Notification of Decision To Withdraw Proposed Determination To Restrict the Use of an Area as a Disposal Site; Pebble Deposit Area, Southwest Alaska, 45749-45756 [2019-18596]
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Abstract: In order to effectively
implement and enforce final changes to
40 CFR part 258 on a State level,
owners/operators of municipal solid
waste landfills have to comply with the
final reporting and recordkeeping
requirements. Respondents include
owners or operators of new municipal
solid waste landfills (MSWLFs), existing
MSWLFs, and lateral expansions of
existing MSWLFs. The respondents, in
complying with 40 CFR part 258, are
required to record information in the
facility operating record, pursuant to
§ 258.29, as it becomes available. The
operating record must be supplied to the
state as requested until the end of the
post-closure care period of the MSWLF.
The information collected will be used
by the State Director to confirm owner
or operator compliance with the
regulations under Part 258. These
owners or operators could include
federal, state, and local governments,
and private waste management
companies. Facilities in NAICS codes
9221, 5622, 3252, 3251 and 3253 may be
affected by this rule.
Form Numbers: None.
Respondents/affected entities:
Recordkeeping and Reporting—Solid
Waste Disposal Facilities and Practices.
Respondent’s obligation to respond:
The respondents, in complying with 40
CFR part 258, are required to record
information in the facility operating
record, pursuant to § 258.29, as it
becomes available.
Estimated number of respondents:
10,211.
Frequency of response: On occasion.
Total estimated burden: 197,965
hours (per year). Burden is defined at 5
CFR 1320.03(b).
Total estimated cost: $15,238,668 (per
year), includes $2,210,853 annualized
capital or operation & maintenance
costs.
Changes in the Estimates: There is a
decrease in the total estimated burden
currently identified in the OMB
Inventory of Approved ICR Burdens.
This is due to the revised method of
burden calculation, not any program
changes or modifications to the
underlying burden level assumptions.
Previously, the burdens were grouped
together and given a weighted average.
On this ICR, each category of burdens
was seperated and evaluated as to the
specific task. The task specific burden
calculations are a reflection of actual
hours spent on each task.
Courtney Kerwin,
Director, Regulatory Support Division.
[FR Doc. 2019–18739 Filed 8–29–19; 8:45 am]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–R10–OW–2017–0369; 9998–93–
Region 10]
Notification of Decision To Withdraw
Proposed Determination To Restrict
the Use of an Area as a Disposal Site;
Pebble Deposit Area, Southwest
Alaska
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The United States
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Region 10 Regional Administrator is
providing notice of the EPA’s decision
to withdraw the Proposed
Determination to restrict the use of
certain waters in the South Fork Koktuli
River, North Fork Koktuli River, and
Upper Talarik Creek watersheds in
southwest Alaska as disposal sites for
dredged or fill material associated with
mining the Pebble deposit.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Visit
www.epa.gov/bristolbay. Erik Peterson
is the project manager. Please call a
Bristol Bay-specific phone line at (206)
553–0040, or email r10bristolbay@
epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
I. General Information
EPA Region 10 is providing notice
under 40 CFR 231.5(c) of EPA’s
withdrawal of the Proposed
Determination to restrict the use of
certain waters in the South Fork Koktuli
River, North Fork Koktuli River, and
Upper Talarik Creek watersheds in
southwest Alaska as disposal sites for
dredged or fill material associated with
mining the Pebble deposit issued under
EPA’s Clean Water Act (CWA) Section
404(c) authority. EPA is concluding the
process it started in July 2017,
suspended in January 2018, and
resumed in June 2019 to withdraw the
Proposed Determination. EPA has
decided that now is the appropriate
time to complete the withdrawal of the
Proposed Determination in light of
developments in the record and the
availability of processes for EPA to
address record issues with the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) prior
to any potential future decision-making
by EPA regarding this matter.
A. How to Obtain a Copy of the
Proposed Determination: The July 2014
Proposed Determination is available via
the internet on the EPA Region 10
Bristol Bay site at www.epa.gov/
bristolbay.
B. How to Obtain a Copy of the
Settlement Agreement: The May 11,
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45749
2017, settlement agreement is available
via the internet on the EPA Region 10
Bristol Bay site at www.epa.gov/
bristolbay.
C. How to Obtain a Copy of the
Proposal to Withdraw the Proposed
Determination: The July 2017 proposal
to withdraw the Proposed
Determination is available via the
internet on the EPA Region 10 Bristol
Bay site at www.epa.gov/bristolbay.
Information regarding the proposal to
withdraw can also be found in the
docket for this effort at
www.regulations.gov, see docket ID No.
EPA–R10–OW–2017–0369 or use the
following link: https://
www.regulations.gov/
docket?D=EPAR10-OW-2017-0369.
D. How to Obtain a Copy of
Notification of Suspension: The
February 2018 notice announcing the
EPA’s decision to suspend the
proceeding to withdraw the Proposed
Determination at that time is available
via the internet on the EPA Region 10
Bristol Bay site at www.epa.gov/
bristolbay.
II. Factual Background
In 2011, EPA initiated an assessment
to determine the significance of the
Bristol Bay watershed’s ecological
resources and evaluate the potential
impacts of large-scale mining on these
resources. The stated purpose was to
characterize the biological and mineral
resources of the Bristol Bay watershed;
increase understanding of the potential
impacts of large-scale mining on the
Region’s fish resources; and inform
future decision-making. Also in 2011,
Northern Dynasty Minerals, which
wholly owns the Pebble Limited
Partnership (PLP), submitted
information to the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission
that detailed its intention to develop a
large-scale mine at the Pebble deposit.
EPA Region 10 used this information to
develop its mining scenarios for the
Bristol Bay Watershed Assessment.
After two rounds of public comments on
drafts of the Bristol Bay Watershed
Assessment in 2012 and 2013 that
generated over one million comments,
as well as independent external peer
review, EPA Region 10 finalized the
Assessment in January of 2014.
On July 21, 2014, EPA Region 10
published in the Federal Register (79
FR 42314) a Notice of Proposed
Determination under section 404(c) of
the CWA to restrict the use of certain
waters in the South Fork Koktuli River,
North Fork Koktuli River, and Upper
Talarik Creek watersheds (located
within the larger Bristol Bay watershed)
as disposal sites for dredged or fill
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material associated with mining the
Pebble deposit. This Proposed
Determination was issued preemptively;
in other words, it was issued prior to
PLP’s submission of a CWA Section 404
permit application to the Corps. The
notice started a public comment period
that ended on September 19, 2014. EPA
Region 10 also held seven hearings
throughout southwest Alaska during the
week of August 11, 2014. In addition to
testimony taken at the hearings, EPA
Region 10 received more than 670,000
written comments during the public
comment period.
The next step in the section 404(c)
process would have been for EPA
Region 10 to either forward a
Recommended Determination to EPA
Headquarters or to withdraw the
Proposed Determination pursuant to 40
CFR 231.5(a). However, PLP filed a
lawsuit that alleged that EPA formed
three advisory committees in violation
of the Federal Advisory Committee Act
to assist EPA ‘‘in developing and
implementing an unprecedented plan to
assert EPA’s purported authority under
section 404(c) of the federal Clean Water
Act . . . in a manner that will
effectively preempt [p]laintiff from
exercising its right through the normal
permit process to extract minerals from
the Pebble Mine deposit in Southwest
Alaska.’’ Second Amended Complaint
for Declaratory and Injunctive Relief at
2, Pebble Limited Partnership v. EPA,
No. 3:14-cv-00171 (D. Alaska July 7,
2015). As part of this litigation, the
court issued a preliminary injunction
against EPA on November 25, 2014 after
the court determined that PLP had ‘‘a
fair chance of success on the merits’’
with respect to one of the alleged federal
advisory committees. Order Granting
Preliminary Injunction at 1–2, Pebble
Limited Partnership v. EPA, No. 3:14-cv00171 (D. Alaska. Nov. 25, 2014). The
injunction halted EPA Region 10’s
section 404(c) review process until the
case was resolved. EPA and PLP
resolved all outstanding lawsuits in a
May 11, 2017 settlement agreement, and
the court subsequently dissolved the
injunction and dismissed the cases. As
part of the settlement, EPA agreed that
it would not advance to the next interim
step in the section 404(c) review process
(i.e., a Recommended Determination), if
such a decision is made, until either
May 11, 2021 or EPA publishes a notice
of the Corps’ final environmental impact
statement (EIS) for the project,
whichever is earlier. EPA also agreed to
‘‘initiate a process to propose to
withdraw the Proposed Determination.’’
In July 2017, EPA Region 10 issued a
notice of a proposal to withdraw its July
2014 Proposed Determination that was
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published in the Federal Register (82
FR 33123, July 19, 2017). In this notice,
EPA defined the scope of the input it
was seeking on its proposal to
withdraw. Specifically, EPA sought
input on three reasons underlying its
proposed withdrawal:
1. Provide PLP with additional time to
submit a CWA Section 404 permit
application to the Corps;
2. Remove any uncertainty, real or
perceived, about PLP’s ability to submit
a permit application and have that
permit application reviewed; and
3. Allow the factual record regarding
any forthcoming permit application to
develop.
The notice opened a public comment
period that closed on October 17, 2017.
During the public comment period, EPA
received more than one million public
comments regarding its proposal to
withdraw. EPA also held two hearings
in the Bristol Bay watershed during the
week of October 9, 2017. Approximately
200 people participated in the hearings.
EPA also consulted with federally
recognized tribal governments from the
Bristol Bay region and Alaska Native
Claims Settlement Act Regional and
Village Corporations with lands in the
Bristol Bay watershed on the Agency’s
proposal to withdraw.
On December 22, 2017, PLP submitted
a CWA Section 404 permit application
to the Corps to develop a mine at the
Pebble deposit. On January 5, 2018, the
Corps issued a notice that provided
PLP’s permit application to the public
and stated that an EIS would be
required as part of its permit review
process consistent with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The
Corps also invited relevant federal and
state agencies, including EPA, to be
cooperating agencies on the
development of the EIS.
On January 26, 2018, EPA Region 10
issued a notice announcing a
‘‘suspension’’ of the proceeding to
withdraw the Proposed Determination.
This action was published in the
Federal Register on February 28, 2018
(83 FR 8668).
On March 1, 2018, EPA Region 10
accepted the Corps’ invitation to serve
as a cooperating agency for development
of the EIS for the Pebble project. As a
cooperating agency, EPA has
participated in meetings and provided
comments on early drafts of EIS
material, including on sections of the
Preliminary DEIS in December of 2018.
EPA also provided scoping comments to
the Corps on June 29, 2018.
The Corps released a Draft EIS and
Section 404 Public Notice (404 PN) on
February 20, 2019. The public comment
periods for both opened on March 1,
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2019 and closed on July 1, 2019. The
Corps received over 100,000 comments
on the Draft EIS. EPA submitted over
100 pages of comments to the Corps on
the Draft EIS and over 50 pages of
comments on the 404 PN.
On June 26, 2019, the EPA General
Counsel, acting by delegated authority
for the Administrator, directed EPA
Region 10 ‘‘to continue deliberating
regarding whether to withdraw the 2014
Proposed Determination or
alternatively, decide to leave the 2014
Proposed Determination in place.’’ The
General Counsel’s memorandum
indicated that the suspension notice had
created confusion regarding the status of
the 2014 Proposed Determination and
that by ‘‘making a decision one way or
the other, the Region will provide
much-needed clarity and transparency
to the public on this issue.’’ In addition,
the General Counsel also asked the
Region to ‘‘reconsider its previous
statement that it would seek additional
public comment on the 2014 Proposed
Determination, in light of the ample
opportunity for public comment
previously provided and the current
public comment opportunity on the
more than 1,400-page [Draft EIS].’’
III. Legal Background
A. CWA Section 404(c)
CWA Section 404(a) allows the Corps
to issue permits authorizing the
discharge of dredged or fill material at
specified disposal sites. Section 404(b)
provides that ‘‘[s]ubject to subsection (c)
. . ., each such disposal site shall be
specified for each such permit by the
Secretary. . . .’’ CWA Section 404(c)
authorizes EPA to deny or restrict the
use of defined areas as a disposal site:
The Administrator is authorized to prohibit
the specification (including the withdrawal
of specification) of any defined area as a
disposal site, and he is authorized to deny or
restrict the use of any defined area for
specification (including the withdrawal of
specification) as a disposal site, whenever he
determines, after notice and opportunity for
public hearings, that the discharge of such
materials into such area will have an
unacceptable adverse effect on municipal
water supplies, shellfish beds and fishery
areas (including spawning and breeding
areas), wildlife, or recreational areas. Before
making such determination, the
Administrator shall consult with the
Secretary. The Administrator shall set forth
in writing and make public his findings and
his reasons for making any determination
under this subsection.
The statute authorizes, but does not
mandate, EPA to initiate the section
404(c) process. City of Olmstead Falls v.
EPA, 266 F. Supp. 2d 718, 723 (N.D.
Ohio 2003). EPA’s decision whether or
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not to exercise section 404(c) is akin to
enforcement discretion where an
agency’s discretion is at its broadest.
EPA may decide to exercise its
discretionary authority under section
404(c) ‘‘whenever’’ it makes a
determination that a discharge will have
an unacceptable adverse effect. 33
U.S.C. 1344(c); 40 CFR 231.1(a), (c); see
also Mingo Logan Coal Co. v. EPA, 714
F.3d 608, 613 (DC Cir. 2013). Once it
makes the required determination, EPA
has the authority to fully prohibit
discharges or issue restrictions or
conditions on discharges.
B. CWA Section 404(c) Regulations
EPA’s regulations in 40 CFR part 231
establish the procedures for EPA’s
consideration of whether to use its
section 404(c) authority:
• Step 1: Initial Notification. If the
EPA Regional Administrator has reason
to believe, after evaluating the available
information, that an unacceptable
adverse effect could result from the
specification or use for specification of
a defined area as a disposal site, the
Regional Administrator may initiate the
section 404(c) process by notifying the
Corps, the applicant (if any), and the
site owner that he intends to issue a
proposed determination. Each of those
parties then has 15 days to demonstrate
to the satisfaction of the Regional
Administrator that no unacceptable
adverse effects will occur, or the District
Engineer can provide notice of an intent
to take corrective action to prevent an
unacceptable adverse effect.
• Step 2: Proposed Determination. If
within 15 days no such notice is
provided, or if the Regional
Administrator is not satisfied that no
unacceptable adverse effect will occur,
the Regional Administrator must
publish a notice of the proposed
determination in the Federal Register,
soliciting public comment and offering
an opportunity for public hearing.
• Step 3: Withdrawal of Proposed
Determination or Preparation of
Recommended Determination.
Following the public hearing and close
of the comment period, the Regional
Administrator must either withdraw the
proposed determination or prepare a
recommended determination. A
decision to withdraw may be reviewed
at the discretion of the Assistant
Administrator for Water at EPA
Headquarters.1 If the Regional
1 In 1984, the EPA Administrator delegated the
authority to make final determinations under
section 404(c) to EPA’s national CWA Section 404
program manager, who is the Assistant
Administrator for Water. That delegation remains in
effect. With regard to EPA’s Section 404(c) action
for the Pebble deposit area, on March 22, 2019,
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Administrator prepares a recommended
determination, the Regional
Administrator then forwards it and the
complete administrative record
compiled in the Regional Office to the
Assistant Administrator for Water.
• Step 4: Final Determination. Within
30 days the Assistant Administrator for
Water will consider the recommended
determination of the Regional
Administrator and the information in
the administrative record, and also
consult again with the Corps, the
applicant (if any), and the site owner.
Following consultation and
consideration of all available
information, the Assistant
Administrator for Water makes the final
determination affirming, modifying, or
rescinding the recommended
determination.
With regard to Step 1, the regulations
provide that the Regional Administrator
‘‘may’’ initiate certain actions if he or
she ‘‘has reason to believe’’ that an
unacceptable adverse effect ‘‘could
result.’’ 40 CFR 231.3(a). The
regulations do not require immediate
action where the Regional
Administrator makes such a finding
because the Regional Administrator has
the ‘‘necessary discretion in deciding
when to act or whether to act at all.’’ 44
FR 58079, October 9, 1979. In addition,
EPA uses the term ‘‘could’’ for this early
stage ‘‘because the preliminary
determination merely represents a
judgment that the matter is worth
looking into.’’ 44 FR 58078, October 9,
1979. Importantly, a ‘‘proposed
determination does not represent a
judgment that discharge of dredged or
fill material will result in unacceptable
adverse effects; it merely means that the
Regional Administrator believes that the
issue should be explored.’’ 44 FR 58082,
October 9, 1979.
Although the regulations provide a
standard for the Regional
Administrator’s decision regarding
whether to issue a recommended
determination (i.e., discharge of material
‘‘would be likely to have an
unacceptable adverse effect.’’), the
regulations do not provide a regulatory
standard for the Regional
Administrator’s decision to withdraw a
proposed determination. 40 CFR
231.5(a), (c). Such a decision is at the
discretion of the Regional Administrator
‘‘after review of the available
information.’’ 44 FR 50582, October 9,
1979. Instead, the regulations only
include procedural requirements for the
Administrator Wheeler delegated to the General
Counsel the authority to perform all functions and
responsibilities retained by the Administrator or
previously delegated to the Assistant Administrator
for Water.
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45751
withdrawal of a proposed
determination. In particular, the
Regional Administrator must notify the
Administrator of the decision who then
has 10 days to notify the Regional
Administrator of his or her intent to
review. 40 CFR 231.5(c). In addition, the
Regional Administrator must send
copies of such notification to all
‘‘persons who commented on the
proposed determination or participated
at the hearing.’’ Id. The regulations
provide that ‘‘[s]uch persons may
submit timely written recommendations
concerning review.’’ Id. EPA’s final rule
preamble explains that the purpose of
this requirement was to allow for
‘‘public input into the Administrator’s
decision whether to review the Regional
Administrator’s withdrawal of a
proposed determination.’’ 44 FR 58081,
October 9, 1979.
In addition, EPA’s implementing
regulations recognize the statutory
mandate for EPA to consult with the
Corps on its section 404(c) decision.
Indeed, EPA’s regulations require
consultation with the Corps throughout
the various stages of the regulatory
process. Of particular note, the
regulations contemplate two specific
engagements with the Corps during the
initial stages of the section 404(c)
process.
First, EPA’s regulations generally
contemplate that where there is a permit
application pending, the Regional
Administrator’s initial determination of
whether the discharge ‘‘could’’ result in
an unacceptable adverse effect would be
made after considering the record
developed during its coordination with
the Corps on the permit application.
Section 231.3(a) provides that the
Regional Administrator’s decision under
that provision must be based on an
evaluation of ‘‘information available to
him, including any record developed
under the section 404 referral process
specified in 33 CFR 323.5(b).’’ 2 40 CFR
2 ‘‘Coordination with EPA. Prior to actual
issuance of permits for the discharge of dredged or
fill material in water of the United States, Corps of
Engineers officials will advise appropriate Regional
Administrators, EPA of the intent to issue permits
to which EPA has objected, recommended
conditions, or for which significant changes are
proposed. If the Regional Administrator advises,
within fifteen days of the advice of the intent to
issue, that he objects to the issuance of the permits,
the case will be forwarded to the Chief of Engineers
in accordance with 33 CFR 325.11 for further
coordination with the Administrator, EPA and the
decision. The report forwarding the case will
contain an analysis of the economic impact on
navigation and anchorage that would occur by
failing to authorize the use of a proposed disposal
site, and whether there are other economically
feasible methods or sites available other than those
to which the Regional Administrator objects.’’ 33
CFR 323.5(b) (1979).
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231.3(a). The regulations also include a
comment stating that ‘‘[i]n cases
involving a proposed disposal site for
which a permit application is pending,
it is anticipated that the procedures of
the section 404 referral process will
normally be exhausted prior to any final
decision of whether to initiate a 404(c)
proceeding.’’ 40 CFR 231.3. Although
the Corps removed the section 404
referral process from its regulations that
are still referenced in EPA’s current
regulations, the regulatory history
associated with the Corps’ revisions to
its regulations indicates that its intent
was to update that reference to reflect
current coordination processes with
EPA established under CWA Section
404(q).3
In addition, EPA’s final rule preamble
promulgating its regulations in 40 CFR
part 231 states:
EPA’s announcement of intent to start a
404(c) action will ordinarily be preceded by
an objection to the permit application, and
under § 325.8 such objection serves to halt
issuance of the permit until the matter is
resolved. . . .
The promulgation of regulations under
404(c) will not alter EPA’s present
obligations to make timely objections to
permit applications where appropriate. It is
not the Agency’s intention to hold back and
then suddenly to spring a veto action at the
last minute. The fact that 404(c) may be
regarded as a tool of last resort implies that
EPA will first employ its tool of ‘‘first resort,’’
e.g. comment and consultation with the
permitting authority at all appropriate stages
of the permit process.
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44 FR 58080, October 9, 1979.
Therefore, the comment that exists in
EPA’s regulations indicates that where
there is a permit application pending it
is anticipated that the 404(q) process
‘‘will normally be exhausted prior to
any final decision of whether to initiate
a section 404(c) proceeding’’ and that
the record developed under the 404(q)
3 Congress added CWA Section 404(q) to the
statute in 1977. EPA issued its 404(c) regulations in
1979. 44 FR 58076, October 9, 1979. In 1980, the
Corps proposed amendments to reflect the 1977
amendments to the CWA. 54 FR 62732, September
19, 1980. Specifically, the Corps proposed to move
section 323.5 to 323.6 and amended paragraph (b),
which is still the language included in the Corps’
current regulations. When issuing its 1980 proposal,
the Corps explained that ‘‘[p]aragraph (b) would be
revised in accordance with interagency agreements
called for by section 404(q) of the CWA and EPA
regulations for section 404(c) veto procedures (40
CFR part 231).’’ 45 FR 62733, September 19, 1980.
When finalizing its revised rule language in 1982,
the Corps further explained that the purpose was
‘‘to be consistent with current agreements between
the Corps and EPA which reflect EPA authority to
veto disposal site specifications under section
404(c).’’ 47 FR 31795, July 22, 1982. Therefore, this
regulatory history demonstrates that the 404 referral
process referenced in 231.3(a) is now manifested as
the coordination processes EPA and the Corps have
established under CWA Section 404(q).
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process would be considered by the
Region Administrator when evaluating
information under 40 CFR 231.3(a).
Second, once the Regional
Administrator has made the requisite
finding, the regulations provide an
opportunity for the Corps, among
others, to consult with the Regional
Administrator prior to the issuance of a
proposed determination. The purpose of
this consultation is to provide
information to demonstrate that no
unacceptable adverse effects will occur
or for the Corps to notify the Regional
Administrator of his or her intent to take
corrective action to prevent
unacceptable adverse effects. 40 CFR
231.3(a)(2).
In addition to the initial stages, the
remainder of the 404(c) process,
including the opportunity for public
comment and consultation with the
Corps, is intended to obtain information
relating to whether corrective action is
available to reduce the adverse impacts
of the discharge. 40 CFR 231.4(a), 231.6.
EPA’s final rule preamble recognized
the role the Corps permitting process
would play in implementing corrective
action identified during the section
404(c) process. In response to a
commenter that asked for EPA to
provide an opportunity for public
comment on any corrective action
‘‘proposed by the permitting authority
during the consultative process, where
the effect of such corrective measures is
to obviate the need for the 404(c)
action,’’ EPA indicated that ‘‘in such a
situation, it would be more appropriate
for the public comment to come as part
of the permit process rather than the
404(c) procedure, since it will be the
permitting authority who will have the
responsibility for incorporating
appropriate corrective measures into a
permit.’’ 44 FR 58081, October 9, 1979.
It is important to note that the
regulations envision that all the 404(c)
regulatory steps would occur over
relatively short timeframes. 40 CFR
231.3(a)(2), 231.4(a), 231.5(a), 231.6.
Although EPA’s regulations allow for an
extension of time, this exception was
only intended where there is good
cause. 40 CFR 231.8; see 44 FR 58079,
October 9, 1979.
C. CWA Section 404(q)
Section 404(q) directs the Secretary of
the Army to enter into agreements with
various federal agencies, including the
EPA ‘‘to minimize, to the maximum
extent practicable, duplication, needless
paperwork, and delays in the issuance
of permits under this section.’’ The
agreements must be developed ‘‘to
assure that, to the maximum extent
practicable’’ the Corps decision on a
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permit application will be made no later
than 90 days after the application is
published.
EPA and the Corps have entered into
various agreements pursuant to section
404(q). The operative agreement was
entered in 1992. Part IV, paragraph 3 of
the 1992 EPA and Army Memorandum
of Agreement to implement section
404(q) (hereinafter referred to as the
‘‘404(q) MOA’’), sets forth the
‘‘exclusive procedures’’ for elevation of
individual permits cases. Once the
process is initiated, the 404(q) MOA
outlines a process to resolve EPA’s
concerns that, if necessary, culminates
with the Corps providing EPA with a
copy of the Statement of Findings/
Record of Decision prepared in support
of the permit decision ‘‘to assist the EPA
in reaching a decision whether to
initiate 404(c) before the permit is
issued or activity may begin.’’ The MOA
provides a 10-day period for EPA to
initiate the section 404(c) process before
the permit is issued or the activity may
begin.
IV. Withdrawal of the Proposed
Determination
After conferring with EPA’s General
Counsel, EPA Region 10 is concluding
the withdrawal process that was
initiated on July 19, 2017. EPA’s July 19,
2017 notice stated that it was proposing
to withdraw the 2014 Proposed
Determination ‘‘[b]ecause the Agency
retains the right under the settlement
agreement to ultimately exercise the full
extent of its discretion under section
404(c), including the discretion to act
prior to any potential Army Corps
authorization of discharge of dredged or
fill material associated with mining the
Pebble deposit, the Agency believes that
withdrawing the Proposed
Determination now, while allowing the
factual record regarding any
forthcoming permit application to
develop, is appropriate at this time for
this particular matter.’’ 82 FR 33124. In
suspending this withdrawal process,
EPA noted that ‘‘the factual record
regarding the permit application can
develop notwithstanding the Proposed
Determination’’ and EPA ‘‘has
discretion to consider that factual record
after it has developed.’’ 83 FR 8670,
February 28, 2018.
EPA has carefully considered the
positions articulated in 2014 Proposed
Determination and the 2017 and 2018
notices in light of the developments
since they were published. First, the
Corps’ DEIS includes significant projectspecific information that was not
accounted for in the 2014 Proposed
Determination and, based on that
information, the Corps has reached
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preliminary conclusions that in certain
respects conflict with preliminary
conclusions in EPA’s 2014 Proposed
Determination. Second, there are other
processes available now, including the
404(q) MOA process, for EPA to resolve
any issues with the Corps as the record
develops. EPA believes these processes
should be exhausted prior to EPA
deciding, based upon all information
that has and will be further developed,
to use its section 404(c) authority. The
issues relating to the development of the
record align with EPA’s original, July
2017 rationale for withdrawing the 2014
Proposed Determination. For these
reasons, Region 10 has now concluded
that it is more appropriate to use wellestablished mechanisms to raise projectspecific issues as the record develops
during the permitting process and
consider the full record before potential
future decision-making on this matter,
instead of maintaining a section 404(c)
process that is now five years old and
does not account for the voluminous
information provided in the permitting
process.
A. Record Developments
EPA is withdrawing the 2014
Proposed Determination because there
is new information that has been
generated since 2014, including
information and preliminary
conclusions in the Corps’ DEIS, that
conflict with EPA’s Proposed
Determination and that EPA will need
to consider before any potential future
decision-making regarding this matter.
As discussed below, the current record
before the agency is different from the
one considered by the Regional
Administrator in 2014 and, consistent
with general administrative law
principles for agency decision-making,
EPA must consider the entire record of
this proceeding. As a result, any
decision-making process under section
404(c) should, if initiated, be based on
the available information at that time
rather than based on a proposed
determination which, through the
passage of time, the submittal of a
permit application, and a significant
expansion of the record, has effectively
grown stale.
Shortly after EPA issued the 2014
Proposed Determination, EPA was
enjoined from working on the 2014
Section 404(c) process when a Federal
District court issued a preliminary
injunction. That injunction remained in
place until May 11, 2017 when EPA and
PLP settled the pending cases. EPA’s
record and work relating to the
Proposed Determination was completely
frozen from November 2014 until May
2017. Within a few months of its
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settlement with EPA, PLP submitted its
permit application, and since that time,
the Corps’ record has grown
significantly to include project-specific
information, analyses, and preliminary
conclusions developed during the
permitting process.
The record will only continue to grow
until the Corps issues a final EIS, and
during this time Region 10 is precluded
under the settlement agreement from
forwarding a Recommended
Determination to EPA Headquarters
until the Corps issues a final EIS or May
2021, whenever is sooner. EPA used its
extension authority under 40 CFR 231.8
to suspend the process and keep the
Proposed Determination pending during
the timelines provided in the settlement
agreement. 83 FR 8671, February 28,
2018. Although the regulations allow
extensions for the short regulatory
timeframes if there is good cause, these
timeframes provide evidence that
extensions authorized under 40 CFR
231.8 were not intended to allow for
long-term gaps, as in this case, that
could result in decision-making without
the full record.
When EPA entered into the settlement
agreement in 2017 and proposed to
withdraw the Proposed Determination,
EPA did not know if or when PLP
would submit a CWA Section 404
permit application. And even once PLP
submitted a permit application and
despite the Corps’ estimated schedule,
EPA did not know and could not know
when it issued its 2018 suspension
exactly how long the NEPA process
would take and how it would proceed.
Given the current status of the NEPA
process, it is now clear that EPA’s 2014
Proposed Determination does not
account for the significant projectspecific information that has been
developed and will be developed during
the multi-year permitting process.
In particular, PLP’s current proposal
is to produce 1.3 billion tons of ore from
the Pebble deposit over 20 years. The
2014 Proposed Determination relied
heavily on the Bristol Bay Watershed
Assessment, which evaluated three
hypothetical mine scenarios that
represented different stages of mining at
the Pebble deposit, based on the amount
of ore processed: Pebble 0.25
(approximately 0.25 billion tons of ore
over 20 years), Pebble 2.0
(approximately 2.0 billion tons of ore
over 25 years), and Pebble 6.5
(approximately 6.5 billion tons of ore
over 78 years). These hypothetical mine
scenarios drew on preliminary
information developed by Northern
Dynasty Minerals in 2011 and submitted
to the Securities and Exchange
Commission, consultation with experts,
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and baseline data collected by PLP to
characterize the mine site, mine
activities, and the surrounding
environment. EPA 2014 ES–10, Ch. 6.
The Assessment disclosed the
uncertainties associated with these
hypothetical scenarios and recognized
that the exact details of any future mine
plan for the Pebble deposit or for other
deposits in the watershed would differ
from EPA’s mine scenarios. Id.
Although a number of aspects of the
PLP’s current proposal evaluated in the
DEIS are similar to the mine scenarios
evaluated in the Bristol Bay Watershed
Assessment, there are aspects of PLP’s
proposal that differ from EPA’s
scenarios considered in the Assessment.
While the agencies do not know the
extent of the differences on the overall
impacts of the project and how they
may relate to the Corps’ NEPA and 404
analyses, the distinctions themselves are
evidence that there is now different
information in the Agencies’ records
than in 2014.
While any subsequent mine
expansion may change the mine
components and impacts, differences
between the 2014 projected mining
proposal evaluated by EPA and PLP’s
current 20-year mining proposal include
the following:
• The movement of most mine
component facilities out of the Upper
Talarik Creek watershed which may
result in reduced impacts to aquatic
resources in the Upper Talarik Creek
watershed;
• The elimination of cyanide leaching
as part of the ore processing, which
eliminates risks of impacts due to
cyanide that would otherwise be in
tailings and process water and
eliminates risk of cyanide spills;
• The placement of a liner under the
disposal facility containing pyritic
tailings and potentially acid generating
(PAG) waste rock, which would
minimize the potential for groundwater
contamination;
• The reduction in waste rock, which
may make it more feasible to backfill
PAG waste rock into the open pit at
closure;
• The separation of pyritic tailings
from bulk tailings, which may make it
more feasible to backfill pyritic tailings
into the open pit at closure and may
result in the ability to more effectively
reclaim the pyritic tailings/PAG waste
rock site and reduce surface impacts
and reduce water management needs of
this site following closure; and
• The relocation of treated water
discharge locations, which allows flow
augmentation and may reduce impacts
due to open pit dewatering.
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In addition to these differences in the
mining proposal, the Corps’ DEIS and
EPA’s 2014 Proposed Determination
draw some conflicting preliminary
conclusions regarding the information
about the project. EPA recognizes that
these documents have different
purposes and that the Corps has not yet
prepared its specific section 404(b)(1)
Guidelines analysis. DEIS, Section 4.22
Wetlands and Other Waters/Special
Aquatic Sites, 4.22–4. In addition, EPA’s
issuance of a Proposed Determination
represents a judgment that the matter
should be ‘‘look[ed] into’’ or
‘‘explored.’’ While the Proposed
Determination describes EPA’s basis for
its 2014 preliminary determinations,
EPA has not rendered a final
determination on this matter. The
Corps’ conclusions are also preliminary,
and EPA provided detailed comments
on the Draft EIS and 404 PN on July 1,
2019 which raise issues for the Corps’
consideration about some of the Corps’
analyses and preliminary conclusions
(including the examples discussed
below). EPA’s July 1, 2019 letters also
make recommendations to provide
significant additional information about
key project components and plans and
improve the environmental modeling
and other aspects of the impact
assessment.
In this decision, EPA is not seeking to
resolve any conflicting preliminary
conclusions of the Agencies or
conclusively address the merits of the
underlying technical issues. Rather, in
withdrawing the Proposed
Determination, EPA has considered the
full record as it now stands, including
the conflicting preliminary conclusions
of the Agencies. EPA is providing a few
examples of the divergent views
expressed by the Agencies on some key
questions that will ultimately need to be
resolved. The examples are not an
exhaustive list but are included to
illustrate that the Agencies have
expressed divergent views on important
issues related to the impact of the
proposed project.
For example, the DEIS states in a
section regarding fish displacement and
habitat loss that ‘‘there is sufficient
available habitat for relocation without
impacts to existing populations . . .
[t]he extent or scope of these impacts
would [be] limited to waters in the
vicinity of the mine site footprint, and
may not be observed downstream from
the affected stream channel.’’ DEIS
Section 4.24, page 4.24–8. However,
EPA’s 2014 Proposed Determination
states that ‘‘[t]he elimination and
dewatering of anadromous fish streams
would also adversely affect downstream
habitat for salmon and other fish
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species.’’ Proposed Determination 2014,
4–9 (citations omitted).
As another example, the Alaska
District’s DEIS preliminarily concluded
in a section discussing impacts on coho
and Chinook populations that:
[C]onsidering the low quality and low use
of coho and Chinook rearing habitat, the lack
of spawning in SFK east reaches impacted,
and the low level of coho spawning in NFK
Tributary 1.190, measurable impacts to
salmon populations would be unlikely . . .
modeling indicates that indirect impacts
associated with mine operations would occur
at the individual level, and be attenuated
upstream of the confluence of the NFK and
SFK with no measurable impacts to salmon
populations.
DEIS, Section 4.24, page 4.24–6. For
comparison, EPA’s Proposed
Determination preliminarily concluded
that:
The headwater and beaver-modified
habitats eliminated or dewatered by the
Pebble 0.25 stage mine could support [coho
and Chinook] populations that are distinct
from those using habitats farther downstream
in each watershed. Besides destroying the
intact, headwater-to-larger river networks of
the SFK, NFK, and UTC watersheds, stream
losses that eliminate local, unique
populations could translate into a substantial
loss of genetic variability with impacts
extending well beyond the footprints of the
lost habitats. . . . Thus, loss of the SFK,
NFK, and UTC watersheds’ discrete fish
populations could have significant
repercussions well beyond that suggested by
their absolute proportion within the larger
watersheds. . . . Thus, the elimination or
dewatering of nearly 5 miles (8 km) of
salmon streams caused or facilitated by the
discharge of dredged or fill material for the
Pebble 0.25 stage mine could reduce the
overall productivity of the SFK, NFK, and
UTC watersheds for both species, at a level
that the aquatic ecosystem may not be able
to afford.
Proposed Determination 2014, 4–8
(citations omitted). Furthermore, EPA
anticipates that additional information
will continue to become available
through the Corps’ ongoing permit
review process that was not available at
the time of the Proposed Determination.
The Corps’ Draft EIS received over
100,000 public comments. In addition to
these comments now in the record, EPA
expects that additional information
relevant to EPA’s decision-making will
become available through the permitting
process. All this information represents
the full record that EPA would
ultimately need to consider as part of
any regulatory decision-making.
Given the need for any final EPA
404(c) decision to be based on the entire
record, EPA has concluded that a
Proposed Determination which in its
current form does not account for the
full record and does not grapple with
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differing conclusions, including those
noted previously, cannot serve as a basis
for such a decision. If in the future EPA
decides to proceed under its 404(c)
authority, a new proposed
determination would be appropriate to
ensure consideration by the Regional
Administrator of the full record prior to
making the required determination
under 40 CFR 231.3(a) and ensure
meaningful public engagement through
the public comment period on any new
proposed determination. As discussed
below, EPA concludes that the proper
avenue for considering the full available
record and resolving technical issues,
including conflicting information and
conclusions, should be through the now
available processes before any potential
decision-making by EPA.
B. Process Opportunities as the Record
Develops
EPA is also withdrawing the 2014
Proposed Determination because it has
determined that given the record
developments, as well as the language
and structure of the 404(c) regulations,
as discussed previously, at this time, the
appropriate sequencing is to resolve
technical issues during the Corps’
permitting process rather than through a
separate 404(c) process initiated in 2014
that does not reflect the full record.
EPA is participating in the Corps’
NEPA process as a cooperating agency
for the preparation of the EIS pursuant
to the Corps’ invitation and schedule. In
this role, EPA has provided significant
technical comments to the Corps
relating to impacts of the project. EPA
has and will continue to work
constructively with the Corps as a
cooperating agency, providing special
expertise in specific areas requested by
the Corps, including: Alternatives;
recreation; aesthetics and visual
resources; soils; surface- and
groundwater hydrology; water and
sediment quality; wetlands and special
aquatic sites; vegetation; and mitigation.
EPA plans to continue to work with the
Corps and the other cooperating
agencies on the next steps in the NEPA
process, including the development of
the final EIS and other information to
inform the Corps’ permit decision.
In addition to supporting the Corps as
a cooperating agency, EPA is evaluating
the information relevant to the section
404(b)(1) Guidelines analysis and
providing feedback to the Corps. EPA’s
July 1, 2019 comments on the 404 PN
for Pebble’s permit application stated
that it ‘‘has concerns regarding the
extent and magnitude of the substantial
proposed impacts to streams, wetlands,
and other aquatic resources that may
result, particularly in light of the
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important role these resources play in
supporting the region’s valuable fishery
resources.’’
In its section 404 letter, EPA Region
10 also invoked the process to resolve
these concerns pursuant to the 404(q)
MOA. EPA’s June 1, 2019 letter stated
that ‘‘Region 10 finds that this project as
described in the PN may have
substantial and unacceptable adverse
impacts on fisheries resources in the
project area watersheds, which are
aquatic resources of national
importance.’’
EPA recognizes that the Corps,
through well-established processes of
continued analysis and coordination
with EPA, may resolve some of the
issues raised by EPA’s letter. In
addition, EPA recognizes that it is
incumbent on the Agency to reanalyze
its prior position, which was based on
hypothetical scenarios, now that there is
actual, non-speculative information
before EPA in the form of a section 404
permit application and associated
information.
As such, EPA believes it is
appropriate to defer to the Corps’
decision-making process to sort out the
information before deciding whether to
initiate a section 404(c) process based
on the full record before the agencies.
This approach is appropriate in these
circumstances in light of the record
developments and EPA’s regulations as
described previously. Under the statute
and regulations, the Corps is the lead
agency for issuing permits under section
404(a). The Corps should have the first
opportunity to consider project-specific
information here without having to
contend with a 404(c) proposal that
does not account for all of the available
information.
Moreover, when EPA is considering
use of its authority under section 404(c),
the Corps plays an important
coordination and consultation role in
the initial stages of EPA’s decisionmaking, and that role may differ
depending on whether or not there is a
pending CWA 404 permit application.
As discussed previously, the regulations
provide that where there is a permit
application pending, ‘‘it is anticipated’’
that the coordination process ‘‘will
normally be exhausted prior to any final
decision of whether to initiate a 404(c)
proceeding.’’ The current coordination
procedures between EPA and the Corps
on individual permitting decisions is
now memorialized in the 1992 404(q)
MOA. The elevation procedures
represent a longstanding, wellunderstood, and agreed-upon process
that the agencies have utilized for more
than two decades.
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Importantly, EPA could not have
initiated the 404(q) MOA process when
EPA Region 10 started its section 404(c)
process for the Pebble deposit area in
2014 or when EPA issued its February
2018 suspension notice. After the Corps
noticed PLP’s 404 permit application for
public comment, EPA could and did
initiate the section 404(q) MOA
procedures. Now that the 404(q) MOA
process is available to resolve issues,
EPA has determined that it is most
appropriate to use that process to
resolve issues as the record develops
before engaging in any possible future
decision-making regarding its section
404(c) authority. By initiating the 404(q)
MOA process, EPA Region 10 is
following an avenue to work with the
Corps Alaska District throughout the
permitting process to resolve concerns.
If unresolved, EPA Region 10 can
elevate to EPA Headquarters, which can
decide whether to engage with the
Department of the Army. If EPA
proceeds through this process and its
concerns remain outstanding when the
Corps is ready to issue the permit, the
MOA specifically contemplates that
EPA will have an opportunity to
consider exercising its section 404(c)
authority at that time. If EPA believes
that these processes are not addressing
its concerns, EPA retains the discretion
and the authority to decide to use its
section 404(c) authority ‘‘whenever’’ it
determines, in its discretion, that the
statutory standard for exercising this
authority has been met, including at the
end of 404(q) MOA process, by
initiating a new section 404(c) process
that is informed by the entirety of the
facts and the Corps’ decision-making
known to the Agency at that time.4
The Corps, in addition to the public,
also plays an important role in
identifying information or potential
corrective actions to address EPA’s
unacceptable adverse effects finding. In
particular, EPA’s regulations provide a
15-day opportunity for the Corps to
provide such information prior to the
issuance of the proposed determination.
Although the Corps participated in
EPA’s 2014 process prior to the issuance
of the Proposed Determination, the
nature of the Corps’ engagement in this
instance was somewhat limited because
there was no permit application
pending. Now that PLP submitted a
permit application, the Corps is in a
4 The 404(q) MOA states that ‘‘This agreement
does not diminish either Agency’s authority to
decide whether a particular individual permit
should be granted, including determining whether
the project is in compliance with the Section
404(b)(1) Guidelines, or the Administrator’s
authority under section 404(c) of the Clean Water
Act.’’ Part I, paragraph 5.
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different position regarding its ability to
provide information relating to
corrective actions to prevent
unacceptable adverse effects and that
information should be accounted for in
the Corps’ permitting process as well as
by EPA.
For these reasons, EPA has
determined that it is most appropriate to
participate in the 404 permitting
processes to address concerns as the
record develops rather than continue
with a separate 404(c) action initiated in
2014. This approach will ensure that
both agencies will be able to consider
the full record and engage on issues
consistent with their respective roles
provided for under the Clean Water Act
and EPA’s implementing regulations.
V. Response to Comments
EPA’s February 2018 Federal Register
notice summarized the comments EPA
received on the proposal to withdraw.
Two of EPA’s bases for withdrawal in
2017 focused on giving time for PLP to
submit a permit application and to
allow for Corps review of that permit
application. EPA acknowledges that
given the developments since EPA’s
July 2017 notice those rationales for
withdrawal no long apply to this
situation.
As discussed previously, EPA’s
withdrawal action aligns with the third
basis included in EPA’s original July
2017 proposed withdrawal relating to
the factual development of the record
for PLP’s permit application and EPA’s
ability, consistent with its settlement
agreement, to exercise section 404(c)
prior to any potential Corps
authorization of discharge of dredged or
fill material associated with mining the
Pebble deposit. EPA is focusing its
responses on that issue and on
comments that EPA explained that it
was not addressing in its 2018
suspension notice.
EPA’s February 28, 2018 notice
indicated that ‘‘in light of EPA’s
forbearance from proceeding to the next
step of the section 404(c) process . . .,
EPA concludes that the factual record
regarding the permit application can
develop notwithstanding the Proposed
Determination.’’ 83 FR 8670. Although
that remains true, given the need for any
final EPA 404(c) decision to be based on
the entire record, EPA has concluded
that a Proposed Determination which in
its current form does not account for the
full record and does not grapple with
differing conclusions, including those
noted previously, should not serve as a
basis for such a decision.
In response to comments that EPA
cannot withdraw a Proposed
Determination without considering the
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proposed restrictions or the science and
technical information, EPA’s February
28, 2018 notice stated that such
comments were ‘‘moot’’ in light of
EPA’s decision not to withdraw the
Proposed Determination. 83 FR 8670.
Although EPA is now withdrawing the
Proposed Determination, such
comments remain outside the bounds of
EPA’s basis for its decision. Indeed,
EPA’s July 19, 2017 notice indicated
that it was ‘‘not soliciting comment on
the proposed restrictions or science or
technical information underlying the
Proposed Determination.’’ 82 FR 33124.
Moreover, EPA’s February 28, 2018
notice made clear that such comments
were outside the scope. 83 FR 8898. As
in EPA’s prior notices, EPA is not basing
its decision-making on technical
consideration or judgments about
whether the mine proposal will
ultimately be found to meet the
requirements of the 404(b)(1) Guidelines
or results in ‘‘unacceptable adverse
effects’’ under CWA section 404(c). The
technical information is continuing to
evolve through the ongoing section 404
and NEPA processes, and
determinations under section 404 will
be made in conjunction with, and based
on, the record when it is fully
developed. Rather, EPA is withdrawing
its 2014 Proposed Determination based
on the considerations described in this
notice and is continuing to consider the
technical issues through its engagement
with the Corps in these procedures. EPA
will continue to consider the relevant
science and technical information,
including the information underlying its
2014 Proposed Determination, as part of
the ongoing permitting process. This
effort includes consideration of ‘‘any
other information that is relevant to
protection of the world-class fisheries
contained in the Bristol Bay watershed
in light of the permit application that
has now been submitted to the Corps.’’
83 FR 8670, February 28, 2018.
EPA’s February 28, 2018 notice
indicated that comments received on
the Administrator’s review ‘‘do not need
to be addressed’’ because the Proposed
Determination was not being
withdrawn. See 83 FR 8670. In general,
these comments advocated for or against
the Administrator’s review. Some
commenters asked for additional
opportunities for public input. EPA has
satisfied all of the procedural
requirements for withdrawing a
proposed determination provided in 40
CFR 231.5(c). EPA’s regulations do not
require EPA to propose a withdrawal of
a proposed determination and take
public comment. EPA took that step to
comply with its settlement agreement
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obligation. EPA’s regulations only
require notification to all those that
commented on the proposed
determination or participated at the
hearing and allow an opportunity for
such persons to provide timely written
recommendations concerning whether
the Administrator should review the
Regional Administrator’s decision. 40
CFR 231.5(c); 44 FR 58081, October 9,
1979. EPA satisfied this requirement
through its July 2017 notice. Through
this process, the public had a full
opportunity to comment on the very
basis for EPA’s withdrawal of the
Proposed Determination and on whether
the Administrator should review and
reconsider the withdrawal. 82 FR 33124,
July 19, 2017. EPA has now completed
consideration of the issues raised as
described in this notice. The General
Counsel, who is the delegated official to
act for the Administrator, did not notify
the Regional Administrator of his intent
to review as described in the
regulations, thus ending the regulatory
process.
EPA has also determined that it is
unnecessary to seek additional public
comment as indicated by the February
2018 Federal Register notice. Such an
additional public comment is not
required under EPA’s regulations. EPA
notes that it provided numerous
opportunities for the public to comment
on the Bristol Bay Watershed
Assessment and Proposed
Determination, including on the
rationale for EPA’s decision to withdraw
the Proposed Determination.
Furthermore, the Corps has provided an
opportunity for the public to comment
on the Draft EIS and the public has an
opportunity to comment on the final
EIS. See 40 CFR 1503.1(b). Finally, if
EPA initiates the section 404(c) process
pursuant to 40 CFR 231.3 in the future
and proceeds to publish a new Proposed
Determination, such a decision would
be subject to notice and comment under
EPA’s regulations.
VI. Conclusion
This decision provides clarity and
certainty that EPA Region 10 will be
working through the Corps’ permitting
process, including as a cooperating
agency, and the 404(q) MOA process for
engagement on this matter. This notice
concludes EPA’s withdrawal process
that was initiated on July 19, 2017 and
suspended on January 26, 2018. As
Regional Administrator and after
conferring with EPA’s General Counsel,
I am providing notice of withdrawal of
the 2014 Proposed Determination
described herein under 40 CFR
231.5(c)(1).
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Dated: July 30, 2019.
Chris Hladick,
Regional Administrator, EPA Region 10.
[FR Doc. 2019–18596 Filed 8–29–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
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[EPA–HQ–OAR–2007–0358; FRL–9994–91–
OMS]
Information Collection Request
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ACTION: Notice.
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information collection request (ICR),
Responsible Appliance Disposal
Program (EPA ICR Number 2254.03,
OMB Control Number 2060–0703) to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act. This is a proposed
extension of the ICR, which is currently
approved through August 31, 2019.
Public comments were previously
requested via the Federal Register on
February 8, 2019 during a 60-day
comment period. This notice allows for
an additional 30 days for public
comments. A fuller description of the
ICR is given below, including its
estimated burden and cost to the public.
An agency may not conduct or sponsor
and a person is not required to respond
to a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control
number.
DATES: Additional comments may be
submitted on or before September 30,
2019.
SUMMARY:
Submit your comments,
referencing Docket ID Number EPA–
HQ–OAR–2007–0358, to (1) EPA online
using www.regulations.gov (our
preferred method), by email to a-and-rdocket@epa.gov, or by mail to: EPA
Docket Center, Environmental
Protection Agency, Mail Code 28221T,
1200 Pennsylvania Ave. NW,
Washington, DC 20460, and (2) OMB via
email to oira_submission@omb.eop.gov.
Address comments to OMB Desk Officer
for EPA.
EPA’s policy is that all comments
received will be included in the public
docket without change including any
personal information provided, unless
the comment includes profanity, threats,
ADDRESSES:
E:\FR\FM\30AUN1.SGM
30AUN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 169 (Friday, August 30, 2019)]
[Notices]
[Pages 45749-45756]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-18596]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[EPA-R10-OW-2017-0369; 9998-93-Region 10]
Notification of Decision To Withdraw Proposed Determination To
Restrict the Use of an Area as a Disposal Site; Pebble Deposit Area,
Southwest Alaska
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
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SUMMARY: The United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) Region
10 Regional Administrator is providing notice of the EPA's decision to
withdraw the Proposed Determination to restrict the use of certain
waters in the South Fork Koktuli River, North Fork Koktuli River, and
Upper Talarik Creek watersheds in southwest Alaska as disposal sites
for dredged or fill material associated with mining the Pebble deposit.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Visit www.epa.gov/bristolbay. Erik
Peterson is the project manager. Please call a Bristol Bay-specific
phone line at (206) 553-0040, or email [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
EPA Region 10 is providing notice under 40 CFR 231.5(c) of EPA's
withdrawal of the Proposed Determination to restrict the use of certain
waters in the South Fork Koktuli River, North Fork Koktuli River, and
Upper Talarik Creek watersheds in southwest Alaska as disposal sites
for dredged or fill material associated with mining the Pebble deposit
issued under EPA's Clean Water Act (CWA) Section 404(c) authority. EPA
is concluding the process it started in July 2017, suspended in January
2018, and resumed in June 2019 to withdraw the Proposed Determination.
EPA has decided that now is the appropriate time to complete the
withdrawal of the Proposed Determination in light of developments in
the record and the availability of processes for EPA to address record
issues with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) prior to any
potential future decision-making by EPA regarding this matter.
A. How to Obtain a Copy of the Proposed Determination: The July
2014 Proposed Determination is available via the internet on the EPA
Region 10 Bristol Bay site at www.epa.gov/bristolbay.
B. How to Obtain a Copy of the Settlement Agreement: The May 11,
2017, settlement agreement is available via the internet on the EPA
Region 10 Bristol Bay site at www.epa.gov/bristolbay.
C. How to Obtain a Copy of the Proposal to Withdraw the Proposed
Determination: The July 2017 proposal to withdraw the Proposed
Determination is available via the internet on the EPA Region 10
Bristol Bay site at www.epa.gov/bristolbay. Information regarding the
proposal to withdraw can also be found in the docket for this effort at
www.regulations.gov, see docket ID No. EPA-R10-OW-2017-0369 or use the
following link: https://www.regulations.gov/docket?D=EPAR10-OW-2017-0369.
D. How to Obtain a Copy of Notification of Suspension: The February
2018 notice announcing the EPA's decision to suspend the proceeding to
withdraw the Proposed Determination at that time is available via the
internet on the EPA Region 10 Bristol Bay site at www.epa.gov/bristolbay.
II. Factual Background
In 2011, EPA initiated an assessment to determine the significance
of the Bristol Bay watershed's ecological resources and evaluate the
potential impacts of large-scale mining on these resources. The stated
purpose was to characterize the biological and mineral resources of the
Bristol Bay watershed; increase understanding of the potential impacts
of large-scale mining on the Region's fish resources; and inform future
decision-making. Also in 2011, Northern Dynasty Minerals, which wholly
owns the Pebble Limited Partnership (PLP), submitted information to the
United States Securities and Exchange Commission that detailed its
intention to develop a large-scale mine at the Pebble deposit. EPA
Region 10 used this information to develop its mining scenarios for the
Bristol Bay Watershed Assessment. After two rounds of public comments
on drafts of the Bristol Bay Watershed Assessment in 2012 and 2013 that
generated over one million comments, as well as independent external
peer review, EPA Region 10 finalized the Assessment in January of 2014.
On July 21, 2014, EPA Region 10 published in the Federal Register
(79 FR 42314) a Notice of Proposed Determination under section 404(c)
of the CWA to restrict the use of certain waters in the South Fork
Koktuli River, North Fork Koktuli River, and Upper Talarik Creek
watersheds (located within the larger Bristol Bay watershed) as
disposal sites for dredged or fill
[[Page 45750]]
material associated with mining the Pebble deposit. This Proposed
Determination was issued preemptively; in other words, it was issued
prior to PLP's submission of a CWA Section 404 permit application to
the Corps. The notice started a public comment period that ended on
September 19, 2014. EPA Region 10 also held seven hearings throughout
southwest Alaska during the week of August 11, 2014. In addition to
testimony taken at the hearings, EPA Region 10 received more than
670,000 written comments during the public comment period.
The next step in the section 404(c) process would have been for EPA
Region 10 to either forward a Recommended Determination to EPA
Headquarters or to withdraw the Proposed Determination pursuant to 40
CFR 231.5(a). However, PLP filed a lawsuit that alleged that EPA formed
three advisory committees in violation of the Federal Advisory
Committee Act to assist EPA ``in developing and implementing an
unprecedented plan to assert EPA's purported authority under section
404(c) of the federal Clean Water Act . . . in a manner that will
effectively preempt [p]laintiff from exercising its right through the
normal permit process to extract minerals from the Pebble Mine deposit
in Southwest Alaska.'' Second Amended Complaint for Declaratory and
Injunctive Relief at 2, Pebble Limited Partnership v. EPA, No. 3:14-cv-
00171 (D. Alaska July 7, 2015). As part of this litigation, the court
issued a preliminary injunction against EPA on November 25, 2014 after
the court determined that PLP had ``a fair chance of success on the
merits'' with respect to one of the alleged federal advisory
committees. Order Granting Preliminary Injunction at 1-2, Pebble
Limited Partnership v. EPA, No. 3:14-cv-00171 (D. Alaska. Nov. 25,
2014). The injunction halted EPA Region 10's section 404(c) review
process until the case was resolved. EPA and PLP resolved all
outstanding lawsuits in a May 11, 2017 settlement agreement, and the
court subsequently dissolved the injunction and dismissed the cases. As
part of the settlement, EPA agreed that it would not advance to the
next interim step in the section 404(c) review process (i.e., a
Recommended Determination), if such a decision is made, until either
May 11, 2021 or EPA publishes a notice of the Corps' final
environmental impact statement (EIS) for the project, whichever is
earlier. EPA also agreed to ``initiate a process to propose to withdraw
the Proposed Determination.''
In July 2017, EPA Region 10 issued a notice of a proposal to
withdraw its July 2014 Proposed Determination that was published in the
Federal Register (82 FR 33123, July 19, 2017). In this notice, EPA
defined the scope of the input it was seeking on its proposal to
withdraw. Specifically, EPA sought input on three reasons underlying
its proposed withdrawal:
1. Provide PLP with additional time to submit a CWA Section 404
permit application to the Corps;
2. Remove any uncertainty, real or perceived, about PLP's ability
to submit a permit application and have that permit application
reviewed; and
3. Allow the factual record regarding any forthcoming permit
application to develop.
The notice opened a public comment period that closed on October
17, 2017. During the public comment period, EPA received more than one
million public comments regarding its proposal to withdraw. EPA also
held two hearings in the Bristol Bay watershed during the week of
October 9, 2017. Approximately 200 people participated in the hearings.
EPA also consulted with federally recognized tribal governments from
the Bristol Bay region and Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act Regional
and Village Corporations with lands in the Bristol Bay watershed on the
Agency's proposal to withdraw.
On December 22, 2017, PLP submitted a CWA Section 404 permit
application to the Corps to develop a mine at the Pebble deposit. On
January 5, 2018, the Corps issued a notice that provided PLP's permit
application to the public and stated that an EIS would be required as
part of its permit review process consistent with the National
Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The Corps also invited relevant
federal and state agencies, including EPA, to be cooperating agencies
on the development of the EIS.
On January 26, 2018, EPA Region 10 issued a notice announcing a
``suspension'' of the proceeding to withdraw the Proposed
Determination. This action was published in the Federal Register on
February 28, 2018 (83 FR 8668).
On March 1, 2018, EPA Region 10 accepted the Corps' invitation to
serve as a cooperating agency for development of the EIS for the Pebble
project. As a cooperating agency, EPA has participated in meetings and
provided comments on early drafts of EIS material, including on
sections of the Preliminary DEIS in December of 2018. EPA also provided
scoping comments to the Corps on June 29, 2018.
The Corps released a Draft EIS and Section 404 Public Notice (404
PN) on February 20, 2019. The public comment periods for both opened on
March 1, 2019 and closed on July 1, 2019. The Corps received over
100,000 comments on the Draft EIS. EPA submitted over 100 pages of
comments to the Corps on the Draft EIS and over 50 pages of comments on
the 404 PN.
On June 26, 2019, the EPA General Counsel, acting by delegated
authority for the Administrator, directed EPA Region 10 ``to continue
deliberating regarding whether to withdraw the 2014 Proposed
Determination or alternatively, decide to leave the 2014 Proposed
Determination in place.'' The General Counsel's memorandum indicated
that the suspension notice had created confusion regarding the status
of the 2014 Proposed Determination and that by ``making a decision one
way or the other, the Region will provide much-needed clarity and
transparency to the public on this issue.'' In addition, the General
Counsel also asked the Region to ``reconsider its previous statement
that it would seek additional public comment on the 2014 Proposed
Determination, in light of the ample opportunity for public comment
previously provided and the current public comment opportunity on the
more than 1,400-page [Draft EIS].''
III. Legal Background
A. CWA Section 404(c)
CWA Section 404(a) allows the Corps to issue permits authorizing
the discharge of dredged or fill material at specified disposal sites.
Section 404(b) provides that ``[s]ubject to subsection (c) . . ., each
such disposal site shall be specified for each such permit by the
Secretary. . . .'' CWA Section 404(c) authorizes EPA to deny or
restrict the use of defined areas as a disposal site:
The Administrator is authorized to prohibit the specification
(including the withdrawal of specification) of any defined area as a
disposal site, and he is authorized to deny or restrict the use of
any defined area for specification (including the withdrawal of
specification) as a disposal site, whenever he determines, after
notice and opportunity for public hearings, that the discharge of
such materials into such area will have an unacceptable adverse
effect on municipal water supplies, shellfish beds and fishery areas
(including spawning and breeding areas), wildlife, or recreational
areas. Before making such determination, the Administrator shall
consult with the Secretary. The Administrator shall set forth in
writing and make public his findings and his reasons for making any
determination under this subsection.
The statute authorizes, but does not mandate, EPA to initiate the
section 404(c) process. City of Olmstead Falls v. EPA, 266 F. Supp. 2d
718, 723 (N.D. Ohio 2003). EPA's decision whether or
[[Page 45751]]
not to exercise section 404(c) is akin to enforcement discretion where
an agency's discretion is at its broadest. EPA may decide to exercise
its discretionary authority under section 404(c) ``whenever'' it makes
a determination that a discharge will have an unacceptable adverse
effect. 33 U.S.C. 1344(c); 40 CFR 231.1(a), (c); see also Mingo Logan
Coal Co. v. EPA, 714 F.3d 608, 613 (DC Cir. 2013). Once it makes the
required determination, EPA has the authority to fully prohibit
discharges or issue restrictions or conditions on discharges.
B. CWA Section 404(c) Regulations
EPA's regulations in 40 CFR part 231 establish the procedures for
EPA's consideration of whether to use its section 404(c) authority:
Step 1: Initial Notification. If the EPA Regional
Administrator has reason to believe, after evaluating the available
information, that an unacceptable adverse effect could result from the
specification or use for specification of a defined area as a disposal
site, the Regional Administrator may initiate the section 404(c)
process by notifying the Corps, the applicant (if any), and the site
owner that he intends to issue a proposed determination. Each of those
parties then has 15 days to demonstrate to the satisfaction of the
Regional Administrator that no unacceptable adverse effects will occur,
or the District Engineer can provide notice of an intent to take
corrective action to prevent an unacceptable adverse effect.
Step 2: Proposed Determination. If within 15 days no such
notice is provided, or if the Regional Administrator is not satisfied
that no unacceptable adverse effect will occur, the Regional
Administrator must publish a notice of the proposed determination in
the Federal Register, soliciting public comment and offering an
opportunity for public hearing.
Step 3: Withdrawal of Proposed Determination or
Preparation of Recommended Determination. Following the public hearing
and close of the comment period, the Regional Administrator must either
withdraw the proposed determination or prepare a recommended
determination. A decision to withdraw may be reviewed at the discretion
of the Assistant Administrator for Water at EPA Headquarters.\1\ If the
Regional Administrator prepares a recommended determination, the
Regional Administrator then forwards it and the complete administrative
record compiled in the Regional Office to the Assistant Administrator
for Water.
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\1\ In 1984, the EPA Administrator delegated the authority to
make final determinations under section 404(c) to EPA's national CWA
Section 404 program manager, who is the Assistant Administrator for
Water. That delegation remains in effect. With regard to EPA's
Section 404(c) action for the Pebble deposit area, on March 22,
2019, Administrator Wheeler delegated to the General Counsel the
authority to perform all functions and responsibilities retained by
the Administrator or previously delegated to the Assistant
Administrator for Water.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Step 4: Final Determination. Within 30 days the Assistant
Administrator for Water will consider the recommended determination of
the Regional Administrator and the information in the administrative
record, and also consult again with the Corps, the applicant (if any),
and the site owner. Following consultation and consideration of all
available information, the Assistant Administrator for Water makes the
final determination affirming, modifying, or rescinding the recommended
determination.
With regard to Step 1, the regulations provide that the Regional
Administrator ``may'' initiate certain actions if he or she ``has
reason to believe'' that an unacceptable adverse effect ``could
result.'' 40 CFR 231.3(a). The regulations do not require immediate
action where the Regional Administrator makes such a finding because
the Regional Administrator has the ``necessary discretion in deciding
when to act or whether to act at all.'' 44 FR 58079, October 9, 1979.
In addition, EPA uses the term ``could'' for this early stage ``because
the preliminary determination merely represents a judgment that the
matter is worth looking into.'' 44 FR 58078, October 9, 1979.
Importantly, a ``proposed determination does not represent a judgment
that discharge of dredged or fill material will result in unacceptable
adverse effects; it merely means that the Regional Administrator
believes that the issue should be explored.'' 44 FR 58082, October 9,
1979.
Although the regulations provide a standard for the Regional
Administrator's decision regarding whether to issue a recommended
determination (i.e., discharge of material ``would be likely to have an
unacceptable adverse effect.''), the regulations do not provide a
regulatory standard for the Regional Administrator's decision to
withdraw a proposed determination. 40 CFR 231.5(a), (c). Such a
decision is at the discretion of the Regional Administrator ``after
review of the available information.'' 44 FR 50582, October 9, 1979.
Instead, the regulations only include procedural requirements for the
withdrawal of a proposed determination. In particular, the Regional
Administrator must notify the Administrator of the decision who then
has 10 days to notify the Regional Administrator of his or her intent
to review. 40 CFR 231.5(c). In addition, the Regional Administrator
must send copies of such notification to all ``persons who commented on
the proposed determination or participated at the hearing.'' Id. The
regulations provide that ``[s]uch persons may submit timely written
recommendations concerning review.'' Id. EPA's final rule preamble
explains that the purpose of this requirement was to allow for ``public
input into the Administrator's decision whether to review the Regional
Administrator's withdrawal of a proposed determination.'' 44 FR 58081,
October 9, 1979.
In addition, EPA's implementing regulations recognize the statutory
mandate for EPA to consult with the Corps on its section 404(c)
decision. Indeed, EPA's regulations require consultation with the Corps
throughout the various stages of the regulatory process. Of particular
note, the regulations contemplate two specific engagements with the
Corps during the initial stages of the section 404(c) process.
First, EPA's regulations generally contemplate that where there is
a permit application pending, the Regional Administrator's initial
determination of whether the discharge ``could'' result in an
unacceptable adverse effect would be made after considering the record
developed during its coordination with the Corps on the permit
application. Section 231.3(a) provides that the Regional
Administrator's decision under that provision must be based on an
evaluation of ``information available to him, including any record
developed under the section 404 referral process specified in 33 CFR
323.5(b).'' \2\ 40 CFR
[[Page 45752]]
231.3(a). The regulations also include a comment stating that ``[i]n
cases involving a proposed disposal site for which a permit application
is pending, it is anticipated that the procedures of the section 404
referral process will normally be exhausted prior to any final decision
of whether to initiate a 404(c) proceeding.'' 40 CFR 231.3. Although
the Corps removed the section 404 referral process from its regulations
that are still referenced in EPA's current regulations, the regulatory
history associated with the Corps' revisions to its regulations
indicates that its intent was to update that reference to reflect
current coordination processes with EPA established under CWA Section
404(q).\3\
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\2\ ``Coordination with EPA. Prior to actual issuance of permits
for the discharge of dredged or fill material in water of the United
States, Corps of Engineers officials will advise appropriate
Regional Administrators, EPA of the intent to issue permits to which
EPA has objected, recommended conditions, or for which significant
changes are proposed. If the Regional Administrator advises, within
fifteen days of the advice of the intent to issue, that he objects
to the issuance of the permits, the case will be forwarded to the
Chief of Engineers in accordance with 33 CFR 325.11 for further
coordination with the Administrator, EPA and the decision. The
report forwarding the case will contain an analysis of the economic
impact on navigation and anchorage that would occur by failing to
authorize the use of a proposed disposal site, and whether there are
other economically feasible methods or sites available other than
those to which the Regional Administrator objects.'' 33 CFR 323.5(b)
(1979).
\3\ Congress added CWA Section 404(q) to the statute in 1977.
EPA issued its 404(c) regulations in 1979. 44 FR 58076, October 9,
1979. In 1980, the Corps proposed amendments to reflect the 1977
amendments to the CWA. 54 FR 62732, September 19, 1980.
Specifically, the Corps proposed to move section 323.5 to 323.6 and
amended paragraph (b), which is still the language included in the
Corps' current regulations. When issuing its 1980 proposal, the
Corps explained that ``[p]aragraph (b) would be revised in
accordance with interagency agreements called for by section 404(q)
of the CWA and EPA regulations for section 404(c) veto procedures
(40 CFR part 231).'' 45 FR 62733, September 19, 1980. When
finalizing its revised rule language in 1982, the Corps further
explained that the purpose was ``to be consistent with current
agreements between the Corps and EPA which reflect EPA authority to
veto disposal site specifications under section 404(c).'' 47 FR
31795, July 22, 1982. Therefore, this regulatory history
demonstrates that the 404 referral process referenced in 231.3(a) is
now manifested as the coordination processes EPA and the Corps have
established under CWA Section 404(q).
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In addition, EPA's final rule preamble promulgating its regulations
in 40 CFR part 231 states:
EPA's announcement of intent to start a 404(c) action will
ordinarily be preceded by an objection to the permit application,
and under Sec. 325.8 such objection serves to halt issuance of the
permit until the matter is resolved. . . .
The promulgation of regulations under 404(c) will not alter
EPA's present obligations to make timely objections to permit
applications where appropriate. It is not the Agency's intention to
hold back and then suddenly to spring a veto action at the last
minute. The fact that 404(c) may be regarded as a tool of last
resort implies that EPA will first employ its tool of ``first
resort,'' e.g. comment and consultation with the permitting
authority at all appropriate stages of the permit process.
44 FR 58080, October 9, 1979. Therefore, the comment that exists in
EPA's regulations indicates that where there is a permit application
pending it is anticipated that the 404(q) process ``will normally be
exhausted prior to any final decision of whether to initiate a section
404(c) proceeding'' and that the record developed under the 404(q)
process would be considered by the Region Administrator when evaluating
information under 40 CFR 231.3(a).
Second, once the Regional Administrator has made the requisite
finding, the regulations provide an opportunity for the Corps, among
others, to consult with the Regional Administrator prior to the
issuance of a proposed determination. The purpose of this consultation
is to provide information to demonstrate that no unacceptable adverse
effects will occur or for the Corps to notify the Regional
Administrator of his or her intent to take corrective action to prevent
unacceptable adverse effects. 40 CFR 231.3(a)(2).
In addition to the initial stages, the remainder of the 404(c)
process, including the opportunity for public comment and consultation
with the Corps, is intended to obtain information relating to whether
corrective action is available to reduce the adverse impacts of the
discharge. 40 CFR 231.4(a), 231.6. EPA's final rule preamble recognized
the role the Corps permitting process would play in implementing
corrective action identified during the section 404(c) process. In
response to a commenter that asked for EPA to provide an opportunity
for public comment on any corrective action ``proposed by the
permitting authority during the consultative process, where the effect
of such corrective measures is to obviate the need for the 404(c)
action,'' EPA indicated that ``in such a situation, it would be more
appropriate for the public comment to come as part of the permit
process rather than the 404(c) procedure, since it will be the
permitting authority who will have the responsibility for incorporating
appropriate corrective measures into a permit.'' 44 FR 58081, October
9, 1979.
It is important to note that the regulations envision that all the
404(c) regulatory steps would occur over relatively short timeframes.
40 CFR 231.3(a)(2), 231.4(a), 231.5(a), 231.6. Although EPA's
regulations allow for an extension of time, this exception was only
intended where there is good cause. 40 CFR 231.8; see 44 FR 58079,
October 9, 1979.
C. CWA Section 404(q)
Section 404(q) directs the Secretary of the Army to enter into
agreements with various federal agencies, including the EPA ``to
minimize, to the maximum extent practicable, duplication, needless
paperwork, and delays in the issuance of permits under this section.''
The agreements must be developed ``to assure that, to the maximum
extent practicable'' the Corps decision on a permit application will be
made no later than 90 days after the application is published.
EPA and the Corps have entered into various agreements pursuant to
section 404(q). The operative agreement was entered in 1992. Part IV,
paragraph 3 of the 1992 EPA and Army Memorandum of Agreement to
implement section 404(q) (hereinafter referred to as the ``404(q)
MOA''), sets forth the ``exclusive procedures'' for elevation of
individual permits cases. Once the process is initiated, the 404(q) MOA
outlines a process to resolve EPA's concerns that, if necessary,
culminates with the Corps providing EPA with a copy of the Statement of
Findings/Record of Decision prepared in support of the permit decision
``to assist the EPA in reaching a decision whether to initiate 404(c)
before the permit is issued or activity may begin.'' The MOA provides a
10-day period for EPA to initiate the section 404(c) process before the
permit is issued or the activity may begin.
IV. Withdrawal of the Proposed Determination
After conferring with EPA's General Counsel, EPA Region 10 is
concluding the withdrawal process that was initiated on July 19, 2017.
EPA's July 19, 2017 notice stated that it was proposing to withdraw the
2014 Proposed Determination ``[b]ecause the Agency retains the right
under the settlement agreement to ultimately exercise the full extent
of its discretion under section 404(c), including the discretion to act
prior to any potential Army Corps authorization of discharge of dredged
or fill material associated with mining the Pebble deposit, the Agency
believes that withdrawing the Proposed Determination now, while
allowing the factual record regarding any forthcoming permit
application to develop, is appropriate at this time for this particular
matter.'' 82 FR 33124. In suspending this withdrawal process, EPA noted
that ``the factual record regarding the permit application can develop
notwithstanding the Proposed Determination'' and EPA ``has discretion
to consider that factual record after it has developed.'' 83 FR 8670,
February 28, 2018.
EPA has carefully considered the positions articulated in 2014
Proposed Determination and the 2017 and 2018 notices in light of the
developments since they were published. First, the Corps' DEIS includes
significant project-specific information that was not accounted for in
the 2014 Proposed Determination and, based on that information, the
Corps has reached
[[Page 45753]]
preliminary conclusions that in certain respects conflict with
preliminary conclusions in EPA's 2014 Proposed Determination. Second,
there are other processes available now, including the 404(q) MOA
process, for EPA to resolve any issues with the Corps as the record
develops. EPA believes these processes should be exhausted prior to EPA
deciding, based upon all information that has and will be further
developed, to use its section 404(c) authority. The issues relating to
the development of the record align with EPA's original, July 2017
rationale for withdrawing the 2014 Proposed Determination. For these
reasons, Region 10 has now concluded that it is more appropriate to use
well-established mechanisms to raise project-specific issues as the
record develops during the permitting process and consider the full
record before potential future decision-making on this matter, instead
of maintaining a section 404(c) process that is now five years old and
does not account for the voluminous information provided in the
permitting process.
A. Record Developments
EPA is withdrawing the 2014 Proposed Determination because there is
new information that has been generated since 2014, including
information and preliminary conclusions in the Corps' DEIS, that
conflict with EPA's Proposed Determination and that EPA will need to
consider before any potential future decision-making regarding this
matter. As discussed below, the current record before the agency is
different from the one considered by the Regional Administrator in 2014
and, consistent with general administrative law principles for agency
decision-making, EPA must consider the entire record of this
proceeding. As a result, any decision-making process under section
404(c) should, if initiated, be based on the available information at
that time rather than based on a proposed determination which, through
the passage of time, the submittal of a permit application, and a
significant expansion of the record, has effectively grown stale.
Shortly after EPA issued the 2014 Proposed Determination, EPA was
enjoined from working on the 2014 Section 404(c) process when a Federal
District court issued a preliminary injunction. That injunction
remained in place until May 11, 2017 when EPA and PLP settled the
pending cases. EPA's record and work relating to the Proposed
Determination was completely frozen from November 2014 until May 2017.
Within a few months of its settlement with EPA, PLP submitted its
permit application, and since that time, the Corps' record has grown
significantly to include project-specific information, analyses, and
preliminary conclusions developed during the permitting process.
The record will only continue to grow until the Corps issues a
final EIS, and during this time Region 10 is precluded under the
settlement agreement from forwarding a Recommended Determination to EPA
Headquarters until the Corps issues a final EIS or May 2021, whenever
is sooner. EPA used its extension authority under 40 CFR 231.8 to
suspend the process and keep the Proposed Determination pending during
the timelines provided in the settlement agreement. 83 FR 8671,
February 28, 2018. Although the regulations allow extensions for the
short regulatory timeframes if there is good cause, these timeframes
provide evidence that extensions authorized under 40 CFR 231.8 were not
intended to allow for long-term gaps, as in this case, that could
result in decision-making without the full record.
When EPA entered into the settlement agreement in 2017 and proposed
to withdraw the Proposed Determination, EPA did not know if or when PLP
would submit a CWA Section 404 permit application. And even once PLP
submitted a permit application and despite the Corps' estimated
schedule, EPA did not know and could not know when it issued its 2018
suspension exactly how long the NEPA process would take and how it
would proceed. Given the current status of the NEPA process, it is now
clear that EPA's 2014 Proposed Determination does not account for the
significant project-specific information that has been developed and
will be developed during the multi-year permitting process.
In particular, PLP's current proposal is to produce 1.3 billion
tons of ore from the Pebble deposit over 20 years. The 2014 Proposed
Determination relied heavily on the Bristol Bay Watershed Assessment,
which evaluated three hypothetical mine scenarios that represented
different stages of mining at the Pebble deposit, based on the amount
of ore processed: Pebble 0.25 (approximately 0.25 billion tons of ore
over 20 years), Pebble 2.0 (approximately 2.0 billion tons of ore over
25 years), and Pebble 6.5 (approximately 6.5 billion tons of ore over
78 years). These hypothetical mine scenarios drew on preliminary
information developed by Northern Dynasty Minerals in 2011 and
submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission, consultation with
experts, and baseline data collected by PLP to characterize the mine
site, mine activities, and the surrounding environment. EPA 2014 ES-10,
Ch. 6. The Assessment disclosed the uncertainties associated with these
hypothetical scenarios and recognized that the exact details of any
future mine plan for the Pebble deposit or for other deposits in the
watershed would differ from EPA's mine scenarios. Id.
Although a number of aspects of the PLP's current proposal
evaluated in the DEIS are similar to the mine scenarios evaluated in
the Bristol Bay Watershed Assessment, there are aspects of PLP's
proposal that differ from EPA's scenarios considered in the Assessment.
While the agencies do not know the extent of the differences on the
overall impacts of the project and how they may relate to the Corps'
NEPA and 404 analyses, the distinctions themselves are evidence that
there is now different information in the Agencies' records than in
2014.
While any subsequent mine expansion may change the mine components
and impacts, differences between the 2014 projected mining proposal
evaluated by EPA and PLP's current 20-year mining proposal include the
following:
The movement of most mine component facilities out of the
Upper Talarik Creek watershed which may result in reduced impacts to
aquatic resources in the Upper Talarik Creek watershed;
The elimination of cyanide leaching as part of the ore
processing, which eliminates risks of impacts due to cyanide that would
otherwise be in tailings and process water and eliminates risk of
cyanide spills;
The placement of a liner under the disposal facility
containing pyritic tailings and potentially acid generating (PAG) waste
rock, which would minimize the potential for groundwater contamination;
The reduction in waste rock, which may make it more
feasible to backfill PAG waste rock into the open pit at closure;
The separation of pyritic tailings from bulk tailings,
which may make it more feasible to backfill pyritic tailings into the
open pit at closure and may result in the ability to more effectively
reclaim the pyritic tailings/PAG waste rock site and reduce surface
impacts and reduce water management needs of this site following
closure; and
The relocation of treated water discharge locations, which
allows flow augmentation and may reduce impacts due to open pit
dewatering.
[[Page 45754]]
In addition to these differences in the mining proposal, the Corps'
DEIS and EPA's 2014 Proposed Determination draw some conflicting
preliminary conclusions regarding the information about the project.
EPA recognizes that these documents have different purposes and that
the Corps has not yet prepared its specific section 404(b)(1)
Guidelines analysis. DEIS, Section 4.22 Wetlands and Other Waters/
Special Aquatic Sites, 4.22-4. In addition, EPA's issuance of a
Proposed Determination represents a judgment that the matter should be
``look[ed] into'' or ``explored.'' While the Proposed Determination
describes EPA's basis for its 2014 preliminary determinations, EPA has
not rendered a final determination on this matter. The Corps'
conclusions are also preliminary, and EPA provided detailed comments on
the Draft EIS and 404 PN on July 1, 2019 which raise issues for the
Corps' consideration about some of the Corps' analyses and preliminary
conclusions (including the examples discussed below). EPA's July 1,
2019 letters also make recommendations to provide significant
additional information about key project components and plans and
improve the environmental modeling and other aspects of the impact
assessment.
In this decision, EPA is not seeking to resolve any conflicting
preliminary conclusions of the Agencies or conclusively address the
merits of the underlying technical issues. Rather, in withdrawing the
Proposed Determination, EPA has considered the full record as it now
stands, including the conflicting preliminary conclusions of the
Agencies. EPA is providing a few examples of the divergent views
expressed by the Agencies on some key questions that will ultimately
need to be resolved. The examples are not an exhaustive list but are
included to illustrate that the Agencies have expressed divergent views
on important issues related to the impact of the proposed project.
For example, the DEIS states in a section regarding fish
displacement and habitat loss that ``there is sufficient available
habitat for relocation without impacts to existing populations . . .
[t]he extent or scope of these impacts would [be] limited to waters in
the vicinity of the mine site footprint, and may not be observed
downstream from the affected stream channel.'' DEIS Section 4.24, page
4.24-8. However, EPA's 2014 Proposed Determination states that ``[t]he
elimination and dewatering of anadromous fish streams would also
adversely affect downstream habitat for salmon and other fish
species.'' Proposed Determination 2014, 4-9 (citations omitted).
As another example, the Alaska District's DEIS preliminarily
concluded in a section discussing impacts on coho and Chinook
populations that:
[C]onsidering the low quality and low use of coho and Chinook
rearing habitat, the lack of spawning in SFK east reaches impacted,
and the low level of coho spawning in NFK Tributary 1.190,
measurable impacts to salmon populations would be unlikely . . .
modeling indicates that indirect impacts associated with mine
operations would occur at the individual level, and be attenuated
upstream of the confluence of the NFK and SFK with no measurable
impacts to salmon populations.
DEIS, Section 4.24, page 4.24-6. For comparison, EPA's Proposed
Determination preliminarily concluded that:
The headwater and beaver-modified habitats eliminated or
dewatered by the Pebble 0.25 stage mine could support [coho and
Chinook] populations that are distinct from those using habitats
farther downstream in each watershed. Besides destroying the intact,
headwater-to-larger river networks of the SFK, NFK, and UTC
watersheds, stream losses that eliminate local, unique populations
could translate into a substantial loss of genetic variability with
impacts extending well beyond the footprints of the lost habitats. .
. . Thus, loss of the SFK, NFK, and UTC watersheds' discrete fish
populations could have significant repercussions well beyond that
suggested by their absolute proportion within the larger watersheds.
. . . Thus, the elimination or dewatering of nearly 5 miles (8 km)
of salmon streams caused or facilitated by the discharge of dredged
or fill material for the Pebble 0.25 stage mine could reduce the
overall productivity of the SFK, NFK, and UTC watersheds for both
species, at a level that the aquatic ecosystem may not be able to
afford.
Proposed Determination 2014, 4-8 (citations omitted). Furthermore, EPA
anticipates that additional information will continue to become
available through the Corps' ongoing permit review process that was not
available at the time of the Proposed Determination. The Corps' Draft
EIS received over 100,000 public comments. In addition to these
comments now in the record, EPA expects that additional information
relevant to EPA's decision-making will become available through the
permitting process. All this information represents the full record
that EPA would ultimately need to consider as part of any regulatory
decision-making.
Given the need for any final EPA 404(c) decision to be based on the
entire record, EPA has concluded that a Proposed Determination which in
its current form does not account for the full record and does not
grapple with differing conclusions, including those noted previously,
cannot serve as a basis for such a decision. If in the future EPA
decides to proceed under its 404(c) authority, a new proposed
determination would be appropriate to ensure consideration by the
Regional Administrator of the full record prior to making the required
determination under 40 CFR 231.3(a) and ensure meaningful public
engagement through the public comment period on any new proposed
determination. As discussed below, EPA concludes that the proper avenue
for considering the full available record and resolving technical
issues, including conflicting information and conclusions, should be
through the now available processes before any potential decision-
making by EPA.
B. Process Opportunities as the Record Develops
EPA is also withdrawing the 2014 Proposed Determination because it
has determined that given the record developments, as well as the
language and structure of the 404(c) regulations, as discussed
previously, at this time, the appropriate sequencing is to resolve
technical issues during the Corps' permitting process rather than
through a separate 404(c) process initiated in 2014 that does not
reflect the full record.
EPA is participating in the Corps' NEPA process as a cooperating
agency for the preparation of the EIS pursuant to the Corps' invitation
and schedule. In this role, EPA has provided significant technical
comments to the Corps relating to impacts of the project. EPA has and
will continue to work constructively with the Corps as a cooperating
agency, providing special expertise in specific areas requested by the
Corps, including: Alternatives; recreation; aesthetics and visual
resources; soils; surface- and groundwater hydrology; water and
sediment quality; wetlands and special aquatic sites; vegetation; and
mitigation. EPA plans to continue to work with the Corps and the other
cooperating agencies on the next steps in the NEPA process, including
the development of the final EIS and other information to inform the
Corps' permit decision.
In addition to supporting the Corps as a cooperating agency, EPA is
evaluating the information relevant to the section 404(b)(1) Guidelines
analysis and providing feedback to the Corps. EPA's July 1, 2019
comments on the 404 PN for Pebble's permit application stated that it
``has concerns regarding the extent and magnitude of the substantial
proposed impacts to streams, wetlands, and other aquatic resources that
may result, particularly in light of the
[[Page 45755]]
important role these resources play in supporting the region's valuable
fishery resources.''
In its section 404 letter, EPA Region 10 also invoked the process
to resolve these concerns pursuant to the 404(q) MOA. EPA's June 1,
2019 letter stated that ``Region 10 finds that this project as
described in the PN may have substantial and unacceptable adverse
impacts on fisheries resources in the project area watersheds, which
are aquatic resources of national importance.''
EPA recognizes that the Corps, through well-established processes
of continued analysis and coordination with EPA, may resolve some of
the issues raised by EPA's letter. In addition, EPA recognizes that it
is incumbent on the Agency to reanalyze its prior position, which was
based on hypothetical scenarios, now that there is actual, non-
speculative information before EPA in the form of a section 404 permit
application and associated information.
As such, EPA believes it is appropriate to defer to the Corps'
decision-making process to sort out the information before deciding
whether to initiate a section 404(c) process based on the full record
before the agencies. This approach is appropriate in these
circumstances in light of the record developments and EPA's regulations
as described previously. Under the statute and regulations, the Corps
is the lead agency for issuing permits under section 404(a). The Corps
should have the first opportunity to consider project-specific
information here without having to contend with a 404(c) proposal that
does not account for all of the available information.
Moreover, when EPA is considering use of its authority under
section 404(c), the Corps plays an important coordination and
consultation role in the initial stages of EPA's decision-making, and
that role may differ depending on whether or not there is a pending CWA
404 permit application. As discussed previously, the regulations
provide that where there is a permit application pending, ``it is
anticipated'' that the coordination process ``will normally be
exhausted prior to any final decision of whether to initiate a 404(c)
proceeding.'' The current coordination procedures between EPA and the
Corps on individual permitting decisions is now memorialized in the
1992 404(q) MOA. The elevation procedures represent a longstanding,
well-understood, and agreed-upon process that the agencies have
utilized for more than two decades.
Importantly, EPA could not have initiated the 404(q) MOA process
when EPA Region 10 started its section 404(c) process for the Pebble
deposit area in 2014 or when EPA issued its February 2018 suspension
notice. After the Corps noticed PLP's 404 permit application for public
comment, EPA could and did initiate the section 404(q) MOA procedures.
Now that the 404(q) MOA process is available to resolve issues, EPA has
determined that it is most appropriate to use that process to resolve
issues as the record develops before engaging in any possible future
decision-making regarding its section 404(c) authority. By initiating
the 404(q) MOA process, EPA Region 10 is following an avenue to work
with the Corps Alaska District throughout the permitting process to
resolve concerns. If unresolved, EPA Region 10 can elevate to EPA
Headquarters, which can decide whether to engage with the Department of
the Army. If EPA proceeds through this process and its concerns remain
outstanding when the Corps is ready to issue the permit, the MOA
specifically contemplates that EPA will have an opportunity to consider
exercising its section 404(c) authority at that time. If EPA believes
that these processes are not addressing its concerns, EPA retains the
discretion and the authority to decide to use its section 404(c)
authority ``whenever'' it determines, in its discretion, that the
statutory standard for exercising this authority has been met,
including at the end of 404(q) MOA process, by initiating a new section
404(c) process that is informed by the entirety of the facts and the
Corps' decision-making known to the Agency at that time.\4\
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\4\ The 404(q) MOA states that ``This agreement does not
diminish either Agency's authority to decide whether a particular
individual permit should be granted, including determining whether
the project is in compliance with the Section 404(b)(1) Guidelines,
or the Administrator's authority under section 404(c) of the Clean
Water Act.'' Part I, paragraph 5.
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The Corps, in addition to the public, also plays an important role
in identifying information or potential corrective actions to address
EPA's unacceptable adverse effects finding. In particular, EPA's
regulations provide a 15-day opportunity for the Corps to provide such
information prior to the issuance of the proposed determination.
Although the Corps participated in EPA's 2014 process prior to the
issuance of the Proposed Determination, the nature of the Corps'
engagement in this instance was somewhat limited because there was no
permit application pending. Now that PLP submitted a permit
application, the Corps is in a different position regarding its ability
to provide information relating to corrective actions to prevent
unacceptable adverse effects and that information should be accounted
for in the Corps' permitting process as well as by EPA.
For these reasons, EPA has determined that it is most appropriate
to participate in the 404 permitting processes to address concerns as
the record develops rather than continue with a separate 404(c) action
initiated in 2014. This approach will ensure that both agencies will be
able to consider the full record and engage on issues consistent with
their respective roles provided for under the Clean Water Act and EPA's
implementing regulations.
V. Response to Comments
EPA's February 2018 Federal Register notice summarized the comments
EPA received on the proposal to withdraw. Two of EPA's bases for
withdrawal in 2017 focused on giving time for PLP to submit a permit
application and to allow for Corps review of that permit application.
EPA acknowledges that given the developments since EPA's July 2017
notice those rationales for withdrawal no long apply to this situation.
As discussed previously, EPA's withdrawal action aligns with the
third basis included in EPA's original July 2017 proposed withdrawal
relating to the factual development of the record for PLP's permit
application and EPA's ability, consistent with its settlement
agreement, to exercise section 404(c) prior to any potential Corps
authorization of discharge of dredged or fill material associated with
mining the Pebble deposit. EPA is focusing its responses on that issue
and on comments that EPA explained that it was not addressing in its
2018 suspension notice.
EPA's February 28, 2018 notice indicated that ``in light of EPA's
forbearance from proceeding to the next step of the section 404(c)
process . . ., EPA concludes that the factual record regarding the
permit application can develop notwithstanding the Proposed
Determination.'' 83 FR 8670. Although that remains true, given the need
for any final EPA 404(c) decision to be based on the entire record, EPA
has concluded that a Proposed Determination which in its current form
does not account for the full record and does not grapple with
differing conclusions, including those noted previously, should not
serve as a basis for such a decision.
In response to comments that EPA cannot withdraw a Proposed
Determination without considering the
[[Page 45756]]
proposed restrictions or the science and technical information, EPA's
February 28, 2018 notice stated that such comments were ``moot'' in
light of EPA's decision not to withdraw the Proposed Determination. 83
FR 8670. Although EPA is now withdrawing the Proposed Determination,
such comments remain outside the bounds of EPA's basis for its
decision. Indeed, EPA's July 19, 2017 notice indicated that it was
``not soliciting comment on the proposed restrictions or science or
technical information underlying the Proposed Determination.'' 82 FR
33124. Moreover, EPA's February 28, 2018 notice made clear that such
comments were outside the scope. 83 FR 8898. As in EPA's prior notices,
EPA is not basing its decision-making on technical consideration or
judgments about whether the mine proposal will ultimately be found to
meet the requirements of the 404(b)(1) Guidelines or results in
``unacceptable adverse effects'' under CWA section 404(c). The
technical information is continuing to evolve through the ongoing
section 404 and NEPA processes, and determinations under section 404
will be made in conjunction with, and based on, the record when it is
fully developed. Rather, EPA is withdrawing its 2014 Proposed
Determination based on the considerations described in this notice and
is continuing to consider the technical issues through its engagement
with the Corps in these procedures. EPA will continue to consider the
relevant science and technical information, including the information
underlying its 2014 Proposed Determination, as part of the ongoing
permitting process. This effort includes consideration of ``any other
information that is relevant to protection of the world-class fisheries
contained in the Bristol Bay watershed in light of the permit
application that has now been submitted to the Corps.'' 83 FR 8670,
February 28, 2018.
EPA's February 28, 2018 notice indicated that comments received on
the Administrator's review ``do not need to be addressed'' because the
Proposed Determination was not being withdrawn. See 83 FR 8670. In
general, these comments advocated for or against the Administrator's
review. Some commenters asked for additional opportunities for public
input. EPA has satisfied all of the procedural requirements for
withdrawing a proposed determination provided in 40 CFR 231.5(c). EPA's
regulations do not require EPA to propose a withdrawal of a proposed
determination and take public comment. EPA took that step to comply
with its settlement agreement obligation. EPA's regulations only
require notification to all those that commented on the proposed
determination or participated at the hearing and allow an opportunity
for such persons to provide timely written recommendations concerning
whether the Administrator should review the Regional Administrator's
decision. 40 CFR 231.5(c); 44 FR 58081, October 9, 1979. EPA satisfied
this requirement through its July 2017 notice. Through this process,
the public had a full opportunity to comment on the very basis for
EPA's withdrawal of the Proposed Determination and on whether the
Administrator should review and reconsider the withdrawal. 82 FR 33124,
July 19, 2017. EPA has now completed consideration of the issues raised
as described in this notice. The General Counsel, who is the delegated
official to act for the Administrator, did not notify the Regional
Administrator of his intent to review as described in the regulations,
thus ending the regulatory process.
EPA has also determined that it is unnecessary to seek additional
public comment as indicated by the February 2018 Federal Register
notice. Such an additional public comment is not required under EPA's
regulations. EPA notes that it provided numerous opportunities for the
public to comment on the Bristol Bay Watershed Assessment and Proposed
Determination, including on the rationale for EPA's decision to
withdraw the Proposed Determination. Furthermore, the Corps has
provided an opportunity for the public to comment on the Draft EIS and
the public has an opportunity to comment on the final EIS. See 40 CFR
1503.1(b). Finally, if EPA initiates the section 404(c) process
pursuant to 40 CFR 231.3 in the future and proceeds to publish a new
Proposed Determination, such a decision would be subject to notice and
comment under EPA's regulations.
VI. Conclusion
This decision provides clarity and certainty that EPA Region 10
will be working through the Corps' permitting process, including as a
cooperating agency, and the 404(q) MOA process for engagement on this
matter. This notice concludes EPA's withdrawal process that was
initiated on July 19, 2017 and suspended on January 26, 2018. As
Regional Administrator and after conferring with EPA's General Counsel,
I am providing notice of withdrawal of the 2014 Proposed Determination
described herein under 40 CFR 231.5(c)(1).
Dated: July 30, 2019.
Chris Hladick,
Regional Administrator, EPA Region 10.
[FR Doc. 2019-18596 Filed 8-29-19; 8:45 am]
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