Revisions to the Petition Provisions of the Title V Permitting Program, 57822-57846 [2016-20029]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 164 / Wednesday, August 24, 2016 / Proposed Rules
X. References
The following references are on
display in the Division of Dockets
Management (see ADDRESSES) and are
available for viewing by interested
persons between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.,
Monday through Friday; they are also
available electronically at https://
www.regulations.gov. FDA has verified
the Web site addresses, as of the date
this document publishes in the Federal
Register, but Web sites are subject to
change over time.)
1. U.S. Department of Agriculture,
‘‘Livestock & Meat Domestic Data,’’ https://
www.ers.usda.gov/data-products/livestockmeat-domestic-data (accessed on June 23,
2016).
2. ‘‘Food Fish Production and Sales by
Species, by Size Category, by State and
United States: 2005,’’ https://www.agcensus.
usda.gov/Publications/2002/Aquaculture/
aquacen2005_08.pdf (accessed on June 23,
2016).
List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 558
Animal drugs, animal feeds.
Therefore, under the Food, Drug, and
Cosmetic Act and under authority
delegated to the Commissioner of Food
and Drugs and redelegated to the Center
for Veterinary Medicine, it is proposed
that part 558 be amended as follows:
PART 558—NEW ANIMAL DRUGS FOR
USE IN ANIMAL FEEDS
1. The authority citation for part 558
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 21 U.S.C. 354, 360b, 360ccc,
360ccc–1, 371.
2. In § 558.3, revise paragraphs
(b)(1)(i) and (ii) and add paragraphs
(b)(13) and (14) to read as follows:
■
§ 558.3 Definitions and general
considerations applicable to this part.
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Category I—These drugs require no
withdrawal period at the lowest use
level in each major species for which
they are approved or are approved for
use only in minor species.
(ii) Category II—These drugs require a
withdrawal period at the lowest use
level for at least one major species for
which they are approved, or are
regulated on a ‘‘no-residue’’ basis or
with a zero tolerance because of
carcinogenic concern regardless of
whether a withdrawal period is required
in any species.
*
*
*
*
*
(13) ‘‘Major species’’ means cattle,
horses, swine, chickens, turkeys, dogs,
and cats.
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(14) ‘‘Minor species’’ means animals,
other than humans, that are not major
species.
Dated: August 18, 2016.
Jeremy Sharp,
Deputy Commissioner for Policy, Planning,
Legislation, and Analysis.
[FR Doc. 2016–20149 Filed 8–23–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4164–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 70
[EPA–HQ–OAR–2016–0194; FRL–9951–09–
OAR]
RIN 2060–AS61
Revisions to the Petition Provisions of
the Title V Permitting Program
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) proposes to
revise its regulations to streamline and
clarify processes related to submission
and review of title V petitions. This
notice covers five key areas, each of
which should increase stakeholder
access to and understanding of the
petition process and aid the EPA’s
review of petitions. First, the EPA is
proposing regulatory provisions that
provide direction as to how petitions
should be submitted to the agency.
Second, the EPA is proposing regulatory
provisions that describe the expected
format and minimum required content
for title V petitions. Third, the proposal
clarifies that permitting authorities are
required to respond to significant
comments received during the public
comment period for draft title V
permits, and to provide that response
with the proposed title V permit to the
EPA for the agency’s 45-day review
period. Fourth, guidance is provided in
the form of ‘‘recommended practices’’
for various stakeholders to help ensure
title V permits have complete
administrative records and comport
with the requirements of the Clean Air
Act (CAA or Act). Fifth, to increase
familiarity with the post-petition
process, this notice presents information
on the agency’s interpretation of certain
title V provisions of the CAA and its
implementing regulations regarding the
steps following an EPA objection in
response to a title V petition, as
previously discussed in specific title V
orders.
DATES: Comments: Comments must be
received on or before October 24, 2016.
SUMMARY:
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Public Hearing: If anyone contacts
EPA requesting a public hearing on or
before September 6, 2016, we will hold
a public hearing. Additional
information about the hearing would be
published in a subsequent Federal
Register notice.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OAR–2016–0194, to the Federal
eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Once submitted, comments cannot be
edited or withdrawn. The EPA may
publish any comment received to its
public docket. Do not submit
electronically any information you
consider to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
the disclosure of which is restricted by
statute. Multimedia submissions (audio,
video, etc.) must be accompanied by a
written comment. The written comment
is considered the official comment and
should include discussion of all points
you wish to make. The EPA will
generally not consider comments or
comment contents located outside of the
primary submission (i.e., on the Web,
Cloud, or other file sharing system). For
additional submission methods, the full
EPA public comment policy,
information about CBI or multimedia
submissions, and general guidance on
making effective comments, please visit
https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/
commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Questions concerning these proposed
rule revisions should be addressed to
Ms. Carrie Wheeler, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Office of Air Quality
Planning and Standards, Air Quality
Planning Division, (C504–05), Research
Triangle Park, NC 27711, telephone
number (919) 541–9771, email at
wheeler.carrie@epa.gov. To request a
public hearing or information pertaining
to a public hearing on the proposed
regulatory revisions, contact Ms. Pamela
Long, U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Office of Air Quality Planning
and Standards, Air Quality Policy
Division, (C504–01), Research Triangle
Park, NC 27711; telephone number (919)
541–0641; fax number (919) 541–5509;
email address: long.pam@epa.gov
(preferred method of contact).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The
information presented in this document
is organized as follows:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
B. What should I consider as I prepare my
comments for the EPA?
C. How can I find information about a
possible hearing?
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D. Where can I obtain a copy of this
document and other related information?
II. Overview of Proposed Regulatory
Revisions and Information in This Notice
III. Background
A. The Title V Operating Permits Program
B. Statutory and Regulatory Basis for This
Proposal
C. Title V Petition Process and Content
D. Prior Interpretations and Applications of
the Title V Provisions
IV. Proposed Revisions to Title V Regulations
A. Additional Legal Background for the
Proposed Revisions to the Part 70 Rules
B. Electronic Submittal of Petitions
C. Required Petition Content and Format
D. Proposed Administrative Record
Requirements
V. Pre- and Post-Petition Process
Information/Guidance
A. Recommended Practices for Complete
Permit Records
B. Post-Petition Process
VI. Implementation
VII. Proposed Determination of Nationwide
Scope and Effect
VIII. Environmental Justice Considerations
IX. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations.
K. Determination Under Section 307(d)
X. Statutory Authority
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I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
Entities potentially affected directly
by the proposed revisions to the EPA’s
regulations include anyone who intends
to submit a title V petition on a
proposed title V permit prepared by a
state, local or tribal title V permitting
authority pursuant to its EPA-approved
title V permitting program. Entities also
potentially affected by this rule include
state, local and tribal permitting
authorities responsible for
implementing the title V permitting
program. Entities not directly affected
by this proposed rule include owners
and operators of major stationary
sources or other sources that are subject
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to title V permit requirements, as well
as the general public who would have
an interest in knowing about title V
permitting actions and associated public
hearings but do not intend to submit a
petition.
B. What should I consider as I prepare
my comments for the EPA?
1. Submitting CBI. Do not submit this
information to the EPA through https://
www.regulations.gov or email. Clearly
mark the specific information that you
claim to be CBI. For CBI in a disk or
CD–ROM that you mail to the EPA,
mark the outside of the disk or CD–ROM
as CBI and then identify electronically
within the disk or CD–ROM the specific
information that is claimed as CBI.
Information so marked will not be
disclosed except in accordance with
procedures set forth in 40 CFR part 2.
In addition to one complete version of
the comment that includes information
claimed as CBI, a copy of the comment
that does not contain the information
claimed as CBI must be submitted for
inclusion in the public docket.
2. Tips for preparing comments.
When preparing and submitting your
comments, see the commenting tips at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
comments.html.
C. How can I find information about a
possible public hearing?
To request a public hearing or
information pertaining to a public
hearing, contact Ms. Pamela Long,
Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards, U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, by phone at (919)
541–0641 or by email at long.pam@
epa.gov.
D. Where can I obtain a copy of this
document and other related
information?
In addition to being available in the
docket, an electronic copy of this
Federal Register document will be
posted at the regulations section of our
Title V Operating Permits Web site,
under Regulatory Actions, at https://
www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/
current-regulations-and-regulatoryactions. A ‘‘track changes’’ version of
the full regulatory text that incorporates
and shows the full context of the
proposed changes to the existing
regulations in this proposal is also
available in the docket for this
rulemaking.
II. Overview of Proposed Regulatory
Revisions and Information in This
Notice
Title V of the CAA establishes an
operating permit program. Section 505
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of the CAA requires permitting
authorities to submit a proposed title V
permit to the EPA Administrator for
review for a 45-day review period before
issuing the permit as final. The
Administrator shall object to issuance of
the permit within that 45-day review
period if the Administrator determines
that the permit contains provisions that
are not in compliance with the
applicable requirements under the CAA.
If the Administrator does not object to
the permit during the 45-day EPA
review period, any person may petition
the Administrator within 60 days after
the expiration of the 45-day review
period to take such action (hereinafter
‘‘title V petition’’ or ‘‘petition’’). The
title V petition provisions of the current
implementing regulations found at 40
CFR part 70 largely mirror the CAA, and
have not been revised since original
promulgation in 1992. With 20 years of
experience with title V petitions as well
as feedback from various stakeholders,
the agency is now proposing changes to
40 CFR part 70 intended to provide
clarity and transparency to the petition
process, and to improve the efficiency of
that process.1
The changes proposed and the
information provided in the preamble to
the proposal are intended to benefit
permitting authorities, permitted
sources, and potential petitioners, as
well as the EPA. Permitting authorities
and permitted sources are expected to
benefit by early consultation with the
appropriate EPA Regional Office when
the permitting authority is preparing a
permit to ensure it includes conditions
that assure compliance with applicable
requirements under the CAA and part
70). These early actions should
minimize potential permit deficiencies
and reduce the associated likelihood
that a petition will be submitted on that
title V permit.
Potential petitioners are expected to
benefit by having better notification of
permits and review deadlines (e.g., the
EPA is proposing to post on EPA
Regional Web sites when a proposed
permit is received and the
corresponding 60-day deadline for
submitting a petition) and by better
1 The revisions proposed in this rule only impact
40 CFR part 70, which applies to federallyapproved state, local, and tribal operating permit
programs; 40 CFR part 71, which covers the title V
operating permit program for permits issued under
the EPA’s federal permitting authority, utilizes a
different administrative review process, through the
Environmental Appeals Board (EAB). The EAB has
its own review process for title V permits issued
under 40 CFR part 71 that is separate and distinct
from the process of petitioning the Administrator
for an objection to a 40 CFR part 70 permit; thus,
these proposed changes are intended to streamline
and clarify the EPA’s title V petition review process
under 40 CFR part 70 only.
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access to permitting decision
information (e.g., the permitting
authority’s written response to
comments). These updates will clarify
the expected minimum content of
petitions and provide a standardized
format, simplifying the process and
enhancing the likelihood that petitions
will be clear and complete. In addition,
potential petitioners may also derive a
benefit from more efficient responses to
petitions and a better understanding of
the process.
The EPA is expected to benefit by
improving the agency’s ability to meet
its statutory obligations to review
proposed permits, respond to title V
petitions and provide more
transparency in the title V petition
process. These were concerns expressed
by a Clean Air Act Advisory Committee
task force in recommendations provided
to the agency in 2006.2 The EPA
believes that the proposed regulatory
revisions and shared information are
responsive to these concerns and could,
if finalized, improve the efficiency of
the agency’s response.
The proposed regulatory revisions
described in Section IV of this notice
would, among other things: (1) Provide
direction as to how title V petitions
should be submitted to the agency,
including encouraging the use of an
electronic submittal system as the
preferred (but not exclusive) method to
submit title V petitions; (2) describe
mandatory content and format for title
V petitions, which is intended to clarify
the process for petitioners and improve
the EPA’s ability to review and act on
petitions efficiently; and (3) require
permitting authorities to respond in
writing to significant comments
received during the public comment
period on a draft title V permit and to
provide that written response to the
EPA along with the proposed title V
permit at the start of the EPA’s 45-day
review period. This proposal also
requests comment on the proposed
revisions to the regulations governing
the CAA title V petition process, as well
as comment on questions related to
2 In 2004, the Clean Air Act Advisory Committee
(CAAAC) established a Task Force to evaluate the
title V program. The 18-member panel, comprised
of industry, state, and environmental group
representatives, identified what Committee
members believed was and was not working well.
After hosting public meetings and receiving written
feedback, and compiling the information with the
personal experience of panel members, the Title V
Task Force issued a final report that highlighted
concerns and recommendations for improvement.
See, Final Report to the Clean Air Act Advisory
Committee on the Title V Implementation
Experience: Title V Implementation Experience
(April 2006). The Title V Task Force Final Report
is available at: https://www.epa.gov/caaac/caaacreports.
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potentially establishing page limits on
title V petitions. The proposed revisions
to the 40 CFR part 70 regulations are
described more fully in Section IV of
this notice.
Separate from the regulatory revisions
proposed in Section IV, Section V.A of
this notice provides guidance on
‘‘recommended practices’’ for permit
development for various stakeholders
that, when followed, helps to ensure
permits have complete administrative
records and comport with the
requirements of the CAA. Lastly, to
increase stakeholder familiarity with the
post-petition process, Section V.B.
provides information concerning the
agency’s interpretation of certain
provisions of title V of the CAA and the
implementing regulations at part 70
regarding the steps following an EPA
objection in response to a title V
petition, as previously discussed in
specific title V orders. The following
paragraphs briefly provide additional
information on each area.
First, in order to reduce confusion
with and add clarity to the process of
submitting title V petitions, the EPA has
developed a centralized point of entry
for all title V petitions using an
electronic submittal system. As
described in Section IV.A of this notice,
the EPA encourages petitioners to use
this electronic system when submitting
title V petitions, which will improve
customer service by allowing for better
access to and tracking of petitions. This
is the preferred method identified in the
proposed regulatory revisions that
would be acceptable to use to submit a
title V petition to the agency.
Alternative methods for submittal are
also identified in this notice.
Second, with regard to petition
content, the EPA is proposing regulatory
revisions that would specify
requirements for mandatory petition
content and standard formatting for all
petitions. This is expected to benefit
potential petitioners by ensuring
completeness while promoting
streamlining and improving the EPA’s
ability to review and act on petitions
efficiently. In its orders responding to
title V petitions, the EPA has already
identified key elements that are critical
for demonstrating that a title V permit
does not assure compliance with
applicable requirements under the CAA
or under the part 70 regulations, and has
explained their relevance to its
determinations. In this proposal, the
EPA is proposing new regulatory
language to codify what has already
been discussed in prior orders. If
finalized, petitioners would be expected
to follow these requirements and
include this content following a
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standard format. As described later in
this notice and in the proposed
regulatory text, this content includes
identifying where the issue being raised
in the title V petition was raised during
the public comment period on the draft
title V permit and addressing the
permitting authority’s response to the
comment in the petition in order to
demonstrate that an objection is
warranted.
Along with the proposed changes and
requests for comment regarding petition
content and format in Section IV.B of
this notice, the EPA proposes to add
new regulatory language to 40 CFR 70.8
that would require a petitioner to send
a copy of the petition to both the
permitting authority and the permit
applicant. The current title V
regulations do not have provisions
implementing this requirement of
section 505(b)(2) of the Act. Therefore,
this rule proposes to insert a
requirement into the part 70 rules
mirroring the Act’s requirement in order
to ensure consistency with this
provision of the statute.
Third, Section IV.C of this notice
contains requirements for certain
procedures related to responding to
significant public comments on the draft
title V permit, as well as the
administrative record for and submittal
of proposed title V permits to the EPA
by permitting authorities. The changes
being proposed now would require that
all permitting authorities respond to
significant comments received on draft
permits. The EPA is also proposing that
the 45-day review period under section
505(b)(1) would not begin until the
permitting authority forwards the
proposed permit, the written response
to comments (RTC) or statement that no
public comments were received, and the
statement of basis document, to the EPA
for its review. These changes are
expected to benefit permitting
authorities and permitted sources by
resulting in a more complete permit
record and greater clarity for all
stakeholders. If finalized, these changes
may result in a need to revise at least
some state, local and tribal part 70
programs.
In addition to these three areas, as
part of the agency’s effort to share
information with stakeholders about the
title V petition process, this notice
includes guidance to help ensure
permits have complete administrative
records and comport with the
requirements of the CAA. Presented in
the form of ‘‘recommended practices’’
for stakeholders, this guidance is shared
in the spirit of providing information
and context to give a more
comprehensive view of the title V
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petition process, including the time
before a petition may be filed. Following
the suggested recommended practices
contained in Section V.A of this notice
is expected to positively affect the
permit issuance process resulting in
better permits and may reduce the
likelihood that a title V petition will be
submitted on a title V permit.
All four of the previously mentioned
areas should help to improve title V
permits issued by permitting
authorities, promote access to and
provide better understanding of the title
V petition process for potential
petitioners, and reduce delays in
decisions and support the agency’s
efforts to meet its obligations in
responding to title V petitions. The
proposed revisions to the part 70
regulations associated with the first
three key areas are anticipated to
increase transparency and add clarity to
the title V petition submittal, review,
and response processes. Codifying
existing practices into title V regulations
of the CAA is also expected to make the
EPA petition review process more
efficient. In addition, providing
‘‘recommended practices’’ for
stakeholders, including some related to
permit issuance, also increases
transparency and clarity to further
improve the stakeholder experience and
understanding surrounding title V
petitions.
Section V.B of this notice discusses
steps following the EPA’s issuance of an
objection in response to a title V
petition, particularly where the state,
local, or tribal permitting authority
subsequently amends the permit terms
and conditions and/or the permit record
in response to the EPA’s objection. This
process is often referred to as the postpetition process. The information
provided in Section V.B reflects
interpretations of certain statutory and
regulatory provisions related to this
aspect of the title V petition process that
have previously been discussed by the
EPA, including in title V petition orders.
This information is repeated as a
convenience to stakeholders and the
general public: The agency is not
proposing to alter its interpretation of
that process in this notice and the
regulatory revisions proposed in this
notice do not relate to or modify this
interpretation. The agency is not
soliciting comment on this
interpretation or otherwise reopening or
revising the already-issued title V
petition orders or other EPA documents
in which it has previously been
discussed. Rather, this discussion is
included to provide additional
transparency and clarity.
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Finally, as a convenience to
stakeholders and the general public, and
to provide context and background that
informs how the EPA determines
whether to grant an objection and to
promote awareness of the EPA’s existing
interpretation of key provisions of
section 505(b)(2) of the Act, Section
III.D of this notice includes a summary
of some past orders responding to title
V petitions and court decisions
addressing the burden on a title V
petitioner to demonstrate that an
objection is warranted.
III. Background
A. The Title V Operating Permits
Program
Congress amended the CAA in 1990
to add title V, now found at 42 U.S.C.
7661–7661f, to assist in compliance and
enforcement of air pollution controls.
CAA Amendments of 1990, Public Law
101–549, sections 501–507, 104 Stat.
2399, 2635–48 (1990). Before this, the
CAA pollution control requirements
that might apply to a particular source
could be found in many different
provisions of the Act and its numerous
regulations. As one court opinion has
described it: ‘‘Before 1990, regulators
and industry were left to wander
through this regulatory maze in search
of the emission limits and monitoring
requirements that might apply to a
particular source. Congress addressed
this confusion in the 1990 Amendments
by adding title V of the Act, which
created a national permit program that
requires many stationary sources of air
pollution to obtain permits that include
relevant emission limits and monitoring
requirements.’’ Sierra Club v. EPA, 536
F.3d 673, 674 (D.C. Cir. 2008).
Accordingly, title V of the Act
establishes an operating permits
program for major sources of air
pollutants, as well as certain other
sources. CAA section 502(a). Under title
V of the CAA, states were required to
develop and submit to EPA for approval
title V permitting programs consistent
with program requirements promulgated
by the EPA. Those requirements are
now found in 40 CFR part 70. Most
states, certain local agencies, and one
tribe have approved part 70 programs.3
As part of an approved part 70 program,
title V of the CAA requires every major
source and certain other sources to
apply for and operate pursuant to an
operating permit. CAA sections 502(a)
and 503; see also 40 CFR 70.5(a) and
70.1(b). It further requires that the
permits contain conditions that assure
3 The Southern Ute Indian Tribe has an EPAapproved operating permit program under 40 CFR
part 70.
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compliance with all of the sources’
applicable requirements under the Act,
including the requirements of the
applicable implementation plan. CAA
section 504(a); see also 40 CFR 70.1(b)
and 70.6(a)(1).
Prior to the title V program, CAA
requirements for major sources of air
pollutants were implemented in
multiple and various ways. As a
lawmaker involved in the 1990 CAA
Amendments explained:
Title V creates, for the first time, a unifying
permit program for facilities subject to the
[A]ct’s various control requirements. In the
past, some provisions of the Clean Air Act—
for example, the nonattainment and PSD new
source requirements—were, and will
continue to be, implemented through
preconstruction permits. Other control
requirements were effected without Federal,
or in some cases, State permits—for example,
NESHAPS and NSPS—although States often
incorporated these requirements into their
own permit programs.4
More specifically, a title V permit
must contain enforceable emission
limits and standards, including
operational requirements and
limitations, and such other conditions
as necessary to assure compliance with
all applicable requirements that apply to
the source at the time of permit
issuance, as well as the monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting
requirements to assure compliance. In
sum, the title V permit program is a
vehicle for ensuring that air quality
control requirements are appropriately
applied to a source’s emission units and
for assuring compliance with such
requirements.
For the most part, title V of the CAA
does not impose new pollution control
requirements on sources. The definition
of ‘‘applicable requirements’’ in the part
70 regulations includes many standards
and requirements that are established
through other CAA programs, such as
standards and requirements under
sections 111 and 112 of the Act, and
terms and conditions of preconstruction
permits issued under the New Source
Review programs. 40 CFR 70.2. Once
those air quality control requirements
are established in those other programs,
they are incorporated into a source’s
title V permits as appropriate. Hence, a
title V permit is a comprehensive
document that identifies all the specific
CAA requirements that must be met by
a source in order to operate. Developing
4 136 Cong. Rec. E3663, E3673 (1990) (Speech of
Rep. Michael Bilirakis), reprinted in Environment
and Natural Resources Policy Division of the
Congressional Research Service of the Library of
Congress, 6 A Legislative History of the Clean Air
Act Amendments of 1990, at 10768 (1993)
[hereinafter CAAA Leg. Hist.].
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such a comprehensive document can be
a complex process that involves some
harmonization of all the source’s
applicable requirements. As a lawmaker
involved in the 1990 CAA Amendments
explained:
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The creation of the new permit program in
title V provides an opportunity and an
obligation for EPA to harmonize the
substantive provisions of the other titles in
this complex legislation. Many of the same
sources and pollutants will be controlled
under multiple titles—the same facilities and
pollutants will often be controlled under the
hazardous air pollutant, nonattainment, and
acid rain programs. EPA must make every
effort to harmonize and prevent
unproductive duplication among those titles.
The permit provisions of title V provide a
focus for this harmonization, although title V
does not change, and gives EPA no authority
to modify, the substantive provisions of these
other titles.5
As this language suggests, in
providing an opportunity for
harmonization through title V of the
CAA, Congress did not replace or
remove the procedures and
requirements for establishing
substantive requirements that exist in
other provisions of the CAA. Nor did
Congress alter or supplant the
opportunities for public participation
and administrative and judicial review
that are found in other CAA programs,
such as those for public participation
and judicial review of certain final
agency actions under section 307 of the
Act. In addition, the Act requires that
title V permitting programs provide
opportunities for public participation in
title V permitting processes and an
opportunity for judicial review in state
court. CAA section 502(b)(6); see also 40
CFR 70.4(b)(3)(x) (judicial review) and
70.7(h) (public participation). The
petition process co-exists with those
provisions, without superseding them.
Although title V of the CAA does not
generally impose new pollution control
requirements on sources, it does require
that certain procedural measures be
followed especially with respect to
assuring compliance with underlying
applicable requirements, and it also
requires sources to pay certain fees. For
example, title V of the CAA requires
permits to contain adequate monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting provisions
to assure sources’ compliance with
permit terms and conditions. See CAA
504(c); Sierra Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d 673
(D.C. Cir. 2008). The part 70 regulations
contain monitoring rules designed to
satisfy this statutory requirement.
Finally, as an additional measure to
5 136 Cong. Rec. E3663, E3673 (1990) (Speech of
Rep. Michael Bilirakis), reprinted in 6 CAAA Leg.
Hist., at 10768 (1993).
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ensure permits are in compliance with
the CAA, the title V program provides
for public participation at various steps
in the permitting process, including the
opportunity to submit a title V petition.
B. Statutory and Regulatory Basis for
This Proposal
In general terms, as noted above, the
title V permit program was a significant
development that established new
procedural requirements for permitting
authorities and sources. In crafting the
program, Congress balanced the benefit
of a single document that contains all
applicable requirements of the Act with
the need to process these complex
documents in an efficient manner. As
part of the effort to promote efficient
implementation of the operating permits
program, the provisions relating to title
V objections establish an orderly
process with specific deadlines, which
give the EPA an opportunity to raise
objections to a title V permit before it is
issued and which give any person the
opportunity to timely raise specific
issues to the EPA through a title V
petition. In light of the complexities of
implementing a program of title V’s
scope, a statement of one lawmaker in
the legislative history indicates that the
opportunity to ‘‘challenge EPA’s failure
to object’’ through the petition process
was ‘‘designed to avoid delays’’ while
preserving the discretion of both the
EPA and the states.6
More specifically, under CAA section
505(a), and the current implementing
regulations found at 40 CFR 70.8(a),
permitting authorities are required to
submit each proposed title V permit to
the EPA for review.7 Upon receipt of a
proposed permit and all necessary
supporting information, the
Administrator has 45 days in which to
object to the final issuance of the permit
if he/she determines that the proposed
permit is not in compliance with
applicable requirements of the Act,
including the requirements of the
applicable state implementation plan
(SIP), or part 70 requirements. CAA
section 505(b)(1) and 40 CFR 70.8(c)(1).
As the EPA explained when
proposing the initial title V regulations
in 1991, the Act limits the EPA’s
opportunity for its initial review and an
objection based on that review to 45
days in order to minimize delays. 56 FR
21749 (May 10, 1991). If the
Administrator objects under CAA
6 136 Cong. Rec. E3663, E3675 (1990) (Speech of
Rep. Michael Bilirakis), reprinted in 6 CAAA Leg.
Hist. at 10774.
7 As the part 70 rules in 70.8(c) and (d) largely
mirror the Act’s provisions, the statutory and
regulatory requirements are addressed together in
this background discussion.
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505(b)(1), he/she must provide a
statement of the reasons for the
objection, providing a copy of both the
objection and the statement to the
permit applicant. CAA 505(b)(1); see
also 40 CFR 70.8(c)(1).
If the Administrator does not object
during the 45-day review period,
consistent with section 505(b)(2) of the
CAA and 40 CFR 70.8(d), any person
may petition the Administrator within
60 days after the expiration of the EPA’s
45-day review period to object to the
permit. The Administrator shall grant or
deny such a petition within 60 days
after it is filed. CAA section 505(b)(2)
establishes several requirements related
to such petitions. Among other things,
it provides that such a petition shall be
based only on objections to the permit
that were raised with reasonable
specificity during the public comment
period, unless the petitioner
demonstrates that it was impracticable
to raise objections during that period or
the grounds for objection arose after
completion of the public comment
period. It also provides that the
Administrator shall issue an objection if
the petitioner demonstrates that the
permit is not in compliance with the
requirements of the CAA, including the
requirements of the applicable
implementation plan.
The implementing regulations are
found in 40 CFR 70.8(d) and largely
mirror this provision. As the EPA
explained in proposing the initial title V
regulations, the title V petition
opportunity serves an important
purpose because title V permits are
frequently complex documents, and
given the brevity of the agency review
period there may be occasions when the
EPA does not recognize that certain
permit provisions are not in compliance
with applicable requirements of the Act.
56 FR 21751 (May 10, 1991). CAA
section 505(b)(2) states that the
Administrator ‘‘shall’’ object if the
petitioner makes the required
demonstration. If the Administrator
denies a petition for an objection, CAA
505(b)(2) provides that denial is subject
to judicial review under CAA section
307; however, under CAA section
505(c), no objection is subject to judicial
review until the Administrator has
taken final action to issue or deny the
permit. Further, the requirements under
CAA section 505(b)(2) may not be
delegated by the Administrator.
In addition to the provisions of title
V, the rulemaking of provisions under
CAA section 307(d) are relevant to this
notice. The Administrator is applying
the rulemaking provisions of CAA
section 307(d) to the rulemaking
discussed in this notice, pursuant to
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CAA section 307(d)(1)(V), which
provides that the provisions of 307(d)
apply to ‘‘such other actions as the
Administrator may determine.’’
C. Title V Petition Process and Content
After 20 years of experience in
implementing the title V petition
process, the EPA has identified some
general trends in petition content and
aspects of the petition review process
that pose challenges for potential
petitioners in preparing petitions and
for the EPA in providing an efficient
response to petitions. These are
described in this section of the notice to
provide additional context for this
proposal. This proposed rulemaking is
aimed in part at increasing stakeholder
access to and understanding of the
petition process and increasing the
efficiency of the agency’s response to
petitions received and at mitigating
some of the factors that contribute to
poorly prepared or incomplete petitions,
misunderstanding of applicable permit
and CAA requirements, and longer
response times. These factors include:
(1) The lack of administrative
requirements around petition
submittals, which results in a variety of
inconsistent methods used by
petitioners; (2) the lack of specific rules
regarding petition content, which
results in considerable inconsistency in
the format and content of petitions; and
(3) the need to often deal with
numerous and highly complex issues
that arise in title V petitions given that
title V permits must address many
applicable requirements. These include
issues relating to compliance with the
requirements of the prevention of
significant deterioration (PSD)
permitting program, the hazardous air
pollutant program (i.e., requirements
implementing the provisions of CAA
112), and other air quality issues. For
example, petitioners often raise issues
related to compliance with the
requirements of the major and minor
preconstruction permit programs, such
as the PSD permitting requirements
found in part C of Title I of the Act. This
permitting program has a separate
process under the CAA, its
implementing regulations and SIPs, for
evaluating applicability of the
permitting requirements, determining
the appropriate terms and conditions for
permits, and for public participation
and administrative and/or judicial
review of those permits. At times, the
PSD issues raised in the context of a
title V petition relate to projects that
occurred a considerable time in the past,
and in some situations, the title V
permit record may not contain all the
relevant information for understanding
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the determinations that were made. For
these reasons, consideration of these
issues in the title V petition context can
be time-consuming to research and
complex to resolve, even to come to the
seemingly simple determination that the
permit record is inadequate. Further,
title V petitions frequently include
lengthy arguments that primarily
concern CAA programmatic or policy
issues, rather than the terms of a
particular permit.
Over time, petitions have raised
increasingly more complex policy, legal,
and technical matters. Through the
review of such extensive and
complicated petitions, the petition
review process has evolved into a
resource-intensive effort by the EPA. To
increase stakeholder understanding of
the title V petition process, help ensure
consistent presentation of critical
information in such petitions, and
facilitate more efficient review of them,
the EPA is proposing to revise its
regulations to establish procedural
parameters which, if finalized, would
govern the title V petition process
moving forward. As described in more
detail in Section IV of this notice, this
proposal includes proposed
requirements for petition submittal,
petition content and format, and certain
administrative record requirements. As
mentioned previously, one of the
primary goals of the proposed changes
is to improve stakeholder access to and
understanding of the petition process
and improve the agency’s ability to meet
its statutory obligations to review
proposed permits and respond to title V
petitions, in light of the overall structure
of the CAA.
Yet another overarching factor that
hampers the current petition review
process is the confusion or lack of
familiarity with the process itself. In the
2006 Title V Task Force Final Report
noted earlier, for example, the CAAAC
task force expressed a concern with the
lack of transparency in the title V
petition process. This concern has been
echoed in the years since the 2006
report through feedback the agency has
received from various stakeholders. In
response, the EPA has tried to provide
more explanation and insight into the
title V petition process in the
administrative orders it issues in
responding to petitions. Some of these
issues have also been discussed in the
opinions courts have issued in
reviewing such EPA orders. However,
the EPA expects that not all
stakeholders, including the public, may
have read these response orders or
related court decisions.
Therefore, the next section of this
notice seeks to provide additional
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transparency concerning the petition
process by repeating some of the
relevant interpretations of statutory and
regulatory provisions that the EPA has
previously explained in title V petition
orders, as well as interpretations of
certain provisions related to the title V
petition process provided in judicial
opinions. Reiterating these prior
statements concerning the EPA’s
application and interpretation of the
statute to reviewing title V petitions
may also provide useful context for the
proposed changes to 40 CFR part 70,
which are discussed in Section IV of
this notice.
D. Prior Interpretations and
Applications of the Title V Provisions
This section includes a discussion of
certain aspects of the statutory elements
of CAA section 505(b)(2) as well as the
implementing regulations that have
previously been interpreted by the EPA
and/or courts. The discussion that
follows serves to inform the public,
stakeholders, permitting authorities, and
other interested parties of these
interpretations. Although the matters
discussed in this section are available to
the public,8 and in some cases have
been available for years and/or already
subject to judicial review, in the interest
of transparency and clarity, the agency
is collecting these interpretations and
judicial decisions in this notice. That
information is repeated here merely as
a convenience for the public. The
agency is not in this notice proposing to
change these previously-presented
interpretations, soliciting comments on
these interpretations, or reopening the
already-issued title V orders or other
EPA documents in which these
interpretations were discussed. None of
the regulatory revisions proposed in this
notice would alter these interpretations
or the prior title V orders or other EPA
documents in which these
interpretations were discussed.
1. ‘‘Threshold’’ Requirements
Certain of the requirements under
CAA section 505(b)(2) related to
petitions are sometimes referred to as
‘‘threshold’’ requirements, which
provide some procedural requirements
and some limitations on the scope of
title V petitions. These include, for
example, that the petition be filed
within 60 days following the agency’s
45-day review period. Another example
is the requirement that the petition be
based only on objections to the permit
8 The Title V Petitions Database contains petitions
and EPA Orders responding to petitions and is
available at: https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operatingpermits/title-v-petition-database.
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that were raised with reasonable
specificity during the public comment
period provided by the permitting
agency. The agency has previously
addressed these ‘‘threshold’’ issues in
prior title V orders, and some of those
statements are reiterated in this section.
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a. Timeliness
Generally speaking, the first step in
the petition response process is for the
agency to ascertain if the petition was
timely filed pursuant to CAA section
505(b)(2). The Act and implementing
regulations at 40 CFR 70.8(d) provide
for a 60-day window in which to file a
title V petition, which runs from the
expiration of the EPA’s 45-day review
period. A petition received after the 60day petition deadline is not timely. The
agency is aware that because the
petition period runs from the end of the
EPA’s 45-day review period, and the
date a proposed permit is received by
the EPA is not always apparent, the
petition deadline is not always readily
apparent. The agency currently
encourages permitting authorities to
provide notifications to the public or
interested stakeholders regarding the
timing of proposal of permits to the
EPA, for example making that
information available either online,
such as Region 4 has done on the EPA
Web site, ‘‘Region 4 Proposed Title V
Permits and State Contacts,’’ 9 or in the
publication in which public notice of
the draft permit was given.
b. Reasonable Specificity
The second ‘‘threshold’’ requirement
described in the statute regards the
content of a petition. CAA section
505(b)(2) requires that, unless one of the
enumerated exceptions applies, the
petition must be based only on
objections to the permit that were raised
with reasonable specificity during the
public comment period provided by the
permitting agency. Subject to the
exceptions contained in the provision,
the EPA understands this statutory
language to require that the issues
presented in a petition be raised during
the public comment process with
reasonable specificity. Such issues
could, however, be raised in comments
filed by a commenter other than the
petitioner.
The EPA continues to believe that, as
stated in the preamble to the 1991 part
70 proposal, Congress did not intend for
petitioners to create an entirely new
9 EPA Region 4’s Web site provides links with
lists of permits that have been proposed and are
still under the public petition deadline, organized
by state: https://www.epa.gov/caa-permitting/
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record before the EPA that the
permitting authority had no opportunity
to address. The requirement to raise
issues ‘‘with reasonable specificity’’
places the burden on the petitioner.
Unless there are unusual circumstances,
the Petitioner needs to provide evidence
that would support a finding of
noncompliance with the Act to the
permitting authority before it is raised
in a petition. See, 56 FR 21712, 21750
(1991).
Where an issue is raised to the EPA
in a title V petition without first raising
it with reasonable specificity to the
permitting authority to give it the
opportunity to address the issue, the
Administrator has generally denied
such claims consistent with the
statutory requirements. The EPA has
specifically addressed the reasonable
specificity threshold requirement in a
number of title V petition orders. Some
key highlights are summarized next.
In 2013 in the Luminant Order, the
EPA responded to a petition that raised
a number of issues, including several
that were raised only in general terms or
not raised at all during the public
comment period by any commenter.
See, In the Matter of Luminant
Generating Station, Petition, Order on
Petition No. VI–2011–05 (January 15,
2013). For example, the petitioners
claimed that the permit in question
failed to identify emission units that
were associated with permit by rules to
which the facility was subject. The EPA
noted that no mention was made in the
public comments concerning the lack of
identification of emission units, and
denied the claim. Id. at 12. The
Administrator similarly denied other
claims not raised with reasonable
specificity during the public comment
period: The comments did not present
evidence or analysis to support these
petition claims, and thus the state had
no opportunity to consider and respond
to those claims. Id. at 6, 11, 13, 15. The
Luminant Order also included a
discussion of the reasonable specificity
standard, that absent unusual
circumstances, the requirement to raise
issues ‘‘with reasonable specificity’’
places the burden on the petitioner to
bring forward evidence before the State
that would support a finding of
noncompliance with the CAA. See id. at
5.
As noted above, the Act contains two
enumerated exceptions to the
‘‘reasonable specificity’’ requirement.
Namely, issues that were not raised with
reasonable specificity during the public
comment period can be raised in a
petition if the petitioner demonstrates
that it was impracticable to raise such
objections within such period or unless
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the grounds for such objection arose
after such period. CAA section
505(b)(2). For an issue to fit within one
of these exceptions, the petitioner
would have to demonstrate the
impracticality, or show that the grounds
arose after the comment period. The
EPA has also addressed this issue in
petition orders.
One example is in the 2012 San Juan
Generating Station Order, where the
EPA responded to a petition claim that
the permit failed to assure compliance
with PSD applicable requirements
because it did not address significant
increase of a specific pollutant after a
change at the facility. See In the Matter
of Public Service Company Of New
Mexico, San Juan Generating Station
(SJGS), Order on Petition VI–2010
(February 15, 2012) at 10. According to
the petitioners, these concerns were not
raised during the comment period
because the State did not make the
information about the significant
emission increase available until after
the public comment period, when the
permitting authority noted in its
response to the EPA that the change
triggered PSD and expressed its intent to
add a title V compliance schedule to the
permit. The Administrator found that in
this case, the petitioners demonstrated
that the grounds arose after the
comment period and therefore, the EPA
would consider their claim on this
matter. See id. at 10.
c. Scope of Permit Action
Petitions may be submitted on several
types of proposed title V permits, such
as proposed initial permits, permit
renewals, or permit revisions, which
may include minor or significant
modifications to the title V permit.
Some stakeholders have indicated there
may be confusion on the matter of
petition opportunities, particularly for
minor modification actions. In cases
where the permitting authority has not
provided for a prior public comment
period on a minor permit modification,
petitioners can still submit a petition to
the Administrator. 57 FR 32283; see also
40 CFR 70.7(e)(2)(iv) (for a minor
modification, the permitting authority
may not issue a final permit until after
EPA’s 45-day review period or until
EPA has notified the permitting
authority that it will not object,
whichever is earlier) and 70.8(e) (a part
70 permit, including a modification,
may not be issued until after EPA has
had an opportunity to review the
proposed permit as required under this
section). As the EPA may receive a
petition on different types of proposed
title V permits, it is important for the
agency to be able to identify the
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particular action of concern to the
petitioner.
Under CAA section 505(b)(2), a
petition pertains to a particular permit.
Thus, the EPA must be able to discern
from the petition what permit action the
petition is based on in order to review
and respond to it. The EPA has
interpreted the potential scope of the
petition as related to the scope of the
permit action that is the basis of the
petition. In the 1992 preamble to the
final part 70 rule, the EPA explained
that public objections to an initial
permit, permit revision, or permit
renewal must be germane to the
applicable requirements implicated by
the permitting action in question. For
example, objections raised on a portion
of an existing permit that would not in
any way be affected by a proposed
permit revision would not be germane.
57 FR 32250, 32290/3 (July 21, 1992).
Consistent with CAA section 505(b)(2),
the EPA has considered the scope of the
permit proceeding in reviewing
petitions and denied petitions that
concern issues that are outside the
scope of the permit proceeding. See,
e.g., In the Matter of Wisconsin Public
Service Corporation’s JP Pulliam Power
Plant (Order in response to Petition
Number V–2012–01) (January 7, 2013) at
8; In the Matter of Consolidated
Environmental Management, Inc.—
Nucor Steel Louisiana, Order on
Petition Numbers VI–2010–05, VI–
2011–06 and VI–2012–07 (January 30,
2014) (Nucor III Order) at 12.
One such denial can be found in the
2007 Weston Order, in which the EPA
received a petition that claimed that the
proposed modification permit was
deficient because it did not incorporate
limits from PSD and preconstruction
permit applications for a particular unit
at the Weston facility. See, In the Matter
of Wisconsin Public Service
Corporation—Weston Generating
Station (Order in response to Petition)
(December 19, 2007). The EPA denied
the claim because the unit in question
had not been affected by or related to
the significant modification on which
the title V permitting action was based.
The Order stated:
EPA interprets its title V regulations at 40
CFR part 70 to require different opportunities
for citizens to petition on initial permit
issuance, permit modifications, and
renewals. The regulations state that a permit,
permit modification, or renewal may be
issued if specified conditions are met, 40
CFR 70.7(a)(1), including a requirement that
‘[t]he permitting authority shall provide a
statement that sets forth the legal and factual
basis for the draft permit conditions.’ 40 CFR
70(a)(1)(ii) and 70.7(a)(5) (emphasis added).
Further, 40 CFR 70.7(h), in requiring the
permitting authority to provide adequate
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procedures for public notice and comment
for permit proceedings that qualify as
significant modifications, provides that the
notice shall identify ‘the activity or activities
involved in the permit action; the emissions
change involved in any permit modification;
. . . and all other materials available to the
permitting authority that are relevant to the
permit decision . . .’ 40 CFR 70.7(h)(2)
(emphasis added). We interpret these
provisions to limit petitions on significant
modifications to issues directly related to
those modifications. Id. at 5.
The Weston Order further noted that
this limitation on petitions for title V
significant modifications did not affect
the public’s ability to participate in the
permit issuance or enforcement
processes. When a title V permit is
renewed, all aspects of the title V permit
are subject to public comment and
petition as part of the process to issue
a renewal permit. Generally speaking,
members of the public can also bring an
enforcement action in situations of
alleged noncompliance with any permit
terms. Furthermore, if the public is
concerned that the permit fails to
incorporate all applicable requirements,
a petition may be submitted to the
Administrator to reopen the permit for
cause under CAA section 505(e). Id. at
7.
2. Demonstration Requirement
In addition to the threshold
requirements, the statute identifies
another general guideline for the EPA’s
consideration. Specifically, to compel
an objection by the EPA, CAA section
505(b)(2) requires the petitioner to
demonstrate that a permit is not in
compliance with requirements of the
Act, including the requirements of the
applicable implementation plan. The
EPA has interpreted the demonstration
burden under CAA section 505(b)(2) in
numerous title V petition orders and
court opinions have also interpreted it.
What follows is a brief restatement of
interpretations previously articulated in
some of those orders and opinions.
In the 2013 Nucor II Order the EPA
stated:
The petitioner demonstration burden is a
critical component of CAA section 505(b)(2).
As courts have recognized, CAA section
505(b)(2) contains a ‘‘discretionary
component’’ that requires the exercise of the
EPA’s judgment to determine whether a
petition demonstrates noncompliance with
the Act, as well as a nondiscretionary duty
to object where such a demonstration is
made. Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d at
1265–66 (‘‘it is undeniable [CAA section
505(b)(2)] also contains a discretionary
component: it requires the Administrator to
make a judgment of whether a petition
demonstrates a permit does not comply with
clean air requirements’’); NYPIRG, 321 F.3d
at 333. Courts have also made clear that the
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57829
Administrator is only obligated to grant a
petition to object under CAA section
505(b)(2) if the Administrator determines that
the petitioners have demonstrated that the
permit is not in compliance with
requirements of the Act. See, e.g., Citizens
Against Ruining the Environment, 535 F.3d
at 667 (section 505(b)(2) ‘‘clearly obligates
the Administrator to (1) determine whether
the petition demonstrates noncompliance
and (2) object if such a demonstration is
made’’) (emphasis added); NYPIRG, 321 F.3d
at 334 (‘‘Section 505(b)[2] of the CAA
provides a step-by-step procedure by which
objections to draft permits may be raised and
directs the EPA to grant or deny them,
depending on whether non-compliance has
been demonstrated.’’) (emphasis added);
Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d at 1265
(‘‘Congress’s use of the word ‘shall’ . . .
plainly mandates an objection whenever a
petitioner demonstrates noncompliance’’)
(emphasis added). Courts reviewing the
EPA’s interpretation of the ambiguous term
‘‘demonstrates’’ and its determination as to
whether the demonstration has been made
have applied a deferential standard of
review. See, e.g., Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541
F.3d at 1265–66; Citizens Against Ruining the
Environment, 535 F.3d at 678; MacClarence
[v. EPA], 596 F.3d [1123] at 1130–31 [9th Cir.
2010)].
See, In the Matter of Consolidated
Environmental Management, Inc.—
Nucor Steel Louisiana, Order on
Petition Numbers VI–2011–06 and VI–
2012–07 (June 19, 2013) (Nucor II
Order) at 4–5.
The EPA highlighted in the Nucor II
Order several reasons why the
petitioner’s demonstration is important
in the context of a title V petition,
including first, the relatively short time
frames title V of the CAA provides for
the EPA to review title V permits and
petitions. As previously explained,
under CAA section 505(b)(1), the
Administrator has only 45 days after
receiving a copy of the proposed permit
to review that permit and object if she
determines that the permit is not in
compliance with the CAA. If the
Administrator does not object, then any
petition for an objection must be filed
within 60 days after the expiration of
the 45-day review period, and the
agency is required to grant or deny that
petition within 60 days. See CAA
section 505(b)(2). Given these short time
frames, the Nucor II Order explained
that EPA does not believe it is
reasonable to conclude that Congress
would have intended for the EPA to
engage in extensive fact-finding or
investigation to analyze contested
petition claims, and in support of this
interpretation it cited Citizens Against
Ruining the Environment, 535 F.3d at
678, which noted that because the
limited time frame Congress gave the
EPA for permit review ‘‘may not allow
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the EPA to fully investigate and analyze
contested allegations, it is reasonable in
this context for the EPA to refrain from
extensive fact-finding.’’ Nucor II Order
at 5. Therefore, it is imperative that the
petitioner make the demonstration.
After discussing the relatively short
time frames for the EPA to review as the
first point, the Nucor II Order
continued:
Second, the Act is structured so that the
EPA’s evaluation of a petition under CAA
section 505(b)(2) follows and is distinct from
its review of a proposed permit under section
505(b)(1), which requires the Administrator
to object on his own accord if he determines
the permit is not in compliance with the Act.
By contrast, under section 505(b)(2), the
Administrator is compelled to object only if
the necessary demonstration has been
made.[10]
Third, the EPA is also sensitive to the fact
that its response to title V petitions often
comes late in the title V permitting process
and often after the title V permit has been
issued. See CAA section 505(b)(3)
(acknowledging that the EPA’s response to a
petition may occur after the permit has been
issued). The EPA’s evaluation of the
petitioners’ demonstration can have
consequences, as a determination by the EPA
that the petition demonstrates the permit is
not in compliance with the Act requires the
Administrator and the state permitting
authority to take certain actions.
MacClarence, 596 F.3d at 1131. The EPA also
acknowledges Congress’ direction that
permitting authorities must provide
‘‘streamlined’’ procedures for issuing title V
permits, indicating that the title V permitting
process should proceed efficiently and
expeditiously. CAA section 502(b)(6); 40 CFR
part 70.4(d)(3)(ix). These circumstances make
it all the more important that the EPA
carefully evaluate the petition’s
demonstration and not issue an objection
under section 505(b)(2) unless the petition
demonstrates that one is required.
Fourth, and consistent with its importance
in CAA section 505(b)(2), the petitioner
demonstration requirement helps to ensure
the equity, procedural certainty, efficiency,
and viability of the title V petition process for
petitioners, state and local permitting
authorities, the EPA and source owner/
operators. This petitioner demonstration
requirement helps to ensure that each and
every petitioner is treated equitably in the
petition process because the same standard
for demonstration applies to each petitioner.
Where petitioners meet their burden, the EPA
will grant the petition. Where they do not,
the EPA will not grant the petition. In this
way, the EPA gives equal consideration to the
petitioner’s arguments, as appropriate.
In addition, the petitioner burden
requirement also helps to ensure that the title
10 Footnote 3 of the Nucor II Order explained:
‘‘Further, CAA section 505(b)(2) provides that ‘the
Administrator may not delegate the requirements of
this paragraph.’ This reflects the significance
Congress attached to the decision on whether or not
to object in response to a petition, and means the
process requires additional time.’’
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V petition process is consistent with the
division of responsibilities and co-regulator
relationship between the EPA and state or
local permitting authorities established in the
CAA. When carrying out our title V review
responsibilities under the CAA, it is our
practice, consistent with that relationship, to
defer to permitting decisions of state and
local agencies with approved title V
programs where such decisions are not
inconsistent with the requirements under the
CAA. The EPA does not seek to substitute its
judgment for the state or local agency. As we
discuss above in this section, sections
505(b)(1) and (2) of the Act, require the EPA
to object to the issuance of a title V permit
if it determines that the title V permit
contains provisions that are not in
compliance with applicable requirements of
the Act, including the requirements of the
applicable SIP. State and local agencies must
ensure that the title V permit includes all
applicable requirements under the CAA for
that source, and provide an adequate
rationale for the permit requirements in the
public record, including the response to
comment. When the EPA grants a particular
title V petition under CAA section 505(b)(2),
the EPA directs the state or local agency
regarding actions necessary to ensure that the
title V permit meets the applicable
requirements with regard to the particular
issue(s) that was raised, including
appropriate and necessary changes to the
permit.
The petitioner burden requirement assures
that petitioners have clearly and sufficiently
articulated the basis for an objection before
a title V petition is granted. Thus, state and
local agencies have certainty regarding the
standard against which petitions on their title
V permits and permit records will be
assessed. The petitioner burden requirement
also helps to ensure that the EPA does not
have to spend significant time and resources
responding to ungrounded claims regarding
the title V permit or permit record. For
example, petitioners might include claims in
petitions unrelated to applicable
requirements for the title V permit at issue
or that do not provide sufficient information
for the EPA to analyze the claim. Without the
petitioner demonstration burden, the EPA
could be required to investigate and respond
to claims that ultimately prove to be
ungrounded or frivolous. This would
increase the complexity and uncertainty of
the title V permit process, and would be
burdensome and unproductive for the EPA,
as well as for state and local agencies. The
petitioner burden standard also helps to
ensure certainty of the permitting process for
source owner/operators, because it provides
a consistent standard against which petitions
on their title V permits will be assessed.
Nucor II Order at 5–7.
In light of the EPA’s interpretation of
the demonstration requirement and its
importance to the implementation of the
statutory structure that Congress created
for addressing objections to title V
permits, the EPA has discussed and
applied its interpretation of the
demonstration burden in numerous title
V orders. Examples of the EPA’s
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application of this standard can be
found in: In the Matter of Scherer
Steam-Electric Generating Plant Juliette,
Georgia, et al., Order on Petition Nos.
IV–2012–1, IV–2012–2, IV–2012–3, IV–
2012–4, and IV–2012–5 (Apr. 14, 2014)
at 12–13; In the Matter of Hu Honua
Bioenergy Facility, Order on Petition
No. IX–2001–1 (July 2, 2014) (Hu Honua
Order) at 25–27; In the Matter of EME
Homer City Generation LP, et al., Order
on Petition No. III–2012–06, III–2012–
07, and III–2013–02 (July 30, 2014) at
24–25; In the Matter of Public Service of
New Hampshire Schiller Station, Order
on Petition No. VI–2014–04 (July 28,
2015) at 11–12.
The interpretation quoted from the
Nucor II Order is based on the
discussion of the demonstration burden
in opinions from federal courts of
appeal. These courts have recognized
that the term ‘‘demonstrates’’ in CAA
section 505(b)(2) is ambiguous and have
accordingly deferred to the EPA’s
interpretation. See Wildearth Guardians
v. EPA, 728 F.3d 1075, 1081–1082 (10th
Cir. 2013); MacClarence v. EPA, 596
F.3d 1123, 1130–1131 (9th Cir. 2010);
Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d 1257,
1265–1267 (11th Cir. 2008); Citizens
Against Ruining the Env’t v. EPA, 535
F.3d 670, 677–678 (7th Cir. 2008). In so
deferring, these courts have discussed
the seminal Supreme Court decision,
Chevron USA, Inc. v. Natural Res. Def.
Council Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842–843
(1984), which provides guiding
principles for judicial review of agency
interpretations and determinations
under statutes that the agency
administers.11 Chevron establishes a
well-known two-step test: First, if the
Congress has ‘‘directly spoken to the
precise question at issue’’ both the court
and the agency must ‘‘give effect to the
unambiguously expressed intent of
Congress.’’ Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842–
843. Second, if the statute is ambiguous,
courts will generally defer to the
agency’s interpretation and uphold it so
long as it ‘‘is based on a permissible
construction of the statute.’’ Id. at 843.
Several federal courts of appeal have
agreed with the EPA’s position that the
term ‘‘demonstrates’’ in CAA section
505(b)(2) is ambiguous. MacClarence,
596 F.3d at 1130 (collecting cases). As
one opinion pointed out, ‘‘[n]either the
Clean Air Act nor its regulations define
the term ‘demonstrates’ or give context
to how the Administrator should make
this judgment.’’ Sierra Club v. Johnson,
541 F.3d at 1266; see also Citizens
Against Ruining the Env’t, 535 F.3d at
11 The principle of deference named after this
decision—Chevron deference—is discussed in more
detail in Section IV.A of this notice.
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677–678. After considering the plain
meaning of the term ‘‘demonstrates’’ as
shown by various dictionary definitions,
courts have agreed that the plain
meaning ‘‘does not resolve important
questions that are part and parcel of the
Administrator’s duty to evaluate the
sufficiency of a petition, for example,
the type of evidence a petitioner may
present and the burden of proof guiding
the Administrator’s evaluation of when
a sufficient demonstration has
occurred.’’ Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541
F.3d at 1266; MacClarence, 596 F.3d at
1131 (same). Similarly, another court
observed that the Act ‘‘does not set forth
any factors the EPA must take into
account in determining whether a
petitioner has demonstrated
noncompliance under [CAA 505(b)(2)].’’
Wildearth Guardians, 728 F.3d at 1082.
This recognition of the ambiguity in
CAA section 505(b)(2) leads to the
conclusion that ‘‘the statute’s silence on
these important issues means Congress
has delegated to the EPA some
discretion in determining whether, in its
expert opinion, a petitioner has
presented sufficient evidence to prove a
permit violates clean air requirements.’’
Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d at
1266. Accordingly, as one opinion put
it, ‘‘the EPA has discretion under the
statute to determine what a petition
must show in order to make an adequate
‘demonstration.’ ’’ Citizens Against
Ruining the Env’t, 535 F.3d at 678.
Similarly, another court explained,
‘‘because we conclude [section
505(b)(2)] is ambiguous when it comes
to defining the type of demonstration
required to trigger the Administrator’s
duty to object, we are willing to defer
to a reasonable interpretation by the
agency as to when a petitioner has
sufficiently demonstrated
noncompliance with PSD
requirements.’’ Sierra Club v. Johnson,
541 F.3d at 1267. In so deferring to the
EPA’s interpretation of the
demonstration standard under CAA
section 505(b)(2) some courts have
noted that they need not resolve the
question of the exact degree of deference
to be accorded to the EPA because its
‘‘interpretation is persuasive even under
[the] less deferential standard of
review’’ under Skidmore v. Swift, 323
U.S. 134 (1944) and ‘‘would thus prevail
under either standard.’’ Wildearth
Guardians, 728 F.3d at 1082;
MacClarence, 596 F.3d at 1131 (same).
In the context of reviewing particular
applications of the demonstration
burden in title V petition orders, courts
have also deferred to the agency’s
interpretation as to whether or not a
petition had adequately demonstrated
that an objection was warranted. For
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example, in MacClarence, the petition
was denied in part because it ‘‘failed to
provide adequate information to support
[a claim]’’ and made ‘‘only generalized
statements . . . and did not provide
adequate references, legal analysis, or
evidence in support of these general
assertions.’’ 596 F.3d at 1131 (internal
marks omitted). The court found the
EPA’s construction of the burden under
CAA section 505(b)(2) as encompassing
an expectation that a petition provide
‘‘references, legal analysis, or evidence’’
a reasonable interpretation, which
comported with both the plain meaning
of the term ‘‘demonstrates’’ and with
CAA section 505(b)(2). Id. In addition,
in MacClarence, the petitioner argued
that the EPA should not have denied his
petition for failing to address the
permitting authority’s reasoning in the
final permitting decision and
documents, which differed from the
draft documents and explained why the
changes had been made. The court
upheld the EPA’s decision, determining
that it was reasonable for the EPA to
expect the petitioner to address the
permitting authority’s final decision. Id.
at 1132–33. As another example of the
deference that courts have accorded the
EPA’s application of the demonstration
standard, in the Wildearth Guardians
case cited above, the court found
reasonable the EPA’s determination that
the petitioner could not rely solely on
the fact that a Notice of Violation (NOV)
had been previously issued to
demonstrate noncompliance. Wildearth
Guardians, 728 F.3d at 1082. The court
noted that the EPA had explained that
an NOV may be a relevant factor in
‘‘ ‘determining whether the overall
information presented by Petitioner—in
light of all the factors that may be
relevant—demonstrates the applicability
of a requirement for the purposes of title
V’ ’’ but explained that other factors may
also be relevant. Id. The EPA further
explained that if the petitioner had not
addressed other relevant factors, it
could find that petitioner ‘‘ ‘failed to
present sufficient information to
demonstrate that the requirement is
applicable.’ ’’ Id. Finding this
interpretation of the demonstration
requirement persuasive, the court
deferred to it. Id.
3. Raising PSD Issues in a Petition
As noted earlier, many petitions raise
numerous and highly complex issues
around PSD permitting, a separate
permitting program under the CAA.
Because of the frequency with which
title V petitions raise PSD claims,
statements in prior petition orders
regarding such claims is worth a
separate mention here. In the Meraux
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Refinery Order, In the Matter of Meraux
Refinery, Order on Petition Number VI–
2012–04 (May 29, 2015), at 3–4, the EPA
stated:
Where a petitioner’s request that the
Administrator object to the issuance of a title
V permit is based in whole, or in part, on a
permitting authority’s alleged failure to
comply with the requirements of its
approved PSD program (as with other
allegations of noncompliance with the Act),
the burden is on the petitioner to
demonstrate to the Administrator that the
permitting decision was not in compliance
with the requirements of the Act, including
the requirements of the SIP. CAA section
505(b)(2). . . . Such requirements, as the
EPA has explained in describing its authority
to oversee the implementation of the PSD
program in states with approved programs,
include the permitting authority: (1)
following the required procedures in the SIP;
(2) making PSD determinations on reasonable
grounds properly supported on the record;
and (3) describing the determinations in
enforceable terms. See, e.g., In the Matter of
Wisconsin Power and Light, Columbia
Generating Station, Order on Petition No. V–
2008–01 (October 8, 2009) at 8. The
permitting authority for a State’s SIPapproved PSD program has substantial
discretion in issuing PSD permits. Given this
discretion, in reviewing a PSD permitting
decision, the EPA will not substitute its own
judgment for that of the State. Rather,
consistent with the decision in Alaska Dep’t
of Envt’l Conservation v. EPA, 540 U.S. 461
(2004), in reviewing a petition to object to a
title V permit raising concerns regarding a
state’s PSD permitting decision, the EPA
generally will look to see whether the
petitioner has shown that the state did not
comply with its SIP-approved regulations
governing PSD permitting or whether the
state’s exercise of discretion under such
regulations was unreasonable or arbitrary.
See, e.g., In re Louisville Gas and Electric
Company, Order on Petition No. IV–2008–3
(Aug. 12, 2009); In re East Kentucky Power
Cooperative, Inc. Hugh L. Spurlock
Generating Station, Order on Petition No. IV–
2006–4 (Aug. 30, 2007); In re Pacific Coast
Building Products, Inc. (Order on Petition)
(Dec. 10, 1999); In re Roosevelt Regional
Landfill Regional Disposal Company (Order
on Petition) (May 4, 1999).
As is indicated by the internal citations
to a number of other title V orders in the
Meraux Refinery Order, the agency has
made similar statements in several
previous orders over the years.
4. Raising Emissions Monitoring Issues
in a Petition
Many petitions also raise issues
surrounding emissions monitoring,
recordkeeping and reporting in title V
permits. Title V of the CAA requires
permits to contain adequate emissions
monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting to assure sources’ compliance
with applicable requirements. 57 FR
32250, 32251 (July 1, 1992). Because of
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the frequency with which monitoring
claims are raised, statements in prior
petition orders regarding such claims
are also worth a separate mention here.
As an example, In the Matter of the
Premcor Refining Group, Inc., Order on
Petition Number VI–2007–02 (May 28,
2009), at 7, the EPA stated:
As a general matter, permitting authorities
must take three steps to satisfy the
monitoring requirements in the EPA’s part 70
regulations. First, a permitting authority must
ensure that monitoring requirements
contained in applicable requirements are
properly incorporated into the title V permit.
40 CFR 70.6(a)(3)(i)(A). Second, if the
applicable requirements contain no periodic
monitoring, permitting authorities must add
monitoring ‘‘sufficient to yield reliable data
from the relevant time period that are
representative of the source’s compliance
with the permit.’’ 40 CFR 70.6(a)(3)(i)(B).
Third, if the applicable requirement has
associated periodic monitoring but the
monitoring is not sufficient to assure
compliance with permit terms and
conditions, a permitting authority must
supplement monitoring to assure
compliance. See 40 CFR 70.6(c)(1).
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5. Addressing Permitting Authority’s
Rationale
The EPA has previously noted that as
part of the CAA section 505(b)(2)
demonstration requirement, the
petitioner is expected to address the
permitting authority’s final decision,
and the permitting authority’s final
reasoning (including the RTC), where
these documents were available during
the timeframe for filing the petition.
Where a permitting authority has
articulated its rationale for the permit
terms and conditions concerning an
applicable requirement in its record
(RTC and statement of basis) and the
petitioner did not adequately address
that rationale in its petition, the EPA
has often denied the petition, at least in
part, on that basis. See e.g., In the Matter
of Noranda Alumina, LLC, Order on
Petition No. VI–2011–04 (December 14,
2012) at 20–21 (denying title V petition
issue where petitioners did not respond
to state’s explanation in response to
comments or explain why the state
erred or the permit was deficient); In the
Matter of Kentucky Syngas, LLC, Order
on Petition No. IV–2010–9 (June 22,
2012) at 41 (denying title V petition
issue where petitioners did not
acknowledge or reply to state’s response
to comments or provide a particularized
rationale for why the state erred or the
permit was deficient). Caselaw supports
this interpretation. See MacClarence,
596 F.3d at 1132–33 (the Administrator
‘‘reasonably expected’’ the petitioner to
challenge the state permitting
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authority’s explanation and reasoning
for final permit).
IV. Proposed Revisions to Title V
Regulations
This notice proposes several changes
to part 70. Many of the proposed
revisions fall within three key areas.
First, regulatory language is proposed
that encourages the use of the agency’s
electronic submittal system for title V
petitions. Alternative methods for
submittal are also identified in this
notice. Petitioners who experience
technical difficulty when attempting to
submit a petition through the electronic
submittal system may send it to the
designated email address, while those
without access to the Internet or unable
to access email for other reasons may
send a paper copy to the specific
physical address identified in this
proposal.
Second, this rule proposes mandatory
petition content requirements and
standard formatting for title V petitions.
The EPA has identified key pieces of
information that are critical when
assessing claims and potential flaws in
a title V permit or permit process, and
these pieces are now proposed as
required content for petitions and
would be a new provision, 40 CFR
70.12. Under the proposed revisions, in
order to demonstrate a flaw in the
permit, permit record, or permit process
that warrants an objection under CAA
section 505(b)(2), the petition would
present the required content in the same
manner and order as contained in the
new section of the title V regulations, 40
CFR 70.12.
A related change is proposed that
would add new regulatory language to
40 CFR 70.8, which would require a
petitioner to send a copy of the petition
to both the permitting authority and the
permit applicant. The current title V
regulations do not have provisions
effectuating this requirement of section
505(b)(2) of the Act. Therefore, this
proposal would insert a requirement
into the regulation identical to the one
in the Act in order to ensure consistency
with this provision of the statute.
Third, the agency proposes to require
that permitting authorities respond in
writing to significant comments
received during the public comment
period on a draft title V permit. Further,
the EPA proposes regulatory language
stating that this response to significant
comments, often referred to as the RTC,
must be sent with the proposed permit
and statement of basis for the 45-day
EPA review period of the proposed
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permit.12 Under the proposed revisions,
the EPA 45-day review period would
not commence until the proposed
permit and all necessary supporting
information, including the written RTC,
are received. Finally, the EPA proposes
to require that within 30 days of sending
the proposed permit to the EPA, that
permitting authorities must provide
notification that the proposed permit
and the response to significant public
comments are available to the public.
Such notice must explain how these
materials may be accessed.
These proposed revisions to part 70
provide increased transparency and
clarity to the title V petition
preparation, submittal, review, and
response processes. Improved
interactions with stakeholders that
participate in the title V process and
more accurate tracking of petitions may
also result from the establishment of the
preferred petition submittal method. If
finalized, the proposed rule revisions
would help facilitate a more effective
process for the development of title V
petitions and a more efficient process
for the review and response to title V
petitions. Overall, the EPA is intending
that these rule revisions along with
other shared information will help to
improve title V permits issued by
permitting authorities, promote access
to and provide better understanding of
the title V petition process for potential
petitioners, and reduce delays in
decisions and support the agency’s
efforts to meet its obligations in
responding to title V petitions.
For each of the three key areas, the
agency describes the proposed
regulatory changes, rationale for
proposing the changes, and request for
comment in the sections that follow.
Before discussing each of the three key
areas of this proposal, however, this
notice provides some additional legal
background related to these proposals.
A. Additional Legal Background for the
Proposed Revisions to the Part 70 Rules
To provide context for the statutory
and regulatory interpretations discussed
below, the EPA first discusses some
additional legal background, including
principles generally applied by courts in
reviewing agency interpretations.
The Supreme Court decision, Chevron
USA, Inc. v. Natural Res. Def. Council
12 The statement of basis is a statement that ‘‘sets
forth the legal and factual basis . . . (including
references to the applicable statutory or regulatory
provisions)’’ for terms and/or conditions in a
permit. 40 CFR 70.7(a)(5). Often a separate
document, the statement of basis is intended to
provide information to facilitate the EPA’s review
of permit terms and conditions and also to provide
information that supports public participation in
the permitting process.
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Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842–843 (1984),
establishes principles that guide judicial
review of agency interpretations of
statutes that the agency administers.
Under Chevron courts apply a wellknown two-step test: First, if the
Congress has ‘‘directly spoken to the
precise question at issue’’ both the court
and the agency must ‘‘give effect to the
unambiguously expressed intent of
Congress.’’ Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842–
843. Second, if the statute is ambiguous,
courts will generally defer to the
agency’s interpretation and uphold it so
long as it ‘‘is based on a permissible
construction of the statute.’’ Id. at 843.
At the second step of this inquiry, also
referred to as ‘‘Chevron Step 2,’’ courts
such as the D.C. Circuit have frequently
explained that ‘‘ ‘Chevron requires that
we defer to the agency’s reasonable
interpretation of the term.’ ’’ Miss.
Comm’n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA, 790
F.3d 138, 151 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (quoting
Pennsylvania Dept. of Envtl. Protection
v. EPA, 429 F.3d 1125, 1130 (D.C. Cir.
2005)). In other words, under Chevron
the agency’s interpretation ‘‘ ‘governs if
it is a reasonable interpretation of the
statute—not necessarily the only
possible interpretation, nor even the
interpretation deemed most reasonable
by the courts.’ ’’ Entergy Corp. v.
Riverkeeper, Inc., 556 U.S. 208, 218
(2009) (quoted in Airlines for Am. v.
Transp. Sec. Admin., 780 F.3d 409, 413
(D.C. Cir. 2015)).
Similarly, courts accord deference to
an administrative agency’s
interpretations of its own regulations
under principles enunciated in Auer v.
Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 462–63 (1997).
This type of deference is frequently
referred to as Auer deference. When an
agency’s interpretation of a regulation
receives Auer deference, the court
accepts the agency’s interpretation
‘‘unless the interpretation is plainly
erroneous or inconsistent with the
regulations or there is any other reason
to suspect that the interpretation does
not reflect the agency’s fair and
considered judgment on the matter in
question.’’ Rural Cellular Ass’n &
Universal Serv. v. FCC, 685 F.3d 1083,
1093–1094 (D.C. Cir. 2012) (internal
marks and citations omitted).
Finally, the EPA notes that
administrative agencies have broad
discretion to adopt procedures to
discharge their obligations under the
statutes they implement. In the words of
the U.S. Supreme Court: ‘‘[T]he
formulation of procedures [is] basically
to be left within the discretion of the
agencies to which Congress [has]
confided the responsibility for
substantive judgments.’’ Vermont
Yankee Nuclear Power Corp. v. Natural
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Resources Defense Council, 435 U.S.
519, 524 (1978). Later in the same case,
the Court observed that ‘‘[a]bsent
constitutional constraints or extremely
compelling circumstances the
administrative agencies should be free
to fashion their own rules of procedure
to pursue methods of inquiry capable of
permitting them to discharge their
multitudinous duties.’’ Id. at 543–544.
Relatedly, courts have emphasized the
inherent authority that administrative
agencies have ‘‘to control the
disposition of their caseload’’ and
manage their own dockets. See, e.g.,
GTE Service Corp. v. FCC, 782 F.2d 263,
273–274 (D.C. Cir. 1986).
B. Electronic Submittal System for
Petitions
1. Proposed Revisions
a. Petition Submission to the EPA
In this notice, the EPA is proposing to
revise part 70 to add a new provision
that would require petitions to be
submitted using one of three identified
methods. Among those three methods,
the agency encourages petitioners to
submit title V petitions through the
electronic submittal system, the
agency’s preferred method. The EPA has
developed a title V petitions submittal
system through the Central Data
Exchange (CDX) and information on
how to access and use the system is
available at the title V petitions Web
site: https://www.epa.gov/title-voperating-permits/title-v-petitions.
While the current submittal system was
designed using CDX, the EPA recognizes
that adjustments to the system or a
different submittal system entirely may
be needed in the future. Therefore, the
title V petitions Web site will provide
access to the designated electronic
submittal system in use at any given
time, which will remain the primary
and preferred method for receiving title
V petitions. The electronic submittal
system allows for a direct route to the
appropriate agency staff. It also provides
immediate confirmation that the EPA
has received the petition and any
attachments.
If a petitioner experiences technical
difficulties when trying to submit a
petition through the electronic submittal
system identified on the title V petitions
Web site, the petition may also be
submitted to the agency through the
following email address:
titleVpetitions@epa.gov. This address is
being established as an alternative
method for use in instances when the
electronic submittal system is not
available. For petitioners without access
to the Internet at the time of petition
submittal, this notice also announces
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the establishment of one specific
physical address to which all paper
copies of petitions should be sent. Paper
copies of all petitions unable to be sent
electronically may be sent by mail or by
courier to the following address: U.S.
EPA, Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards, Air Quality Policy Division,
Operating Permits Group Leader, 109
T.W. Alexander Dr. (C504–05), Research
Triangle Park, NC 27711. Additional
information on these alternative
methods for submittal will also be
available at the title V petitions Web
site.
Although regulatory changes are being
proposed to integrate these methods of
submission into the part 70 rules, all
three of these methods are currently
available for petition submission, and
petitioners may elect to use any one of
them now. Furthermore, although the
proposed changes to the regulatory
provisions identify three possible means
to submit petitions, for any particular
petition, once a petition and any
attachments have been successfully
submitted using one method, there is no
need to submit a duplicate copy via
another method. The EPA requests that
petitioners only submit a petition using
one method, which will expedite the
administrative process and improve the
EPA’s efficiency in reviewing petitions.
Finally, if these regulatory revisions are
finalized, the agency would not be
obligated to consider petitions
submitted through any means other than
the three identified in the rule.
b. Required Copy of the Petition to the
Permitting Authority and Applicant
Section 505(b)(2) of the Act requires
that the petitioner provide copies of its
petition to the permitting authority and
the permit applicant. This requirement
does not currently appear in the part 70
rules. The EPA is proposing to revise
the part 70 regulations in order to fill
this gap in the regulations. Specifically,
in this notice, the EPA proposes to add
language to 40 CFR 70.8(d) that is
identical to the statutory language.
2. Why is the EPA proposing this
change?
In general, feedback from
stakeholders, as well as the EPA’s
experience in receiving petitions,
indicate there is confusion at present as
to where a petition should be submitted.
While section 505(b)(2) of the CAA and
40 CFR 70.8(d) provide that any person
may petition the Administrator to object
within 60 days after the expiration of
the EPA’s 45-day review period for the
proposed permit, both the statute and
the regulations are currently silent as to
how a petition should be submitted to
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the EPA. Because the regulations do not
dictate a specific address, title V
petitions have been received in a
number of different offices within the
agency. Most of the recent petitions
have been sent to the agency through
email, in some cases with a duplicate
paper copy sent to a physical address
somewhere within the EPA. For
example, the agency has received
petitions that were sent directly to a
staff person in a Regional office, as well
as petitions sent directly to the
Administrator, either by email or
courier. One complication presented by
this current practice is that by sending
petitions via email, attachments
supplied by petitioners as supporting
materials may become separated from
the petition or lost entirely. In addition,
and potentially because of this fact,
petition attachments are frequently
submitted by mail or courier, while the
petition itself is submitted by email.
These various submission practices
require additional administrative
processing within the EPA and can
delay the initiation of the substantive
petition review process.
One goal of this proposal is to clarify
where and how title V petitions should
be submitted. Another goal of this
proposal is to announce the
establishment of an electronic submittal
system and promote its use as the
preferred method for the submittal of
petitions to the EPA. These proposed
changes are expected to allow for more
accurate tracking of petitions and to
increase the agency’s efficiency and
effectiveness in responding to petitions
by ensuring the timely receipt of
petitions and any attachments in a
central location.
The EPA has identified several
benefits of establishing the electronic
submittal system as the preferred
submittal method for receiving title V
petitions. For petitioners, the electronic
submittal system will provide
immediate confirmation to the
petitioner that the petition was received
by the agency. In contrast to the size
limitations that can be experienced
when sending title V petitions through
email, petitioners will be able to see that
all intended supporting materials are
attached to the petition and are
submitted in one entry. Thus,
submitting a petition and attachments
via the electronic submittal system
would avoid the need to send multiple
emails to transmit the entire petition
package. Sending petitions through the
electronic submittal system also
eliminates timeliness issues from
potential mishandling due to courier
issues.
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For the agency, there is a time savings
as petitions and any attachments
submitted through the electronic
submittal system will be immediately
and directly available to the agency.
This saves administrative time
otherwise spent processing the
incoming petition and any attachments,
especially those submitted separately
from the petition. Thus, the EPA
anticipates that using this system will
facilitate more efficient processing for
incoming petitions. Further, the
electronic submittal system in its
current form identifies the number of
attachments a petitioner intends to
submit, which can alert the EPA to any
missing attachments.
More information about the electronic
submittal system, including information
about security concerns regarding
providing personal information,
uploading and/or downloading files,
personally identifiable information (PII),
and CBI is available at the CDX Web
site: https://cdx.epa.gov/. If this rule is
finalized and there is interest from
commenters, the EPA will consider
developing training webinars on the use
of the electronic submittal system.
These proposed rule revisions to
identify specific methods for petition
submittal fall within the EPA’s inherent
discretion to formulate procedures to
meet its obligations under CAA section
505(b)(2), as discussed in Section IV.A
of this notice. In addition, the Act is
silent as to the methods that should be
used for title V petition submittal but
imposes a 60-day deadline for granting
or denying such petitions. Accordingly,
these proposed changes to improve the
efficiency of the EPA’s initial processing
of petitions and to support the agency’s
efforts to satisfy that obligation are
based on a reasonable interpretation of
CAA section 505(b)(2), including the
relatively short timeframe for the EPA to
grant or deny a petition.
3. Request for Comment
Comments are requested on all
aspects of these proposed revisions. The
EPA is also specifically soliciting
comment on our proposal to add
language to part 70 that identifies the
electronic submittal of petitions through
the agency’s identified electronic
submittal system as the preferred
primary method for submitting a title V
petition, as well as identifying two
alternative methods that could be used
in case of technical difficulties or by a
petitioner without Internet access.
Commenters are encouraged to address
in their comments whether additional
specification or direction is needed to
ensure all stakeholders are aware and
have a better understanding of the
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preferred electronic submittal process.
The EPA is expressly requesting
comment on whether the proposed
regulatory revisions are necessary, or
whether the same effect could be
achieved through the direction provided
in this preamble and through the title V
petitions Web site. Further, the EPA is
requesting comment on what, if any,
outreach methods or training materials
(e.g., written instructions) would assist
users with submitting petitions through
the CDX system.
C. Required Petition Content and
Format
1. Proposed Revisions
The following proposed regulatory
changes are designed to assist the public
with preparing their petitions, as well as
to assist the EPA in its review of
petitions. In this notice, the agency
proposes to establish in the part 70
regulations key mandatory content
requirements for title V petitions. These
proposed requirements are based on
statutory requirements under CAA
section 505(b)(2) and aspects of the
demonstration standard interpreted by
the EPA in numerous title V petition
orders and restated in Section III.D of
this notice. By proposing to codify what
has already been discussed in prior
orders, the EPA aims to help all
stakeholders understand the criteria that
the EPA applies in reviewing a title V
petition. The EPA also proposes to
establish requirements to encourage
similar formats for all petitions to
further assist the agency in its review
process.
a. Required Petition Content
The EPA is proposing to revise part 70
to require standard content that must be
included in a title V petition, laying out
the agency’s expectations with more
specificity to assist petitioners in
understanding how to make their
petitions complete and to enhance the
EPA’s ability to review and respond to
them promptly. Under this proposal, a
new section of the title V regulations, 40
CFR 70.12, would add the following list
of required elements:
• Identification of the proposed
permit on which the petition is based.
The proposed permit is the version of
the permit the permitting authority
forwards to the EPA for the agency’s 45day review under CAA section
505(b)(1).13 A petition would be
required to provide the permit number,
version number, and/or any other
information by which the permit can be
13 A proposed permit may be any of the following
permit actions: Initial permit, renewal permit, or
permit modification/revision.
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readily identified. In addition, the
petition must specify whether the
relevant permit action is an initial
issuance, renewal, or modification/
revision, including minor
modifications/revisions.
• Sufficient information to show that
the petition was timely filed. A petition
must be filed within 60 days after the
expiration of the Administrator’s 45-day
review period, as required by section
505(b)(2) of the Act. Timeliness may be
demonstrated by the electronic receipt
date generated upon submittal of the
petition through the agency’s electronic
submittal system, the date and time the
emailed petition was received, or the
postmark date generated for a paper
copy mailed to the agency’s designated
physical address. It is helpful if the
petition provides key dates, such as the
end of the public comment period
provided under 40 CFR 70.7(h), (or
parallel regulations in an EPA-approved
state, local or tribal title V permitting
program), or the conclusion of the EPA
45-day review period for the proposed
permit.
• Identification of Petition Claims.
Any issue raised in the petition as
grounds for an objection must be based
on a claim that the permit, permit
record, or permit process is not in
compliance with the applicable
requirements under the Act or
requirements under part 70. All
pertinent information in support of each
issue raised as a petition claim must be
included within the body of the
petition. In determining whether to
object, the Administrator would not
consider information incorporated into
the petition by reference (for example,
comments offered during the public
comment period on the draft permit that
are incorporated by reference into the
petition on the proposed permit, or, as
another example, claims raised in one
title V petition that are incorporated by
reference into a different title V
petition). However, petitions may and
should still provide citations to support
each petition claim (e.g., citations to
caselaw, statutory and regulatory
provisions, or portions of the permit
record). For each claim raised, the
petition would need to identify the
following:
Æ The specific grounds for an
objection, citing to a specific permit
term or condition where applicable.
Æ The applicable requirement under
the CAA or requirement under part 70
that is not met. Note that the term
‘‘applicable requirement’’ refers to Clean
Air Act requirements only, and does not
include other requirements (e.g.,
Endangered Species Act, Clean Water
Act) to which a source may be subject.
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The term ‘‘applicable requirement’’ of
the CAA for title V purposes is defined
in 40 CFR 70.2.
Æ An explanation of how the term or
condition in the proposed permit, or
relevant portion of the permit record or
permit process, is not adequate to
comply with the corresponding
applicable requirement under the CAA
or requirement under part 70.
Æ If the petition claims that the
permitting authority did not provide for
the public participation procedures
required under 40 CFR 70.7(h), the
petition must identify specifically the
required public participation procedure
that was not provided.
Æ Identification of where the issue in
the claim was raised with reasonable
specificity during the public comment
period provided for in 40 CFR 70.7(h),
citing to any relevant page numbers in
the public comment as submitted and
attaching the submitted public comment
to the petition. If the grounds for the
objection were not raised during the
public comment period, the petitioner
must demonstrate that it was
impracticable to raise such objections
within the period or that they arose after
such a period, as required by section
505(b)(2) of the Act and 40 CFR 70.8(d).
Æ Unless the exception under CAA
section 505(b)(2) and 40 CFR 70.8(d)
discussed in the immediately preceding
bullet applies, the petition must identify
where the permitting authority
responded to the public comment,
including the specific page number(s) in
the document where the response
appears, and explain how the permitting
authority’s response to the comment is
inadequate to address the claimed
deficiency. If the written RTC does not
address the public comment at all or if
there is no RTC, the petition should
state that.
In addition to including all specified
content, it is important that the
information provided or any analysis
completed by the petitioner must also
be accurate. However, including this
content would not necessarily result in
the Administrator granting an objection
on any particular claim raised in a
petition. For example, a petitioner could
include all this information but not
demonstrate noncompliance, or the
petition might point to a specific permit
term as not being adequate to comply
with an air emission limit, but may not
have identified the appropriate
applicable requirement.
One impediment to the EPA’s review
process is the use of incorporation by
reference of other documents, in whole
or in part, into petitions. As noted
earlier in this section, under
‘‘identification of petition issues’’ in the
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new proposed mandatory content
requirements, the EPA would require all
pertinent information in support of each
issue raised as a petition claim to be
included in the body of a petition.
Incorporating information into a
petition by reference is inconsistent
with the demonstration obligations in
the statute and would extend the
petition review time as the agency
spends time searching for and then
attempting to decipher the petitioner’s
intended claim. In practice, the EPA
often finds that where claims have been
incorporated by reference it is not clear
that the specific grounds for objection
have been raised by the petitioner,
which could lead to the EPA denying
for failure to meet the demonstration
burden. Relatedly, petitioners have
sometimes used incorporation by
reference to include comments from a
comment letter, but a comment letter
alone would typically not address a
state’s response to the comment. See,
e.g. Nucor III Order at 16 (noting that
the ‘‘mere incorporation by reference
. . . without any attempt to explain
how these comments relate to an
argument in the petition and without
confronting [the State’s] reasoning
supporting the final permit is not
sufficient to satisfy the petitioner’s
demonstration burden’’). In practice, the
EPA has found that the incorporation of
comments by reference into a petition
can lead to confusion concerning the
rationale for the petitioner’s arguments,
as it is frequently unclear which part of
the comment is incorporated, how it
relates to the particular argument in the
petition, and the precise intent of the
incorporation. In addition, the
incorporation of comments by reference
increases the agency’s review time, as
the EPA must review more than one
document to try to determine the
complete argument that a petitioner is
making. Therefore, the EPA is proposing
to revise the regulations to state that the
Administrator will not consider
information incorporated by reference
into a petition. However, a petition
should still provide citations as needed
to support its legal and factual
assertions.
For further transparency and clarity,
the EPA in this notice gives examples of
types of information that are not
necessary to include when preparing an
effective petition. In doing so, the EPA
hopes to ease the effort associated with
preparing a petition while promoting
succinctness. For example, while a
petitioner needs to cite to the legal
authority supporting its specific claim,
a petition does not need to include
pages of background or history on
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aspects of the CAA. If a petitioner
wishes to include additional
information for an alternate purpose
unrelated to the EPA’s review of the
specific petition claim, the EPA
recommends appending this
information to the petition as a separate
document and identifying the purpose
for which it is provided.
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b. Required Petition Format
Even with all necessary information
provided, a petition may still require
substantial time to review because of
how it is organized. Therefore, the EPA
is also proposing and taking comment
on format requirements. If information
is presented in the same format,
including the same order, in all
petitions, the EPA anticipates this
standard organization could reduce
review time as the general location of
specific details would be the same in
every petition received. These proposed
format requirements could also help
petitioners better understand what is,
and what isn’t, necessary in an effective
title V petition. To that end, the EPA
proposes the use of a standard format
following the same order as previously
identified in the list of required petition
content. Regulatory language to this
effect is included in the proposed new
provision, 40 CFR 70.12. If finalized,
templates and/or guidance are planned
for development for inclusion on the
title V petitions Web site.
Further, the EPA is requesting input
from the public on several specific
questions related to potentially
establishing page limits for title V
petitions, as explained further in
Section IV.C.4 of this notice. While the
EPA has received petitions ranging from
approximately 3 to 82 pages (excluding
attachments), the length for most
petitions is in the range of 20 to 30. The
amount of detail required to
successfully raise a claim and meet the
demonstration standard may depend on
the complexity of the issue. However,
we expect that most claims could be
written effectively and succinctly, as
demonstrated in the example claim that
follows.
2. Example Claim
The following paragraphs contain an
example of a concise and effective
presentation of a hypothetical single
claim that would be part of a larger
petition—one that includes all pieces of
required content for a claim proposed in
this rule. Because this is only a sample
claim, not a sample petition, it does not
include some of the required content
that relates to the petition as a whole
(such as identifying information for the
proposed permit). This example is
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organized following the order presented
in the proposed required content
changes identified previously, which is
also the proposed standard format. The
bullets highlight each element of the
proposed content requirements.
Although EPA is providing this
sample claim to illustrate how the
material that would be required under
the proposed regulatory revisions could
be presented succinctly and effectively,
the information that is needed to satisfy
the demonstration burden for any given
petition claim will vary depending on
the specifics of the claim, the applicable
requirements, and the underlying
permit terms and record. The following
hypothetical claim is provided solely for
purposes of illustration:
to satisfy that requirement under part 70
because monitoring only once annually
for the engines units is inadequate to
assure compliance with an hourly
emission limit.
• Specific Grounds for Objection,
Including Citation to Permit Term
Facility X’s title V permit lacks
monitoring sufficient to assure
compliance with the 4.5 pound per hour
(lb/hr) nitrogen dioxide (NOX) emission
limitation of the approved State
Implementation Plan (SIP) at 30 State
Administrative Code 66.54.2.
Specifically, Permit Condition I.D.26
requires that NOX emissions from
Facility X’s combustion units (Units 1–
6 and 11–14) cannot exceed 4.5 pounds
of NOX per hour. Permit Condition
II.D.105 requires once-per-year portable
analyzer monitoring for Units 1–6 and
11–14. The permit contains no other
testing, monitoring, recordkeeping, or
reporting requirements on these units,
and contains no other monitoring that
could be used determine compliance
with the 4.5 lb/hr NOX emission limit
for the units.
• Analysis of State’s Response
In responding to Petitioners’ comment
stating that the frequency of the permit’s
compliance monitoring for the
compressor engines’ 4.5 lb/hour NOX
limit was inadequate to assure
compliance with the permit term, state
agency asserted that ‘‘all that the title V
provisions in 30 State Administrative
Code 66.55.5(b) and the parallel
requirements in 40 CFR 70.6(a)(3)(i)(B)
require is periodic monitoring sufficient
to yield reliable data that are
representative of the source’s
compliance with the permit. Continuous
monitoring is not required.’’ [RTC) at 8;
Petition Exhibit B at 8]. The RTC states
that state agency’s monitoring protocol
for this unit type requires ‘‘quarterly
portable analyzer testing on units with
catalytic converters and annual testing
on units without controls.’’ Id. The RTC
then concludes that ‘‘[b]ecause the
portable analyzer test is a short term
test, it demonstrates compliance with
the emission limits for that time period.
Due to the steady state operation of
these units, state agency believes that
the portable analyzer testing along with
proper operation and maintenance of
the units provides reasonable
demonstration of compliance with
hourly NOX and CO emission limits.’’
Id. Although state agency asserts that it
included NOX monitoring in accordance
with its monitoring protocols for
engines, state agency’s RTC does not
adequately explain how the monitoring
in Facility X’s permit is sufficient to
assure compliance with the hourly NOX
limit in Permit Condition I.D.26.
As explained, state agency is relying
on the portable analyzer test results as
a snapshot sampling of emissions to
confirm annually whether the units
continue to meet their 4.5 lb/hour NOX
limits. Between annual portable
analyzer tests, state agency relies on
assumptions of steady state operation
• Applicable Requirement or Part 70
Requirement Not Met
CAA section 504(c), and the
implementing regulations in 40 CFR
70.6(c)(1) and 70.6(a)(3)(i)(B), requires
all title V permits to contain monitoring
requirements to assure compliance with
permit terms and conditions. See also
30 State Administrative Code 66.55.5(b)
and (c) (same requirements in state’s
approved title V program). The permit
does not meet this requirement as
explained in the following analysis.
• Inadequacy of the Permit Term
The SIP-approved NOX limitation
does not include any periodic
monitoring requirements, so 40 CFR
70.6(a)(3)(i)(B) requires state agency to
add periodic monitoring sufficient to
yield reliable data from the relevant
time period that are representative of
the source’s compliance with the
permit. The monitoring added by the
state in Permit Condition II.D.105 fails
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• Public Participation Procedure Not
Provided
This petition does not claim that any
public participation procedures were
not provided.
• Issue Raised in Public Comments
Public Group Y (Petitioners) raised
this issue on page 5 of the July 31, 2015
comment letter it submitted on Facility
X’s July 1, 2015 draft title V permit. (See
Public Group Y Comments at 5; Petition
Exhibit A at 5.)
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and ‘‘proper operation and maintenance
of the units’’ to provide a ‘‘reasonable’’
demonstration of compliance with
hourly NOX emission limits. The RTC,
however, does not identify any permit
terms or conditions that require proper
operation and maintenance of the units;
nor does it provide an explanation (or
appropriate citation to the technical
discussion) of why it believes its
assumptions about steady-state
operations are reasonable for this
equipment, or explain how such
assumptions, in conjunction with an
annual emissions test, constitute
monitoring that demonstrates
compliance with a short term limit.
Accordingly, the EPA must grants the
petition on this claim.
3. Why is the EPA proposing this
change?
The CAA and part 70 regulations
currently provide little information on
what a title V petition must or should
contain. In fact, the primary
requirement in CAA section 505(b)(2) is
that a petition (with a few identified
exceptions) must be based on objections
that were raised with reasonable
specificity during the public comment
period for the permit, and that is the
only specific requirement for petition
content in the relevant regulation. See
CAA section 505(b)(2) and 40 CFR
70.8(d). As a result, the content and
format of petitions have varied widely.
In the agency’s experience, many
petitions fail to include key pieces of
information, making it more timeconsuming and resource-intensive for
the EPA to assess the claim. Many
petitions are also convoluted, include
extraneous or irrelevant information, or
fail to present the key information in a
logical progression, making it difficult
for the agency to ascertain the specific
issue being raised. Contributing to the
confusion, petitions frequently include
large sections of text that appear to have
been developed for other reasons and
are not relevant to raising or evaluating
a claim about a specific flaw in the title
V permit or permitting process.
One of the EPA’s desired outcomes for
this proposed rule is to provide
direction to petitioners that will assist
them with preparing petitions. The
agency anticipates receiving petitions
that are both more concise and clear and
that contain all the key relevant
material, so that the EPA does not have
to search for fundamental information
or attempt to decipher the petitioner’s
intent. These proposed revisions are
intended to facilitate a more effective
petition development process and a
more efficient petition review and
response process, which are critical in
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this context because CAA section
505(b)(2) requires the agency to grant or
deny a petition within 60 days.
Similarly, this tight timeframe makes it
imperative that a petitioner make a clear
and concise demonstration that can be
efficiently evaluated. By proposing to
create obligations related to the content
and structure of a petition, the EPA
anticipates receiving petitions that more
clearly articulate the petition claim and
the basis for it, focusing on key
information, including the alleged
deficiency in the permit or permit
process; the applicable requirements
under the CAA or requirements under
part 70 that are in question; and where
the issue was raised during the public
comment period (or a demonstration as
to why it was impracticable to do so or
that the grounds for the objection arose
after the public comment period closed),
how the state responded, and why that
response did not adequately address the
issue.
These proposed rules are consistent
with statements and conclusions that
the EPA has made in previous orders
responding to title V petitions. The EPA
has identified and emphasized the
importance of such key pieces of
information in assessing petitioners’
claims that a title V permit or permit
process does not assure compliance
with applicable requirements under the
CAA or under part 70. For context,
examples of some of these orders were
discussed in Section III.D of this notice.
The EPA is proposing to add petition
content requirements that would make
certain information mandatory in
petitions. These requirements would
help clarify for petitioners specific
information that is useful or necessary
to evaluate a petition claim. The EPA
anticipates that these mandatory
petition content requirements and
standard formatting would help
petitioners to succinctly focus their
claims and present them effectively. The
EPA anticipates that these proposed
changes could also decrease the
instances in which the Administrator
denies a petition because the petitioner
did not provide an adequate
demonstration. The agency believes
these changes would help petitioners to
hone their claims to include the
appropriate information and to realize
when a claim does not meet the
mandatory requirements and should not
be included in the petition (e.g., the
state adequately addressed the issue in
its RTC).
The EPA expects the proposed
revisions to require mandatory content
to improve the efficiency of the agency’s
review process for title V petitions, as
the key information would be presented
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in a clear and succinct fashion.
Similarly, the agency expects that the
proposed revisions to require similar
organization for all petitions could
reduce agency review time as a result of
having the specific information in the
same format in every petition received.
Increasing the efficiency of the review
process, and more specifically reducing
the time it takes to review petitions, are
consistent with Congress’s intent that
the petition process proceed in a timely
and expeditious fashion, as indicated by
the 60-day time frame for the
Administrator to grant or deny petitions
provided in CAA section 505(b)(2). See
Citizens Against Ruining the
Environment, 535 F.3d at 678 (noting
that because the limited time frame
Congress gave the EPA for permit
review ‘‘may not allow the EPA to fully
investigate and analyze contested
allegations, it is reasonable in this
context for the EPA to refrain from
extensive fact-finding’’).
Moreover, as discussed in more detail
in Section III.D of this notice, the EPA
has explained in previous title V orders
the importance of the demonstration
burden in determining whether or not to
grant an objection in response to a
petition. See, e.g., Nucor II Order at 4–
7. The Act does not dictate all the
information that must be included or
the format in which that information
should be presented; nor does it address
what kind of showing must be made in
order to demonstrate that an objection is
warranted. Courts have determined that
the term ‘‘demonstrates’’ in CAA section
505(b)(2) is ambiguous and have
accordingly deferred to the EPA’s
reasonable interpretation of that term.
See, e.g., MacClarence, 596 F.3d at 1131
(finding the EPA’s expectation that a
petition provide ‘‘references, legal
analysis, or evidence’’ a reasonable
interpretation of the term
‘‘demonstrates’’ under CAA section
505(b)(2)). The proposed changes are
aimed in part at helping petitioners
ensure that they are including
information in their petitions that is
necessary to satisfy the demonstration
burden, under the EPA’s interpretation.
Furthermore, these proposed
revisions to the part 70 rules related to
mandatory petition content and format
fall within the EPA’s inherent discretion
to formulate procedures to discharge its
obligations under CAA section
505(b)(2), as discussed in Section IV.A
of this notice. Similar procedural
requirements have been established for
other EPA programs and processes,
including the procedures for appeals
filed with the Environmental Appeals
Board (EAB). See 78 FR 5281 (2013)
(adopting revisions to ‘‘codify current
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D. Proposed Administrative Record
Requirements
procedural practices, clarify existing
review procedures, and simplify the
permit review process’’).
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4. Request for Comment
Comments are requested on all
aspects of these proposed revisions. The
EPA is proposing changes to part 70 to
include mandatory petition content and
format to facilitate the efficient review
of issues raised in petitions. The EPA
requests comment on all aspects of the
required petition content in the
proposed 40 CFR 70.12, including the
requirement to provide all key
information, arguments, or analysis in
the petition, rather than incorporating it
by reference. The agency also requests
comments on the proposed requirement
that the petition format follow the same
order as the proposed list of required
content, as well as the proposed
revision to the regulatory language in 40
CFR 70.8(d) that requires that copies of
the petition be provided to the
permitting authority and the applicant.
The EPA is also requesting comment
on whether or not page limits should be
established for title V petitions, as a
means of promoting concise petitions
and to further facilitate efficient and
expeditious review of petitions by the
EPA. Procedural requirements
specifying the maximum length of
submissions have been instituted for
processes such as the EAB appeal
process, where petitions and response
briefs may not exceed an identified
word or page limit. See 40 CFR
12419(d)(3) (limiting petitions and
response briefs to either 14,000 words or
alternatively, a 30-page limit). Based on
the EPA’s assessment of petitions
received to date, most claims could be
written effectively and succinctly in one
or two pages. However, we recognize
that some claims are more complex and
could benefit from more space for an
effective demonstration. If page limits
were established in the final rules,
petitioners would need to include the
mandatory required content (if
finalized) while adhering to a specified
page limit. We also request comments
on the following questions: if a page
limit is established, what would be an
adequate number of pages, excluding
attachments, for a complete but concise
petition? Would a page limit in the
range of 15–20 or 20–30 pages be
reasonable excluding attachments?
What would be an adequate number of
pages for a complete but concise claim?
When responding to these questions, the
EPA requests that commenters provide
a rationale or basis for their responses.
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1. Proposed Revisions
The EPA proposes to revise 40 CFR
70.7 to require a permitting authority to
respond in writing to significant
comments received during the public
participation process for a draft permit.
The agency is proposing a regulatory
revision to 40 CFR 70.8 that would
require a written response to all
significant comments (RTC) and the
statement of basis document to be
included as part of the proposed permit
record that is sent to the EPA for its
review under CAA section 505(b)(1).14
Finally, the EPA proposes to revise 40
CFR 70.4(b), 70.7(h), and 70.8(a) to
specifically identify the statement of
basis document as a necessary part of
the permit record throughout the
permitting process. If no significant
comments are received during the
public comment period, the permitting
authority should prepare and submit to
EPA for its 45-day review a statement to
that effect.
a. Response to Comments
Under the existing 40 CFR 70.7(h)(5),
a permitting authority is required to
keep a record of the commenters and
also of the issues raised during the
public participation process so that the
Administrator may fulfill the obligation
under CAA section 505(b)(2) of the Act
to determine whether a title V petition
may be granted. This provision also
requires that such records shall be
available to the public. The EPA is
proposing regulatory language to revise
40 CFR 70.7 to add a new requirement
that a permitting authority respond in
writing to significant comments from
the public participation process for a
draft title V permit.15 Significant
comments in this context include, but
are not limited to, comments that
concern whether the title V permit
includes terms and conditions
addressing federal applicable
requirements, including monitoring and
related recordkeeping and reporting
requirements. If no significant
14 While most permitting authorities prepare a
separate RTC document, the response to significant
comments may also be included within a statement
of basis. Likewise, the statement of basis may be
part of the title V permit, rather than a separate
document. As long as there is clear indication that
the RTC and statement of basis are provided along
with the proposed permit, and where they can be
found in the submission, the EPA will commence
its 45-day review period.
15 The EPA is aware that many permitting
authorities elect to respond to all comments. While
the EPA is proposing to require that permitting
authorities must respond to all significant
comments, the Agency’s proposal is not intended to
discourage permitting authorities from that practice.
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comments are received during the
public comment period the permitting
authority should prepare a statement to
that effect.
b. Statement of Basis
The statement of basis document,
which provides the legal and factual
basis for the permit terms or conditions,
is a necessary component for an
effective permit review. Under the
current regulations, permitting
authorities are required to send this
‘‘statement of basis’’ to the EPA and ‘‘to
any other person who requests it.’’ 40
CFR 70.7(a)(5). The EPA recently
compiled best practices for developing
and preparing statement of basis
documents in the April 2014 guidance
document, Implementation Guidance on
Statement of Basis Requirements Under
the Clean Air Act Title V Operating
Permits Program.16 In most situations,
the permitting authority makes the
statement of basis document available
for the public comment period on the
draft permit (at least 30 days long), for
the EPA’s 45-day review, and during the
60-day petition period.
To address any occasions where it
may be absent during the permit
issuance process, the EPA now proposes
to add language to the part 70
regulations that would reaffirm its
importance and require its inclusion at
all points in the permit review process
for every permit. To that end, we are
proposing that 40 CFR 70.4(b), 70.7(h)
and 70.8(a) would be revised to
specifically identify the statement of
basis document as a required document.
c. Incorrect Reference
The EPA proposes one additional
change to 40 CFR 70.4(b) to amend an
incorrect reference. Specifically, the
language in 40 CFR 70.4(b)(3)(viii)
currently reads: ‘‘[t]he contents of a part
70 permit shall not be entitled to
protection under section 115(c) of the
Act.’’ However, section 115(c) of the Act
pertains to reciprocity related to
statutory provisions addressing
endangerment of public health or
welfare in foreign countries from air
pollution emitted in the United States.
Therefore, the EPA proposes to revise
the citation in 40 CFR 70.4(b)(3)(viii) to
section 114(c) of the Act, which pertains
to the availability of records, reports,
and information to the public. This
change ensures the regulations comport
with the parallel provision in the
section 503(e) of the CAA, which states
16 Memorandum from Stephen D. Page, Director,
Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, U.S.
EPA, to Regional Air Division Directors, April 30,
2014. Available at: https://www.epa.gov/sites/
production/files/2015-08/documents/20140430.pdf.
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that: ‘‘The contents of a permit shall not
be entitled to protection under section
7414(c) of this title.’’
d. Commencement of EPA 45-Day
Review Period
The agency considers both the
statement of basis and the written RTC
to be integral components of the permit
record. Having access to these
documents during the agency’s 45-day
review period could improve the
efficiency of the review, and also
ensures that the agency has these
critical parts of the record before it in
reviewing a proposed permit under
CAA section 505(b)(1). Further, it
ensures that these documents are
completed and available during the
petition period under CAA section
505(b)(2). The EPA is proposing
revisions to part 70 to require that any
proposed permit that is transmitted to
the agency must include both the
statement of basis and written RTC
among the necessary information as
described in 40 CFR 70.8. The agency is
proposing that the 45-day review period
would not begin until all the supporting
information listed in the proposed
revisions to 40 CFR 70.8(a)(1)(i) has
been received by the EPA. This includes
the proposed permit, statement of basis,
and the written RTC (or when no
significant comments are received
during the public comment period a
statement to that effect). Finally, the
EPA proposes to revise 40 CFR
70.7(h)(7) to require that within 30 days
of sending the proposed permit to the
EPA, that permitting authorities must
provide notification that the proposed
permit and the response to significant
public comments are available to the
public. Such notice must explain how
these materials may be accessed.
The EPA recognizes that some
permitting authorities run the 30-day
public comment period and 45-day EPA
review period concurrently, as long as
no significant comments are received.
Under this proposal such a practice
could continue, but if a significant
public comment is received, the
Administrator would no longer consider
the submitted permit as a proposed
permit. In such instances, the permitting
authority must make any necessary
revisions to the permit or permit record,
and per the regulations proposed in this
notice, resubmit the proposed permit to
EPA with the RTC and statement of
basis, and any other required supporting
information, with any revisions that
were made to address the public
comments, to re-start the EPA’s 45-day
review period. This reflects the EPA’s
understanding of how such concurrent
permitting programs currently operate.
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e. Notification to the Public
Because the petition period runs from
the end of the EPA’s 45-day review
period, and the date a proposed permit
is received by the EPA is not always
apparent, the petition deadline is not
always readily apparent. To date, the
agency has encouraged permitting
authorities to provide notifications to
the public or interested stakeholders
regarding the timing of proposal of
permits to the EPA, for example by
making that information available either
online or in the publication in which
public notice of the draft permit was
given. At this time, the agency is
considering and requests comment on
the best method for the public to be
made aware of the date that a proposed
permit is received by the EPA, as well
as the deadline to submit a petition on
a particular proposed permit. The EPA
proposes to post when a proposed
permit is received and the
corresponding 60-day deadline for
submitting a petition on the EPA
Regional Office Web sites.
2. Why is the EPA proposing this
change?
Section 505(a)(1)(B) of the CAA
requires in relevant part that permitting
authorities transmit to the
Administrator each proposed permit.
The current regulations contain the
same requirement in 40 CFR 70.8(a)(1).
Failure to submit any information
necessary for the adequate review of the
proposed permit is grounds for an
objection. See 40 CFR 70.8(c)(3)(ii). Part
70 also currently requires that the
permitting authority provide a statement
of basis that sets forth the legal and
factual basis for the draft permit
conditions (including references to the
applicable statutory and regulatory
provisions). See 40 CFR 70.7(a)(5).
As a general matter, initial and
renewed title V permits are developed
by a permitting authority and then go
through a public notice and comment
period. The draft permit may undergo
some revisions based on the public
comment period and this updated
version of the permit, referred to as the
proposed permit, is sent to the EPA for
a 45-day review period per CAA section
505(b)(1). Many permitting authorities
already send a written RTC and a
statement of basis along with the
proposed permit for the EPA 45-day
review. However, there are other
permitting authorities that do not;
instead this information may be
provided by these permitting authorities
at some point later in the permitting
process. When these documents, and
the RTC document in particular, are
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57839
unavailable for the EPA review period,
the EPA cannot provide a fully effective
review. Moreover, when these
documents are unavailable to the public
following the EPA’s review, potential
petitioners may be missing necessary
information to determine whether to
submit a petition or to provide a full
argument in support of any issues they
may raise in a petition.
Notably, the EPA’s 45-day review
period under the current rules begins
when the EPA has received the
proposed permit and ‘‘all necessary
information’’ from the permitting
authority. 40 CFR 70.8(c). With regard to
the availability of necessary information
for the agency’s 45-day review of a
proposed permit, the EPA stated in the
proposal to the original title V
regulations that the agency believes it
can object to the issuance of permit
where the materials submitted by the
permitting authority do not provide
enough information to allow a
meaningful EPA review of whether the
proposed permit is in compliance with
requirements of the Act (including the
SIP). If the agency was not able to object
under these circumstances, the EPA’s
oversight rule could be severely
hampered. 56 FR 21750 (1991). The EPA
continues to interpret the Act in this
way and provides part of the rationale
for these proposed revisions to the
regulations.
In reviewing title V petitions, the EPA
generally pays careful attention to the
permitting authority’s RTC. The EPA
also explained the benefits of making
the written RTC available during its 45day review period in 2014 in the Hu
Honua Order:
[P]roviding the entire record for a Proposed
Permit at the beginning of the EPA’s 45-day
review period serves to enhance the EPA’s
review of the Proposed Permit by providing
a fuller understanding of the permitting
history and the state’s rationale for its
permitting decisions. Where the entire record
is available at the beginning of the 45-day
review period, the EPA has the benefit of
understanding the permitting history and the
state’s rationale for its permitting decisions.
Likewise, where the entire record is available
at the beginning of the public’s 60-day
window to submit petitions to the
Administrator, the public has the benefit of
understanding the permitting history and the
state’s rationale for its permitting decisions.
Providing the entire record before the start of
the public’s 60-day petition period would
allow the public to better assess any issues
with the permit that they may have
identified.
See, In the Matter of Hu Honua
Bioenergy Facility, Order on Petition
No. IX–2001–1 (July 2, 2014) at 30.
As noted in Section III.D.5 of this
notice under general principles of
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administrative law, it is incumbent
upon an administrative agency to
respond to significant comments raised
during the public comment period. See,
e.g., Home Box Office v. FCC, 567 F.2d
9, 35 (D.C. Cir. 1977) (‘‘the opportunity
to comment is meaningless unless the
agency responds to significant points
raised by the public.’’) It is to the benefit
of the permitting authority to respond to
significant comments, as it is an
opportunity to further refine the permit
record and/or articulate the authority’s
rationale. As the issues raised in a title
V petition must generally be raised with
reasonable specificity during the
comment period, responding to
comments gives the permitting authority
a chance to address any issues that may
become the basis for a petition.
Generally speaking, in order to make the
demonstration required under CAA
505(b)(2), a petitioner is expected to
address the permitting authority’s final
decision and reasoning, including any
response in the RTC. See MacClarence,
596 F.3d at 1132–33; see also, e.g., In
the Matter of Noranda Alumina, LLC,
Order on Petition No. VI–2011–04
(December 14, 2012) at 20–21 (denying
title V petition issue where petitioners
did not respond to state’s explanation in
response to comments or explain why
the state erred or the permit was
deficient); In the Matter of Kentucky
Syngas, LLC, Order on Petition No. IV–
2010–9 (June 22, 2012) at 41 (denying
title V petition issue where petitioners
did not acknowledge or reply to state’s
response to comments or provide a
particularized rationale for why the
state erred or the permit was deficient).
However, if the state has not responded
to the comment, there is nothing for the
petitioner to address. If the written RTC
is not available during the petition
period, it may not be clear how the
petitioner would be able to address the
permitting authority’s response in its
petition. Similarly, if a permitting
authority has not adequately articulated
its rationale for a particular permitting
action that rationale may not be evident
to the EPA from the permit record and
a petitioner may be able to easily
demonstrate that the articulated
rationale is inadequate to support the
action. For these reasons, without the
availability of the written RTC during
the petition period, there may be an
increased likelihood of granting a
particular claim on the basis that the
state provided an inadequate rationale
or permit record.
While many permitting authorities
submit the RTC and statement of basis
with a title V proposed permit, these
proposed revisions, if finalized, would
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promote national consistency and the
availability of the RTC document during
the EPA 45-day review and the 60-day
window in which a petition may be
submitted on the proposed permit. This
proposed requirement would allow a
petitioner to better determine whether
flaws in the permit, permit record, or
public participation procedures raised
during the public comment period had
been adequately addressed. In turn, this
would enhance a petitioner’s confidence
in its judgment whether a title V
petition is warranted, because it would
have the benefit of the permitting
authority’s rationale for permit terms
and permit actions. Thus, it could
facilitate resolution of issues earlier in
the permitting process and may reduce
the number of petitions or petition
claims filed. Further, when properly
implemented by permitting authorities,
the agency anticipates that this
proposed requirement would likely
reduce the number of EPA
determinations to grant a petition
because a permitting authority’s
rationale is inadequate. The EPA is
proposing this regulatory change to
ensure that petitioners have the
opportunity to address the permitting
authority’s response to comment in
order to meet their demonstration
burden. As such, these proposed
revisions are supported by and would
help implement the EPA’s interpretation
in this context of the ambiguous term
‘‘demonstrate’’ under CAA section
505(b)(2). See MacClarence, 596 F.3d at
1132–33 (finding the EPA’s expectation
that a petitioner challenge a permitting
authority’s final reasoning as reflected
in the statement of basis of the permit
a reasonable interpretation of the
demonstration requirement).
These proposed changes are
responsive to recommendations from
the CAAAC Title V Task Force Final
Report. The 2006 report included a
number of recommendations for
implementation improvements,
including specific recommendations
regarding public notification and public
participation in the title V process. The
majority of Task Force members agreed
that if a permitting authority receives
comments on a draft permit, it is
essential that the permitting authority
prepare a written response to comments.
See Title V Task Force Final Report
Recommendation 1 at page 238. The
majority of Task Force members also
recommended that if a permitting
authority received public comments
(from anyone other than the permittee)
during the public comment period, the
RTC described in Recommendation 1
should be provided to the EPA for
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consideration during its 45-day review
period. See Title V Task Force Final
Report Recommendation 2 at 239.
While the Act does not expressly
require the submission of the RTC and
statement of basis together with the
proposed permit, it also does not
preclude such a requirement or
prescribe the specific materials that are
needed to review a proposed permit. In
light of the focus of CAA section
505(b)(2) on issues raised with
reasonable specificity during the
comment period, it is reasonable to
interpret the Act to include a
requirement that would allow the EPA
and the public access to materials such
as the RTC and statement of basis that
would allow them to evaluate the issues
raised with reasonable specificity
during the comment period and the
permitting authority’s response.
The agency believes these proposed
revisions to the part 70 rules are within
the EPA’s inherent discretion to
formulate procedures to discharge its
obligations under CAA sections
505(b)(1) and 505(b)(2), as discussed in
Section IV.A of this notice. If finalized,
it would help the EPA more efficiently
review both proposed permits and title
V petitions.
3. Request for Comment
Comments are requested on all
aspects of these proposed revisions.
Comments are specifically requested on
the proposed regulatory language
requiring the preparation of a written
RTC. Additionally, the EPA requests
comment on all aspects of the proposal
to require both the written RTC and
statement of basis be included in the
record that is sent with the proposed
title V permit for the EPA’s 45-day
review. The EPA is expressly taking
comment on the best method(s) for
proposed permits to be made available
so that the public is aware when a
proposed permit is received by the EPA
for its 45-day review. States are also
encouraged to provide information on
whether any changes to state rules and
programs would be necessary if this
proposed revision to part 70 were
finalized. The EPA is also expressly
taking comment on the practices of
permitting authorities that conduct
concurrent review and is particularly
interested in what processes or steps
should be followed to allow for
concurrent review, even if the
permitting authority is not aware of
whether or not it will receive comment
on the title V permit when that permit
is initially submitted to EPA. Finally,
the EPA solicits comments on the
proposed regulatory language in 40 CFR
70.4, 70.7, and 70.8 requiring the
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statement of basis is necessary or
appropriate to ensure the document is
available at all stages of the permit
issuance process, or whether including
it in fewer provisions would be
adequate (and if so, which ones).
V. Pre- and Post-Petition Process
Information/Guidance
In this section of the notice, the EPA
is providing information on certain
steps in the title V petition process,
namely the permit issuance process that
occurs before a petition is submitted,
and the post-petition process, which
occurs after the EPA grants an objection
on at least one issue in a petition. The
EPA anticipates this information will
help stakeholders gain a better
understanding of the role a petition
might play in the development of a
permit that assures compliance with
applicable requirements under the CAA
and part 70. Most of what follows has
been addressed publicly in various
formats, but the EPA believes that
repeating this information here for the
public’s convenience will provide
stakeholders with a comprehensive look
at the petition opportunity in CAA
section 505(b)(2) and 40 CFR 70.
A. Recommended Practices for
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1. Recommended Practices for
Permitting Authorities
The proposed changes in Section IV.D
of this notice are intended to increase
the effectiveness of the EPA 45-day
review as well as ensure that the full
permit record is before petitioners
during the 60-day petition period.
Making these documents available also
provides an opportunity for a permitting
authority to ensure that they have fully
responded to comments when preparing
the proposed permit. Permitting
authorities have at least three
opportunities to provide the permit
record and ensure that it comports with
the CAA: the draft, proposed, and final
permit.
While the EPA is not requiring the
following actions, the agency is
recommending practices for permitting
authorities when preparing title V
permits. In the agency’s experience,
these practices can minimize the
likelihood that a petition will be
submitted on a title V permit. Many
involve taking action at an appropriate
time to ensure that the permit includes
the conditions to assure compliance
with applicable requirements under the
CAA and part 70. In addition, many
focus on consulting with the
appropriate EPA Regional Office early
when preparing and issuing permits.
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These ‘‘recommended practices’’
include:
Æ Consulting with the appropriate
EPA Regional Office as needed on key
aspects of the permit before the draft
permit stage, especially if the permit is
expected to be highly visible or
contested.
Æ On a case-by-case basis,
considering whether a particular draft
permit warrants outreach to the
community.
Æ On a case-by-case basis,
considering whether it is appropriate to
provide for a public participation
opportunity on a revised draft permit.
Æ Fully addressing significant
comments on draft permits and ensuring
the permit or permit record includes
adequate rationale for the decisions
made. For example, permitting
authorities should provide sufficient
rationale for selected monitoring to
assure compliance. The EPA’s
objections based on an inadequate
record most often occur when the EPA
finds that a permitting authority did not
sufficiently explain why the monitoring
was sufficient to assure compliance
with a particular limit.
Æ Consulting with the appropriate
EPA Regional Office as needed to
resolve issues related to comments on
draft permits and incorporating those
resolutions into the proposed permits.
Æ Consulting with the appropriate
EPA Regional Offices as needed to
resolve issues related to the EPA
objections or comments on proposed
permits and incorporating those
resolutions into the final permits.
Æ For petitions on which the EPA
grants an objection on a claim because
the record is inadequate, revising the
record and permit as necessary and in
a timely manner to resolve the
objection.
Æ Reviewing permits that are the
subject of a petition and revising or
reopening for cause to address any
issues raised by the petition that have
not been resolved.
Æ Posting the proposed permit and
RTC online where possible.
2. Recommended Practices for Permit
Applicants
The EPA is providing the following
recommended practices for a source to
consider to help ensure that its permit
includes the conditions to assure
compliance with applicable
requirements under the CAA and part
70. In some cases, this may minimize
the likelihood that a petition will be
submitted on its title V permit. These
‘‘recommended practices’’ include:
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Æ Submitting permit applications that
include all information required under
the approved title V permit program.
Æ Consulting with the permitting
authority when any discrepancy or
inaccuracy is identified in the permit, at
any stage of the permitting process.
Æ Promptly providing any updates to
the permit application to the permitting
authority.
Æ If public comments identify an
issue in the draft permit, contacting the
permitting authority to make revisions
to address the concern before the permit
is proposed to the EPA.
Æ Timely responding to inquiries
from the permitting authority at each
stage in the permitting process,
including the draft, proposed, and final
stages.
B. Post-Petition Process
The following discussion provides
information about the activities that
occur, or may occur, after the EPA
responds to a title V petition. Various
stakeholders have indicated there can be
confusion around the appropriate steps
following an EPA petition order,
particularly when the Administrator
granted the petition in whole or in part.
The summary below describes EPA’s
interpretation of key provisions of the
CAA and implementing regulations.
This interpretation has already been
shared publicly in title V orders
responding to petitions. See, e.g., In the
Matter of Public Service of New
Hampshire Schiller Station, Order on
Petition Number VI–2014–04 (July 28,
2015) at 4; In the Matter of Meraux
Refinery, Order on Petition Number VI–
2012–04 (May 29, 2015) at 7–10. In the
interest of providing additional
transparency and clarity for the title V
petition process, and for the public’s
convenience, the EPA repeats that
interpretation in the following
paragraphs.
When the EPA objects to a proposed
permit under CAA section 505(b),
section 505(b)(3) instructs that a
permitting authority ‘‘may not issue the
permit unless it is revised and issued’’
in accordance with section 505(c) of the
Act. If the permit has already been
issued by the permitting authority
before it receives the objection, then the
EPA ‘‘shall modify, terminate, or
revoke’’ the permit, and the permitting
authority may then only issue a revised
permit in accordance with section
505(c) of the Act.
Under CAA section 505(c), if the
permitting authority fails to submit a
permit revised to meet the
Administrator’s objection within 90
days after the objection, the
Administrator must issue or deny the
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permit in accordance with the
requirements under title V. Section
505(c) further provides that no objection
is subject to judicial review until the
Administrator takes final action to issue
or deny the permit.
Neither CAA section 505(b)(3) nor
section 505(c) provide express direction
as to the specific procedures and steps
the EPA must use to ‘‘modify, terminate,
or revoke’’ or ‘‘issue or deny’’ the
permit, though section 505(c) points
generally to the requirements under title
V. Although the Act is ambiguous, the
implementing regulations shed some
light on the process. Those regulations
provide a state with 90 days to resolve
the EPA’s objection and terminate,
modify, or revoke and reissue the
permit, before the EPA would need to
begin to act on the permit. 40 CFR
70.8(d), 70.7(g)(4)–(5); see also 40 CFR
71.4(e) (the EPA will take permitting
action under part 71, when, among
other things, a state fails to respond to
the EPA’s objection). A permitting
authority may address an EPA objection
by, among other things, providing the
EPA with a revised permit. See, e.g., 40
CFR 70.7(g)(4). In some cases, the
permitting authority’s response to an
EPA objection may not involve a
revision to the permit terms and
conditions themselves, but may instead
involve revisions to the permit record.
As an example, a permitting authority
might opt to include additional
rationale and detail to support its
decision in response to the EPA’s
objection if such objection was based on
the grounds that the permit record does
not adequately support the permitting
authority’s decision. Whether the
permitting authority submits revised
permit terms, a revised permit record, or
other revisions to the permit, the
permitting authority’s response is
generally treated as a new proposed
permit.17
17 When the permitting authority decides to
modify a permit in order to resolve an EPA
objection, it must go through the appropriate
procedures for that modification. For example,
when the permitting authority’s response to an
objection is a change to the permit terms or
conditions or a revision to the permit record, the
permitting authority should determine whether its
response is a minor modification or a significant
modification to the title V permit, as described in
40 CFR 70.7(e)(2) and (4) or the corresponding
regulations in the state’s EPA-approved title V
program. If the permitting authority determines that
the modification is a significant modification, then
the permitting authority must provide for notice
and opportunity for public comment for the
significant modification consistent with 40 CFR
70.7(h). In other words, EPA’s view that the state’s
response to an EPA objection is a generally treated
as a new proposed permit does not alter the
procedures for making the changes to the permit
terms or condition or permit record that are
intended to resolve EPA’s objection.
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As described in previous title V
orders, such as the 2013 Nucor II Order,
the EPA has generally treated the
permitting authority response as a new
proposed permit which is subject to the
agency’s opportunity to conduct a 45day review per CAA 505(b)(1) and 40
CFR 70.8(c), and an opportunity for a
petition if the EPA does not object. As
stated in the Nucor II Order:
[T]he EPA viewed the revised permit as
providing the EPA an opportunity to object
to the permit under CAA section 505(b)(l)
and 40 CFR 70.8(c), and, when the EPA did
not object, an opportunity for a citizen to
petition the EPA to object under CAA section
505(b)(2) and 40 CFR 70.8(d). The EPA has
also treated state responses to EPA objections
that revised the permit record to provide
further support for its decision as
constituting new proposed permits subject to
review by the EPA under CAA section
505(b)(1) and 40 CFR 70.8(c), and, absent an
EPA objection, citizen petition under CAA
section 505(b)(2) and 40 CFR 70.8(d). See,
e.g., In the Matter of KerrMcGee/Anadarko
Petroleum Corp., Frederick Compressor
Station, Order on Petition VIII–2008–02, at
2–3 (Oct. 8, 2009); In the Matter of Anadarko
Petroleum Corp., Frederick Compressor
Station, Order on Petition VIII–2010–4, at 4–
5 (Feb. 2, 2011). A permitting authority’s
rationale for its permit terms is a
fundamental component of its permit
decision. Accordingly, the EPA has viewed a
state response to an EPA objection that
buttresses its basis for its permit decision as
a new proposed permit for purposes of CAA
section 505(b) and 40 CFR 70.8(c) and (d).
Nucor II Order at 14.
The EPA’s interpretation that a state’s
response to an EPA objection generally
triggers a new EPA review and petition
opportunity is consistent with, and a
reasonable interpretation of, the
statutory and regulatory process for
addressing objections by the EPA, as
explained previously. Accordingly, at
the end of the 45-day review period, if
the EPA does not object, there is a 60day window in which there is an
opportunity for a second petition. If a
second petition is received, the EPA
must respond to the petition within 60
days under CAA section 505(b)(2).
VI. Implementation
Costs associated with this proposed
rule are expected to be minimal. Much
of the focus in this proposal is to codify
the established practice that has been
publicly discussed and evolved over
time. If finalized, the revisions should
impose no costs on petitioners, and may
reduce confusion over and the time
necessary for preparing a title V
petition. The agency anticipates that a
small number of permitting authorities
may need to amend their rules regarding
permit issuance to require responses to
significant comments and the submittal
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of those responses with the proposed
permit that is sent to the EPA for
review.
The existing part 70 regulations
provide for state program revisions if
part 70 is revised and the EPA
determines such conforming changes
are necessary. 40 CFR 70.4(a) and
70.4(i). The EPA is soliciting comment
as to whether revisions to any approved
state programs would be necessary if the
revisions to part 70 regulations
proposed in this notice are finalized.
States are expressly encouraged to
provide information on any changes to
state rules and programs that may be
necessary if the proposed revisions to 40
CFR 70.7(h) and 70.8 are finalized to
require permitting authorities to
respond in writing to all significant
comments raised during the public
participation process and to provide
that response to the EPA for the
agency’s 45-day review period.
VII. Proposed Determination of
Nationwide Scope and Effect
Section 307(b)(1) of the CAA indicates
which Federal Courts of Appeal have
venue for petitions of review of final
agency actions by the EPA under the
CAA. This section provides, in part, that
petitions for review must be filed in the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit (i) when the agency
action consists of nationally applicable
regulations promulgated, or final actions
taken, by the Administrator; or (ii) when
such action is locally or regionally
applicable, if the action is determined to
be of nationwide scope or effect and the
Administrator publishes such a
determination. The EPA proposes to
find and publish that this rule is based
on a determination of nationwide scope
and effect. This proposed rule concerns
revisions to the EPA’s regulations in
part 70 for operating permit programs,
and these regulations apply to
permitting programs across the country.
Accordingly, we propose to determine
that this is a rulemaking of nationwide
scope or effect such that any petitions
for review must be filed in the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia Circuit.
VIII. Environmental Justice
Considerations
This action proposes certain revisions
to part 70 regulations to improve the
title V petition submittal, review and
response processes. The proposed
revisions and guidance provided in this
rule should increase the transparency
and clarity of the petition process for all
stakeholders. First, the establishment of
centralized petition submittal is
expected to reduce or eliminate
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confusion over where to submit a
petition. When using the preferred
method of an electronic petition
submittal through the agency’s
electronic submittal system, a petitioner
will also have immediate assurance that
the petition and any attachments were
received. However, alternative submittal
methods are still available options for
members of the public that experience
technical difficulties when trying to
submit a petition or for those that do not
have access to electronic submittal
mechanisms. Second, the proposed
required content and format provides
instruction and clarity on what must be
included in a petition. This change is
anticipated to assist petitioners in
providing all the critical information in
their petitions in an effective manner,
which may increase the agency’s
efficiency in responding to petitions.
Third, the proposed regulatory changes
would require permitting authorities to
respond to public comments in a
written document that is provided to the
EPA for the agency’s 45-day review and
is available during the 60-day
opportunity to file a title V petition,
which will provide increased
availability of information regarding
permits for the public in general and
petitioners specifically. Further, this
change may provide more timely
notification of pertinent steps and
documents in the permit issuance
process. Fourth, the recommended
practices for permitting authorities and
sources, if followed, may improve the
quality of public participation and the
operating permits being issued. Finally,
the description of the post-petition
process is anticipated to reduce
confusion regarding the appropriate
steps when the EPA grants a petition for
an objection on a particular issue. This
proposed action does not compel any
specific changes to the requirements to
provide opportunities for public
participation in permitting nor does it
finalize any particular permit action that
may affect the fair treatment and
meaningful involvement of all people.
Further, this proposed action is
responsive to some of the feedback
received during the Environmental
Justice in Permitting workshops the
agency provided in the North
Birmingham area on September 15 and
16, 2014 and other such meetings held
in EPA’s Region 4.
In preparation for this proposal, the
agency participated in community calls
where the EPA presented a brief
overview and announcement of the
rulemaking effort. The EPA provided
additional details about a planned
webinar that will describe the title V
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petition process, the content of this
proposal, and when and how to submit
comments.
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government.
IX. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant action
and was, therefore, not submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action would not impose any
new information collection burden
under the PRA. OMB has previously
approved the information collection
activities contained in the existing
regulations and has assigned OMB
control number 2060–0243 for the title
V part 70 program. To the extent that a
SIP revision or a title V program
revision is necessary to effect the
changes being proposed, we believe that
the burden is already accounted for
under the approved information
collection requests noted earlier.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the RFA. This proposed action
would not impose any requirements
directly on small entities. Entities
potentially affected directly by this
proposal include anyone that chooses to
submit a title V petition on a proposed
title V permit prepared by an EPAapproved state, local or tribal title V
permitting authority. Other entities
directly affected may include state,
local, and tribal governments and none
of these governments are small
governments. Other types of small
entities are not directly subject to the
requirements of this action.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded federal mandate of $100
million or more as described in UMRA,
2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and would not
significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. This proposed action
imposes no enforceable duty on any
state, local or tribal governments or the
private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial
direct effect on the states, on the
relationship between the national
government and the states, or on the
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This action has tribal implications.
However, it will neither impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
federally recognized tribal governments,
nor preempt tribal law. The Southern
Ute Indian Tribe has an EPA-approved
operating permit program under 40 CFR
part 70 and could be impacted. The EPA
conducted outreach to the tribes
through a call with the National Tribal
Air Association. Further, the agency
plans to offer consultation to all tribal
governments, and will specifically offer
to consult with the Southern Ute Indian
tribe. The EPA solicits comment from
affected tribal governments on the
implications of this proposed
rulemaking.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order
13045 as applying to those regulatory
actions that concern environmental
health or safety risks that the EPA has
reason to believe may
disproportionately affect children, per
the definition of ‘‘covered regulatory
action’’ in section 2–202 of the
Executive Order. This proposed action
is not subject to Executive Order 13045
because it does not concern an
environmental health risk or safety risk.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions
Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13211, because it is not a
significant regulatory action under
Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve
technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes the human health
and environmental risk addressed by
this proposed action will not have
potential disproportionately high and
adverse human health or environmental
effects on minority, low-income or
indigenous populations. The results of
this evaluation are contained in Section
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VIII of this notice titled, ‘‘Environmental
Justice Considerations.’’
K. Determination Under Section 307(d)
Section 307(d)(1)(V) of the CAA
provides that the provisions of CAA
section 307(d) apply to ‘‘such other
actions as the administrator may
determine.’’ Pursuant to CAA section
307(d)(1)(V), the Administrator
determines that this proposed action is
subject to the provisions of CAA section
307(d).
VIII. Statutory Authority
The statutory authority for this
proposed action is provided by 42
U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 70
Environmental protection,
Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Intergovernmental
relations, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Dated: August 15, 2016.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, title 40, Chapter I of the Code
of Federal Regulations is proposed to be
amended as set forth below.
PART 70—STATE OPERATING PERMIT
PROGRAMS
1. The authority citation for the part
70 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
2. Section 70.4 is amended by revising
paragraph (b)(3)(viii) to reads as follows:
■
§ 70.4 State program submittals and
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(b) * * *
(3) * * *
(viii) Make available to the public any
permit application, statement of basis,
compliance plan, permit, and
monitoring and compliance certification
report pursuant to section 503(e) of the
Act, except for information entitled to
confidential treatment pursuant to
section 114(c) of the Act. The contents
of a part 70 permit itself shall not be
entitled to protection under section
114(c) of the Act.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Section 70.7 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraphs (h)(2) and (5);
and
■ b. Adding paragraphs (h)(6) and (7).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
§ 70.7 Permit issuance, renewal,
reopenings, and revisions.
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(h) * * *
(2) The notice shall identify the
affected facility; the name and address
of the permittee; the name and address
of the permitting authority processing
the permit; the activity or activities
involved in the permit action; the
emissions change involved in any
permit modification; the name, address,
and telephone number of a person from
whom interested persons may obtain
additional information, including copies
of the draft permit, statement of basis for
the draft permit, the application, all
relevant supporting materials, including
those set forth in § 70.4(b)(3)(viii), and
all other materials available to the
permitting authority that are relevant to
the permit decision; a brief description
of the comment procedures required by
this part; and the time and place of any
hearing that may be held, including a
statement of procedures to request a
hearing (unless a hearing has already
been scheduled);
*
*
*
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*
(5) The permitting authority shall
keep a record of the commenters and of
the issues raised during the public
participation process, as well as records
of the written comments submitted
during that process, so that the
Administrator may fulfill his obligation
under section 505(b)(2) of the Act to
determine whether a citizen petition
may be granted, and such records shall
be available to the public.
(6) The permitting authority shall
respond in writing to all significant
comments raised during the public
participation process, including any
such written comments submitted
during the public comment period and
any such comments raised during any
public hearing on the permit. If no
significant comments are raised during
the public participation process, the
permitting authority shall prepare a
written statement to that effect.
(7) The permitting authority shall give
notice within 30 days of transmitting
the proposed permit to the
Administrator, consistent with the
procedures under paragraph (h)(1) of
this section, that the proposed permit in
accordance with § 70.8(a)(1) and
responses to public comments in
accordance with paragraph (h)(6) of this
section have been transmitted to the
EPA, the date of the transmission, and
that these documents are available to
the public. Such notice shall explain
how the public may access the proposed
permit and responses to comments.
When possible, such notice shall
include notification in the same manner
used to announce the availability of the
draft permit for public comment.
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4. Section 70.8 is amended by revising
paragraphs (a)(1), (c)(1) and (d) to read
as follows:
■
§ 70.8 Permit review by EPA and affected
States.
(a) Transmission of information to the
Administrator. (1) (i) The permit
program shall require that the
permitting authority provide to the
Administrator a copy of each permit
application (including any application
for significant or minor permit
modification), the statement of basis for
each proposed permit and for each final
permit, each proposed permit, each final
permit, the written response to
comments (which shall include a
written response to all significant
comments raised during the public
participation process on the draft permit
and recorded under § 70.7(h)(5), or if no
significant comments are received, a
statement to that effect), and an
explanation of how those public
comments and the permitting
authority’s responses are available to the
public. The applicant may be required
by the permitting authority to provide a
copy of the permit application
(including the compliance plan) directly
to the Administrator. Upon agreement
with the Administrator, the permitting
authority may submit to the
Administrator a permit application
summary form and any relevant portion
of the permit application and
compliance plan, in place of the
complete permit application and
compliance plan. To the extent
practicable, the preceding information
shall be provided in computer-readable
format compatible with EPA’s national
database management system. The
Administrator’s 45-day review period
for this proposed permit will not begin
until the proposed permit and all
necessary supporting material required
under this paragraph have been received
by the EPA.
(ii) In instances where the
Administrator has received a proposed
permit from a permitting authority
before the public participation process
on the draft permit has been completed,
and the permitting authority receives a
significant comment on the draft permit
after the submission of the proposed
permit to the Administrator, the
Administrator will no longer consider
the submitted proposed permit as a
permit proposed to be issued under
section 505 of the Act. In such
instances, the permitting authority must
make any revisions to the permit or
permit record necessary to address the
public comments, including preparation
or revision of the response to comment
document, and must re-submit the
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proposed permit and all necessary
supporting material required in
paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section to the
Administrator after the public comment
period has closed. The Administrator’s
45-day review period for this proposed
permit will not begin until the proposed
permit and all necessary supporting
material required under paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of this section have been
received by the EPA.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(1) The Administrator will object to
the issuance of any proposed permit
determined by the Administrator not to
be in compliance with applicable
requirements or requirements under this
part. No permit for which an application
must be transmitted to the
Administrator under paragraph (a) of
this section shall be issued if the
Administrator objects to its issuance in
writing within 45 days of receipt of the
proposed permit and all necessary
supporting information required under
paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
*
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*
(d) Public petitions to the
Administrator. The program shall
provide that, if the Administrator does
not object in writing under paragraph (c)
of this section, any person may petition
the Administrator within 60 days after
the expiration of the Administrator’s 45day review period to make such
objection. The petitioner shall provide a
copy of such petition to the permitting
authority and the applicant. Any such
petition shall be based only on
objections to the permit that were raised
with reasonable specificity during the
public comment period provided for in
§ 70.7(h), unless the petitioner
demonstrates that it was impracticable
to raise such objections within such
period, or unless the grounds for such
objection arose after such period. If the
Administrator objects to the permit as a
result of a petition filed under this
paragraph, the permitting authority
shall not issue the permit until EPA’s
objection has been resolved, except that
a petition for review does not stay the
effectiveness of a permit or its
requirements if the permit was issued
after the end of the 45-day review
period and prior to an EPA objection. If
the permitting authority has issued a
permit prior to receipt of an EPA
objection under this paragraph, the
Administrator will modify, terminate, or
revoke such permit, and shall do so
consistent with the procedures in
§ 70.7(g) (4) or (5) (i) and (ii) except in
unusual circumstances, and the
permitting authority may thereafter
issue only a revised permit that satisfies
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EPA’s objection. In any case, the source
will not be in violation of the
requirement to have submitted a timely
and complete application.
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■ 5. Section 70.12 is added to read as
follows:
§ 70.12
Public Petition Requirements.
Standard petition requirements. Each
public petition sent to the Administrator
under 70.8(d) of this part shall include
the following elements in the following
order:
(a) Identification of the proposed
permit on which the petition is based.
The petition shall provide the permit
number, version number, or any other
information by which the permit can be
readily identified. The petition shall
specify whether the permit action is an
initial permit, a permit renewal, or a
permit modification/revision, including
minor modifications/revisions.
(b) Sufficient information to show that
the petition was timely filed.
(c) Identification of Petition Claims.
Any issue raised in the petition as
grounds for an objection shall be based
on a claim that the permit, permit
record, or permit process is not in
compliance with applicable
requirements or requirements under this
part. All pertinent information in
support of each issue raised as a petition
claim shall be contained within the
body of the petition. In determining
whether to object, the Administrator
will not consider arguments, assertions,
claims, or other information
incorporated into the petition by
reference. For each claim raised, the
petition shall identify the following:
(1) The specific grounds for an
objection, citing to a specific permit
term or condition where applicable.
(2) The applicable requirement as
defined in § 70.2, or requirement under
part 70, that is not met.
(3) An explanation of how the term or
condition in the permit, or relevant
portion of the permit record or permit
process, is not adequate to comply with
the corresponding applicable
requirement or requirement under part
70.
(4) If the petition claims that the
permitting authority did not provide for
a public participation procedure
required under § 70.7(h), the petition
must identify specifically the required
public participation procedure that was
not provided.
(5) Identification of where the issue
was raised with reasonable specificity
during the public comment period
provided for in § 70.7(h), citing to any
relevant page numbers in the public
comment submitted to the permitting
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57845
authority and attaching this public
comment to the petition. If the grounds
for the objection were not raised with
reasonable specificity during the public
comment period, the petitioner must
demonstrate that such grounds arose
after that period, or that it was
impracticable to raise such objections
within that period, as required under
§ 70.8(d).
(6) Unless the grounds for the
objection arose after the public
comment period or it was impracticable
to raise the objection within that period
such that the exception under § 70.8(d)
applies, the petition must identify
where the permitting authority
responded to the public comment,
including page number(s) in the
publicly available written response to
comment, and explain how the
permitting authority’s response to the
comment is inadequate to address the
issue raised in the public comment. If
the response to comment document
does not address the public comment at
all, the petition shall state that.
■ 6. Section 70.13 is added to read as
follows:
§ 70.13 Documents that May be
Considered in Reviewing Petitions.
The information that the
Administrator considers in making a
determination whether to grant or deny
a petition submitted under § 70.8(d) on
a proposed permit generally includes,
but is not limited to, the Administrative
Record for the proposed permit and the
petition, including attachments to the
Petition. For purposes of this paragraph,
the Administrative Record for a
particular proposed permit includes the
draft and proposed permits; any permit
applications that relate to the draft or
proposed permits; the statement of bases
for the draft and proposed permits; the
permitting authority’s written responses
to comments, including responses to all
significant comments raised during the
public participation process on the draft
permit; relevant supporting materials
made available to the public according
to § 70.7(h)(2); and all other materials
available to the permitting authority that
are relevant to the permitting decision
and that the permitting authority made
available to the public according to
§ 70.7(h)(2). If a final permit and a
statement of basis for the final permit
are available during the agency’s review
of a petition on a proposed permit, those
documents may also be considered as
part of making a determination whether
to grant or deny the petition.
■ 7. Section 70.14 is added to read as
follows:
E:\FR\FM\24AUP1.SGM
24AUP1
57846
§ 70.14
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 164 / Wednesday, August 24, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Submission of Petitions.
Any petition to the Administrator
shall be submitted through the
Operating Permits Group in the Air
Quality Policy Division in the Office of
Air Quality Planning and Standards,
using one of the three following
methods identified at the Title V
Petitions Web site: An electronic
submission through the EPA’s
designated submission system (the
agency’s preferred method); an
electronic submission through the EPA’s
designated email address listed on that
Web site; or a paper submission to the
EPA’s designated physical address
listed on that Web site. Any necessary
attachments shall be submitted together
with the petition, using the same
method as for the petition. Once a
petition has been successfully submitted
using one of these three methods, the
petitioner should not submit additional
copies of the petition using another
method. The Administrator is not
obligated to consider petitions
submitted to the agency using any
method other than the three identified
in this paragraph.
[FR Doc. 2016–20029 Filed 8–23–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 721
[EPA–HQ–OPPT–2016–0491; FRL–9951–06]
RIN 2070–AB27
Significant New Use Rule on Certain
Chemical Substances
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
EPA is proposing significant
new use rules (SNURs) under the Toxic
Substances Control Act (TSCA) for two
chemical substances which were the
subject of premanufacture notices
(PMNs). This action would require
persons who intend to manufacture
(defined by statute to include import) or
process any of the chemical substances
for an activity that is designated as a
significant new use by this proposed
rule to notify EPA at least 90 days before
commencing that activity. The required
notification initiates EPA’s evaluation of
the intended use within the applicable
review period. Manufacture and
processing for the significant new use is
unable to commence until EPA has
conducted a review of the notice, made
an appropriate determination on the
notice, and taken such actions as are
mstockstill on DSK3G9T082PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:02 Aug 23, 2016
Jkt 238001
required in association with that
determination.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before September 23, 2016.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–OPPT–2016–0491, by
one of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Do not submit electronically any
information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute.
• Mail: Document Control Office
(7407M), Office of Pollution Prevention
and Toxics (OPPT), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460–0001.
• Hand Delivery: To make special
arrangements for hand delivery or
delivery of boxed information, please
follow the instructions at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets/contacts.html.
Additional instructions on
commenting or visiting the docket,
along with more information about
dockets generally, is available at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
For technical information contact:
Kenneth Moss, Chemical Control
Division (7405M), Office of Pollution
Prevention and Toxics, Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20460–0001;
telephone number: (202) 564–9232;
email address: moss.kenneth@epa.gov.
For general information contact: The
TSCA-Hotline, ABVI-Goodwill, 422
South Clinton Ave., Rochester, NY
14620; telephone number: (202) 554–
1404; email address: TSCA-Hotline@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this action if you manufacture, process,
or use the chemical substances
contained in this proposed rule. The
following list of North American
Industrial Classification System
(NAICS) codes is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
to help readers determine whether this
document applies to them. Potentially
affected entities may include:
Manufacturers (including importers)
or processors of one or more subject
chemical substances (NAICS codes 325
and 324110), e.g., chemical
manufacturing and petroleum refineries.
This action may also affect certain
entities through pre-existing import
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
certification and export notification
rules under TSCA. Chemical importers
are subject to the TSCA section 13 (15
U.S.C. 2612) import certification
requirements promulgated at 19 CFR
12.118 through 12.127 and 19 CFR
127.28. Chemical importers must certify
that the shipment of the chemical
substance complies with all applicable
rules and orders under TSCA. Importers
of chemicals subject to these SNURs
must certify their compliance with the
SNUR requirements. The EPA policy in
support of import certification appears
at 40 CFR part 707, subpart B. In
addition, any persons who export or
intend to export a chemical substance
that is the subject of this proposed rule
on or after September 23, 2016 are
subject to the export notification
provisions of TSCA section 12(b) (15
U.S.C. 2611(b)) (see § 721.20), and must
comply with the export notification
requirements in 40 CFR part 707,
subpart D.
B. What should I consider as I prepare
my comments for EPA?
1. Submitting CBI. Do not submit this
information to EPA through
regulations.gov or email. Clearly mark
the part or all of the information that
you claim to be CBI. For CBI
information in a disk or CD–ROM that
you mail to EPA, mark the outside of the
disk or CD–ROM as CBI and then
identify electronically within the disk or
CD–ROM the specific information that
is claimed as CBI. In addition to one
complete version of the comment that
includes information claimed as CBI, a
copy of the comment that does not
contain the information claimed as CBI
must be submitted for inclusion in the
public docket. Information so marked
will not be disclosed except in
accordance with procedures set forth in
40 CFR part 2.
2. Tips for preparing your comments.
When preparing and submitting your
comments, see the commenting tips at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets/
comments.html.
II. Background
A. What action is the agency taking?
EPA is proposing these SNURs under
TSCA section 5(a)(2) for two chemical
substances which were the subject of
PMNs P–14–321 and P–14–323. These
SNURs would require persons who
intend to manufacture or process any of
these chemical substances for an
activity that is designated as a
significant new use to notify EPA at
least 90 days before commencing that
activity.
E:\FR\FM\24AUP1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 164 (Wednesday, August 24, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 57822-57846]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-20029]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 70
[EPA-HQ-OAR-2016-0194; FRL-9951-09-OAR]
RIN 2060-AS61
Revisions to the Petition Provisions of the Title V Permitting
Program
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) proposes to
revise its regulations to streamline and clarify processes related to
submission and review of title V petitions. This notice covers five key
areas, each of which should increase stakeholder access to and
understanding of the petition process and aid the EPA's review of
petitions. First, the EPA is proposing regulatory provisions that
provide direction as to how petitions should be submitted to the
agency. Second, the EPA is proposing regulatory provisions that
describe the expected format and minimum required content for title V
petitions. Third, the proposal clarifies that permitting authorities
are required to respond to significant comments received during the
public comment period for draft title V permits, and to provide that
response with the proposed title V permit to the EPA for the agency's
45-day review period. Fourth, guidance is provided in the form of
``recommended practices'' for various stakeholders to help ensure title
V permits have complete administrative records and comport with the
requirements of the Clean Air Act (CAA or Act). Fifth, to increase
familiarity with the post-petition process, this notice presents
information on the agency's interpretation of certain title V
provisions of the CAA and its implementing regulations regarding the
steps following an EPA objection in response to a title V petition, as
previously discussed in specific title V orders.
DATES: Comments: Comments must be received on or before October 24,
2016.
Public Hearing: If anyone contacts EPA requesting a public hearing
on or before September 6, 2016, we will hold a public hearing.
Additional information about the hearing would be published in a
subsequent Federal Register notice.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2016-0194, to the Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments. Once submitted, comments cannot be edited or withdrawn. The
EPA may publish any comment received to its public docket. Do not
submit electronically any information you consider to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other information the disclosure of which
is restricted by statute. Multimedia submissions (audio, video, etc.)
must be accompanied by a written comment. The written comment is
considered the official comment and should include discussion of all
points you wish to make. The EPA will generally not consider comments
or comment contents located outside of the primary submission (i.e., on
the Web, Cloud, or other file sharing system). For additional
submission methods, the full EPA public comment policy, information
about CBI or multimedia submissions, and general guidance on making
effective comments, please visit https://www2.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Questions concerning these proposed
rule revisions should be addressed to Ms. Carrie Wheeler, U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards, Air Quality Planning Division, (C504-05), Research Triangle
Park, NC 27711, telephone number (919) 541-9771, email at
wheeler.carrie@epa.gov. To request a public hearing or information
pertaining to a public hearing on the proposed regulatory revisions,
contact Ms. Pamela Long, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office
of Air Quality Planning and Standards, Air Quality Policy Division,
(C504-01), Research Triangle Park, NC 27711; telephone number (919)
541-0641; fax number (919) 541-5509; email address: long.pam@epa.gov
(preferred method of contact).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The information presented in this document
is organized as follows:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
B. What should I consider as I prepare my comments for the EPA?
C. How can I find information about a possible hearing?
[[Page 57823]]
D. Where can I obtain a copy of this document and other related
information?
II. Overview of Proposed Regulatory Revisions and Information in
This Notice
III. Background
A. The Title V Operating Permits Program
B. Statutory and Regulatory Basis for This Proposal
C. Title V Petition Process and Content
D. Prior Interpretations and Applications of the Title V
Provisions
IV. Proposed Revisions to Title V Regulations
A. Additional Legal Background for the Proposed Revisions to the
Part 70 Rules
B. Electronic Submittal of Petitions
C. Required Petition Content and Format
D. Proposed Administrative Record Requirements
V. Pre- and Post-Petition Process Information/Guidance
A. Recommended Practices for Complete Permit Records
B. Post-Petition Process
VI. Implementation
VII. Proposed Determination of Nationwide Scope and Effect
VIII. Environmental Justice Considerations
IX. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations.
K. Determination Under Section 307(d)
X. Statutory Authority
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
Entities potentially affected directly by the proposed revisions to
the EPA's regulations include anyone who intends to submit a title V
petition on a proposed title V permit prepared by a state, local or
tribal title V permitting authority pursuant to its EPA-approved title
V permitting program. Entities also potentially affected by this rule
include state, local and tribal permitting authorities responsible for
implementing the title V permitting program. Entities not directly
affected by this proposed rule include owners and operators of major
stationary sources or other sources that are subject to title V permit
requirements, as well as the general public who would have an interest
in knowing about title V permitting actions and associated public
hearings but do not intend to submit a petition.
B. What should I consider as I prepare my comments for the EPA?
1. Submitting CBI. Do not submit this information to the EPA
through https://www.regulations.gov or email. Clearly mark the specific
information that you claim to be CBI. For CBI in a disk or CD-ROM that
you mail to the EPA, mark the outside of the disk or CD-ROM as CBI and
then identify electronically within the disk or CD-ROM the specific
information that is claimed as CBI. Information so marked will not be
disclosed except in accordance with procedures set forth in 40 CFR part
2. In addition to one complete version of the comment that includes
information claimed as CBI, a copy of the comment that does not contain
the information claimed as CBI must be submitted for inclusion in the
public docket.
2. Tips for preparing comments. When preparing and submitting your
comments, see the commenting tips at https://www.epa.gov/dockets/comments.html.
C. How can I find information about a possible public hearing?
To request a public hearing or information pertaining to a public
hearing, contact Ms. Pamela Long, Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, by phone at (919) 541-
0641 or by email at long.pam@epa.gov.
D. Where can I obtain a copy of this document and other related
information?
In addition to being available in the docket, an electronic copy of
this Federal Register document will be posted at the regulations
section of our Title V Operating Permits Web site, under Regulatory
Actions, at https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/current-regulations-and-regulatory-actions. A ``track changes'' version of the
full regulatory text that incorporates and shows the full context of
the proposed changes to the existing regulations in this proposal is
also available in the docket for this rulemaking.
II. Overview of Proposed Regulatory Revisions and Information in This
Notice
Title V of the CAA establishes an operating permit program. Section
505 of the CAA requires permitting authorities to submit a proposed
title V permit to the EPA Administrator for review for a 45-day review
period before issuing the permit as final. The Administrator shall
object to issuance of the permit within that 45-day review period if
the Administrator determines that the permit contains provisions that
are not in compliance with the applicable requirements under the CAA.
If the Administrator does not object to the permit during the 45-day
EPA review period, any person may petition the Administrator within 60
days after the expiration of the 45-day review period to take such
action (hereinafter ``title V petition'' or ``petition''). The title V
petition provisions of the current implementing regulations found at 40
CFR part 70 largely mirror the CAA, and have not been revised since
original promulgation in 1992. With 20 years of experience with title V
petitions as well as feedback from various stakeholders, the agency is
now proposing changes to 40 CFR part 70 intended to provide clarity and
transparency to the petition process, and to improve the efficiency of
that process.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The revisions proposed in this rule only impact 40 CFR part
70, which applies to federally-approved state, local, and tribal
operating permit programs; 40 CFR part 71, which covers the title V
operating permit program for permits issued under the EPA's federal
permitting authority, utilizes a different administrative review
process, through the Environmental Appeals Board (EAB). The EAB has
its own review process for title V permits issued under 40 CFR part
71 that is separate and distinct from the process of petitioning the
Administrator for an objection to a 40 CFR part 70 permit; thus,
these proposed changes are intended to streamline and clarify the
EPA's title V petition review process under 40 CFR part 70 only.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The changes proposed and the information provided in the preamble
to the proposal are intended to benefit permitting authorities,
permitted sources, and potential petitioners, as well as the EPA.
Permitting authorities and permitted sources are expected to benefit by
early consultation with the appropriate EPA Regional Office when the
permitting authority is preparing a permit to ensure it includes
conditions that assure compliance with applicable requirements under
the CAA and part 70). These early actions should minimize potential
permit deficiencies and reduce the associated likelihood that a
petition will be submitted on that title V permit.
Potential petitioners are expected to benefit by having better
notification of permits and review deadlines (e.g., the EPA is
proposing to post on EPA Regional Web sites when a proposed permit is
received and the corresponding 60-day deadline for submitting a
petition) and by better
[[Page 57824]]
access to permitting decision information (e.g., the permitting
authority's written response to comments). These updates will clarify
the expected minimum content of petitions and provide a standardized
format, simplifying the process and enhancing the likelihood that
petitions will be clear and complete. In addition, potential
petitioners may also derive a benefit from more efficient responses to
petitions and a better understanding of the process.
The EPA is expected to benefit by improving the agency's ability to
meet its statutory obligations to review proposed permits, respond to
title V petitions and provide more transparency in the title V petition
process. These were concerns expressed by a Clean Air Act Advisory
Committee task force in recommendations provided to the agency in
2006.\2\ The EPA believes that the proposed regulatory revisions and
shared information are responsive to these concerns and could, if
finalized, improve the efficiency of the agency's response.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ In 2004, the Clean Air Act Advisory Committee (CAAAC)
established a Task Force to evaluate the title V program. The 18-
member panel, comprised of industry, state, and environmental group
representatives, identified what Committee members believed was and
was not working well. After hosting public meetings and receiving
written feedback, and compiling the information with the personal
experience of panel members, the Title V Task Force issued a final
report that highlighted concerns and recommendations for
improvement. See, Final Report to the Clean Air Act Advisory
Committee on the Title V Implementation Experience: Title V
Implementation Experience (April 2006). The Title V Task Force Final
Report is available at: https://www.epa.gov/caaac/caaac-reports.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed regulatory revisions described in Section IV of this
notice would, among other things: (1) Provide direction as to how title
V petitions should be submitted to the agency, including encouraging
the use of an electronic submittal system as the preferred (but not
exclusive) method to submit title V petitions; (2) describe mandatory
content and format for title V petitions, which is intended to clarify
the process for petitioners and improve the EPA's ability to review and
act on petitions efficiently; and (3) require permitting authorities to
respond in writing to significant comments received during the public
comment period on a draft title V permit and to provide that written
response to the EPA along with the proposed title V permit at the start
of the EPA's 45-day review period. This proposal also requests comment
on the proposed revisions to the regulations governing the CAA title V
petition process, as well as comment on questions related to
potentially establishing page limits on title V petitions. The proposed
revisions to the 40 CFR part 70 regulations are described more fully in
Section IV of this notice.
Separate from the regulatory revisions proposed in Section IV,
Section V.A of this notice provides guidance on ``recommended
practices'' for permit development for various stakeholders that, when
followed, helps to ensure permits have complete administrative records
and comport with the requirements of the CAA. Lastly, to increase
stakeholder familiarity with the post-petition process, Section V.B.
provides information concerning the agency's interpretation of certain
provisions of title V of the CAA and the implementing regulations at
part 70 regarding the steps following an EPA objection in response to a
title V petition, as previously discussed in specific title V orders.
The following paragraphs briefly provide additional information on each
area.
First, in order to reduce confusion with and add clarity to the
process of submitting title V petitions, the EPA has developed a
centralized point of entry for all title V petitions using an
electronic submittal system. As described in Section IV.A of this
notice, the EPA encourages petitioners to use this electronic system
when submitting title V petitions, which will improve customer service
by allowing for better access to and tracking of petitions. This is the
preferred method identified in the proposed regulatory revisions that
would be acceptable to use to submit a title V petition to the agency.
Alternative methods for submittal are also identified in this notice.
Second, with regard to petition content, the EPA is proposing
regulatory revisions that would specify requirements for mandatory
petition content and standard formatting for all petitions. This is
expected to benefit potential petitioners by ensuring completeness
while promoting streamlining and improving the EPA's ability to review
and act on petitions efficiently. In its orders responding to title V
petitions, the EPA has already identified key elements that are
critical for demonstrating that a title V permit does not assure
compliance with applicable requirements under the CAA or under the part
70 regulations, and has explained their relevance to its
determinations. In this proposal, the EPA is proposing new regulatory
language to codify what has already been discussed in prior orders. If
finalized, petitioners would be expected to follow these requirements
and include this content following a standard format. As described
later in this notice and in the proposed regulatory text, this content
includes identifying where the issue being raised in the title V
petition was raised during the public comment period on the draft title
V permit and addressing the permitting authority's response to the
comment in the petition in order to demonstrate that an objection is
warranted.
Along with the proposed changes and requests for comment regarding
petition content and format in Section IV.B of this notice, the EPA
proposes to add new regulatory language to 40 CFR 70.8 that would
require a petitioner to send a copy of the petition to both the
permitting authority and the permit applicant. The current title V
regulations do not have provisions implementing this requirement of
section 505(b)(2) of the Act. Therefore, this rule proposes to insert a
requirement into the part 70 rules mirroring the Act's requirement in
order to ensure consistency with this provision of the statute.
Third, Section IV.C of this notice contains requirements for
certain procedures related to responding to significant public comments
on the draft title V permit, as well as the administrative record for
and submittal of proposed title V permits to the EPA by permitting
authorities. The changes being proposed now would require that all
permitting authorities respond to significant comments received on
draft permits. The EPA is also proposing that the 45-day review period
under section 505(b)(1) would not begin until the permitting authority
forwards the proposed permit, the written response to comments (RTC) or
statement that no public comments were received, and the statement of
basis document, to the EPA for its review. These changes are expected
to benefit permitting authorities and permitted sources by resulting in
a more complete permit record and greater clarity for all stakeholders.
If finalized, these changes may result in a need to revise at least
some state, local and tribal part 70 programs.
In addition to these three areas, as part of the agency's effort to
share information with stakeholders about the title V petition process,
this notice includes guidance to help ensure permits have complete
administrative records and comport with the requirements of the CAA.
Presented in the form of ``recommended practices'' for stakeholders,
this guidance is shared in the spirit of providing information and
context to give a more comprehensive view of the title V
[[Page 57825]]
petition process, including the time before a petition may be filed.
Following the suggested recommended practices contained in Section V.A
of this notice is expected to positively affect the permit issuance
process resulting in better permits and may reduce the likelihood that
a title V petition will be submitted on a title V permit.
All four of the previously mentioned areas should help to improve
title V permits issued by permitting authorities, promote access to and
provide better understanding of the title V petition process for
potential petitioners, and reduce delays in decisions and support the
agency's efforts to meet its obligations in responding to title V
petitions. The proposed revisions to the part 70 regulations associated
with the first three key areas are anticipated to increase transparency
and add clarity to the title V petition submittal, review, and response
processes. Codifying existing practices into title V regulations of the
CAA is also expected to make the EPA petition review process more
efficient. In addition, providing ``recommended practices'' for
stakeholders, including some related to permit issuance, also increases
transparency and clarity to further improve the stakeholder experience
and understanding surrounding title V petitions.
Section V.B of this notice discusses steps following the EPA's
issuance of an objection in response to a title V petition,
particularly where the state, local, or tribal permitting authority
subsequently amends the permit terms and conditions and/or the permit
record in response to the EPA's objection. This process is often
referred to as the post-petition process. The information provided in
Section V.B reflects interpretations of certain statutory and
regulatory provisions related to this aspect of the title V petition
process that have previously been discussed by the EPA, including in
title V petition orders. This information is repeated as a convenience
to stakeholders and the general public: The agency is not proposing to
alter its interpretation of that process in this notice and the
regulatory revisions proposed in this notice do not relate to or modify
this interpretation. The agency is not soliciting comment on this
interpretation or otherwise reopening or revising the already-issued
title V petition orders or other EPA documents in which it has
previously been discussed. Rather, this discussion is included to
provide additional transparency and clarity.
Finally, as a convenience to stakeholders and the general public,
and to provide context and background that informs how the EPA
determines whether to grant an objection and to promote awareness of
the EPA's existing interpretation of key provisions of section
505(b)(2) of the Act, Section III.D of this notice includes a summary
of some past orders responding to title V petitions and court decisions
addressing the burden on a title V petitioner to demonstrate that an
objection is warranted.
III. Background
A. The Title V Operating Permits Program
Congress amended the CAA in 1990 to add title V, now found at 42
U.S.C. 7661-7661f, to assist in compliance and enforcement of air
pollution controls. CAA Amendments of 1990, Public Law 101-549,
sections 501-507, 104 Stat. 2399, 2635-48 (1990). Before this, the CAA
pollution control requirements that might apply to a particular source
could be found in many different provisions of the Act and its numerous
regulations. As one court opinion has described it: ``Before 1990,
regulators and industry were left to wander through this regulatory
maze in search of the emission limits and monitoring requirements that
might apply to a particular source. Congress addressed this confusion
in the 1990 Amendments by adding title V of the Act, which created a
national permit program that requires many stationary sources of air
pollution to obtain permits that include relevant emission limits and
monitoring requirements.'' Sierra Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d 673, 674 (D.C.
Cir. 2008).
Accordingly, title V of the Act establishes an operating permits
program for major sources of air pollutants, as well as certain other
sources. CAA section 502(a). Under title V of the CAA, states were
required to develop and submit to EPA for approval title V permitting
programs consistent with program requirements promulgated by the EPA.
Those requirements are now found in 40 CFR part 70. Most states,
certain local agencies, and one tribe have approved part 70
programs.\3\ As part of an approved part 70 program, title V of the CAA
requires every major source and certain other sources to apply for and
operate pursuant to an operating permit. CAA sections 502(a) and 503;
see also 40 CFR 70.5(a) and 70.1(b). It further requires that the
permits contain conditions that assure compliance with all of the
sources' applicable requirements under the Act, including the
requirements of the applicable implementation plan. CAA section 504(a);
see also 40 CFR 70.1(b) and 70.6(a)(1).
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\3\ The Southern Ute Indian Tribe has an EPA-approved operating
permit program under 40 CFR part 70.
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Prior to the title V program, CAA requirements for major sources of
air pollutants were implemented in multiple and various ways. As a
lawmaker involved in the 1990 CAA Amendments explained:
Title V creates, for the first time, a unifying permit program
for facilities subject to the [A]ct's various control requirements.
In the past, some provisions of the Clean Air Act--for example, the
nonattainment and PSD new source requirements--were, and will
continue to be, implemented through preconstruction permits. Other
control requirements were effected without Federal, or in some
cases, State permits--for example, NESHAPS and NSPS--although States
often incorporated these requirements into their own permit
programs.\4\
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\4\ 136 Cong. Rec. E3663, E3673 (1990) (Speech of Rep. Michael
Bilirakis), reprinted in Environment and Natural Resources Policy
Division of the Congressional Research Service of the Library of
Congress, 6 A Legislative History of the Clean Air Act Amendments of
1990, at 10768 (1993) [hereinafter CAAA Leg. Hist.].
More specifically, a title V permit must contain enforceable
emission limits and standards, including operational requirements and
limitations, and such other conditions as necessary to assure
compliance with all applicable requirements that apply to the source at
the time of permit issuance, as well as the monitoring, recordkeeping,
and reporting requirements to assure compliance. In sum, the title V
permit program is a vehicle for ensuring that air quality control
requirements are appropriately applied to a source's emission units and
for assuring compliance with such requirements.
For the most part, title V of the CAA does not impose new pollution
control requirements on sources. The definition of ``applicable
requirements'' in the part 70 regulations includes many standards and
requirements that are established through other CAA programs, such as
standards and requirements under sections 111 and 112 of the Act, and
terms and conditions of preconstruction permits issued under the New
Source Review programs. 40 CFR 70.2. Once those air quality control
requirements are established in those other programs, they are
incorporated into a source's title V permits as appropriate. Hence, a
title V permit is a comprehensive document that identifies all the
specific CAA requirements that must be met by a source in order to
operate. Developing
[[Page 57826]]
such a comprehensive document can be a complex process that involves
some harmonization of all the source's applicable requirements. As a
lawmaker involved in the 1990 CAA Amendments explained:
The creation of the new permit program in title V provides an
opportunity and an obligation for EPA to harmonize the substantive
provisions of the other titles in this complex legislation. Many of
the same sources and pollutants will be controlled under multiple
titles--the same facilities and pollutants will often be controlled
under the hazardous air pollutant, nonattainment, and acid rain
programs. EPA must make every effort to harmonize and prevent
unproductive duplication among those titles. The permit provisions
of title V provide a focus for this harmonization, although title V
does not change, and gives EPA no authority to modify, the
substantive provisions of these other titles.\5\
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\5\ 136 Cong. Rec. E3663, E3673 (1990) (Speech of Rep. Michael
Bilirakis), reprinted in 6 CAAA Leg. Hist., at 10768 (1993).
As this language suggests, in providing an opportunity for
harmonization through title V of the CAA, Congress did not replace or
remove the procedures and requirements for establishing substantive
requirements that exist in other provisions of the CAA. Nor did
Congress alter or supplant the opportunities for public participation
and administrative and judicial review that are found in other CAA
programs, such as those for public participation and judicial review of
certain final agency actions under section 307 of the Act. In addition,
the Act requires that title V permitting programs provide opportunities
for public participation in title V permitting processes and an
opportunity for judicial review in state court. CAA section 502(b)(6);
see also 40 CFR 70.4(b)(3)(x) (judicial review) and 70.7(h) (public
participation). The petition process co-exists with those provisions,
without superseding them.
Although title V of the CAA does not generally impose new pollution
control requirements on sources, it does require that certain
procedural measures be followed especially with respect to assuring
compliance with underlying applicable requirements, and it also
requires sources to pay certain fees. For example, title V of the CAA
requires permits to contain adequate monitoring, recordkeeping, and
reporting provisions to assure sources' compliance with permit terms
and conditions. See CAA 504(c); Sierra Club v. EPA, 536 F.3d 673 (D.C.
Cir. 2008). The part 70 regulations contain monitoring rules designed
to satisfy this statutory requirement. Finally, as an additional
measure to ensure permits are in compliance with the CAA, the title V
program provides for public participation at various steps in the
permitting process, including the opportunity to submit a title V
petition.
B. Statutory and Regulatory Basis for This Proposal
In general terms, as noted above, the title V permit program was a
significant development that established new procedural requirements
for permitting authorities and sources. In crafting the program,
Congress balanced the benefit of a single document that contains all
applicable requirements of the Act with the need to process these
complex documents in an efficient manner. As part of the effort to
promote efficient implementation of the operating permits program, the
provisions relating to title V objections establish an orderly process
with specific deadlines, which give the EPA an opportunity to raise
objections to a title V permit before it is issued and which give any
person the opportunity to timely raise specific issues to the EPA
through a title V petition. In light of the complexities of
implementing a program of title V's scope, a statement of one lawmaker
in the legislative history indicates that the opportunity to
``challenge EPA's failure to object'' through the petition process was
``designed to avoid delays'' while preserving the discretion of both
the EPA and the states.\6\
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\6\ 136 Cong. Rec. E3663, E3675 (1990) (Speech of Rep. Michael
Bilirakis), reprinted in 6 CAAA Leg. Hist. at 10774.
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More specifically, under CAA section 505(a), and the current
implementing regulations found at 40 CFR 70.8(a), permitting
authorities are required to submit each proposed title V permit to the
EPA for review.\7\ Upon receipt of a proposed permit and all necessary
supporting information, the Administrator has 45 days in which to
object to the final issuance of the permit if he/she determines that
the proposed permit is not in compliance with applicable requirements
of the Act, including the requirements of the applicable state
implementation plan (SIP), or part 70 requirements. CAA section
505(b)(1) and 40 CFR 70.8(c)(1).
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\7\ As the part 70 rules in 70.8(c) and (d) largely mirror the
Act's provisions, the statutory and regulatory requirements are
addressed together in this background discussion.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As the EPA explained when proposing the initial title V regulations
in 1991, the Act limits the EPA's opportunity for its initial review
and an objection based on that review to 45 days in order to minimize
delays. 56 FR 21749 (May 10, 1991). If the Administrator objects under
CAA 505(b)(1), he/she must provide a statement of the reasons for the
objection, providing a copy of both the objection and the statement to
the permit applicant. CAA 505(b)(1); see also 40 CFR 70.8(c)(1).
If the Administrator does not object during the 45-day review
period, consistent with section 505(b)(2) of the CAA and 40 CFR
70.8(d), any person may petition the Administrator within 60 days after
the expiration of the EPA's 45-day review period to object to the
permit. The Administrator shall grant or deny such a petition within 60
days after it is filed. CAA section 505(b)(2) establishes several
requirements related to such petitions. Among other things, it provides
that such a petition shall be based only on objections to the permit
that were raised with reasonable specificity during the public comment
period, unless the petitioner demonstrates that it was impracticable to
raise objections during that period or the grounds for objection arose
after completion of the public comment period. It also provides that
the Administrator shall issue an objection if the petitioner
demonstrates that the permit is not in compliance with the requirements
of the CAA, including the requirements of the applicable implementation
plan.
The implementing regulations are found in 40 CFR 70.8(d) and
largely mirror this provision. As the EPA explained in proposing the
initial title V regulations, the title V petition opportunity serves an
important purpose because title V permits are frequently complex
documents, and given the brevity of the agency review period there may
be occasions when the EPA does not recognize that certain permit
provisions are not in compliance with applicable requirements of the
Act. 56 FR 21751 (May 10, 1991). CAA section 505(b)(2) states that the
Administrator ``shall'' object if the petitioner makes the required
demonstration. If the Administrator denies a petition for an objection,
CAA 505(b)(2) provides that denial is subject to judicial review under
CAA section 307; however, under CAA section 505(c), no objection is
subject to judicial review until the Administrator has taken final
action to issue or deny the permit. Further, the requirements under CAA
section 505(b)(2) may not be delegated by the Administrator.
In addition to the provisions of title V, the rulemaking of
provisions under CAA section 307(d) are relevant to this notice. The
Administrator is applying the rulemaking provisions of CAA section
307(d) to the rulemaking discussed in this notice, pursuant to
[[Page 57827]]
CAA section 307(d)(1)(V), which provides that the provisions of 307(d)
apply to ``such other actions as the Administrator may determine.''
C. Title V Petition Process and Content
After 20 years of experience in implementing the title V petition
process, the EPA has identified some general trends in petition content
and aspects of the petition review process that pose challenges for
potential petitioners in preparing petitions and for the EPA in
providing an efficient response to petitions. These are described in
this section of the notice to provide additional context for this
proposal. This proposed rulemaking is aimed in part at increasing
stakeholder access to and understanding of the petition process and
increasing the efficiency of the agency's response to petitions
received and at mitigating some of the factors that contribute to
poorly prepared or incomplete petitions, misunderstanding of applicable
permit and CAA requirements, and longer response times. These factors
include: (1) The lack of administrative requirements around petition
submittals, which results in a variety of inconsistent methods used by
petitioners; (2) the lack of specific rules regarding petition content,
which results in considerable inconsistency in the format and content
of petitions; and (3) the need to often deal with numerous and highly
complex issues that arise in title V petitions given that title V
permits must address many applicable requirements. These include issues
relating to compliance with the requirements of the prevention of
significant deterioration (PSD) permitting program, the hazardous air
pollutant program (i.e., requirements implementing the provisions of
CAA 112), and other air quality issues. For example, petitioners often
raise issues related to compliance with the requirements of the major
and minor preconstruction permit programs, such as the PSD permitting
requirements found in part C of Title I of the Act. This permitting
program has a separate process under the CAA, its implementing
regulations and SIPs, for evaluating applicability of the permitting
requirements, determining the appropriate terms and conditions for
permits, and for public participation and administrative and/or
judicial review of those permits. At times, the PSD issues raised in
the context of a title V petition relate to projects that occurred a
considerable time in the past, and in some situations, the title V
permit record may not contain all the relevant information for
understanding the determinations that were made. For these reasons,
consideration of these issues in the title V petition context can be
time-consuming to research and complex to resolve, even to come to the
seemingly simple determination that the permit record is inadequate.
Further, title V petitions frequently include lengthy arguments that
primarily concern CAA programmatic or policy issues, rather than the
terms of a particular permit.
Over time, petitions have raised increasingly more complex policy,
legal, and technical matters. Through the review of such extensive and
complicated petitions, the petition review process has evolved into a
resource-intensive effort by the EPA. To increase stakeholder
understanding of the title V petition process, help ensure consistent
presentation of critical information in such petitions, and facilitate
more efficient review of them, the EPA is proposing to revise its
regulations to establish procedural parameters which, if finalized,
would govern the title V petition process moving forward. As described
in more detail in Section IV of this notice, this proposal includes
proposed requirements for petition submittal, petition content and
format, and certain administrative record requirements. As mentioned
previously, one of the primary goals of the proposed changes is to
improve stakeholder access to and understanding of the petition process
and improve the agency's ability to meet its statutory obligations to
review proposed permits and respond to title V petitions, in light of
the overall structure of the CAA.
Yet another overarching factor that hampers the current petition
review process is the confusion or lack of familiarity with the process
itself. In the 2006 Title V Task Force Final Report noted earlier, for
example, the CAAAC task force expressed a concern with the lack of
transparency in the title V petition process. This concern has been
echoed in the years since the 2006 report through feedback the agency
has received from various stakeholders. In response, the EPA has tried
to provide more explanation and insight into the title V petition
process in the administrative orders it issues in responding to
petitions. Some of these issues have also been discussed in the
opinions courts have issued in reviewing such EPA orders. However, the
EPA expects that not all stakeholders, including the public, may have
read these response orders or related court decisions.
Therefore, the next section of this notice seeks to provide
additional transparency concerning the petition process by repeating
some of the relevant interpretations of statutory and regulatory
provisions that the EPA has previously explained in title V petition
orders, as well as interpretations of certain provisions related to the
title V petition process provided in judicial opinions. Reiterating
these prior statements concerning the EPA's application and
interpretation of the statute to reviewing title V petitions may also
provide useful context for the proposed changes to 40 CFR part 70,
which are discussed in Section IV of this notice.
D. Prior Interpretations and Applications of the Title V Provisions
This section includes a discussion of certain aspects of the
statutory elements of CAA section 505(b)(2) as well as the implementing
regulations that have previously been interpreted by the EPA and/or
courts. The discussion that follows serves to inform the public,
stakeholders, permitting authorities, and other interested parties of
these interpretations. Although the matters discussed in this section
are available to the public,\8\ and in some cases have been available
for years and/or already subject to judicial review, in the interest of
transparency and clarity, the agency is collecting these
interpretations and judicial decisions in this notice. That information
is repeated here merely as a convenience for the public. The agency is
not in this notice proposing to change these previously-presented
interpretations, soliciting comments on these interpretations, or
reopening the already-issued title V orders or other EPA documents in
which these interpretations were discussed. None of the regulatory
revisions proposed in this notice would alter these interpretations or
the prior title V orders or other EPA documents in which these
interpretations were discussed.
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\8\ The Title V Petitions Database contains petitions and EPA
Orders responding to petitions and is available at: https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/title-v-petition-database.
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1. ``Threshold'' Requirements
Certain of the requirements under CAA section 505(b)(2) related to
petitions are sometimes referred to as ``threshold'' requirements,
which provide some procedural requirements and some limitations on the
scope of title V petitions. These include, for example, that the
petition be filed within 60 days following the agency's 45-day review
period. Another example is the requirement that the petition be based
only on objections to the permit
[[Page 57828]]
that were raised with reasonable specificity during the public comment
period provided by the permitting agency. The agency has previously
addressed these ``threshold'' issues in prior title V orders, and some
of those statements are reiterated in this section.
a. Timeliness
Generally speaking, the first step in the petition response process
is for the agency to ascertain if the petition was timely filed
pursuant to CAA section 505(b)(2). The Act and implementing regulations
at 40 CFR 70.8(d) provide for a 60-day window in which to file a title
V petition, which runs from the expiration of the EPA's 45-day review
period. A petition received after the 60-day petition deadline is not
timely. The agency is aware that because the petition period runs from
the end of the EPA's 45-day review period, and the date a proposed
permit is received by the EPA is not always apparent, the petition
deadline is not always readily apparent. The agency currently
encourages permitting authorities to provide notifications to the
public or interested stakeholders regarding the timing of proposal of
permits to the EPA, for example making that information available
either online, such as Region 4 has done on the EPA Web site, ``Region
4 Proposed Title V Permits and State Contacts,'' \9\ or in the
publication in which public notice of the draft permit was given.
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\9\ EPA Region 4's Web site provides links with lists of permits
that have been proposed and are still under the public petition
deadline, organized by state: https://www.epa.gov/caa-permitting/region-4-proposed-title-v-permits-and-state-contacts.
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b. Reasonable Specificity
The second ``threshold'' requirement described in the statute
regards the content of a petition. CAA section 505(b)(2) requires that,
unless one of the enumerated exceptions applies, the petition must be
based only on objections to the permit that were raised with reasonable
specificity during the public comment period provided by the permitting
agency. Subject to the exceptions contained in the provision, the EPA
understands this statutory language to require that the issues
presented in a petition be raised during the public comment process
with reasonable specificity. Such issues could, however, be raised in
comments filed by a commenter other than the petitioner.
The EPA continues to believe that, as stated in the preamble to the
1991 part 70 proposal, Congress did not intend for petitioners to
create an entirely new record before the EPA that the permitting
authority had no opportunity to address. The requirement to raise
issues ``with reasonable specificity'' places the burden on the
petitioner. Unless there are unusual circumstances, the Petitioner
needs to provide evidence that would support a finding of noncompliance
with the Act to the permitting authority before it is raised in a
petition. See, 56 FR 21712, 21750 (1991).
Where an issue is raised to the EPA in a title V petition without
first raising it with reasonable specificity to the permitting
authority to give it the opportunity to address the issue, the
Administrator has generally denied such claims consistent with the
statutory requirements. The EPA has specifically addressed the
reasonable specificity threshold requirement in a number of title V
petition orders. Some key highlights are summarized next.
In 2013 in the Luminant Order, the EPA responded to a petition that
raised a number of issues, including several that were raised only in
general terms or not raised at all during the public comment period by
any commenter. See, In the Matter of Luminant Generating Station,
Petition, Order on Petition No. VI-2011-05 (January 15, 2013). For
example, the petitioners claimed that the permit in question failed to
identify emission units that were associated with permit by rules to
which the facility was subject. The EPA noted that no mention was made
in the public comments concerning the lack of identification of
emission units, and denied the claim. Id. at 12. The Administrator
similarly denied other claims not raised with reasonable specificity
during the public comment period: The comments did not present evidence
or analysis to support these petition claims, and thus the state had no
opportunity to consider and respond to those claims. Id. at 6, 11, 13,
15. The Luminant Order also included a discussion of the reasonable
specificity standard, that absent unusual circumstances, the
requirement to raise issues ``with reasonable specificity'' places the
burden on the petitioner to bring forward evidence before the State
that would support a finding of noncompliance with the CAA. See id. at
5.
As noted above, the Act contains two enumerated exceptions to the
``reasonable specificity'' requirement. Namely, issues that were not
raised with reasonable specificity during the public comment period can
be raised in a petition if the petitioner demonstrates that it was
impracticable to raise such objections within such period or unless the
grounds for such objection arose after such period. CAA section
505(b)(2). For an issue to fit within one of these exceptions, the
petitioner would have to demonstrate the impracticality, or show that
the grounds arose after the comment period. The EPA has also addressed
this issue in petition orders.
One example is in the 2012 San Juan Generating Station Order, where
the EPA responded to a petition claim that the permit failed to assure
compliance with PSD applicable requirements because it did not address
significant increase of a specific pollutant after a change at the
facility. See In the Matter of Public Service Company Of New Mexico,
San Juan Generating Station (SJGS), Order on Petition VI-2010 (February
15, 2012) at 10. According to the petitioners, these concerns were not
raised during the comment period because the State did not make the
information about the significant emission increase available until
after the public comment period, when the permitting authority noted in
its response to the EPA that the change triggered PSD and expressed its
intent to add a title V compliance schedule to the permit. The
Administrator found that in this case, the petitioners demonstrated
that the grounds arose after the comment period and therefore, the EPA
would consider their claim on this matter. See id. at 10.
c. Scope of Permit Action
Petitions may be submitted on several types of proposed title V
permits, such as proposed initial permits, permit renewals, or permit
revisions, which may include minor or significant modifications to the
title V permit. Some stakeholders have indicated there may be confusion
on the matter of petition opportunities, particularly for minor
modification actions. In cases where the permitting authority has not
provided for a prior public comment period on a minor permit
modification, petitioners can still submit a petition to the
Administrator. 57 FR 32283; see also 40 CFR 70.7(e)(2)(iv) (for a minor
modification, the permitting authority may not issue a final permit
until after EPA's 45-day review period or until EPA has notified the
permitting authority that it will not object, whichever is earlier) and
70.8(e) (a part 70 permit, including a modification, may not be issued
until after EPA has had an opportunity to review the proposed permit as
required under this section). As the EPA may receive a petition on
different types of proposed title V permits, it is important for the
agency to be able to identify the
[[Page 57829]]
particular action of concern to the petitioner.
Under CAA section 505(b)(2), a petition pertains to a particular
permit. Thus, the EPA must be able to discern from the petition what
permit action the petition is based on in order to review and respond
to it. The EPA has interpreted the potential scope of the petition as
related to the scope of the permit action that is the basis of the
petition. In the 1992 preamble to the final part 70 rule, the EPA
explained that public objections to an initial permit, permit revision,
or permit renewal must be germane to the applicable requirements
implicated by the permitting action in question. For example,
objections raised on a portion of an existing permit that would not in
any way be affected by a proposed permit revision would not be germane.
57 FR 32250, 32290/3 (July 21, 1992). Consistent with CAA section
505(b)(2), the EPA has considered the scope of the permit proceeding in
reviewing petitions and denied petitions that concern issues that are
outside the scope of the permit proceeding. See, e.g., In the Matter of
Wisconsin Public Service Corporation's JP Pulliam Power Plant (Order in
response to Petition Number V-2012-01) (January 7, 2013) at 8; In the
Matter of Consolidated Environmental Management, Inc.--Nucor Steel
Louisiana, Order on Petition Numbers VI-2010-05, VI-2011-06 and VI-
2012-07 (January 30, 2014) (Nucor III Order) at 12.
One such denial can be found in the 2007 Weston Order, in which the
EPA received a petition that claimed that the proposed modification
permit was deficient because it did not incorporate limits from PSD and
preconstruction permit applications for a particular unit at the Weston
facility. See, In the Matter of Wisconsin Public Service Corporation--
Weston Generating Station (Order in response to Petition) (December 19,
2007). The EPA denied the claim because the unit in question had not
been affected by or related to the significant modification on which
the title V permitting action was based. The Order stated:
EPA interprets its title V regulations at 40 CFR part 70 to
require different opportunities for citizens to petition on initial
permit issuance, permit modifications, and renewals. The regulations
state that a permit, permit modification, or renewal may be issued
if specified conditions are met, 40 CFR 70.7(a)(1), including a
requirement that `[t]he permitting authority shall provide a
statement that sets forth the legal and factual basis for the draft
permit conditions.' 40 CFR 70(a)(1)(ii) and 70.7(a)(5) (emphasis
added). Further, 40 CFR 70.7(h), in requiring the permitting
authority to provide adequate procedures for public notice and
comment for permit proceedings that qualify as significant
modifications, provides that the notice shall identify `the activity
or activities involved in the permit action; the emissions change
involved in any permit modification; . . . and all other materials
available to the permitting authority that are relevant to the
permit decision . . .' 40 CFR 70.7(h)(2) (emphasis added). We
interpret these provisions to limit petitions on significant
modifications to issues directly related to those modifications. Id.
at 5.
The Weston Order further noted that this limitation on petitions
for title V significant modifications did not affect the public's
ability to participate in the permit issuance or enforcement processes.
When a title V permit is renewed, all aspects of the title V permit are
subject to public comment and petition as part of the process to issue
a renewal permit. Generally speaking, members of the public can also
bring an enforcement action in situations of alleged noncompliance with
any permit terms. Furthermore, if the public is concerned that the
permit fails to incorporate all applicable requirements, a petition may
be submitted to the Administrator to reopen the permit for cause under
CAA section 505(e). Id. at 7.
2. Demonstration Requirement
In addition to the threshold requirements, the statute identifies
another general guideline for the EPA's consideration. Specifically, to
compel an objection by the EPA, CAA section 505(b)(2) requires the
petitioner to demonstrate that a permit is not in compliance with
requirements of the Act, including the requirements of the applicable
implementation plan. The EPA has interpreted the demonstration burden
under CAA section 505(b)(2) in numerous title V petition orders and
court opinions have also interpreted it. What follows is a brief
restatement of interpretations previously articulated in some of those
orders and opinions.
In the 2013 Nucor II Order the EPA stated:
The petitioner demonstration burden is a critical component of
CAA section 505(b)(2). As courts have recognized, CAA section
505(b)(2) contains a ``discretionary component'' that requires the
exercise of the EPA's judgment to determine whether a petition
demonstrates noncompliance with the Act, as well as a
nondiscretionary duty to object where such a demonstration is made.
Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d at 1265-66 (``it is undeniable [CAA
section 505(b)(2)] also contains a discretionary component: it
requires the Administrator to make a judgment of whether a petition
demonstrates a permit does not comply with clean air
requirements''); NYPIRG, 321 F.3d at 333. Courts have also made
clear that the Administrator is only obligated to grant a petition
to object under CAA section 505(b)(2) if the Administrator
determines that the petitioners have demonstrated that the permit is
not in compliance with requirements of the Act. See, e.g., Citizens
Against Ruining the Environment, 535 F.3d at 667 (section 505(b)(2)
``clearly obligates the Administrator to (1) determine whether the
petition demonstrates noncompliance and (2) object if such a
demonstration is made'') (emphasis added); NYPIRG, 321 F.3d at 334
(``Section 505(b)[2] of the CAA provides a step-by-step procedure by
which objections to draft permits may be raised and directs the EPA
to grant or deny them, depending on whether non-compliance has been
demonstrated.'') (emphasis added); Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d
at 1265 (``Congress's use of the word `shall' . . . plainly mandates
an objection whenever a petitioner demonstrates noncompliance'')
(emphasis added). Courts reviewing the EPA's interpretation of the
ambiguous term ``demonstrates'' and its determination as to whether
the demonstration has been made have applied a deferential standard
of review. See, e.g., Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d at 1265-66;
Citizens Against Ruining the Environment, 535 F.3d at 678;
MacClarence [v. EPA], 596 F.3d [1123] at 1130-31 [9th Cir. 2010)].
See, In the Matter of Consolidated Environmental Management, Inc.--
Nucor Steel Louisiana, Order on Petition Numbers VI-2011-06 and VI-
2012-07 (June 19, 2013) (Nucor II Order) at 4-5.
The EPA highlighted in the Nucor II Order several reasons why the
petitioner's demonstration is important in the context of a title V
petition, including first, the relatively short time frames title V of
the CAA provides for the EPA to review title V permits and petitions.
As previously explained, under CAA section 505(b)(1), the Administrator
has only 45 days after receiving a copy of the proposed permit to
review that permit and object if she determines that the permit is not
in compliance with the CAA. If the Administrator does not object, then
any petition for an objection must be filed within 60 days after the
expiration of the 45-day review period, and the agency is required to
grant or deny that petition within 60 days. See CAA section 505(b)(2).
Given these short time frames, the Nucor II Order explained that EPA
does not believe it is reasonable to conclude that Congress would have
intended for the EPA to engage in extensive fact-finding or
investigation to analyze contested petition claims, and in support of
this interpretation it cited Citizens Against Ruining the Environment,
535 F.3d at 678, which noted that because the limited time frame
Congress gave the EPA for permit review ``may not allow
[[Page 57830]]
the EPA to fully investigate and analyze contested allegations, it is
reasonable in this context for the EPA to refrain from extensive fact-
finding.'' Nucor II Order at 5. Therefore, it is imperative that the
petitioner make the demonstration.
After discussing the relatively short time frames for the EPA to
review as the first point, the Nucor II Order continued:
Second, the Act is structured so that the EPA's evaluation of a
petition under CAA section 505(b)(2) follows and is distinct from
its review of a proposed permit under section 505(b)(1), which
requires the Administrator to object on his own accord if he
determines the permit is not in compliance with the Act. By
contrast, under section 505(b)(2), the Administrator is compelled to
object only if the necessary demonstration has been
made.[10]
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\10\ Footnote 3 of the Nucor II Order explained: ``Further, CAA
section 505(b)(2) provides that `the Administrator may not delegate
the requirements of this paragraph.' This reflects the significance
Congress attached to the decision on whether or not to object in
response to a petition, and means the process requires additional
time.''
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Third, the EPA is also sensitive to the fact that its response
to title V petitions often comes late in the title V permitting
process and often after the title V permit has been issued. See CAA
section 505(b)(3) (acknowledging that the EPA's response to a
petition may occur after the permit has been issued). The EPA's
evaluation of the petitioners' demonstration can have consequences,
as a determination by the EPA that the petition demonstrates the
permit is not in compliance with the Act requires the Administrator
and the state permitting authority to take certain actions.
MacClarence, 596 F.3d at 1131. The EPA also acknowledges Congress'
direction that permitting authorities must provide ``streamlined''
procedures for issuing title V permits, indicating that the title V
permitting process should proceed efficiently and expeditiously. CAA
section 502(b)(6); 40 CFR part 70.4(d)(3)(ix). These circumstances
make it all the more important that the EPA carefully evaluate the
petition's demonstration and not issue an objection under section
505(b)(2) unless the petition demonstrates that one is required.
Fourth, and consistent with its importance in CAA section
505(b)(2), the petitioner demonstration requirement helps to ensure
the equity, procedural certainty, efficiency, and viability of the
title V petition process for petitioners, state and local permitting
authorities, the EPA and source owner/operators. This petitioner
demonstration requirement helps to ensure that each and every
petitioner is treated equitably in the petition process because the
same standard for demonstration applies to each petitioner. Where
petitioners meet their burden, the EPA will grant the petition.
Where they do not, the EPA will not grant the petition. In this way,
the EPA gives equal consideration to the petitioner's arguments, as
appropriate.
In addition, the petitioner burden requirement also helps to
ensure that the title V petition process is consistent with the
division of responsibilities and co-regulator relationship between
the EPA and state or local permitting authorities established in the
CAA. When carrying out our title V review responsibilities under the
CAA, it is our practice, consistent with that relationship, to defer
to permitting decisions of state and local agencies with approved
title V programs where such decisions are not inconsistent with the
requirements under the CAA. The EPA does not seek to substitute its
judgment for the state or local agency. As we discuss above in this
section, sections 505(b)(1) and (2) of the Act, require the EPA to
object to the issuance of a title V permit if it determines that the
title V permit contains provisions that are not in compliance with
applicable requirements of the Act, including the requirements of
the applicable SIP. State and local agencies must ensure that the
title V permit includes all applicable requirements under the CAA
for that source, and provide an adequate rationale for the permit
requirements in the public record, including the response to
comment. When the EPA grants a particular title V petition under CAA
section 505(b)(2), the EPA directs the state or local agency
regarding actions necessary to ensure that the title V permit meets
the applicable requirements with regard to the particular issue(s)
that was raised, including appropriate and necessary changes to the
permit.
The petitioner burden requirement assures that petitioners have
clearly and sufficiently articulated the basis for an objection
before a title V petition is granted. Thus, state and local agencies
have certainty regarding the standard against which petitions on
their title V permits and permit records will be assessed. The
petitioner burden requirement also helps to ensure that the EPA does
not have to spend significant time and resources responding to
ungrounded claims regarding the title V permit or permit record. For
example, petitioners might include claims in petitions unrelated to
applicable requirements for the title V permit at issue or that do
not provide sufficient information for the EPA to analyze the claim.
Without the petitioner demonstration burden, the EPA could be
required to investigate and respond to claims that ultimately prove
to be ungrounded or frivolous. This would increase the complexity
and uncertainty of the title V permit process, and would be
burdensome and unproductive for the EPA, as well as for state and
local agencies. The petitioner burden standard also helps to ensure
certainty of the permitting process for source owner/operators,
because it provides a consistent standard against which petitions on
their title V permits will be assessed.
Nucor II Order at 5-7.
In light of the EPA's interpretation of the demonstration
requirement and its importance to the implementation of the statutory
structure that Congress created for addressing objections to title V
permits, the EPA has discussed and applied its interpretation of the
demonstration burden in numerous title V orders. Examples of the EPA's
application of this standard can be found in: In the Matter of Scherer
Steam-Electric Generating Plant Juliette, Georgia, et al., Order on
Petition Nos. IV-2012-1, IV-2012-2, IV-2012-3, IV-2012-4, and IV-2012-5
(Apr. 14, 2014) at 12-13; In the Matter of Hu Honua Bioenergy Facility,
Order on Petition No. IX-2001-1 (July 2, 2014) (Hu Honua Order) at 25-
27; In the Matter of EME Homer City Generation LP, et al., Order on
Petition No. III-2012-06, III-2012-07, and III-2013-02 (July 30, 2014)
at 24-25; In the Matter of Public Service of New Hampshire Schiller
Station, Order on Petition No. VI-2014-04 (July 28, 2015) at 11-12.
The interpretation quoted from the Nucor II Order is based on the
discussion of the demonstration burden in opinions from federal courts
of appeal. These courts have recognized that the term ``demonstrates''
in CAA section 505(b)(2) is ambiguous and have accordingly deferred to
the EPA's interpretation. See Wildearth Guardians v. EPA, 728 F.3d
1075, 1081-1082 (10th Cir. 2013); MacClarence v. EPA, 596 F.3d 1123,
1130-1131 (9th Cir. 2010); Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d 1257, 1265-
1267 (11th Cir. 2008); Citizens Against Ruining the Env't v. EPA, 535
F.3d 670, 677-678 (7th Cir. 2008). In so deferring, these courts have
discussed the seminal Supreme Court decision, Chevron USA, Inc. v.
Natural Res. Def. Council Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-843 (1984), which
provides guiding principles for judicial review of agency
interpretations and determinations under statutes that the agency
administers.\11\ Chevron establishes a well-known two-step test: First,
if the Congress has ``directly spoken to the precise question at
issue'' both the court and the agency must ``give effect to the
unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.'' Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842-
843. Second, if the statute is ambiguous, courts will generally defer
to the agency's interpretation and uphold it so long as it ``is based
on a permissible construction of the statute.'' Id. at 843.
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\11\ The principle of deference named after this decision--
Chevron deference--is discussed in more detail in Section IV.A of
this notice.
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Several federal courts of appeal have agreed with the EPA's
position that the term ``demonstrates'' in CAA section 505(b)(2) is
ambiguous. MacClarence, 596 F.3d at 1130 (collecting cases). As one
opinion pointed out, ``[n]either the Clean Air Act nor its regulations
define the term `demonstrates' or give context to how the Administrator
should make this judgment.'' Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d at 1266;
see also Citizens Against Ruining the Env't, 535 F.3d at
[[Page 57831]]
677-678. After considering the plain meaning of the term
``demonstrates'' as shown by various dictionary definitions, courts
have agreed that the plain meaning ``does not resolve important
questions that are part and parcel of the Administrator's duty to
evaluate the sufficiency of a petition, for example, the type of
evidence a petitioner may present and the burden of proof guiding the
Administrator's evaluation of when a sufficient demonstration has
occurred.'' Sierra Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d at 1266; MacClarence, 596
F.3d at 1131 (same). Similarly, another court observed that the Act
``does not set forth any factors the EPA must take into account in
determining whether a petitioner has demonstrated noncompliance under
[CAA 505(b)(2)].'' Wildearth Guardians, 728 F.3d at 1082.
This recognition of the ambiguity in CAA section 505(b)(2) leads to
the conclusion that ``the statute's silence on these important issues
means Congress has delegated to the EPA some discretion in determining
whether, in its expert opinion, a petitioner has presented sufficient
evidence to prove a permit violates clean air requirements.'' Sierra
Club v. Johnson, 541 F.3d at 1266. Accordingly, as one opinion put it,
``the EPA has discretion under the statute to determine what a petition
must show in order to make an adequate `demonstration.' '' Citizens
Against Ruining the Env't, 535 F.3d at 678. Similarly, another court
explained, ``because we conclude [section 505(b)(2)] is ambiguous when
it comes to defining the type of demonstration required to trigger the
Administrator's duty to object, we are willing to defer to a reasonable
interpretation by the agency as to when a petitioner has sufficiently
demonstrated noncompliance with PSD requirements.'' Sierra Club v.
Johnson, 541 F.3d at 1267. In so deferring to the EPA's interpretation
of the demonstration standard under CAA section 505(b)(2) some courts
have noted that they need not resolve the question of the exact degree
of deference to be accorded to the EPA because its ``interpretation is
persuasive even under [the] less deferential standard of review'' under
Skidmore v. Swift, 323 U.S. 134 (1944) and ``would thus prevail under
either standard.'' Wildearth Guardians, 728 F.3d at 1082; MacClarence,
596 F.3d at 1131 (same).
In the context of reviewing particular applications of the
demonstration burden in title V petition orders, courts have also
deferred to the agency's interpretation as to whether or not a petition
had adequately demonstrated that an objection was warranted. For
example, in MacClarence, the petition was denied in part because it
``failed to provide adequate information to support [a claim]'' and
made ``only generalized statements . . . and did not provide adequate
references, legal analysis, or evidence in support of these general
assertions.'' 596 F.3d at 1131 (internal marks omitted). The court
found the EPA's construction of the burden under CAA section 505(b)(2)
as encompassing an expectation that a petition provide ``references,
legal analysis, or evidence'' a reasonable interpretation, which
comported with both the plain meaning of the term ``demonstrates'' and
with CAA section 505(b)(2). Id. In addition, in MacClarence, the
petitioner argued that the EPA should not have denied his petition for
failing to address the permitting authority's reasoning in the final
permitting decision and documents, which differed from the draft
documents and explained why the changes had been made. The court upheld
the EPA's decision, determining that it was reasonable for the EPA to
expect the petitioner to address the permitting authority's final
decision. Id. at 1132-33. As another example of the deference that
courts have accorded the EPA's application of the demonstration
standard, in the Wildearth Guardians case cited above, the court found
reasonable the EPA's determination that the petitioner could not rely
solely on the fact that a Notice of Violation (NOV) had been previously
issued to demonstrate noncompliance. Wildearth Guardians, 728 F.3d at
1082. The court noted that the EPA had explained that an NOV may be a
relevant factor in `` `determining whether the overall information
presented by Petitioner--in light of all the factors that may be
relevant--demonstrates the applicability of a requirement for the
purposes of title V' '' but explained that other factors may also be
relevant. Id. The EPA further explained that if the petitioner had not
addressed other relevant factors, it could find that petitioner ``
`failed to present sufficient information to demonstrate that the
requirement is applicable.' '' Id. Finding this interpretation of the
demonstration requirement persuasive, the court deferred to it. Id.
3. Raising PSD Issues in a Petition
As noted earlier, many petitions raise numerous and highly complex
issues around PSD permitting, a separate permitting program under the
CAA. Because of the frequency with which title V petitions raise PSD
claims, statements in prior petition orders regarding such claims is
worth a separate mention here. In the Meraux Refinery Order, In the
Matter of Meraux Refinery, Order on Petition Number VI-2012-04 (May 29,
2015), at 3-4, the EPA stated:
Where a petitioner's request that the Administrator object to
the issuance of a title V permit is based in whole, or in part, on a
permitting authority's alleged failure to comply with the
requirements of its approved PSD program (as with other allegations
of noncompliance with the Act), the burden is on the petitioner to
demonstrate to the Administrator that the permitting decision was
not in compliance with the requirements of the Act, including the
requirements of the SIP. CAA section 505(b)(2). . . . Such
requirements, as the EPA has explained in describing its authority
to oversee the implementation of the PSD program in states with
approved programs, include the permitting authority: (1) following
the required procedures in the SIP; (2) making PSD determinations on
reasonable grounds properly supported on the record; and (3)
describing the determinations in enforceable terms. See, e.g., In
the Matter of Wisconsin Power and Light, Columbia Generating
Station, Order on Petition No. V-2008-01 (October 8, 2009) at 8. The
permitting authority for a State's SIP-approved PSD program has
substantial discretion in issuing PSD permits. Given this
discretion, in reviewing a PSD permitting decision, the EPA will not
substitute its own judgment for that of the State. Rather,
consistent with the decision in Alaska Dep't of Envt'l Conservation
v. EPA, 540 U.S. 461 (2004), in reviewing a petition to object to a
title V permit raising concerns regarding a state's PSD permitting
decision, the EPA generally will look to see whether the petitioner
has shown that the state did not comply with its SIP-approved
regulations governing PSD permitting or whether the state's exercise
of discretion under such regulations was unreasonable or arbitrary.
See, e.g., In re Louisville Gas and Electric Company, Order on
Petition No. IV-2008-3 (Aug. 12, 2009); In re East Kentucky Power
Cooperative, Inc. Hugh L. Spurlock Generating Station, Order on
Petition No. IV-2006-4 (Aug. 30, 2007); In re Pacific Coast Building
Products, Inc. (Order on Petition) (Dec. 10, 1999); In re Roosevelt
Regional Landfill Regional Disposal Company (Order on Petition) (May
4, 1999).
As is indicated by the internal citations to a number of other title V
orders in the Meraux Refinery Order, the agency has made similar
statements in several previous orders over the years.
4. Raising Emissions Monitoring Issues in a Petition
Many petitions also raise issues surrounding emissions monitoring,
recordkeeping and reporting in title V permits. Title V of the CAA
requires permits to contain adequate emissions monitoring,
recordkeeping, and reporting to assure sources' compliance with
applicable requirements. 57 FR 32250, 32251 (July 1, 1992). Because of
[[Page 57832]]
the frequency with which monitoring claims are raised, statements in
prior petition orders regarding such claims are also worth a separate
mention here. As an example, In the Matter of the Premcor Refining
Group, Inc., Order on Petition Number VI-2007-02 (May 28, 2009), at 7,
the EPA stated:
As a general matter, permitting authorities must take three
steps to satisfy the monitoring requirements in the EPA's part 70
regulations. First, a permitting authority must ensure that
monitoring requirements contained in applicable requirements are
properly incorporated into the title V permit. 40 CFR
70.6(a)(3)(i)(A). Second, if the applicable requirements contain no
periodic monitoring, permitting authorities must add monitoring
``sufficient to yield reliable data from the relevant time period
that are representative of the source's compliance with the
permit.'' 40 CFR 70.6(a)(3)(i)(B). Third, if the applicable
requirement has associated periodic monitoring but the monitoring is
not sufficient to assure compliance with permit terms and
conditions, a permitting authority must supplement monitoring to
assure compliance. See 40 CFR 70.6(c)(1).
5. Addressing Permitting Authority's Rationale
The EPA has previously noted that as part of the CAA section
505(b)(2) demonstration requirement, the petitioner is expected to
address the permitting authority's final decision, and the permitting
authority's final reasoning (including the RTC), where these documents
were available during the timeframe for filing the petition. Where a
permitting authority has articulated its rationale for the permit terms
and conditions concerning an applicable requirement in its record (RTC
and statement of basis) and the petitioner did not adequately address
that rationale in its petition, the EPA has often denied the petition,
at least in part, on that basis. See e.g., In the Matter of Noranda
Alumina, LLC, Order on Petition No. VI-2011-04 (December 14, 2012) at
20-21 (denying title V petition issue where petitioners did not respond
to state's explanation in response to comments or explain why the state
erred or the permit was deficient); In the Matter of Kentucky Syngas,
LLC, Order on Petition No. IV-2010-9 (June 22, 2012) at 41 (denying
title V petition issue where petitioners did not acknowledge or reply
to state's response to comments or provide a particularized rationale
for why the state erred or the permit was deficient). Caselaw supports
this interpretation. See MacClarence, 596 F.3d at 1132-33 (the
Administrator ``reasonably expected'' the petitioner to challenge the
state permitting authority's explanation and reasoning for final
permit).
IV. Proposed Revisions to Title V Regulations
This notice proposes several changes to part 70. Many of the
proposed revisions fall within three key areas. First, regulatory
language is proposed that encourages the use of the agency's electronic
submittal system for title V petitions. Alternative methods for
submittal are also identified in this notice. Petitioners who
experience technical difficulty when attempting to submit a petition
through the electronic submittal system may send it to the designated
email address, while those without access to the Internet or unable to
access email for other reasons may send a paper copy to the specific
physical address identified in this proposal.
Second, this rule proposes mandatory petition content requirements
and standard formatting for title V petitions. The EPA has identified
key pieces of information that are critical when assessing claims and
potential flaws in a title V permit or permit process, and these pieces
are now proposed as required content for petitions and would be a new
provision, 40 CFR 70.12. Under the proposed revisions, in order to
demonstrate a flaw in the permit, permit record, or permit process that
warrants an objection under CAA section 505(b)(2), the petition would
present the required content in the same manner and order as contained
in the new section of the title V regulations, 40 CFR 70.12.
A related change is proposed that would add new regulatory language
to 40 CFR 70.8, which would require a petitioner to send a copy of the
petition to both the permitting authority and the permit applicant. The
current title V regulations do not have provisions effectuating this
requirement of section 505(b)(2) of the Act. Therefore, this proposal
would insert a requirement into the regulation identical to the one in
the Act in order to ensure consistency with this provision of the
statute.
Third, the agency proposes to require that permitting authorities
respond in writing to significant comments received during the public
comment period on a draft title V permit. Further, the EPA proposes
regulatory language stating that this response to significant comments,
often referred to as the RTC, must be sent with the proposed permit and
statement of basis for the 45-day EPA review period of the proposed
permit.\12\ Under the proposed revisions, the EPA 45-day review period
would not commence until the proposed permit and all necessary
supporting information, including the written RTC, are received.
Finally, the EPA proposes to require that within 30 days of sending the
proposed permit to the EPA, that permitting authorities must provide
notification that the proposed permit and the response to significant
public comments are available to the public. Such notice must explain
how these materials may be accessed.
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\12\ The statement of basis is a statement that ``sets forth the
legal and factual basis . . . (including references to the
applicable statutory or regulatory provisions)'' for terms and/or
conditions in a permit. 40 CFR 70.7(a)(5). Often a separate
document, the statement of basis is intended to provide information
to facilitate the EPA's review of permit terms and conditions and
also to provide information that supports public participation in
the permitting process.
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These proposed revisions to part 70 provide increased transparency
and clarity to the title V petition preparation, submittal, review, and
response processes. Improved interactions with stakeholders that
participate in the title V process and more accurate tracking of
petitions may also result from the establishment of the preferred
petition submittal method. If finalized, the proposed rule revisions
would help facilitate a more effective process for the development of
title V petitions and a more efficient process for the review and
response to title V petitions. Overall, the EPA is intending that these
rule revisions along with other shared information will help to improve
title V permits issued by permitting authorities, promote access to and
provide better understanding of the title V petition process for
potential petitioners, and reduce delays in decisions and support the
agency's efforts to meet its obligations in responding to title V
petitions.
For each of the three key areas, the agency describes the proposed
regulatory changes, rationale for proposing the changes, and request
for comment in the sections that follow. Before discussing each of the
three key areas of this proposal, however, this notice provides some
additional legal background related to these proposals.
A. Additional Legal Background for the Proposed Revisions to the Part
70 Rules
To provide context for the statutory and regulatory interpretations
discussed below, the EPA first discusses some additional legal
background, including principles generally applied by courts in
reviewing agency interpretations.
The Supreme Court decision, Chevron USA, Inc. v. Natural Res. Def.
Council
[[Page 57833]]
Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-843 (1984), establishes principles that guide
judicial review of agency interpretations of statutes that the agency
administers. Under Chevron courts apply a well-known two-step test:
First, if the Congress has ``directly spoken to the precise question at
issue'' both the court and the agency must ``give effect to the
unambiguously expressed intent of Congress.'' Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842-
843. Second, if the statute is ambiguous, courts will generally defer
to the agency's interpretation and uphold it so long as it ``is based
on a permissible construction of the statute.'' Id. at 843. At the
second step of this inquiry, also referred to as ``Chevron Step 2,''
courts such as the D.C. Circuit have frequently explained that ``
`Chevron requires that we defer to the agency's reasonable
interpretation of the term.' '' Miss. Comm'n on Envtl. Quality v. EPA,
790 F.3d 138, 151 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (quoting Pennsylvania Dept. of
Envtl. Protection v. EPA, 429 F.3d 1125, 1130 (D.C. Cir. 2005)). In
other words, under Chevron the agency's interpretation `` `governs if
it is a reasonable interpretation of the statute--not necessarily the
only possible interpretation, nor even the interpretation deemed most
reasonable by the courts.' '' Entergy Corp. v. Riverkeeper, Inc., 556
U.S. 208, 218 (2009) (quoted in Airlines for Am. v. Transp. Sec.
Admin., 780 F.3d 409, 413 (D.C. Cir. 2015)).
Similarly, courts accord deference to an administrative agency's
interpretations of its own regulations under principles enunciated in
Auer v. Robbins, 519 U.S. 452, 462-63 (1997). This type of deference is
frequently referred to as Auer deference. When an agency's
interpretation of a regulation receives Auer deference, the court
accepts the agency's interpretation ``unless the interpretation is
plainly erroneous or inconsistent with the regulations or there is any
other reason to suspect that the interpretation does not reflect the
agency's fair and considered judgment on the matter in question.''
Rural Cellular Ass'n & Universal Serv. v. FCC, 685 F.3d 1083, 1093-1094
(D.C. Cir. 2012) (internal marks and citations omitted).
Finally, the EPA notes that administrative agencies have broad
discretion to adopt procedures to discharge their obligations under the
statutes they implement. In the words of the U.S. Supreme Court:
``[T]he formulation of procedures [is] basically to be left within the
discretion of the agencies to which Congress [has] confided the
responsibility for substantive judgments.'' Vermont Yankee Nuclear
Power Corp. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 435 U.S. 519, 524
(1978). Later in the same case, the Court observed that ``[a]bsent
constitutional constraints or extremely compelling circumstances the
administrative agencies should be free to fashion their own rules of
procedure to pursue methods of inquiry capable of permitting them to
discharge their multitudinous duties.'' Id. at 543-544. Relatedly,
courts have emphasized the inherent authority that administrative
agencies have ``to control the disposition of their caseload'' and
manage their own dockets. See, e.g., GTE Service Corp. v. FCC, 782 F.2d
263, 273-274 (D.C. Cir. 1986).
B. Electronic Submittal System for Petitions
1. Proposed Revisions
a. Petition Submission to the EPA
In this notice, the EPA is proposing to revise part 70 to add a new
provision that would require petitions to be submitted using one of
three identified methods. Among those three methods, the agency
encourages petitioners to submit title V petitions through the
electronic submittal system, the agency's preferred method. The EPA has
developed a title V petitions submittal system through the Central Data
Exchange (CDX) and information on how to access and use the system is
available at the title V petitions Web site: https://www.epa.gov/title-v-operating-permits/title-v-petitions. While the current submittal
system was designed using CDX, the EPA recognizes that adjustments to
the system or a different submittal system entirely may be needed in
the future. Therefore, the title V petitions Web site will provide
access to the designated electronic submittal system in use at any
given time, which will remain the primary and preferred method for
receiving title V petitions. The electronic submittal system allows for
a direct route to the appropriate agency staff. It also provides
immediate confirmation that the EPA has received the petition and any
attachments.
If a petitioner experiences technical difficulties when trying to
submit a petition through the electronic submittal system identified on
the title V petitions Web site, the petition may also be submitted to
the agency through the following email address:
titleVpetitions@epa.gov. This address is being established as an
alternative method for use in instances when the electronic submittal
system is not available. For petitioners without access to the Internet
at the time of petition submittal, this notice also announces the
establishment of one specific physical address to which all paper
copies of petitions should be sent. Paper copies of all petitions
unable to be sent electronically may be sent by mail or by courier to
the following address: U.S. EPA, Office of Air Quality Planning and
Standards, Air Quality Policy Division, Operating Permits Group Leader,
109 T.W. Alexander Dr. (C504-05), Research Triangle Park, NC 27711.
Additional information on these alternative methods for submittal will
also be available at the title V petitions Web site.
Although regulatory changes are being proposed to integrate these
methods of submission into the part 70 rules, all three of these
methods are currently available for petition submission, and
petitioners may elect to use any one of them now. Furthermore, although
the proposed changes to the regulatory provisions identify three
possible means to submit petitions, for any particular petition, once a
petition and any attachments have been successfully submitted using one
method, there is no need to submit a duplicate copy via another method.
The EPA requests that petitioners only submit a petition using one
method, which will expedite the administrative process and improve the
EPA's efficiency in reviewing petitions. Finally, if these regulatory
revisions are finalized, the agency would not be obligated to consider
petitions submitted through any means other than the three identified
in the rule.
b. Required Copy of the Petition to the Permitting Authority and
Applicant
Section 505(b)(2) of the Act requires that the petitioner provide
copies of its petition to the permitting authority and the permit
applicant. This requirement does not currently appear in the part 70
rules. The EPA is proposing to revise the part 70 regulations in order
to fill this gap in the regulations. Specifically, in this notice, the
EPA proposes to add language to 40 CFR 70.8(d) that is identical to the
statutory language.
2. Why is the EPA proposing this change?
In general, feedback from stakeholders, as well as the EPA's
experience in receiving petitions, indicate there is confusion at
present as to where a petition should be submitted. While section
505(b)(2) of the CAA and 40 CFR 70.8(d) provide that any person may
petition the Administrator to object within 60 days after the
expiration of the EPA's 45-day review period for the proposed permit,
both the statute and the regulations are currently silent as to how a
petition should be submitted to
[[Page 57834]]
the EPA. Because the regulations do not dictate a specific address,
title V petitions have been received in a number of different offices
within the agency. Most of the recent petitions have been sent to the
agency through email, in some cases with a duplicate paper copy sent to
a physical address somewhere within the EPA. For example, the agency
has received petitions that were sent directly to a staff person in a
Regional office, as well as petitions sent directly to the
Administrator, either by email or courier. One complication presented
by this current practice is that by sending petitions via email,
attachments supplied by petitioners as supporting materials may become
separated from the petition or lost entirely. In addition, and
potentially because of this fact, petition attachments are frequently
submitted by mail or courier, while the petition itself is submitted by
email. These various submission practices require additional
administrative processing within the EPA and can delay the initiation
of the substantive petition review process.
One goal of this proposal is to clarify where and how title V
petitions should be submitted. Another goal of this proposal is to
announce the establishment of an electronic submittal system and
promote its use as the preferred method for the submittal of petitions
to the EPA. These proposed changes are expected to allow for more
accurate tracking of petitions and to increase the agency's efficiency
and effectiveness in responding to petitions by ensuring the timely
receipt of petitions and any attachments in a central location.
The EPA has identified several benefits of establishing the
electronic submittal system as the preferred submittal method for
receiving title V petitions. For petitioners, the electronic submittal
system will provide immediate confirmation to the petitioner that the
petition was received by the agency. In contrast to the size
limitations that can be experienced when sending title V petitions
through email, petitioners will be able to see that all intended
supporting materials are attached to the petition and are submitted in
one entry. Thus, submitting a petition and attachments via the
electronic submittal system would avoid the need to send multiple
emails to transmit the entire petition package. Sending petitions
through the electronic submittal system also eliminates timeliness
issues from potential mishandling due to courier issues.
For the agency, there is a time savings as petitions and any
attachments submitted through the electronic submittal system will be
immediately and directly available to the agency. This saves
administrative time otherwise spent processing the incoming petition
and any attachments, especially those submitted separately from the
petition. Thus, the EPA anticipates that using this system will
facilitate more efficient processing for incoming petitions. Further,
the electronic submittal system in its current form identifies the
number of attachments a petitioner intends to submit, which can alert
the EPA to any missing attachments.
More information about the electronic submittal system, including
information about security concerns regarding providing personal
information, uploading and/or downloading files, personally
identifiable information (PII), and CBI is available at the CDX Web
site: https://cdx.epa.gov/. If this rule is finalized and there is
interest from commenters, the EPA will consider developing training
webinars on the use of the electronic submittal system.
These proposed rule revisions to identify specific methods for
petition submittal fall within the EPA's inherent discretion to
formulate procedures to meet its obligations under CAA section
505(b)(2), as discussed in Section IV.A of this notice. In addition,
the Act is silent as to the methods that should be used for title V
petition submittal but imposes a 60-day deadline for granting or
denying such petitions. Accordingly, these proposed changes to improve
the efficiency of the EPA's initial processing of petitions and to
support the agency's efforts to satisfy that obligation are based on a
reasonable interpretation of CAA section 505(b)(2), including the
relatively short timeframe for the EPA to grant or deny a petition.
3. Request for Comment
Comments are requested on all aspects of these proposed revisions.
The EPA is also specifically soliciting comment on our proposal to add
language to part 70 that identifies the electronic submittal of
petitions through the agency's identified electronic submittal system
as the preferred primary method for submitting a title V petition, as
well as identifying two alternative methods that could be used in case
of technical difficulties or by a petitioner without Internet access.
Commenters are encouraged to address in their comments whether
additional specification or direction is needed to ensure all
stakeholders are aware and have a better understanding of the preferred
electronic submittal process. The EPA is expressly requesting comment
on whether the proposed regulatory revisions are necessary, or whether
the same effect could be achieved through the direction provided in
this preamble and through the title V petitions Web site. Further, the
EPA is requesting comment on what, if any, outreach methods or training
materials (e.g., written instructions) would assist users with
submitting petitions through the CDX system.
C. Required Petition Content and Format
1. Proposed Revisions
The following proposed regulatory changes are designed to assist
the public with preparing their petitions, as well as to assist the EPA
in its review of petitions. In this notice, the agency proposes to
establish in the part 70 regulations key mandatory content requirements
for title V petitions. These proposed requirements are based on
statutory requirements under CAA section 505(b)(2) and aspects of the
demonstration standard interpreted by the EPA in numerous title V
petition orders and restated in Section III.D of this notice. By
proposing to codify what has already been discussed in prior orders,
the EPA aims to help all stakeholders understand the criteria that the
EPA applies in reviewing a title V petition. The EPA also proposes to
establish requirements to encourage similar formats for all petitions
to further assist the agency in its review process.
a. Required Petition Content
The EPA is proposing to revise part 70 to require standard content
that must be included in a title V petition, laying out the agency's
expectations with more specificity to assist petitioners in
understanding how to make their petitions complete and to enhance the
EPA's ability to review and respond to them promptly. Under this
proposal, a new section of the title V regulations, 40 CFR 70.12, would
add the following list of required elements:
Identification of the proposed permit on which the
petition is based. The proposed permit is the version of the permit the
permitting authority forwards to the EPA for the agency's 45-day review
under CAA section 505(b)(1).\13\ A petition would be required to
provide the permit number, version number, and/or any other information
by which the permit can be
[[Page 57835]]
readily identified. In addition, the petition must specify whether the
relevant permit action is an initial issuance, renewal, or
modification/revision, including minor modifications/revisions.
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\13\ A proposed permit may be any of the following permit
actions: Initial permit, renewal permit, or permit modification/
revision.
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Sufficient information to show that the petition was
timely filed. A petition must be filed within 60 days after the
expiration of the Administrator's 45-day review period, as required by
section 505(b)(2) of the Act. Timeliness may be demonstrated by the
electronic receipt date generated upon submittal of the petition
through the agency's electronic submittal system, the date and time the
emailed petition was received, or the postmark date generated for a
paper copy mailed to the agency's designated physical address. It is
helpful if the petition provides key dates, such as the end of the
public comment period provided under 40 CFR 70.7(h), (or parallel
regulations in an EPA-approved state, local or tribal title V
permitting program), or the conclusion of the EPA 45-day review period
for the proposed permit.
Identification of Petition Claims. Any issue raised in the
petition as grounds for an objection must be based on a claim that the
permit, permit record, or permit process is not in compliance with the
applicable requirements under the Act or requirements under part 70.
All pertinent information in support of each issue raised as a petition
claim must be included within the body of the petition. In determining
whether to object, the Administrator would not consider information
incorporated into the petition by reference (for example, comments
offered during the public comment period on the draft permit that are
incorporated by reference into the petition on the proposed permit, or,
as another example, claims raised in one title V petition that are
incorporated by reference into a different title V petition). However,
petitions may and should still provide citations to support each
petition claim (e.g., citations to caselaw, statutory and regulatory
provisions, or portions of the permit record). For each claim raised,
the petition would need to identify the following:
[cir] The specific grounds for an objection, citing to a specific
permit term or condition where applicable.
[cir] The applicable requirement under the CAA or requirement under
part 70 that is not met. Note that the term ``applicable requirement''
refers to Clean Air Act requirements only, and does not include other
requirements (e.g., Endangered Species Act, Clean Water Act) to which a
source may be subject. The term ``applicable requirement'' of the CAA
for title V purposes is defined in 40 CFR 70.2.
[cir] An explanation of how the term or condition in the proposed
permit, or relevant portion of the permit record or permit process, is
not adequate to comply with the corresponding applicable requirement
under the CAA or requirement under part 70.
[cir] If the petition claims that the permitting authority did not
provide for the public participation procedures required under 40 CFR
70.7(h), the petition must identify specifically the required public
participation procedure that was not provided.
[cir] Identification of where the issue in the claim was raised
with reasonable specificity during the public comment period provided
for in 40 CFR 70.7(h), citing to any relevant page numbers in the
public comment as submitted and attaching the submitted public comment
to the petition. If the grounds for the objection were not raised
during the public comment period, the petitioner must demonstrate that
it was impracticable to raise such objections within the period or that
they arose after such a period, as required by section 505(b)(2) of the
Act and 40 CFR 70.8(d).
[cir] Unless the exception under CAA section 505(b)(2) and 40 CFR
70.8(d) discussed in the immediately preceding bullet applies, the
petition must identify where the permitting authority responded to the
public comment, including the specific page number(s) in the document
where the response appears, and explain how the permitting authority's
response to the comment is inadequate to address the claimed
deficiency. If the written RTC does not address the public comment at
all or if there is no RTC, the petition should state that.
In addition to including all specified content, it is important
that the information provided or any analysis completed by the
petitioner must also be accurate. However, including this content would
not necessarily result in the Administrator granting an objection on
any particular claim raised in a petition. For example, a petitioner
could include all this information but not demonstrate noncompliance,
or the petition might point to a specific permit term as not being
adequate to comply with an air emission limit, but may not have
identified the appropriate applicable requirement.
One impediment to the EPA's review process is the use of
incorporation by reference of other documents, in whole or in part,
into petitions. As noted earlier in this section, under
``identification of petition issues'' in the new proposed mandatory
content requirements, the EPA would require all pertinent information
in support of each issue raised as a petition claim to be included in
the body of a petition. Incorporating information into a petition by
reference is inconsistent with the demonstration obligations in the
statute and would extend the petition review time as the agency spends
time searching for and then attempting to decipher the petitioner's
intended claim. In practice, the EPA often finds that where claims have
been incorporated by reference it is not clear that the specific
grounds for objection have been raised by the petitioner, which could
lead to the EPA denying for failure to meet the demonstration burden.
Relatedly, petitioners have sometimes used incorporation by reference
to include comments from a comment letter, but a comment letter alone
would typically not address a state's response to the comment. See,
e.g. Nucor III Order at 16 (noting that the ``mere incorporation by
reference . . . without any attempt to explain how these comments
relate to an argument in the petition and without confronting [the
State's] reasoning supporting the final permit is not sufficient to
satisfy the petitioner's demonstration burden''). In practice, the EPA
has found that the incorporation of comments by reference into a
petition can lead to confusion concerning the rationale for the
petitioner's arguments, as it is frequently unclear which part of the
comment is incorporated, how it relates to the particular argument in
the petition, and the precise intent of the incorporation. In addition,
the incorporation of comments by reference increases the agency's
review time, as the EPA must review more than one document to try to
determine the complete argument that a petitioner is making. Therefore,
the EPA is proposing to revise the regulations to state that the
Administrator will not consider information incorporated by reference
into a petition. However, a petition should still provide citations as
needed to support its legal and factual assertions.
For further transparency and clarity, the EPA in this notice gives
examples of types of information that are not necessary to include when
preparing an effective petition. In doing so, the EPA hopes to ease the
effort associated with preparing a petition while promoting
succinctness. For example, while a petitioner needs to cite to the
legal authority supporting its specific claim, a petition does not need
to include pages of background or history on
[[Page 57836]]
aspects of the CAA. If a petitioner wishes to include additional
information for an alternate purpose unrelated to the EPA's review of
the specific petition claim, the EPA recommends appending this
information to the petition as a separate document and identifying the
purpose for which it is provided.
b. Required Petition Format
Even with all necessary information provided, a petition may still
require substantial time to review because of how it is organized.
Therefore, the EPA is also proposing and taking comment on format
requirements. If information is presented in the same format, including
the same order, in all petitions, the EPA anticipates this standard
organization could reduce review time as the general location of
specific details would be the same in every petition received. These
proposed format requirements could also help petitioners better
understand what is, and what isn't, necessary in an effective title V
petition. To that end, the EPA proposes the use of a standard format
following the same order as previously identified in the list of
required petition content. Regulatory language to this effect is
included in the proposed new provision, 40 CFR 70.12. If finalized,
templates and/or guidance are planned for development for inclusion on
the title V petitions Web site.
Further, the EPA is requesting input from the public on several
specific questions related to potentially establishing page limits for
title V petitions, as explained further in Section IV.C.4 of this
notice. While the EPA has received petitions ranging from approximately
3 to 82 pages (excluding attachments), the length for most petitions is
in the range of 20 to 30. The amount of detail required to successfully
raise a claim and meet the demonstration standard may depend on the
complexity of the issue. However, we expect that most claims could be
written effectively and succinctly, as demonstrated in the example
claim that follows.
2. Example Claim
The following paragraphs contain an example of a concise and
effective presentation of a hypothetical single claim that would be
part of a larger petition--one that includes all pieces of required
content for a claim proposed in this rule. Because this is only a
sample claim, not a sample petition, it does not include some of the
required content that relates to the petition as a whole (such as
identifying information for the proposed permit). This example is
organized following the order presented in the proposed required
content changes identified previously, which is also the proposed
standard format. The bullets highlight each element of the proposed
content requirements.
Although EPA is providing this sample claim to illustrate how the
material that would be required under the proposed regulatory revisions
could be presented succinctly and effectively, the information that is
needed to satisfy the demonstration burden for any given petition claim
will vary depending on the specifics of the claim, the applicable
requirements, and the underlying permit terms and record. The following
hypothetical claim is provided solely for purposes of illustration:
Specific Grounds for Objection, Including Citation to Permit
Term
Facility X's title V permit lacks monitoring sufficient to assure
compliance with the 4.5 pound per hour (lb/hr) nitrogen dioxide
(NOX) emission limitation of the approved State
Implementation Plan (SIP) at 30 State Administrative Code 66.54.2.
Specifically, Permit Condition I.D.26 requires that NOX
emissions from Facility X's combustion units (Units 1-6 and 11-14)
cannot exceed 4.5 pounds of NOX per hour. Permit Condition
II.D.105 requires once-per-year portable analyzer monitoring for Units
1-6 and 11-14. The permit contains no other testing, monitoring,
recordkeeping, or reporting requirements on these units, and contains
no other monitoring that could be used determine compliance with the
4.5 lb/hr NOX emission limit for the units.
Applicable Requirement or Part 70 Requirement Not Met
CAA section 504(c), and the implementing regulations in 40 CFR
70.6(c)(1) and 70.6(a)(3)(i)(B), requires all title V permits to
contain monitoring requirements to assure compliance with permit terms
and conditions. See also 30 State Administrative Code 66.55.5(b) and
(c) (same requirements in state's approved title V program). The permit
does not meet this requirement as explained in the following analysis.
Inadequacy of the Permit Term
The SIP-approved NOX limitation does not include any
periodic monitoring requirements, so 40 CFR 70.6(a)(3)(i)(B) requires
state agency to add periodic monitoring sufficient to yield reliable
data from the relevant time period that are representative of the
source's compliance with the permit. The monitoring added by the state
in Permit Condition II.D.105 fails to satisfy that requirement under
part 70 because monitoring only once annually for the engines units is
inadequate to assure compliance with an hourly emission limit.
Public Participation Procedure Not Provided
This petition does not claim that any public participation
procedures were not provided.
Issue Raised in Public Comments
Public Group Y (Petitioners) raised this issue on page 5 of the
July 31, 2015 comment letter it submitted on Facility X's July 1, 2015
draft title V permit. (See Public Group Y Comments at 5; Petition
Exhibit A at 5.)
Analysis of State's Response
In responding to Petitioners' comment stating that the frequency of
the permit's compliance monitoring for the compressor engines' 4.5 lb/
hour NOX limit was inadequate to assure compliance with the
permit term, state agency asserted that ``all that the title V
provisions in 30 State Administrative Code 66.55.5(b) and the parallel
requirements in 40 CFR 70.6(a)(3)(i)(B) require is periodic monitoring
sufficient to yield reliable data that are representative of the
source's compliance with the permit. Continuous monitoring is not
required.'' [RTC) at 8; Petition Exhibit B at 8]. The RTC states that
state agency's monitoring protocol for this unit type requires
``quarterly portable analyzer testing on units with catalytic
converters and annual testing on units without controls.'' Id. The RTC
then concludes that ``[b]ecause the portable analyzer test is a short
term test, it demonstrates compliance with the emission limits for that
time period. Due to the steady state operation of these units, state
agency believes that the portable analyzer testing along with proper
operation and maintenance of the units provides reasonable
demonstration of compliance with hourly NOX and CO emission
limits.'' Id. Although state agency asserts that it included
NOX monitoring in accordance with its monitoring protocols
for engines, state agency's RTC does not adequately explain how the
monitoring in Facility X's permit is sufficient to assure compliance
with the hourly NOX limit in Permit Condition I.D.26.
As explained, state agency is relying on the portable analyzer test
results as a snapshot sampling of emissions to confirm annually whether
the units continue to meet their 4.5 lb/hour NOX limits.
Between annual portable analyzer tests, state agency relies on
assumptions of steady state operation
[[Page 57837]]
and ``proper operation and maintenance of the units'' to provide a
``reasonable'' demonstration of compliance with hourly NOX
emission limits. The RTC, however, does not identify any permit terms
or conditions that require proper operation and maintenance of the
units; nor does it provide an explanation (or appropriate citation to
the technical discussion) of why it believes its assumptions about
steady-state operations are reasonable for this equipment, or explain
how such assumptions, in conjunction with an annual emissions test,
constitute monitoring that demonstrates compliance with a short term
limit. Accordingly, the EPA must grants the petition on this claim.
3. Why is the EPA proposing this change?
The CAA and part 70 regulations currently provide little
information on what a title V petition must or should contain. In fact,
the primary requirement in CAA section 505(b)(2) is that a petition
(with a few identified exceptions) must be based on objections that
were raised with reasonable specificity during the public comment
period for the permit, and that is the only specific requirement for
petition content in the relevant regulation. See CAA section 505(b)(2)
and 40 CFR 70.8(d). As a result, the content and format of petitions
have varied widely. In the agency's experience, many petitions fail to
include key pieces of information, making it more time-consuming and
resource-intensive for the EPA to assess the claim. Many petitions are
also convoluted, include extraneous or irrelevant information, or fail
to present the key information in a logical progression, making it
difficult for the agency to ascertain the specific issue being raised.
Contributing to the confusion, petitions frequently include large
sections of text that appear to have been developed for other reasons
and are not relevant to raising or evaluating a claim about a specific
flaw in the title V permit or permitting process.
One of the EPA's desired outcomes for this proposed rule is to
provide direction to petitioners that will assist them with preparing
petitions. The agency anticipates receiving petitions that are both
more concise and clear and that contain all the key relevant material,
so that the EPA does not have to search for fundamental information or
attempt to decipher the petitioner's intent. These proposed revisions
are intended to facilitate a more effective petition development
process and a more efficient petition review and response process,
which are critical in this context because CAA section 505(b)(2)
requires the agency to grant or deny a petition within 60 days.
Similarly, this tight timeframe makes it imperative that a petitioner
make a clear and concise demonstration that can be efficiently
evaluated. By proposing to create obligations related to the content
and structure of a petition, the EPA anticipates receiving petitions
that more clearly articulate the petition claim and the basis for it,
focusing on key information, including the alleged deficiency in the
permit or permit process; the applicable requirements under the CAA or
requirements under part 70 that are in question; and where the issue
was raised during the public comment period (or a demonstration as to
why it was impracticable to do so or that the grounds for the objection
arose after the public comment period closed), how the state responded,
and why that response did not adequately address the issue.
These proposed rules are consistent with statements and conclusions
that the EPA has made in previous orders responding to title V
petitions. The EPA has identified and emphasized the importance of such
key pieces of information in assessing petitioners' claims that a title
V permit or permit process does not assure compliance with applicable
requirements under the CAA or under part 70. For context, examples of
some of these orders were discussed in Section III.D of this notice.
The EPA is proposing to add petition content requirements that would
make certain information mandatory in petitions. These requirements
would help clarify for petitioners specific information that is useful
or necessary to evaluate a petition claim. The EPA anticipates that
these mandatory petition content requirements and standard formatting
would help petitioners to succinctly focus their claims and present
them effectively. The EPA anticipates that these proposed changes could
also decrease the instances in which the Administrator denies a
petition because the petitioner did not provide an adequate
demonstration. The agency believes these changes would help petitioners
to hone their claims to include the appropriate information and to
realize when a claim does not meet the mandatory requirements and
should not be included in the petition (e.g., the state adequately
addressed the issue in its RTC).
The EPA expects the proposed revisions to require mandatory content
to improve the efficiency of the agency's review process for title V
petitions, as the key information would be presented in a clear and
succinct fashion. Similarly, the agency expects that the proposed
revisions to require similar organization for all petitions could
reduce agency review time as a result of having the specific
information in the same format in every petition received. Increasing
the efficiency of the review process, and more specifically reducing
the time it takes to review petitions, are consistent with Congress's
intent that the petition process proceed in a timely and expeditious
fashion, as indicated by the 60-day time frame for the Administrator to
grant or deny petitions provided in CAA section 505(b)(2). See Citizens
Against Ruining the Environment, 535 F.3d at 678 (noting that because
the limited time frame Congress gave the EPA for permit review ``may
not allow the EPA to fully investigate and analyze contested
allegations, it is reasonable in this context for the EPA to refrain
from extensive fact-finding'').
Moreover, as discussed in more detail in Section III.D of this
notice, the EPA has explained in previous title V orders the importance
of the demonstration burden in determining whether or not to grant an
objection in response to a petition. See, e.g., Nucor II Order at 4-7.
The Act does not dictate all the information that must be included or
the format in which that information should be presented; nor does it
address what kind of showing must be made in order to demonstrate that
an objection is warranted. Courts have determined that the term
``demonstrates'' in CAA section 505(b)(2) is ambiguous and have
accordingly deferred to the EPA's reasonable interpretation of that
term. See, e.g., MacClarence, 596 F.3d at 1131 (finding the EPA's
expectation that a petition provide ``references, legal analysis, or
evidence'' a reasonable interpretation of the term ``demonstrates''
under CAA section 505(b)(2)). The proposed changes are aimed in part at
helping petitioners ensure that they are including information in their
petitions that is necessary to satisfy the demonstration burden, under
the EPA's interpretation.
Furthermore, these proposed revisions to the part 70 rules related
to mandatory petition content and format fall within the EPA's inherent
discretion to formulate procedures to discharge its obligations under
CAA section 505(b)(2), as discussed in Section IV.A of this notice.
Similar procedural requirements have been established for other EPA
programs and processes, including the procedures for appeals filed with
the Environmental Appeals Board (EAB). See 78 FR 5281 (2013) (adopting
revisions to ``codify current
[[Page 57838]]
procedural practices, clarify existing review procedures, and simplify
the permit review process'').
4. Request for Comment
Comments are requested on all aspects of these proposed revisions.
The EPA is proposing changes to part 70 to include mandatory petition
content and format to facilitate the efficient review of issues raised
in petitions. The EPA requests comment on all aspects of the required
petition content in the proposed 40 CFR 70.12, including the
requirement to provide all key information, arguments, or analysis in
the petition, rather than incorporating it by reference. The agency
also requests comments on the proposed requirement that the petition
format follow the same order as the proposed list of required content,
as well as the proposed revision to the regulatory language in 40 CFR
70.8(d) that requires that copies of the petition be provided to the
permitting authority and the applicant.
The EPA is also requesting comment on whether or not page limits
should be established for title V petitions, as a means of promoting
concise petitions and to further facilitate efficient and expeditious
review of petitions by the EPA. Procedural requirements specifying the
maximum length of submissions have been instituted for processes such
as the EAB appeal process, where petitions and response briefs may not
exceed an identified word or page limit. See 40 CFR 12419(d)(3)
(limiting petitions and response briefs to either 14,000 words or
alternatively, a 30-page limit). Based on the EPA's assessment of
petitions received to date, most claims could be written effectively
and succinctly in one or two pages. However, we recognize that some
claims are more complex and could benefit from more space for an
effective demonstration. If page limits were established in the final
rules, petitioners would need to include the mandatory required content
(if finalized) while adhering to a specified page limit. We also
request comments on the following questions: if a page limit is
established, what would be an adequate number of pages, excluding
attachments, for a complete but concise petition? Would a page limit in
the range of 15-20 or 20-30 pages be reasonable excluding attachments?
What would be an adequate number of pages for a complete but concise
claim? When responding to these questions, the EPA requests that
commenters provide a rationale or basis for their responses.
D. Proposed Administrative Record Requirements
1. Proposed Revisions
The EPA proposes to revise 40 CFR 70.7 to require a permitting
authority to respond in writing to significant comments received during
the public participation process for a draft permit. The agency is
proposing a regulatory revision to 40 CFR 70.8 that would require a
written response to all significant comments (RTC) and the statement of
basis document to be included as part of the proposed permit record
that is sent to the EPA for its review under CAA section 505(b)(1).\14\
Finally, the EPA proposes to revise 40 CFR 70.4(b), 70.7(h), and
70.8(a) to specifically identify the statement of basis document as a
necessary part of the permit record throughout the permitting process.
If no significant comments are received during the public comment
period, the permitting authority should prepare and submit to EPA for
its 45-day review a statement to that effect.
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\14\ While most permitting authorities prepare a separate RTC
document, the response to significant comments may also be included
within a statement of basis. Likewise, the statement of basis may be
part of the title V permit, rather than a separate document. As long
as there is clear indication that the RTC and statement of basis are
provided along with the proposed permit, and where they can be found
in the submission, the EPA will commence its 45-day review period.
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a. Response to Comments
Under the existing 40 CFR 70.7(h)(5), a permitting authority is
required to keep a record of the commenters and also of the issues
raised during the public participation process so that the
Administrator may fulfill the obligation under CAA section 505(b)(2) of
the Act to determine whether a title V petition may be granted. This
provision also requires that such records shall be available to the
public. The EPA is proposing regulatory language to revise 40 CFR 70.7
to add a new requirement that a permitting authority respond in writing
to significant comments from the public participation process for a
draft title V permit.\15\ Significant comments in this context include,
but are not limited to, comments that concern whether the title V
permit includes terms and conditions addressing federal applicable
requirements, including monitoring and related recordkeeping and
reporting requirements. If no significant comments are received during
the public comment period the permitting authority should prepare a
statement to that effect.
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\15\ The EPA is aware that many permitting authorities elect to
respond to all comments. While the EPA is proposing to require that
permitting authorities must respond to all significant comments, the
Agency's proposal is not intended to discourage permitting
authorities from that practice.
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b. Statement of Basis
The statement of basis document, which provides the legal and
factual basis for the permit terms or conditions, is a necessary
component for an effective permit review. Under the current
regulations, permitting authorities are required to send this
``statement of basis'' to the EPA and ``to any other person who
requests it.'' 40 CFR 70.7(a)(5). The EPA recently compiled best
practices for developing and preparing statement of basis documents in
the April 2014 guidance document, Implementation Guidance on Statement
of Basis Requirements Under the Clean Air Act Title V Operating Permits
Program.\16\ In most situations, the permitting authority makes the
statement of basis document available for the public comment period on
the draft permit (at least 30 days long), for the EPA's 45-day review,
and during the 60-day petition period.
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\16\ Memorandum from Stephen D. Page, Director, Office of Air
Quality Planning and Standards, U.S. EPA, to Regional Air Division
Directors, April 30, 2014. Available at: https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-08/documents/20140430.pdf.
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To address any occasions where it may be absent during the permit
issuance process, the EPA now proposes to add language to the part 70
regulations that would reaffirm its importance and require its
inclusion at all points in the permit review process for every permit.
To that end, we are proposing that 40 CFR 70.4(b), 70.7(h) and 70.8(a)
would be revised to specifically identify the statement of basis
document as a required document.
c. Incorrect Reference
The EPA proposes one additional change to 40 CFR 70.4(b) to amend
an incorrect reference. Specifically, the language in 40 CFR
70.4(b)(3)(viii) currently reads: ``[t]he contents of a part 70 permit
shall not be entitled to protection under section 115(c) of the Act.''
However, section 115(c) of the Act pertains to reciprocity related to
statutory provisions addressing endangerment of public health or
welfare in foreign countries from air pollution emitted in the United
States.
Therefore, the EPA proposes to revise the citation in 40 CFR
70.4(b)(3)(viii) to section 114(c) of the Act, which pertains to the
availability of records, reports, and information to the public. This
change ensures the regulations comport with the parallel provision in
the section 503(e) of the CAA, which states
[[Page 57839]]
that: ``The contents of a permit shall not be entitled to protection
under section 7414(c) of this title.''
d. Commencement of EPA 45-Day Review Period
The agency considers both the statement of basis and the written
RTC to be integral components of the permit record. Having access to
these documents during the agency's 45-day review period could improve
the efficiency of the review, and also ensures that the agency has
these critical parts of the record before it in reviewing a proposed
permit under CAA section 505(b)(1). Further, it ensures that these
documents are completed and available during the petition period under
CAA section 505(b)(2). The EPA is proposing revisions to part 70 to
require that any proposed permit that is transmitted to the agency must
include both the statement of basis and written RTC among the necessary
information as described in 40 CFR 70.8. The agency is proposing that
the 45-day review period would not begin until all the supporting
information listed in the proposed revisions to 40 CFR 70.8(a)(1)(i)
has been received by the EPA. This includes the proposed permit,
statement of basis, and the written RTC (or when no significant
comments are received during the public comment period a statement to
that effect). Finally, the EPA proposes to revise 40 CFR 70.7(h)(7) to
require that within 30 days of sending the proposed permit to the EPA,
that permitting authorities must provide notification that the proposed
permit and the response to significant public comments are available to
the public. Such notice must explain how these materials may be
accessed.
The EPA recognizes that some permitting authorities run the 30-day
public comment period and 45-day EPA review period concurrently, as
long as no significant comments are received. Under this proposal such
a practice could continue, but if a significant public comment is
received, the Administrator would no longer consider the submitted
permit as a proposed permit. In such instances, the permitting
authority must make any necessary revisions to the permit or permit
record, and per the regulations proposed in this notice, resubmit the
proposed permit to EPA with the RTC and statement of basis, and any
other required supporting information, with any revisions that were
made to address the public comments, to re-start the EPA's 45-day
review period. This reflects the EPA's understanding of how such
concurrent permitting programs currently operate.
e. Notification to the Public
Because the petition period runs from the end of the EPA's 45-day
review period, and the date a proposed permit is received by the EPA is
not always apparent, the petition deadline is not always readily
apparent. To date, the agency has encouraged permitting authorities to
provide notifications to the public or interested stakeholders
regarding the timing of proposal of permits to the EPA, for example by
making that information available either online or in the publication
in which public notice of the draft permit was given. At this time, the
agency is considering and requests comment on the best method for the
public to be made aware of the date that a proposed permit is received
by the EPA, as well as the deadline to submit a petition on a
particular proposed permit. The EPA proposes to post when a proposed
permit is received and the corresponding 60-day deadline for submitting
a petition on the EPA Regional Office Web sites.
2. Why is the EPA proposing this change?
Section 505(a)(1)(B) of the CAA requires in relevant part that
permitting authorities transmit to the Administrator each proposed
permit. The current regulations contain the same requirement in 40 CFR
70.8(a)(1). Failure to submit any information necessary for the
adequate review of the proposed permit is grounds for an objection. See
40 CFR 70.8(c)(3)(ii). Part 70 also currently requires that the
permitting authority provide a statement of basis that sets forth the
legal and factual basis for the draft permit conditions (including
references to the applicable statutory and regulatory provisions). See
40 CFR 70.7(a)(5).
As a general matter, initial and renewed title V permits are
developed by a permitting authority and then go through a public notice
and comment period. The draft permit may undergo some revisions based
on the public comment period and this updated version of the permit,
referred to as the proposed permit, is sent to the EPA for a 45-day
review period per CAA section 505(b)(1). Many permitting authorities
already send a written RTC and a statement of basis along with the
proposed permit for the EPA 45-day review. However, there are other
permitting authorities that do not; instead this information may be
provided by these permitting authorities at some point later in the
permitting process. When these documents, and the RTC document in
particular, are unavailable for the EPA review period, the EPA cannot
provide a fully effective review. Moreover, when these documents are
unavailable to the public following the EPA's review, potential
petitioners may be missing necessary information to determine whether
to submit a petition or to provide a full argument in support of any
issues they may raise in a petition.
Notably, the EPA's 45-day review period under the current rules
begins when the EPA has received the proposed permit and ``all
necessary information'' from the permitting authority. 40 CFR 70.8(c).
With regard to the availability of necessary information for the
agency's 45-day review of a proposed permit, the EPA stated in the
proposal to the original title V regulations that the agency believes
it can object to the issuance of permit where the materials submitted
by the permitting authority do not provide enough information to allow
a meaningful EPA review of whether the proposed permit is in compliance
with requirements of the Act (including the SIP). If the agency was not
able to object under these circumstances, the EPA's oversight rule
could be severely hampered. 56 FR 21750 (1991). The EPA continues to
interpret the Act in this way and provides part of the rationale for
these proposed revisions to the regulations.
In reviewing title V petitions, the EPA generally pays careful
attention to the permitting authority's RTC. The EPA also explained the
benefits of making the written RTC available during its 45-day review
period in 2014 in the Hu Honua Order:
[P]roviding the entire record for a Proposed Permit at the
beginning of the EPA's 45-day review period serves to enhance the
EPA's review of the Proposed Permit by providing a fuller
understanding of the permitting history and the state's rationale
for its permitting decisions. Where the entire record is available
at the beginning of the 45-day review period, the EPA has the
benefit of understanding the permitting history and the state's
rationale for its permitting decisions. Likewise, where the entire
record is available at the beginning of the public's 60-day window
to submit petitions to the Administrator, the public has the benefit
of understanding the permitting history and the state's rationale
for its permitting decisions. Providing the entire record before the
start of the public's 60-day petition period would allow the public
to better assess any issues with the permit that they may have
identified.
See, In the Matter of Hu Honua Bioenergy Facility, Order on
Petition No. IX-2001-1 (July 2, 2014) at 30.
As noted in Section III.D.5 of this notice under general principles
of
[[Page 57840]]
administrative law, it is incumbent upon an administrative agency to
respond to significant comments raised during the public comment
period. See, e.g., Home Box Office v. FCC, 567 F.2d 9, 35 (D.C. Cir.
1977) (``the opportunity to comment is meaningless unless the agency
responds to significant points raised by the public.'') It is to the
benefit of the permitting authority to respond to significant comments,
as it is an opportunity to further refine the permit record and/or
articulate the authority's rationale. As the issues raised in a title V
petition must generally be raised with reasonable specificity during
the comment period, responding to comments gives the permitting
authority a chance to address any issues that may become the basis for
a petition. Generally speaking, in order to make the demonstration
required under CAA 505(b)(2), a petitioner is expected to address the
permitting authority's final decision and reasoning, including any
response in the RTC. See MacClarence, 596 F.3d at 1132-33; see also,
e.g., In the Matter of Noranda Alumina, LLC, Order on Petition No. VI-
2011-04 (December 14, 2012) at 20-21 (denying title V petition issue
where petitioners did not respond to state's explanation in response to
comments or explain why the state erred or the permit was deficient);
In the Matter of Kentucky Syngas, LLC, Order on Petition No. IV-2010-9
(June 22, 2012) at 41 (denying title V petition issue where petitioners
did not acknowledge or reply to state's response to comments or provide
a particularized rationale for why the state erred or the permit was
deficient). However, if the state has not responded to the comment,
there is nothing for the petitioner to address. If the written RTC is
not available during the petition period, it may not be clear how the
petitioner would be able to address the permitting authority's response
in its petition. Similarly, if a permitting authority has not
adequately articulated its rationale for a particular permitting action
that rationale may not be evident to the EPA from the permit record and
a petitioner may be able to easily demonstrate that the articulated
rationale is inadequate to support the action. For these reasons,
without the availability of the written RTC during the petition period,
there may be an increased likelihood of granting a particular claim on
the basis that the state provided an inadequate rationale or permit
record.
While many permitting authorities submit the RTC and statement of
basis with a title V proposed permit, these proposed revisions, if
finalized, would promote national consistency and the availability of
the RTC document during the EPA 45-day review and the 60-day window in
which a petition may be submitted on the proposed permit. This proposed
requirement would allow a petitioner to better determine whether flaws
in the permit, permit record, or public participation procedures raised
during the public comment period had been adequately addressed. In
turn, this would enhance a petitioner's confidence in its judgment
whether a title V petition is warranted, because it would have the
benefit of the permitting authority's rationale for permit terms and
permit actions. Thus, it could facilitate resolution of issues earlier
in the permitting process and may reduce the number of petitions or
petition claims filed. Further, when properly implemented by permitting
authorities, the agency anticipates that this proposed requirement
would likely reduce the number of EPA determinations to grant a
petition because a permitting authority's rationale is inadequate. The
EPA is proposing this regulatory change to ensure that petitioners have
the opportunity to address the permitting authority's response to
comment in order to meet their demonstration burden. As such, these
proposed revisions are supported by and would help implement the EPA's
interpretation in this context of the ambiguous term ``demonstrate''
under CAA section 505(b)(2). See MacClarence, 596 F.3d at 1132-33
(finding the EPA's expectation that a petitioner challenge a permitting
authority's final reasoning as reflected in the statement of basis of
the permit a reasonable interpretation of the demonstration
requirement).
These proposed changes are responsive to recommendations from the
CAAAC Title V Task Force Final Report. The 2006 report included a
number of recommendations for implementation improvements, including
specific recommendations regarding public notification and public
participation in the title V process. The majority of Task Force
members agreed that if a permitting authority receives comments on a
draft permit, it is essential that the permitting authority prepare a
written response to comments. See Title V Task Force Final Report
Recommendation 1 at page 238. The majority of Task Force members also
recommended that if a permitting authority received public comments
(from anyone other than the permittee) during the public comment
period, the RTC described in Recommendation 1 should be provided to the
EPA for consideration during its 45-day review period. See Title V Task
Force Final Report Recommendation 2 at 239.
While the Act does not expressly require the submission of the RTC
and statement of basis together with the proposed permit, it also does
not preclude such a requirement or prescribe the specific materials
that are needed to review a proposed permit. In light of the focus of
CAA section 505(b)(2) on issues raised with reasonable specificity
during the comment period, it is reasonable to interpret the Act to
include a requirement that would allow the EPA and the public access to
materials such as the RTC and statement of basis that would allow them
to evaluate the issues raised with reasonable specificity during the
comment period and the permitting authority's response.
The agency believes these proposed revisions to the part 70 rules
are within the EPA's inherent discretion to formulate procedures to
discharge its obligations under CAA sections 505(b)(1) and 505(b)(2),
as discussed in Section IV.A of this notice. If finalized, it would
help the EPA more efficiently review both proposed permits and title V
petitions.
3. Request for Comment
Comments are requested on all aspects of these proposed revisions.
Comments are specifically requested on the proposed regulatory language
requiring the preparation of a written RTC. Additionally, the EPA
requests comment on all aspects of the proposal to require both the
written RTC and statement of basis be included in the record that is
sent with the proposed title V permit for the EPA's 45-day review. The
EPA is expressly taking comment on the best method(s) for proposed
permits to be made available so that the public is aware when a
proposed permit is received by the EPA for its 45-day review. States
are also encouraged to provide information on whether any changes to
state rules and programs would be necessary if this proposed revision
to part 70 were finalized. The EPA is also expressly taking comment on
the practices of permitting authorities that conduct concurrent review
and is particularly interested in what processes or steps should be
followed to allow for concurrent review, even if the permitting
authority is not aware of whether or not it will receive comment on the
title V permit when that permit is initially submitted to EPA. Finally,
the EPA solicits comments on the proposed regulatory language in 40 CFR
70.4, 70.7, and 70.8 requiring the
[[Page 57841]]
statement of basis is necessary or appropriate to ensure the document
is available at all stages of the permit issuance process, or whether
including it in fewer provisions would be adequate (and if so, which
ones).
V. Pre- and Post-Petition Process Information/Guidance
In this section of the notice, the EPA is providing information on
certain steps in the title V petition process, namely the permit
issuance process that occurs before a petition is submitted, and the
post-petition process, which occurs after the EPA grants an objection
on at least one issue in a petition. The EPA anticipates this
information will help stakeholders gain a better understanding of the
role a petition might play in the development of a permit that assures
compliance with applicable requirements under the CAA and part 70. Most
of what follows has been addressed publicly in various formats, but the
EPA believes that repeating this information here for the public's
convenience will provide stakeholders with a comprehensive look at the
petition opportunity in CAA section 505(b)(2) and 40 CFR 70.
A. Recommended Practices for Complete Permit Records
1. Recommended Practices for Permitting Authorities
The proposed changes in Section IV.D of this notice are intended to
increase the effectiveness of the EPA 45-day review as well as ensure
that the full permit record is before petitioners during the 60-day
petition period. Making these documents available also provides an
opportunity for a permitting authority to ensure that they have fully
responded to comments when preparing the proposed permit. Permitting
authorities have at least three opportunities to provide the permit
record and ensure that it comports with the CAA: the draft, proposed,
and final permit.
While the EPA is not requiring the following actions, the agency is
recommending practices for permitting authorities when preparing title
V permits. In the agency's experience, these practices can minimize the
likelihood that a petition will be submitted on a title V permit. Many
involve taking action at an appropriate time to ensure that the permit
includes the conditions to assure compliance with applicable
requirements under the CAA and part 70. In addition, many focus on
consulting with the appropriate EPA Regional Office early when
preparing and issuing permits. These ``recommended practices'' include:
[cir] Consulting with the appropriate EPA Regional Office as needed
on key aspects of the permit before the draft permit stage, especially
if the permit is expected to be highly visible or contested.
[cir] On a case-by-case basis, considering whether a particular
draft permit warrants outreach to the community.
[cir] On a case-by-case basis, considering whether it is
appropriate to provide for a public participation opportunity on a
revised draft permit.
[cir] Fully addressing significant comments on draft permits and
ensuring the permit or permit record includes adequate rationale for
the decisions made. For example, permitting authorities should provide
sufficient rationale for selected monitoring to assure compliance. The
EPA's objections based on an inadequate record most often occur when
the EPA finds that a permitting authority did not sufficiently explain
why the monitoring was sufficient to assure compliance with a
particular limit.
[cir] Consulting with the appropriate EPA Regional Office as needed
to resolve issues related to comments on draft permits and
incorporating those resolutions into the proposed permits.
[cir] Consulting with the appropriate EPA Regional Offices as
needed to resolve issues related to the EPA objections or comments on
proposed permits and incorporating those resolutions into the final
permits.
[cir] For petitions on which the EPA grants an objection on a claim
because the record is inadequate, revising the record and permit as
necessary and in a timely manner to resolve the objection.
[cir] Reviewing permits that are the subject of a petition and
revising or reopening for cause to address any issues raised by the
petition that have not been resolved.
[cir] Posting the proposed permit and RTC online where possible.
2. Recommended Practices for Permit Applicants
The EPA is providing the following recommended practices for a
source to consider to help ensure that its permit includes the
conditions to assure compliance with applicable requirements under the
CAA and part 70. In some cases, this may minimize the likelihood that a
petition will be submitted on its title V permit. These ``recommended
practices'' include:
[cir] Submitting permit applications that include all information
required under the approved title V permit program.
[cir] Consulting with the permitting authority when any discrepancy
or inaccuracy is identified in the permit, at any stage of the
permitting process.
[cir] Promptly providing any updates to the permit application to
the permitting authority.
[cir] If public comments identify an issue in the draft permit,
contacting the permitting authority to make revisions to address the
concern before the permit is proposed to the EPA.
[cir] Timely responding to inquiries from the permitting authority
at each stage in the permitting process, including the draft, proposed,
and final stages.
B. Post-Petition Process
The following discussion provides information about the activities
that occur, or may occur, after the EPA responds to a title V petition.
Various stakeholders have indicated there can be confusion around the
appropriate steps following an EPA petition order, particularly when
the Administrator granted the petition in whole or in part. The summary
below describes EPA's interpretation of key provisions of the CAA and
implementing regulations. This interpretation has already been shared
publicly in title V orders responding to petitions. See, e.g., In the
Matter of Public Service of New Hampshire Schiller Station, Order on
Petition Number VI-2014-04 (July 28, 2015) at 4; In the Matter of
Meraux Refinery, Order on Petition Number VI-2012-04 (May 29, 2015) at
7-10. In the interest of providing additional transparency and clarity
for the title V petition process, and for the public's convenience, the
EPA repeats that interpretation in the following paragraphs.
When the EPA objects to a proposed permit under CAA section 505(b),
section 505(b)(3) instructs that a permitting authority ``may not issue
the permit unless it is revised and issued'' in accordance with section
505(c) of the Act. If the permit has already been issued by the
permitting authority before it receives the objection, then the EPA
``shall modify, terminate, or revoke'' the permit, and the permitting
authority may then only issue a revised permit in accordance with
section 505(c) of the Act.
Under CAA section 505(c), if the permitting authority fails to
submit a permit revised to meet the Administrator's objection within 90
days after the objection, the Administrator must issue or deny the
[[Page 57842]]
permit in accordance with the requirements under title V. Section
505(c) further provides that no objection is subject to judicial review
until the Administrator takes final action to issue or deny the permit.
Neither CAA section 505(b)(3) nor section 505(c) provide express
direction as to the specific procedures and steps the EPA must use to
``modify, terminate, or revoke'' or ``issue or deny'' the permit,
though section 505(c) points generally to the requirements under title
V. Although the Act is ambiguous, the implementing regulations shed
some light on the process. Those regulations provide a state with 90
days to resolve the EPA's objection and terminate, modify, or revoke
and reissue the permit, before the EPA would need to begin to act on
the permit. 40 CFR 70.8(d), 70.7(g)(4)-(5); see also 40 CFR 71.4(e)
(the EPA will take permitting action under part 71, when, among other
things, a state fails to respond to the EPA's objection). A permitting
authority may address an EPA objection by, among other things,
providing the EPA with a revised permit. See, e.g., 40 CFR 70.7(g)(4).
In some cases, the permitting authority's response to an EPA objection
may not involve a revision to the permit terms and conditions
themselves, but may instead involve revisions to the permit record. As
an example, a permitting authority might opt to include additional
rationale and detail to support its decision in response to the EPA's
objection if such objection was based on the grounds that the permit
record does not adequately support the permitting authority's decision.
Whether the permitting authority submits revised permit terms, a
revised permit record, or other revisions to the permit, the permitting
authority's response is generally treated as a new proposed permit.\17\
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\17\ When the permitting authority decides to modify a permit in
order to resolve an EPA objection, it must go through the
appropriate procedures for that modification. For example, when the
permitting authority's response to an objection is a change to the
permit terms or conditions or a revision to the permit record, the
permitting authority should determine whether its response is a
minor modification or a significant modification to the title V
permit, as described in 40 CFR 70.7(e)(2) and (4) or the
corresponding regulations in the state's EPA-approved title V
program. If the permitting authority determines that the
modification is a significant modification, then the permitting
authority must provide for notice and opportunity for public comment
for the significant modification consistent with 40 CFR 70.7(h). In
other words, EPA's view that the state's response to an EPA
objection is a generally treated as a new proposed permit does not
alter the procedures for making the changes to the permit terms or
condition or permit record that are intended to resolve EPA's
objection.
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As described in previous title V orders, such as the 2013 Nucor II
Order, the EPA has generally treated the permitting authority response
as a new proposed permit which is subject to the agency's opportunity
to conduct a 45-day review per CAA 505(b)(1) and 40 CFR 70.8(c), and an
opportunity for a petition if the EPA does not object. As stated in the
Nucor II Order:
[T]he EPA viewed the revised permit as providing the EPA an
opportunity to object to the permit under CAA section 505(b)(l) and
40 CFR 70.8(c), and, when the EPA did not object, an opportunity for
a citizen to petition the EPA to object under CAA section 505(b)(2)
and 40 CFR 70.8(d). The EPA has also treated state responses to EPA
objections that revised the permit record to provide further support
for its decision as constituting new proposed permits subject to
review by the EPA under CAA section 505(b)(1) and 40 CFR 70.8(c),
and, absent an EPA objection, citizen petition under CAA section
505(b)(2) and 40 CFR 70.8(d). See, e.g., In the Matter of KerrMcGee/
Anadarko Petroleum Corp., Frederick Compressor Station, Order on
Petition VIII-2008-02, at 2-3 (Oct. 8, 2009); In the Matter of
Anadarko Petroleum Corp., Frederick Compressor Station, Order on
Petition VIII-2010-4, at 4-5 (Feb. 2, 2011). A permitting
authority's rationale for its permit terms is a fundamental
component of its permit decision. Accordingly, the EPA has viewed a
state response to an EPA objection that buttresses its basis for its
permit decision as a new proposed permit for purposes of CAA section
505(b) and 40 CFR 70.8(c) and (d).
Nucor II Order at 14.
The EPA's interpretation that a state's response to an EPA
objection generally triggers a new EPA review and petition opportunity
is consistent with, and a reasonable interpretation of, the statutory
and regulatory process for addressing objections by the EPA, as
explained previously. Accordingly, at the end of the 45-day review
period, if the EPA does not object, there is a 60-day window in which
there is an opportunity for a second petition. If a second petition is
received, the EPA must respond to the petition within 60 days under CAA
section 505(b)(2).
VI. Implementation
Costs associated with this proposed rule are expected to be
minimal. Much of the focus in this proposal is to codify the
established practice that has been publicly discussed and evolved over
time. If finalized, the revisions should impose no costs on
petitioners, and may reduce confusion over and the time necessary for
preparing a title V petition. The agency anticipates that a small
number of permitting authorities may need to amend their rules
regarding permit issuance to require responses to significant comments
and the submittal of those responses with the proposed permit that is
sent to the EPA for review.
The existing part 70 regulations provide for state program
revisions if part 70 is revised and the EPA determines such conforming
changes are necessary. 40 CFR 70.4(a) and 70.4(i). The EPA is
soliciting comment as to whether revisions to any approved state
programs would be necessary if the revisions to part 70 regulations
proposed in this notice are finalized. States are expressly encouraged
to provide information on any changes to state rules and programs that
may be necessary if the proposed revisions to 40 CFR 70.7(h) and 70.8
are finalized to require permitting authorities to respond in writing
to all significant comments raised during the public participation
process and to provide that response to the EPA for the agency's 45-day
review period.
VII. Proposed Determination of Nationwide Scope and Effect
Section 307(b)(1) of the CAA indicates which Federal Courts of
Appeal have venue for petitions of review of final agency actions by
the EPA under the CAA. This section provides, in part, that petitions
for review must be filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia Circuit (i) when the agency action consists of nationally
applicable regulations promulgated, or final actions taken, by the
Administrator; or (ii) when such action is locally or regionally
applicable, if the action is determined to be of nationwide scope or
effect and the Administrator publishes such a determination. The EPA
proposes to find and publish that this rule is based on a determination
of nationwide scope and effect. This proposed rule concerns revisions
to the EPA's regulations in part 70 for operating permit programs, and
these regulations apply to permitting programs across the country.
Accordingly, we propose to determine that this is a rulemaking of
nationwide scope or effect such that any petitions for review must be
filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit.
VIII. Environmental Justice Considerations
This action proposes certain revisions to part 70 regulations to
improve the title V petition submittal, review and response processes.
The proposed revisions and guidance provided in this rule should
increase the transparency and clarity of the petition process for all
stakeholders. First, the establishment of centralized petition
submittal is expected to reduce or eliminate
[[Page 57843]]
confusion over where to submit a petition. When using the preferred
method of an electronic petition submittal through the agency's
electronic submittal system, a petitioner will also have immediate
assurance that the petition and any attachments were received. However,
alternative submittal methods are still available options for members
of the public that experience technical difficulties when trying to
submit a petition or for those that do not have access to electronic
submittal mechanisms. Second, the proposed required content and format
provides instruction and clarity on what must be included in a
petition. This change is anticipated to assist petitioners in providing
all the critical information in their petitions in an effective manner,
which may increase the agency's efficiency in responding to petitions.
Third, the proposed regulatory changes would require permitting
authorities to respond to public comments in a written document that is
provided to the EPA for the agency's 45-day review and is available
during the 60-day opportunity to file a title V petition, which will
provide increased availability of information regarding permits for the
public in general and petitioners specifically. Further, this change
may provide more timely notification of pertinent steps and documents
in the permit issuance process. Fourth, the recommended practices for
permitting authorities and sources, if followed, may improve the
quality of public participation and the operating permits being issued.
Finally, the description of the post-petition process is anticipated to
reduce confusion regarding the appropriate steps when the EPA grants a
petition for an objection on a particular issue. This proposed action
does not compel any specific changes to the requirements to provide
opportunities for public participation in permitting nor does it
finalize any particular permit action that may affect the fair
treatment and meaningful involvement of all people. Further, this
proposed action is responsive to some of the feedback received during
the Environmental Justice in Permitting workshops the agency provided
in the North Birmingham area on September 15 and 16, 2014 and other
such meetings held in EPA's Region 4.
In preparation for this proposal, the agency participated in
community calls where the EPA presented a brief overview and
announcement of the rulemaking effort. The EPA provided additional
details about a planned webinar that will describe the title V petition
process, the content of this proposal, and when and how to submit
comments.
IX. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is not a significant action and was, therefore, not
submitted to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
This action would not impose any new information collection burden
under the PRA. OMB has previously approved the information collection
activities contained in the existing regulations and has assigned OMB
control number 2060-0243 for the title V part 70 program. To the extent
that a SIP revision or a title V program revision is necessary to
effect the changes being proposed, we believe that the burden is
already accounted for under the approved information collection
requests noted earlier.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. This
proposed action would not impose any requirements directly on small
entities. Entities potentially affected directly by this proposal
include anyone that chooses to submit a title V petition on a proposed
title V permit prepared by an EPA-approved state, local or tribal title
V permitting authority. Other entities directly affected may include
state, local, and tribal governments and none of these governments are
small governments. Other types of small entities are not directly
subject to the requirements of this action.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded federal mandate of $100
million or more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and would not
significantly or uniquely affect small governments. This proposed
action imposes no enforceable duty on any state, local or tribal
governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have
substantial direct effect on the states, on the relationship between
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action has tribal implications. However, it will neither
impose substantial direct compliance costs on federally recognized
tribal governments, nor preempt tribal law. The Southern Ute Indian
Tribe has an EPA-approved operating permit program under 40 CFR part 70
and could be impacted. The EPA conducted outreach to the tribes through
a call with the National Tribal Air Association. Further, the agency
plans to offer consultation to all tribal governments, and will
specifically offer to consult with the Southern Ute Indian tribe. The
EPA solicits comment from affected tribal governments on the
implications of this proposed rulemaking.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health and Safety Risks
The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 as applying to those
regulatory actions that concern environmental health or safety risks
that the EPA has reason to believe may disproportionately affect
children, per the definition of ``covered regulatory action'' in
section 2-202 of the Executive Order. This proposed action is not
subject to Executive Order 13045 because it does not concern an
environmental health risk or safety risk.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211, because it is
not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
This rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
The EPA believes the human health and environmental risk addressed
by this proposed action will not have potential disproportionately high
and adverse human health or environmental effects on minority, low-
income or indigenous populations. The results of this evaluation are
contained in Section
[[Page 57844]]
VIII of this notice titled, ``Environmental Justice Considerations.''
K. Determination Under Section 307(d)
Section 307(d)(1)(V) of the CAA provides that the provisions of CAA
section 307(d) apply to ``such other actions as the administrator may
determine.'' Pursuant to CAA section 307(d)(1)(V), the Administrator
determines that this proposed action is subject to the provisions of
CAA section 307(d).
VIII. Statutory Authority
The statutory authority for this proposed action is provided by 42
U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 70
Environmental protection, Administrative practice and procedure,
Air pollution control, Intergovernmental relations, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
Dated: August 15, 2016.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, title 40, Chapter I of the
Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended as set forth
below.
PART 70--STATE OPERATING PERMIT PROGRAMS
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1. The authority citation for the part 70 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401, et seq.
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2. Section 70.4 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(3)(viii) to reads
as follows:
Sec. 70.4 State program submittals and transition.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(3) * * *
(viii) Make available to the public any permit application,
statement of basis, compliance plan, permit, and monitoring and
compliance certification report pursuant to section 503(e) of the Act,
except for information entitled to confidential treatment pursuant to
section 114(c) of the Act. The contents of a part 70 permit itself
shall not be entitled to protection under section 114(c) of the Act.
* * * * *
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3. Section 70.7 is amended by:
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a. Revising paragraphs (h)(2) and (5); and
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b. Adding paragraphs (h)(6) and (7).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 70.7 Permit issuance, renewal, reopenings, and revisions.
* * * * *
(h) * * *
(2) The notice shall identify the affected facility; the name and
address of the permittee; the name and address of the permitting
authority processing the permit; the activity or activities involved in
the permit action; the emissions change involved in any permit
modification; the name, address, and telephone number of a person from
whom interested persons may obtain additional information, including
copies of the draft permit, statement of basis for the draft permit,
the application, all relevant supporting materials, including those set
forth in Sec. 70.4(b)(3)(viii), and all other materials available to
the permitting authority that are relevant to the permit decision; a
brief description of the comment procedures required by this part; and
the time and place of any hearing that may be held, including a
statement of procedures to request a hearing (unless a hearing has
already been scheduled);
* * * * *
(5) The permitting authority shall keep a record of the commenters
and of the issues raised during the public participation process, as
well as records of the written comments submitted during that process,
so that the Administrator may fulfill his obligation under section
505(b)(2) of the Act to determine whether a citizen petition may be
granted, and such records shall be available to the public.
(6) The permitting authority shall respond in writing to all
significant comments raised during the public participation process,
including any such written comments submitted during the public comment
period and any such comments raised during any public hearing on the
permit. If no significant comments are raised during the public
participation process, the permitting authority shall prepare a written
statement to that effect.
(7) The permitting authority shall give notice within 30 days of
transmitting the proposed permit to the Administrator, consistent with
the procedures under paragraph (h)(1) of this section, that the
proposed permit in accordance with Sec. 70.8(a)(1) and responses to
public comments in accordance with paragraph (h)(6) of this section
have been transmitted to the EPA, the date of the transmission, and
that these documents are available to the public. Such notice shall
explain how the public may access the proposed permit and responses to
comments. When possible, such notice shall include notification in the
same manner used to announce the availability of the draft permit for
public comment.
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4. Section 70.8 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(1), (c)(1) and
(d) to read as follows:
Sec. 70.8 Permit review by EPA and affected States.
(a) Transmission of information to the Administrator. (1) (i) The
permit program shall require that the permitting authority provide to
the Administrator a copy of each permit application (including any
application for significant or minor permit modification), the
statement of basis for each proposed permit and for each final permit,
each proposed permit, each final permit, the written response to
comments (which shall include a written response to all significant
comments raised during the public participation process on the draft
permit and recorded under Sec. 70.7(h)(5), or if no significant
comments are received, a statement to that effect), and an explanation
of how those public comments and the permitting authority's responses
are available to the public. The applicant may be required by the
permitting authority to provide a copy of the permit application
(including the compliance plan) directly to the Administrator. Upon
agreement with the Administrator, the permitting authority may submit
to the Administrator a permit application summary form and any relevant
portion of the permit application and compliance plan, in place of the
complete permit application and compliance plan. To the extent
practicable, the preceding information shall be provided in computer-
readable format compatible with EPA's national database management
system. The Administrator's 45-day review period for this proposed
permit will not begin until the proposed permit and all necessary
supporting material required under this paragraph have been received by
the EPA.
(ii) In instances where the Administrator has received a proposed
permit from a permitting authority before the public participation
process on the draft permit has been completed, and the permitting
authority receives a significant comment on the draft permit after the
submission of the proposed permit to the Administrator, the
Administrator will no longer consider the submitted proposed permit as
a permit proposed to be issued under section 505 of the Act. In such
instances, the permitting authority must make any revisions to the
permit or permit record necessary to address the public comments,
including preparation or revision of the response to comment document,
and must re-submit the
[[Page 57845]]
proposed permit and all necessary supporting material required in
paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section to the Administrator after the
public comment period has closed. The Administrator's 45-day review
period for this proposed permit will not begin until the proposed
permit and all necessary supporting material required under paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of this section have been received by the EPA.
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(1) The Administrator will object to the issuance of any proposed
permit determined by the Administrator not to be in compliance with
applicable requirements or requirements under this part. No permit for
which an application must be transmitted to the Administrator under
paragraph (a) of this section shall be issued if the Administrator
objects to its issuance in writing within 45 days of receipt of the
proposed permit and all necessary supporting information required under
paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
* * * * *
(d) Public petitions to the Administrator. The program shall
provide that, if the Administrator does not object in writing under
paragraph (c) of this section, any person may petition the
Administrator within 60 days after the expiration of the
Administrator's 45-day review period to make such objection. The
petitioner shall provide a copy of such petition to the permitting
authority and the applicant. Any such petition shall be based only on
objections to the permit that were raised with reasonable specificity
during the public comment period provided for in Sec. 70.7(h), unless
the petitioner demonstrates that it was impracticable to raise such
objections within such period, or unless the grounds for such objection
arose after such period. If the Administrator objects to the permit as
a result of a petition filed under this paragraph, the permitting
authority shall not issue the permit until EPA's objection has been
resolved, except that a petition for review does not stay the
effectiveness of a permit or its requirements if the permit was issued
after the end of the 45-day review period and prior to an EPA
objection. If the permitting authority has issued a permit prior to
receipt of an EPA objection under this paragraph, the Administrator
will modify, terminate, or revoke such permit, and shall do so
consistent with the procedures in Sec. 70.7(g) (4) or (5) (i) and (ii)
except in unusual circumstances, and the permitting authority may
thereafter issue only a revised permit that satisfies EPA's objection.
In any case, the source will not be in violation of the requirement to
have submitted a timely and complete application.
* * * * *
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5. Section 70.12 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 70.12 Public Petition Requirements.
Standard petition requirements. Each public petition sent to the
Administrator under 70.8(d) of this part shall include the following
elements in the following order:
(a) Identification of the proposed permit on which the petition is
based. The petition shall provide the permit number, version number, or
any other information by which the permit can be readily identified.
The petition shall specify whether the permit action is an initial
permit, a permit renewal, or a permit modification/revision, including
minor modifications/revisions.
(b) Sufficient information to show that the petition was timely
filed.
(c) Identification of Petition Claims. Any issue raised in the
petition as grounds for an objection shall be based on a claim that the
permit, permit record, or permit process is not in compliance with
applicable requirements or requirements under this part. All pertinent
information in support of each issue raised as a petition claim shall
be contained within the body of the petition. In determining whether to
object, the Administrator will not consider arguments, assertions,
claims, or other information incorporated into the petition by
reference. For each claim raised, the petition shall identify the
following:
(1) The specific grounds for an objection, citing to a specific
permit term or condition where applicable.
(2) The applicable requirement as defined in Sec. 70.2, or
requirement under part 70, that is not met.
(3) An explanation of how the term or condition in the permit, or
relevant portion of the permit record or permit process, is not
adequate to comply with the corresponding applicable requirement or
requirement under part 70.
(4) If the petition claims that the permitting authority did not
provide for a public participation procedure required under Sec.
70.7(h), the petition must identify specifically the required public
participation procedure that was not provided.
(5) Identification of where the issue was raised with reasonable
specificity during the public comment period provided for in Sec.
70.7(h), citing to any relevant page numbers in the public comment
submitted to the permitting authority and attaching this public comment
to the petition. If the grounds for the objection were not raised with
reasonable specificity during the public comment period, the petitioner
must demonstrate that such grounds arose after that period, or that it
was impracticable to raise such objections within that period, as
required under Sec. 70.8(d).
(6) Unless the grounds for the objection arose after the public
comment period or it was impracticable to raise the objection within
that period such that the exception under Sec. 70.8(d) applies, the
petition must identify where the permitting authority responded to the
public comment, including page number(s) in the publicly available
written response to comment, and explain how the permitting authority's
response to the comment is inadequate to address the issue raised in
the public comment. If the response to comment document does not
address the public comment at all, the petition shall state that.
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6. Section 70.13 is added to read as follows:
Sec. 70.13 Documents that May be Considered in Reviewing Petitions.
The information that the Administrator considers in making a
determination whether to grant or deny a petition submitted under Sec.
70.8(d) on a proposed permit generally includes, but is not limited to,
the Administrative Record for the proposed permit and the petition,
including attachments to the Petition. For purposes of this paragraph,
the Administrative Record for a particular proposed permit includes the
draft and proposed permits; any permit applications that relate to the
draft or proposed permits; the statement of bases for the draft and
proposed permits; the permitting authority's written responses to
comments, including responses to all significant comments raised during
the public participation process on the draft permit; relevant
supporting materials made available to the public according to Sec.
70.7(h)(2); and all other materials available to the permitting
authority that are relevant to the permitting decision and that the
permitting authority made available to the public according to Sec.
70.7(h)(2). If a final permit and a statement of basis for the final
permit are available during the agency's review of a petition on a
proposed permit, those documents may also be considered as part of
making a determination whether to grant or deny the petition.
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7. Section 70.14 is added to read as follows:
[[Page 57846]]
Sec. 70.14 Submission of Petitions.
Any petition to the Administrator shall be submitted through the
Operating Permits Group in the Air Quality Policy Division in the
Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards, using one of the three
following methods identified at the Title V Petitions Web site: An
electronic submission through the EPA's designated submission system
(the agency's preferred method); an electronic submission through the
EPA's designated email address listed on that Web site; or a paper
submission to the EPA's designated physical address listed on that Web
site. Any necessary attachments shall be submitted together with the
petition, using the same method as for the petition. Once a petition
has been successfully submitted using one of these three methods, the
petitioner should not submit additional copies of the petition using
another method. The Administrator is not obligated to consider
petitions submitted to the agency using any method other than the three
identified in this paragraph.
[FR Doc. 2016-20029 Filed 8-23-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P