Notice of Public Meetings Regarding “Waters of the United States”; Establishment of a Public Docket; Request for Recommendations, 41911-41914 [2021-16643]
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Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 147 / Wednesday, August 4, 2021 / Proposed Rules
V. Public Participation and Request for
Comments
§ 100.T08–0462 Captain’s Quarters Sailing
Regatta, Louisville, KY. Ohio River MM
594.0 to MM 598.0.
We view public participation as
essential to effective rulemaking, and
will consider all comments and material
received during the comment period.
Your comment can help shape the
outcome of this rulemaking. If you
submit a comment, please include the
docket number for this rulemaking,
indicate the specific section of this
document to which each comment
applies, and provide a reason for each
suggestion or recommendation.
Submitting comments. We encourage
you to submit comments through the
Federal Decision Making Portal at
https://www.regulations.gov. To do so,
go to https://www.regulations.gov, type
USCG–2021–0546 in the search box and
click ‘‘Search.’’ Next, look for this
document in the Search Results column,
and click on it. Then click on the
Comment option. If you cannot submit
your material by using https://
www.regulations.gov, call or email the
person in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section of this proposed rule
for alternate instructions.
Viewing material in docket. To view
documents mentioned in this proposed
rule as being available in the docket,
find the docket as described in the
previous paragraph, and then select
‘‘Supporting & Related Material’’ in the
Document Type column. Public
comments will also be placed in our
online docket and can be viewed by
following instructions on the https://
www.regulations.gov Frequently Asked
Questions web page. We review all
comments received, but we will only
post comments that address the topic of
the proposed rule. We may choose not
to post off-topic, inappropriate, or
duplicate comments that we receive.
Personal information. We accept
anonymous comments. Comments we
post to https://www.regulations.gov will
include any personal information you
have provided. For more about privacy
and submissions to the docket in
response to this document, see DHS’s
eRulemaking System of Records notice
(85 FR 14226, March 11, 2020).
(a) Regulated area. The regulations in
this section apply to the following area:
All waters of the Ohio River from MM
594.0 to MM 598.0, extending the entire
width of the river.
(b) Regulations. (1) All nonparticipants are prohibited from
entering, transiting through, anchoring
in, or remaining within the regulated
area described in paragraph (a) of this
section unless authorized by the Captain
of the Port Sector Ohio Valley or their
designated representative.
(2) To seek permission to enter,
contact the COTP or the COTP’s
representative by Sector Ohio Valley
command center at 502–779–5422.
Those in the regulated area must
comply with all lawful orders or
directions given to them by the COTP or
the designated representative.
(3) The COTP will provide notice of
the regulated area through advanced
notice via broadcast notice to mariners
and by on-scene designated
representatives.
(c) Enforcement period. This section
will be enforced from noon through 5
p.m. on October 9, 2021 and October 10,
2021.
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PART 100—SAFETY OF LIFE ON
NAVIGABLE WATERS
1. The authority citation for part 100
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 46 U.S.C. 70041; 33 CFR
1.05–1.
2. Add § 100.T08–0462 to read as
follows:
■
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Dated: July 20, 2021.
A.M. Beach,
Captain, U.S. Coast Guard, Captain of the
Port Sector Ohio Valley.
[FR Doc. 2021–16573 Filed 8–3–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9110–04–P
DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army, Corps of
Engineers
33 CFR Part 328
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 120
[EPA–HQ–OW–2021–0328; FRL–6027.4–02–
OW]
Notice of Public Meetings Regarding
‘‘Waters of the United States’’;
Establishment of a Public Docket;
Request for Recommendations
Department of the Army, Corps
of Engineers, Department of Defense;
and Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA)
ACTION: Notice; announcement of public
meeting dates and solicitation of preproposal feedback.
AGENCY:
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On June 9, 2021, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
and the Department of the Army
announced their intent to revise the
definition of ‘‘waters of the United
States.’’ This process includes two
rulemakings: A foundational rule to
restore longstanding protections, and a
second rulemaking process that builds
on that regulatory foundation. The
forthcoming foundational rule will
propose to restore the regulations
defining ‘‘waters of the United States’’
that were in place for decades until
2015, with updates to be consistent with
relevant Supreme Court decisions. The
agencies will also pursue a separate,
second rulemaking process that further
refines and builds upon that regulatory
foundation. The agencies intend to
engage with state and tribal coregulators and the public to inform
these two rulemakings. The agencies are
committed to learning from the past
regulatory approaches—the pre-2015
regulations and guidance, the 2015
Clean Water Rule, and the 2020
Navigable Waters Protection Rule—
while engaging with stakeholders and
crafting a refined definition of ‘‘waters
of the United States.’’
This document includes a schedule
for initial public meetings to hear from
interested stakeholders on their
perspectives on defining ‘‘waters of the
United States’’ under the Clean Water
Act and how to implement that
definition as the agencies pursue this
process. The agencies are also accepting
written recommendations from
members of the public and are planning
further opportunities for engagement.
These opportunities will include 10
geographically focused roundtables that
will provide for broad, transparent,
regionally focused discussions among a
full spectrum of stakeholders.
DATES: Written recommendations must
be received on or before September 3,
2021. The agencies will hold public
meetings on the following dates: August
18, August 23, August 25, August 26,
and August 31, 2021. Please refer to the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for
additional information on these
meetings.
SUMMARY:
You may send written
feedback, identified by Docket ID No.
EPA–HQ–OW–2021–0328, by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov/ (our
preferred method). Follow the online
instructions for submitting written
feedback.
• Email: OW-Docket@epa.gov.
Include Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OW–
ADDRESSES:
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41912
Federal Register / Vol. 86, No. 147 / Wednesday, August 4, 2021 / Proposed Rules
2021–0328 in the subject line of the
message.
Instructions: All submissions received
must include Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OW–2021–0328. Written feedback
received may be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov/,
including any personal information
provided. Out of an abundance of
caution for members of the public and
our staff, the EPA Docket Center and
Reading Room are closed to the public,
with limited exceptions, to reduce the
risk of transmitting COVID–19. Our
Docket Center staff will continue to
provide remote customer service via
email, phone, and webform. We
encourage the public to submit written
feedback via https://
www.regulations.gov/ or email, as there
may be a delay in processing mail and
faxes. Hand deliveries and couriers may
be received by scheduled appointment
only. For further information on EPA
Docket Center services and the current
status, please visit us online at https://
www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Damaris Christensen, Oceans, Wetlands
and Communities Division, Office of
Water (4504–T), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460;
telephone number: (202) 564–2281;
email address: WOTUS-outreach@
epa.gov, and Stacey Jensen, Office of the
Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil
Works, Department of the Army, 108
Army Pentagon, Washington, DC
20310–0104; telephone number: (703)
459–6026; email address:
usarmy.pentagon.hqda-asa-cw.mbx.asacw-reporting@mail.mil.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Background
‘‘Waters of the United States’’ is a
threshold term in the Clean Water Act
that establishes the geographic scope of
federal jurisdiction under the Act. Many
Clean Water Act programs, including
sections 303 (Water Quality Standards
and Total Maximum Daily Loads), 311
(oil spill programs), 401 (water quality
certifications), 402 (pollutant discharge
permits), and 404 (dredged and fill
material discharge permits), address
‘‘navigable waters,’’ defined in the
statute as ‘‘the waters of the United
States, including the territorial seas.’’
Since the 1970s, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S.
Department of the Army (‘‘Army,’’
collectively ‘‘the agencies’’) have
defined ‘‘waters of the United States’’ by
regulation. The Navigable Waters
Protection Rule (NWPR), the agencies’
most recent regulation revising the
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definition of ‘‘waters of the United
States,’’ was published in the Federal
Register on April 21, 2020 (85 FR
22250). The NWPR defines categories of
waters that are jurisdictional and
categories that are not jurisdictional.
Eighty-one parties have filed fifteen
complaints challenging the NWPR in
eleven different district courts.
II. Review of the NWPR
On January 20, 2021, the President
signed Executive Order 13990 directing
federal agencies to review rules issued
in the prior four years that are or might
conflict with the policy stated in the
order. The order provides that ‘‘[i]t is,
therefore, the policy of my
Administration to listen to the science;
to improve public health and protect
our environment; to ensure access to
clean air and water; to limit exposure to
dangerous chemicals and pesticides; to
hold polluters accountable, including
those who disproportionately harm
communities of color and low-income
communities; to reduce greenhouse gas
emissions; to bolster resilience to the
impacts of climate change; to restore
and expand our national treasures and
monuments; and to prioritize both
environmental justice and the creation
of the well-paying union jobs necessary
to deliver on these goals.’’ 86 FR 7037,
section 1 (published January 25, 2021,
signed January 20, 2021). The order
‘‘directs all executive departments and
agencies (agencies) to immediately
review and, as appropriate and
consistent with applicable law, take
action to address the promulgation of
Federal regulations and other actions
during the last four years that conflict
with these important national
objectives, and to immediately
commence work to confront the climate
crisis.’’ Id. at 7037, section 2(a). ‘‘For
any such actions identified by the
agencies, the heads of agencies shall, as
appropriate and consistent with
applicable law, consider suspending,
revising, or rescinding the agency
actions.’’ Id. The order also specifically
revoked Executive Order 13778 of
February 28, 2017 (Restoring the Rule of
Law, Federalism, and Economic Growth
by Reviewing the ‘‘Waters of the United
States’’ Rule), which had initiated
development of the agencies’ two-step
process to repeal and replace the 2015
Clean Water Rule, culminating in
promulgation of the NWPR.
In conformance with Executive Order
13990, the agencies reviewed the NWPR
and have decided to initiate two new
rulemakings. The agencies considered
the following factors in making this
decision, including but not limited to:
The text of the Clean Water Act;
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Congressional intent and the objective
of the Clean Water Act; Supreme Court
precedent; the current and future harms
to the chemical, physical, and biological
integrity of the nation’s waters due to
the NWPR; concerns raised by
stakeholders about the NWPR, including
implementation-related issues; the
principles outlined in the Executive
Order; and issues raised in ongoing
litigation challenging the NWPR. EPA
and the Army have substantial and
legitimate concerns that the NWPR did
not appropriately consider the effect of
the revised definition of ‘‘waters of the
United States’’ on the integrity of the
nation’s waters. Notwithstanding these
concerns and ongoing litigation, the
agencies will continue to implement the
NWPR until it is no longer in effect, as
a result of either a new final rule going
into effect or by virtue of a court order.
III. New Rulemakings
The agencies are initiating two new
rulemakings. First, the agencies intend
to propose restoring the longstanding
Clean Water Act regulations that were in
place for decades prior to 2015, as
amended to be consistent with relevant
Supreme Court decisions.1 The agencies
then intend to propose a second rule
that builds on that regulatory
foundation. During the development of
both rules, the agencies will listen to
and engage with states, tribes, and
interested stakeholders about their
experiences implementing the NWPR,
the 2015 Clean Water Rule, and the pre2015 regulatory regime. The agencies’
rulemaking process will be guided by
the following considerations:
• Ensure the rule will further the
principal objective of the Act as set forth
by Congress, which is to ‘‘restore the
chemical, physical, and biological
integrity of the Nation’s waters.’’ 33
U.S.C. 1251.
• Consider the latest peer-reviewed
and relevant science.
1 In United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes,
474 U.S. 121 (1985), in a unanimous opinion, the
Supreme Court deferred to the Corps’ judgment and
upheld the inclusion of adjacent wetlands in the
regulatory definition of ‘‘waters of the United
States.’’ In Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook
County v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 531 U.S.
159 (2001), the Court (in a 5–4 opinion) held that
the use of ‘‘isolated’’ non-navigable intrastate ponds
by migratory birds was not by itself a sufficient
basis for the exercise of Federal regulatory authority
under the CWA. In Rapanos v. United States, 547
U.S. 715 (2006), a four-Justice plurality interpreted
‘‘waters of the United States’’ as covering
‘‘relatively permanent’’ waters as well as wetlands
with a ‘‘continuous surface connection’’ to such
water bodies. Justice Kennedy’s concurring opinion
concluded that a water or wetland must possess a
‘‘significant nexus’’ to traditional navigable waters
to be a ‘‘water of the United States.’’
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• Prioritize practical implementation
approaches for state and tribal coregulators.
• Reflect the experiences of, and
input received from, landowners, the
agricultural community, states, tribes,
local governments, community
organizations, environmental groups,
and disadvantaged communities with
environmental justice concerns.
IV. Stakeholder Engagement
To assist the agencies in the
rulemaking process, the agencies
welcome feedback that can be provided
through the open public docket or
through participation at one of several
public meetings. This feedback will
inform the rulemaking process;
however, the agencies will not be
responding to individual
recommendations. Issues that the
agencies are particularly interested in
getting feedback on include:
• Implementation. The agencies seek
input on co-regulator and stakeholder
experiences with implementing the
various regulatory regimes. In
particular, the agencies would like
feedback on significant nexus analyses
under the pre-2015 regulatory regime
and the 2015 Clean Water Rule, as well
as the typical year analysis under the
NWPR. Are there implementation
successes and challenges in assessing
specific types of sites? If there are
challenges, what types of
implementation assistance would be
helpful? Are there ways in which these
assessments could be more efficient?
Are there tools that have been, or could
be, developed to assist in determining
jurisdiction?
• Regional, State, and Tribal
interests. The agencies request feedback
on how or whether states and tribes
have taken any actions in response to
changes in the jurisdictional scope of
‘‘waters of the United States’’ under the
NWPR. In addition, the agencies request
recommendations regarding whether
there are certain waters that could be
addressed by regionalized approaches.
The agencies are committed to listening
to specific tribal interests that should be
considered in any revised definition.
The agencies are also seeking input on
the use and value of the jurisdictional
category for interstate waters.
• Science. Consistent with Executive
Order 13990, the agencies request
identification of relevant science related
to how streams, wetlands, lakes, and
ponds restore and maintain the
chemical, physical, and biological
integrity of the nation’s waters,
including relevant literature that has
been published since EPA’s 2015 Report
Connectivity of Streams and Wetlands
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to Downstream Waters: A Review and
Synthesis of the Scientific Evidence.
• Environmental justice interests.
Consistent with Executive Order 13990,
the agencies request feedback on how to
better engage to ensure input is received
from communities with environmental
justice interests. How does the
jurisdictional status of waters affect
communities that are overburdened
with environmental pollution? How is
the implementation of NWPR impacting
low-income communities, and other
disadvantaged communities? Can the
jurisdictional status of waters be linked
to environmental justice concerns, and,
if so, what is the basis?
• Climate implications. Consistent
with Executive Order 13990, the
agencies request feedback on how
climate change affects the chemical,
physical, and biological integrity of the
nation’s waters. How should the
agencies account for the effects of a
changing climate in identifying
jurisdictional waters? Are there
particular types of waters that are
especially important in protecting the
nation’s waters in the face of a changing
climate, and, if so, what scientific
evidence supports these conclusions?
• The scope of jurisdictional
tributaries. Multiple rules, judicial
decisions, and longstanding practice
protected ephemeral, intermittent, and
perennial streams that met applicable
criteria for jurisdiction as tributaries
that are ‘‘waters of the United States.’’
Ephemeral streams were then
categorically excluded from jurisdiction
in the NWPR, and some intermittent
streams and even some perennial
streams are no longer jurisdictional
under the NWPR. The agencies seek
feedback on whether certain
characteristics, such as indicators of
channelization; physical indicators such
as indicators of ordinary high water
mark; flow regime; flow duration;
watershed size; landscape position;
stream network density; or distance
from a traditional navigable water,
territorial sea, or interstate water should
inform determinations about which
tributaries could be considered
jurisdictional as a class, and which
decisions are best left to individual,
case-specific significant nexus
determinations similar to the agencies’
practice from 2007 through 2015. The
agencies are particularly interested in
feedback regarding how to identify
ephemeral streams that should be
jurisdictional as tributaries, as they are
the dominant stream type in the arid
West and in many headwater regions.
The agencies are interested in
understanding the impacts of their
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41913
exclusion from the regulations under
the Clean Water Act by the NWPR.
• The scope of jurisdictional ditches.
Historically, the agencies have
recognized that ditches that reroute
otherwise jurisdictional tributaries are
themselves jurisdictional as tributaries.
In addition, in practice, many other
ditches have been considered generally
not jurisdictional. The 2015 Clean Water
Rule and later the NWPR, for the first
time, excluded many ditches explicitly
in rule language. The agencies solicit
feedback on whether flow regime,
physical features, excavation in aquatic
resources versus uplands, type or use of
the ditch (e.g., irrigation and drainage),
biological indicators like presence of
fish, or other characteristics could
provide clear and implementable
distinctions between jurisdictional and
non-jurisdictional ditches.
• The scope of adjacency. Each
regulatory definition of ‘‘waters of the
United States’’ has taken a different
approach to determining adjacency for
purposes of jurisdiction under the Act
and to the jurisdiction of non-adjacent
waters:
a. Wetlands that may have been
considered adjacent under some but not
all definitions of ‘‘waters of the United
States’’ include wetlands behind
artificial berms, which were considered
adjacent under the pre-2015 regulatory
regime and the 2015 Clean Water Rule
regardless of the presence or absence of
a hydrologic surface connection, but
required a surface water connection
under the NWPR. The pre-2015
regulatory regime and the 2015 Clean
Water Rule also included ‘‘neighboring’’
wetlands within the definition of
‘‘adjacent,’’ while the NWPR generally
did not.
b. Adjacent lakes and ponds that were
not jurisdictional as tributaries were
covered under the other waters category
in the pre-2015 regulations if they met
certain criteria. Adjacent lakes and
ponds were included with adjacent
wetlands in an adjacent waters category
in the 2015 Clean Water Rule. Lakes and
ponds with certain surface water
connections are jurisdictional under the
NWPR.
c. Another category of waters includes
non-adjacent, intrastate, non-navigable
waters, such as certain prairie potholes,
playa lakes, Carolina Bays, and more,
that are not proximate (reasonably close)
to jurisdictional waters or lack natural
tributary connections or ditching to
connect them to a tributary network.
These waters are typically nonjurisdictional under the NWPR and, as
a matter of practice, following Supreme
Court decisions the agencies did not
assert jurisdiction over them under the
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pre-2015 regulatory regime. These
waters would have been jurisdictional
under the 2015 Clean Water Rule where
they met specific criteria and were
found to have a significant nexus to
downstream traditional navigable
waters, interstate waters, or territorial
seas.
The agencies are interested in
identifying characteristics that could
allow for clarity, implementability, and/
or regionalization in defining adjacency
and identifying jurisdictional waters,
including whether there are appropriate
distances or other factors to limit
adjacency, whether there are certain
situations where case-specific
significant nexus determinations would
more appropriately determine
jurisdiction, and whether there are
certain types of waters with particular
features or characteristics that could
provide clear and implementable
distinctions between jurisdictional and
non-jurisdictional waters. The agencies
are also interested in recommendations
for implementation approaches to
address any of these types of waters.
• Exclusions from the definition. The
agencies request feedback on the
implementability and clarity of
exclusions present in the NWPR and
identified in the 2015 Clean Water Rule
or the pre-2015 regulations and the
preambles to those regulations. Was the
scope of these exclusions appropriate
under the Clean Water Act, easy to
understand, and implementable? Are
the NWPR definitions of prior converted
cropland and waste treatment systems
appropriate under the Clean Water Act,
easy to understand, and implementable?
Did the exclusions have any benefits or
harmful impacts? Are there regional
differences with these features and/or
systems that should be considered?
V. Public Meetings and Outreach
The agencies will hold a series of
public meetings intended to solicit
recommendations as the agencies
pursue the development of both rules.
During these meetings, the agencies
intend to provide brief background
information on the rulemaking process
and stakeholders will have the
opportunity to provide input,
particularly with regard to the directives
in Executive Order 13990 and the topics
above. The agencies will hold four
meetings open to all stakeholders and
an additional session for small entities,
and reserve a time for an additional
meeting that will be added in case all
speaking slots are filled in earlier
meetings.
The public meetings will be held as
web conferences in August 2021, with
one date reserved in September, if
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needed. Registration instructions can be
found at the following website: https://
www.epa.gov/wotus/public-outreachand-stakeholder-engagement-activities.
Persons or organizations wishing to
provide verbal recommendations during
the meetings will be selected on a firstcome, first-serve basis. Due to the
expected number of participants,
individuals will be asked to limit their
spoken presentation to three minutes.
Once the speaking slots are filled,
participants may be placed on a standby
list to speak or continue to register to
listen to the recommendations. The
meetings will be recorded and posted on
EPA’s website. Supporting materials
and written feedback from those who do
not have an opportunity to speak can be
submitted to the docket as described
above. The schedule for the ‘‘waters of
the United States’’ meetings is as
follows:
—August 18, 2021, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Eastern,
—August 23, 2021, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
Eastern,
—August 25, 2021, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Eastern,
—August 26, 2021, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Eastern, and
—August 31, 2021, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Eastern.
The agencies have also reserved
September 2, 2021, from 2 p.m. to 4
p.m. Eastern, for an additional meeting
that will be added in case all speaking
slots are filled in earlier meetings.
In addition, the agencies are initiating
Federalism and tribal consultations for
the proposed rulemaking to restore the
regulations defining ‘‘waters of the
United States’’ in place from 1986 until
2015, amended to be consistent with
relevant Supreme Court decisions. The
agencies also intend to host a series of
dialogues with state and tribal
coregulators this fall to discuss both
rulemakings.
Finally, the rulemaking efforts of the
past decade have highlighted the
regional variability of water resources
and the importance of close engagement
with stakeholders to understand the
specifics of how they experience
regulation under varying definitions of
waters of the United States. As an
agency, we will honor our commitment
to listen and learn from diverse
perspectives by hosting 10 roundtables
representing different regions of the
country and encouraging broad
participation that reflects diverse views.
These 10 regional roundtables will
allow a full spectrum of stakeholders to
provide their perspectives about what
has worked and what has not worked
within their geographic areas in
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previous regulatory efforts with each
other and in the presence of EPA and
Army leadership. These roundtables
will highlight similarities and
differences across geographic regions,
while emphasizing particular water
resources that are characteristic of or
unique to each region, and providing
site-specific feedback about
implementation. Information on the
roundtables will be posted on the EPA
website above.
Vance F. Stewart III,
Acting Principal Deputy, Office of the
Assistant Secretary of the Army for Civil
Works, Department of the Army.
John Goodin,
Director, Office of Wetlands, Oceans and
Watersheds, Environmental Protection
Agency.
[FR Doc. 2021–16643 Filed 8–3–21; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R04–OAR–2020–0445; FRL–8779–01–
R4]
Air Plan Approval; SC; Revisions to
Definitions
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to approve a
State Implementation Plan (SIP)
revision submitted by the State of South
Carolina, through the South Carolina
Department of Health and
Environmental Control (SC DHEC or
Department), on April 24, 2020. The SIP
revision updates the definition of ‘‘Spec.
Oil (Specification Oil)’’ and makes
minor updates to formatting and
numbering. EPA is proposing to approve
this revision pursuant to the Clean Air
Act (CAA or Act) and implementing
federal regulations.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before September 3, 2021.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–R04–
OAR–2020–0445 at
www.regulations.gov. Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
Once submitted, comments cannot be
edited or removed from Regulations.gov.
EPA may publish any comment received
to its public docket. Do not submit
electronically any information you
consider to be Confidential Business
Information (CBI) or other information
whose disclosure is restricted by statute.
SUMMARY:
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 86, Number 147 (Wednesday, August 4, 2021)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 41911-41914]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2021-16643]
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DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE
Department of the Army, Corps of Engineers
33 CFR Part 328
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 120
[EPA-HQ-OW-2021-0328; FRL-6027.4-02-OW]
Notice of Public Meetings Regarding ``Waters of the United
States''; Establishment of a Public Docket; Request for Recommendations
AGENCY: Department of the Army, Corps of Engineers, Department of
Defense; and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
ACTION: Notice; announcement of public meeting dates and solicitation
of pre-proposal feedback.
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SUMMARY: On June 9, 2021, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) and the Department of the Army announced their intent to revise
the definition of ``waters of the United States.'' This process
includes two rulemakings: A foundational rule to restore longstanding
protections, and a second rulemaking process that builds on that
regulatory foundation. The forthcoming foundational rule will propose
to restore the regulations defining ``waters of the United States''
that were in place for decades until 2015, with updates to be
consistent with relevant Supreme Court decisions. The agencies will
also pursue a separate, second rulemaking process that further refines
and builds upon that regulatory foundation. The agencies intend to
engage with state and tribal co-regulators and the public to inform
these two rulemakings. The agencies are committed to learning from the
past regulatory approaches--the pre-2015 regulations and guidance, the
2015 Clean Water Rule, and the 2020 Navigable Waters Protection Rule--
while engaging with stakeholders and crafting a refined definition of
``waters of the United States.''
This document includes a schedule for initial public meetings to
hear from interested stakeholders on their perspectives on defining
``waters of the United States'' under the Clean Water Act and how to
implement that definition as the agencies pursue this process. The
agencies are also accepting written recommendations from members of the
public and are planning further opportunities for engagement. These
opportunities will include 10 geographically focused roundtables that
will provide for broad, transparent, regionally focused discussions
among a full spectrum of stakeholders.
DATES: Written recommendations must be received on or before September
3, 2021. The agencies will hold public meetings on the following dates:
August 18, August 23, August 25, August 26, and August 31, 2021. Please
refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for additional
information on these meetings.
ADDRESSES: You may send written feedback, identified by Docket ID No.
EPA-HQ-OW-2021-0328, by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov/
(our preferred method). Follow the online instructions for submitting
written feedback.
Email: [email protected]. Include Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-
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2021-0328 in the subject line of the message.
Instructions: All submissions received must include Docket ID No.
EPA-HQ-OW-2021-0328. Written feedback received may be posted without
change to https://www.regulations.gov/, including any personal
information provided. Out of an abundance of caution for members of the
public and our staff, the EPA Docket Center and Reading Room are closed
to the public, with limited exceptions, to reduce the risk of
transmitting COVID-19. Our Docket Center staff will continue to provide
remote customer service via email, phone, and webform. We encourage the
public to submit written feedback via https://www.regulations.gov/ or
email, as there may be a delay in processing mail and faxes. Hand
deliveries and couriers may be received by scheduled appointment only.
For further information on EPA Docket Center services and the current
status, please visit us online at https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Damaris Christensen, Oceans, Wetlands
and Communities Division, Office of Water (4504-T), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460;
telephone number: (202) 564-2281; email address: [email protected], and Stacey Jensen, Office of the Assistant Secretary
of the Army for Civil Works, Department of the Army, 108 Army Pentagon,
Washington, DC 20310-0104; telephone number: (703) 459-6026; email
address: [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
``Waters of the United States'' is a threshold term in the Clean
Water Act that establishes the geographic scope of federal jurisdiction
under the Act. Many Clean Water Act programs, including sections 303
(Water Quality Standards and Total Maximum Daily Loads), 311 (oil spill
programs), 401 (water quality certifications), 402 (pollutant discharge
permits), and 404 (dredged and fill material discharge permits),
address ``navigable waters,'' defined in the statute as ``the waters of
the United States, including the territorial seas.'' Since the 1970s,
the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the U.S. Department
of the Army (``Army,'' collectively ``the agencies'') have defined
``waters of the United States'' by regulation. The Navigable Waters
Protection Rule (NWPR), the agencies' most recent regulation revising
the definition of ``waters of the United States,'' was published in the
Federal Register on April 21, 2020 (85 FR 22250). The NWPR defines
categories of waters that are jurisdictional and categories that are
not jurisdictional. Eighty-one parties have filed fifteen complaints
challenging the NWPR in eleven different district courts.
II. Review of the NWPR
On January 20, 2021, the President signed Executive Order 13990
directing federal agencies to review rules issued in the prior four
years that are or might conflict with the policy stated in the order.
The order provides that ``[i]t is, therefore, the policy of my
Administration to listen to the science; to improve public health and
protect our environment; to ensure access to clean air and water; to
limit exposure to dangerous chemicals and pesticides; to hold polluters
accountable, including those who disproportionately harm communities of
color and low-income communities; to reduce greenhouse gas emissions;
to bolster resilience to the impacts of climate change; to restore and
expand our national treasures and monuments; and to prioritize both
environmental justice and the creation of the well-paying union jobs
necessary to deliver on these goals.'' 86 FR 7037, section 1 (published
January 25, 2021, signed January 20, 2021). The order ``directs all
executive departments and agencies (agencies) to immediately review
and, as appropriate and consistent with applicable law, take action to
address the promulgation of Federal regulations and other actions
during the last four years that conflict with these important national
objectives, and to immediately commence work to confront the climate
crisis.'' Id. at 7037, section 2(a). ``For any such actions identified
by the agencies, the heads of agencies shall, as appropriate and
consistent with applicable law, consider suspending, revising, or
rescinding the agency actions.'' Id. The order also specifically
revoked Executive Order 13778 of February 28, 2017 (Restoring the Rule
of Law, Federalism, and Economic Growth by Reviewing the ``Waters of
the United States'' Rule), which had initiated development of the
agencies' two-step process to repeal and replace the 2015 Clean Water
Rule, culminating in promulgation of the NWPR.
In conformance with Executive Order 13990, the agencies reviewed
the NWPR and have decided to initiate two new rulemakings. The agencies
considered the following factors in making this decision, including but
not limited to: The text of the Clean Water Act; Congressional intent
and the objective of the Clean Water Act; Supreme Court precedent; the
current and future harms to the chemical, physical, and biological
integrity of the nation's waters due to the NWPR; concerns raised by
stakeholders about the NWPR, including implementation-related issues;
the principles outlined in the Executive Order; and issues raised in
ongoing litigation challenging the NWPR. EPA and the Army have
substantial and legitimate concerns that the NWPR did not appropriately
consider the effect of the revised definition of ``waters of the United
States'' on the integrity of the nation's waters. Notwithstanding these
concerns and ongoing litigation, the agencies will continue to
implement the NWPR until it is no longer in effect, as a result of
either a new final rule going into effect or by virtue of a court
order.
III. New Rulemakings
The agencies are initiating two new rulemakings. First, the
agencies intend to propose restoring the longstanding Clean Water Act
regulations that were in place for decades prior to 2015, as amended to
be consistent with relevant Supreme Court decisions.\1\ The agencies
then intend to propose a second rule that builds on that regulatory
foundation. During the development of both rules, the agencies will
listen to and engage with states, tribes, and interested stakeholders
about their experiences implementing the NWPR, the 2015 Clean Water
Rule, and the pre-2015 regulatory regime. The agencies' rulemaking
process will be guided by the following considerations:
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\1\ In United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes, 474 U.S. 121
(1985), in a unanimous opinion, the Supreme Court deferred to the
Corps' judgment and upheld the inclusion of adjacent wetlands in the
regulatory definition of ``waters of the United States.'' In Solid
Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers, 531 U.S. 159 (2001), the Court (in a 5-4 opinion) held
that the use of ``isolated'' non-navigable intrastate ponds by
migratory birds was not by itself a sufficient basis for the
exercise of Federal regulatory authority under the CWA. In Rapanos
v. United States, 547 U.S. 715 (2006), a four-Justice plurality
interpreted ``waters of the United States'' as covering ``relatively
permanent'' waters as well as wetlands with a ``continuous surface
connection'' to such water bodies. Justice Kennedy's concurring
opinion concluded that a water or wetland must possess a
``significant nexus'' to traditional navigable waters to be a
``water of the United States.''
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Ensure the rule will further the principal objective of
the Act as set forth by Congress, which is to ``restore the chemical,
physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters.'' 33 U.S.C.
1251.
Consider the latest peer-reviewed and relevant science.
[[Page 41913]]
Prioritize practical implementation approaches for state
and tribal co-regulators.
Reflect the experiences of, and input received from,
landowners, the agricultural community, states, tribes, local
governments, community organizations, environmental groups, and
disadvantaged communities with environmental justice concerns.
IV. Stakeholder Engagement
To assist the agencies in the rulemaking process, the agencies
welcome feedback that can be provided through the open public docket or
through participation at one of several public meetings. This feedback
will inform the rulemaking process; however, the agencies will not be
responding to individual recommendations. Issues that the agencies are
particularly interested in getting feedback on include:
Implementation. The agencies seek input on co-regulator
and stakeholder experiences with implementing the various regulatory
regimes. In particular, the agencies would like feedback on significant
nexus analyses under the pre-2015 regulatory regime and the 2015 Clean
Water Rule, as well as the typical year analysis under the NWPR. Are
there implementation successes and challenges in assessing specific
types of sites? If there are challenges, what types of implementation
assistance would be helpful? Are there ways in which these assessments
could be more efficient? Are there tools that have been, or could be,
developed to assist in determining jurisdiction?
Regional, State, and Tribal interests. The agencies
request feedback on how or whether states and tribes have taken any
actions in response to changes in the jurisdictional scope of ``waters
of the United States'' under the NWPR. In addition, the agencies
request recommendations regarding whether there are certain waters that
could be addressed by regionalized approaches. The agencies are
committed to listening to specific tribal interests that should be
considered in any revised definition. The agencies are also seeking
input on the use and value of the jurisdictional category for
interstate waters.
Science. Consistent with Executive Order 13990, the
agencies request identification of relevant science related to how
streams, wetlands, lakes, and ponds restore and maintain the chemical,
physical, and biological integrity of the nation's waters, including
relevant literature that has been published since EPA's 2015 Report
Connectivity of Streams and Wetlands to Downstream Waters: A Review and
Synthesis of the Scientific Evidence.
Environmental justice interests. Consistent with Executive
Order 13990, the agencies request feedback on how to better engage to
ensure input is received from communities with environmental justice
interests. How does the jurisdictional status of waters affect
communities that are overburdened with environmental pollution? How is
the implementation of NWPR impacting low-income communities, and other
disadvantaged communities? Can the jurisdictional status of waters be
linked to environmental justice concerns, and, if so, what is the
basis?
Climate implications. Consistent with Executive Order
13990, the agencies request feedback on how climate change affects the
chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the nation's waters.
How should the agencies account for the effects of a changing climate
in identifying jurisdictional waters? Are there particular types of
waters that are especially important in protecting the nation's waters
in the face of a changing climate, and, if so, what scientific evidence
supports these conclusions?
The scope of jurisdictional tributaries. Multiple rules,
judicial decisions, and longstanding practice protected ephemeral,
intermittent, and perennial streams that met applicable criteria for
jurisdiction as tributaries that are ``waters of the United States.''
Ephemeral streams were then categorically excluded from jurisdiction in
the NWPR, and some intermittent streams and even some perennial streams
are no longer jurisdictional under the NWPR. The agencies seek feedback
on whether certain characteristics, such as indicators of
channelization; physical indicators such as indicators of ordinary high
water mark; flow regime; flow duration; watershed size; landscape
position; stream network density; or distance from a traditional
navigable water, territorial sea, or interstate water should inform
determinations about which tributaries could be considered
jurisdictional as a class, and which decisions are best left to
individual, case-specific significant nexus determinations similar to
the agencies' practice from 2007 through 2015. The agencies are
particularly interested in feedback regarding how to identify ephemeral
streams that should be jurisdictional as tributaries, as they are the
dominant stream type in the arid West and in many headwater regions.
The agencies are interested in understanding the impacts of their
exclusion from the regulations under the Clean Water Act by the NWPR.
The scope of jurisdictional ditches. Historically, the
agencies have recognized that ditches that reroute otherwise
jurisdictional tributaries are themselves jurisdictional as
tributaries. In addition, in practice, many other ditches have been
considered generally not jurisdictional. The 2015 Clean Water Rule and
later the NWPR, for the first time, excluded many ditches explicitly in
rule language. The agencies solicit feedback on whether flow regime,
physical features, excavation in aquatic resources versus uplands, type
or use of the ditch (e.g., irrigation and drainage), biological
indicators like presence of fish, or other characteristics could
provide clear and implementable distinctions between jurisdictional and
non-jurisdictional ditches.
The scope of adjacency. Each regulatory definition of
``waters of the United States'' has taken a different approach to
determining adjacency for purposes of jurisdiction under the Act and to
the jurisdiction of non-adjacent waters:
a. Wetlands that may have been considered adjacent under some but
not all definitions of ``waters of the United States'' include wetlands
behind artificial berms, which were considered adjacent under the pre-
2015 regulatory regime and the 2015 Clean Water Rule regardless of the
presence or absence of a hydrologic surface connection, but required a
surface water connection under the NWPR. The pre-2015 regulatory regime
and the 2015 Clean Water Rule also included ``neighboring'' wetlands
within the definition of ``adjacent,'' while the NWPR generally did
not.
b. Adjacent lakes and ponds that were not jurisdictional as
tributaries were covered under the other waters category in the pre-
2015 regulations if they met certain criteria. Adjacent lakes and ponds
were included with adjacent wetlands in an adjacent waters category in
the 2015 Clean Water Rule. Lakes and ponds with certain surface water
connections are jurisdictional under the NWPR.
c. Another category of waters includes non-adjacent, intrastate,
non-navigable waters, such as certain prairie potholes, playa lakes,
Carolina Bays, and more, that are not proximate (reasonably close) to
jurisdictional waters or lack natural tributary connections or ditching
to connect them to a tributary network. These waters are typically non-
jurisdictional under the NWPR and, as a matter of practice, following
Supreme Court decisions the agencies did not assert jurisdiction over
them under the
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pre-2015 regulatory regime. These waters would have been jurisdictional
under the 2015 Clean Water Rule where they met specific criteria and
were found to have a significant nexus to downstream traditional
navigable waters, interstate waters, or territorial seas.
The agencies are interested in identifying characteristics that
could allow for clarity, implementability, and/or regionalization in
defining adjacency and identifying jurisdictional waters, including
whether there are appropriate distances or other factors to limit
adjacency, whether there are certain situations where case-specific
significant nexus determinations would more appropriately determine
jurisdiction, and whether there are certain types of waters with
particular features or characteristics that could provide clear and
implementable distinctions between jurisdictional and non-
jurisdictional waters. The agencies are also interested in
recommendations for implementation approaches to address any of these
types of waters.
Exclusions from the definition. The agencies request
feedback on the implementability and clarity of exclusions present in
the NWPR and identified in the 2015 Clean Water Rule or the pre-2015
regulations and the preambles to those regulations. Was the scope of
these exclusions appropriate under the Clean Water Act, easy to
understand, and implementable? Are the NWPR definitions of prior
converted cropland and waste treatment systems appropriate under the
Clean Water Act, easy to understand, and implementable? Did the
exclusions have any benefits or harmful impacts? Are there regional
differences with these features and/or systems that should be
considered?
V. Public Meetings and Outreach
The agencies will hold a series of public meetings intended to
solicit recommendations as the agencies pursue the development of both
rules. During these meetings, the agencies intend to provide brief
background information on the rulemaking process and stakeholders will
have the opportunity to provide input, particularly with regard to the
directives in Executive Order 13990 and the topics above. The agencies
will hold four meetings open to all stakeholders and an additional
session for small entities, and reserve a time for an additional
meeting that will be added in case all speaking slots are filled in
earlier meetings.
The public meetings will be held as web conferences in August 2021,
with one date reserved in September, if needed. Registration
instructions can be found at the following website: https://www.epa.gov/wotus/public-outreach-and-stakeholder-engagement-activities. Persons or organizations wishing to provide verbal
recommendations during the meetings will be selected on a first-come,
first-serve basis. Due to the expected number of participants,
individuals will be asked to limit their spoken presentation to three
minutes. Once the speaking slots are filled, participants may be placed
on a standby list to speak or continue to register to listen to the
recommendations. The meetings will be recorded and posted on EPA's
website. Supporting materials and written feedback from those who do
not have an opportunity to speak can be submitted to the docket as
described above. The schedule for the ``waters of the United States''
meetings is as follows:
--August 18, 2021, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern,
--August 23, 2021, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Eastern,
--August 25, 2021, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern,
--August 26, 2021, from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Eastern, and
--August 31, 2021, from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Eastern.
The agencies have also reserved September 2, 2021, from 2 p.m. to 4
p.m. Eastern, for an additional meeting that will be added in case all
speaking slots are filled in earlier meetings.
In addition, the agencies are initiating Federalism and tribal
consultations for the proposed rulemaking to restore the regulations
defining ``waters of the United States'' in place from 1986 until 2015,
amended to be consistent with relevant Supreme Court decisions. The
agencies also intend to host a series of dialogues with state and
tribal coregulators this fall to discuss both rulemakings.
Finally, the rulemaking efforts of the past decade have highlighted
the regional variability of water resources and the importance of close
engagement with stakeholders to understand the specifics of how they
experience regulation under varying definitions of waters of the United
States. As an agency, we will honor our commitment to listen and learn
from diverse perspectives by hosting 10 roundtables representing
different regions of the country and encouraging broad participation
that reflects diverse views. These 10 regional roundtables will allow a
full spectrum of stakeholders to provide their perspectives about what
has worked and what has not worked within their geographic areas in
previous regulatory efforts with each other and in the presence of EPA
and Army leadership. These roundtables will highlight similarities and
differences across geographic regions, while emphasizing particular
water resources that are characteristic of or unique to each region,
and providing site-specific feedback about implementation. Information
on the roundtables will be posted on the EPA website above.
Vance F. Stewart III,
Acting Principal Deputy, Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Army
for Civil Works, Department of the Army.
John Goodin,
Director, Office of Wetlands, Oceans and Watersheds, Environmental
Protection Agency.
[FR Doc. 2021-16643 Filed 8-3-21; 8:45 am]
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