Proposed Information Collection Request; Comment Request; Information Collection Request for the 2020 Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment (DWINSA), 6542-6543 [2020-02263]
Download as PDF
6542
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 24 / Wednesday, February 5, 2020 / Notices
Signed in Washington, DC, on January 30,
2020.
LaTanya Butler,
Deputy Committee Management Officer.
[FR Doc. 2020–02160 Filed 2–4–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[EPA–HQ–OW–2020–0017; FRL 10004–75–
OW]
Proposed Information Collection
Request; Comment Request;
Information Collection Request for the
2020 Drinking Water Infrastructure
Needs Survey and Assessment
(DWINSA)
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is planning to submit an
information collection request (ICR),
‘‘Information Collection Request for the
2020 Drinking Water Infrastructure
Needs Survey and Assessment
(DWINSA)’’ (EPA ICR No. 2616.01,
OMB Control No. 2040–NEW) to the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) for review and approval in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA). Before doing so,
the EPA is soliciting public comments
on specific aspects of the proposed
information collection as described in
this document. This is a request for
approval of a new collection. 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: Comments must be submitted on
or before April 6, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
referencing Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OW–2020–0017 online using https://
www.regulations.gov (our preferred
method), by email to ow-docket@
epa.gov or by mail to: The EPA Docket
Center, Environmental Protection
Agency, Mail Code 28221T, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC
20460.
The 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,
information claimed to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:54 Feb 04, 2020
Jkt 250001
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robert Barles, Drinking Water
Protection Division (Mail Code 4606M),
Office of Ground Water and Drinking
Water, Environmental Protection
Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20460; telephone
number: 202–564–3814; fax number:
202–564–3754; email address:
barles.robert@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Supporting documents which explain in
detail the information that the EPA will
be collecting are available in the public
docket for this ICR. The docket can be
viewed online at https://
www.regulations.gov or in person at the
EPA Docket Center, WJC West, Room
3334, 1301 Constitution Ave. NW,
Washington, DC. The telephone number
for the Docket Center is 202–566–1744.
For additional information about the
EPA’s public docket, visit https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
Pursuant to section 3506(c)(2)(A) of
the PRA (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), the
EPA is soliciting comments and
information to enable it to: (i) Evaluate
whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Agency, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
(ii) evaluate the accuracy of the
Agency’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(iii) enhance the quality, utility, and
clarity of the information to be
collected; and (iv) minimize the burden
of the collection of information on those
who are to respond, including through
the use of appropriate automated
electronic, mechanical, or other
technological collection techniques or
other forms of information technology,
e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses. The EPA will consider the
comments received and amend the ICR
as appropriate. The final ICR package
will then be submitted to OMB for
review and approval. At that time, the
EPA will issue another Federal Register
notice to announce the submission of
the ICR to OMB and the opportunity to
submit additional comments to OMB.
Abstract: The purpose of this
information collection is to identify the
infrastructure needs of public water
systems for the 20-year period from
January 2020 through December 2039.
The EPA’s Office of Ground Water and
Drinking Water will collect these data to
comply with sections 1452(h) and
1452(i)(4) of the Safe Drinking Water
Act (42 U.S.C. 300j–12). This data
collection effort will include the 2020
PO 00000
Frm 00046
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
State DWINSA and the 2020 Native
American DWINSA. For the State
DWINSA, the EPA will collect the 20year need for systems that are in all 50
states, the U.S. territories (Guam, U.S.
Virgin Islands, Northern Mariana
Islands, and American Samoa), Puerto
Rico, and the District of Columbia. The
EPA will use a questionnaire to collect
capital investment need information
from selected community water systems
(CWSs) and not-for-profit
noncommunity water systems
(NPNCWSs). The EPA will collect data
from NPNCWSs serving 10,000 or fewer
persons and small CWSs serving 3,300
or fewer persons through site visits. For
the Native American DWINSA, the EPA
will survey selected American Indian
and Alaska Native Village CWSs and
NPNCWSs. These systems will receive
the same data collection instrument as
the systems selected for the 2020 State
DWINSA, except that American Indian
and Alaska Native Village water systems
will not receive questions related to
American Iron and Steel because those
requirements do not apply to these
systems. Participation in the survey is
voluntary. The data from the
questionnaires will provide the EPA
with new information from the field to
assist in the 2020 update to the
Agency’s assessment of the nationwide
infrastructure needs of public water
systems. As mandated by section
1452(a)(1)(D)(ii) of the Safe Drinking
Water Act, the EPA uses the results of
the latest survey to allocate Drinking
Water State Revolving Fund (DWSRF)
monies among states, territories, the
EPA Regions (for direct implementation
programs), and the Navajo Nation.
Form Numbers: None.
Respondents/affected entities: The
respondents for the 2020 Drinking
Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and
Assessment are CWSs, NPNCWSs, state
agencies, the EPA Regions, and the
Navajo Nation.
Respondent’s obligation to respond:
Voluntary.
Estimated number of respondents:
3,969 (total).
Frequency of response: One time.
Total estimated burden: 14,510 hours
(average per year over three years).
Burden is defined at 5 CFR 1320.03(b).
Total estimated cost: $734,686
(average per year over three years),
includes $0 annualized capital or
operation & maintenance costs.
Changes in estimates: This ICR does
not modify an existing ICR. An ICR was
prepared for the previous survey effort
done in 2015, which is outside of the 3year window for modifying an existing
ICR for a new effort. For purposes of this
reinstatement, the EPA has provided a
E:\FR\FM\05FEN1.SGM
05FEN1
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 24 / Wednesday, February 5, 2020 / Notices
comparison of burden of the proposed
new effort to the estimates of the
previous 2015 DWINSA ICR.
The estimated total public reporting
burden over the entire 4-year length of
the 2015 DWINSA was 37,195 hours.
The total public reporting burden for the
2020 DWINSA is estimated to be 43,531
hours, an increase of 17 percent over the
2015 DWINSA. Some aspects of the
2020 DWINSA resulted in an estimated
decrease in burden compared to the
same data collection for the 2015 effort,
and some aspects that are new to the
2020 DWINSA resulted in an increase
compared to the 2015 DWINSA.
Specific differences between the 2015
and 2020 DWINSAs that resulted in
changes in burden are as follows:
• The 2015 DWINSA focused on
collecting data on 20-year infrastructure
needs from medium and large systems
through a State DWINSA. The 2015
DWINSA did not collect new data from
small CWSs, state NPNCWSs, or
American Indian or Alaska Native
Village water systems. The 2015
DWINSA relied on data from the 2007
DWINSA for small CWSs’ needs, from
the 1999 DWINSA for the state
NPNCWSs’ needs, and from the 2011
DWINSA for the American Indian and
Alaska Native Village systems’ needs.
The 2020 DWINSA will collect 20-year
infrastructure need data from all of
those survey groups. This increased
scope of the 2020 DWINSA efforts to
collect infrastructure needs compared to
the 2015 DWINSA added survey groups
with corresponding increased burden.
• The approach to data collection and
therefore the overall assumptions on the
burdens associated with collecting 20year infrastructure need information
from each large, medium, and small
CWS for the State DWINSA did not
change relative to the most recent State
DWINSA in which these water systems
were last surveyed. However, the
burden estimate for collecting data from
each NPNCWS has increased since the
last time this type of system was
surveyed in the 1999 State DWINSA. At
that time, the EPA estimated that
NPNCWS staff would spend little time
accompanying the survey team during
the site visit. Subsequently, the EPA
developed more in-depth interview
methods to improve capture of the 20year infrastructure needs. The EPA will
apply these newer survey methods to
small NPNCWSs (serving 10,000 and
fewer persons) for the first time in this
2020 State DWINSA. These changes to
the survey methods were previously
applied for small CWSs in the 2007
survey and, therefore, the same burden
estimates will now apply to both small
CWSs and small NPNCWSs. The EPA
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:54 Feb 04, 2020
Jkt 250001
will apply the same survey methods
and, therefore, the same burden to CWS
serving 10,000–50,000 persons and
NPNCWS serving more than 10,000
persons.
• As previously described, the
assumed burdens for collecting 20-year
infrastructure need information from
each large, medium, and small CWS did
not change relative to the most recent
DWINSA in which these water systems
were surveyed. However, the number of
medium and large systems in the State
DWINSA that will be surveyed
decreased by 322 systems from 2,859
systems in 2015 to 2,537 systems in the
2020 DWINSA. This results in a lower
burden estimate.
• The 2015 DWINSA focused on the
20-year infrastructure needs of the
surveyed systems. The 2020 DWINSA
includes three categories of new
questions: Lead Service Lines, Operator
Workforce, and American Iron and
Steel. These new questions add burden
to participating survey respondents,
dependent on the category of the
question and type of respondent.
• For the first time, the 2015 State
Survey used a modified statistical
approach where a large majority of the
medium systems sampled had been
previously sampled in the earlier 2011
State Survey; the change resulted in a
significant decrease in states’ and
systems’ reported burden hours. The
2020 State DWINSA applies the same
modified approach to the medium
system survey as was applied for the
2015 DWINSA. The 2020 DWINSA also
applies this approach for the first time
to the 2020 Native American DWINSA.
The 2015 DWINSA did not collect data
on American Indian (AI) and Alaska
Native Village (ANV) Needs; however,
the estimated burden associated with
the 2020 Native American DWINSA is
less than was reported in the 2011 ICR.
The increase in burden from the 2015
to the 2020 DWINSA attributable to the
addition of new survey respondents
(i.e., small water systems; NPNCWSs;
and AI and ANV systems, including
Navajo Nation water systems) for their
20-year infrastructure investment needs
is a combined 3,382 burden hours. That
increase is partially offset by a decrease
of 1,548 burden hours to ascertain
infrastructure needs for fewer large and
medium systems. The net result is an
increase of 1,560 burden hours from the
2015 to the 2020 DWINSA for water
system respondents to report
infrastructure needs. Thus, the increase
in burden for water systems overall is
small relative to the additional data to
be collected. The combined burden on
primacy agencies for ascertaining water
systems’ infrastructure needs actually
PO 00000
Frm 00047
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
6543
decreases from the 2015 to the 2020
DWINSA.
Most of the increase in burden due to
the expanded scope of the type of
systems surveyed for infrastructure
needs in the 2020 DWINSA is borne by
the EPA. The EPA is responsible for
collection of data from the small CWSs
and NPNCWS for the State DWINSA,
and by the EPA Regions for all but the
Navajo Nation systems in the Native
American DWINSA (the Navajo Nation
will collect data for their systems).
An increase of 3,573 burden hours
from the 2015 to the 2020 DWINSA for
water system respondents is attributable
to the additional Lead Service Line,
Operator Workforce, and American Iron
and Steel questions. Most of this
increase in burden is due to the Lead
Service Line questions. The Lead
Service Line questions account for 2,978
hours (83 percent) of the 3,573 hours of
increased burden for the three
additional question categories. The Lead
Service Line questions will gather
information about the water systems’
service lines, as mandated by the
America’s Water Infrastructure Act of
2018 section 2015(e)(2). These 2,978
hours translate to an average of 0.76
burden hours per water system
respondent to specifically address the
Lead Service Line questions.
These changes are further discussed
in the Supporting Statement of the
Information Collection Request
available in the EPA’s docket for
comment.
Dated: January 31, 2020.
Jennifer McLain,
Director, Office of Ground Water and Drinking
Water.
[FR Doc. 2020–02263 Filed 2–4–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
COMMISSION
[OMB 3060–1252; FRS 16465]
Information Collection Being Reviewed
by the Federal Communications
Commission
Federal Communications
Commission.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
As part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork burdens, and as
required by the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (PRA), the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC or
Commission) invites the general public
and other Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on the
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\05FEN1.SGM
05FEN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 24 (Wednesday, February 5, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 6542-6543]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-02263]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[EPA-HQ-OW-2020-0017; FRL 10004-75-OW]
Proposed Information Collection Request; Comment Request;
Information Collection Request for the 2020 Drinking Water
Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment (DWINSA)
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is planning to
submit an information collection request (ICR), ``Information
Collection Request for the 2020 Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs
Survey and Assessment (DWINSA)'' (EPA ICR No. 2616.01, OMB Control No.
2040-NEW) to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review and
approval in accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA). Before
doing so, the EPA is soliciting public comments on specific aspects of
the proposed information collection as described in this document. This
is a request for approval of a new collection. 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: Comments must be submitted on or before April 6, 2020.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, referencing Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-
2020-0017 online using https://www.regulations.gov (our preferred
method), by email to [email protected] or by mail to: The EPA Docket
Center, Environmental Protection Agency, Mail Code 28221T, 1200
Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460.
The 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, information
claimed to be Confidential Business Information (CBI) or other
information whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Robert Barles, Drinking Water
Protection Division (Mail Code 4606M), Office of Ground Water and
Drinking Water, Environmental Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460; telephone number: 202-564-3814; fax
number: 202-564-3754; email address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Supporting documents which explain in detail
the information that the EPA will be collecting are available in the
public docket for this ICR. The docket can be viewed online at https://www.regulations.gov or in person at the EPA Docket Center, WJC West,
Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Ave. NW, Washington, DC. The telephone
number for the Docket Center is 202-566-1744. For additional
information about the EPA's public docket, visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
Pursuant to section 3506(c)(2)(A) of the PRA (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.), the EPA is soliciting comments and information to enable it to:
(i) Evaluate whether the proposed collection of information is
necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the Agency,
including whether the information will have practical utility; (ii)
evaluate the accuracy of the Agency's estimate of the burden of the
proposed collection of information, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used; (iii) enhance the quality, utility,
and clarity of the information to be collected; and (iv) minimize the
burden of the collection of information on those who are to respond,
including through the use of appropriate automated electronic,
mechanical, or other technological collection techniques or other forms
of information technology, e.g., permitting electronic submission of
responses. The EPA will consider the comments received and amend the
ICR as appropriate. The final ICR package will then be submitted to OMB
for review and approval. At that time, the EPA will issue another
Federal Register notice to announce the submission of the ICR to OMB
and the opportunity to submit additional comments to OMB.
Abstract: The purpose of this information collection is to identify
the infrastructure needs of public water systems for the 20-year period
from January 2020 through December 2039. The EPA's Office of Ground
Water and Drinking Water will collect these data to comply with
sections 1452(h) and 1452(i)(4) of the Safe Drinking Water Act (42
U.S.C. 300j-12). This data collection effort will include the 2020
State DWINSA and the 2020 Native American DWINSA. For the State DWINSA,
the EPA will collect the 20-year need for systems that are in all 50
states, the U.S. territories (Guam, U.S. Virgin Islands, Northern
Mariana Islands, and American Samoa), Puerto Rico, and the District of
Columbia. The EPA will use a questionnaire to collect capital
investment need information from selected community water systems
(CWSs) and not-for-profit noncommunity water systems (NPNCWSs). The EPA
will collect data from NPNCWSs serving 10,000 or fewer persons and
small CWSs serving 3,300 or fewer persons through site visits. For the
Native American DWINSA, the EPA will survey selected American Indian
and Alaska Native Village CWSs and NPNCWSs. These systems will receive
the same data collection instrument as the systems selected for the
2020 State DWINSA, except that American Indian and Alaska Native
Village water systems will not receive questions related to American
Iron and Steel because those requirements do not apply to these
systems. Participation in the survey is voluntary. The data from the
questionnaires will provide the EPA with new information from the field
to assist in the 2020 update to the Agency's assessment of the
nationwide infrastructure needs of public water systems. As mandated by
section 1452(a)(1)(D)(ii) of the Safe Drinking Water Act, the EPA uses
the results of the latest survey to allocate Drinking Water State
Revolving Fund (DWSRF) monies among states, territories, the EPA
Regions (for direct implementation programs), and the Navajo Nation.
Form Numbers: None.
Respondents/affected entities: The respondents for the 2020
Drinking Water Infrastructure Needs Survey and Assessment are CWSs,
NPNCWSs, state agencies, the EPA Regions, and the Navajo Nation.
Respondent's obligation to respond: Voluntary.
Estimated number of respondents: 3,969 (total).
Frequency of response: One time.
Total estimated burden: 14,510 hours (average per year over three
years). Burden is defined at 5 CFR 1320.03(b).
Total estimated cost: $734,686 (average per year over three years),
includes $0 annualized capital or operation & maintenance costs.
Changes in estimates: This ICR does not modify an existing ICR. An
ICR was prepared for the previous survey effort done in 2015, which is
outside of the 3-year window for modifying an existing ICR for a new
effort. For purposes of this reinstatement, the EPA has provided a
[[Page 6543]]
comparison of burden of the proposed new effort to the estimates of the
previous 2015 DWINSA ICR.
The estimated total public reporting burden over the entire 4-year
length of the 2015 DWINSA was 37,195 hours. The total public reporting
burden for the 2020 DWINSA is estimated to be 43,531 hours, an increase
of 17 percent over the 2015 DWINSA. Some aspects of the 2020 DWINSA
resulted in an estimated decrease in burden compared to the same data
collection for the 2015 effort, and some aspects that are new to the
2020 DWINSA resulted in an increase compared to the 2015 DWINSA.
Specific differences between the 2015 and 2020 DWINSAs that resulted in
changes in burden are as follows:
The 2015 DWINSA focused on collecting data on 20-year
infrastructure needs from medium and large systems through a State
DWINSA. The 2015 DWINSA did not collect new data from small CWSs, state
NPNCWSs, or American Indian or Alaska Native Village water systems. The
2015 DWINSA relied on data from the 2007 DWINSA for small CWSs' needs,
from the 1999 DWINSA for the state NPNCWSs' needs, and from the 2011
DWINSA for the American Indian and Alaska Native Village systems'
needs. The 2020 DWINSA will collect 20-year infrastructure need data
from all of those survey groups. This increased scope of the 2020
DWINSA efforts to collect infrastructure needs compared to the 2015
DWINSA added survey groups with corresponding increased burden.
The approach to data collection and therefore the overall
assumptions on the burdens associated with collecting 20-year
infrastructure need information from each large, medium, and small CWS
for the State DWINSA did not change relative to the most recent State
DWINSA in which these water systems were last surveyed. However, the
burden estimate for collecting data from each NPNCWS has increased
since the last time this type of system was surveyed in the 1999 State
DWINSA. At that time, the EPA estimated that NPNCWS staff would spend
little time accompanying the survey team during the site visit.
Subsequently, the EPA developed more in-depth interview methods to
improve capture of the 20-year infrastructure needs. The EPA will apply
these newer survey methods to small NPNCWSs (serving 10,000 and fewer
persons) for the first time in this 2020 State DWINSA. These changes to
the survey methods were previously applied for small CWSs in the 2007
survey and, therefore, the same burden estimates will now apply to both
small CWSs and small NPNCWSs. The EPA will apply the same survey
methods and, therefore, the same burden to CWS serving 10,000-50,000
persons and NPNCWS serving more than 10,000 persons.
As previously described, the assumed burdens for
collecting 20-year infrastructure need information from each large,
medium, and small CWS did not change relative to the most recent DWINSA
in which these water systems were surveyed. However, the number of
medium and large systems in the State DWINSA that will be surveyed
decreased by 322 systems from 2,859 systems in 2015 to 2,537 systems in
the 2020 DWINSA. This results in a lower burden estimate.
The 2015 DWINSA focused on the 20-year infrastructure
needs of the surveyed systems. The 2020 DWINSA includes three
categories of new questions: Lead Service Lines, Operator Workforce,
and American Iron and Steel. These new questions add burden to
participating survey respondents, dependent on the category of the
question and type of respondent.
For the first time, the 2015 State Survey used a modified
statistical approach where a large majority of the medium systems
sampled had been previously sampled in the earlier 2011 State Survey;
the change resulted in a significant decrease in states' and systems'
reported burden hours. The 2020 State DWINSA applies the same modified
approach to the medium system survey as was applied for the 2015
DWINSA. The 2020 DWINSA also applies this approach for the first time
to the 2020 Native American DWINSA. The 2015 DWINSA did not collect
data on American Indian (AI) and Alaska Native Village (ANV) Needs;
however, the estimated burden associated with the 2020 Native American
DWINSA is less than was reported in the 2011 ICR.
The increase in burden from the 2015 to the 2020 DWINSA
attributable to the addition of new survey respondents (i.e., small
water systems; NPNCWSs; and AI and ANV systems, including Navajo Nation
water systems) for their 20-year infrastructure investment needs is a
combined 3,382 burden hours. That increase is partially offset by a
decrease of 1,548 burden hours to ascertain infrastructure needs for
fewer large and medium systems. The net result is an increase of 1,560
burden hours from the 2015 to the 2020 DWINSA for water system
respondents to report infrastructure needs. Thus, the increase in
burden for water systems overall is small relative to the additional
data to be collected. The combined burden on primacy agencies for
ascertaining water systems' infrastructure needs actually decreases
from the 2015 to the 2020 DWINSA.
Most of the increase in burden due to the expanded scope of the
type of systems surveyed for infrastructure needs in the 2020 DWINSA is
borne by the EPA. The EPA is responsible for collection of data from
the small CWSs and NPNCWS for the State DWINSA, and by the EPA Regions
for all but the Navajo Nation systems in the Native American DWINSA
(the Navajo Nation will collect data for their systems).
An increase of 3,573 burden hours from the 2015 to the 2020 DWINSA
for water system respondents is attributable to the additional Lead
Service Line, Operator Workforce, and American Iron and Steel
questions. Most of this increase in burden is due to the Lead Service
Line questions. The Lead Service Line questions account for 2,978 hours
(83 percent) of the 3,573 hours of increased burden for the three
additional question categories. The Lead Service Line questions will
gather information about the water systems' service lines, as mandated
by the America's Water Infrastructure Act of 2018 section 2015(e)(2).
These 2,978 hours translate to an average of 0.76 burden hours per
water system respondent to specifically address the Lead Service Line
questions.
These changes are further discussed in the Supporting Statement of
the Information Collection Request available in the EPA's docket for
comment.
Dated: January 31, 2020.
Jennifer McLain,
Director, Office of Ground Water and Drinking Water.
[FR Doc. 2020-02263 Filed 2-4-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P