National Environmental Policy Act Implementing Procedures, 2102-2103 [2014-00324]
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2102
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 8 / Monday, January 13, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
POSTAL SERVICE
39 CFR Part 775
National Environmental Policy Act
Implementing Procedures
Postal Service.
Interim final rule with request
for comments.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
SUMMARY: The Postal Service (USPS) TM
is publishing this interim final rule with
request for comments to amend a
categorical exclusion, which is currently
in the Postal Service’s National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA)
implementing procedures. This
amendment will make the categorical
exclusion (CATEX) more consistent
with the intended scope of covered
activities and with those CATEXs used
by other Federal entities for property
disposals.
Effective date: January 13, 2014.
Comment date: Submit comments on
or before February 12, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Deliver written comments
by email to USPSFAC@usps.gov, with
the subject heading ‘‘CATEX
Rulemaking,’’ or by mail to Angie
Mitchell, U.S. Postal Service, 475
L’Enfant Plaza SW., Room 6611,
Washington, DC 20260. You may
inspect and photocopy all written
comments at the USPS Headquarters
Library, 475 L’Enfant Plaza SW., 11th
Floor North, Washington, DC, by
appointment only between the hours of
9 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday through
Friday by calling 202–268–2906 in
advance. Faxed comments will not be
accepted.
DATES:
ehiers on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with RULES
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Charlotte Parrish, Environmental
Specialist, at charlotte.parrish@usps.gov
or 201–714–7216, or Matthew Raeburn,
Environmental Counsel, at
matthew.d.raeburn@usps.gov or 202–
268–4570.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The Postal Service is publishing this
interim final rule with request for
comments to amend a categorical
exclusion under the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).
Amending this categorical exclusion
(CATEX) is consistent with NEPA and
the Council on Environmental Quality’s
(CEQ’s) regulations. This amendment
focuses the CATEX more clearly on
activities that, absent extraordinary
circumstances, do not normally have the
potential for individual or cumulative
significant impacts on the quality of the
human environment. The amendment
also makes the CATEX more consistent
with analogous CATEXs used by the
VerDate Mar<15>2010
13:45 Jan 10, 2014
Jkt 232001
General Services Administration (GSA)
and other Federal entities. The Postal
Service has determined that the
activities included in this category—i.e.,
property disposals undertaken in the
normal course of the Postal Service’s
business—do not normally, absent
extraordinary circumstances,
individually or cumulatively create the
potential for significant effects on the
human environment. The updated
CATEX is necessary to ensure greater
clarity and consistency when the
CATEX is used because of the
increasing regularity of property
disposals by the Postal Service. There
have also been changes to the Postal
Service’s business and infrastructure
since its last CATEX revisions in 1997.
This amendment maintains the Postal
Service’s compliance with NEPA while
greatly reducing the Postal Service’s
administrative burden, and the
amendment advances the ongoing
efforts to enhance the efficiency and
effectiveness of timely environmental
review processes.
NEPA applies to Federal actions and
requires an Environmental Impact
Statement (EIS) for major actions
significantly affecting the quality of the
human environment (42 U.S.C.
4332(C)). NEPA established CEQ, whose
regulations at 40 CFR parts 1500–1508
implement NEPA across the Executive
Branch. CEQ’s regulations require
Federal agencies to adopt their own
implementing procedures to
supplement CEQ’s regulations and to
establish and use CATEXs to define
categories of actions that do not
normally, absent extraordinary
circumstances, have the potential for
individual or cumulative significant
impacts on the human environment
and, thus, do not necessitate the
preparation of an EIS or an
environmental assessment (EA) (40 CFR
1507.3(b)(2)(ii), 1508.4).
CEQ also requires that CATEXs be
used to reduce paperwork and delay (40
CFR 1500.4(p), 1500.5(k)). In its
guidance on ‘‘Establishing, Applying,
and Revising Categorical Exclusions
under the National Environmental
Policy Act’’ (75 FR 75628, February 18,
2010), CEQ recommends that agencies
periodically review their CATEXs and
benchmark them against those of other
agencies. An agency can substantiate its
own CATEX by comparing another
agency’s experience promulgating and
applying a comparable CATEX. CEQ
also encourages agencies to establish
new CATEXs and to revise existing
CATEXs to eliminate unnecessary
paperwork and delay for categories of
actions that, absent extraordinary
circumstances, do not have significant
PO 00000
Frm 00028
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
environmental effects. This approach
leaves more resources available to
assess, either in an EA or EIS, those
proposed Federal actions that are
actually likely to have the potential to
cause significant environmental effects.
The Postal Service, which is an
independent establishment of the
executive branch rather than a Federal
agency (39 U.S.C. 201), has its own
NEPA regulations at 39 CFR part 775.
Those regulations include several
CATEXs for categories of actions that
the Postal Service has determined do
not individually or cumulatively have
the potential for significant effects on
the human environment (39 CFR 775.6).
The Postal Service last revised its
CATEXs through a rulemaking that
became effective on October 1, 1997 (63
FR 45720). One of the CATEXs
promulgated in that rulemaking applied
to the ‘‘[a]cquisition and disposal
through sale, lease, transfer or exchange
of real property that does not involve an
increase in volumes, concentrations, or
discharge rates of wastes, air emissions,
or water effluents, and that under
reasonably foreseeable uses, have
generally similar environmental impacts
as compared to those before the
acquisition or disposal’’ (39 CFR
775.6(e)(8)).
In the 16 years since, the Postal
Service became aware of refinements in
similar CATEXs in other Federal agency
regulations. In particular, the Postal
Service examined a similar CATEX for
disposals finalized in 2000 by the
General Services Administration (GSA)
(65 FR 69558). GSA’s disposal CATEX
is included in that agency’s NEPA Desk
Guide, which the Environmental
Protection Agency called ‘‘a good model
for other agencies’’ (65 FR 69558).
Indeed, in July 2013, the U.S. Coast
Guard (USCG) used GSA’s disposal
CATEX as a basis for USCG’s own
CATEX (78 FR 44140). Whereas the
Postal Service’s disposal CATEX at 39
CFR 775.6(e)(8)—prior to this interim
final rule—could have been read to
compare the environmental impact of
current and reasonably foreseeable uses
only on the property being disposed of,
the GSA’s and USCG’s CATEXs more
broadly and realistically compare the
reasonably anticipated and reasonably
foreseeable uses on the disposal
property to other property uses in the
surrounding area. In other words, those
CATEXs take into account the
environmental effects of the agencies’
disposals in the context of the
surrounding neighborhoods. Both GSA
and USCG have determined that a
property disposal that results in a use or
uses similar to those on surrounding
properties does not, when undertaken in
E:\FR\FM\13JAR1.SGM
13JAR1
ehiers on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with RULES
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 8 / Monday, January 13, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
the normal course of business, give rise
to the potential for significant impacts
and therefor does not necessitate the
preparation of an EA (or an EIS).
The frequency of property disposals
by the Postal Service has increased
dramatically in recent years. For
example, the total number of Postal
Service facilities fell from 34,175 in
2008 to 32,604 in 2012 (U.S. Postal
Service 2012 Sustainability Report
(2013)). The Postal Service anticipates
that the frequency of property disposals
will persist or increase in the
foreseeable future. As a result, the Postal
Service would reduce paperwork and
delay by updating its CATEX to clarify
that an EA is not required for the
overwhelming majority of its normal
course of business property disposals.
That determination is based on the
Postal Service’s experience that such
disposals do not normally result in
significant environmental effects.
The Postal Service’s NEPA procedural
safeguards will continue to apply to the
Postal Service’s application of the
amended CATEX. Specifically, the
Postal Service’s NEPA regulations
require that all proposed real property
actions, including property disposals, be
reviewed using a process that includes
the completion of a Facilities
Environmental Checklist (FEC). The
FEC allows the Postal Service’s
personnel and consultants to identify
and list any potential environmental
effects of the proposed action. The
FEC’s signatory determines whether the
proposed action qualifies for a CATEX
under NEPA and whether extraordinary
circumstances exist that could cause the
proposed action to have a significant
environmental effect that would
preclude the use of the CATEX.
If the person completing the FEC
concludes that a CATEX applies, then a
Record of Environmental Consideration
(REC)—a formal record justifying the
use of a CATEX—must be completed
and signed by both the project manager
and a responsible official at the Postal
Service. The REC’s signatories must
affirm they have reviewed the
applicable NEPA guidance and
considered the environmental impacts
of the proposed property action.
The Postal Service’s experience leads
it to believe that, as demonstrated by the
GSA’s and USCG’s use of their property
disposal CATEXs, its amended CATEX
reflects an appropriate and realistic
view that such activities undertaken in
the normal course of business do not
individually or cumulatively have
significant impacts on the human
environment. The Postal Service also
finds those agencies’ experience and
consideration to be a useful guide. Like
VerDate Mar<15>2010
13:45 Jan 10, 2014
Jkt 232001
the Postal Service, both agencies are
responsible for the acquisition and
disposal of Federal property. GSA,
which is responsible for the acquisition
and disposal of most Federal property,
has promulgated a property disposal
CATEX that reflects its seasoned
judgment about the precise scope of real
property acquisition and disposal that
lacks significant individual and
cumulative environmental impact. The
Postal Service also notes that neither
GSA nor USCG received adverse public
comments regarding their property
disposal CATEXs (see 65 FR 69558; 78
FR 44139).
Although the Postal Service notes
minor differences between the phrasing
of GSA’s and USCG’s CATEXs, those
differences are not substantive or
otherwise of a nature to change the
projected environmental consequences
of the activities. Because of GSA’s
preeminent experience with the
acquisition and disposal of Federal real
property, the Postal Service believes
that it is appropriate to amend its own
CATEX to match that of the GSA. The
Postal Service does not believe that this
update to a single CATEX, which
follows the model of Federal agencies’
existing CATEXs, should be significant
or controversial.
The Administrative Procedure Act
does not apply to this action (5 U.S.C.
553(a)(2); 39 U.S.C. 410(a)), which is
being taken pursuant to the Postal
Service’s general rulemaking authority
under 39 U.S.C. 401(2). Nevertheless,
the Postal Service is complying with
CEQ Regulations and seeking public
input when revising this CATEX. The
Postal Service therefore invites
comments on the following revision of
39 CFR 775.6(e)(8).
Note that this interim final rule is
effective upon its date of publication in
the Federal Register. The Postal Service
will review any comments received
during the 30-day comment period.
Following the expiration of the
comment period, the Postal Service will
publish its responses to any adverse
comments in a subsequent Federal
Register notice, together with its
determination whether the interim final
rule will be made permanent without
change, or adjusted in response to the
comments received.
List of Subjects in 39 CFR Part 775
Environmental impact statements.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, 39 CFR part 775 is amended
as follows:
PO 00000
Frm 00029
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
2103
PART 775—NATIONAL
ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ACT
PROCEDURES
1. The authority citation for 39 CFR
part 775 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 39 U.S.C. 401; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et
seq.; 40 CFR 1500.4.
2. In § 775.6, paragraph (e)(8) is
revised to read as follows:
■
§ 775.6
Categorical exclusions.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(8) Disposal of properties where the
size, area, topography, and zoning are
similar to existing surrounding
properties and/or where current and
reasonable anticipated uses are or
would be similar to current surrounding
uses (e.g., commercial store in a
commercial strip, warehouse in an
urban complex, office building in
downtown area, row house or vacant lot
in an urban area).
*
*
*
*
*
Stanley F. Mires,
Attorney, Legal Policy & Legislative Advice.
[FR Doc. 2014–00324 Filed 1–10–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY
Federal Emergency Management
Agency
44 CFR Part 67
[Docket ID FEMA–2013–0002]
Final Flood Elevation Determinations
Federal Emergency
Management Agency, DHS.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
Base (1% annual-chance)
Flood Elevations (BFEs) and modified
BFEs are made final for the
communities listed below. The BFEs
and modified BFEs are the basis for the
floodplain management measures that
each community is required either to
adopt or to show evidence of being
already in effect in order to qualify or
remain qualified for participation in the
National Flood Insurance Program
(NFIP).
SUMMARY:
The date of issuance of the Flood
Insurance Rate Map (FIRM) showing
BFEs and modified BFEs for each
community. This date may be obtained
by contacting the office where the maps
are available for inspection as indicated
in the table below.
DATES:
E:\FR\FM\13JAR1.SGM
13JAR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 8 (Monday, January 13, 2014)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 2102-2103]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-00324]
[[Page 2102]]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
POSTAL SERVICE
39 CFR Part 775
National Environmental Policy Act Implementing Procedures
AGENCY: Postal Service.
ACTION: Interim final rule with request for comments.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Postal Service (USPS) TM is publishing this
interim final rule with request for comments to amend a categorical
exclusion, which is currently in the Postal Service's National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) implementing procedures. This amendment
will make the categorical exclusion (CATEX) more consistent with the
intended scope of covered activities and with those CATEXs used by
other Federal entities for property disposals.
DATES: Effective date: January 13, 2014.
Comment date: Submit comments on or before February 12, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Deliver written comments by email to USPSFAC@usps.gov, with
the subject heading ``CATEX Rulemaking,'' or by mail to Angie Mitchell,
U.S. Postal Service, 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW., Room 6611, Washington, DC
20260. You may inspect and photocopy all written comments at the USPS
Headquarters Library, 475 L'Enfant Plaza SW., 11th Floor North,
Washington, DC, by appointment only between the hours of 9 a.m. and 4
p.m., Monday through Friday by calling 202-268-2906 in advance. Faxed
comments will not be accepted.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Charlotte Parrish, Environmental
Specialist, at charlotte.parrish@usps.gov or 201-714-7216, or Matthew
Raeburn, Environmental Counsel, at matthew.d.raeburn@usps.gov or 202-
268-4570.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The Postal Service is publishing this interim final rule with
request for comments to amend a categorical exclusion under the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). Amending this categorical
exclusion (CATEX) is consistent with NEPA and the Council on
Environmental Quality's (CEQ's) regulations. This amendment focuses the
CATEX more clearly on activities that, absent extraordinary
circumstances, do not normally have the potential for individual or
cumulative significant impacts on the quality of the human environment.
The amendment also makes the CATEX more consistent with analogous
CATEXs used by the General Services Administration (GSA) and other
Federal entities. The Postal Service has determined that the activities
included in this category--i.e., property disposals undertaken in the
normal course of the Postal Service's business--do not normally, absent
extraordinary circumstances, individually or cumulatively create the
potential for significant effects on the human environment. The updated
CATEX is necessary to ensure greater clarity and consistency when the
CATEX is used because of the increasing regularity of property
disposals by the Postal Service. There have also been changes to the
Postal Service's business and infrastructure since its last CATEX
revisions in 1997. This amendment maintains the Postal Service's
compliance with NEPA while greatly reducing the Postal Service's
administrative burden, and the amendment advances the ongoing efforts
to enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of timely environmental
review processes.
NEPA applies to Federal actions and requires an Environmental
Impact Statement (EIS) for major actions significantly affecting the
quality of the human environment (42 U.S.C. 4332(C)). NEPA established
CEQ, whose regulations at 40 CFR parts 1500-1508 implement NEPA across
the Executive Branch. CEQ's regulations require Federal agencies to
adopt their own implementing procedures to supplement CEQ's regulations
and to establish and use CATEXs to define categories of actions that do
not normally, absent extraordinary circumstances, have the potential
for individual or cumulative significant impacts on the human
environment and, thus, do not necessitate the preparation of an EIS or
an environmental assessment (EA) (40 CFR 1507.3(b)(2)(ii), 1508.4).
CEQ also requires that CATEXs be used to reduce paperwork and delay
(40 CFR 1500.4(p), 1500.5(k)). In its guidance on ``Establishing,
Applying, and Revising Categorical Exclusions under the National
Environmental Policy Act'' (75 FR 75628, February 18, 2010), CEQ
recommends that agencies periodically review their CATEXs and benchmark
them against those of other agencies. An agency can substantiate its
own CATEX by comparing another agency's experience promulgating and
applying a comparable CATEX. CEQ also encourages agencies to establish
new CATEXs and to revise existing CATEXs to eliminate unnecessary
paperwork and delay for categories of actions that, absent
extraordinary circumstances, do not have significant environmental
effects. This approach leaves more resources available to assess,
either in an EA or EIS, those proposed Federal actions that are
actually likely to have the potential to cause significant
environmental effects.
The Postal Service, which is an independent establishment of the
executive branch rather than a Federal agency (39 U.S.C. 201), has its
own NEPA regulations at 39 CFR part 775. Those regulations include
several CATEXs for categories of actions that the Postal Service has
determined do not individually or cumulatively have the potential for
significant effects on the human environment (39 CFR 775.6). The Postal
Service last revised its CATEXs through a rulemaking that became
effective on October 1, 1997 (63 FR 45720). One of the CATEXs
promulgated in that rulemaking applied to the ``[a]cquisition and
disposal through sale, lease, transfer or exchange of real property
that does not involve an increase in volumes, concentrations, or
discharge rates of wastes, air emissions, or water effluents, and that
under reasonably foreseeable uses, have generally similar environmental
impacts as compared to those before the acquisition or disposal'' (39
CFR 775.6(e)(8)).
In the 16 years since, the Postal Service became aware of
refinements in similar CATEXs in other Federal agency regulations. In
particular, the Postal Service examined a similar CATEX for disposals
finalized in 2000 by the General Services Administration (GSA) (65 FR
69558). GSA's disposal CATEX is included in that agency's NEPA Desk
Guide, which the Environmental Protection Agency called ``a good model
for other agencies'' (65 FR 69558). Indeed, in July 2013, the U.S.
Coast Guard (USCG) used GSA's disposal CATEX as a basis for USCG's own
CATEX (78 FR 44140). Whereas the Postal Service's disposal CATEX at 39
CFR 775.6(e)(8)--prior to this interim final rule--could have been read
to compare the environmental impact of current and reasonably
foreseeable uses only on the property being disposed of, the GSA's and
USCG's CATEXs more broadly and realistically compare the reasonably
anticipated and reasonably foreseeable uses on the disposal property to
other property uses in the surrounding area. In other words, those
CATEXs take into account the environmental effects of the agencies'
disposals in the context of the surrounding neighborhoods. Both GSA and
USCG have determined that a property disposal that results in a use or
uses similar to those on surrounding properties does not, when
undertaken in
[[Page 2103]]
the normal course of business, give rise to the potential for
significant impacts and therefor does not necessitate the preparation
of an EA (or an EIS).
The frequency of property disposals by the Postal Service has
increased dramatically in recent years. For example, the total number
of Postal Service facilities fell from 34,175 in 2008 to 32,604 in 2012
(U.S. Postal Service 2012 Sustainability Report (2013)). The Postal
Service anticipates that the frequency of property disposals will
persist or increase in the foreseeable future. As a result, the Postal
Service would reduce paperwork and delay by updating its CATEX to
clarify that an EA is not required for the overwhelming majority of its
normal course of business property disposals. That determination is
based on the Postal Service's experience that such disposals do not
normally result in significant environmental effects.
The Postal Service's NEPA procedural safeguards will continue to
apply to the Postal Service's application of the amended CATEX.
Specifically, the Postal Service's NEPA regulations require that all
proposed real property actions, including property disposals, be
reviewed using a process that includes the completion of a Facilities
Environmental Checklist (FEC). The FEC allows the Postal Service's
personnel and consultants to identify and list any potential
environmental effects of the proposed action. The FEC's signatory
determines whether the proposed action qualifies for a CATEX under NEPA
and whether extraordinary circumstances exist that could cause the
proposed action to have a significant environmental effect that would
preclude the use of the CATEX.
If the person completing the FEC concludes that a CATEX applies,
then a Record of Environmental Consideration (REC)--a formal record
justifying the use of a CATEX--must be completed and signed by both the
project manager and a responsible official at the Postal Service. The
REC's signatories must affirm they have reviewed the applicable NEPA
guidance and considered the environmental impacts of the proposed
property action.
The Postal Service's experience leads it to believe that, as
demonstrated by the GSA's and USCG's use of their property disposal
CATEXs, its amended CATEX reflects an appropriate and realistic view
that such activities undertaken in the normal course of business do not
individually or cumulatively have significant impacts on the human
environment. The Postal Service also finds those agencies' experience
and consideration to be a useful guide. Like the Postal Service, both
agencies are responsible for the acquisition and disposal of Federal
property. GSA, which is responsible for the acquisition and disposal of
most Federal property, has promulgated a property disposal CATEX that
reflects its seasoned judgment about the precise scope of real property
acquisition and disposal that lacks significant individual and
cumulative environmental impact. The Postal Service also notes that
neither GSA nor USCG received adverse public comments regarding their
property disposal CATEXs (see 65 FR 69558; 78 FR 44139).
Although the Postal Service notes minor differences between the
phrasing of GSA's and USCG's CATEXs, those differences are not
substantive or otherwise of a nature to change the projected
environmental consequences of the activities. Because of GSA's
preeminent experience with the acquisition and disposal of Federal real
property, the Postal Service believes that it is appropriate to amend
its own CATEX to match that of the GSA. The Postal Service does not
believe that this update to a single CATEX, which follows the model of
Federal agencies' existing CATEXs, should be significant or
controversial.
The Administrative Procedure Act does not apply to this action (5
U.S.C. 553(a)(2); 39 U.S.C. 410(a)), which is being taken pursuant to
the Postal Service's general rulemaking authority under 39 U.S.C.
401(2). Nevertheless, the Postal Service is complying with CEQ
Regulations and seeking public input when revising this CATEX. The
Postal Service therefore invites comments on the following revision of
39 CFR 775.6(e)(8).
Note that this interim final rule is effective upon its date of
publication in the Federal Register. The Postal Service will review any
comments received during the 30-day comment period. Following the
expiration of the comment period, the Postal Service will publish its
responses to any adverse comments in a subsequent Federal Register
notice, together with its determination whether the interim final rule
will be made permanent without change, or adjusted in response to the
comments received.
List of Subjects in 39 CFR Part 775
Environmental impact statements.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, 39 CFR part 775 is amended
as follows:
PART 775--NATIONAL ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY ACT PROCEDURES
0
1. The authority citation for 39 CFR part 775 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 39 U.S.C. 401; 42 U.S.C. 4321 et seq.; 40 CFR 1500.4.
0
2. In Sec. 775.6, paragraph (e)(8) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 775.6 Categorical exclusions.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(8) Disposal of properties where the size, area, topography, and
zoning are similar to existing surrounding properties and/or where
current and reasonable anticipated uses are or would be similar to
current surrounding uses (e.g., commercial store in a commercial strip,
warehouse in an urban complex, office building in downtown area, row
house or vacant lot in an urban area).
* * * * *
Stanley F. Mires,
Attorney, Legal Policy & Legislative Advice.
[FR Doc. 2014-00324 Filed 1-10-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P