Kentucky Regulatory Program, 15953-15958 [2015-06962]
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[FR Doc. 2015–06938 Filed 3–25–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4410–FB–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of Surface Mining Reclamation
and Enforcement
30 CFR Part 917
[SATS No. KY–256–FOR; Docket ID: OSM–
2012–0014; S1D1SSS08011000SX066A0006
7F154S180110; S2D2SSS08011000SX066
A00033F15XS501520]
Kentucky Regulatory Program
Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement, Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule; reopening of the
public comment period and opportunity
for public hearing.
AGENCY:
We, the Office of Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement
(OSMRE), are reopening the public
comment period on the proposed
amendment to the Kentucky regulatory
program (the Kentucky program) under
the Surface Mining Control and
Reclamation Act of 1977 (SMCRA or the
Act) that was originally published on
February 20, 2013. The public comment
period and opportunity for public
hearing is being reopened to incorporate
subsequent information (emergency
regulations, permanent regulations,
legislation, and revised statutes) that we
received from Kentucky to address a
deficiency in the Kentucky program
regarding reclamation bonds and to
revise its program to be administered in
a manner consistent with SMCRA and
the Federal regulations.
This document gives the times and
locations that this proposed amendment
to the Kentucky program is available for
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SUMMARY:
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your inspection, the comment period
during which you may submit written
comments on the amendment, and the
procedures that we will follow for the
public hearing, if one is requested.
DATES: We will accept written
comments on the proposed rules until
4:00 p.m., Eastern Standard Time (EST)
April 27, 2015. If requested, we will
hold a public hearing on April 20, 2015.
We will accept requests to speak until
4:00 p.m., EST on April 10, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by SATS No. KY–256–FOR
and OSM Docket No. OSM–2012–0004,
by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
www.regulations.gov. The proposed rule
has been assigned Docket ID: OSM–
2012–0014. Please follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: Mr. Robert Evans,
bevans@osmre.gov.
• Fax: (859) 260–8410.
• Mail/Hand Delivery: Mr. Robert
Evans, Field Office Director, Lexington
Field Office, Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement, 2675
Regency Road, Lexington, Kentucky
40503. Please include the rule
identifiers (SATS No. KY–256–FOR and
Docket ID OSM–2012–0014) with your
comments.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the agency name and
docket number for this rulemaking. For
detailed instructions on submitting
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
‘‘Public Comment Procedures’’ heading
of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section of this document.
Docket: For access to the docket to
review copies of the Kentucky program,
this amendment, a listing of any
scheduled public hearings, and all
written comments received in response
to this document, you must go to the
address listed below during normal
business hours, Monday through Friday,
excluding holidays. You may receive
one free copy of the amendment by
contacting the person listed under FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT or the
full text of the program amendment is
available for you to read at
www.regulations.gov. Mr. Robert Evans,
Field Office Director, Lexington Field
Office, Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement, 2675
Regency Road, Lexington, Kentucky
40503. Telephone: (859) 260–3900.
Email: bevans@osmre.gov.
In addition, you may review a copy of
the amendment during regular business
hours at the following location: Mr.
Steve Hohmann, Commissioner,
Kentucky Department for Natural
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15953
Resources, 2 Hudson Hollow, Frankfort,
Kentucky 40601. Telephone: (502) 564–
6940. Email: Steve.Hohmann@ky.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr.
Robert Evans, Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement,
Telephone: (859) 260–3900. Email:
bevans@osmre.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background on the Kentucky Program
II. Description of the Proposed Amendment
III. Public Comment Procedures
IV. Procedural Determinations
I. Background on the Kentucky
Program
Section 503(a) of the Act permits a
State to assume primacy for the
regulation of surface coal mining and
reclamation operations on non-Federal
and non-Indian lands within its borders
by demonstrating that its program
includes, among other things, ‘‘* * *
State law which provides for the
regulation of surface coal mining and
reclamation operations in accordance
with the requirements of this Act * * *;
and rules and regulations consistent
with regulations issued by the Secretary
pursuant to this Act.’’ See 30 U.S.C.
1253(a)(1) and (7). On the basis of these
criteria, the Secretary of the Interior
conditionally approved the Kentucky
program on May 18, 1982. You can find
background information on the
Kentucky program, including the
Secretary’s findings, the disposition of
comments, and conditions of approval,
in the May 18, 1982, Federal Register
(47 FR 21434). You can also find later
actions concerning the Kentucky
program and program amendments at 30
CFR 917.11–917.17.
II. Description of the Proposed
Amendment
Kentucky submitted information on
three occasions in response to a Notice
under 30 CFR part 733 that we sent to
Kentucky on May 1, 2012 (Docket ID
OSM–2012–0014) regarding deficiencies
in its bonding program. These
submissions are intended to address the
noted deficiencies and were submitted
as follows: September 28, 2012
(emergency and permanent
administrative regulations), July 5, 2013
(House Bill (HB) 66 and emergency and
permanent regulations), and December
3, 2013 (revised statutes and permanent
regulations). Below is a summary of
those submissions.
A. Kentucky Response (First
Submission, September 28, 2012): We
announced receipt of the submission on
September 28, 2012, (first amendment
request) in the February 20, 2013
Federal Register (78 FR 11796). We are
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summarizing the content of that
submission again. Our intent is to issue
one decision pertaining to both that
submission and the two additional
submissions announced in this Notice.
The first amendment submission
included program changes intended to
take immediate action involving the
financial inadequacies of the bond
program. These program changes are
identified as either emergency Kentucky
Administrative Regulations (KARs) or
corresponding permanent (ordinary)
KARs. Both the emergency and
permanent regulations were signed by
the Secretary, Energy and Environment
Cabinet on May 4, 2012 and submitted
to the Kentucky Legislative Research
Commission (LRC) on that date.
Kentucky recognizes emergency
regulations as being valid for 180 days
unless permanent regulations are
approved and replace the emergency
regulations.
Since Kentucky permanent
regulations were approved on
September 6, 2012, the emergency
regulations expired and we will not be
rendering a decision on the emergency
regulations in this, or any future,
rulemaking. Instead, we will issue a
decision only on the permanent
regulations. We are including only a
brief summary of the emergency
administrative regulations, along with a
more detailed description in the
corresponding permanent
administrative regulations. Significant
program changes that have been
submitted for approval are highlighted
below. Minor changes such as
typographical corrections, crossreference changes, and paragraph
renumbering are not mentioned.
1. Emergency Kentucky Administrative
Regulations
• 405 KAR 10:011E: This is an
emergency regulation (as noted by an E
following the section number) and is an
emergency repealer that removes the
following two administrative
regulations from Chapter 10 of Title 405:
Chapter 405 KAR 10:010, General
Requirements for Performance Bond and
Liability Insurance, and 405 KAR
10:020, Amount and Duration of
Performance Bond. With the exception
of 405 KAR 10:010, sections 4 and 5, the
contents of the repealed sections are
being relocated into a new
administrative regulation which will
contain all information on bonding
surface mine disturbances (See 405 KAR
10:015 addressed below). Section 4,
Requirement to File a Certificate of
Liability, and Section 5, Incorporation
By Reference, are being relocated to 405
KAR 10:030, which is addressed below.
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• 405 KAR 10:015E: This is an
emergency regulation and it
immediately implements certain
provisions of Kentucky’s plan to address
the bonding deficiencies. This
emergency regulation is identical to the
permanent (ordinary) regulations at 405
KAR 10:015 noted below.
2. Permanent (Ordinary) Kentucky
Administrative Regulations
• 405 KAR 10:015, General bonding
provisions: This is a new regulation that
combines two repealed sections (405
KAR 10:010 and 10:020 mentioned
above) and incorporates parts of 405
KAR 10:030 (addressed below). It
consolidates into one regulation all
current existing bonding criteria, types
of bonds, bonding methods, terms and
conditions of bonds, and new
calculation protocols. It also contains a
protocol for bond calculation for
demolition and disposal costs for
materials used in mining operations at
preparation plants. In addition, it
provides for the calculation of costs
associated with mine sites that have
been identified as producers of
substandard effluent discharges
requiring long term treatment. The
following significant program changes
are included within this regulation:
—Section 6, Determination of Bond
Amounts: This section allows the
cabinet to use the reclamation costs
submitted in the permit application to
establish the bond amount required, if
those costs are higher than the
reclamation costs calculated by the
cabinet. It also requires the cabinet to
review bond amounts established in
the regulations at a minimum of every
two years to determine if those
amounts are adequate after
consideration of the impacts of
inflation and increases in reclamation
costs.
—Section 7, Minimum Bond Amount:
This section increases minimum bond
amounts to $75,000 for the entire
surface area under one permit,
$75,000 per increment for
incrementally bonded permits,
$50,000 for a permit or increment
operating on previously mined areas,
and $10,000 for underground mines
that have only underground
operations (i.e., no surface facilities).
—Section 8, Bonding Rate of Additional
Areas: This section establishes new,
increased bond amounts as follows:
• $2,500 per acre and each fraction
thereof for coal haul roads, other
mine access roads, and mine
management areas;
• $7,500 per acre and each fraction
thereof for refuse disposal areas;
• $10,000 per acre and each fraction
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thereof for an embankment
sediment control pond. Each pond
must be measured separately if the
pond is located off-bench
downstream of the proposed mining
or storage area. The cabinet also
may apply this rate to partial
embankment structures as deemed
necessary;
• $3,500 per acre and each fraction
thereof for coal preparation plants.
In addition, the bond amount must
include the costs associated with
demolition and disposal of
concrete, masonry, steel, timber,
and other materials associated with
surface coal mining and
reclamation operations;
• $2,000 per acre and each fraction
thereof for operations on previously
mined areas;
• $3,500 per acre and each fraction
thereof for all areas not otherwise
addressed; and
• For permits with substandard
drainage that require long-term
treatment, the cabinet must
calculate and the permittee must
post an additional bond amount
based on the annual treatment cost
provided by the permittee,
multiplied by 20 years. In lieu of
posting this additional bond
amount, the permittee may submit
a satisfactory reclamation and
remediation plan for the areas
producing the substandard
drainage.
—Section 11, Supplemental Assurance:
This section now includes the
supplemental assurance requirements
previously located at 405 KAR 16:020
(see summary of 16:020 below) and
increases the supplemental assurance
amount from $50,000 to $150,000.
• 405 KAR 10:030. General
requirements for liability insurance:
This regulation has been amended. Prior
to this revision the regulation included
general requirements for the types,
terms, and conditions of performance
bonds and liability insurance. In this
revision, all references to performance
bonds have been removed from sections
1 through 3 and now only requirements
for liability insurance are included
(former sections 4 and 5 have been
renumbered as sections 2 and 3).
Requirements for performance bonds
have been moved to 405 KAR 10:015 as
noted above. Also, two forms are
specified as requirements related to
liability insurance coverage: Certificate
of Liability Insurance, and Notice of
Cancellation, Nonrenewal or Change of
Liability Insurance.
• 405 KAR 16:020. Contemporaneous
reclamation: This regulation has been
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amended. A new section is included
(Section 1, Definitions) and it defines
the term ‘‘completed reclamation.’’
Subsequently, other sections have been
renumbered. Other changes include
adding references to the new section,
405 KAR 10:015, and removing the
section involving Supplemental
Assurance. Regulatory information
regarding supplemental assurance has
been relocated to 405 KAR 10:015,
noted above.
We are not seeking comments on the
emergency regulations at 10:011E and
10:015E as they have been replaced by
10:015. If you submitted comments on
the emergency and permanent
regulations noted above during the
public comment period when we
published the first submission (79 FR
11796) you do not need to resubmit
them, we will be considering these
comments in our analysis of the total
submission.
B. Kentucky Response: (Second
Submission, July 5, 2013, and Third
Submission, December 3, 2013): The
first submission primarily addresses
general bonding provisions (bonding
criteria, types of bonds, bonding
methods, terms and conditions of
bonds, and new calculation protocols).
The second and third submissions
address the source of revenue used to
supplement permit-specific bonds, the
Kentucky Reclamation Guaranty Fund
(KRGF), the responsible entities for
managing the fund, and other bond pool
related provisions.
On March 11, 2013, the General
Assembly of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky enacted HB No. 66 (HB 66),
which addressed the deficiencies of the
bonding program. This bill had an
emergency clause (section 14) and
therefore became effective upon
signature of the Governor on March 22,
2013. On July 5, 2013, Kentucky
submitted HB 66 and emergency and
permanent regulations to OSMRE for
approval.
Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS),
sections were submitted to OSMRE for
approval in December 2013, along with
final permanent regulations. We are
including a summary of the KRS
sections along with the corresponding
HB sections even though the revised
statutes were submitted with the third
submission. This is being done since the
HB and statutes are interrelated. The
following summarizes the HB, revised
statutes, and emergency and permanent
regulations:
1. Legislative Action and Revised
Statutes—House Bill 66 (Second
Submission) and Kentucky Revised
Statutes (Third Submission): On March
11, 2013, HB 66 was enacted and on
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March 22, 2013, it was signed by the
Governor. The major changes involved
repealing KRS sections 350.700 through
350.755 (which applied to the voluntary
bond pool fund and commission) and
adding new sections 350.500 through
350.521. The following sections of the
bill are noted along with the
corresponding KRS sections, where
available.
• HB 66 Section 1—KRS 350.500.
Definitions for KRS 350.500 to 350.521:
This is a new section that provides the
HB 66 definitions of actuarial
soundness, date of the establishment of
the new fund KRGF, Reclamation
Guaranty Fund Commission (RGFC),
and voluntary bond pool fund.
• HB 66 Section 2—KRS 350.503.
Kentucky reclamation guaranty fund:
This is a new section that establishes
the KRGF, which is assigned to the
cabinet. The KRGF is an interest-bearing
reclamation account, requiring
mandatory participation and designed
to cover the excess costs of reclamation
for coal mining sites when the permitspecific performance (penal) bond is
inadequate. This does not apply to
permits forfeited prior to January 1,
2014, except for obligations that may
arise from the forfeiture of bond prior to
that date secured by the voluntary bond
pool. Funds are also used to compensate
the cabinet for costs incurred for
administering the fund, procuring
audits and actuarial studies, and
operating and necessary legal expenses
of the RGFC. The fund cannot be used
for the long-term treatment of
substandard water discharges or to
repair subsidence damage. In addition,
the fund is exempt from the
requirements applicable to insurers.
• HB 66 Section 3—KRS 350.506.
Reclamation Guaranty Fund
Commission—Membership—Bylaws—
Meetings—Conflicts of Interest—
Applicability of Executive Branch Code
of Ethics: This is a new section that
creates the RGFC that is attached to the
cabinet. This section provides the makeup of the RGFC membership; the terms
and conditions of membership
appointments and the establishment of
bylaws, official domicile, meeting
frequency, member stipend; and
attendance requirements. Further, it
addresses limits on direct or indirect
financial interest of the members,
membership immunity from civil or
criminal proceedings, and ethics terms.
• HB 66 Section 4—KRS 350.509.
Duties of commission: This is a new
section and it outlines the
responsibilities of the RGFC that
include reviewing, recommending, and
promulgating regulations necessary to:
Monitor and maintain the fund;
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establish a structure for processing
claims and making payments; establish
the mechanisms for the review of the
viability of the fund; set a schedule for
penalties for late payment or failure to
pay fees and assessments; review and
assign classification of mine types for
fee assessments; establish a structure for
the payment of fees and assessments;
authorizing expenditures from the fund;
notifying the permittees of suspension/
reinstatement of fees, annually report
the status of the KRGF, and take action
against permittees to recover funds if
necessary.
• HB 66 Section 5—KRS 350.512.
Office of the Reclamation Guaranty
Fund—Duties of executive director: This
is a new section and establishes an
Office of the Reclamation Guaranty
Fund (ORGF) and appoints an executive
director to manage its affairs and
provides for the responsibilities of the
executive director.
• HB 66 Section 6—KRS 350.515.
Mandatory participation in fund—
Initial capitalization—One-time
assessments—Full-cost bond in lieu of
participation: This is a new section and
mandates that all surface coal mining
permittees be participants in the fund,
unless the permittee elects to provide
full-cost bond. Member entities are
given the option to either provide fullcost bond based on a reclamation cost
estimate that reflects potential
reclamation costs to the cabinet or
participate in the fund, which includes
assessment of fees noted in 350.518
below.
In addition, this section also provides
for the initial capitalization of the KRGF
fund that consists of: (1) Transfer of the
assets and liabilities of the voluntary
bond pool fund; (2) a one-time start-up
assessment for all current permittees as
of July 1, 2013 in the amount of $1,500;
and (3) a one-time $10 per active
permitted acre assessment. Entities
entering the fund after July 1, 2013 shall
pay a one-time assessment of $10,000 to
the fund. No individual permit shall be
issued until the one-time assessments
are paid. Members of the former
voluntary bond pool are exempt from
the one-time start-up assessment and
active permitted acre assessment. If an
applicant opts out and elects to provide
a full-cost bond, the applicant shall not
be subject to these assessments.
• HB 66 Section 7—KRS 350.518.
Permittee to submit permit-specific
bond under KRS 350.060(11)—Tonnage
fees—Assignment of mine type
classification—Inclusion of future
permits of existing classification—
Inclusion of future permits of existing
voluntary bond pool fund members—
Permit-specific penal bond—
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Administrative regulations—Suspension
of permit for arrearage in fees—
Distribution of penalties collected under
KRS 350.990(1)—Rights and remedies:
This is a new section that provides that:
—Permit-specific bond: Each member
permittee (those that did not elect to
opt-out of the fund) shall also submit
a permit-specific bond.
—Tonnage fees: In addition to the bond,
each permittee shall pay a fee for each
ton of coal mined and sold by surface
and underground coal mining
operations from each permit area. In
addition, the RFGC may request and
review documents and reports
provided by the Kentucky Department
of Natural Resources (DNR) and
OSMRE to verify production records.
—Assignment of mine type
classification: The fee assessment is
based on the type of permit
classification.
—Inclusion of existing VBP members:
This section also provides that
permits that were subject to the
voluntary bond pool: (1) Are excluded
from the one-time start-up
assessment/fee; (2) are subject to the
new tonnage fees, instead of the
tonnage fees which had been
previously established (prior to July 1,
2013); and (3) will continue to receive
subsidization of the reclamation
bonding authorized under these new
statutes and new permanent
regulations.
The KRGF will continue to provide
coverage for the existing bonds
previously issued for them by the
voluntary bond pool. It also provides
the criteria that members of the
voluntary bond pool as of July 1, 2013
must meet in order to be included in the
Fund. This section also specifies a
maximum increase for which the total
amount of bonds issued to any one
member of the voluntary bond pool will
apply.
—Permanent Regulations:
Administrative regulations will be
promulgated by the RGFC to address
the reporting and payment of fees (see
administrative regulations
promulgated).
—Suspension of permit for arrearage in
fees: This section also provides that
the cabinet shall suspend a permit if
the permittee is in arrearage in the
payment of any fees assessed to the
permit. Once the arrearage has been
paid in full, the permit suspension
may be lifted. The suspension may be
appealed pursuant to the hearing
provisions of KRS 350.0301, Petition
challenging determination of cabinet,
Conduct of hearings, etc.
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—Distribution of Penalties: This section
also provides the manner in which
penalties collected shall be deposited
and applied.
—Rights and Remedies: Any person
who considers him or herself to be
aggrieved by any determination made
by the commission shall have all of
the rights and remedies provided in
section 350.0301 pertaining to
petitions challenging determinations
of the cabinet.
—Other Provisions and Responsibilities:
This section also provides the terms
and conditions for which an annual
fee based on acreage shall apply for
non-production permits (i.e., coal
preparation and processing
operations, loading activities, coal
haulage and access roads). It also
provides the terms and conditions for
which a fee may apply for any expired
permits or other permits not subject to
the fees mentioned above.
In addition, if an entity was not a
participant in the Fund as of March 22,
2013, a permit may be considered for
inclusion in the fund if the entity and
entity’s owners can meet eligibility
standards established in permanent
regulations promulgated by the RGFC.
Any permits accepted into the fund
shall require payment of a permitspecific performance bond based on
acreage and shall pay the actuarially
determined tonnage rates prescribed.
The RGFC shall make changes to the
rates in an amount sufficient to
maintain actuarial soundness of the
fund in accordance with the annual
actuarial study.
• HB 66 Section 8—KRS 350.521.
Forfeiture of bonds for permits covered
by fund—Use of additional moneys
when bond insufficient to cover
estimated reclamation cost: This is a
new section that provides that bond for
permits covered by the fund forfeited
after January 1, 2014 shall be placed in
the fund. It also provides that in the
event that a forfeited bond is
insufficient to reclaim the permit to the
requirements, any outstanding permitspecific performance bond for
reclamation on the forfeited permit shall
be used first before any additional
monies necessary to reclaim the permit
area are withdrawn from the KRGF. It
also provides the manner in which the
request from the cabinet and transfer
shall occur. The commission, its
members, and employees shall not be
named a party to any forfeiture action.
• HB 66 Section 9—KRS 12:020,
Enumeration of departments, program
cabinets, and administrative bodies:
This section is amended to add the
ORGF, DNR to the list of departments,
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program cabinets and their departments,
and the respective major bodies.
• HB 66 Section 10—KRS 350.595.
Application for inclusion under
Abandoned Mine Land Enhancement
Program—Coverage under Kentucky
reclamation guaranty fund: This section
is amended to provide that an applicant
who desires to remine property shall
send the application for the use of bond
pool funds (for qualified AML
enhancement projects) to the RGFC
instead of the Bond Pool Commission. It
also adds appropriate references or
deletes references related to the Bond
Pool.
• HB 66 Section 11—KRS 350.990.
Penalties: This section is amended to
reflect that all sums recovered, except
those moneys collected in excess of
$800,000 in any fiscal year be deposited
50% in the reclamation guaranty fund
(rather than the bond pool fund). It
removes the $16 million base amount
below which the former bond pool fund
could not be allowed to sink.
• HB 66 Section 12—KRS 350.700 to
350.755: The following sections are
repealed due to the abolishment of the
voluntary bond pool:
—350.700. Bond pool fund established;
—350.705. Bond Pool Commission;
—350.710. Powers of the Commission;
—350.720. Bond Pool (Criteria
compliance records);
—350.725. Membership fee—tonnage
fee;
—350.730. Tonnage fee suspension or
reinstatement;
—350.735. Permit-specific penal bond;
—350.740. Permit issuance;
—350.745. Payments from fund for
reclamation;
—350.750. Revocation of membership in
bond pool; and
—350.755. Grounds for refusal of
permit.
We note that it is our understanding
that HB 66 was intended to also repeal
350.715, Pool administrator, and is
consistent with the removal of all other
sections involving the voluntary bond
pool references. However, this section
remains in effect and cannot be removed
until the repeal is submitted for
approval.
• HB 66 Section 13—(no
corresponding KRS section since a
revised statute is not necessary): This
section provides that the assets and
liabilities of the voluntary bond pool be
immediately transferred to the KRGF.
Any records, files and documents
associated with the activities of the
voluntary bond pool shall also be
transferred. The affairs of the voluntary
bond pool shall be wound up, and the
cabinet shall have disposition over
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placement or transfer of any personnel
of the voluntary bond pool. No existing
contract shall be impaired.
• HB 66 Section 14—(no
corresponding KRS section since a
revised statute is not necessary): This
section provides for the immediate
implementation of the provisions of the
bill.
2. Kentucky Administrative Regulations
• Emergency Kentucky
Administrative Regulations (Second
Submission): Following passage of HB
66, Kentucky developed emergency and
permanent administrative regulations to
remove requirements that were no
longer applicable as part of Kentucky’s
bonding program and to prevent
overlapping requirements for the former
members of the voluntary bond pool.
Both the emergency and permanent
regulations were submitted to the
Legislative Research Commission on
July 3, 2013. These permanent
regulations were approved by the
Secretary, Energy and Environment
Cabinet, on November 7, 2013. On that
same date, the emergency regulations
expired. Therefore, we will not be
rendering a decision on the emergency
regulation in this, or any future,
rulemaking. Instead, we will issue a
decision only on the permanent
regulations.
—405 KAR 10:001E, Definitions: This is
an emergency regulation that is
necessary to immediately implement
amendments to match other
emergency regulations filed
simultaneously. This section is
identical to the permanent regulation
(405 KAR 10:001), which is described
below.
—405 KAR 10.070E, Kentucky
Reclamation Guaranty Fund: This is
an emergency regulation that is
necessary to immediately implement
the provisions of HB 66 related to the
establishment of the KRGF and the
RGFC. The emergency regulation will
be replaced by a permanent regulation
at 10:070, which is not identical to
this emergency regulation. The
difference is that the emergency
regulation includes provisions for the
initial capitalization of the KRGF (one
time assessments) and the terms and
conditions in which these
assessments are paid. It also provides
the terms in which former voluntary
bond pool members report coal mined
and sold until and after January 1,
2014. These two provisions are not
included in the permanent regulation
(405 KAR 10:070) described below.
—405 KAR 10:080E: Full-cost bonding:
This is an emergency regulation that
is necessary to immediately
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implement the provisions of HB 66
allowing permittees to not participate
in the KRGF and provide full-cost
reclamation bonds for coal mine
surface disturbances. This emergency
regulation will be replaced by a
permanent regulation at 10:080,
which is not identical to this
emergency regulation. The difference
is that this emergency regulation
includes provisions pertaining to
members with permits issued prior to
July 1, 2013. It provides the terms and
conditions in which the permittee
shall make such election. This
provision is not included in the
permanent regulation (405 KAR
10:080) described below.
—405 KAR 10:090E, Production Fees:
This is an emergency regulation that
is necessary to immediately set the
amount of the tonnage fees required
by section 7(2)(a) and (b) of HB 66.
The emergency regulation will be
replaced by a permanent regulation,
which is identical to this emergency
regulation.
—405 KAR 10:201E, Repeal of 405 KAR
10:200: This is an emergency
regulation that repeals Chapter 405
KAR 10:200, Kentucky Bond Pool,
from Kentucky’s administrative
regulations: This emergency
administrative regulation is necessary
to remove requirements that are no
longer applicable as part of
Kentucky’s bonding program and
prevent overlapping requirements for
those former members. The
emergency administrative regulation
will not be replaced by a permanent
regulation.
3. Permanent (Ordinary) Kentucky
Administrative Regulations (Second and
Third Submissions): In addition to the
emergency regulations, Kentucky also
submitted proposed corresponding
administrative regulations that revise its
bonding administrative regulations in
its approved permanent regulatory
program. Except as mentioned above,
these permanent regulations are, for the
most part, identical to the emergency
regulations submitted. These permanent
regulations were signed by the
Secretary, Energy and Environment
Cabinet on July 7, 2013 and were
submitted as final to OSMRE in the
second submission, with the exception
of 405 KAR 8:010, which was submitted
with the third submission.
• 405 KAR 10:001. Definitions for 405
KAR Chapter 10: This regulation is
amended to add the definition of the
following terms: Acquisition; active
acre; actuarial soundness; dormancy fee;
coal mined and sold; final disposition;
full-cost bonding; Kentucky
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Fmt 4702
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15957
Reclamation Guaranty Fund; Office of
the Reclamation Guaranty Fund; optout; member, non-production fee; and
acquisition as it relates to criteria for
identifying land historically used for
cropland. The definitions of bond pool,
bond pool administrator, and bond pool
commission have been deleted. Bond
pool and bond pool administrator have
been replaced with and definitions of
KRGF and the ORGF.
• 405 KAR 10:015. General bonding
provisions: This regulation is amended
to add bonds from the KRGF to the list
of types of performance bonds approved
by the cabinet and also details how
bonds on future permits subsidized by
the KRGF for former VBP members will
be released. It also includes the option
of providing full-cost bonds to the
section on determination of bond
amount. The amendment is necessary to
clarify that the regulated entity should
provide the calculation for the cabinet’s
cost of reclamation in the event a fullcost option is chosen.
• 405 KAR 10:070. Kentucky
reclamation guaranty fund: This is a
new regulation and provides
information related to the operation and
sources of revenue for the KRGF,
classification of permits, reporting and
payment of fees, and penalties.
Permittees will be mandatory
participants in the KRGF unless they
chose to opt-out. These regulations
require that permittees comply with
reporting requirements, maintain
production records, provide initial
assessments, pay fees, comply with
penalty provisions, and complete and
submit required forms.
• 405 KAR 10:080. Full-cost bonding:
This is a new regulation and provides
that members have the option to provide
full-cost bonds in lieu of maintaining
membership in the KRGF (opt out) and
the manner in which a permittee shall
make such declaration. For full-cost
bond elections it also provides for the
calculation of bonding estimates and
forms required to submit such estimates,
the requirement for a registered
professional engineer to certify
estimates, and the requirement to
submit a bond once the Department has
accepted the reclamation estimate. A
member with permits issued prior to
July 1, 2013 that has made the decision
to opt-out is required to post full-cost
reclamation bonds with the Department
before April 30, 2014 on all permits
held by the member.
• 405 KAR 10:090. Production Fees:
This is a new regulation and provides
information on production fees, the
amount of the fees, and the schedule
that payments are to be remitted.
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Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 58 / Thursday, March 26, 2015 / Proposed Rules
• 405 KAR 8:010. General provisions
for permits: This regulation has been
amended to provide that permittees
shall submit a minor revision
application for the purpose of providing
a full-cost reclamation bonding estimate
to the cabinet. This was done to provide
the Division of Mine Permits 30 working
days after the notice of administrative
completeness to review full-cost
bonding revisions. The original
provisions allowed for 15 working days.
The full text of the program
amendment is available for you to read
at the locations listed above under
ADDRESSES or at www.regulations.gov.
III. Public Comment Procedures
Under the provisions of 30 CFR
732.17(h), we are seeking your
comments on whether the amendment
satisfies the applicable program
approval criteria of 30 CFR 732.15. If we
approve the amendment, it will become
part of the State program. As mentioned
earlier, if you submitted comments on
the first submission during the public
comment period (79 FR 11796) you do
not need to resubmit them, we will be
considering these comments in our
analysis of the total submission.
Electric or Written Comments
If you submit written or electronic
comments on the proposed rule during
the 30-day comment period, they should
be specific, confined to issues pertinent
to the proposed regulations, and explain
the reason for any recommended
change(s). We appreciate any and all
comments, but those most useful and
likely to influence decisions on the final
regulations will be those that either
involve personal experience or include
citations to and analyses of SMCRA, its
legislative history, its implementing
regulations, case law, other pertinent
State or Federal laws or regulations,
technical literature, or other relevant
publications.
We cannot ensure that comments
received after the close of the comment
period (see DATES) or sent to an address
other than those listed (see ADDRESSES)
will be included in the docket for this
rulemaking and considered.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone
number, email address, or other
personal identifying information in your
comment, you should be aware that
your entire comment including your
personal identifying information, may
be made publicly available at any time.
While you can ask us in your comment
to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we
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cannot guarantee that we will be able to
do so.
Public Hearing
If you wish to speak at a public
hearing, contact the person listed under
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT by
4:00 p.m., EST), on April 10, 2015. If
you are disabled and need reasonable
accommodation to attend a public
hearing, contact the person listed under
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. We
will arrange the location and time of the
hearing with those persons requesting
the hearing. If no one requests an
opportunity to speak, we will not hold
a hearing.
To assist the transcriber and ensure an
accurate record, we request, if possible,
that each person who speaks at the
public hearing provide us with a written
copy of his or her comments. The public
hearing will continue on the specified
date until everyone scheduled to speak
has been given an opportunity to be
heard. If you are in the audience and
have not been scheduled to speak and
wish to do so, you will be allowed to
speak after those who have been
scheduled. We will end the hearing after
everyone scheduled to speak and others
present in the audience who wish to
speak, have been heard.
Public Meeting
If there is only limited interest in
having an opportunity to speak, we may
hold a public meeting rather than a
public hearing. If you wish to meet with
us to discuss the amendment, please
request a meeting by contacting the
person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT. All such meetings
are open to the public and, if possible,
we will post notices of meetings at the
locations listed under ADDRESSES. We
will make a written summary of each
meeting a part of the administrative
record.
IV. Procedural Determinations
Executive Order 12866—Regulatory
Planning and Review
This rule is exempt from review by
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under Executive Order 12866.
Other Laws and Executive Orders
Affecting Rulemaking
When a State submits a program
amendment to OSMRE for review, our
regulations at 30 CFR 732.17(h) require
us to publish a notice in the Federal
Register indicating receipt of the
proposed amendment, its text or a
summary of its terms, and an
opportunity for public comment. We
conclude our review of the proposed
amendment after the close of the public
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Fmt 4702
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comment period and determine whether
the amendment should be approved,
approved in part, or not approved. At
that time, we will also make the
determinations and certifications
required by the various laws and
executive orders governing the
rulemaking process and include them in
the final rule.
List of Subjects in 30 CFR Part 917
Intergovernmental relations, Surface
mining, Underground mining.
Dated: December 29, 2014.
David G. Hartos,
Deputy Regional Director, Appalachian
Region.
[FR Doc. 2015–06962 Filed 3–25–15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310–05–P
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS
Copyright Royalty Board
37 CFR Part 380
[Docket No. 2014–CRB–0001–WR (2016–
2020) (Web IV)]
Digital Performance Right in Sound
Recordings and Ephemeral
Recordings
Copyright Royalty Board,
Library of Congress.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Copyright Royalty Judges
are publishing for comment proposed
regulations governing the rates and
terms for the digital performances of
sound recordings by certain public radio
stations and for the making of
ephemeral recordings necessary to
facilitate those transmissions for the
period commencing January 1, 2016,
and ending on December 31, 2020.
DATES: Comments and objections, if any,
are due no later than April 16, 2015.
ADDRESSES: The proposed rule is posted
on the agency’s Web site (www.loc.gov/
crb). Submit electronic comments
online at https://www.regulations.gov or
via email to crb@loc.gov. Those who
choose not to submit comments
electronically should see How to Submit
Comments in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section below for physical
addresses and further instructions.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kimberly Whittle, Attorney Advisor, by
telephone at (202) 707–7658, or by
email at crb@loc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
Background
On February 24, 2015, the Copyright
Royalty Judges (Judges) received a joint
E:\FR\FM\26MRP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 58 (Thursday, March 26, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 15953-15958]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2015-06962]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement
30 CFR Part 917
[SATS No. KY-256-FOR; Docket ID: OSM-2012-0014;
S1D1SSS08011000SX066A00067F154S180110;
S2D2SSS08011000SX066A00033F15XS501520]
Kentucky Regulatory Program
AGENCY: Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Interior.
ACTION: Proposed rule; reopening of the public comment period and
opportunity for public hearing.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: We, the Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement
(OSMRE), are reopening the public comment period on the proposed
amendment to the Kentucky regulatory program (the Kentucky program)
under the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act of 1977 (SMCRA or
the Act) that was originally published on February 20, 2013. The public
comment period and opportunity for public hearing is being reopened to
incorporate subsequent information (emergency regulations, permanent
regulations, legislation, and revised statutes) that we received from
Kentucky to address a deficiency in the Kentucky program regarding
reclamation bonds and to revise its program to be administered in a
manner consistent with SMCRA and the Federal regulations.
This document gives the times and locations that this proposed
amendment to the Kentucky program is available for your inspection, the
comment period during which you may submit written comments on the
amendment, and the procedures that we will follow for the public
hearing, if one is requested.
DATES: We will accept written comments on the proposed rules until 4:00
p.m., Eastern Standard Time (EST) April 27, 2015. If requested, we will
hold a public hearing on April 20, 2015. We will accept requests to
speak until 4:00 p.m., EST on April 10, 2015.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by SATS No. KY-256-FOR
and OSM Docket No. OSM-2012-0004, by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: www.regulations.gov. The
proposed rule has been assigned Docket ID: OSM-2012-0014. Please follow
the online instructions for submitting comments.
Email: Mr. Robert Evans, bevans@osmre.gov.
Fax: (859) 260-8410.
Mail/Hand Delivery: Mr. Robert Evans, Field Office
Director, Lexington Field Office, Office of Surface Mining Reclamation
and Enforcement, 2675 Regency Road, Lexington, Kentucky 40503. Please
include the rule identifiers (SATS No. KY-256-FOR and Docket ID OSM-
2012-0014) with your comments.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name
and docket number for this rulemaking. For detailed instructions on
submitting comments and additional information on the rulemaking
process, see the ``Public Comment Procedures'' heading of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document.
Docket: For access to the docket to review copies of the Kentucky
program, this amendment, a listing of any scheduled public hearings,
and all written comments received in response to this document, you
must go to the address listed below during normal business hours,
Monday through Friday, excluding holidays. You may receive one free
copy of the amendment by contacting the person listed under FOR FURTHER
INFORMATION CONTACT or the full text of the program amendment is
available for you to read at www.regulations.gov. Mr. Robert Evans,
Field Office Director, Lexington Field Office, Office of Surface Mining
Reclamation and Enforcement, 2675 Regency Road, Lexington, Kentucky
40503. Telephone: (859) 260-3900. Email: bevans@osmre.gov.
In addition, you may review a copy of the amendment during regular
business hours at the following location: Mr. Steve Hohmann,
Commissioner, Kentucky Department for Natural Resources, 2 Hudson
Hollow, Frankfort, Kentucky 40601. Telephone: (502) 564-6940. Email:
Steve.Hohmann@ky.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mr. Robert Evans, Office of Surface
Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, Telephone: (859) 260-3900. Email:
bevans@osmre.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background on the Kentucky Program
II. Description of the Proposed Amendment
III. Public Comment Procedures
IV. Procedural Determinations
I. Background on the Kentucky Program
Section 503(a) of the Act permits a State to assume primacy for the
regulation of surface coal mining and reclamation operations on non-
Federal and non-Indian lands within its borders by demonstrating that
its program includes, among other things, ``* * * State law which
provides for the regulation of surface coal mining and reclamation
operations in accordance with the requirements of this Act * * *; and
rules and regulations consistent with regulations issued by the
Secretary pursuant to this Act.'' See 30 U.S.C. 1253(a)(1) and (7). On
the basis of these criteria, the Secretary of the Interior
conditionally approved the Kentucky program on May 18, 1982. You can
find background information on the Kentucky program, including the
Secretary's findings, the disposition of comments, and conditions of
approval, in the May 18, 1982, Federal Register (47 FR 21434). You can
also find later actions concerning the Kentucky program and program
amendments at 30 CFR 917.11-917.17.
II. Description of the Proposed Amendment
Kentucky submitted information on three occasions in response to a
Notice under 30 CFR part 733 that we sent to Kentucky on May 1, 2012
(Docket ID OSM-2012-0014) regarding deficiencies in its bonding
program. These submissions are intended to address the noted
deficiencies and were submitted as follows: September 28, 2012
(emergency and permanent administrative regulations), July 5, 2013
(House Bill (HB) 66 and emergency and permanent regulations), and
December 3, 2013 (revised statutes and permanent regulations). Below is
a summary of those submissions.
A. Kentucky Response (First Submission, September 28, 2012): We
announced receipt of the submission on September 28, 2012, (first
amendment request) in the February 20, 2013 Federal Register (78 FR
11796). We are
[[Page 15954]]
summarizing the content of that submission again. Our intent is to
issue one decision pertaining to both that submission and the two
additional submissions announced in this Notice.
The first amendment submission included program changes intended to
take immediate action involving the financial inadequacies of the bond
program. These program changes are identified as either emergency
Kentucky Administrative Regulations (KARs) or corresponding permanent
(ordinary) KARs. Both the emergency and permanent regulations were
signed by the Secretary, Energy and Environment Cabinet on May 4, 2012
and submitted to the Kentucky Legislative Research Commission (LRC) on
that date. Kentucky recognizes emergency regulations as being valid for
180 days unless permanent regulations are approved and replace the
emergency regulations.
Since Kentucky permanent regulations were approved on September 6,
2012, the emergency regulations expired and we will not be rendering a
decision on the emergency regulations in this, or any future,
rulemaking. Instead, we will issue a decision only on the permanent
regulations. We are including only a brief summary of the emergency
administrative regulations, along with a more detailed description in
the corresponding permanent administrative regulations. Significant
program changes that have been submitted for approval are highlighted
below. Minor changes such as typographical corrections, cross-reference
changes, and paragraph renumbering are not mentioned.
1. Emergency Kentucky Administrative Regulations
405 KAR 10:011E: This is an emergency regulation (as noted
by an E following the section number) and is an emergency repealer that
removes the following two administrative regulations from Chapter 10 of
Title 405: Chapter 405 KAR 10:010, General Requirements for Performance
Bond and Liability Insurance, and 405 KAR 10:020, Amount and Duration
of Performance Bond. With the exception of 405 KAR 10:010, sections 4
and 5, the contents of the repealed sections are being relocated into a
new administrative regulation which will contain all information on
bonding surface mine disturbances (See 405 KAR 10:015 addressed below).
Section 4, Requirement to File a Certificate of Liability, and Section
5, Incorporation By Reference, are being relocated to 405 KAR 10:030,
which is addressed below.
405 KAR 10:015E: This is an emergency regulation and it
immediately implements certain provisions of Kentucky's plan to address
the bonding deficiencies. This emergency regulation is identical to the
permanent (ordinary) regulations at 405 KAR 10:015 noted below.
2. Permanent (Ordinary) Kentucky Administrative Regulations
405 KAR 10:015, General bonding provisions: This is a new
regulation that combines two repealed sections (405 KAR 10:010 and
10:020 mentioned above) and incorporates parts of 405 KAR 10:030
(addressed below). It consolidates into one regulation all current
existing bonding criteria, types of bonds, bonding methods, terms and
conditions of bonds, and new calculation protocols. It also contains a
protocol for bond calculation for demolition and disposal costs for
materials used in mining operations at preparation plants. In addition,
it provides for the calculation of costs associated with mine sites
that have been identified as producers of substandard effluent
discharges requiring long term treatment. The following significant
program changes are included within this regulation:
--Section 6, Determination of Bond Amounts: This section allows the
cabinet to use the reclamation costs submitted in the permit
application to establish the bond amount required, if those costs are
higher than the reclamation costs calculated by the cabinet. It also
requires the cabinet to review bond amounts established in the
regulations at a minimum of every two years to determine if those
amounts are adequate after consideration of the impacts of inflation
and increases in reclamation costs.
--Section 7, Minimum Bond Amount: This section increases minimum bond
amounts to $75,000 for the entire surface area under one permit,
$75,000 per increment for incrementally bonded permits, $50,000 for a
permit or increment operating on previously mined areas, and $10,000
for underground mines that have only underground operations (i.e., no
surface facilities).
--Section 8, Bonding Rate of Additional Areas: This section establishes
new, increased bond amounts as follows:
$2,500 per acre and each fraction thereof for coal haul
roads, other mine access roads, and mine management areas;
$7,500 per acre and each fraction thereof for refuse
disposal areas;
$10,000 per acre and each fraction thereof for an
embankment sediment control pond. Each pond must be measured separately
if the pond is located off-bench downstream of the proposed mining or
storage area. The cabinet also may apply this rate to partial
embankment structures as deemed necessary;
$3,500 per acre and each fraction thereof for coal
preparation plants. In addition, the bond amount must include the costs
associated with demolition and disposal of concrete, masonry, steel,
timber, and other materials associated with surface coal mining and
reclamation operations;
$2,000 per acre and each fraction thereof for operations
on previously mined areas;
$3,500 per acre and each fraction thereof for all areas
not otherwise addressed; and
For permits with substandard drainage that require long-
term treatment, the cabinet must calculate and the permittee must post
an additional bond amount based on the annual treatment cost provided
by the permittee, multiplied by 20 years. In lieu of posting this
additional bond amount, the permittee may submit a satisfactory
reclamation and remediation plan for the areas producing the
substandard drainage.
--Section 11, Supplemental Assurance: This section now includes the
supplemental assurance requirements previously located at 405 KAR
16:020 (see summary of 16:020 below) and increases the supplemental
assurance amount from $50,000 to $150,000.
405 KAR 10:030. General requirements for liability
insurance: This regulation has been amended. Prior to this revision the
regulation included general requirements for the types, terms, and
conditions of performance bonds and liability insurance. In this
revision, all references to performance bonds have been removed from
sections 1 through 3 and now only requirements for liability insurance
are included (former sections 4 and 5 have been renumbered as sections
2 and 3). Requirements for performance bonds have been moved to 405 KAR
10:015 as noted above. Also, two forms are specified as requirements
related to liability insurance coverage: Certificate of Liability
Insurance, and Notice of Cancellation, Nonrenewal or Change of
Liability Insurance.
405 KAR 16:020. Contemporaneous reclamation: This
regulation has been
[[Page 15955]]
amended. A new section is included (Section 1, Definitions) and it
defines the term ``completed reclamation.'' Subsequently, other
sections have been renumbered. Other changes include adding references
to the new section, 405 KAR 10:015, and removing the section involving
Supplemental Assurance. Regulatory information regarding supplemental
assurance has been relocated to 405 KAR 10:015, noted above.
We are not seeking comments on the emergency regulations at 10:011E
and 10:015E as they have been replaced by 10:015. If you submitted
comments on the emergency and permanent regulations noted above during
the public comment period when we published the first submission (79 FR
11796) you do not need to resubmit them, we will be considering these
comments in our analysis of the total submission.
B. Kentucky Response: (Second Submission, July 5, 2013, and Third
Submission, December 3, 2013): The first submission primarily addresses
general bonding provisions (bonding criteria, types of bonds, bonding
methods, terms and conditions of bonds, and new calculation protocols).
The second and third submissions address the source of revenue used to
supplement permit-specific bonds, the Kentucky Reclamation Guaranty
Fund (KRGF), the responsible entities for managing the fund, and other
bond pool related provisions.
On March 11, 2013, the General Assembly of the Commonwealth of
Kentucky enacted HB No. 66 (HB 66), which addressed the deficiencies of
the bonding program. This bill had an emergency clause (section 14) and
therefore became effective upon signature of the Governor on March 22,
2013. On July 5, 2013, Kentucky submitted HB 66 and emergency and
permanent regulations to OSMRE for approval.
Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS), sections were submitted to OSMRE
for approval in December 2013, along with final permanent regulations.
We are including a summary of the KRS sections along with the
corresponding HB sections even though the revised statutes were
submitted with the third submission. This is being done since the HB
and statutes are interrelated. The following summarizes the HB, revised
statutes, and emergency and permanent regulations:
1. Legislative Action and Revised Statutes--House Bill 66 (Second
Submission) and Kentucky Revised Statutes (Third Submission): On March
11, 2013, HB 66 was enacted and on March 22, 2013, it was signed by the
Governor. The major changes involved repealing KRS sections 350.700
through 350.755 (which applied to the voluntary bond pool fund and
commission) and adding new sections 350.500 through 350.521. The
following sections of the bill are noted along with the corresponding
KRS sections, where available.
HB 66 Section 1--KRS 350.500. Definitions for KRS 350.500
to 350.521: This is a new section that provides the HB 66 definitions
of actuarial soundness, date of the establishment of the new fund KRGF,
Reclamation Guaranty Fund Commission (RGFC), and voluntary bond pool
fund.
HB 66 Section 2--KRS 350.503. Kentucky reclamation
guaranty fund: This is a new section that establishes the KRGF, which
is assigned to the cabinet. The KRGF is an interest-bearing reclamation
account, requiring mandatory participation and designed to cover the
excess costs of reclamation for coal mining sites when the permit-
specific performance (penal) bond is inadequate. This does not apply to
permits forfeited prior to January 1, 2014, except for obligations that
may arise from the forfeiture of bond prior to that date secured by the
voluntary bond pool. Funds are also used to compensate the cabinet for
costs incurred for administering the fund, procuring audits and
actuarial studies, and operating and necessary legal expenses of the
RGFC. The fund cannot be used for the long-term treatment of
substandard water discharges or to repair subsidence damage. In
addition, the fund is exempt from the requirements applicable to
insurers.
HB 66 Section 3--KRS 350.506. Reclamation Guaranty Fund
Commission--Membership--Bylaws--Meetings--Conflicts of Interest--
Applicability of Executive Branch Code of Ethics: This is a new section
that creates the RGFC that is attached to the cabinet. This section
provides the make-up of the RGFC membership; the terms and conditions
of membership appointments and the establishment of bylaws, official
domicile, meeting frequency, member stipend; and attendance
requirements. Further, it addresses limits on direct or indirect
financial interest of the members, membership immunity from civil or
criminal proceedings, and ethics terms.
HB 66 Section 4--KRS 350.509. Duties of commission: This
is a new section and it outlines the responsibilities of the RGFC that
include reviewing, recommending, and promulgating regulations necessary
to: Monitor and maintain the fund; establish a structure for processing
claims and making payments; establish the mechanisms for the review of
the viability of the fund; set a schedule for penalties for late
payment or failure to pay fees and assessments; review and assign
classification of mine types for fee assessments; establish a structure
for the payment of fees and assessments; authorizing expenditures from
the fund; notifying the permittees of suspension/reinstatement of fees,
annually report the status of the KRGF, and take action against
permittees to recover funds if necessary.
HB 66 Section 5--KRS 350.512. Office of the Reclamation
Guaranty Fund--Duties of executive director: This is a new section and
establishes an Office of the Reclamation Guaranty Fund (ORGF) and
appoints an executive director to manage its affairs and provides for
the responsibilities of the executive director.
HB 66 Section 6--KRS 350.515. Mandatory participation in
fund--Initial capitalization--One-time assessments--Full-cost bond in
lieu of participation: This is a new section and mandates that all
surface coal mining permittees be participants in the fund, unless the
permittee elects to provide full-cost bond. Member entities are given
the option to either provide full-cost bond based on a reclamation cost
estimate that reflects potential reclamation costs to the cabinet or
participate in the fund, which includes assessment of fees noted in
350.518 below.
In addition, this section also provides for the initial
capitalization of the KRGF fund that consists of: (1) Transfer of the
assets and liabilities of the voluntary bond pool fund; (2) a one-time
start-up assessment for all current permittees as of July 1, 2013 in
the amount of $1,500; and (3) a one-time $10 per active permitted acre
assessment. Entities entering the fund after July 1, 2013 shall pay a
one-time assessment of $10,000 to the fund. No individual permit shall
be issued until the one-time assessments are paid. Members of the
former voluntary bond pool are exempt from the one-time start-up
assessment and active permitted acre assessment. If an applicant opts
out and elects to provide a full-cost bond, the applicant shall not be
subject to these assessments.
HB 66 Section 7--KRS 350.518. Permittee to submit permit-
specific bond under KRS 350.060(11)--Tonnage fees--Assignment of mine
type classification--Inclusion of future permits of existing
classification--Inclusion of future permits of existing voluntary bond
pool fund members--Permit-specific penal bond--
[[Page 15956]]
Administrative regulations--Suspension of permit for arrearage in
fees--Distribution of penalties collected under KRS 350.990(1)--Rights
and remedies: This is a new section that provides that:
--Permit-specific bond: Each member permittee (those that did not elect
to opt-out of the fund) shall also submit a permit-specific bond.
--Tonnage fees: In addition to the bond, each permittee shall pay a fee
for each ton of coal mined and sold by surface and underground coal
mining operations from each permit area. In addition, the RFGC may
request and review documents and reports provided by the Kentucky
Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and OSMRE to verify production
records.
--Assignment of mine type classification: The fee assessment is based
on the type of permit classification.
--Inclusion of existing VBP members: This section also provides that
permits that were subject to the voluntary bond pool: (1) Are excluded
from the one-time start-up assessment/fee; (2) are subject to the new
tonnage fees, instead of the tonnage fees which had been previously
established (prior to July 1, 2013); and (3) will continue to receive
subsidization of the reclamation bonding authorized under these new
statutes and new permanent regulations.
The KRGF will continue to provide coverage for the existing bonds
previously issued for them by the voluntary bond pool. It also provides
the criteria that members of the voluntary bond pool as of July 1, 2013
must meet in order to be included in the Fund. This section also
specifies a maximum increase for which the total amount of bonds issued
to any one member of the voluntary bond pool will apply.
--Permanent Regulations: Administrative regulations will be promulgated
by the RGFC to address the reporting and payment of fees (see
administrative regulations promulgated).
--Suspension of permit for arrearage in fees: This section also
provides that the cabinet shall suspend a permit if the permittee is in
arrearage in the payment of any fees assessed to the permit. Once the
arrearage has been paid in full, the permit suspension may be lifted.
The suspension may be appealed pursuant to the hearing provisions of
KRS 350.0301, Petition challenging determination of cabinet, Conduct of
hearings, etc.
--Distribution of Penalties: This section also provides the manner in
which penalties collected shall be deposited and applied.
--Rights and Remedies: Any person who considers him or herself to be
aggrieved by any determination made by the commission shall have all of
the rights and remedies provided in section 350.0301 pertaining to
petitions challenging determinations of the cabinet.
--Other Provisions and Responsibilities: This section also provides the
terms and conditions for which an annual fee based on acreage shall
apply for non-production permits (i.e., coal preparation and processing
operations, loading activities, coal haulage and access roads). It also
provides the terms and conditions for which a fee may apply for any
expired permits or other permits not subject to the fees mentioned
above.
In addition, if an entity was not a participant in the Fund as of
March 22, 2013, a permit may be considered for inclusion in the fund if
the entity and entity's owners can meet eligibility standards
established in permanent regulations promulgated by the RGFC. Any
permits accepted into the fund shall require payment of a permit-
specific performance bond based on acreage and shall pay the
actuarially determined tonnage rates prescribed. The RGFC shall make
changes to the rates in an amount sufficient to maintain actuarial
soundness of the fund in accordance with the annual actuarial study.
HB 66 Section 8--KRS 350.521. Forfeiture of bonds for
permits covered by fund--Use of additional moneys when bond
insufficient to cover estimated reclamation cost: This is a new section
that provides that bond for permits covered by the fund forfeited after
January 1, 2014 shall be placed in the fund. It also provides that in
the event that a forfeited bond is insufficient to reclaim the permit
to the requirements, any outstanding permit-specific performance bond
for reclamation on the forfeited permit shall be used first before any
additional monies necessary to reclaim the permit area are withdrawn
from the KRGF. It also provides the manner in which the request from
the cabinet and transfer shall occur. The commission, its members, and
employees shall not be named a party to any forfeiture action.
HB 66 Section 9--KRS 12:020, Enumeration of departments,
program cabinets, and administrative bodies: This section is amended to
add the ORGF, DNR to the list of departments, program cabinets and
their departments, and the respective major bodies.
HB 66 Section 10--KRS 350.595. Application for inclusion
under Abandoned Mine Land Enhancement Program--Coverage under Kentucky
reclamation guaranty fund: This section is amended to provide that an
applicant who desires to remine property shall send the application for
the use of bond pool funds (for qualified AML enhancement projects) to
the RGFC instead of the Bond Pool Commission. It also adds appropriate
references or deletes references related to the Bond Pool.
HB 66 Section 11--KRS 350.990. Penalties: This section is
amended to reflect that all sums recovered, except those moneys
collected in excess of $800,000 in any fiscal year be deposited 50% in
the reclamation guaranty fund (rather than the bond pool fund). It
removes the $16 million base amount below which the former bond pool
fund could not be allowed to sink.
HB 66 Section 12--KRS 350.700 to 350.755: The following
sections are repealed due to the abolishment of the voluntary bond
pool:
--350.700. Bond pool fund established;
--350.705. Bond Pool Commission;
--350.710. Powers of the Commission;
--350.720. Bond Pool (Criteria compliance records);
--350.725. Membership fee--tonnage fee;
--350.730. Tonnage fee suspension or reinstatement;
--350.735. Permit-specific penal bond;
--350.740. Permit issuance;
--350.745. Payments from fund for reclamation;
--350.750. Revocation of membership in bond pool; and
--350.755. Grounds for refusal of permit.
We note that it is our understanding that HB 66 was intended to
also repeal 350.715, Pool administrator, and is consistent with the
removal of all other sections involving the voluntary bond pool
references. However, this section remains in effect and cannot be
removed until the repeal is submitted for approval.
HB 66 Section 13--(no corresponding KRS section since a
revised statute is not necessary): This section provides that the
assets and liabilities of the voluntary bond pool be immediately
transferred to the KRGF. Any records, files and documents associated
with the activities of the voluntary bond pool shall also be
transferred. The affairs of the voluntary bond pool shall be wound up,
and the cabinet shall have disposition over
[[Page 15957]]
placement or transfer of any personnel of the voluntary bond pool. No
existing contract shall be impaired.
HB 66 Section 14--(no corresponding KRS section since a
revised statute is not necessary): This section provides for the
immediate implementation of the provisions of the bill.
2. Kentucky Administrative Regulations
Emergency Kentucky Administrative Regulations (Second
Submission): Following passage of HB 66, Kentucky developed emergency
and permanent administrative regulations to remove requirements that
were no longer applicable as part of Kentucky's bonding program and to
prevent overlapping requirements for the former members of the
voluntary bond pool. Both the emergency and permanent regulations were
submitted to the Legislative Research Commission on July 3, 2013. These
permanent regulations were approved by the Secretary, Energy and
Environment Cabinet, on November 7, 2013. On that same date, the
emergency regulations expired. Therefore, we will not be rendering a
decision on the emergency regulation in this, or any future,
rulemaking. Instead, we will issue a decision only on the permanent
regulations.
--405 KAR 10:001E, Definitions: This is an emergency regulation that is
necessary to immediately implement amendments to match other emergency
regulations filed simultaneously. This section is identical to the
permanent regulation (405 KAR 10:001), which is described below.
--405 KAR 10.070E, Kentucky Reclamation Guaranty Fund: This is an
emergency regulation that is necessary to immediately implement the
provisions of HB 66 related to the establishment of the KRGF and the
RGFC. The emergency regulation will be replaced by a permanent
regulation at 10:070, which is not identical to this emergency
regulation. The difference is that the emergency regulation includes
provisions for the initial capitalization of the KRGF (one time
assessments) and the terms and conditions in which these assessments
are paid. It also provides the terms in which former voluntary bond
pool members report coal mined and sold until and after January 1,
2014. These two provisions are not included in the permanent regulation
(405 KAR 10:070) described below.
--405 KAR 10:080E: Full-cost bonding: This is an emergency regulation
that is necessary to immediately implement the provisions of HB 66
allowing permittees to not participate in the KRGF and provide full-
cost reclamation bonds for coal mine surface disturbances. This
emergency regulation will be replaced by a permanent regulation at
10:080, which is not identical to this emergency regulation. The
difference is that this emergency regulation includes provisions
pertaining to members with permits issued prior to July 1, 2013. It
provides the terms and conditions in which the permittee shall make
such election. This provision is not included in the permanent
regulation (405 KAR 10:080) described below.
--405 KAR 10:090E, Production Fees: This is an emergency regulation
that is necessary to immediately set the amount of the tonnage fees
required by section 7(2)(a) and (b) of HB 66. The emergency regulation
will be replaced by a permanent regulation, which is identical to this
emergency regulation.
--405 KAR 10:201E, Repeal of 405 KAR 10:200: This is an emergency
regulation that repeals Chapter 405 KAR 10:200, Kentucky Bond Pool,
from Kentucky's administrative regulations: This emergency
administrative regulation is necessary to remove requirements that are
no longer applicable as part of Kentucky's bonding program and prevent
overlapping requirements for those former members. The emergency
administrative regulation will not be replaced by a permanent
regulation.
3. Permanent (Ordinary) Kentucky Administrative Regulations (Second
and Third Submissions): In addition to the emergency regulations,
Kentucky also submitted proposed corresponding administrative
regulations that revise its bonding administrative regulations in its
approved permanent regulatory program. Except as mentioned above, these
permanent regulations are, for the most part, identical to the
emergency regulations submitted. These permanent regulations were
signed by the Secretary, Energy and Environment Cabinet on July 7, 2013
and were submitted as final to OSMRE in the second submission, with the
exception of 405 KAR 8:010, which was submitted with the third
submission.
405 KAR 10:001. Definitions for 405 KAR Chapter 10: This
regulation is amended to add the definition of the following terms:
Acquisition; active acre; actuarial soundness; dormancy fee; coal mined
and sold; final disposition; full-cost bonding; Kentucky Reclamation
Guaranty Fund; Office of the Reclamation Guaranty Fund; opt-out;
member, non-production fee; and acquisition as it relates to criteria
for identifying land historically used for cropland. The definitions of
bond pool, bond pool administrator, and bond pool commission have been
deleted. Bond pool and bond pool administrator have been replaced with
and definitions of KRGF and the ORGF.
405 KAR 10:015. General bonding provisions: This
regulation is amended to add bonds from the KRGF to the list of types
of performance bonds approved by the cabinet and also details how bonds
on future permits subsidized by the KRGF for former VBP members will be
released. It also includes the option of providing full-cost bonds to
the section on determination of bond amount. The amendment is necessary
to clarify that the regulated entity should provide the calculation for
the cabinet's cost of reclamation in the event a full-cost option is
chosen.
405 KAR 10:070. Kentucky reclamation guaranty fund: This
is a new regulation and provides information related to the operation
and sources of revenue for the KRGF, classification of permits,
reporting and payment of fees, and penalties. Permittees will be
mandatory participants in the KRGF unless they chose to opt-out. These
regulations require that permittees comply with reporting requirements,
maintain production records, provide initial assessments, pay fees,
comply with penalty provisions, and complete and submit required forms.
405 KAR 10:080. Full-cost bonding: This is a new
regulation and provides that members have the option to provide full-
cost bonds in lieu of maintaining membership in the KRGF (opt out) and
the manner in which a permittee shall make such declaration. For full-
cost bond elections it also provides for the calculation of bonding
estimates and forms required to submit such estimates, the requirement
for a registered professional engineer to certify estimates, and the
requirement to submit a bond once the Department has accepted the
reclamation estimate. A member with permits issued prior to July 1,
2013 that has made the decision to opt-out is required to post full-
cost reclamation bonds with the Department before April 30, 2014 on all
permits held by the member.
405 KAR 10:090. Production Fees: This is a new regulation
and provides information on production fees, the amount of the fees,
and the schedule that payments are to be remitted.
[[Page 15958]]
405 KAR 8:010. General provisions for permits: This
regulation has been amended to provide that permittees shall submit a
minor revision application for the purpose of providing a full-cost
reclamation bonding estimate to the cabinet. This was done to provide
the Division of Mine Permits 30 working days after the notice of
administrative completeness to review full-cost bonding revisions. The
original provisions allowed for 15 working days.
The full text of the program amendment is available for you to read
at the locations listed above under ADDRESSES or at
www.regulations.gov.
III. Public Comment Procedures
Under the provisions of 30 CFR 732.17(h), we are seeking your
comments on whether the amendment satisfies the applicable program
approval criteria of 30 CFR 732.15. If we approve the amendment, it
will become part of the State program. As mentioned earlier, if you
submitted comments on the first submission during the public comment
period (79 FR 11796) you do not need to resubmit them, we will be
considering these comments in our analysis of the total submission.
Electric or Written Comments
If you submit written or electronic comments on the proposed rule
during the 30-day comment period, they should be specific, confined to
issues pertinent to the proposed regulations, and explain the reason
for any recommended change(s). We appreciate any and all comments, but
those most useful and likely to influence decisions on the final
regulations will be those that either involve personal experience or
include citations to and analyses of SMCRA, its legislative history,
its implementing regulations, case law, other pertinent State or
Federal laws or regulations, technical literature, or other relevant
publications.
We cannot ensure that comments received after the close of the
comment period (see DATES) or sent to an address other than those
listed (see ADDRESSES) will be included in the docket for this
rulemaking and considered.
Public Availability of Comments
Before including your address, phone number, email address, or
other personal identifying information in your comment, you should be
aware that your entire comment including your personal identifying
information, may be made publicly available at any time. While you can
ask us in your comment to withhold your personal identifying
information from public review, we cannot guarantee that we will be
able to do so.
Public Hearing
If you wish to speak at a public hearing, contact the person listed
under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT by 4:00 p.m., EST), on April 10,
2015. If you are disabled and need reasonable accommodation to attend a
public hearing, contact the person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. We will arrange the location and time of the hearing with
those persons requesting the hearing. If no one requests an opportunity
to speak, we will not hold a hearing.
To assist the transcriber and ensure an accurate record, we
request, if possible, that each person who speaks at the public hearing
provide us with a written copy of his or her comments. The public
hearing will continue on the specified date until everyone scheduled to
speak has been given an opportunity to be heard. If you are in the
audience and have not been scheduled to speak and wish to do so, you
will be allowed to speak after those who have been scheduled. We will
end the hearing after everyone scheduled to speak and others present in
the audience who wish to speak, have been heard.
Public Meeting
If there is only limited interest in having an opportunity to
speak, we may hold a public meeting rather than a public hearing. If
you wish to meet with us to discuss the amendment, please request a
meeting by contacting the person listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT. All such meetings are open to the public and, if possible, we
will post notices of meetings at the locations listed under ADDRESSES.
We will make a written summary of each meeting a part of the
administrative record.
IV. Procedural Determinations
Executive Order 12866--Regulatory Planning and Review
This rule is exempt from review by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) under Executive Order 12866.
Other Laws and Executive Orders Affecting Rulemaking
When a State submits a program amendment to OSMRE for review, our
regulations at 30 CFR 732.17(h) require us to publish a notice in the
Federal Register indicating receipt of the proposed amendment, its text
or a summary of its terms, and an opportunity for public comment. We
conclude our review of the proposed amendment after the close of the
public comment period and determine whether the amendment should be
approved, approved in part, or not approved. At that time, we will also
make the determinations and certifications required by the various laws
and executive orders governing the rulemaking process and include them
in the final rule.
List of Subjects in 30 CFR Part 917
Intergovernmental relations, Surface mining, Underground mining.
Dated: December 29, 2014.
David G. Hartos,
Deputy Regional Director, Appalachian Region.
[FR Doc. 2015-06962 Filed 3-25-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4310-05-P