated May 10, 1995, entitled ‘‘Reasonable
Further Progress, Attainment Demonstration, and
Related Requirements for Ozone Nonattainment
Areas Meeting the Ozone National Ambient Air
Quality Standard’’ (‘‘Clean Data Policy’’).
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Comment 3A, no prior failure to attain
was established until EPA’s final
determination in this rulemaking (see
response to Comment 3A above). In this
rulemaking, EPA is finalizing its
determinations that the NY-NJ-CT
nonattainment area is currently
attaining both the one-hour and eighthour ozone NAAQSs. Under 40 CFR
51.918 and the interpretation set forth in
EPA’s longstanding Clean Data Policy,
these determinations suspend the
obligations to submit any outstanding
planning requirements, including ROP.
Based on the monitoring data that show
attainment of both ozone standards,
there is no need to require the States to
revise or submit new ROP plans or new
RFP milestones for the one-hour ozone
SIPs. Additional ozone reductions have
resulted from implementation of the
eight-hour ozone standard. EPA has
approved ROPs for the 1997 ozone
standard SIPs in Connecticut, New
Jersey and New York, which function to
further reduce ozone precursors to a
greater extent than would be required by
submission of an additional RFP for the
one-hour ozone standard.
4. Sierra Club contends that the NYNJ-CT ozone nonattainment area must
submit a revised one-hour ozone SIP
and asserts that EPA’s failure to require
a new SIP for the NY-NJ-CT area upon
finalizing its proposed determination of
nonattainment is improper and contrary
to law.
Response: We disagree that EPA’s
determination here that the NY-NJ-CT
area failed to attain the one-hour ozone
standard triggers any CAA section
179(d) requirement to prepare and
submit SIP revisions. A new section
179(d) ozone plan, triggered by section
179(c) is not an applicable antibacksliding requirement under EPA’s
anti-backsliding regulations. As EPA has
explained in other rulemakings, only
those anti-backsliding requirements that
were specifically retained are
applicable, and the requirements of
section 179(c) and (d) are not included.
See 76 FR 82133 (December 30, 2011).
As EPA stated in its proposal, the only
anti-backsliding measures that pertain
to this determination of failure to meet
the one-hour deadline are one-hour
contingency measures for failure to
attain and section 185 penalty fees.
Moreover, under EPA’s Clean Data
Policy EPA’s determination that the area
is currently attaining the one-hour
ozone standard obviates the need for
submission of any planning
requirements related to attainment of
the standard.
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IV. Final Actions
EPA is making four separate and
independent determinations related to
the NY-NJ-CT one-hour and 1997 eighthour ozone nonattainment areas. These
determinations are based upon
complete, quality-assured and certified
ozone monitoring data. First, with
respect to the one-hour ozone standard,
and pursuant to EPA’s authority to
ensure implementation of one-hour
ozone anti-backsliding requirements
and CAA section 301, EPA is
determining that data for 2005–2007
show that the NY-NJ-CT area previously
failed to attain the one-hour ozone
standard by its applicable November 15,
2007 attainment deadline. Second, and
more importantly, EPA is determining
that the NY-NJ-CT area is currently
attaining the one-hour ozone standard,
based on more recent complete, qualityassured and certified data for 2008–
2010. Quality-assured ozone monitoring
data in the AQS for 2011 indicate the
area continues to attain the revoked onehour ozone standard.
Third, with respect to the 1997 eighthour ozone standard, in accordance
with section 181(b) of the CAA, EPA is
determining that complete, qualityassured and certified ozone monitoring
data for 2007–2009 show the NY-NJ-CT
eight-hour ozone nonattainment area
attained the 1997 eight-hour ozone
standard by its June 15, 2010 attainment
deadline. Fourth, EPA is also
determining that the NY-NJ-CT eighthour ozone nonattainment area
currently continues to attain the eighthour ozone NAAQS, based on complete,
quality-assured and certified data for
2008–2010. Quality-assured ozone
monitoring data in the AQS for 2011
indicate the area continues to attain the
1997 eight-hour ozone standard.
As provided in 40 CFR 51.918, EPA’s
determination that the area has attained
the eight-hour ozone standard suspends
the requirements under section
182(b)(1) for submission of the
attainment demonstration, reasonable
further progress plan, contingency
measures and any other planning SIP
relating to attainment of the 1997 eighthour NAAQS. This suspension of
requirements is effective for so long as
the area continues to attain the 1997
eight-hour ozone standard.
For the reasons stated in its proposed
notice and response to comments here,
EPA is also withdrawing the May 8,
2009 proposed disapprovals of
Connecticut’s and New Jersey’s eighthour ozone attainment demonstrations
for the NY-NJ-CT eight-hour ozone
nonattainment area.
V. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
These actions, make attainment
determinations based on air quality and
result in the suspension of certain
Federal requirements, will not impose
additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law, or will not impose
any requirements beyond those required
by Federal statute. For these reasons,
these actions:
• Are not ‘‘significant regulatory
actions’’ subject to review by the Office
of Management and Budget under
Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993);
• Do not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Are 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.);
• Do not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Do not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Are not economically significant
regulatory actions based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Are not significant regulatory
actions subject to Executive Order
13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
• Are 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
• Do 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 August 17, 2012.
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, Nitrogen oxides,
Ozone, Volatile organic compounds,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: May 15, 2012.
Judith A. Enck,
Regional Administrator, Region 2.
Dated: May 27, 2012.
H. Curtis Spalding,
Regional Administrator, Region 1.
Part 52, chapter I, title 40 of the Code
of Federal Regulations is amended as
follows:
PART 52—[AMENDED]
1. The authority citation for part 52
continues to read as follows:
■
Subpart FF—New Jersey
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
2. Section 52.377 is amended by
adding paragraphs (j) and (k) to read as
follows:
3. Section 52.1576 is amended by
designating the existing text as
paragraph (a), adding and reserving
paragraph (b), and adding new
paragraphs (c) and (d) to read as follows:
§ 52.377
§ 52.1576
■
Subpart H—Connecticut
■
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Long Island (NY-NJ-CT) one-hour ozone
nonattainment area did not meet its
applicable one-hour ozone attainment
date of November 15, 2007, based on
2005–2007 complete, quality-assured
and certified ozone monitoring data.
Separate from and independent of this
determination, EPA is determining that
the New York-Northern New JerseyLong Island (NY-NJ-CT) one-hour ozone
nonattainment area has attained the
one-hour ozone standard, based on
2008–2010 complete, quality-assured
and certified ozone monitoring data at
all monitoring sites in the area and data
showing the area continued to attain
through 2011.
(k) Determination of Attainment for
the Eight-Hour Ozone Standard.
Effective July 18, 2012 EPA is
determining, that complete, qualityassured and certified ozone monitoring
data for 2007–2009 show the NY-NJ-CT
eight-hour ozone nonattainment area
attained the 1997 eight-hour ozone
standard by its June 15, 2010 attainment
deadline. Therefore, EPA has met the
requirement pursuant to CAA section
181(b)(2)(A) to determine, based on the
area’s air quality data as of the
attainment date, whether the area
attained the standard. EPA also
determined that the NY-NJ-CT
nonattainment area will not be
reclassified for failure to attain by its
applicable attainment date under
section 181(b)(2)(A). EPA is also
determining that the NY-NJ-CT eighthour ozone nonattainment area
currently continues to attain the eighthour ozone NAAQS, based on complete,
quality-assured and certified data for
2008–2010 and data through 2011. This
determination, in accordance with 40
CFR 51.918, suspends the requirements
for this area to submit an attainment
demonstration, associated reasonably
available control measures, a reasonable
further progress plan, contingency
measures, and other planning SIPs
related to attainment of the standard for
as long as this area continues to meet
the 1997 annual eight-hour ozone
NAAQS.
Control strategy: Ozone.
*
*
*
*
*
(j) Determination of Attainment for
the One-Hour Ozone Standard. Effective
July 18, 2012, EPA is determining that
the New York-Northern New Jersey-
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Determinations of attainment.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Based upon EPA’s review of the air
quality data for the three-year period
2005 to 2007, EPA determined, as of
June 18, 2012, that the New York-
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Northern New Jersey-Long Island (NYNJ-CT) one-hour ozone nonattainment
area did not meet its applicable onehour ozone attainment date of
November 15, 2007. Separate from and
independent of this determination,
based on 2008–2010 complete, qualityassured ozone monitoring data at all
monitoring sites in the area, and data for
2011, EPA determined, as of June 18,
2012, that the NY-NJ-CT one-hour ozone
nonattainment area has attained the
one-hour ozone standard.
(d) Based upon EPA’s review of
complete, quality-assured and certified
air quality data for the three-year period
2007 to 2009, and data for 2011, EPA
determined, as of June 18, 2012, that the
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long
Island (NY-NJ-CT) eight-hour ozone
moderate nonattainment area attained
the 1997 eight-hour ozone NAAQS by
the applicable attainment date of June
15, 2010. Therefore, EPA has met the
requirement pursuant to CAA section
181(b)(2)(A) to determine, based on the
area’s air quality data as of the
attainment date, whether the area
attained the standard. EPA also
determined that the NY-NJ-CT
nonattainment area will not be
reclassified for failure to attain by its
applicable attainment date under
section 181(b)(2)(A).
■ 4. Section 52.1582 is amended by
designating paragraph (n) as paragraph
(n)(1), and adding new paragraph (n)(2)
to read as follows:
§ 52.1582 Control strategy and
regulations: Ozone.
*
*
*
*
*
(n) Attainment determination. (1)
* * *
(2) EPA has determined, as of June 18,
2012, that based on 2007 to 2009
complete, quality-assured and certified
ambient air quality data, additional data
showing continued attainment through
2011, the New York-Northern New
Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-CT, eighthour ozone moderate nonattainment
area has attained the 1997 eight-hour
ozone NAAQS. This determination, in
accordance with 40 CFR 51.918,
suspends the requirements for this area
to submit an attainment demonstration,
associated reasonably available control
measures, a reasonable further progress
plan, contingency measures, and other
planning SIPs related to attainment of
the standard for as long as this area
continues to meet the 1997 annual
eight-hour ozone NAAQS.
Subpart HH—New York
5. Section 52.1679 is added to read as
follows:
■
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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 117 / Monday, June 18, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
Determinations of attainment.
(a) Based upon EPA’s review of
complete, quality-assured air quality
data for the 3-year period 2005 to 2007,
EPA determined, as of June 18, 2012,
that the New York-Northern New JerseyLong Island (NY-NJ-CT) one-hour ozone
nonattainment area did not meet its
applicable one-hour ozone attainment
date of November 15, 2007. Separate
from and independent of this
determination, based on 2008–2010
complete, quality-assured ozone
monitoring data at all monitoring sites
in the area, and data for 2011, EPA
determined, as of June 18, 2012, that the
NY-NJ-CT one-hour ozone
nonattainment area met the one-hour
ozone NAAQS.
(b) Based upon EPA’s review of
complete, quality-assured and certified
air quality data for the 3-year period
2007 to 2009, and data for 2011, EPA
determined, as of June 18, 2012, that the
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long
Island (NY-NJ-CT) eight-hour ozone
moderate nonattainment area attained
the 1997 eight-hour ozone NAAQS by
the applicable attainment date of June
15, 2010. Therefore, EPA has met the
requirement pursuant to CAA section
181(b)(2)(A) to determine, based on the
area’s air quality data as of the
attainment date, whether the area
attained the standard. EPA also
determined that the NY-NJ-CT
nonattainment area will not be
reclassified for failure to attain by its
applicable attainment date under
section 181(b)(2)(A).
6. Section 52.1683 is amended by
adding new paragraph (f)(2)(viii) to read
as follows:
■
§ 52.1683
Control strategy: Ozone.
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*
*
*
*
*
(f) * * *
(2) * * *
(viii) New York-Northern New JerseyLong Island, NY-NJ-CT, eight-hour
ozone moderate nonattainment area
(consisting of the Bronx, Kings, Nassau,
New York, Queens, Richmond,
Rockland, Suffolk and Westchester
Counties) as of June 15, 2010 and data
showing the area continued to attain
through 2011.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2012–14716 Filed 6–15–12; 8:45 am]
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EVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
40 CFR Part 711
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2009–0187; FRL–9353–1]
RIN 2070–AJ43
TSCA Inventory Update Reporting
Modifications; Chemical Data
Reporting; 2012 Submission Period
Extension
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
EPA is amending the Toxic
Substances Control Act (TSCA)
Chemical Data Reporting (CDR)
regulations by extending the submission
deadline for 2012 reports from June 30,
2012 to August 13, 2012. This is a onetime extension for the 2012 submission
period only. The CDR regulations
require manufacturers and importers of
certain chemical substances included on
the TSCA Chemical Substance
Inventory (TSCA Inventory) to report
current data on the manufacturing,
processing, and use of the chemical
substances.
SUMMARY:
This final rule is effective June
18, 2012.
ADDRESSES: The docket for this action,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number (No.) EPA–HQ–OPPT–2009–
0187, is available either electronically
through https://www.regulations.gov or
in hard copy at the Pollution Prevention
and Toxics (OPPT) Docket,
Environmental Protection Agency
Docket Center (EPA/DC), EPA West
Bldg., Rm. 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave.
NW., Washington, DC. The Public
Reading Room is open from 8:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday,
excluding legal holidays. The telephone
number for the Public Reading Room is
(202) 566–1744, and the telephone
number for the OPPT Docket is (202)
566–0280. Please review the visitor
instructions and additional information
about the docket available at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Chenise Farquharson, Chemical Control
Division (7405M), Office of Pollution
Prevention and Toxics, Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460–0001;
telephone number: (202) 564–7768; fax
number: (202) 564–4775; email address:
farquharson.chenise@epa.gov.
For general information contact: The
TSCA-Hotline, ABVI-Goodwill, 422
South Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY
14620; telephone number: (202) 554–
DATES:
PO 00000
Frm 00056
Fmt 4700
1404; email address: TSCAHotline@epa.gov.
Sfmt 4700
I. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this action if you manufacture
(including manufacture as a byproduct)
or import chemical substances listed on
the TSCA Inventory. Potentially affected
entities may include, but are not limited
to:
• Chemical manufacturers and
importers (NAICS codes 325 and
324110, e.g., chemical manufacturing
and processing and petroleum
refineries).
• Chemical users and processors who
may manufacture a byproduct chemical
substance (NAICS codes 22, 322, 331,
and 3344, e.g., utilities, paper
manufacturing, primary metal
manufacturing, and semiconductor and
other electronic component
manufacturing).
This listing is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
for readers regarding entities likely to be
affected by this action. Other types of
entities not listed in this unit could also
be affected. The North American
Industrial Classification System
(NAICS) codes have been provided to
assist you and others in determining
whether this action might apply to
certain entities. If you have any
questions regarding the applicability of
this action to a particular entity, consult
the technical person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT.
II. Background
A. What action is the Agency taking?
In the August 16, 2011, final rule
entitled, ‘‘TSCA Inventory Update
Reporting Modifications; Chemical Data
Reporting’’ (76 FR 50816, August 16,
2011) (FRL–8872–9), EPA designated
the 2012 CDR submission period to be
February 1, 2012 to June 30, 2012. EPA
is issuing this amendment to extend the
deadline for 2012 CDR submission
reports until August 13, 2012.
The Agency is taking this action in
response to concerns raised by the
regulated community about their ability
to submit the required information
within the prescribed period. Written
requests to extend the CDR submission
period are included in the docket (see
ADDRESSES). The compelling concerns
raised by industry include the timing of
responses to inquiries about regulatory
interpretations, particularly for
byproduct chemical substances, and
issues associated with several aspects of
electronic reporting.
E:\FR\FM\18JNR1.SGM
18JNR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 117 (Monday, June 18, 2012)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 36163-36170]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2012-14716]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA-R02-OAR-2011-0956; FRL-9682-7]
Determinations of Failure To Attain the One-Hour Ozone Standard
by 2007, Current Attainment of the One-Hour Ozone Standard, and
Attainment of the 1997 Eight-Hour Ozone Standards for the New York-
Northern New Jersey-Long Island Nonattainment Area in Connecticut, New
Jersey and New York
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: EPA is finalizing four separate and independent determinations
related to the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island (NY-NJ-CT) one-
hour and 1997 eight-hour ozone nonattainment areas. The boundaries of
the one-hour and eight-hour ozone nonattainment areas differ slightly.
With respect to the NY-NJ-CT one-hour nonattainment area, EPA is
determining that the area previously failed to attain the one-hour
ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) by its applicable
attainment deadline of November 15, 2007 (based on complete, quality-
assured and certified ozone monitoring data for 2005-2007), and EPA is
also determining that the area is currently attaining the now revoked
one-hour ozone standard based on complete, quality-assured and
certified ozone monitoring data for 2008-2010.
Quality-assured ozone monitoring data in the Air Quality System for
2011 indicate the area continues to attain the revoked one-hour ozone
standard. With respect to the NY-NJ-CT 1997 eight-hour ozone
nonattainment area, EPA is determining that the area attained the 1997
eight-hour ozone standard by the applicable deadline, June 15, 2010,
based on complete, quality-assured and certified ozone monitoring data
for 2007-2009. EPA is also determining that the area is currently
attaining the 1997 eight-hour ozone standard based on complete,
quality-assured and certified ozone monitoring data for 2008-2010.
Quality-assured ozone monitoring data for 2011 indicate that the area
continues to attain the 1997 eight-hour ozone standard.
EPA's ozone implementation regulation for the 1997 eight-hour ozone
standard provides that the requirements for the States to submit
certain reasonable further progress plans, attainment demonstrations,
contingency measures and any other planning requirements of the Clean
Air Act related to attainment of that ozone standard shall be suspended
for as long as the area continues to attain the standard. A
determination of attainment does not constitute a redesignation to
attainment. Redesignation requires the states to meet a number of
additional criteria, including EPA approval of a state plan to maintain
the air quality standard for ten years after redesignation.
DATES: Effective Date: This rule is effective on July 18, 2012.
ADDRESSES: EPA has established a docket for this action under Docket ID
No. EPA-R02-OAR-2011-0956. All
[[Page 36164]]
documents in the docket are listed on the www.regulations.gov Web site.
Although listed in the index, some information is not publicly
available, e.g., 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 www.regulations.gov or in hard
copy at the Environmental Protection Agency, Region 2 Office, Air
Programs Branch, 290 Broadway, 25th Floor, New York, New York 10007-
1866. This Docket Facility is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday, excluding legal holidays. The Docket telephone number
is 212-637-4249.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: If you have questions concerning EPA's
action related to New Jersey or New York, please contact Paul Truchan,
Air Programs Branch, Environmental Protection Agency, 290 Broadway,
25th floor, New York, New York 10008-1866, telephone number (212) 637-
4249. If you have questions concerning EPA's action related to
Connecticut, please contact Richard Burkhart, Air Quality Planning
Unit, Environmental Protection Agency, EPA New England Regional Office,
5 Post Office Square--Suite 100, Mail Code OEP05-02, Boston, MA 02109-
3912, telephone number (617) 918-1664, fax number (617) 918-0664, email
burkhart.richard@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. What are the actions EPA is taking?
II. What is the background for these actions?
III. What comments were received on these actions and what are EPA's
responses?
IV. Final Actions
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
I. What are the actions EPA is taking?
EPA is finalizing four separate and independent determinations for
the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island (NY-NJ-CT) ozone
nonattainment area (hereafter, ``the NY-NJ-CT area'').
A. Determination of Failure To Attain the One-Hour Ozone Standard by
Applicable Attainment Date
EPA is determining that the NY-NJ-CT one-hour ozone nonattainment
area previously failed to attain the one-hour ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standard (NAAQS) by its applicable attainment deadline of
November 15, 2007 (based on complete, quality-assured and certified
ozone monitoring data for 2005-2007).
B. Determination of Current Attainment of the One-Hour Ozone Standard
EPA is determining that the NY-NJ-CT one-hour ozone nonattainment
area is currently attaining the one-hour ozone standard based on
complete, quality-assured and certified ozone monitoring data for 2008-
2010. Quality-assured ozone monitoring data for 2011 in the Air Quality
System (AQS) indicate the area continues to attain the one-hour ozone
standard.
C. Determination of Attainment of the 1997 Eight-Hour Ozone Standard by
Applicable Attainment Date
EPA is determining that the NY-NJ-CT eight-hour ozone nonattainment
area attained the 1997 eight-hour standard by the applicable deadline,
June 15, 2010, based on complete, quality-assured and certified ozone
monitoring data for 2007-2009.
D. Determination of Continued Attainment of the 1997 Eight-Hour Ozone
Standard
EPA is determining that the area is currently attaining the 1997
eight-hour ozone standard based on complete, quality-assured and
certified ozone monitoring data for 2008-2010. Quality-assured data
available in the AQS for 2011 indicate that the area continues to
attain the 1997 eight-hour ozone standard. Based on the determination
that the area is currently attaining the 1997 eight-hour standard, 40
CFR 51.918 \1\ of EPA's ozone implementation rule for the 1997 eight-
hour ozone standard provides that the requirements for the States to
submit certain reasonable further progress plans, attainment
demonstrations, contingency measures and any other planning
requirements of the Clean Air Act related to attainment of that
standard shall be suspended for as long as the area continues to attain
the standard. Quality-assured ozone monitoring data for 2011 in AQS
indicate the area continues to attain the 1997 eight-hour ozone
standard.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ CFR refers to the Code of Federal Regulations, in this case
Title 40 part 51.
\2\ Greenwich Point Park, Connecticut (AQS 090010017) an ozone
monitor in the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island one-hour and
1997 eight-hour ozone nonattainment areas was taken out of service
on August 28, 2011 in an attempt to protect the site from the
prediction of the landfall of Hurricane Irene, at or near New York
City, New York. In the end, the Hurricane storm surge and/or storm
driven waves did submerge an electric meter box, servicing the ozone
monitor. The meter box was replaced and power was restored by
January 4, 2012. The result of this power outage was the loss of
ozone data from August 28 to September 30, 2011. As a result of this
loss of data, the Greenwich Point Park ozone monitor fell just short
of 75 percent data completeness required. Nevertheless, all
available 2011 ozone data indicate New York-Northern New Jersey-Long
Island one-hour and 1997 eight-hour ozone nonattainment areas
continue in attainment for both the 1-hour and 8-hour ozone
standards in 2011. Monitoring data for all other monitors in the
area for the states of New York and Connecticut are certified as
complete and indicated attainment of both standards. The ozone data
for New Jersey is in AQS, is quality assured, and is complete, but
as of May 4, 2012 the NJ ozone data have not yet been certified.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, EPA is withdrawing EPA's proposed disapprovals of
Connecticut's and New Jersey's 1997 eight-hour ozone attainment
demonstrations, which were previously published in the Federal Register
on May 8, 2009 (74 FR 21568 and 74 FR 21578).
In order to determine the areas' air quality status for purposes of
this action, EPA reviewed ozone monitoring air quality data from the
States, in accordance with 40 CFR 50.9, 40 CFR part 50 appendix H and
appendix I, and EPA policy and guidance, as well as data processing,
data rounding and data completeness requirements. EPA's review of the
air quality data and related rationale for these determinations are
explained in the Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPR) published in the
Federal Register on January 25, 2012 (77 FR 3720) and will not be
restated here.
II. What is the background for these actions?
The boundaries for the NY-NJ-CT one-hour and the eight-hour ozone
nonattainment areas are slightly different. For the one-hour ozone
NAAQS of 0.12 parts per million (ppm), the area is composed of: Bergen,
Essex, Hudson, Hunterdon, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Passaic,
Somerset, Sussex, and Union Counties in New Jersey; Bronx, Kings,
Nassau, New York, Queens, Richmond, Rockland, Suffolk, Westchester
Counties and part of Orange County in New York; and parts of Fairfield
and Litchfield Counties in Connecticut. The 1997 eight-hour ozone
nonattainment area is composed of many of the same counties as the one-
hour ozone nonattainment area but does not include Ocean County in New
Jersey, any part of Orange County in New York or any part of Litchfield
County in Connecticut, and does include Warren County in New Jersey,
and all of Fairfield, New Haven and Middlesex Counties in Connecticut.
The one-hour ozone standard designations were established by EPA
following the enactment of the Clean Air Act (CAA) Amendments in 1990.
See 56 FR 56694 (November 6, 1991). Each area of the country that was
[[Page 36165]]
designated nonattainment for the one-hour ozone NAAQS was classified by
operation of law as marginal, moderate, serious, severe, or extreme
depending on the severity of the area's air quality problem. See CAA
sections 107(d)(1)(C) and 181(a). The NY-NJ-CT one-hour ozone
nonattainment area was designated nonattainment and classified as
severe-17, with an attainment deadline of November 15, 2007.
On July 18, 1997, (62 FR 38856), EPA promulgated a new, more
protective standard for ozone based on eight-hour average
concentrations (the ``1997 eight-hour ozone NAAQS''). EPA designated
and classified most areas of the country under the eight-hour ozone
NAAQS in an April 30, 2004 final rule (69 FR 23858). The NY-NJ-CT 1997
eight-hour ozone nonattainment area was designated nonattainment and
classified as moderate with an attainment deadline of June 15, 2010.
On April 30, 2004, EPA also issued a final rule (69 FR 23951)
entitled ``Final Rule To Implement The 8-hour Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standard--Phase 1,'' referred to as the Phase 1 Rule. Among
other matters, this rule revoked the one-hour ozone NAAQS in most areas
of the country, effective June 15, 2005. See, 40 CFR 50.9(b); 69 FR
23996; and 70 FR 44470 (August 3, 2005). The Phase 1 Rule also set
forth how anti-backsliding principles will ensure continued progress
toward attainment of the eight-hour ozone NAAQS by identifying which
one-hour ozone requirements remain applicable in an area after
revocation of the one-hour ozone NAAQS.
Although EPA revoked the one-hour ozone standard (effective June
15, 2005), eight-hour ozone nonattainment areas remain subject to
certain one-hour anti-backsliding requirements based on their one-hour
ozone classification. Initially, EPA's rules to address the transition
from the one-hour to the eight-hour ozone standard did not include one-
hour nonattainment area contingency measures or major source penalty
fee programs among the measures retained as one-hour ozone anti-
backsliding requirements.\3\ However, on December 23, 2006, the United
States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit determined
that EPA should not have excluded these requirements (and certain
others not relevant here) from its anti-backsliding requirements. South
Coast Air Quality Management District v. EPA, 472 F.3d 882 (D.C. Cir.
2006) reh'g denied 489 F.3d 1245 (clarifying that the vacatur was
limited to the issues on which the court granted the petitions for
review). Thus, the Court vacated the provisions that excluded these
requirements. As a result, states must continue to meet the obligations
for one-hour ozone NAAQS contingency measures. EPA has issued a rule
that, among other things, removed the vacated provisions of 40 CFR
51.905(e), and addressed the anti-backsliding requirement for
contingency measures for failure to attain or make reasonable further
progress toward attainment of the one-hour standard. See 74 FR 2936
(January 16, 2009) (proposed rule); 74 FR 7027 (February 12, 2009)
(notice of public hearing and extension of comment period), and 77 FR
28424 (May 14, 2012) (final rule).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Final Rule to Implement The 8-Hour Ozone National Ambient
Air Quality Standard--Phase 1, 69 FR 23951 (April 30, 2004).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. What comments were received on these actions and what are EPA's
responses?
EPA received six distinct comments from three parties: the New
Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (NJDEP), Public Service
Enterprise Group, Inc. (PSEG) and Sierra Club. No adverse comments were
directed at EPA's monitoring data-based air quality determinations, in
and of themselves. One commenter (Sierra Club) submitted adverse
comments concerning EPA's discussion of certain regulatory effects and
consequences of these determinations. Below, EPA summarizes those
comments and sets forth EPA's responses.
1. Two commenters (NJDEP and PSEG) urged EPA to determine that the
section 185 fee requirement under the one-hour standard for the NY-NJ-
CT nonattainment area is no longer applicable to the nonattainment area
because the area attained the one-hour standard. One commenter (PSEG)
alternatively suggested EPA issue a Termination Determination for the
section 185 fee requirement based upon the complete, quality-assured
monitoring data showing attainment with the one-hour ozone NAAQS in the
area due to permanent and enforceable emission reductions implemented
in the area. The commenter contended that such a Termination
Determination would not be dependent upon the Agency's previous section
185 fee guidance, which was vacated by the D.C. Circuit Court, but
would instead be consistent with the statutory objectives of section
185 and the reasoning of the Court in South Coast Air Quality
Management District v. EPA, 472 F.3d 882 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (South
Coast). Sierra Club, in its comments, requested that EPA apply section
185 requirements for the period from 2007-2010.
Response: On January 29, 2011, April 29, 2011 and June 16, 2011,
the Departments of Environmental Protection for the States of New
Jersey, Connecticut and New York, respectively, requested that EPA make
a determination that the NY-NJ-CT area has attained the 1-hour ozone
standard due to permanent and enforceable emissions reductions, and
that therefore the States should be relieved of any obligation to
implement the penalty fees for that area under section 185. EPA is
considering these requests and will take separate notice and comment
rulemaking shortly to address them. EPA has not yet proposed any action
on these requests and thus cannot take any final action with respect to
them in this rulemaking.
EPA in this rulemaking is finalizing its determination that the
area has attained the 1-hour ozone standard based on certified air
quality data for 2008-2010, and continuing through 2011. No commenter
has requested that EPA require the States to implement the section 185
penalty fee program in this area in the period subsequent to the area's
attainment of the 1-hour standard in 2010. Below, EPA addresses one
commenter's (Sierra Club) contentions with respect to requiring penalty
fees for the period prior to 2010. EPA will be addressing any remaining
issues with respect to terminating one-hour ozone section 185 penalty
fee requirements in this area in future rulemaking actions.
2. A commenter (Sierra Club) contends that EPA has no authority to
withdraw its proposed disapprovals of the 1997 eight-hour ozone
attainment demonstration for the NY-NJ-CT eight-hour nonattainment
area. The commenter cites 42 U.S.C. 7410(k)(2) and (3) as requiring EPA
to act within 12 months of a finding of completeness. Also, commenter
asserts that a determination of attainment (Clean Data Determination)
does not and cannot suspend EPA's obligation to approve or disapprove a
SIP submission after it has been submitted to EPA.
Response: Assuming that, in a situation where EPA has already
conducted notice and comment rulemaking to determine that an area is in
attainment of the standard, the Agency is nevertheless obliged to
conduct additional rulemaking on a plan to accomplish what has been
done, under section 110(k)(2), EPA is not obligated to finalize a prior
version of a proposed rulemaking on the plan after circumstances have
changed. In this case, EPA's determination, after notice and comment
rulemaking, that the area
[[Page 36166]]
attained the 1997 eight-hour ozone NAAQS by its attainment date,
eliminates the basis for the prior proposed disapproval. Under these
circumstances, it is reasonable, proper and correct for EPA to withdraw
the proposed disapproval. EPA may then proceed to take into account the
determination that the area has attained, in a subsequent proposed
action to approve the submitted attainment demonstration SIPs.
Alternatively, in view of EPA's final determination of attainment for
the area, the States of Connecticut and New Jersey may choose to
withdraw their attainment demonstrations. Thus, the commenter's
concerns are misplaced. Withdrawal of the proposed disapprovals is
consistent with, and in no way prohibits further action with respect to
the attainment demonstrations in accordance with the EPA's
determination that the monitoring data show the area has attained the
1997 eight-hour standard since 2009.
3. A commenter (Sierra Club) argues that the NY-NJ-CT area's
failure to attain the one-hour ozone NAAQS by its deadline of November
15, 2007 triggers penalty fees for 2007-2010 and contingency plan
requirements under the Clean Air Act.
A. Sierra Club states that the NY-NJ-CT nonattainment area did not
attain by its November 15, 2007 attainment date, and cites South Coast,
472 F.3d at 903, in support of its position that EPA must enforce
certain anti-backsliding requirements, including section 185 fees. The
commenter complains that EPA in its proposed determination of
nonattainment for the NY-NJ-CT area (see 77 FR 3724) did not require
payment of fees for 2007-2010.
Response: First, we wish to emphasize, as EPA stated in its
proposal, that the purpose of this rulemaking action is to make four
specific air quality determinations regarding whether the NY-NJ-CT area
attained the one-hour and 1997 eight-hour ozone standards. While EPA's
proposal noted that these determinations bear on one-hour anti-
backsliding requirements for contingency measures and section 185
penalty fees, this action does not attempt to address or resolve all
the implementation issues regarding those requirements. Thus at the
outset, Sierra Club's position that EPA's specific rulemakings on air
quality determinations must also include resolutions of all anti-
backsliding implementation issues that may flow from them is incorrect.
While EPA recognizes that the anti-backsliding requirement for the one-
hour contingency measures and section 185 fees are linked to the
determination of failure to meet the attainment deadline for that
standard, EPA's rulemakings here regarding those determinations do not,
and are not required to, dispose of all implementation issues for those
requirements or for others, such as those raised in Sierra Club's
comments regarding milestones and additional planning.
In its comments, Sierra Club argues that EPA's determination that
the NY-NJ-CT area failed to attain by its one-hour ozone attainment
deadline also requires EPA to decide here that it must retroactively
collect penalties under section 185 for the period before EPA made its
determination.\4\ We disagree. Neither EPA's determination, nor the
South Coast case, compels EPA to reach this conclusion or even to
decide that issue here. EPA intends to address issues regarding one-
hour anti-backsliding requirements in future rulemakings on
implementation of the section 185 requirements for the NY-NJ-CT area.
Nevertheless, we wish to state our preliminary views on Sierra Club's
comments below. EPA's preliminary views are set forth in the remainder
of the response below, and are not necessary to and are independent of
its air quality determinations of attainment contained in this final
rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ As explained above and elsewhere in our response to
comments, EPA disagrees with Sierra Club's contentions regarding
retroactive collection of fees. As a technical point, however, we
note that under section 185, the earliest year for which fees could
ever have been required to be paid is the calendar year following
the attainment date, November 15, 2007. Thus, it is clear that under
no circumstances would fees be due for 2007.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sierra Club's comments quote at length from South Coast, 472 F.3d
at 902-903. While EPA acknowledges that this decision established that
section 185 fee requirements were to be included as anti-backsliding
measures, the Court in that case did not direct any specific means of
enforcement of these requirements, nor the method for determining
whether an area failed to attain by its attainment date. That decision
established only that the section 185 and contingency measure
requirements were ``applicable.'' It did not establish or even address
how those requirements were to be implemented.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Moreover, as EPA explained above, those issues are ancillary
to the determination of failure to attain the one-hour ozone
standard that EPA is finalizing in this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The D.C. Circuit, however, has previously upheld EPA's longstanding
practice of making determinations of an area's failure to meet
attainment deadlines solely through notice and comment rulemaking--
Sierra Club v. Whitman, 285 F.3d 63 (D.C. Cir. 2002).\6\ In that case--
which similarly arose from a determination of failure of a one-hour
ozone nonattainment area to meet its attainment deadline, the D.C.
Circuit rejected a litigant's \7\ demand to make the consequences of
that determination retroactive to the time period before EPA made the
determination. In that case, Sierra Club similarly argued that EPA's
overdue determination that the St. Louis one-hour ozone nonattainment
area failed to attain by its attainment deadline should apply
retroactively, and that the Court should require retroactive
reclassification of the area. The Court rejected Sierra Club's
contention that EPA's rulemaking was not required to determine a
failure to attain: ``No matter what the Sierra Club thinks the Clean
Air Act or the APA required of EPA, the fact remains that `EPA's
established practice for making a final decision concerning
nonattainment and reclassification is to conduct a rulemaking under the
APA, not to issue a letter, a list, or some other informal document.' *
* * [citations omitted.]'' The Court concluded: ``In other words, if
there has not been a rulemaking there has not been an attainment
determination.'' 285 F.3d at 66.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Sierra Club v. Whitman was discussed and distinguished in a
recent D.C. Circuit decision that addressed retroactivity in a quite
different context, where, unlike the situation here, EPA sought to
give its regulations retroactive effect. National Petrochemical and
Refiners Ass'n v. EPA. 630 F.3d 145, 163 (D.C. Cir. 2010), rehearing
denied 643 F.3d 958 (D.C. Cir. 2011), cert denied 132 S. Ct. 571
(2011).
\7\ In this case, also Sierra Club.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Court also refused to accept Sierra Club's assertion that the
Court should compel EPA to give retroactive effect to its
determination, resulting in reclassification as of the area's
attainment date. The Court stated: ``Although EPA failed to make the
nonattainment determination within the statutory time frame, Sierra
Club's proposed solution only makes the situation worse. Retroactive
relief would likely impose large costs on the States, which would face
fines and suits for not implementing air pollution prevention plans
[earlier], even though they were not on notice at the time.'' 285 F.3d
at 68.
While it is true that the Clean Air Act provides that both
reclassification and penalty fees are consequences of failure to attain
the ozone standard, the D.C. Circuit in Sierra Club recognized that
these weighty consequences are not triggered until EPA makes a
determination, after notice and comment rulemaking, of failure to
attain. In that case the court also rejects
[[Page 36167]]
the view that adverse consequences from the determination should be
imposed retroactively, especially if they would, as here, subject the
States to additional burdens caused by retroactive requirements that
were not triggered prior to conclusion of the rulemaking process.
Several features of our rulemaking for the NY-NJ-CT area provide
additional grounds for application of a position similar to that which
the court took in the St. Louis Sierra Club case. In the case of St.
Louis, when the question of retroactive application arose, the area
remained in nonattainment of the one-hour standard, which was also
still the only standard in effect. Here, unlike St. Louis, EPA has
determined that the NY-NJ-CT area is currently attaining both the one-
hour and eight-hour standards, and thus there is significantly less
reason to consider imposing retroactive penalties that are intended to
bring about the attainment that has already occurred.
Sierra Club here argues, unpersuasively, that the South Coast
opinion supports retroactive imposition of penalties, quoting the
Court's statement that, unless section 185 requirements were
applicable, ``a state could go unpenalized without ever attaining even
the original NAAQS * * *.'' 472 F.3d at 903. Here, however, this
possibility does not exist. EPA's final determinations in this
rulemaking establish that the NY-NJ-CT area has in fact attained not
only the original one-hour standard, but also the 1997 eight-hour
NAAQS.
Sierra Club quotes the Court's statement in South Coast that
``Congress set the penalty deadline well into the future, giving states
and industry ample notice and sufficient incentives to avoid the
penalties.'' 372 F.3d at 903. Notice of the existence of penalty
provisions, however, is not the same as notice that these provisions
have been triggered. As the D.C. Circuit recognized in Sierra Club v.
EPA, only when EPA issues a final notice determining that an area has
failed to attain by the attainment date can that failure be
definitively established. The case of the NY-NJ-CT area presents a
particularly compelling context in which to apply this principle. The
NY-NJ-CT area has been attaining the one-hour standard since 2010 and
the eight-hour standard for the time period 2007-2010, and data for
2011 continues this trend. No incentives--and certainly no penalties--
are required for the area to reach attainment,\8\ a goal that the area
has met, preserved and exceeded. Under these circumstances, and based
on the D.C. Circuit's and EPA's long held position on the issue of
retroactive consequences of determinations of failure to attain, EPA
cannot see a reason to impose penalties on sources in the NY-NJ-CT
area. As explained above, EPA is determining that the area is
currently, and has for some time been, attaining both the one-hour and
eight-hour ozone standards. Thus no anti-backsliding purpose is served
by retroactive imposition of fees for a failure to meet a deadline for
a revoked standard--under circumstances that existed years ago, which
have since been eclipsed by continuous attainment. EPA believes that
compelling the States and sources to address old penalties now would
also divert attention and resources from efforts to achieve current,
forward-looking environmental goals, including the stricter 2008 ozone
standard. In these circumstances, giving retroactive effect to EPA's
determination of failure to attain the standard here would be
unreasonable, and it would, as the Court held in Sierra Club v.
Whitman, ``only mak[e] the situation worse.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Sierra Club appears to recognize this, since it does not
request EPA to impose penalties for the time period after the area
attained the standard (2010 to the present).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Sierra Club asserts that the NY-NJ-CT nonattainment area is
subject to contingency plan requirements for failure to attain the one-
hour standard and that EPA failed to impose this requirement on the
States. Sierra Club argues that EPA must ensure that the contingency
measures approved for New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut in 67 FR
5170, 67 FR 5152, and 66 FR 63921 are implemented and enforced, and
Sierra Club contends that EPA has improperly failed to carry out this
obligation. Sierra Club asserts that EPA's determination that the area
has attained the one-hour ozone standard (Clean Data Determination)
does not allow removal of these contingency measures, which Sierra Club
states became applicable in 2007 and which must remain in place to
prevent backsliding.
Response: Contingency measures for the one-hour ozone standard were
previously approved and have been implemented in the NY-NJ-CT
nonattainment area. See for New York: 67 FR 5170 (February 4, 2002) and
40 CFR 52.1683(i)(3); for New Jersey: 67 FR 5152 (February 4, 2002) and
40 CFR 52.1582(h)(4); for Connecticut: 66 FR 63921 (December 11,2001)
and 40 CFR 52.377. There is no need for EPA to require the states to
implement the contingency measures, because all the identified measures
are part of the applicable SIP and have already been implemented. The
States have not requested removal of the contingency measures from
their respective SIPs and therefore they continue in effect. EPA has
never proposed to remove the measures approved as contingency measures
in this area. The States would have to request a SIP revision if they
wanted to remove these measures from their applicable SIP and would
have to demonstrate compliance with section 110(l). Thus, the measures
identified as contingency measures continue to remain in SIP. Moreover,
as explained in EPA's Clean Data Policy,\9\ the purpose of contingency
measures for failure to attain is linked to attainment. EPA in this
rulemaking has determined that the area has already attained the one-
hour ozone standard, and therefore no additional contingency measures
are needed.
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\9\ Memorandum from John S. Sietz, Director, OAQPS, dated May
10, 1995, entitled ``Reasonable Further Progress, Attainment
Demonstration, and Related Requirements for Ozone Nonattainment
Areas Meeting the Ozone National Ambient Air Quality Standard''
(``Clean Data Policy'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Sierra Club argues that the NY-NJ-CT ozone nonattainment area is
subject to the milestone one-hour ozone anti-backsliding requirements
of the Act. The commenter asserts that EPA errs in failing to impose
rate of progress (ROP) or reasonable further progress (RFP) milestones
on the nonattainment area. The commenter asserts that 42 U.S.C. 7511(d)
requires the states to submit revised SIPs that incorporate updated ROP
plans for the one-hour ozone standard.
Response: As stated in the proposed rulemaking, EPA has previously
approved one-hour RFP and ROP plans for the NY-NJ-CT area. See for New
York: 67 FR 5170 February 4, 2002 and 40 CFR 52.1683(i)(2); for New
Jersey: 67 FR 5152 February 4, 2002 and 40 CFR 52.1582(h)(3); for
Connecticut: 66 FR 63921 December 11, 2001 and 40 CFR 52.377. Nowhere
in its January 25, 2012 proposal (77 FR 3720), did EPA propose to
remove from the approved SIPs the measures that resulted in satisfying
the ROP or RFP plan requirements for the area. Nor have the States
requested removal of those provisions.
Sierra Club's comment relies on section 181(b)(4)(A), and quotes
language providing that, if a severe area fails to attain, certain
reductions continue '' until the standard is attained.'' Here, EPA's
determinations in this rulemaking establish that the area has attained
the one-hour ozone standard, so any such obligation would now be at an
end. And, as explained in
[[Page 36168]]
Comment 3A, no prior failure to attain was established until EPA's
final determination in this rulemaking (see response to Comment 3A
above). In this rulemaking, EPA is finalizing its determinations that
the NY-NJ-CT nonattainment area is currently attaining both the one-
hour and eight-hour ozone NAAQSs. Under 40 CFR 51.918 and the
interpretation set forth in EPA's longstanding Clean Data Policy, these
determinations suspend the obligations to submit any outstanding
planning requirements, including ROP. Based on the monitoring data that
show attainment of both ozone standards, there is no need to require
the States to revise or submit new ROP plans or new RFP milestones for
the one-hour ozone SIPs. Additional ozone reductions have resulted from
implementation of the eight-hour ozone standard. EPA has approved ROPs
for the 1997 ozone standard SIPs in Connecticut, New Jersey and New
York, which function to further reduce ozone precursors to a greater
extent than would be required by submission of an additional RFP for
the one-hour ozone standard.
4. Sierra Club contends that the NY-NJ-CT ozone nonattainment area
must submit a revised one-hour ozone SIP and asserts that EPA's failure
to require a new SIP for the NY-NJ-CT area upon finalizing its proposed
determination of nonattainment is improper and contrary to law.
Response: We disagree that EPA's determination here that the NY-NJ-
CT area failed to attain the one-hour ozone standard triggers any CAA
section 179(d) requirement to prepare and submit SIP revisions. A new
section 179(d) ozone plan, triggered by section 179(c) is not an
applicable anti-backsliding requirement under EPA's anti-backsliding
regulations. As EPA has explained in other rulemakings, only those
anti-backsliding requirements that were specifically retained are
applicable, and the requirements of section 179(c) and (d) are not
included. See 76 FR 82133 (December 30, 2011). As EPA stated in its
proposal, the only anti-backsliding measures that pertain to this
determination of failure to meet the one-hour deadline are one-hour
contingency measures for failure to attain and section 185 penalty
fees.
Moreover, under EPA's Clean Data Policy EPA's determination that
the area is currently attaining the one-hour ozone standard obviates
the need for submission of any planning requirements related to
attainment of the standard.
IV. Final Actions
EPA is making four separate and independent determinations related
to the NY-NJ-CT one-hour and 1997 eight-hour ozone nonattainment areas.
These determinations are based upon complete, quality-assured and
certified ozone monitoring data. First, with respect to the one-hour
ozone standard, and pursuant to EPA's authority to ensure
implementation of one-hour ozone anti-backsliding requirements and CAA
section 301, EPA is determining that data for 2005-2007 show that the
NY-NJ-CT area previously failed to attain the one-hour ozone standard
by its applicable November 15, 2007 attainment deadline. Second, and
more importantly, EPA is determining that the NY-NJ-CT area is
currently attaining the one-hour ozone standard, based on more recent
complete, quality-assured and certified data for 2008-2010. Quality-
assured ozone monitoring data in the AQS for 2011 indicate the area
continues to attain the revoked one-hour ozone standard.
Third, with respect to the 1997 eight-hour ozone standard, in
accordance with section 181(b) of the CAA, EPA is determining that
complete, quality-assured and certified ozone monitoring data for 2007-
2009 show the NY-NJ-CT eight-hour ozone nonattainment area attained the
1997 eight-hour ozone standard by its June 15, 2010 attainment
deadline. Fourth, EPA is also determining that the NY-NJ-CT eight-hour
ozone nonattainment area currently continues to attain the eight-hour
ozone NAAQS, based on complete, quality-assured and certified data for
2008-2010. Quality-assured ozone monitoring data in the AQS for 2011
indicate the area continues to attain the 1997 eight-hour ozone
standard.
As provided in 40 CFR 51.918, EPA's determination that the area has
attained the eight-hour ozone standard suspends the requirements under
section 182(b)(1) for submission of the attainment demonstration,
reasonable further progress plan, contingency measures and any other
planning SIP relating to attainment of the 1997 eight-hour NAAQS. This
suspension of requirements is effective for so long as the area
continues to attain the 1997 eight-hour ozone standard.
For the reasons stated in its proposed notice and response to
comments here, EPA is also withdrawing the May 8, 2009 proposed
disapprovals of Connecticut's and New Jersey's eight-hour ozone
attainment demonstrations for the NY-NJ-CT eight-hour ozone
nonattainment area.
V. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
These actions, make attainment determinations based on air quality
and result in the suspension of certain Federal requirements, will not
impose additional requirements beyond those imposed by state law, or
will not impose any requirements beyond those required by Federal
statute. For these reasons, these actions:
Are not ``significant regulatory actions'' subject to
review by the Office of Management and Budget under Executive Order
12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993);
Do not impose an information collection burden under the
provisions of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
Are 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.);
Do not contain any unfunded mandate or significantly or
uniquely affect small governments, as described in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Pub. L. 104-4);
Do not have Federalism implications as specified in
Executive Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10, 1999);
Are not economically significant regulatory actions based
on health or safety risks subject to Executive Order 13045 (62 FR
19885, April 23, 1997);
Are not significant regulatory actions subject to
Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22, 2001);
Are 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
Do 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
[[Page 36169]]
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 August 17, 2012. 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, Nitrogen oxides,
Ozone, Volatile organic compounds, Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: May 15, 2012.
Judith A. Enck,
Regional Administrator, Region 2.
Dated: May 27, 2012.
H. Curtis Spalding,
Regional Administrator, Region 1.
Part 52, 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 H--Connecticut
0
2. Section 52.377 is amended by adding paragraphs (j) and (k) to read
as follows:
Sec. 52.377 Control strategy: Ozone.
* * * * *
(j) Determination of Attainment for the One-Hour Ozone Standard.
Effective July 18, 2012, EPA is determining that the New York-Northern
New Jersey-Long Island (NY-NJ-CT) one-hour ozone nonattainment area did
not meet its applicable one-hour ozone attainment date of November 15,
2007, based on 2005-2007 complete, quality-assured and certified ozone
monitoring data. Separate from and independent of this determination,
EPA is determining that the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island
(NY-NJ-CT) one-hour ozone nonattainment area has attained the one-hour
ozone standard, based on 2008-2010 complete, quality-assured and
certified ozone monitoring data at all monitoring sites in the area and
data showing the area continued to attain through 2011.
(k) Determination of Attainment for the Eight-Hour Ozone Standard.
Effective July 18, 2012 EPA is determining, that complete, quality-
assured and certified ozone monitoring data for 2007-2009 show the NY-
NJ-CT eight-hour ozone nonattainment area attained the 1997 eight-hour
ozone standard by its June 15, 2010 attainment deadline. Therefore, EPA
has met the requirement pursuant to CAA section 181(b)(2)(A) to
determine, based on the area's air quality data as of the attainment
date, whether the area attained the standard. EPA also determined that
the NY-NJ-CT nonattainment area will not be reclassified for failure to
attain by its applicable attainment date under section 181(b)(2)(A).
EPA is also determining that the NY-NJ-CT eight-hour ozone
nonattainment area currently continues to attain the eight-hour ozone
NAAQS, based on complete, quality-assured and certified data for 2008-
2010 and data through 2011. This determination, in accordance with 40
CFR 51.918, suspends the requirements for this area to submit an
attainment demonstration, associated reasonably available control
measures, a reasonable further progress plan, contingency measures, and
other planning SIPs related to attainment of the standard for as long
as this area continues to meet the 1997 annual eight-hour ozone NAAQS.
Subpart FF--New Jersey
0
3. Section 52.1576 is amended by designating the existing text as
paragraph (a), adding and reserving paragraph (b), and adding new
paragraphs (c) and (d) to read as follows:
Sec. 52.1576 Determinations of attainment.
* * * * *
(c) Based upon EPA's review of the air quality data for the three-
year period 2005 to 2007, EPA determined, as of June 18, 2012, that the
New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island (NY-NJ-CT) one-hour ozone
nonattainment area did not meet its applicable one-hour ozone
attainment date of November 15, 2007. Separate from and independent of
this determination, based on 2008-2010 complete, quality-assured ozone
monitoring data at all monitoring sites in the area, and data for 2011,
EPA determined, as of June 18, 2012, that the NY-NJ-CT one-hour ozone
nonattainment area has attained the one-hour ozone standard.
(d) Based upon EPA's review of complete, quality-assured and
certified air quality data for the three-year period 2007 to 2009, and
data for 2011, EPA determined, as of June 18, 2012, that the New York-
Northern New Jersey-Long Island (NY-NJ-CT) eight-hour ozone moderate
nonattainment area attained the 1997 eight-hour ozone NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date of June 15, 2010. Therefore, EPA has met the
requirement pursuant to CAA section 181(b)(2)(A) to determine, based on
the area's air quality data as of the attainment date, whether the area
attained the standard. EPA also determined that the NY-NJ-CT
nonattainment area will not be reclassified for failure to attain by
its applicable attainment date under section 181(b)(2)(A).
0
4. Section 52.1582 is amended by designating paragraph (n) as paragraph
(n)(1), and adding new paragraph (n)(2) to read as follows:
Sec. 52.1582 Control strategy and regulations: Ozone.
* * * * *
(n) Attainment determination. (1) * * *
(2) EPA has determined, as of June 18, 2012, that based on 2007 to
2009 complete, quality-assured and certified ambient air quality data,
additional data showing continued attainment through 2011, the New
York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-CT, eight-hour ozone
moderate nonattainment area has attained the 1997 eight-hour ozone
NAAQS. This determination, in accordance with 40 CFR 51.918, suspends
the requirements for this area to submit an attainment demonstration,
associated reasonably available control measures, a reasonable further
progress plan, contingency measures, and other planning SIPs related to
attainment of the standard for as long as this area continues to meet
the 1997 annual eight-hour ozone NAAQS.
Subpart HH--New York
0
5. Section 52.1679 is added to read as follows:
[[Page 36170]]
Sec. 52.1679 Determinations of attainment.
(a) Based upon EPA's review of complete, quality-assured air
quality data for the 3-year period 2005 to 2007, EPA determined, as of
June 18, 2012, that the New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island (NY-
NJ-CT) one-hour ozone nonattainment area did not meet its applicable
one-hour ozone attainment date of November 15, 2007. Separate from and
independent of this determination, based on 2008-2010 complete,
quality-assured ozone monitoring data at all monitoring sites in the
area, and data for 2011, EPA determined, as of June 18, 2012, that the
NY-NJ-CT one-hour ozone nonattainment area met the one-hour ozone
NAAQS.
(b) Based upon EPA's review of complete, quality-assured and
certified air quality data for the 3-year period 2007 to 2009, and data
for 2011, EPA determined, as of June 18, 2012, that the New York-
Northern New Jersey-Long Island (NY-NJ-CT) eight-hour ozone moderate
nonattainment area attained the 1997 eight-hour ozone NAAQS by the
applicable attainment date of June 15, 2010. Therefore, EPA has met the
requirement pursuant to CAA section 181(b)(2)(A) to determine, based on
the area's air quality data as of the attainment date, whether the area
attained the standard. EPA also determined that the NY-NJ-CT
nonattainment area will not be reclassified for failure to attain by
its applicable attainment date under section 181(b)(2)(A).
0
6. Section 52.1683 is amended by adding new paragraph (f)(2)(viii) to
read as follows:
Sec. 52.1683 Control strategy: Ozone.
* * * * *
(f) * * *
(2) * * *
(viii) New York-Northern New Jersey-Long Island, NY-NJ-CT, eight-
hour ozone moderate nonattainment area (consisting of the Bronx, Kings,
Nassau, New York, Queens, Richmond, Rockland, Suffolk and Westchester
Counties) as of June 15, 2010 and data showing the area continued to
attain through 2011.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2012-14716 Filed 6-15-12; 8:45 am]
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