Water Quality Standards Regulatory Revisions To Protect Tribal Reserved Rights, 74361-74379 [2022-26240]
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Federal Register / Vol. 87, No. 232 / Monday, December 5, 2022 / Proposed Rules
that complies with the provisions of the
Act and applicable Federal regulations.
See 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions,
EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
provided that they meet the criteria of
the CAA. This action merely proposes to
approve state law as meeting Federal
requirements and does not impose
additional requirements beyond those
imposed by state law. For that reason,
this proposed action:
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to review by the Office of
Management and Budget under
Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,
October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821,
January 21, 2011);
• Does not impose an information
collection burden under the provisions
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);
• Is certified as not having a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.);
• Does not contain any unfunded
mandate or significantly or uniquely
affect small governments, as described
in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
• Does not have Federalism
implications as specified in Executive
Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
1999);
• Is not an economically significant
regulatory action based on health or
safety risks subject to Executive Order
13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
• Is not a significant regulatory action
subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR
28355, May 22, 2001);
• Is not subject to requirements of
section 12(d) of the National
Technology Transfer and Advancement
Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
application of those requirements would
be inconsistent with the CAA; and
• Does not provide EPA with the
discretionary authority to address, as
appropriate, disproportionate human
health or environmental effects, using
practicable and legally permissible
methods, under Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
The SIP is not approved to apply on
any Indian reservation land or in any
other area where EPA or an Indian tribe
has demonstrated that a tribe has
jurisdiction. In those areas of Indian
country, the rule does not have tribal
implications as specified by Executive
Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9,
2000), nor will it impose substantial
direct costs on tribal governments or
preempt tribal law.
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List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 52
Environmental protection, Air
pollution control, Carbon monoxide,
Incorporation by reference,
Intergovernmental relations, Lead,
Nitrogen dioxide, Ozone, Particulate
matter, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Sulfur oxides, Volatile
organic compounds.
Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.
Dated: November 29, 2022.
Daniel Blackman,
Regional Administrator, Region 4.
[FR Doc. 2022–26331 Filed 12–2–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 131
[EPA–HQ–OW–2021–0791; FRL–8599–01–
OW]
RIN 2040–AG17
Water Quality Standards Regulatory
Revisions To Protect Tribal Reserved
Rights
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing
revisions to the Federal Clean Water Act
(CWA) water quality standards (WQS)
regulation to clarify and prescribe how
WQS must protect aquatic and aquaticdependent resources reserved to tribes
through treaties, statutes, executive
orders, or other sources of Federal law,
where applicable.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before March 6, 2023. Comments on
the information collection provisions
submitted to the Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) are best assured of
consideration by OMB if OMB receives
a copy of your comments on or before
January 4, 2023. Public Hearing: EPA
will hold two online public hearings
during the public comment period.
Please refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section for additional
information on the public hearings.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–
OW–2021–0791, by any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov/ (our
preferred method). Follow the online
instructions for submitting comments.
SUMMARY:
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• Mail: U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, EPA Docket Center,
Office of Water Docket, Mail Code
28221T, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20460.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: EPA
Docket Center, WJC West Building,
Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue
NW, Washington, DC 20004. The Docket
Center’s hours of operations are 8:30
a.m.–4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday
(except Federal holidays).
Instructions: All submissions received
must include the Docket ID No. for this
rulemaking. Comments received may be
posted without change to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information provided. For
detailed instructions on sending
comments and additional information
on the rulemaking process, see the
‘‘Public Participation’’ heading of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
this document.
EPA is offering two online public
hearings on this proposed rulemaking.
Refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section below for additional
information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jennifer Brundage, Office of Water,
Standards and Health Protection
Division (4305T), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460;
telephone number: (202) 566–1265;
email address: brundage.jennifer@
epa.gov. Additional information is also
available online at https://www.epa.gov/
wqs-tech/protecting-tribal-reservedrights-in-WQS.
This
proposed rule is organized as follows:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Public Participation
A. Written Comments
B. Public Hearings
II. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
III. Background
A. Clean Water Act Requirements
B. Tribal Reserved Rights
C. Tribal Reserved Rights and Water
Quality Standards
IV. Proposed Revisions to the Federal WQS
Regulation
A. Why is EPA proposing these revisions?
B. What is EPA proposing?
C. How would the proposed regulatory
revisions be applied?
D. EPA’s Role
E. How would the proposed regulatory
revisions apply to States in the Great
Lakes system?
F. Role of Other WQS Provisions in
Protecting Tribal Reserved Rights
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V. Economic Analysis
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563 Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
To Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
I. Public Participation
A. Written Comments
Submit your comments, identified by
Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OW–2021–
0791, at https://www.regulations.gov
(our preferred method), or the other
methods identified in the ADDRESSES
section. Once submitted, comments
cannot be edited or removed from the
docket. EPA may publish any comment
received to its public docket. Do not
submit to EPA’s docket at https://
www.regulations.gov any information
you consider to be Confidential
Business Information (CBI), Proprietary
Business Information (PBI), or other
information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Multimedia
submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment.
The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include
discussion of all points you wish to
make. EPA will generally not consider
comments or comment contents located
outside of the primary submission (i.e.,
on the web, cloud, or other file sharing
system). Please visit https://
www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epadockets for additional submission
methods; the full EPA public comment
policy; information about CBI or
multimedia submissions; and general
guidance on making effective
comments.
B. Public Hearings
EPA is offering two online public
hearings so that interested parties may
provide oral comments on this proposed
rulemaking. For more details on the
online public hearings and to register to
attend the hearings, please visit https://
www.epa.gov/wqs-tech/protecting-tribalreserved-rights-in-WQS.
II. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
States 1 responsible for administering
or overseeing water quality programs
may be affected by this rulemaking, as
states may need to consider and
implement new provisions, or revise
existing provisions, in their WQS.
Federally recognized Indian tribes 2
with reserved rights 3 to aquatic and/or
aquatic-dependent resources may also
be affected by this rulemaking. Entities
that are subject to CWA regulatory
programs, such as industries,
stormwater management districts, or
publicly owned treatment works
(POTWs) that discharge pollutants to
waters of the United States could be
indirectly affected by this rulemaking.
Dischargers that could potentially be
affected include the following:
TABLE 1—DISCHARGERS POTENTIALLY AFFECTED BY THIS RULEMAKING
Category
Examples of potentially affected entities
Industry ...........................................
Municipalities ...................................
Stormwater Management Districts ..
Industries discharging pollutants to waters of the United States.
POTWs or other facilities discharging pollutants to waters of the United States.
Entities responsible for managing stormwater runoff.
This table is not intended to be
exhaustive, but rather provides a guide
for readers regarding entities that could
be indirectly affected by this action. If
you have questions regarding the
applicability of this action to a
particular entity, consult the person
listed in the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section.
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III. Background
A. Clean Water Act Requirements
The CWA establishes the basic
structure for regulating pollutant
discharges into waters of the United
States. In the CWA, Congress
established the national objective to
‘‘restore and maintain the chemical,
physical, and biological integrity of the
Nation’s waters,’’ and to achieve
‘‘wherever attainable, an interim goal of
1 Pursuant to 40 CFR 131.3(j), ‘‘states’’ include the
50 states, the District of Columbia, Guam, the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Virgin Islands,
American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, and Indian tribes that
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water quality which provides for the
protection and propagation of fish,
shellfish, and wildlife and provides for
recreation in and on the water’’ (CWA
sections 101(a) and 101(a)(2)).
CWA section 303(c) directs states to
adopt WQS for waters of the United
States. The core components of WQS are
designated uses, water quality criteria,
and antidegradation requirements.
Designated uses establish the
environmental objectives for a water
body, such as public drinking water
supply, propagation of fish, shellfish
and wildlife, and recreation. Water
quality criteria define the minimum
conditions necessary to achieve those
environmental objectives.
Antidegradation requirements maintain
and protect water quality.
WQS serve as the basis for several
CWA programs, including:
• Section 303(d) water body
assessments and determinations of total
maximum daily loads (TMDLs);
• Section 401 certifications of Federal
licenses and permits;
• Water quality-based effluent limits
in permits issued through state or
National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System (NPDES) Programs
under section 402; and
• Section 404 permits for dredged or
fill material.
Section 303(c)(2)(A) of the CWA
provides that ‘‘[water quality] standards
shall be such as to protect the public
health or welfare, enhance the quality of
water and serve the purposes of this
chapter. Such standards shall be
established taking into consideration
EPA determines to be eligible for purposes of the
WQS program.
2 See Federally Recognized Indian Tribe List Act
of 1944, 25 U.S.C. 479a. The current list can be
found at 87 FR 4636 through 4641 (January 28,
2022).
3 EPA proposes to define ‘‘tribal reserved rights’’
as ‘‘any rights to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent
resources reserved or held by tribes, either
expressly or implicitly, through treaties, statutes,
executive orders, or other sources of Federal law.’’
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their use and value for public water
supplies, propagation of fish and
wildlife, recreational purposes, and
agricultural, industrial, and other
purposes, and also taking into
consideration their use and value for
navigation.’’ CWA section 303(c)(2)(A)
and EPA’s implementing regulation at
40 CFR part 131 require, among other
things, that a state’s WQS specify
appropriate designated uses of the
waters and water quality criteria to
protect those uses. Such criteria must be
based on sound scientific rationale,
must contain sufficient parameters to
protect the designated use, must support
the most sensitive use where multiple
use designations apply, and may be
expressed in either narrative or numeric
form.4 See 40 CFR 131.11(a) and (b). In
addition, 40 CFR 131.10(b) provides that
in designating uses of a water body and
establishing criteria to protect those
uses, the state shall ‘‘. . . ensure that its
water quality standards provide for the
attainment and maintenance of the
water quality standards of downstream
waters.’’
Antidegradation requirements provide
a framework for maintaining and
protecting water quality that has already
been achieved (40 CFR 131.12). States
can also choose to include general
policies in their WQS that affect WQS
implementation, such as WQS variance
policies and mixing zone policies (40
CFR 131.13).
States are required to review
applicable WQS at least once every
three years (‘‘triennial review’’) and, if
appropriate, to revise or adopt new
standards (CWA section 303(c)(1)). Any
new or revised WQS must be submitted
to EPA for review. If EPA disapproves
a state’s new or revised WQS, the CWA
provides the state ninety days to adopt
a revised WQS that meets CWA
requirements. If a state fails to meet that
deadline, EPA is required to promptly
propose and promulgate a new standard
that meets CWA requirements.
CWA section 303(c)(4)(B) authorizes
the Administrator to determine, even in
the absence of a state submission, that
a new or revised standard is necessary
4 Special requirements apply to ‘‘priority toxic
pollutants.’’ CWA Section 303(c)(2)(B) requires
states to adopt numeric criteria, where available, for
all toxic pollutants listed pursuant to CWA Section
307(a)(1) for which EPA has published 304(a)
criteria, as necessary to support the states’
designated uses. ‘‘Priority toxic pollutants’’ are
identified in 40 CFR part 423, Appendix A—126
Priority Pollutants. Consistent with § 131.11(a)(2),
where a state or authorized tribe adopts narrative
criteria for priority pollutants to protect designated
uses, it must also provide information identifying
the method by which it intends to regulate point
source discharges of priority pollutants in water
quality-limited waters based on such narrative
criteria.
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to meet CWA requirements. Once the
Administrator makes such a
determination, the agency must
‘‘promptly’’ propose an appropriate
WQS and finalize it within 90 days
unless the state adopts an acceptable
standard in the interim. CWA section
501(a) authorizes the Administrator to
‘‘prescribe such regulations as are
necessary to carry out his functions
under this chapter.’’ Finally, as further
discussed in section III.C. of this
preamble, CWA section 511(a)(3)
provides that the Act ‘‘shall not be
construed as . . . affecting or impairing
the provisions of any treaty of the
United States.’’
B. Tribal Reserved Rights
For the purposes of this proposed
rulemaking, ‘‘tribal reserved rights’’
means any rights to aquatic and/or
aquatic-dependent resources reserved or
held by tribes, either expressly or
implicitly, through treaties, statutes,
executive orders, or other sources of
Federal law.5 Tribal reserved rights as
defined in this proposed rulemaking
generally do not address the
quantification of Winters rights.6 The
Court has described tribal reserved
rights to fish and access fishing
locations as ‘‘not much less necessary to
the existence of the Indians than the
atmosphere they breathed[.]’’ 7 EPA
recognizes that tribal reserved rights to
use and access natural and cultural
resources are an intrinsic part of tribal
life and are of deep cultural, economic,
and subsistence importance to tribes.8
The U.S. Constitution defines treaties
as part of the supreme law of the land,
with the same legal force as Federal
statutes.9 From 1778 to 1871, the U.S.’
5 Treaty rights are ‘‘reserved’’ by tribes, because,
as the U.S. Supreme Court has explained, treaties
are ‘‘not a grant of rights to the Indians, but a grant
of rights from them, a reservation of those not
granted.’’ United States v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371,
381 (1905).
6 Under Winters v. United States and its progeny,
the establishment of a Federal reservation (Indian
or otherwise) implicitly reserves sufficient water to
accomplish the purposes of the reservation. 207
U.S. 564, 576 (1908); Cappaert v. United States, 426
U.S. 128, 139 (1976); Arizona v. California, 373 U.S.
546, 597–602 (1963).
7 Winans, 198 U.S. at 381.
8 See 2021 Memorandum of Understanding
Regarding Interagency Coordination and
Collaboration for the Protection of Tribal Treaty
Rights and Reserved Rights. Available online at
https://www.doi.gov/sites/doi.gov/files/interagencymou-protecting-tribal-treaty-and-reserved-rights-1115-2021.pdf.
9 U.S. Constitution, Art. VI, cl. 2 (‘‘This
constitution, and the laws of the United States
which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all
treaties made, or which shall be made, under the
authority of the United States, shall be the supreme
law of the land; and the judges in every state shall
be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or
laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding.’’)
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relations with tribes were defined and
conducted largely through treatymaking. In 1871, Congress stopped
making treaties with tribes,10 and
subsequent agreements between tribes
and the Federal government were
instead generally memorialized through
Executive orders, statutes, and other
agreements, such as congressionally
enacted Indian land claim settlements.
Instruments other than treaties may also
reserve tribal rights, with equally
binding effect.11 As one court explained,
generally ‘‘it makes no difference
whether . . . [tribal] rights derive from
treaty, statute or executive order, unless
Congress has provided otherwise.’’ 12
Pursuant to the Constitution’s
Supremacy Clause, treaties and statutes
also bind states.13
Courts generally adhere to several
guiding principles in interpreting
treaties and other Federal legal
instruments regarding Indians tribes
known as the ‘‘Indian canons of
construction.’’ In accordance with these
canons, ‘‘Indian treaties are to be
interpreted liberally in favor of the
Indians, and any ambiguities are to be
10 See Act of Mar. 3, 1871, § 1, 16 Stat. 544
(codified as carried forward at 25 U.S.C. 71).
11 See Cohen’s Handbook of Federal Indian Law
§ 18.02 (Nell Jessup Newton et al eds., 2005)
(‘‘Statutes and agreements that are ratified by
Congress become, like treaties, the supreme law of
the land’’).
12 Parravano v. Masten, 70 F.3d 539, 545 (9th Cir.
1995), cert. denied, Parravano v. Babbitt, 518 U.S.
1016 (1996); see also United States v. Dion, 476
U.S. 734, 745, n.8 (‘‘Indian reservations created by
statute, agreement, or executive order normally
carry with them the same implicit hunting rights as
those created by treaty.’’).
13 Antoine v. Washington, 420 U.S. 194, 205
(1975) (like a treaty, when Congress by statute
ratifies an agreement that reserves tribal rights,
‘‘State qualification of the rights is precluded by
force of the Supremacy Clause, and neither an
express provision precluding state qualification nor
the consent of the State [is] required’’); U.S. v.
Washington, 853 F.3d 946, 966 (9th Cir. 2017)
(Holding that ‘‘in building and maintaining barrier
culverts within the Case Area, Washington has
violated, and is continuing to violate, its obligation
to the Tribes under the Treaties.’’) aff’d, 138 S.Ct.
1832 (per curiam); Skokomish Indian Tribe v.
United States, 410 F.3d 506, 512 (9th Cir. 2005)
(Treaties ‘‘constitute the ‘supreme law of the land’’’
and have ‘‘been found to provide rights of action
for equitable relief against non-contracting parties,’’
and such equitable relief ‘‘ensures compliance with
a treaty; that is, it forces state governmental entities
and their officers to conform their conduct to
federal law.’’); see also Minnesota v. Mille Lacs
Band of Chippewa Indians, 526 U.S. 172, 204
(1999) (noting that ‘‘[a]lthough States have
important interests in regulating wildlife and
natural resources within their borders, this
authority is shared with the Federal Government
when the Federal Government exercises one of its
enumerated constitutional powers, such as treaty
making,’’ and accordingly, the treaty in that case
gave the Chippewa Tribe ‘‘the right to hunt, fish,
and gather in the ceded territory free of . . . state,
regulation.’’).
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resolved in their favor.’’ 14 Further,
treaties ‘‘are to be construed as the
Indians would have understood them’’
at the time of signing.15 Although
Congress may abrogate Indian treaty
rights, those rights remain absent clear
evidence of congressional intent.16
While these Indian canons of
construction originated in the context of
treaty interpretation by Federal courts,
courts have also applied the canons in
other contexts,17 including determining
the scope of tribes’ rights under statutes
or executive orders setting aside land for
tribes.18 Some tribes have treaty rights
that are no longer enforceable because
they have been abrogated or otherwise
superseded by Congress in later Federal
statutes.19 In addition, some tribes
14 Mille Lacs, 526 U.S. at 200 (internal citations
omitted); see also County of Oneida v. Oneida
Indian Nation, 470 U.S. 226, 247 (1985) (‘‘it is well
established that treaties should be construed
liberally in favor of the Indians with ambiguous
provisions interpreted for their benefit’’).
15 Mille Lacs, 526 U.S. at 196 (‘‘[W]e interpret
Indian treaties to give effect to the terms as the
Indians themselves would have understood
them.’’); Jones v. Meehan, 175 U.S. 1, 11 (1899) (A
‘‘treaty must therefore be construed, not according
to the technical meaning of its words to learned
lawyers, but in the sense in which they would
naturally be understood by the Indians.’’).
16 Mille Lacs, 526 U.S. at 202 (‘‘Congress may
abrogate Indian treaty rights, but it must clearly
express its intent to do so.’’); United States v. Dion,
476 U.S. 734, 739–40 (1986) (noting that in finding
congressional intent to abrogate ‘‘[w]hat is essential
is clear evidence that Congress actually considered
the conflict between its intended action on the one
hand and the Indian treaty rights on the other, and
chose to resolve that conflict by abrogating the
treaty’’).
17 See e.g., Hagen v. Utah, 510 U.S. 399, 423–24
(1994) (‘‘For more than 150 years, we have applied
this canon in all areas of Indian law to construe
congressional ambiguity or silence, in treaties,
statutes, executive orders, and agreements, to the
Indians’ benefit.’’); County of Yakima v.
Confederated Tribes, 502 U.S. 251, 268–69 (1992)
(quoting Montana v. Blackfeet Tribe, 471 U. S. 759,
766 (1985)) (‘‘statutes are to be construed liberally
in favor of the Indians, with ambiguous provisions
interpreted to their benefit’’); Alaska Pacific
Fisheries Co. v. U.S., 248 U.S. 78, 89 (1918)
(‘‘statutes passed for the benefit of dependent
Indian tribes or communities are to be liberally
construed, doubtful expressions being resolved in
favor of the Indians’’); but see Penobscot Nation v.
Frey, 3 F.4th 484, 502 (1st Cir. 2021) (holding that
the Indian canons of construction were inapplicable
to statutes settling Indian land claims in Maine).
18 See Winters, 207 U.S. at 576–77 (applying the
canons and holding that the Tribe was entitled to
federally reserved rights to the Milk River);
Parravano, 70 F.3d at 544 (applying the canons to
determine the scope of tribes’ reserved fishing
rights under executive orders and a statute).
19 U.S. Constitution, Art. II, § 2, cl. 2; S. Dakota
v. Bourland, 508 U.S. 679, 690 (1993) (Statutory
language providing that ‘‘the sum paid by the
Government to the Tribe for former trust lands
taken for the Oahe Dam and Reservoir Project, ‘shall
be in final and complete settlement of all claims,
rights, and demands’ of the Tribe or its allottees’’
made clear that the Tribe no longer retained its
treaty right to regulate hunting and fishing); Dion,
476 U.S. at 739 (While Congress has the power to
abrogate a treaty, ‘‘the intention to abrogate or
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negotiated treaties with the U.S.
government that were not ratified.20
Tribal reserved rights may apply to
waters in Indian country as well as
outside of Indian country 21 and may be
express or implied.22 For example, in
certain states in the Great Lakes region,
tribal reserved rights include hunting,
fishing, and gathering rights both within
tribes’ reservations, as well as rights
retained outside these reservations in
specific areas that the tribes ceded to the
Federal government.23 In the Pacific
Northwest, treaties explicitly reserved to
many tribes rights to fish in their ‘‘usual
and accustomed’’ fishing grounds and
stations both within and outside their
reservation boundaries and to hunt and
gather throughout their traditional
territories.24 In addition to tribes whose
rights are reserved through treaties,
other tribes have statutorily-reserved
rights. For example, tribes in Maine
have statutorily-reserved rights to
modify a treaty is not to be lightly imputed . . .
Indian treaty rights are too fundamental to be easily
cast aside.’’); U.S. v. McAlester, 604 F.2d 42, 62–
63 (10th Cir. 1979) (describing the history of the
Choctaw Tribe’s treaty-making with the United
States, including several treaties in the late 1700s
and early 1800s providing rights to lands that were
later lost due to the Indian Removal Act of 1830,
which ‘‘finally forced the Choctaw Nation to agree
. . . to relinquish all its lands east of the
Mississippi River and to settle on lands west of the
Arkansas Territory’’).
20 Robinson v. Jewell, 790 F.3d 910, 918 (9th Cir.
2015) (holding that an 1851 Treaty was never
ratified by the Senate and thus carries no legal
effect.’’).
21 Indian country is defined at 18 U.S.C. 1151 as:
(a) All land within the limits of any Indian
reservation under the jurisdiction of the United
States Government, notwithstanding the issuance of
any patent, and, including rights-of-way running
through the reservation; (b) all dependent Indian
communities within the borders of the United
States whether within the original or subsequently
acquired territory thereof, and whether within or
without the limits of a state; and (c) all Indian
allotments, the Indian titles to which have not been
extinguished, including rights-of-way running
through the same.
22 See Menominee Tribe of Indians v. U.S., 391
U.S. 404, 406, (1968) (Noting that ‘‘nothing was said
in the 1854 treaty about hunting and fishing rights,’’
but holding that such rights were implied, as the
treaty phrase ‘‘‘to be held as Indian lands are held’
includes the right to fish and to hunt.’’); Makah
Indian Tribe v. Quileute Indian Tribe, 873 F.3d
1157, 1160 (9th Cir. 2017), cert. denied 139 S. Ct.
106 (2018) (Affirming district court finding that,
based on historical and linguistic evidence, that use
of the term ‘‘fish’’ in the Treaty of Olympia
encompassed whales and seals).
23 See e.g., Treaty with the Chippewas, 1837, art.
5, 7 Stat. 536 (tribes retained ‘‘[t]he privilege of
hunting, fishing, and gathering the wild rice, upon
the lands, the rivers and the lakes included in the
territory ceded’’); Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of
Chippewa Indians, 526 U.S. 172 (1999).
24 See, e.g., Treaty with the Nez Perces, 1855, art.
3, 12 Stat. 957; Treaty with the Nisquallys, etc.,
1854, art. 3, 10 Stat. 1132 (Treaty of Medicine
Creek).
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practice traditional sustenance lifeways
such as fishing in certain waters.25
Courts also have held that tribal
reserved rights encompass subsidiary
rights that are not explicitly addressed
in treaty or statutory language but are
necessary to render those rights
meaningful.26 For example, in United
States v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371, 381
(1905), the Supreme Court explained
that the right of ‘‘taking fish at all usual
and accustomed places,’’ necessarily
included the right to cross private lands
to reach those fishing areas, noting that
‘‘[n]o other conclusion would give effect
to the treaty.’’ 27
C. Tribal Reserved Rights and Water
Quality Standards
Tribal reserved rights to aquatic
resources could be impaired by water
quality levels that limit right holders’
ability to utilize their rights. Indeed, as
described in section III.B of this
preamble, courts have recognized that
the right to a specific resource
necessarily includes attendant
protections in order to be rendered
meaningful.28 In exercising its CWA
section 303(c) authority, EPA has an
obligation to ensure that its actions are
consistent with treaties, statutes,
executive orders, and other sources of
Federal law reflecting tribal reserved
rights. While there may be instances
where a later-enacted statutory
provision intentionally limits reserved
rights,29 that is not the case with section
303(c) of the CWA. First, with respect to
25 See Maine Implementing Act, 30 M.R.S
6207(4), (9).
26 See, e.g., U.S. v. Washington, 853 F.3d 946, 966
(9th Cir. 2017) (Holding that tribes’ treaty-reserved
right to fish in their usual and accustomed areas
imposed a duty on the State of Washington to
replace or modify road culverts to allow the free
passage of salmon) aff’d, 138 S.Ct. 1832 (per
curiam); Winans, 198 U.S. at 384 (Holding that a
tribe’s treaty fishing right also encompassed the
right to cross private property to access the tribe’s
traditional fishing ground); Grand Traverse Band of
Ottawa and Chippewa Indians v. Director, Mich.
Dept of Nat. Resources, 141 F.3d 635 (6th Cir. 1989)
(Finding that the treaty right to fish commercially
in the Great Lakes included a right to temporary
mooring of treaty fishing vessels at municipal
marinas because without such mooring the Indians
could not fish commercially).
27 See also Washington, 853 F.3d at 965
(Explaining that the right of access to ‘‘usual and
accustomed fishing places would be worthless
without harvestable fish.’’)
28 Consistent with this precedent, the Department
of the Interior has affirmed the principle that ‘‘to
be rendered meaningful, [tribal reserved] fishing
rights by necessity include some subsidiary rights
to water quality.’’ Letter from Hilary C. Tompkins,
Solicitor, DOI, to Avi Garbow, General Counsel,
EPA, regarding Maine’s WQS and Tribal Fishing
Rights of Maine Tribes (January 30, 2015).
29 See Dion, 476 U.S. at 739 (Finding that
‘‘Congressional intent to abrogate Indian treaty
rights to hunt bald and golden eagles is certainly
strongly suggested on the face of the Eagle
Protection Act.’’).
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treaty-reserved rights, the CWA
explicitly provides in section 511(a)(3)
that the Act ‘‘shall not be construed as
. . . affecting or impairing the
provisions of any treaty of the United
States.’’ Second, more broadly, the
statute’s structure and objectives for the
establishment and oversight of WQS,
including the discretion afforded to
EPA, provide ample room for the agency
to consider and give effect to all
applicable reserved rights.
In CWA section 303(c), Congress
established broad directives and
objectives governing the establishment
of WQS. Specifically, the CWA requires
that WQS shall consist of designated
uses and criteria to protect those uses,
and must protect the public health and
welfare, enhance the quality of water,
and serve the purposes of the Act. See
CWA section 303(c)(2)(A). In
implementing section 303(c), EPA’s
longstanding position has been,
consistent with the objectives of the
CWA, to ‘‘use standards as a basis of
restoring and maintaining the integrity
of the Nation’s waters.’’ 30 Where tribes
have reserved rights to aquatic and/or
aquatic-dependent resources, protection
of such rights falls within the ambit of
these broad statutory directives and
objectives and is consistent with EPA’s
longstanding general approach to
implementing CWA section 303(c),
including through adoption and
revision of its WQS regulation.
CWA section 501 authorizes the
agency to prescribe regulations as
necessary to implement the Act.31
Pursuant to that authority, EPA has
issued a regulation that provides a
framework for implementing CWA
section 303(c) and related sections,
translating the broad statutory
provisions in section 303(c) into specific
requirements consistent with the
statutory scheme. Accordingly, EPA’s
implementing regulation at 40 CFR part
131 specifies requirements for states and
authorized tribes to develop WQS for
EPA review that are consistent with the
Act. EPA’s existing WQS regulation
does not, however, explicitly address
how WQS must protect tribal reserved
rights.
EPA established the core of the WQS
regulation in a final rule issued in 1983.
Since that time, the agency has modified
40 CFR part 131 three times.32 The
30 Water Quality Standards Regulation, 48 FR
51400 (November 8, 1983).
31 See also E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v.
Train, 430 U.S. 112, 132 (1977) (‘‘501(a) . . . gives
EPA the power to make ‘such regulations as are
necessary to carry out’ its functions’’).
32 See Water Quality Standards Regulatory
Revisions, 80 FR 51020, 51021 (August 21, 2015)
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agency has explained that such updates
have been in response to new challenges
that ‘‘necessitate a more effective,
flexible and practicable approach for the
implementation of WQS and protecting
water quality,’’ and that such updates
are informed by the extensive
experience with WQS implementation
by states, authorized tribes, and EPA.33
As described further below, EPA has
previously addressed tribal reserved
rights in exercising its oversight
authority in reviewing state-adopted
WQS. In this rulemaking, EPA is
exercising its discretion in
implementing CWA section 303(c) to
propose new regulatory requirements to
ensure that WQS give effect to rights to
aquatic and aquatic-dependent
resources reserved in Federal laws. With
this update to 40 CFR part 131, the
agency is proposing to establish a
transparent and consistent process by
which states and EPA can set WQS that
protect applicable reserved rights.
EPA has previously addressed tribal
reserved rights in state-specific WQS
actions. In 2015, EPA disapproved
certain human health criteria adopted
by the State of Maine because they did
not adequately protect a sustenance
fishing designated use. The sustenance
fishing designated use was based in part
on tribal reserved rights.34 In 2016, in
promulgating human health criteria for
the State of Washington, EPA noted that
most waters covered by the State’s WQS
were subject to Federal treaties that
retained and reserved tribal fishing
rights. The agency concluded that these
rights must be considered when
establishing criteria to protect the
State’s fish harvesting designated use.35
These actions followed a December
2014 Memorandum from EPA
Administrator Gina McCarthy which
explicitly recognized EPA’s obligations
with respect to tribal treaty rights.36
(Describing the history of EPA’s regulation at 40
CFR part 131).
33 Id.
34 Letter from H. Curtis Spalding, Regional
Administrator, EPA Region 1, to Patricia W. Aho,
Commissioner, Maine Department of Environmental
Protection, ‘‘Re: Review and Decision on Water
Quality Standards Revisions’’ (February 2, 2015).
After subsequent collaboration among the State,
EPA, and the tribes, in 2019 the State of Maine
adopted a new sustenance fishing designated use
subcategory which addresses tribal sustenance
fishing. In 2020, after approving this new
designated use subcategory, EPA withdrew most
aspects of its 2015 decisions. The expectations and
steps EPA proposes here reaffirm the general
analytical framework the agency applied in the
2015 decisions.
35 81 FR 85417, 85422 through 85423 (November
28, 2016).
36 U.S. EPA, Memorandum, Commemorating the
30th Anniversary of the EPA Indian Policy
(December 1, 2014), available https://www.epa.gov/
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This Memorandum was issued to
commemorate the 30th anniversary of
EPA’s 1984 Indian Policy, which
addressed many issues related to EPA’s
relationship with federally recognized
tribes and implementation of EPA’s
statutes in Indian country, but did not
expressly address EPA’s considerations
of tribal treaty and other reserved
rights.37 In pertinent part, the 2014
Memorandum provides that ‘‘EPA has
an obligation to honor and respect tribal
rights and resources protected by
treaties,’’ and that ‘‘EPA must ensure
that its actions do not conflict with
tribal treaty rights.’’ 38 In 2016, as part
of the agency’s efforts to implement the
Memorandum, EPA issued an
addendum to its tribal consultation
policy entitled ‘‘Guidance for
Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights’’ with
the purpose of enhancing EPA
consultations where EPA actions may
affect tribal treaty rights.39 The goal of
this document was to help ensure that
EPA’s actions do not conflict with treaty
rights, and that EPA is fully informed as
it seeks to implement its programs to
further protect treaty rights and
resources when it has discretion to do
so.40 Even before this Guidance was
issued in 2016, EPA routinely
undertook extensive consultation with
tribes. For example, in the agency’s
actions in Maine and Washington with
regard to WQS, EPA undertook
extensive consultation with the
federally recognized tribes in Maine and
Washington which included, consistent
with the objectives of that guidance,
gathering information regarding relevant
reserved rights.41
sites/production/files/2015-05/documents/
indianpolicytreatyrightsmemo2014.pdf.
37 Id. See also U.S. EPA, EPA Policy for the
Administration of Environmental Programs on
Indian Reservations (November 8, 1984), available
https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2015-04/
documents/indian-policy-84.pdf.
38 Id.
39 U.S. EPA, EPA Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribes: Guidance for
Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights (February 2016),
available https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/
2016-02/documents/tribal_treaty_rights_guidance_
for_discussing_tribal_treaty_rights.pdf.
40 U.S. EPA, Overview: EPA Policy on
Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribes:
Guidance for Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights
(February 2016), available https://www.epa.gov/
sites/default/files/2016-02/documents/tribal_treaty_
rights_guidance_for_discussing_tribal_treaty_
rights.pdf.
41 See U.S. EPA Region 1, Responses to Public
Comments Relating to Maine’s January 14, 2013,
Submission to EPA for Approval of Certain of the
State’s New and Revised Water Quality Standards
(WQS) That Would Apply in Waters Throughout
Maine, Including Within Indian Territories or
Lands (January 30, 2015), at 1540 (describing tribal
consultation); 81 FR 85417 at 85435 (November 28,
2016).
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Although the agency did not rescind
the Memorandum and Guidance for
Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights,
following EPA’s 2015 and 2016 WQS
actions in Maine and Washington, the
agency did make statements in
subsequent WQS actions disavowing the
approach to protecting tribal reserved
rights in the Maine and Washington
actions. In response to comments on a
2020 decision reversing aspects of EPA’s
2015 Maine WQS disapproval, EPA
asserted that it was ‘‘unnecessary’’ to
ensure protection of applicable
statutorily reserved rights because the
Indian land claims settlement statutes at
issue did not ‘‘themselves . . . address
or reference designated uses, water
quality criteria, or the desired condition
or use goal of the waters covered by the
sustenance fishing provisions.’’ 42 EPA
has reconsidered this assertion. EPA
finds that implementing the CWA to
give effect to applicable reserved rights
to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent
resources does not require that the
relevant treaty, statute, executive order,
or legal instrument explicitly reference
water quality. The agency has similarly
reconsidered other statements the
agency made indicating that states and
EPA can always protect tribal reserved
rights by simply applying EPA’s existing
regulations and guidance, with no
additional consideration of such
rights.43 As explained further below,
this proposed rulemaking adds
regulatory requirements to clarify how
EPA and states must ensure protection
of reserved rights where they apply.
IV. Proposed Revisions to the Federal
WQS Regulation
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A. Why is EPA proposing these
revisions?
In this proposed rulemaking, the
agency is proposing to establish new
requirements which build on existing
regulations and applicable guidance, to
provide a nationally applicable
regulatory framework to ensure that
WQS protect applicable reserved rights.
42 U.S. EPA, Response to Comments on EPA’s
Proposal to Revise EPA’s 2015 Decisions on
Sustenance Fishing Designated Use and Human
Health Criteria in Maine (May 27, 2020), p. 20.
Attachment B of letter from Dennis Deziel,
Administrator, EPA Region 1, to Gerald Reid,
Commissioner, Maine Department of Environmental
Protection, RE Withdrawal of Certain of EPA’s
February 2, 2015 Decisions Concerning Water
Quality Standards for Waters in Indian Lands.
43 See U.S. EPA, Letter and enclosed Technical
Support Document from Chris Hladick, Regional
Administrator, EPA Region 10, to Maia Bellon,
Director, Department of Ecology, Re: EPA’s Reversal
of the November 15, 2016 Clean Water Act Section
303(c) Partial Disapproval of Washington’s Human
Health Water Quality Criteria and Decision to
Approve Washington’s Criteria (May 10, 2019), p.
22–23 (‘‘May 10, 2019 Decision Document’’).
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These revisions to EPA’s existing WQS
regulation are intended to provide
clarity, predictability, and transparency
in EPA’s review of state WQS and
promulgation of Federal WQS in waters
where reserved rights to aquatic and/or
aquatic-dependent resources apply.
Specifically, by amending EPA’s WQS
regulation, rather than addressing these
rights on a case-by-case basis as state
WQS are submitted for EPA review
under CWA section 303(c), EPA is
proposing a uniform approach for
establishment of WQS where tribal
reserved rights apply and clearly laying
out how EPA will review such WQS.
These proposed changes are informed
by EPA’s experience working with states
and right holders, and by input they
have provided. Because EPA is
establishing these requirements in a
rulemaking rather than during review of
an individual state action, the agency’s
approach will be informed by public
comment and input provided through
tribal consultation.
Notably, when EPA promulgated the
WQS regulation at 40 CFR part 131 in
1983, the agency considered adding
regulatory requirements to ensure that
state WQS complied with applicable
international treaties. Specifically, in
the 1983 final rule establishing the WQS
regulation, the agency noted that it had
received comments asserting that EPA
should ‘‘require States to adopt
standards that meet treaty
requirements.’’ 44 In response, the
agency noted that such issues ‘‘have
been adequately resolved previously
without the need for regulatory
language,’’ and, accordingly, that ‘‘EPA
sees no need to include such language
in the Final Rule.’’ 45 The agency further
reasoned that ‘‘[a]ny specific treaty
requirements have the force of law,’’
and therefore, ‘‘State water quality
standards will have to meet any treaty
requirements.’’ 46 Here, based on its
prior experience evaluating individual
state WQS in light of applicable
reserved rights, EPA is proposing to add
specific requirements to its WQS
regulation to guide states establishing
WQS in waters where tribes exercise
reserved rights. These proposed
requirements reflect the agency’s
considered judgment about how to
ensure that WQS protect applicable
reserved rights, and will provide clarity,
transparency, and predictability.
This proposal is particularly
important now, as climate change is
exacerbating water quality issues across
the United States. Tribes and reserved
44 48
FR 51400, 51412 (November 8, 1983).
45 Id.
46 Id.
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rights are particularly vulnerable to
these impacts due to the integral nature
of water resources in their traditional
lifeways and culture.47 Establishing
WQS to protect tribal reserved rights is
a critical component of reducing the
impact of climate change on tribes.
B. What is EPA proposing?
In this rulemaking, EPA is proposing
to (1) amend the Federal WQS
regulation at 40 CFR part 131 to require
that WQS be established to protect tribal
reserved rights, and (2) establish
attendant regulatory requirements for
setting WQS to provide such protection.
This section provides a description of
these proposed revisions.
Central to these regulatory changes is
the proposed addition of 40 CFR 131.9.
First, this provision would specify that
WQS ‘‘must protect tribal reserved
rights applicable to waters subject to
such standards.’’ For purposes of these
regulatory revisions, EPA proposes
adding a new definition to 40 CFR
131.3, defining ‘‘tribal reserved rights’’
as ‘‘any rights to aquatic and/or aquaticdependent resources reserved or held by
tribes, either expressly or implicitly,
through treaties, statutes, executive
orders, or other sources of Federal law.’’
The proposed definition of ‘‘tribal
reserved rights’’ in the rule does not
apply to unratified treaties or reserved
rights that have been abrogated or
otherwise superseded. In addition, some
tribes entered into legal agreements or
compacts with states, which are not
Federal law and are therefore similarly
not within the scope of this rulemaking.
Second, proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a)
would require that, ‘‘to the extent
supported by available data and
information,’’ to protect applicable
tribal reserved rights WQS must be
established to protect:
1. ‘‘The exercise of tribal reserved
rights unsuppressed by water quality or
availability of the aquatic or aquaticdependent resource;’’ and
2. ‘‘The health of the right holders to
at least the same risk level as provided
to the general population of the State.’’
For purposes of these regulatory
revisions, EPA proposes adding a new
definition to 40 CFR 131.3, defining
‘‘right holders’’ as ‘‘tribes holding rights
to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent
resources pursuant to an applicable
treaty, statute, executive order, or other
source of Federal law.’’
EPA is not proposing to require WQS
to be established for every waterbody
subject to a reserved right to protect the
47 See https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/
2016-04/documents/ow-climate-change-adaptationplan.pdf.
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waterbody condition that existed at the
time a reserved right was established.
As described more fully below in
section C.2.ii of this preamble, the
regulation is intended to result in WQS
that protect reasonably anticipated
future uses, taking into account factors
that may have substantially altered a
waterbody.
Proposed 40 CFR 131.9(b) specifies
that EPA will initiate tribal consultation
with the right holders in determining
whether State water quality standards
protect applicable reserved rights in
accordance with 40 CFR 131.9(a)(1) and
(2). Finally, proposed 40 CFR 131.9(c)
describes the three different ways that
WQS can be used where tribal reserved
rights apply to ensure protection of
those rights.
EPA is also proposing to revise 40
CFR 131.5 (‘‘EPA Authority’’). 40 CFR
131.5(a) lists the factors that EPA
considers in determining whether stateadopted WQS are consistent with CWA
section 303(c). EPA is proposing to add
§ 131.5(a)(9) specifying that when
reviewing new or revised standards,
EPA would evaluate whether water
quality standards sufficiently protect
tribal reserved rights, where applicable,
consistent with § 131.9. EPA is
proposing conforming revisions to 40
CFR 131.5(b) which would require that
this new factor, in addition to the other
existing eight factors in 40 CFR 131.5(a),
be met for EPA to approve the WQS.
EPA is also proposing to add an
element to the list of ‘‘Minimum
Requirements for Water Quality
Standards Submission’’ set forth in 40
CFR 131.6. This proposed addition
provides clarity on EPA’s expectations
regarding how states must document
their efforts to ascertain information, in
coordination with the right holders,
about applicable tribal reserved rights
and the level of water quality that fully
supports those rights. Specifically, EPA
is proposing that where tribal reserved
rights apply to WQS being submitted,
those submissions would need to
include:
1. Information about the scope,
nature, and current and past use of the
tribal reserved rights, as informed by the
right holders; and
2. Data and methods used to develop
the WQS.
Finally, EPA is proposing to modify
the procedures for state review and
revision of WQS at 40 CFR 131.20 to
require that the triennial review process
include an evaluation of whether there
are tribal reserved rights applicable to
waters subject to the state’s WQS and
whether WQS need to be revised to
protect those rights.
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Pursuant to 40 CFR 131.22(c), EPA
would be subject to the same
requirements when promulgating
Federal WQS. In accordance with CWA
section 303(c)(4), there are two
scenarios in which EPA would
promulgate Federal WQS for the waters
of a state. First, CWA section
303(c)(4)(A) establishes that if EPA
determines that a state’s new or revised
WQS is not consistent with the
requirements of the Act and the state
fails to submit a modified standard
within 90 days of that decision, EPA
must itself propose and promulgate a
revised or new standard for the waters
involved (unless prior to promulgation
the state has adopted a WQS that EPA
determines to be consistent with the
Act). Second, CWA section 303(c)(4)(B)
grants the EPA Administrator discretion
to determine ‘‘that a revised or new
standard is necessary to meet the
requirements of [the Act].’’ Following
such a determination, EPA is required to
propose and promulgate a revised or
new standard except as noted above.
Examples of how these proposed
regulatory revisions would be applied
and EPA’s basis for them are explained
in more detail in the next section.
C. How would the proposed regulatory
revisions be applied?
The effect of these proposed revisions
on the establishment or revision of a
state’s WQS will be case-specific. EPA
anticipates that these proposed
revisions would be relevant in states
where federally recognized tribes hold
reserved rights to aquatic or aquaticdependent resources in waters where
the state, rather than the right holder,
establishes applicable WQS.
Whether reserved rights apply to
waters subject to a state’s new or revised
WQS would be informed by several
factors, including input from the right
holders, other sources of information
regarding relevant tribal reserved rights
(including information about the
geographic scope of those rights), and
the available data to inform the level of
water quality needed to protect the
reserved rights.
1. Determining if Tribal Reserved Rights
Apply
Examples of tribal reserved rights as
defined in this proposed rulemaking
include but are not limited to the rights
to fish; gather aquatic plants; and to
hunt for aquatic-dependent animals.
EPA requests comment on whether
there are additional types of tribal
reserved rights that it should consider.
EPA acknowledges that it may be a
complex inquiry to determine if tribal
reserved rights apply in waters subject
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to state WQS, and if so, the nature of
those rights and where they apply. For
purposes of implementation of this
proposed rulemaking, the critical
information needed to determine if a
reserved right applies to a state’s waters
includes, but may not be limited to: (1)
the nature of the right (i.e., a fishing
right, a hunting right, a resource
gathering right); (2) where the right
applies (i.e., to a specific set of
waterbodies or to waters generally
within a broad geographic area); and (3)
how the right is exercised by the right
holders (e.g., for subsistence
purposes).48
A first step in obtaining this
information should be engagement with
potential right holders. Accordingly,
when WQS are being evaluated or
revised, early engagement with federally
recognized tribes within the relevant
state as well as tribes outside the state
that exercise resource rights within that
state, can help EPA and states determine
if there are reserved rights, the scope of
those rights, and whether and how they
should be applied in the WQS context.
In order to ensure that tribes with
reserved rights are engaged in the
process of determining whether
reserved rights apply, proposed 40 CFR
131.6(g)(1) would require that WQS
submissions to EPA include information
about tribal reserved rights ‘‘as informed
by the right holders,’’ where applicable.
In addition to any outreach to or
engagement with tribes as part of
establishing new or revised WQS,
proposed 40 CFR 131.20(a) provides a
mechanism for starting the process of
such engagement. It would require
states to evaluate whether there are
applicable tribal reserved rights relevant
to waters subject to the state’s WQS
during the public triennial review
process. To help satisfy this
requirement, states should explicitly
request information regarding the nature
and scope of tribal reserved rights in
each triennial review, thus providing an
opportunity for the right holders to
engage and provide information the
state can use in its evaluation.
Additionally, right holders are
encouraged to proactively share
information with states and EPA about
any tribal reserved rights that may be
relevant, including through the triennial
review process.
These proposed provisions would
provide a role for the right holders in
48 EPA encourages, to the extent practicable, the
consideration and incorporation of any Indigenous
Knowledge that is freely provided by right holders.
Given the sensitivity of some information about
tribal reserved rights, right holders, states and EPA
should discuss in advance how the information will
be shared and potentially used in the WQS context.
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informing both the initial inquiry of
whether tribal reserved rights apply
and, where reserved rights are
applicable, how those reserved rights
could be protected through
implementation of the requirements of
the proposed rulemaking. Specifically,
determinations regarding protection of
tribal reserved rights should be made
through a process of mutual
consideration and discussion between
right holders, states, and the Federal
government.
In addition to seeking input from
potential right holders, EPA will also
consider other sources of information
regarding applicable tribal reserved
rights including the language of the
treaties, statutes, or Executive orders
and relevant judicial precedent.49
2. Protecting Applicable Reserved
Rights
Proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a) would
require states to derive WQS to protect
any tribal reserved rights that were
determined to be applicable. This would
require determining the level of water
quality necessary to protect users of the
resource and/or the aquatic or aquaticdependent resource itself, based on
available data. This level of water
quality is to be determined by applying
proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a)(1) and (2),
described further below. Once
applicable reserved rights to aquatic
and/or aquatic-dependent resources
have been identified, the proposed
regulations provide a mechanism for
establishing WQS at a level of water
quality that protects those resources and
users of those resources, consistent with
the CWA.
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i. Determining the Level of Water
Quality Necessary To Protect the Right
Determining the level of water quality
necessary to protect any aquatic or
aquatic-dependent resource or users of
that resource can be a complex endeavor
that involves weighing multiple lines of
evidence. However, this endeavor will
largely mirror the process states already
follow in developing their WQS.
Examples of such evidence include fish
consumption rate surveys, studies or
accounts of heritage fish consumption
rates,50 peer-reviewed articles or reports
49 Although, as stated above, legal agreements
tribes have entered into solely with states and other
non-Federal government entities are not Federal
law and therefore not within the scope of this
rulemaking, EPA recommends that states use a
similar framework to consider tribal rights reserved
under state law when developing and revising
WQS.
50 A heritage rate is the amount of fish consumed
prior to non-indigenous or modern sources of
contamination and interference with the natural
lifecycle of fish, in addition to changes in human
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on the types and levels of pollutants
that can adversely affect the resource in
question, and monitoring data reflecting
historic and/or current water quality.
EPA requests comment on the types of
historic information that states and EPA
should consider.
In some instances, readily available
information would be sufficient to
identify specific numeric levels of water
quality (e.g., numeric criteria) necessary
to protect the right. In other instances,
such data and information may not be
currently available. 40 CFR 131.9(a)
acknowledges this by providing that
WQS must be consistent with 40 CFR
131.9(a)(1) and (2) ‘‘to the extent
supported by available data and
information.’’ Where data and
information are not currently available
to support establishing numeric levels
of water quality, or where data are
inconclusive, states may adopt narrative
WQS to protect the right. EPA is
available to assist states in gathering
more information, in coordination with
the right holders, for future use.
In complying with the new regulation,
EPA encourages ongoing
communication between states and right
holders to help states ascertain where
reserved rights apply and what data are
available to inform the level of water
quality necessary to protect those rights.
EPA would be available to facilitate
dialogue and information-sharing as
needed.
Proposed 40 CFR 131.6(g) would
require states to submit ‘‘data and
methods used’’ to develop WQS that
protect tribal reserved rights. As with
information regarding the tribal reserved
rights themselves, information regarding
the types and levels of pollutants that
may impact those rights should also be
informed by engagement with the right
holders. EPA recommends that states
request information from the right
holders such as types of pollutants
perceived to be impacting their rights,
key aquatic species, and/or
consumption rates that would be useful
in developing protective WQS, pursuant
to proposed 40 CFR 131.20(a). EPA
recommends that right holders
proactively share any such information
with states and EPA. Obtaining these
data is another reason that states should
work closely with right holders and EPA
early in the process of evaluating and
revising WQS. As with all WQS actions,
states must transparently share
information with the public during their
process for reviewing and revising WQS
society. While it is often thought of as a historic
rate, it can also be reflective of a current
unsuppressed rate. See: USEPA. 2016. Guidance for
Conducting Fish Consumption Surveys. EPA–
823B16002.
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(40 CFR 131.20(b)). The data and
information gathered and submitted
pursuant to proposed 40 CFR 131.6(g)
will inform implementation of proposed
40 CFR 131.9.
ii. Accounting for Suppression Effects
Proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a)(1) would
require that WQS, to the extent
supported by available data and
information, be established to protect
‘‘the exercise of the tribal reserved rights
unsuppressed by water quality or
availability of the aquatic or aquaticdependent resource.’’ This proposed
requirement is intended to address
situations where existing water quality
is lower than necessary to allow for
right holders to fully exercise their tribal
reserved rights. For example, fish
consumption by tribes exercising their
treaty-protected right to fish for
subsistence may be suppressed due to
availability of fish or concerns about the
safety of fish for human consumption.51
Treaty-protected harvesting of wild rice
on waterbodies where harvesting
historically occurred may likewise be
suppressed due to diminished wild rice
populations.
This rulemaking does not establish
any nationally applicable thresholds for
unsuppressed levels or use of a
resource. As described in the National
Environmental Justice Advisory
Committee (NEJAC)’s 2002 report ‘‘Fish
Consumption and Environmental
Justice,’’ the unsuppressed level of a
resource for particular right holders will
depend on the factors affecting water
quality and availability of the resources
for that group.52
51 As noted by the National Environmental Justice
Advisory Council in the 2002 publication Fish
Consumption and Environmental Justice, ‘‘a
suppression effect may arise when fish upon which
humans rely are no longer available in historical
quantities (and kinds), such that humans are unable
to catch and consume as much fish as they had or
would. Such depleted fisheries may result from a
variety of affronts, including an aquatic
environment that is contaminated, altered (due,
among other things, to the presence of dams),
overdrawn, and/or overfished. Were the fish not
depleted, these people would consume fish at more
robust baseline levels. . . .In the Pacific Northwest,
for example, compromised aquatic ecosystems
mean that fish are no longer available for tribal
members to take, as they are entitled to do in
exercise of their treaty rights.’’). National
Environmental Justice Advisory Council, Fish
Consumption and Environmental Justice, p.44, 46
(2002) (NEJAC Fish Consumption Report) available
at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2015-02/
documents/fish-consump-report_1102.pdf.
52 Id, p.49. Using the term ‘‘baseline’’ to refer to
the unsuppressed fish consumption rate, the report
says the appropriate baseline for determining an
unsuppressed level of fish consumption ‘‘will likely
differ according to the circumstances surrounding
and the group affected by the observed suppression
effect . . . . An appropriate baseline
[unsuppressed level] might mean examination into
what people had consumed as well as aspiration for
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The unsuppressed level should
balance heritage use of a resource with
what is currently reasonably achievable
for a particular waterbody. For example,
in determining the unsuppressed level
of a resource for the purpose of
establishing WQS, it may be appropriate
to take into consideration both heritage
rates of use of that resource and factors
that have substantially altered the
pollutant burden, hydrology, or
availability of the resource, such that
use of the resource at heritage rates is
not feasible. For example, EPA
approved the Spokane Tribe’s human
health criteria based on a fish
consumption rate of 865 g/day. This fish
consumption rate maintains the caloric
intake characteristic of a traditional
subsistence lifestyle while accounting
for the lesser quantity and diversity of
fish currently available to the Tribe as
a result of the construction of the Grand
Coulee Dam.53
Another example is determining
which waters to designate for wild rice
protection in the Great Lakes region. To
determine the scope of the
corresponding designated use, it is
appropriate to consider whether waters
that do not currently support wild rice
uses may do so again in the future. A
state might consider historical growing
patterns and planned efforts to restore
the hydrologic regime and reduce
nonpoint sources of pollution, while
also accounting for hydrologic changes
and legacy contaminants that may not
be feasible to remedy at this time.
For the purpose of establishing WQS
to fulfill the requirements of this
rulemaking, the unsuppressed level or
use of a resource should account for
situations where restoration efforts are
planned or underway (e.g., efforts to
improve habitat or reduce
contamination), such that it would be
reasonable to expect the opportunities
for use of the resource to increase in the
future. In these situations, where
supported by available data and
information, EPA is proposing to require
that WQS must be set at levels that
reflect unsuppressed exercise of the
reserved right.
This emphasis on avoiding
suppression effects builds on EPA’s
approach, previously set forth in
guidance including EPA’s 2000
Methodology for Deriving Ambient
Water Quality Criteria for the Protection
what people would consume were there ‘fair access
for all to a full range of resources,’ or were the
conditions fulfilled for full exercise of treaty- and
trust-protected rights and purposes.’’
53 U.S. EPA Region 10. Technical Support
Document for Action on the Revised Surface Water
Quality Standards of the Spokane Tribe of Indians
Submitted April 2010. December 11, 2013.
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of Human Health 54 (2000
Methodology), 2016 Guidance for
Conducting Fish Consumption
Surveys,55 and 1985 Guidelines for
Deriving Numerical National Water
Quality Criteria for the Protection of
Aquatic Organisms and Their Uses.56
Each of these documents contains
information and recommendations that
should be considered when
synthesizing water quality-related data.
However, these documents do not all
speak to setting WQS to protect tribal
reserved rights for CWA purposes.
Accordingly, in its discretion in
prescribing WQS regulations that give
effect to applicable reserved rights, EPA
is proposing at 40 CFR 131.9(a)(1) to
require that where tribal reserved rights
apply, and where supported by
available data and information, WQS
must be established to protect ‘‘the
exercise of the tribal reserved rights
unsuppressed by water quality or
availability of the aquatic or aquaticdependent resource.’’ 57
This proposed requirement is
consistent with the CWA goal to
‘‘restore and maintain the chemical,
physical, and biological integrity of the
Nation’s waters’’ (CWA section 101(a)).
Indeed, this requirement is necessary to
ensure that WQS do not merely
reinforce an existing suppressed use
that may already limit right holders’
ability to exercise their reserved rights,
or worse, set in motion a ‘‘downward
spiral’’ 58 of further reduction/
suppression. Therefore, where exercise
of reserved rights is suppressed, states
would need to seek available
54 USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving
Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the Protection
of Human Health. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC EPA–822–
B–00–004. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/humanhealth-water-quality-criteria-and-methods-toxics.
55 USEPA. 2016. Guidance for Conducting Fish
Consumption Surveys. EPA–823B16002.
56 USEPA. 1985. Guidelines for Deriving
Numerical National Water Quality Criteria for the
Protection of Aquatic Organisms and Their Uses.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of
Water, Washington, DC PB85–227049.
57 In its 2019 approval of Idaho’s water quality
standards, EPA noted that ‘‘[n]othing in the CWA
or the EPA’s regulations and guidance, including
the 2000 Methodology, requires a state to set a FCR
based on an estimate of unsuppressed
consumption’’ and asserted that the concept of
requiring a state to use an unsuppressed fish
consumption rate should be presented for
‘‘thorough public notice and comment.’’ EPA’s
Approval of Idaho’s New and Revised Human
Health Water Quality Criteria for Toxics and Other
[WQS] Provisions (April 4, 2019), p. 12. In this
proposed rule, for the reasons explained herein,
EPA is proposing to amend its WQS regulations to
require that states use an unsuppressed rate where
tribal reserved rights apply and where supported by
available data and information. Consistent with its
2019 letter, EPA is requesting public comment on
this proposed requirement.
58 NEJAC Fish Consumption report, at p. 49.
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information about past and present use
of the resource, and any information
about reasonably anticipated future
uses, to help ascertain the level of water
quality necessary to fully protect the
right.59 EPA strongly encourages states
to coordinate with right holders to
gather information about unsuppressed
uses and for right holders to proactively
share such information with states and
EPA. EPA is available to participate in
discussions with right holders and
states on this issue.
EPA requests comment on whether
additional language should be included
in the final rule specifying the
considerations for determining
unsuppressed WQS.
iii. Protecting Right Holders to the Same
Risk Level as the General Population
Additionally, proposed 40 CFR
131.9(a)(2) would require that the health
of right holders be protected to at least
the same risk level as the general
population of the state would have been
protected, had the general population
been the ‘‘target population’’ for water
quality protections in the waters at
issue. EPA anticipates the primary
application of this provision to be in
using a cancer risk level appropriate for
a general population (i.e., at least 10¥5
along with a fish consumption rate that
reflects the reserved right, as discussed
above, for the purpose of calculating
human health criteria. EPA requests
comment on whether there may be other
situations where this provision could
apply.
Under EPA’s 2000 Methodology, a key
step in deriving human health criteria is
identifying the population subgroup
that the criteria should protect. The
2000 Methodology explains that states
and authorized tribes could set criteria
to protect individuals with ‘‘average’’ or
‘‘typical’’ exposure, or to protect more
highly exposed individuals.60 EPA’s
304(a) criteria use a combination of
median values, mean values, and
percentile estimates targeted at the high
end of the general population (i.e., the
target population or the criteria-basis
population).61 The 2000 Methodology
also recommends use of conservative
exposure parameters to ensure that
water quality criteria are protective not
59 EPA provides guidance on determining
unsuppressed fish consumption rates. See USEPA.
2016. Guidance for Conducting Fish Consumption
Surveys. EPA–823B16002.
60 USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving
Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the Protection
of Human Health. U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC EPA–822–
B–00–004. https://www.epa.gov/wqc/humanhealth-water-quality-criteria-and-methods-toxics. p.
2–1.
61 Id.
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only of the general population, but also
of subpopulations who, because of high
exposure, such as high fish intake rates,
have an increased risk of receiving a
dose that would elicit adverse effects.62
With respect to carcinogens, the 2000
Methodology states that 10¥5 and 10¥6
risk levels may be acceptable for the
general population and that highly
exposed populations should not exceed
a 10¥4 risk level.63 64
EPA’s national guidance has not
previously addressed, however, how
tribal reserved rights to aquatic and/or
aquatic dependent resources should be
considered in identifying the target
population for deriving water quality
criteria. Nor has the agency addressed
what constitutes acceptable risk for
tribal members whose exercise of
reserved rights may put them at greater
risk than the general population (e.g.,
due to higher rates of fish consumption).
The agency considered whether it
should treat tribal members exercising
reserved rights in the same manner as
other highly exposed individuals and
subpopulations as generally laid out in
the 2000 Methodology but has decided
protection of tribal members exercising
reserved rights warrants a distinct
approach. EPA recognizes that treaties,
statutes, executive orders, or other
sources of law establishing reserved
rights vary in many respects and may or
may not themselves speak to right
holders’ exercising their rights relative
to a state’s general population.
Nonetheless, unlike other individuals
and subpopulations, tribal members
exercising reserved rights are a distinct,
identifiable class of individuals holding
legal rights to resources, whose reserved
rights are unique to them and have a
defined geographic scope. In EPA’s
judgment, their unique status as right
holders warrants treating them as the
target population for purposes of
deriving human health criteria.
The proposed rulemaking does not
dictate what cancer risk level must be
used in deriving human health water
quality criteria for carcinogens where
there are applicable reserved rights.
Instead, proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a)(2)
requires that WQS protect the health of
the right holders ‘‘to at least the same
risk level as provided to the general
population of the state.’’ EPA’s 2000
Methodology recommends that states
62 Id.
p.1–11.
p.2–6.
64 Future iterations of this methodology may
make different recommendations regarding cancer
risk level; the requirement in this proposed
rulemaking is not tied to a specific cancer risk level
value, but rather requires that states establish WQS
that provide the same level of protection between
their general populations and right holders.
63 Id.
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and authorized tribes set human health
criteria based on a cancer risk level of
10¥5 or 10¥6 for the target population
which, under the proposed rulemaking,
would be tribal members exercising
applicable reserved rights. This
approach recognizes the special nature
of such reserved rights and status of
right holders. It also helps ensure
protection of tribal members whose
exposure (and consequent risk of
adverse effects) may vary. For example,
if a state or authorized tribe protects the
general population at a risk level of
10¥5, under the proposed rulemaking
they would need to adopt the same risk
level for tribes exercising reserved
rights. The state or authorized tribe
would also select an appropriate fish
consumption rate for deriving criteria
pursuant to 40 CFR 131.9(a)(1), as
discussed above.
In its 2019 decision document
reversing its prior disapproval of
Washington’s human health criteria,
EPA made the following assertion:
‘‘[T]he EPA’s longstanding view,
consistent with the 2000 Methodology,
is that a state may consider tribes with
reserved fishing rights to be highly
exposed populations, rather than the
target general population, in order to
derive criteria, and that such
consideration gives due effect to
reserved fishing rights.’’ 65 EPA has
reconsidered this assertion and is
proposing to require that WQS protect
the health of right holders to at least the
same risk level as a state’s general
population, rather than treating right
holders as a highly exposed population.
EPA has determined that it is
appropriate, in exercising its discretion
in implementing CWA section 303(c), to
give effect to reserved rights within the
WQS-setting paradigm by requiring that
the right holders receive protection to at
least the same risk level as
recommended for a state’s general
population and is accordingly proposing
the requirement set forth in proposed 40
CFR 131.9(a)(2).
iv. Implementation of These Proposed
Requirements
EPA anticipates that the
circumstances where WQS may need to
be adjusted to protect tribal reserved
rights would fall primarily into two
categories:
1. Human health criteria to protect
fish consumers, where tribes with
reserved fishing rights consume more
fish and are therefore exposed to greater
levels of contaminants in fish. This is
because there is a differential health risk
between right holders and the general
65 May
PO 00000
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population of the state because right
holders are more highly exposed to the
resource.
2. Where a reserved right is not
already accounted for as a designated or
presently attained use for a waterbody,
but that waterbody could be reasonably
expected to support that right in the
future (e.g., if restoration efforts are
underway). EPA anticipates that this
could arise with uses to protect aquatic
life, aquatic-dependent wildlife, and
users of those resources, where those
uses are not already designated or
presently attained.
For many aquatic and aquaticdependent resources that tribes have
rights to fish, hunt or gather, the
existing Federal WQS regulations
already require states to provide a level
of protection consistent with this
proposed rulemaking. In accordance
with the interim goal specified by CWA
section 101(a)(2) of ‘‘water quality
which provides for the protection and
propagation of fish, shellfish, and
wildlife and provides for recreation in
and on the water,’’ the existing Federal
WQS regulation requires that state WQS
protect fish, shellfish and wildlife, and
recreation in and on the water, wherever
attainable.66 As a result, states typically
designate most of their waters for those
uses. In addition, the existing WQS
regulation at 40 CFR 131.11 requires
that states adopt water quality criteria
that protect their designated uses. As a
result, where a tribe has the right to
hunt an aquatic-dependent species, for
example, the species may already be
protected in accordance with this
proposed rulemaking by a state’s
‘‘wildlife’’ designated use and
associated criteria, such that this
rulemaking would not require any
additional protection of that species
beyond what is already required under
the CWA and EPA’s existing WQS
regulation.
Additionally, if use of an aquatic or
aquatic-dependent resource pursuant to
a tribal reserved right is a use that is
presently being attained, EPA’s existing
regulation at 40 CFR 131.10(i) requires
states to revise their WQS to reflect the
presently attained use. For example, if
a tribe has a right to gather an aquatic
plant in a state waterbody and that use
is presently attained, state WQS should
already reflect that as a designated use,
per 40 CFR 131.10(i), and thus this
resource should be protected in
accordance with proposed 40 CFR
131.9(a), discussed further below.
With respect to aquatic life criteria,
EPA provides guidance for deriving
criteria that generally protect aquatic
66 See
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organisms,67 including commercially or
recreationally important species. EPA
does not anticipate that more stringent
criteria to protect aquatic or aquaticdependent resources themselves would
be necessary in most cases to comply
with this proposed rulemaking than
already required by the existing Federal
WQS regulations.
This proposed rulemaking would
complement the existing regulatory
requirements set forth in EPA’s WQS
regulation. In certain circumstances,
these existing requirements may already
be operating to ensure water quality
levels are protective of particular tribal
reserved rights. By requiring states to
seek information regarding applicable
reserved rights as they review and revise
their WQS, the proposed requirements
would equip states with information to
determine whether current WQS
adequately protect applicable reserved
rights.
EPA’s identification of two categories
of circumstances where compliance
with the proposed rulemaking is most
likely to necessitate new or revised
WQS is consistent with input from
tribes during pre-proposal consultation,
which focused primarily on protection
of fish consumers and protection of wild
rice.68 EPA requests comment on
whether there are other instances where
WQS may need to be adjusted to protect
tribal reserved rights consistent with
this proposed rulemaking. This request
for comment includes, but is not limited
to, whether there are tribal reserved
rights to aquatic or aquatic-dependent
resources that may require more
stringent criteria than otherwise
required to protect applicable
designated uses in order to comply with
this proposed rulemaking and whether
there are differential health risks for
right holders associated with activities
other than fish consumption such that
new or revised criteria may be necessary
to comply with this proposed
rulemaking.
Where information is conflicting,
there are gaps in information, and/or a
difference of opinion exists between the
state and one or more tribes about the
level of water quality necessary to
protect a reserved right, EPA will take
action based on the best available
information in the same way that EPA
67 USEPA. 1985. Guidelines for Deriving
Numerical National Water Quality Criteria for the
Protection of Aquatic Organisms and Their Uses.
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of
Water, Washington, DC PB85–227049.
68 See USEPA 2021. Summary Report of Tribal
Consultation for the Proposed Rule: Water Quality
Standards Regulatory Revisions to Protect Tribal
Reserved Rights, available in the docket for this
proposed rulemaking.
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currently makes WQS decisions in these
circumstances in other contexts, e.g.,
determining whether criteria are
scientifically defensible in situations
where there is conflicting science, there
are gaps in the science, and/or there are
different conclusions among
stakeholders. EPA requests comment on
whether there are other factors it should
consider when making decisions under
these circumstances.
3. Options for Establishing WQS To
Protect Tribal Reserved Rights
After determining whether tribal
reserved rights apply and the level of
water quality necessary to protect those
rights, states would be required to revise
their WQS if needed to ensure
protection of those rights using
designated uses, criteria, and/or
antidegradation as described at
proposed 40 CFR 131.9(c).
The first option is to adopt designated
uses that explicitly recognize and
identify tribal reserved rights to aquatic
and/or aquatic-dependent resources and
water quality criteria to protect those
uses. For example, a state could adopt
a separate designated use of ‘‘customary
and traditional fishing’’ and apply it to
waterbodies where tribes hold reserved
rights to fish for subsistence. A state
would also determine and adopt
protective criteria set at the level of
water quality that was determined to
protect the customary and traditional
fishing designated use. An advantage to
establishing designated uses that
explicitly recognize specific tribal
reserved rights is that it is a transparent
way to identify where those rights apply
and how they are protected. Designated
uses express the desired condition of
the water and do not need to be
currently attained to be designated.69
Therefore, it would be appropriate and
reasonable to recognize and identify
tribal reserved rights as explicit
designated uses to define the desired
condition for the waters where the
rights apply and to then determine and
adopt protective criteria to define the
minimum conditions necessary to
achieve those objectives. As noted
above, if use of an aquatic or aquaticdependent resource pursuant to a tribal
reserved right is a use that is presently
being attained, EPA’s existing regulation
at 40 CFR 131.10(i) requires states to
revise their WQS to reflect the presently
attained use.
As a second option, the state could
adopt criteria protective of tribal
reserved rights and associate those
criteria with a current designated use
that already encompasses the tribal
69 40
PO 00000
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reserved rights. For example, a state
may have a designated use of ‘‘fishing’’
that is intended to capture a broad range
of fishing activities. In this case, it may
be reasonable for a state to focus on
identifying and synthesizing data on
fish consumption rates to determine
criteria that will protect the ‘‘fishing’’
use to an extent consistent with the
reserved right, including ensuring that
tribes with reserved fishing rights are
protected to a level appropriate to
protect to the general population as
outlined in EPA’s 2000 Methodology or
EPA’s latest guidance for establishing
human health criteria.
As a third option, the state could use
its antidegradation policy to protect
tribal reserved rights. EPA is seeking
public comment on whether the
following two antidegradation policy
options related to Tier 2 and Tier 3
could be used to protect tribal reserved
rights in lieu of the options identified in
proposed 40 CFR 131.9(c)(1) and (2) and
explained earlier in this section. An
additional advantage of the
antidegradation policy options
described in the following paragraph is
that in situations where a waterbody’s
existing water quality exceeds the levels
that protect tribal reserved rights, these
options would provide a mechanism to
maintain high water quality and provide
a margin of safety that would afford the
water body increased resilience to
potential future stressors, including
climate change. Protecting such highquality waters would potentially be
more cost-effective and resourceefficient than investing in long-term
restoration or remedial actions in the
future.
Option 1: States could assign a water
body as an Outstanding National
Resource Water (ONRW) 70 which
would bring it under 40 CFR
131.12(a)(3), which requires the water
quality of such ONRWs to be
maintained and protected.
Option 2: States could amend their
antidegradation policy and/or other
legally binding procedures to include a
provision that ensures that any lowering
of water quality in a high-quality water
that is authorized by the state, in
accordance with 40 CFR 131.12(a)(2),
results in water quality that continues to
protect applicable reserved rights.
EPA is requesting comment on these
two options for implementing
antidegradation requirements to protect
tribal reserved rights. EPA is also
70 Waters provided the highest level of protection
under a state’s antidegradation policy. EPA Water
Quality Standards Handbook, Chapter 4:
Antidegradation. p.12. EPA–823–B–12–002. https://
www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2014-10/
documents/handbook-chapter4.pdf.
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requesting comment on alternative ways
that states could use their
antidegradation policies and
implementation methods to protect
tribal reserved rights, as defined in
proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a).
States could also choose to combine
these methods, such as by assigning
ONRW status to a waterbody to prevent
any additional lowering of water
quality, while also establishing a tribal
resource designated use goal and criteria
that must be met to achieve that goal.
If use of an aquatic or aquaticdependent resource pursuant to a tribal
reserved right is an existing use
pursuant to 40 CFR 131.3(e),71 EPA’s
current WQS regulation at 40 CFR
131.12(a)(1) requires that the use and
the water quality necessary to protect
that use be maintained and protected.
Thus, implementation of 40 CFR
131.12(a)(1) would protect this resource
in accordance with proposed 40 CFR
131.9(a).
EPA recognizes that there may be
areas where multiple right holders hold
reserved rights to the same aquatic and/
or aquatic-dependent resources. In these
cases, right holders may have different
positions on how to ensure the WQS
protect the resources, consistent with
proposed 40 CFR 131.9. Additionally,
tribal reserved rights to a particular
resource may span across multiple
states. These situations would likely
require significant coordination among
all parties to develop WQS to protect all
applicable rights. EPA is available to
facilitate dialogue between and among
states and tribes, where appropriate.
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4. Use Attainability Analyses and Tribal
Reserved Rights
EPA recognizes that there may be
situations where a waterbody may not
be able to support a reserved right to an
aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent
resource because attaining that use in
that waterbody is not currently feasible.
The CWA and EPA’s regulations
provide that such uses could be revised
if shown to be unattainable based on
one of six reasons. However, there may
also be situations where it may be
critical to maintain the designated uses
and continue to strive for attainment of
such uses to protect a tribal reserved
right consistent with the obligations of
treaties and other Federal laws. EPA
requests comment on whether and how
states can revise designated uses, as
provided for by 40 CFR 131.10, while
also ensuring the protection of tribal
71 40 CFR 131.3(e) Existing uses are those uses
actually attained in the water body on or after
November 28, 1975, whether or not they are
included in the water quality standards.
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reserved rights per proposed 40 CFR
131.9. EPA is not considering modifying
the existing requirements in 40 CFR
131.10 or otherwise reopening those
requirements for comment but, rather, is
requesting comment only on whether
any discrete additions to the current
regulatory framework may be necessary
to protect tribal reserved rights. For
example, should EPA include in 40 CFR
131.9 specifics on whether or how a
state can revise designated uses and still
protect tribal reserved rights?
D. EPA’s Role
1. Engagement With States
EPA makes itself available to engage
early and often to provide support when
states are adopting and revising WQS.
EPA support includes providing
triennial review ‘‘kick off’’ letters that
outline EPA’s recommendations for
WQS revisions, participating in state
public processes, and providing
comments to states on their proposed
WQS. EPA intends to support states by
providing input and information on any
tribal reserved rights and the level of
water quality to protect those rights. As
previously mentioned, EPA is also
available to facilitate dialogue between
states and tribes.
2. Consultation With Tribes
As mentioned in section III.A. of this
preamble, any new or revised WQS
must be submitted to EPA for review
and approval or disapproval to
determine whether it meets CWA and
corresponding EPA regulatory
requirements (CWA section 303(c)(2)(A)
and (c)(3); 40 CFR 131.5; 131.21). EPA’s
policy 72 is to consult on a governmentto-government basis with tribes when
EPA actions and decisions such as WQS
actions may affect tribal interests.
Accordingly, in addition to early
engagement with right holders in the
development of new or revised WQS,
EPA will also consult with right holders
72 USEPA 2011. EPA Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribes. (see https://
www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2013-08/
documents/cons-and-coord-with-indian-tribespolicy.pdf)
USEPA 2016. EPA Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribes: Guidance for
Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights. https://
www.epa.gov/tribal/tribal-treaty-rights;
Executive Order 13175, Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribal Governments (see
https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2000/
11/09/00-29003/consultation-and-coordinationwith-indian-tribal-governments);
January 26, 2021 Presidential Memorandum on
Tribal Consultation and Strengthening Nation-toNation Relationships (see https://
www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidentialactions/2021/01/26/memorandum-on-tribalconsultation-and-strengthening-nation-to-nationrelationships/).
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as it reviews relevant state WQS
submissions. EPA intends to codify in
proposed 40 CFR 131.9(b) that EPA
would initiate consultation with the
right holders on state WQS submissions
in determining whether applicable
reserved rights are protected. This
consultation will inform EPA’s
determination pursuant to 40 CFR
131.5(a)(9) as to whether WQS protect
tribal reserved rights, where applicable.
EPA defines consultation in its 2011
Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Tribes 73 as ‘‘a
process of meaningful communication
and coordination between EPA and
tribal officials prior to EPA taking
actions or implementing decisions that
may affect tribes.’’ As a process,
consultation includes several methods
of interaction that may occur at different
levels. The appropriate level of
interaction is determined by past and
current practices, policy adjustments,
the continuing dialogue between EPA
and tribal governments, and program
and regional office consultation
procedures and plans.
Under proposed 40 CFR 131.9(b), EPA
would seek information and input
regarding applicable tribal reserved
rights in accordance with the 2011 EPA
Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Tribes, the 2016 EPA
Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribes:
Guidance for Discussing Tribal Treaty
Rights,74 applicable EPA regional
consultation procedures,75 and any
other applicable EPA tribal consultation
policies in effect when the proposed
rulemaking would be applied. Although
proposed 40 CFR 131.9(b) would
specifically apply to EPA’s review of
state WQS submissions, EPA intends
per its 2011 Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Tribes, the 2016 EPA
Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribes:
Guidance for Discussing Tribal Treaty
Rights,76 and applicable EPA regional
consultation procedures, to initiate
consultation with tribes in the
geographic area where any WQS
decision under EPA’s consideration may
affect tribal interests, including reserved
rights. EPA would consider all relevant
73 USEPA 2011. EPA Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribes. (see https://
www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2013-08/
documents/cons-and-coord-with-indian-tribespolicy.pdf)
74 Available online at https://www.epa.gov/tribal/
epa-policy-consultation-and-coordination-indiantribes-guidance-discussing-tribal-treaty.
75 Available online at https://www.epa.gov/tribal/
forms/consultation-and-coordination-tribes.
76 Available online at https://www.epa.gov/tribal/
epa-policy-consultation-and-coordination-indiantribes-guidance-discussing-tribal-treaty.
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information obtained through
consultation to help ensure that the
agency is fully informed before taking a
WQS action.
EPA would attempt to honor
consultation requests from tribal
governments considering the nature of
the activity, past consultation efforts,
available resources, timing
considerations, and all other relevant
factors. EPA would generally agree to
consult when such a request for
consultation is made by a tribal
government, assuming the proposed
action may affect that tribe.
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E. How would the proposed regulatory
revisions apply to States in the Great
Lakes system?
During pre-proposal tribal
consultation and coordination, some
tribes questioned whether 40 CFR part
132, Water Quality Guidance for the
Great Lakes System, which identifies
minimum WQS for the Great Lakes
System to protect human health, aquatic
life, and wildlife, may limit the ability
of states subject to this regulation, once
finalized, to revise their WQS to protect
tribal reserved rights. 40 CFR part 132
allows for greater levels of protection
than specified in the regulation. For
example, 40 CFR 132.4(i) provides that,
‘‘[n]othing in this part shall prohibit the
Great Lakes States and Tribes from
adopting numeric water quality criteria,
narrative criteria, or water quality
values that are more stringent than’’ the
criteria and values derived using the
methodologies specified in 40 CFR part
132. Therefore, 40 CFR part 132 does
not limit the ability of states subject to
its requirements to revise their WQS to
be more stringent if necessary to protect
tribal reserved rights. In addition, for
waters in the Great Lakes basin, states
must meet the requirements of both 40
CFR parts 131 and 132. Where
regulations in 40 CFR parts 131 and 132
overlap, the more stringent regulation
applies.
For these reasons, revisions to 40 CFR
part 132 are not necessary to protect
tribal reserved rights.
F. Role of Other WQS Provisions in
Protecting Tribal Reserved Rights
EPA requests comment on whether
EPA should specify in 40 CFR 131.9
how other WQS provisions, such as
general policies under 40 CFR 131.13,
WQS variances under 40 CFR 131.14,
and permit compliance schedules under
40 CFR 131.15, should be used to ensure
protection of tribal reserved rights. EPA
is not proposing to modify the existing
language in these sections and is not
reopening them for comment. Rather,
EPA is considering whether potential
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discrete additions to the current
regulatory scheme set forth in this rule
may be necessary. For example, just as
the agency has outlined options for
designated use revisions, criteria
revisions and use of state
antidegradation policies, should EPA
include in 40 CFR 131.9 specifics on
whether or how a state can adopt a WQS
variance and still protect tribal reserved
rights?
V. Economic Analysis
Pursuant to Executive Orders 12866
(Regulatory Planning and Review) and
13563 (Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review), EPA has prepared
an economic analysis to inform the
public of potential costs and benefits of
this proposed rulemaking. This analysis
is not required by the CWA. EPA’s
economic analysis is documented in
Economic Analysis for Water Quality
Standards Regulatory Revisions to
Protect Tribal Reserved Rights
(Proposed Rule) and can be found in the
docket for this proposal.
EPA evaluated the potential
incremental administrative burdens and
costs that may be associated with this
proposal, beyond the burden and costs
associated with implementation of the
current WQS regulation. This proposal
would not establish any requirements
directly applicable to regulated entities,
such as industrial dischargers or
municipal wastewater treatment
facilities, but could ultimately lead to
additional compliance costs to meet
permit limits put in place to comply
with new WQS adopted by states
because of this proposed rulemaking. In
general, facilities meet water qualitybased limits through pollution
prevention programs, product
substitution, altered engineering
processes, or end-of-pipe treatment.
Other aspects of WQS, such as variances
which facilitate feasible progress toward
a less stringent interim goal, may
mitigate compliance costs. However,
because of the uncertainty of the
specific outcome of application of this
proposed rulemaking, both in terms of
location and pollutants involved, EPA is
unable to provide estimates of costs to
those regulated entities. Instead, the
focus of EPA’s economic analysis is to
estimate the potential administrative
burden and costs to state governments.
EPA does not anticipate this rule would
impose any compliance costs on
territorial governments because EPA is
not aware of any federally recognized
tribes with reserved rights in or
downstream of any U.S. territory. EPA
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also does not anticipate costs to
authorized tribes 77 because:
• EPA anticipates that few, if any
tribes have reserved rights to resources
on another tribe’s reservation or
otherwise under the jurisdiction of
another tribe. EPA requests comment on
whether any such situations may exist.
• EPA anticipates that if there are
tribes with reserved rights to resources
under the jurisdiction of a different tribe
that is an authorized tribe, their
interests may align such that any
adopted WQS would reflect protecting
such rights in absence of this proposed
rulemaking. Should this not be the case,
then authorized tribes could be subject
to similar administrative costs as
presented below for states.
EPA also does not anticipate that this
proposed rulemaking would directly
impose costs to right holders because it
does not impose any requirements on
right holders. EPA acknowledges that
the proposed requirement to evaluate
whether WQS protect relevant tribal
reserved rights, as informed by the right
holders, may lead to increased
information-sharing among states, rightholders, and EPA. However, the
proposed rulemaking would not require
any additional coordination beyond that
which already occurs in connection
with WQS public participation
processes and EPA’s consultations with
tribal governments. EPA has, on
occasion, provided funding to tribes to
develop tribal fish consumption rates
that are used to inform the level of water
quality necessary to support tribal
reserved rights. EPA could support
similar projects in the future, as
appropriate and as funding allows.
While EPA anticipates that states and
EPA would bear the majority of the
burden for determining the extent of
reserved rights and water quality
necessary to protect those rights, EPA
acknowledges that some tribes may
choose to incur costs, such as legal fees
or scientific studies to support their
position on the scope and nature of their
rights and/or water quality necessary to
protect them.
EPA assessed the potential
incremental burden and costs associated
with these proposed regulatory
revisions on states by first identifying
those elements of the proposed
revisions that may impose incremental
burdens and costs. Then, EPA estimated
the incremental number of labor hours
potentially required by states to comply
with those elements of the proposed
77 An ‘‘authorized tribe’’ for the purpose of this
rulemaking means a tribe authorized for treatment
in a manner similar to a state (TAS) under Clean
Water Act (CWA) Section 518(e).
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regulatory revisions, and then estimated
the costs associated with those
additional labor hours.
EPA assumed for the purpose of this
analysis that all 50 states would each
undertake three WQS rulemakings to
protect tribal reserved rights. The
agency assumed one rulemaking for
each of the following purposes:
• To evaluate or revise WQS for
protection of human health;
• To evaluate or revise WQS for
protection of aquatic life; and
• To account for any other WQS
changes needed to protect tribal
reserved rights, including addressing
the emergence of any information in the
future that informs either the
applicability of the reserved rights or
the necessary level of water quality.
EPA assumed incremental burden and
costs for all 50 states, although it is
likely that tribal reserved rights to
aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent
resources do not exist in all 50 states.
EPA considered the costs associated
with labor from economists, engineers,
scientists, and lawyers for development
of state regulations. EPA did not include
any labor or other costs associated with
potential litigation of state regulations
as this would not be a direct
consequence of this proposed
rulemaking and would be highly
speculative. Estimates of the
incremental administrative burden and
costs to state governments associated
with this proposal are summarized in
the following Table 2:
TABLE 2—SUMMARY OF POTENTIAL ADMINISTRATIVE BURDENS AND COSTS TO STATES ASSOCIATED WITH THE PROPOSED
RULE
Rulemaking effort 1
Rulemaking #1 .....................
Rulemaking #2 .....................
Rulemaking #3 .....................
Total 7 ...................................
Burden per
State
(hours)
Cost per State (2020$) 2
100–500
90–450
75–375
265–1,325
Number of
potentially
affected
States 3
$7,465–$37,325
6,718–33,592
5,599–27,994
19,782–98,911
Total burden (hours) 4
50
50
50
50
5,000–25,000
4,500–22,500
3,750–18,750
13,250–66,250
Total cost
(2020$;
one-time) 5
$373,250–$1,866,250
335,925–1,679,625
279,938–1,399,688
989,112–4,945,562
1 Reflects
potential new or increased rulemaking activities to adopt provisions consistent with the proposed rulemaking into WQS.
per state multiplied by average hourly labor rate of $74.65 and rounded to the nearest dollar.
50 states, but no territories or tribes.
4 Burden per state multiplied by total number of potentially affected states.
5 Total burden for all potentially affected states multiplied by average hourly labor rate of $74.65 and rounded to the nearest dollar.
2 Hours
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3 Includes
Total one-time costs for this proposal
are estimated to range from $989,112 to
$4,945,562. EPA chose not to annualize
these costs given uncertainty about the
period over which that annualization
would occur.
In addition to estimating potential
burden and costs, EPA also evaluated
the potential benefits associated with
this proposal. While this rulemaking
would not directly lead to
improvements in water quality, if
finalized, this rulemaking would
establish a framework that would
encourage future improvements in water
quality in geographic areas where tribes
hold reserved rights. EPA anticipates
that the proposed rulemaking will
enhance the ability of states and tribes
to protect their water resources by
clarifying and prescribing how to
protect waters with applicable tribal
reserved rights and improving
coordination between Federal, state, and
tribal governments. Tribal members and
the general public may indirectly
benefit from this rulemaking through
targeted improvements to water quality
that are implemented to meet more
stringent state WQS adopted in
accordance with this rulemaking.
EPA acknowledges that achievement
of any benefits associated with cleaner
water would involve additional control
measures, and thus costs to regulated
entities and nonpoint sources, that have
not been included in the economic
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analysis for this proposed rulemaking.
EPA has not attempted to quantify
either the costs of control measures that
might ultimately be required as a result
of this rulemaking, or the benefits they
would provide. However, better
protection of tribal reserved rights has
the potential to provide a variety of
economic benefits associated with
cleaner water.
The primary benefits of the proposed
rulemaking for reserved right holders
would likely be improved ability to
maintain traditions and cultural
landscapes and reduced risk to human
health. Reducing pollutant levels so that
traditional foods such as fish and wild
rice are abundant and safe to eat in
subsistence quantities allows for
unsuppressed levels of tribal
subsistence consumption of these
resources, which in turn contributes to
restoring and maintaining traditional
lifeways, preserving indigenous
knowledge, and cultural selfdetermination. The recognition of tribal
reserved rights can also lead to direct
economic benefits to tribal members.
For example, a 1974 court decision
allocating 50% of the Columbia River
salmon and steelhead catch to the tribes
with reserved rights to this resource
resulted in a near doubling of revenue
for these tribes.78 This rulemaking seeks
to ensure that water quality does not
limit right holders’ ability to utilize
their rights, and therefore achieve the
corresponding economic and social
benefits.
Other potential benefits include the
availability of clean, safe, and affordable
drinking water, greater recreational
opportunities, water of adequate quality
for agricultural and industrial use, and
water quality that supports the
commercial fishing industry and higher
property values. These benefits could
accrue to both tribal and nontribal
populations.
As mentioned above, this proposal
does not establish any requirements
directly applicable to regulated point
sources or nonpoint sources of
pollution, although EPA recognizes that
these sources could potentially incur
future costs as a result of changes to
WQS adopted by states as a result of this
rulemaking (states could also adopt new
or revised WQS independent of this
proposed rulemaking). However, this
proposal does not lend itself to
identification of readily predictable
outcomes regarding changes to state
WQS that might result. Likewise, EPA
could not predict requirements that
could ultimately be imposed on NPDES
permittees and nonpoint sources. Thus,
EPA has not analyzed potential costs or
78 Parker, D.P., Rucker, R.R., & Nickerson, P.H.
(2016). The Legacy of United States v. Washington:
Economic Effects of the Boldt and Rafeedie
Decisions. In Unlocking the Wealth of Indian
Nations, ed. T.L. Anderson, Rowman and Littlefield
Press.
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cost savings associated with any
consequences of potential revised state
WQS.
EPA seeks comment on all aspects of
the accompanying economic analysis.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order
Reviews
Additional information about these
statutes and Executive Orders can be
found at https://www.epa.gov/lawsregulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
ddrumheller on DSK30NT082PROD with PROPOSALS
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
Regulatory Review
This action is a significant regulatory
action that was submitted to the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB) for
review. Any changes made in response
to OMB recommendations have been
documented in the docket.
EPA prepared an analysis of the
potential costs and benefits associated
with this action. This analysis is
summarized in section V of the
preamble and is available in the docket.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
The information collection
requirements in this proposed rule have
been submitted for approval to the OMB
under the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq. The Information
Collection Request (ICR) document
prepared by EPA has been assigned EPA
ICR number 2700.01. You can find a
copy of the ICR in the docket for this
rule, and it is briefly summarized here.
The information collection requirements
in this proposed rule will be in addition
to requirements described in the
existing ICR for the Water Quality
Standards Regulation and approved by
OMB through February 2025.79 At this
time EPA is not proposing to revise the
existing ICR to consolidate the
requirements of this proposed rule. EPA
intends to do so when it requests
renewal of the existing ICR in 2025.
EPA would use the information
required by this proposed rule to carry
out its responsibilities under the CWA
to review and approve or disapprove
new and revised WQS submitted by
states. In reviewing state WQS
submissions, EPA considers whether
those submissions are consistent with
the WQS regulation at 40 CFR part 131.
The current regulation requires states to
include supporting information to
accompany WQS submissions to help
EPA determine whether the submitted
new and revised WQS are consistent
79 ‘‘Information Collection Request for Water
Quality Standards Regulation,’’ OMB Control
Number 2040–0049, EPA ICR Number 0988.15,
expiration date February 28, 2025.
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with 40 CFR part 131. This proposed
rule would add a new requirement to 40
CFR part 131 to require, where
applicable, that state WQS submissions
provide additional supporting
information about whether the
submitted WQS protect tribal reserved
rights, including information about the
scope, nature, and current and past use
of the tribal reserved rights, and data
and methods used to develop the WQS.
This mandatory information collection
would provide EPA with information
necessary to review and approve or
disapprove standards in accordance
with the CWA, 40 CFR part 131, and
other Federal laws.
If the information collection activities
in this proposed rulemaking are not
carried out, states and EPA may not be
able to ensure that WQS comply with
treaties and other Federal laws. In some
cases, this could result in
implementation and control steps such
as TMDLs and NPDES permits that also
do not comply with treaties and other
Federal laws.
Respondents/affected entities: states,
territories, and tribes authorized for
treatment in a manner similar to a state
for purposes of establishing WQS under
the CWA. While tribal right holders
would not be direct respondents, EPA
acknowledges that the proposed
regulation would require that state
submissions be informed by the right
holders. EPA believes this would not
lead to increased burden on right
holders because the proposed rule
would not require additional
coordination beyond that which already
occurs during WQS public participation
processes and EPA’s consultations with
tribal governments. EPA requests
comment on this conclusion.
Respondent’s obligation to respond:
mandatory.
Estimated number of respondents: 50.
Frequency of response: on occasion/as
necessary.
Total estimated burden: 13,250–
66,250 hours. Burden is defined at 5
CFR 1320.3(b).
Total estimated labor cost: $989,112–
$4,945,562 one-time costs (not
annualized).
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. The OMB control
numbers for EPA’s regulations in 40
CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
Submit your comments on the
Agency’s need for this information, the
accuracy of the provided burden
estimates and any suggested methods
for minimizing respondent burden to
the EPA using the docket identified at
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the beginning of this rule. You may also
send your ICR-related comments to
OMB’s Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs using the interface at
www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain.
Find this particular information
collection by selecting ‘‘Currently under
Review— Open for Public Comments’’
or by using the search function. OMB
must receive comments no later than
February 3, 2023. EPA will respond to
any ICR-related comments in the final
rule.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
This action will not impose any
requirements on small entities. Small
entities are not directly regulated by this
rule and this action will not impose any
requirements on small entities; rather,
this action will impose requirements
only on states to take into consideration
how their WQS must protect aquatic
and aquatic-dependent resources
reserved to tribes through treaties,
statutes, Executive orders, or other
sources of Federal law.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
(UMRA)
This action does not contain any
unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does
not significantly or uniquely affect small
governments. The action imposes no
enforceable duty on any state, local or
tribal governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
EPA has concluded that this action
does not have federalism implications.
It will not have substantial direct effects
on the states, on the relationship
between the national government and
the states, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government. This rule
would clarify and prescribe how WQS
for a state’s waters must protect aquatic
and aquatic-dependent resources
reserved to tribes through treaties,
statutes, Executive orders, or other
sources of Federal law. States continue
to have considerable discretion in
adopting and implementing WQS. Thus,
Executive Order 13132 does not apply
to this action.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13132
and consistent with EPA’s policy to
promote communications between EPA
and state and local governments, EPA
provided a conceptual overview of the
draft rule for the Association of Clean
Water Agencies (ACWA)’s Monitoring,
Standards and Assessment
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Subcommittee, and during three
additional one-on-one meetings with
individual states held upon request. 80
In these discussions states requested
additional clarification about EPA’s
expectations for how they should
determine where tribal reserved rights
apply, what resources and tools will be
available, e.g., geospatial data, and how
to handle situations where data are not
available, the state and tribe disagree, or
multiple tribes have overlapping rights
and do not agree on the level of
protection. EPA took these discussions
into account during the drafting of this
rule. EPA specifically solicits comments
on this proposed action from state and
local officials.
After publishing this proposed
rulemaking, EPA will conduct
additional outreach and engagement
with state and local government
officials, or their representative national
organizations, prior to finalizing a rule.
All comment letters and
recommendations received by EPA
during the comment period from state
and local governments will be included
in the proposed rulemaking docket
(Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OW–2021–
0791).
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
and Coordination With Indian Tribal
Governments
This action has tribal implications,
however it will neither impose
substantial direct compliance costs on
federally recognized tribal governments,
nor preempt tribal law. This rulemaking
may affect tribes with reserved rights to
aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent
resources in waters subject to state
WQS, and it may also affect tribes
administering a CWA 303 WQS
program. As of November 15, 2022, 80
Indian tribes have been approved for
treatment in a manner similar to a state
(TAS) for CWA sections 303 and 401.81
All or some of these authorized tribes
could be subject to this proposed rule,
depending on the location and nature of
any other tribes’ downstream rights.
EPA consulted with tribal officials
early in the process of developing this
regulation to permit them to have
meaningful and timely input into its
development. EPA held a 90-day tribal
consultation and coordination period
from June 15 through September 13,
2021 with federally recognized tribes to
80 The slides EPA presented at its meeting with
ACWA are included in the docket for this
rulemaking. These are representative of the slides
EPA presented at its one-on-one meetings with
states.
81 For the most current information please refer to
https://www.epa.gov/wqs-tech/epa-actions-tribalwater-quality-standards-and-contacts.
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inform development of the proposed
rule. EPA conducted the consultation
and coordination process in accordance
with the EPA Policy on Consultation
and Coordination with Indian Tribes
(https://www.epa.gov/tribal/epa-policyconsultation-and-coordination-indiantribes). In addition to two national tribal
listening sessions held in July and
August 2021, EPA presented at 20
meetings of tribal staff and leadership,
as well as held seven staff-level
coordination/engagement meetings and
held seven leader-to-leader meetings at
the request of tribes. EPA continued
outreach and engagement with tribes at
national and regional tribal meetings
after the end of the consultation period.
Nearly all commenters were supportive
of the potential rule in concept. EPA
considered all pre-proposal tribal input
received as it developed the proposed
rule.
A summary of that consultation
(‘‘Summary of EPA’s Pre-Proposal
Consultation, Coordination, and
Outreach with Federally Recognized
Tribes on Potential Revisions to the
Federal Water Quality Standards
Regulation to Protect Tribal Reserved
Rights’’) is available in the docket for
this proposal.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
Children From Environmental Health
and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to Executive
Order 13045 because it is not
economically significant as defined in
E.O. 12866, and because it does not
concern an environmental health risk or
safety risk that may disproportionately
affect children.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That
Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
Distribution, or Use
This action is not a ‘‘significant
energy action’’ because it is not likely to
have a significant adverse effect on the
supply, distribution or use of energy.
This action impacts state and tribal
water quality standards, which do not
regulate the supply, distribution, or use
of energy.
I. National Technology Transfer and
Advancement Act of 1995
This proposed rulemaking does not
involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal
Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and
Low-Income Populations
For the reasons explained below, EPA
concludes that this action does not have
disproportionately high and adverse
human health or environmental effects
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on minority populations, low-income
populations and/or indigenous peoples,
as specified in Executive Order 12898
(59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).
Instead, EPA believes that this rule will
address some of the many
disproportionate impacts to tribal
communities.
EPA defines Environmental Justice
(EJ) as the fair treatment and meaningful
involvement of all people regardless of
race, color, national origin, or income
with respect to the development,
implementation and enforcement of
environmental laws, regulations and
policies.82 Three Executive Orders (E.O.
12898 83, 13985 84 and 14008 85) advance
EJ by calling on Federal agencies to
identify and address disproportionate
impacts on historically underserved,
marginalized, and economically
disadvantaged people. Additionally,
EPA has expressed a commitment to
conducting EJ analyses for rulemakings
as described in the April 30, 2021,
revisions to the Cross-State Air
Pollution Rule (CSAPR).86 This rule is
82 Fair treatment means that ‘‘no group of people
should bear a disproportionate burden of
environmental harms and risks, including those
resulting from the negative environmental
consequences of industrial, governmental and
commercial operations or programs and policies.’’
Meaningful involvement occurs when ‘‘(1)
potentially affected populations have an
appropriate opportunity to participate in decisions
about a proposed activity [e.g., rulemaking] that
will affect their environment and/or health; (2) the
public’s contribution can influence [the EPA’s
rulemaking] decision; (3) the concerns of all
participants involved will be considered in the
decision-making process; and (4) [the EPA will]
seek out and facilitate the involvement of those
potentially affected.’’ A potential EJ concern is
defined as ‘‘the actual or potential lack of fair
treatment or meaningful involvement of minority
populations, low-income populations, tribes, and
tribal peoples in the development, implementation
and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations
and policies.’’ See ‘‘Guidance on Considering
Environmental Justice During the Development of
an Action.’’ Environmental Protection Agency,
www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice/
guidanceconsidering-environmental-justiceduringdevelopment-action. See also https://
www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice.
83 Federal Actions to Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations. Available at https://www.epa.gov/
environmentaljustice/federal-actions-addressenvironmental-justice-minority-populations-andlow.
84 Advancing Racial Equity and Support for
Underserved Communities Through the Federal
Government. Available at https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/01/25/
2021-01753/advancing-racial-equity-and-supportfor-underserved-communities-through-the-federalgovernment.
85 Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and
Abroad. Available at https://
www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/02/01/
2021-02177/tackling-the-climate-crisis-at-homeand-abroad.
86 86 FR 23054, 23162 (April 30, 2021) (‘‘Going
forward, EPA is committed to conducting
environmental justice analysis for rulemakings
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consistent with EPA’s strategic goal of
advancing EJ.87
Environmental impacts to tribes may
be considered under the category of EJ
in recognition that tribes may at times
be more susceptible to impacts from
environmental degradation. In addition,
E.O. 12898 directs Federal agencies, as
appropriate and practical, to evaluate
and communicate the risks associated
with consumption patterns for
populations that rely on fish and/or
wildlife for subsistence. There is a
unique set of EJ considerations for
tribes, particularly where tribes are
exercising their cultural practices, both
on and off their reservations. For EPA,
the government-to-government
relationship and trust responsibility that
the Federal government has with
federally recognized tribal governments
further sets EJ issues for tribes apart
from those in other communities.88
EPA and other Federal agencies focus
on resolving EJ issues affecting tribes
through (1) supporting the tribes’
sovereignty and exercise of their own
environmental authorities and (2) taking
direct action on behalf of the tribes as
part of the Federal government’s tribal
trust responsibility. This proposed
rulemaking is relying on a combination
of both approaches, as discussed below.
Many tribes rely on aquatic and
aquatic-dependent resources for their
lifeways. Attaining and sustaining clean
water to protect human health is
essential to ensuring tribes can continue
to practice these traditional lifeways.
However, due to water quality issues,
many tribes are unable to do so. The
contamination of aquatic food resources
above levels safe to consume in desired
quantities results in what is often
described as a suppression effect. An
illustration of a suppression effect is
when the fish consumption rate for a
based on a framework similar to what is outlined
here, in addition to investigating ways to further
weave environmental justice into the fabric of the
rulemaking process including through enhanced
meaningful engagement with environmental justice
communities.’’).
87 FY2022–2026 EPA Strategic Plan. Available
online at https://www.epa.gov/planandbudget/
strategicplan.
88 EPA recognizes our responsibility to work with
both federally recognized tribes and all other
indigenous peoples, per the EPA Policy on
Environmental Justice for Working with Federally
Recognized Tribes and Indigenous Peoples (2014)
(available online at https://www.epa.gov/
environmentaljustice/epa-policy-environmentaljustice-working-federally-recognized-tribes-and) to
address their EJ concerns. As defined in the policy,
Indigenous Peoples ‘‘includes state-recognized
tribes; indigenous and tribal community-based
organizations; individual members of federally
recognized tribes, including those living on a
different reservation or living outside Indian
country; individual members of state-recognized
tribes; Native Hawaiians; Native Pacific Islanders;
and individual Native Americans.’’
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given tribe reflects a current level of
consumption that is artificially
diminished relative to the tribe’s
heritage fish consumption rate.89 90 91
The negative impacts of suppression
extend well beyond tribal health,
leading to consequences for tribal
economies and cultures as well. Given
that aquatic resources often support a
tribe’s cultural self-determination and
can be pivotal to the economic wellbeing of the community, impacts to
these resources can affect the very
foundation of tribal social and political
organization,92 as well as impact a
tribe’s ability to provide for present and
future generations and the maintenance
of their lifeways.
Tribes have a unique legal and
political status, and environmental
issues affecting tribes must be viewed in
the context of tribal sovereignty. In
giving reserved rights an explicit role in
CWA regulations, EPA’s goal is to
support tribal sovereignty. The
proposed rulemaking recognizes how
critical reserved rights are for many
tribes’ cultural and economic survival
by providing a platform for states and
EPA to consider the nature and scope of
the very rights that tribes have reserved
to themselves and have been enshrined
in legal instruments.
Tribes, unlike other communities
with EJ concerns, cannot be viewed as
subpopulations, differentiated only by
exposures and other vulnerabilities.
Tribal communities’ relationship with
their resources is unique and should be
understood in terms of both the past and
present relationship the particular tribal
communities have with these resources
and their dependence on those
resources. Impacts to tribal communities
may be disproportionate by definition
because of their unique relationship to
the environment.93 It is often the
resource base that provides for their
cultural self-determination and can be
89 National Environmental Justice Advisory
Council (NEJAC). 2002. Fish Consumption and
Environmental Justice. https://www.epa.gov/sites/
default/files/2015-02/documents/fish-consumpreport_1102.pdf. p. vii.
90 EPA. 2016. Idaho Tribal Fish Consumption
Survey. https://www.epa.gov/columbiariver/idahotribal-fish-consumption-survey.
91 Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission, 2019.
Opposition to EPA’s 2019 Actions to Roll Back
Washington’s Human Health Water Quality Criteria,
Docket No. EPA–HQ–OW–2015–0174. Available
online at https://www.regulations.gov/comment/
EPA-HQ-OW-2015-0174-0970.
92 Ranco, D.J., O’Neill, C.A., Donatuto, J., &
Harper, B.L. 2011. Environmental Justice, American
Indians and the Cultural Dilemma: Developing
Environmental Management for Tribal Health and
Well-being. Environmental Justice 4;4, DOI:
10.1089/env.2010.0036.
93 Suagee, D.B. (2003). Environmental Justice and
Indian Country. Human Rights, Vol. 30, No. 4,
p.16–17.
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74377
pivotal to the economic well-being of
the community. Indeed, many of the
reserved rights expressly include
subsistence and economic
components.94 Impacts to their resource
base could affect the very foundation of
their tribal social and political
organization,95 as well as impact their
ability to provide for present and future
generations and the maintenance of
their lifeways.
This proposed rulemaking’s emphasis
on treating the applicable tribe or tribes
as the target population speaks to this
unique status. And the goal of
protecting treaty resources that may not
be otherwise fully protected under the
CWA may indeed have a subsistence
and an economic component. Further,
the concept of addressing suppression,
as described in section IV.C.2.ii. of this
preamble, takes on a unique approach
where tribal members are concerned by
examining not only the current context
but may also look at historical and
cultural practices to establish the
appropriate baseline. Many tribes have
continued their traditional practices
and/or seek to return to those practices,
yet they may have also developed new
approaches and relationships to their
resource base. Both contexts should be
considered in furthering the goal of
protecting resources for which tribes
have reserved rights.
The role these resources play in tribal
communities can be complex.
Understanding which resources, how
they may be used, and in what
quantities, is essential in protecting
tribal sovereignty and the cultural and
economic survival of tribal
communities. And each tribe will likely
have a very different set of values and
relationships with the resources, which
may be different world views from those
of the surrounding community, and
from state and local governments.96
Successful implementation of this
proposed rulemaking therefore
necessitates close coordination with
tribes and a greater understanding of the
unique approaches that tribes may have
toward managing their resources. The
foundation of this coordination in this
94 Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior
Chippewa Indians v. Wisconsin, 758 F. Supp. 1262
(W.D. Wisc. 1991).
95 Ranco, D.J., O’Neill, C.A., Donatuto, J., &
Harper, B.L. (2011). Environmental Justice,
American Indians and the Cultural Dilemma:
Developing Environmental Management for Tribal
Health and Well-being. Environmental Justice 4;4,
DOI: 10.1089/env.2010.0036.
96 Ranco, D.J., O’Neill, C.A., Donatuto, J., &
Harper, B.L. (2011). Environmental Justice,
American Indians and the Cultural Dilemma:
Developing Environmental Management for Tribal
Health and Well-being. Environmental Justice 4;4,
DOI: 10.1089/env.2010.0036
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WQS context necessarily includes the
state, with CWA authority to set
standards in the reserved rights areas in
question, local governments, who often
have even more direct contact with
tribal members and their governments,
tribes holding those rights, and the
Federal government. This proposed
rulemaking recognizes the importance
of coordination with tribes by
establishing an express mechanism for
tribal input in the state WQS setting
process.
Reaching consensus can pose
challenges, particularly given the deepseated sense of stewardship and
responsibility tribes often feel toward
these resources even when under the
jurisdiction of the state. But it is often
when tribal resources are not under the
jurisdiction of the tribes themselves that
tribes see the biggest environmental
justice impacts.97 It is EPA’s goal that
the sovereignty and management role of
both state and tribal governments will
be better understood and aligned
through implementation of this
rulemaking.
EPA recognizes that tribes without
federally reserved rights to aquatic or
aquatic-dependent resources will not be
directly impacted by this rulemaking.
The agency also acknowledges that
since this rulemaking only covers
locations with reserved rights, other
aquatic resources upon which tribes
depend may not be covered. It is EPA’s
expectation that many of the
coordination and collaboration
processes that will be developed to
implement this rule will also lead to
better protection of aquatic and aquaticdependent resources not referenced in
treaties and similar instruments because
this rulemaking aims to facilitate greater
coordination between state and tribal
governments. EPA will continue to work
with states and tribes to help reach this
goal. While this rulemaking does not
address all obstacles to the full exercise
of these rights, EPA believes it takes a
positive step in that direction.
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List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 131
Environmental protection, Indians—
lands, Intergovernmental relations,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Water pollution control.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, EPA proposes to amend 40
CFR part 131 as follows:
97 Id
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PART 131—WATER QUALITY
STANDARDS
Subpart B—Establishment of Water
Quality Standards
1. The authority citation for part 131
continues to read as follows:
■
■
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.
Subpart A—General Provisions
2. Amend § 131.3 by adding
paragraphs (r) and (s) to read as follows:
■
§ 131.3
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(r) Tribal reserved rights are any rights
to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent
resources reserved or held by tribes,
either expressly or implicitly, through
treaties, statutes, executive orders, or
other sources of Federal law.
(s) Right holders are tribes holding
rights to aquatic and/or aquaticdependent resources pursuant to an
applicable treaty, statute, executive
order, or other source of Federal law.
■ 3. Amend § 131.5 by adding paragraph
(a)(9) and revising paragraph (b) to read
as follows:
§ 131.5
EPA authority.
(a) * * *
(9) Whether any State adopted water
quality standards protect tribal reserved
rights, where applicable, consistent with
§ 131.9.
(b) If EPA determines that the State’s
or Tribe’s water quality standards are
consistent with the factors listed in
paragraphs (a)(1) through (9) of this
section, EPA approves the standards.
EPA must disapprove the State’s or
Tribe’s water quality standards and
promulgate Federal standards under
section 303(c)(4), and for Great Lakes
States or Great Lakes Tribes under
section 118(c)(2)(C) of the Act, if State
or Tribal adopted standards are not
consistent with the factors listed in
paragraphs (a)(1) through (9) of this
section. EPA may also promulgate a new
or revised standard when necessary to
meet the requirements of the Act.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Amend § 131.6 by adding paragraph
(g) to read as follows:
§ 131.6 Minimum requirements for water
quality standards submission.
*
*
*
*
*
(g) Where applicable, information
which will aid the agency in evaluating
whether the submission protects tribal
reserved rights consistent with § 131.9,
including:
(1) Information about the scope,
nature, and current and past use of the
tribal reserved rights, as informed by the
right holders; and
(2) Data and methods used to develop
the water quality standards.
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5. Add § 131.9 to subpart B to read as
follows:
§ 131.9
Protection of tribal reserved rights.
(a) Water quality standards must
protect tribal reserved rights applicable
to waters subject to such standards. To
protect tribal reserved rights, water
quality standards must, to the extent
supported by available data and
information, be established to protect:
(1) The exercise of tribal reserved
rights unsuppressed by water quality or
availability of the aquatic or aquaticdependent resource; and
(2) The health of the right holders to
at least the same risk level as provided
to the general population of the State.
(b) In reviewing State water quality
standards submissions under this
section, EPA will initiate tribal
consultation with the right holders,
consistent with applicable EPA tribal
consultation policies, in determining
whether State water quality standards
protect applicable tribal reserved rights
in accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section.
(c) In order to meet the requirements
in paragraph (a) of this section, States
must:
(1) Designate uses consistent with
§ 131.10 that either expressly
incorporate protection of the tribal
reserved rights or encompass such
rights; and
(2) Establish water quality criteria
consistent with § 131.11 to protect tribal
reserved rights; and/or
(3) Use applicable antidegradation
requirements consistent with § 131.12 to
maintain and protect water quality that
protects tribal reserved rights.
Subpart C—Procedures for Review and
Revision of Water Quality Standards
6.Amend § 131.20 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
■
§ 131.20 State review and revision of water
quality standards.
(a) State review. The State shall from
time to time, but at least once every 3
years, hold public hearings for the
purpose of reviewing applicable water
quality standards adopted pursuant to
§§ 131.10 through 131.15 and Federally
promulgated water quality standards
and, as appropriate, modifying and
adopting standards. This review shall
include evaluating whether there are
tribal reserved rights applicable to State
waters and whether water quality
standards need to be revised to protect
those rights pursuant to § 131.9. The
State shall also re-examine any
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waterbody segment with water quality
standards that do not include the uses
specified in section 101(a)(2) of the Act
every 3 years to determine if any new
information has become available. If
such new information indicates that the
uses specified in section 101(a)(2) of the
Act are attainable, the State shall revise
its standards accordingly. Procedures
States establish for identifying and
reviewing water bodies for review
should be incorporated into their
Continuing Planning Process. In
addition, if a State does not adopt new
or revised criteria for parameters for
which EPA has published new or
updated CWA section 304(a) criteria
recommendations, then the State shall
provide an explanation when it submits
the results of its triennial review to the
Regional Administrator consistent with
CWA section 303(c)(1) and the
requirements of paragraph (c) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
[FR Doc. 2022–26240 Filed 12–2–22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 372
[EPA–HQ–TRI–2022–0270; FRL–8741–03–
OCSPP]
RIN 2070–AK97
Changes to Reporting Requirements
for Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl
Substances and to Supplier
Notifications for Chemicals of Special
Concern; Community Right-to-Know
Toxic Chemical Release Reporting
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) is proposing to add perand polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS)
subject to reporting under the
Emergency Planning and Community
Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA) and the
Pollution Prevention Act (PPA)
pursuant to the National Defense
Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2020
(NDAA) to the list of Lower Thresholds
for Chemicals of Special Concern
(chemicals of special concern). These
PFAS already have a lower reporting
threshold of 100 pounds. The addition
of these PFAS to the list of chemicals of
special concern will cause such PFAS to
be subject to the same reporting
requirements as other chemicals of
special concern (i.e., it would eliminate
the use of the de minimis exemption
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and the option to use Form A and
would limit the use of range reporting
for PFAS). Removing the availability of
these burden-reduction reporting
options will result in a more complete
picture of the releases and waste
management quantities for these PFAS.
In addition, EPA is proposing to remove
the availability of the de minimis
exemption for purposes of the Supplier
Notification Requirements for all
chemicals on the list of chemicals of
special concern. This change will help
ensure that purchasers of mixtures and
trade name products containing such
chemicals are informed of their
presence in mixtures and products they
purchase.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before February 3, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
identified by docket identification (ID)
number EPA–HQ–TRI–2022–0270,
using the Federal eRulemaking Portal at
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
online instructions for submitting
comments. Do not submit electronically
any information you consider to be
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Additional
instructions on commenting or visiting
the docket, along with more information
about dockets generally, is available at
https://www.epa.gov/dockets.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
technical information contact: Daniel R.
Ruedy, Data Gathering and Analysis
Division (7406M), Office of Pollution
Prevention and Toxics, Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania
Ave. NW, Washington, DC 20460–0001;
telephone number: (202) 564–7974;
email: ruedy.daniel@epa.gov.
For general information contact: The
Emergency Planning and Community
Right-to-Know Hotline; telephone
numbers: toll free at (800) 424–9346
(select menu option 3) or (703) 348–
5070 in the Washington, DC Area and
International; or go to https://
www.epa.gov/home/epa-hotlines.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
You may be potentially affected by
this action if you manufacture, process,
or otherwise use listed PFAS or any
chemicals listed under 40 CFR 372.28.
The following list of North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS)
codes is not intended to be exhaustive,
but rather provides a guide to help
readers determine whether this action
applies to them. Potentially affected
entities may include:
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74379
• Facilities included in the following
NAICS manufacturing codes
(corresponding to Standard Industrial
Classification (SIC) codes 20 through
39): 311*, 312*, 313*, 314*, 315*, 316,
321, 322, 323*, 324, 325*, 326*, 327,
331, 332, 333, 334*, 335*, 336, 337*,
339*, 111998*, 211130*, 212324*,
212325*, 212393*, 212399*, 488390*,
511110, 511120, 511130, 511140*,
511191, 511199, 512230*, 512250*,
519130*, 541713*, 541715* or 811490*.
*Exceptions and/or limitations exist for
these NAICS codes.
• Facilities included in the following
NAICS codes (corresponding to SIC
codes other than SIC codes 20 through
39): 211130 (corresponds to SIC code
SIC 1321, Natural Gas Liquids and SIC
2819, Industrial Inorganic Chemicals,
Not Elsewhere Classified); or 212111,
212112, 212113 (corresponds to SIC
code 12, Coal Mining (except 1241)); or
212221, 212222, 212230, 212299
(corresponds to SIC code 10, Metal
Mining (except 1011, 1081, and 1094));
or 221111, 221112, 221113, 221118,
221121, 221122, 221330 (limited to
facilities that combust coal and/or oil
for the purpose of generating power for
distribution in commerce) (corresponds
to SIC codes 4911, 4931, and 4939,
Electric Utilities); or 424690, 425110,
425120 (limited to facilities previously
classified in SIC code 5169, Chemicals
and Allied Products, Not Elsewhere
Classified); or 424710 (corresponds to
SIC code 5171, Petroleum Bulk
Terminals and Plants); or 562112
(limited to facilities primarily engaged
in solvent recovery services on a
contract or fee basis (previously
classified under SIC code 7389,
Business Services, NEC)); or 562211,
562212, 562213, 562219, 562920
(limited to facilities regulated under the
Resource Conservation and Recovery
Act, subtitle C, 42 U.S.C. 6921 et seq.)
(corresponds to SIC code 4953, Refuse
Systems).
• Federal facilities.
A more detailed description of the
types of facilities covered by the NAICS
codes subject to reporting under EPCRA
section 313 can be found at: https://
www.epa.gov/toxics-release-inventorytri-program/tri-covered-industry-sectors.
To determine whether your facility
would be affected by this action, you
should carefully examine the
applicability criteria in part 372, subpart
B of title 40 of the Code of Federal
Regulations. Federal facilities are
required to report under Executive
Order 14008 (https://www.govinfo.gov/
content/pkg/FR-2021-02-01/pdf/202102177.pdf), as explained in the Council
on Environmental Quality’s 2021
memorandum to Chief Sustainability
E:\FR\FM\05DEP1.SGM
05DEP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 87, Number 232 (Monday, December 5, 2022)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 74361-74379]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2022-26240]
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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
40 CFR Part 131
[EPA-HQ-OW-2021-0791; FRL-8599-01-OW]
RIN 2040-AG17
Water Quality Standards Regulatory Revisions To Protect Tribal
Reserved Rights
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Proposed rule.
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SUMMARY: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing
revisions to the Federal Clean Water Act (CWA) water quality standards
(WQS) regulation to clarify and prescribe how WQS must protect aquatic
and aquatic-dependent resources reserved to tribes through treaties,
statutes, executive orders, or other sources of Federal law, where
applicable.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before March 6, 2023. Comments
on the information collection provisions submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) are
best assured of consideration by OMB if OMB receives a copy of your
comments on or before January 4, 2023. Public Hearing: EPA will hold
two online public hearings during the public comment period. Please
refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section for additional
information on the public hearings.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OW-2021-0791, by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov/
(our preferred method). Follow the online instructions for submitting
comments.
Mail: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, EPA Docket
Center, Office of Water Docket, Mail Code 28221T, 1200 Pennsylvania
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460.
Hand Delivery or Courier: EPA Docket Center, WJC West
Building, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20004.
The Docket Center's hours of operations are 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m., Monday
through Friday (except Federal holidays).
Instructions: All submissions received must include the Docket ID
No. for this rulemaking. Comments received may be posted without change
to https://www.regulations.gov, including any personal information
provided. For detailed instructions on sending comments and additional
information on the rulemaking process, see the ``Public Participation''
heading of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document.
EPA is offering two online public hearings on this proposed
rulemaking. Refer to the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section below for
additional information.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jennifer Brundage, Office of Water,
Standards and Health Protection Division (4305T), Environmental
Protection Agency, 1200 Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20460;
telephone number: (202) 566-1265; email address:
[email protected]. Additional information is also available
online at https://www.epa.gov/wqs-tech/protecting-tribal-reserved-rights-in-WQS.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: This proposed rule is organized as follows:
I. Public Participation
A. Written Comments
B. Public Hearings
II. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
III. Background
A. Clean Water Act Requirements
B. Tribal Reserved Rights
C. Tribal Reserved Rights and Water Quality Standards
IV. Proposed Revisions to the Federal WQS Regulation
A. Why is EPA proposing these revisions?
B. What is EPA proposing?
C. How would the proposed regulatory revisions be applied?
D. EPA's Role
E. How would the proposed regulatory revisions apply to States
in the Great Lakes system?
F. Role of Other WQS Provisions in Protecting Tribal Reserved
Rights
[[Page 74362]]
V. Economic Analysis
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and
Executive Order 13563 Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With
Indian Tribal Governments
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From
Environmental Health and Safety Risks
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect
Energy Supply, Distribution, or Use
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income
Populations
I. Public Participation
A. Written Comments
Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-2021-
0791, at https://www.regulations.gov (our preferred method), or the
other methods identified in the ADDRESSES section. Once submitted,
comments cannot be edited or removed from the docket. EPA may publish
any comment received to its public docket. Do not submit to EPA's
docket at https://www.regulations.gov any information you consider to
be Confidential Business Information (CBI), Proprietary Business
Information (PBI), or other information whose disclosure is restricted
by statute. Multimedia submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
accompanied by a written comment. The written comment is considered the
official comment and should include discussion of all points you wish
to make. EPA will generally not consider comments or comment contents
located outside of the primary submission (i.e., on the web, cloud, or
other file sharing system). Please visit https://www.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets for additional submission methods; the full EPA
public comment policy; information about CBI or multimedia submissions;
and general guidance on making effective comments.
B. Public Hearings
EPA is offering two online public hearings so that interested
parties may provide oral comments on this proposed rulemaking. For more
details on the online public hearings and to register to attend the
hearings, please visit https://www.epa.gov/wqs-tech/protecting-tribal-reserved-rights-in-WQS.
II. General Information
A. Does this action apply to me?
States \1\ responsible for administering or overseeing water
quality programs may be affected by this rulemaking, as states may need
to consider and implement new provisions, or revise existing
provisions, in their WQS. Federally recognized Indian tribes \2\ with
reserved rights \3\ to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent resources may
also be affected by this rulemaking. Entities that are subject to CWA
regulatory programs, such as industries, stormwater management
districts, or publicly owned treatment works (POTWs) that discharge
pollutants to waters of the United States could be indirectly affected
by this rulemaking. Dischargers that could potentially be affected
include the following:
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\1\ Pursuant to 40 CFR 131.3(j), ``states'' include the 50
states, the District of Columbia, Guam, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, Virgin Islands, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, and Indian tribes that EPA determines to
be eligible for purposes of the WQS program.
\2\ See Federally Recognized Indian Tribe List Act of 1944, 25
U.S.C. 479a. The current list can be found at 87 FR 4636 through
4641 (January 28, 2022).
\3\ EPA proposes to define ``tribal reserved rights'' as ``any
rights to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent resources reserved or
held by tribes, either expressly or implicitly, through treaties,
statutes, executive orders, or other sources of Federal law.''
Table 1--Dischargers Potentially Affected by This Rulemaking
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Examples of potentially affected
Category entities
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Industry.......................... Industries discharging pollutants to
waters of the United States.
Municipalities.................... POTWs or other facilities
discharging pollutants to waters of
the United States.
Stormwater Management Districts... Entities responsible for managing
stormwater runoff.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a
guide for readers regarding entities that could be indirectly affected
by this action. If you have questions regarding the applicability of
this action to a particular entity, consult the person listed in the
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
III. Background
A. Clean Water Act Requirements
The CWA establishes the basic structure for regulating pollutant
discharges into waters of the United States. In the CWA, Congress
established the national objective to ``restore and maintain the
chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters,''
and to achieve ``wherever attainable, an interim goal of water quality
which provides for the protection and propagation of fish, shellfish,
and wildlife and provides for recreation in and on the water'' (CWA
sections 101(a) and 101(a)(2)).
CWA section 303(c) directs states to adopt WQS for waters of the
United States. The core components of WQS are designated uses, water
quality criteria, and antidegradation requirements. Designated uses
establish the environmental objectives for a water body, such as public
drinking water supply, propagation of fish, shellfish and wildlife, and
recreation. Water quality criteria define the minimum conditions
necessary to achieve those environmental objectives. Antidegradation
requirements maintain and protect water quality.
WQS serve as the basis for several CWA programs, including:
Section 303(d) water body assessments and determinations
of total maximum daily loads (TMDLs);
Section 401 certifications of Federal licenses and
permits;
Water quality-based effluent limits in permits issued
through state or National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System
(NPDES) Programs under section 402; and
Section 404 permits for dredged or fill material.
Section 303(c)(2)(A) of the CWA provides that ``[water quality]
standards shall be such as to protect the public health or welfare,
enhance the quality of water and serve the purposes of this chapter.
Such standards shall be established taking into consideration
[[Page 74363]]
their use and value for public water supplies, propagation of fish and
wildlife, recreational purposes, and agricultural, industrial, and
other purposes, and also taking into consideration their use and value
for navigation.'' CWA section 303(c)(2)(A) and EPA's implementing
regulation at 40 CFR part 131 require, among other things, that a
state's WQS specify appropriate designated uses of the waters and water
quality criteria to protect those uses. Such criteria must be based on
sound scientific rationale, must contain sufficient parameters to
protect the designated use, must support the most sensitive use where
multiple use designations apply, and may be expressed in either
narrative or numeric form.\4\ See 40 CFR 131.11(a) and (b). In
addition, 40 CFR 131.10(b) provides that in designating uses of a water
body and establishing criteria to protect those uses, the state shall
``. . . ensure that its water quality standards provide for the
attainment and maintenance of the water quality standards of downstream
waters.''
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\4\ Special requirements apply to ``priority toxic pollutants.''
CWA Section 303(c)(2)(B) requires states to adopt numeric criteria,
where available, for all toxic pollutants listed pursuant to CWA
Section 307(a)(1) for which EPA has published 304(a) criteria, as
necessary to support the states' designated uses. ``Priority toxic
pollutants'' are identified in 40 CFR part 423, Appendix A--126
Priority Pollutants. Consistent with Sec. 131.11(a)(2), where a
state or authorized tribe adopts narrative criteria for priority
pollutants to protect designated uses, it must also provide
information identifying the method by which it intends to regulate
point source discharges of priority pollutants in water quality-
limited waters based on such narrative criteria.
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Antidegradation requirements provide a framework for maintaining
and protecting water quality that has already been achieved (40 CFR
131.12). States can also choose to include general policies in their
WQS that affect WQS implementation, such as WQS variance policies and
mixing zone policies (40 CFR 131.13).
States are required to review applicable WQS at least once every
three years (``triennial review'') and, if appropriate, to revise or
adopt new standards (CWA section 303(c)(1)). Any new or revised WQS
must be submitted to EPA for review. If EPA disapproves a state's new
or revised WQS, the CWA provides the state ninety days to adopt a
revised WQS that meets CWA requirements. If a state fails to meet that
deadline, EPA is required to promptly propose and promulgate a new
standard that meets CWA requirements.
CWA section 303(c)(4)(B) authorizes the Administrator to determine,
even in the absence of a state submission, that a new or revised
standard is necessary to meet CWA requirements. Once the Administrator
makes such a determination, the agency must ``promptly'' propose an
appropriate WQS and finalize it within 90 days unless the state adopts
an acceptable standard in the interim. CWA section 501(a) authorizes
the Administrator to ``prescribe such regulations as are necessary to
carry out his functions under this chapter.'' Finally, as further
discussed in section III.C. of this preamble, CWA section 511(a)(3)
provides that the Act ``shall not be construed as . . . affecting or
impairing the provisions of any treaty of the United States.''
B. Tribal Reserved Rights
For the purposes of this proposed rulemaking, ``tribal reserved
rights'' means any rights to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent resources
reserved or held by tribes, either expressly or implicitly, through
treaties, statutes, executive orders, or other sources of Federal
law.\5\ Tribal reserved rights as defined in this proposed rulemaking
generally do not address the quantification of Winters rights.\6\ The
Court has described tribal reserved rights to fish and access fishing
locations as ``not much less necessary to the existence of the Indians
than the atmosphere they breathed[.]'' \7\ EPA recognizes that tribal
reserved rights to use and access natural and cultural resources are an
intrinsic part of tribal life and are of deep cultural, economic, and
subsistence importance to tribes.\8\
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\5\ Treaty rights are ``reserved'' by tribes, because, as the
U.S. Supreme Court has explained, treaties are ``not a grant of
rights to the Indians, but a grant of rights from them, a
reservation of those not granted.'' United States v. Winans, 198
U.S. 371, 381 (1905).
\6\ Under Winters v. United States and its progeny, the
establishment of a Federal reservation (Indian or otherwise)
implicitly reserves sufficient water to accomplish the purposes of
the reservation. 207 U.S. 564, 576 (1908); Cappaert v. United
States, 426 U.S. 128, 139 (1976); Arizona v. California, 373 U.S.
546, 597-602 (1963).
\7\ Winans, 198 U.S. at 381.
\8\ See 2021 Memorandum of Understanding Regarding Interagency
Coordination and Collaboration for the Protection of Tribal Treaty
Rights and Reserved Rights. Available online at https://www.doi.gov/sites/doi.gov/files/interagency-mou-protecting-tribal-treaty-and-reserved-rights-11-15-2021.pdf.
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The U.S. Constitution defines treaties as part of the supreme law
of the land, with the same legal force as Federal statutes.\9\ From
1778 to 1871, the U.S.' relations with tribes were defined and
conducted largely through treaty-making. In 1871, Congress stopped
making treaties with tribes,\10\ and subsequent agreements between
tribes and the Federal government were instead generally memorialized
through Executive orders, statutes, and other agreements, such as
congressionally enacted Indian land claim settlements. Instruments
other than treaties may also reserve tribal rights, with equally
binding effect.\11\ As one court explained, generally ``it makes no
difference whether . . . [tribal] rights derive from treaty, statute or
executive order, unless Congress has provided otherwise.'' \12\
Pursuant to the Constitution's Supremacy Clause, treaties and statutes
also bind states.\13\
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\9\ U.S. Constitution, Art. VI, cl. 2 (``This constitution, and
the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance
thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the
authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the
land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything
in the constitution or laws of any State to the contrary
notwithstanding.'')
\10\ See Act of Mar. 3, 1871, Sec. 1, 16 Stat. 544 (codified as
carried forward at 25 U.S.C. 71).
\11\ See Cohen's Handbook of Federal Indian Law Sec. 18.02
(Nell Jessup Newton et al eds., 2005) (``Statutes and agreements
that are ratified by Congress become, like treaties, the supreme law
of the land'').
\12\ Parravano v. Masten, 70 F.3d 539, 545 (9th Cir. 1995),
cert. denied, Parravano v. Babbitt, 518 U.S. 1016 (1996); see also
United States v. Dion, 476 U.S. 734, 745, n.8 (``Indian reservations
created by statute, agreement, or executive order normally carry
with them the same implicit hunting rights as those created by
treaty.'').
\13\ Antoine v. Washington, 420 U.S. 194, 205 (1975) (like a
treaty, when Congress by statute ratifies an agreement that reserves
tribal rights, ``State qualification of the rights is precluded by
force of the Supremacy Clause, and neither an express provision
precluding state qualification nor the consent of the State [is]
required''); U.S. v. Washington, 853 F.3d 946, 966 (9th Cir. 2017)
(Holding that ``in building and maintaining barrier culverts within
the Case Area, Washington has violated, and is continuing to
violate, its obligation to the Tribes under the Treaties.'') aff'd,
138 S.Ct. 1832 (per curiam); Skokomish Indian Tribe v. United
States, 410 F.3d 506, 512 (9th Cir. 2005) (Treaties ``constitute the
`supreme law of the land''' and have ``been found to provide rights
of action for equitable relief against non-contracting parties,''
and such equitable relief ``ensures compliance with a treaty; that
is, it forces state governmental entities and their officers to
conform their conduct to federal law.''); see also Minnesota v.
Mille Lacs Band of Chippewa Indians, 526 U.S. 172, 204 (1999)
(noting that ``[a]lthough States have important interests in
regulating wildlife and natural resources within their borders, this
authority is shared with the Federal Government when the Federal
Government exercises one of its enumerated constitutional powers,
such as treaty making,'' and accordingly, the treaty in that case
gave the Chippewa Tribe ``the right to hunt, fish, and gather in the
ceded territory free of . . . state, regulation.'').
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Courts generally adhere to several guiding principles in
interpreting treaties and other Federal legal instruments regarding
Indians tribes known as the ``Indian canons of construction.'' In
accordance with these canons, ``Indian treaties are to be interpreted
liberally in favor of the Indians, and any ambiguities are to be
[[Page 74364]]
resolved in their favor.'' \14\ Further, treaties ``are to be construed
as the Indians would have understood them'' at the time of signing.\15\
Although Congress may abrogate Indian treaty rights, those rights
remain absent clear evidence of congressional intent.\16\ While these
Indian canons of construction originated in the context of treaty
interpretation by Federal courts, courts have also applied the canons
in other contexts,\17\ including determining the scope of tribes'
rights under statutes or executive orders setting aside land for
tribes.\18\ Some tribes have treaty rights that are no longer
enforceable because they have been abrogated or otherwise superseded by
Congress in later Federal statutes.\19\ In addition, some tribes
negotiated treaties with the U.S. government that were not
ratified.\20\
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\14\ Mille Lacs, 526 U.S. at 200 (internal citations omitted);
see also County of Oneida v. Oneida Indian Nation, 470 U.S. 226, 247
(1985) (``it is well established that treaties should be construed
liberally in favor of the Indians with ambiguous provisions
interpreted for their benefit'').
\15\ Mille Lacs, 526 U.S. at 196 (``[W]e interpret Indian
treaties to give effect to the terms as the Indians themselves would
have understood them.''); Jones v. Meehan, 175 U.S. 1, 11 (1899) (A
``treaty must therefore be construed, not according to the technical
meaning of its words to learned lawyers, but in the sense in which
they would naturally be understood by the Indians.'').
\16\ Mille Lacs, 526 U.S. at 202 (``Congress may abrogate Indian
treaty rights, but it must clearly express its intent to do so.'');
United States v. Dion, 476 U.S. 734, 739-40 (1986) (noting that in
finding congressional intent to abrogate ``[w]hat is essential is
clear evidence that Congress actually considered the conflict
between its intended action on the one hand and the Indian treaty
rights on the other, and chose to resolve that conflict by
abrogating the treaty'').
\17\ See e.g., Hagen v. Utah, 510 U.S. 399, 423-24 (1994) (``For
more than 150 years, we have applied this canon in all areas of
Indian law to construe congressional ambiguity or silence, in
treaties, statutes, executive orders, and agreements, to the
Indians' benefit.''); County of Yakima v. Confederated Tribes, 502
U.S. 251, 268-69 (1992) (quoting Montana v. Blackfeet Tribe, 471 U.
S. 759, 766 (1985)) (``statutes are to be construed liberally in
favor of the Indians, with ambiguous provisions interpreted to their
benefit''); Alaska Pacific Fisheries Co. v. U.S., 248 U.S. 78, 89
(1918) (``statutes passed for the benefit of dependent Indian tribes
or communities are to be liberally construed, doubtful expressions
being resolved in favor of the Indians''); but see Penobscot Nation
v. Frey, 3 F.4th 484, 502 (1st Cir. 2021) (holding that the Indian
canons of construction were inapplicable to statutes settling Indian
land claims in Maine).
\18\ See Winters, 207 U.S. at 576-77 (applying the canons and
holding that the Tribe was entitled to federally reserved rights to
the Milk River); Parravano, 70 F.3d at 544 (applying the canons to
determine the scope of tribes' reserved fishing rights under
executive orders and a statute).
\19\ U.S. Constitution, Art. II, Sec. 2, cl. 2; S. Dakota v.
Bourland, 508 U.S. 679, 690 (1993) (Statutory language providing
that ``the sum paid by the Government to the Tribe for former trust
lands taken for the Oahe Dam and Reservoir Project, `shall be in
final and complete settlement of all claims, rights, and demands' of
the Tribe or its allottees'' made clear that the Tribe no longer
retained its treaty right to regulate hunting and fishing); Dion,
476 U.S. at 739 (While Congress has the power to abrogate a treaty,
``the intention to abrogate or modify a treaty is not to be lightly
imputed . . . Indian treaty rights are too fundamental to be easily
cast aside.''); U.S. v. McAlester, 604 F.2d 42, 62-63 (10th Cir.
1979) (describing the history of the Choctaw Tribe's treaty-making
with the United States, including several treaties in the late 1700s
and early 1800s providing rights to lands that were later lost due
to the Indian Removal Act of 1830, which ``finally forced the
Choctaw Nation to agree . . . to relinquish all its lands east of
the Mississippi River and to settle on lands west of the Arkansas
Territory'').
\20\ Robinson v. Jewell, 790 F.3d 910, 918 (9th Cir. 2015)
(holding that an 1851 Treaty was never ratified by the Senate and
thus carries no legal effect.'').
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Tribal reserved rights may apply to waters in Indian country as
well as outside of Indian country \21\ and may be express or
implied.\22\ For example, in certain states in the Great Lakes region,
tribal reserved rights include hunting, fishing, and gathering rights
both within tribes' reservations, as well as rights retained outside
these reservations in specific areas that the tribes ceded to the
Federal government.\23\ In the Pacific Northwest, treaties explicitly
reserved to many tribes rights to fish in their ``usual and
accustomed'' fishing grounds and stations both within and outside their
reservation boundaries and to hunt and gather throughout their
traditional territories.\24\ In addition to tribes whose rights are
reserved through treaties, other tribes have statutorily-reserved
rights. For example, tribes in Maine have statutorily-reserved rights
to practice traditional sustenance lifeways such as fishing in certain
waters.\25\
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\21\ Indian country is defined at 18 U.S.C. 1151 as: (a) All
land within the limits of any Indian reservation under the
jurisdiction of the United States Government, notwithstanding the
issuance of any patent, and, including rights-of-way running through
the reservation; (b) all dependent Indian communities within the
borders of the United States whether within the original or
subsequently acquired territory thereof, and whether within or
without the limits of a state; and (c) all Indian allotments, the
Indian titles to which have not been extinguished, including rights-
of-way running through the same.
\22\ See Menominee Tribe of Indians v. U.S., 391 U.S. 404, 406,
(1968) (Noting that ``nothing was said in the 1854 treaty about
hunting and fishing rights,'' but holding that such rights were
implied, as the treaty phrase ```to be held as Indian lands are
held' includes the right to fish and to hunt.''); Makah Indian Tribe
v. Quileute Indian Tribe, 873 F.3d 1157, 1160 (9th Cir. 2017), cert.
denied 139 S. Ct. 106 (2018) (Affirming district court finding that,
based on historical and linguistic evidence, that use of the term
``fish'' in the Treaty of Olympia encompassed whales and seals).
\23\ See e.g., Treaty with the Chippewas, 1837, art. 5, 7 Stat.
536 (tribes retained ``[t]he privilege of hunting, fishing, and
gathering the wild rice, upon the lands, the rivers and the lakes
included in the territory ceded''); Minnesota v. Mille Lacs Band of
Chippewa Indians, 526 U.S. 172 (1999).
\24\ See, e.g., Treaty with the Nez Perces, 1855, art. 3, 12
Stat. 957; Treaty with the Nisquallys, etc., 1854, art. 3, 10 Stat.
1132 (Treaty of Medicine Creek).
\25\ See Maine Implementing Act, 30 M.R.S 6207(4), (9).
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Courts also have held that tribal reserved rights encompass
subsidiary rights that are not explicitly addressed in treaty or
statutory language but are necessary to render those rights
meaningful.\26\ For example, in United States v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371,
381 (1905), the Supreme Court explained that the right of ``taking fish
at all usual and accustomed places,'' necessarily included the right to
cross private lands to reach those fishing areas, noting that ``[n]o
other conclusion would give effect to the treaty.'' \27\
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\26\ See, e.g., U.S. v. Washington, 853 F.3d 946, 966 (9th Cir.
2017) (Holding that tribes' treaty-reserved right to fish in their
usual and accustomed areas imposed a duty on the State of Washington
to replace or modify road culverts to allow the free passage of
salmon) aff'd, 138 S.Ct. 1832 (per curiam); Winans, 198 U.S. at 384
(Holding that a tribe's treaty fishing right also encompassed the
right to cross private property to access the tribe's traditional
fishing ground); Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians
v. Director, Mich. Dept of Nat. Resources, 141 F.3d 635 (6th Cir.
1989) (Finding that the treaty right to fish commercially in the
Great Lakes included a right to temporary mooring of treaty fishing
vessels at municipal marinas because without such mooring the
Indians could not fish commercially).
\27\ See also Washington, 853 F.3d at 965 (Explaining that the
right of access to ``usual and accustomed fishing places would be
worthless without harvestable fish.'')
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C. Tribal Reserved Rights and Water Quality Standards
Tribal reserved rights to aquatic resources could be impaired by
water quality levels that limit right holders' ability to utilize their
rights. Indeed, as described in section III.B of this preamble, courts
have recognized that the right to a specific resource necessarily
includes attendant protections in order to be rendered meaningful.\28\
In exercising its CWA section 303(c) authority, EPA has an obligation
to ensure that its actions are consistent with treaties, statutes,
executive orders, and other sources of Federal law reflecting tribal
reserved rights. While there may be instances where a later-enacted
statutory provision intentionally limits reserved rights,\29\ that is
not the case with section 303(c) of the CWA. First, with respect to
[[Page 74365]]
treaty-reserved rights, the CWA explicitly provides in section
511(a)(3) that the Act ``shall not be construed as . . . affecting or
impairing the provisions of any treaty of the United States.'' Second,
more broadly, the statute's structure and objectives for the
establishment and oversight of WQS, including the discretion afforded
to EPA, provide ample room for the agency to consider and give effect
to all applicable reserved rights.
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\28\ Consistent with this precedent, the Department of the
Interior has affirmed the principle that ``to be rendered
meaningful, [tribal reserved] fishing rights by necessity include
some subsidiary rights to water quality.'' Letter from Hilary C.
Tompkins, Solicitor, DOI, to Avi Garbow, General Counsel, EPA,
regarding Maine's WQS and Tribal Fishing Rights of Maine Tribes
(January 30, 2015).
\29\ See Dion, 476 U.S. at 739 (Finding that ``Congressional
intent to abrogate Indian treaty rights to hunt bald and golden
eagles is certainly strongly suggested on the face of the Eagle
Protection Act.'').
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In CWA section 303(c), Congress established broad directives and
objectives governing the establishment of WQS. Specifically, the CWA
requires that WQS shall consist of designated uses and criteria to
protect those uses, and must protect the public health and welfare,
enhance the quality of water, and serve the purposes of the Act. See
CWA section 303(c)(2)(A). In implementing section 303(c), EPA's
longstanding position has been, consistent with the objectives of the
CWA, to ``use standards as a basis of restoring and maintaining the
integrity of the Nation's waters.'' \30\ Where tribes have reserved
rights to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent resources, protection of
such rights falls within the ambit of these broad statutory directives
and objectives and is consistent with EPA's longstanding general
approach to implementing CWA section 303(c), including through adoption
and revision of its WQS regulation.
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\30\ Water Quality Standards Regulation, 48 FR 51400 (November
8, 1983).
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CWA section 501 authorizes the agency to prescribe regulations as
necessary to implement the Act.\31\ Pursuant to that authority, EPA has
issued a regulation that provides a framework for implementing CWA
section 303(c) and related sections, translating the broad statutory
provisions in section 303(c) into specific requirements consistent with
the statutory scheme. Accordingly, EPA's implementing regulation at 40
CFR part 131 specifies requirements for states and authorized tribes to
develop WQS for EPA review that are consistent with the Act. EPA's
existing WQS regulation does not, however, explicitly address how WQS
must protect tribal reserved rights.
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\31\ See also E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Train, 430 U.S.
112, 132 (1977) (``501(a) . . . gives EPA the power to make `such
regulations as are necessary to carry out' its functions'').
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EPA established the core of the WQS regulation in a final rule
issued in 1983. Since that time, the agency has modified 40 CFR part
131 three times.\32\ The agency has explained that such updates have
been in response to new challenges that ``necessitate a more effective,
flexible and practicable approach for the implementation of WQS and
protecting water quality,'' and that such updates are informed by the
extensive experience with WQS implementation by states, authorized
tribes, and EPA.\33\ As described further below, EPA has previously
addressed tribal reserved rights in exercising its oversight authority
in reviewing state-adopted WQS. In this rulemaking, EPA is exercising
its discretion in implementing CWA section 303(c) to propose new
regulatory requirements to ensure that WQS give effect to rights to
aquatic and aquatic-dependent resources reserved in Federal laws. With
this update to 40 CFR part 131, the agency is proposing to establish a
transparent and consistent process by which states and EPA can set WQS
that protect applicable reserved rights.
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\32\ See Water Quality Standards Regulatory Revisions, 80 FR
51020, 51021 (August 21, 2015) (Describing the history of EPA's
regulation at 40 CFR part 131).
\33\ Id.
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EPA has previously addressed tribal reserved rights in state-
specific WQS actions. In 2015, EPA disapproved certain human health
criteria adopted by the State of Maine because they did not adequately
protect a sustenance fishing designated use. The sustenance fishing
designated use was based in part on tribal reserved rights.\34\ In
2016, in promulgating human health criteria for the State of
Washington, EPA noted that most waters covered by the State's WQS were
subject to Federal treaties that retained and reserved tribal fishing
rights. The agency concluded that these rights must be considered when
establishing criteria to protect the State's fish harvesting designated
use.\35\
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\34\ Letter from H. Curtis Spalding, Regional Administrator, EPA
Region 1, to Patricia W. Aho, Commissioner, Maine Department of
Environmental Protection, ``Re: Review and Decision on Water Quality
Standards Revisions'' (February 2, 2015). After subsequent
collaboration among the State, EPA, and the tribes, in 2019 the
State of Maine adopted a new sustenance fishing designated use
subcategory which addresses tribal sustenance fishing. In 2020,
after approving this new designated use subcategory, EPA withdrew
most aspects of its 2015 decisions. The expectations and steps EPA
proposes here reaffirm the general analytical framework the agency
applied in the 2015 decisions.
\35\ 81 FR 85417, 85422 through 85423 (November 28, 2016).
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These actions followed a December 2014 Memorandum from EPA
Administrator Gina McCarthy which explicitly recognized EPA's
obligations with respect to tribal treaty rights.\36\ This Memorandum
was issued to commemorate the 30th anniversary of EPA's 1984 Indian
Policy, which addressed many issues related to EPA's relationship with
federally recognized tribes and implementation of EPA's statutes in
Indian country, but did not expressly address EPA's considerations of
tribal treaty and other reserved rights.\37\ In pertinent part, the
2014 Memorandum provides that ``EPA has an obligation to honor and
respect tribal rights and resources protected by treaties,'' and that
``EPA must ensure that its actions do not conflict with tribal treaty
rights.'' \38\ In 2016, as part of the agency's efforts to implement
the Memorandum, EPA issued an addendum to its tribal consultation
policy entitled ``Guidance for Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights'' with
the purpose of enhancing EPA consultations where EPA actions may affect
tribal treaty rights.\39\ The goal of this document was to help ensure
that EPA's actions do not conflict with treaty rights, and that EPA is
fully informed as it seeks to implement its programs to further protect
treaty rights and resources when it has discretion to do so.\40\ Even
before this Guidance was issued in 2016, EPA routinely undertook
extensive consultation with tribes. For example, in the agency's
actions in Maine and Washington with regard to WQS, EPA undertook
extensive consultation with the federally recognized tribes in Maine
and Washington which included, consistent with the objectives of that
guidance, gathering information regarding relevant reserved rights.\41\
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\36\ U.S. EPA, Memorandum, Commemorating the 30th Anniversary of
the EPA Indian Policy (December 1, 2014), available https://www.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-05/documents/indianpolicytreatyrightsmemo2014.pdf.
\37\ Id. See also U.S. EPA, EPA Policy for the Administration of
Environmental Programs on Indian Reservations (November 8, 1984),
available https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2015-04/documents/indian-policy-84.pdf.
\38\ Id.
\39\ U.S. EPA, EPA Policy on Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribes: Guidance for Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights
(February 2016), available https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2016-02/documents/tribal_treaty_rights_guidance_for_discussing_tribal_treaty_rights.pdf
.
\40\ U.S. EPA, Overview: EPA Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Indian Tribes: Guidance for Discussing Tribal
Treaty Rights (February 2016), available https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2016-02/documents/tribal_treaty_rights_guidance_for_discussing_tribal_treaty_rights.pdf
.
\41\ See U.S. EPA Region 1, Responses to Public Comments
Relating to Maine's January 14, 2013, Submission to EPA for Approval
of Certain of the State's New and Revised Water Quality Standards
(WQS) That Would Apply in Waters Throughout Maine, Including Within
Indian Territories or Lands (January 30, 2015), at 1540 (describing
tribal consultation); 81 FR 85417 at 85435 (November 28, 2016).
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[[Page 74366]]
Although the agency did not rescind the Memorandum and Guidance for
Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights, following EPA's 2015 and 2016 WQS
actions in Maine and Washington, the agency did make statements in
subsequent WQS actions disavowing the approach to protecting tribal
reserved rights in the Maine and Washington actions. In response to
comments on a 2020 decision reversing aspects of EPA's 2015 Maine WQS
disapproval, EPA asserted that it was ``unnecessary'' to ensure
protection of applicable statutorily reserved rights because the Indian
land claims settlement statutes at issue did not ``themselves . . .
address or reference designated uses, water quality criteria, or the
desired condition or use goal of the waters covered by the sustenance
fishing provisions.'' \42\ EPA has reconsidered this assertion. EPA
finds that implementing the CWA to give effect to applicable reserved
rights to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent resources does not require
that the relevant treaty, statute, executive order, or legal instrument
explicitly reference water quality. The agency has similarly
reconsidered other statements the agency made indicating that states
and EPA can always protect tribal reserved rights by simply applying
EPA's existing regulations and guidance, with no additional
consideration of such rights.\43\ As explained further below, this
proposed rulemaking adds regulatory requirements to clarify how EPA and
states must ensure protection of reserved rights where they apply.
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\42\ U.S. EPA, Response to Comments on EPA's Proposal to Revise
EPA's 2015 Decisions on Sustenance Fishing Designated Use and Human
Health Criteria in Maine (May 27, 2020), p. 20. Attachment B of
letter from Dennis Deziel, Administrator, EPA Region 1, to Gerald
Reid, Commissioner, Maine Department of Environmental Protection, RE
Withdrawal of Certain of EPA's February 2, 2015 Decisions Concerning
Water Quality Standards for Waters in Indian Lands.
\43\ See U.S. EPA, Letter and enclosed Technical Support
Document from Chris Hladick, Regional Administrator, EPA Region 10,
to Maia Bellon, Director, Department of Ecology, Re: EPA's Reversal
of the November 15, 2016 Clean Water Act Section 303(c) Partial
Disapproval of Washington's Human Health Water Quality Criteria and
Decision to Approve Washington's Criteria (May 10, 2019), p. 22-23
(``May 10, 2019 Decision Document'').
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IV. Proposed Revisions to the Federal WQS Regulation
A. Why is EPA proposing these revisions?
In this proposed rulemaking, the agency is proposing to establish
new requirements which build on existing regulations and applicable
guidance, to provide a nationally applicable regulatory framework to
ensure that WQS protect applicable reserved rights. These revisions to
EPA's existing WQS regulation are intended to provide clarity,
predictability, and transparency in EPA's review of state WQS and
promulgation of Federal WQS in waters where reserved rights to aquatic
and/or aquatic-dependent resources apply. Specifically, by amending
EPA's WQS regulation, rather than addressing these rights on a case-by-
case basis as state WQS are submitted for EPA review under CWA section
303(c), EPA is proposing a uniform approach for establishment of WQS
where tribal reserved rights apply and clearly laying out how EPA will
review such WQS. These proposed changes are informed by EPA's
experience working with states and right holders, and by input they
have provided. Because EPA is establishing these requirements in a
rulemaking rather than during review of an individual state action, the
agency's approach will be informed by public comment and input provided
through tribal consultation.
Notably, when EPA promulgated the WQS regulation at 40 CFR part 131
in 1983, the agency considered adding regulatory requirements to ensure
that state WQS complied with applicable international treaties.
Specifically, in the 1983 final rule establishing the WQS regulation,
the agency noted that it had received comments asserting that EPA
should ``require States to adopt standards that meet treaty
requirements.'' \44\ In response, the agency noted that such issues
``have been adequately resolved previously without the need for
regulatory language,'' and, accordingly, that ``EPA sees no need to
include such language in the Final Rule.'' \45\ The agency further
reasoned that ``[a]ny specific treaty requirements have the force of
law,'' and therefore, ``State water quality standards will have to meet
any treaty requirements.'' \46\ Here, based on its prior experience
evaluating individual state WQS in light of applicable reserved rights,
EPA is proposing to add specific requirements to its WQS regulation to
guide states establishing WQS in waters where tribes exercise reserved
rights. These proposed requirements reflect the agency's considered
judgment about how to ensure that WQS protect applicable reserved
rights, and will provide clarity, transparency, and predictability.
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\44\ 48 FR 51400, 51412 (November 8, 1983).
\45\ Id.
\46\ Id. at 51413.
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This proposal is particularly important now, as climate change is
exacerbating water quality issues across the United States. Tribes and
reserved rights are particularly vulnerable to these impacts due to the
integral nature of water resources in their traditional lifeways and
culture.\47\ Establishing WQS to protect tribal reserved rights is a
critical component of reducing the impact of climate change on tribes.
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\47\ See https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2016-04/documents/ow-climate-change-adaptation-plan.pdf.
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B. What is EPA proposing?
In this rulemaking, EPA is proposing to (1) amend the Federal WQS
regulation at 40 CFR part 131 to require that WQS be established to
protect tribal reserved rights, and (2) establish attendant regulatory
requirements for setting WQS to provide such protection. This section
provides a description of these proposed revisions.
Central to these regulatory changes is the proposed addition of 40
CFR 131.9. First, this provision would specify that WQS ``must protect
tribal reserved rights applicable to waters subject to such
standards.'' For purposes of these regulatory revisions, EPA proposes
adding a new definition to 40 CFR 131.3, defining ``tribal reserved
rights'' as ``any rights to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent resources
reserved or held by tribes, either expressly or implicitly, through
treaties, statutes, executive orders, or other sources of Federal
law.'' The proposed definition of ``tribal reserved rights'' in the
rule does not apply to unratified treaties or reserved rights that have
been abrogated or otherwise superseded. In addition, some tribes
entered into legal agreements or compacts with states, which are not
Federal law and are therefore similarly not within the scope of this
rulemaking.
Second, proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a) would require that, ``to the
extent supported by available data and information,'' to protect
applicable tribal reserved rights WQS must be established to protect:
1. ``The exercise of tribal reserved rights unsuppressed by water
quality or availability of the aquatic or aquatic-dependent resource;''
and
2. ``The health of the right holders to at least the same risk
level as provided to the general population of the State.''
For purposes of these regulatory revisions, EPA proposes adding a
new definition to 40 CFR 131.3, defining ``right holders'' as ``tribes
holding rights to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent resources pursuant
to an applicable treaty, statute, executive order, or other source of
Federal law.''
EPA is not proposing to require WQS to be established for every
waterbody subject to a reserved right to protect the
[[Page 74367]]
waterbody condition that existed at the time a reserved right was
established. As described more fully below in section C.2.ii of this
preamble, the regulation is intended to result in WQS that protect
reasonably anticipated future uses, taking into account factors that
may have substantially altered a waterbody.
Proposed 40 CFR 131.9(b) specifies that EPA will initiate tribal
consultation with the right holders in determining whether State water
quality standards protect applicable reserved rights in accordance with
40 CFR 131.9(a)(1) and (2). Finally, proposed 40 CFR 131.9(c) describes
the three different ways that WQS can be used where tribal reserved
rights apply to ensure protection of those rights.
EPA is also proposing to revise 40 CFR 131.5 (``EPA Authority'').
40 CFR 131.5(a) lists the factors that EPA considers in determining
whether state-adopted WQS are consistent with CWA section 303(c). EPA
is proposing to add Sec. 131.5(a)(9) specifying that when reviewing
new or revised standards, EPA would evaluate whether water quality
standards sufficiently protect tribal reserved rights, where
applicable, consistent with Sec. 131.9. EPA is proposing conforming
revisions to 40 CFR 131.5(b) which would require that this new factor,
in addition to the other existing eight factors in 40 CFR 131.5(a), be
met for EPA to approve the WQS.
EPA is also proposing to add an element to the list of ``Minimum
Requirements for Water Quality Standards Submission'' set forth in 40
CFR 131.6. This proposed addition provides clarity on EPA's
expectations regarding how states must document their efforts to
ascertain information, in coordination with the right holders, about
applicable tribal reserved rights and the level of water quality that
fully supports those rights. Specifically, EPA is proposing that where
tribal reserved rights apply to WQS being submitted, those submissions
would need to include:
1. Information about the scope, nature, and current and past use of
the tribal reserved rights, as informed by the right holders; and
2. Data and methods used to develop the WQS.
Finally, EPA is proposing to modify the procedures for state review
and revision of WQS at 40 CFR 131.20 to require that the triennial
review process include an evaluation of whether there are tribal
reserved rights applicable to waters subject to the state's WQS and
whether WQS need to be revised to protect those rights.
Pursuant to 40 CFR 131.22(c), EPA would be subject to the same
requirements when promulgating Federal WQS. In accordance with CWA
section 303(c)(4), there are two scenarios in which EPA would
promulgate Federal WQS for the waters of a state. First, CWA section
303(c)(4)(A) establishes that if EPA determines that a state's new or
revised WQS is not consistent with the requirements of the Act and the
state fails to submit a modified standard within 90 days of that
decision, EPA must itself propose and promulgate a revised or new
standard for the waters involved (unless prior to promulgation the
state has adopted a WQS that EPA determines to be consistent with the
Act). Second, CWA section 303(c)(4)(B) grants the EPA Administrator
discretion to determine ``that a revised or new standard is necessary
to meet the requirements of [the Act].'' Following such a
determination, EPA is required to propose and promulgate a revised or
new standard except as noted above.
Examples of how these proposed regulatory revisions would be
applied and EPA's basis for them are explained in more detail in the
next section.
C. How would the proposed regulatory revisions be applied?
The effect of these proposed revisions on the establishment or
revision of a state's WQS will be case-specific. EPA anticipates that
these proposed revisions would be relevant in states where federally
recognized tribes hold reserved rights to aquatic or aquatic-dependent
resources in waters where the state, rather than the right holder,
establishes applicable WQS.
Whether reserved rights apply to waters subject to a state's new or
revised WQS would be informed by several factors, including input from
the right holders, other sources of information regarding relevant
tribal reserved rights (including information about the geographic
scope of those rights), and the available data to inform the level of
water quality needed to protect the reserved rights.
1. Determining if Tribal Reserved Rights Apply
Examples of tribal reserved rights as defined in this proposed
rulemaking include but are not limited to the rights to fish; gather
aquatic plants; and to hunt for aquatic-dependent animals. EPA requests
comment on whether there are additional types of tribal reserved rights
that it should consider. EPA acknowledges that it may be a complex
inquiry to determine if tribal reserved rights apply in waters subject
to state WQS, and if so, the nature of those rights and where they
apply. For purposes of implementation of this proposed rulemaking, the
critical information needed to determine if a reserved right applies to
a state's waters includes, but may not be limited to: (1) the nature of
the right (i.e., a fishing right, a hunting right, a resource gathering
right); (2) where the right applies (i.e., to a specific set of
waterbodies or to waters generally within a broad geographic area); and
(3) how the right is exercised by the right holders (e.g., for
subsistence purposes).\48\
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\48\ EPA encourages, to the extent practicable, the
consideration and incorporation of any Indigenous Knowledge that is
freely provided by right holders. Given the sensitivity of some
information about tribal reserved rights, right holders, states and
EPA should discuss in advance how the information will be shared and
potentially used in the WQS context.
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A first step in obtaining this information should be engagement
with potential right holders. Accordingly, when WQS are being evaluated
or revised, early engagement with federally recognized tribes within
the relevant state as well as tribes outside the state that exercise
resource rights within that state, can help EPA and states determine if
there are reserved rights, the scope of those rights, and whether and
how they should be applied in the WQS context. In order to ensure that
tribes with reserved rights are engaged in the process of determining
whether reserved rights apply, proposed 40 CFR 131.6(g)(1) would
require that WQS submissions to EPA include information about tribal
reserved rights ``as informed by the right holders,'' where applicable.
In addition to any outreach to or engagement with tribes as part of
establishing new or revised WQS, proposed 40 CFR 131.20(a) provides a
mechanism for starting the process of such engagement. It would require
states to evaluate whether there are applicable tribal reserved rights
relevant to waters subject to the state's WQS during the public
triennial review process. To help satisfy this requirement, states
should explicitly request information regarding the nature and scope of
tribal reserved rights in each triennial review, thus providing an
opportunity for the right holders to engage and provide information the
state can use in its evaluation. Additionally, right holders are
encouraged to proactively share information with states and EPA about
any tribal reserved rights that may be relevant, including through the
triennial review process.
These proposed provisions would provide a role for the right
holders in
[[Page 74368]]
informing both the initial inquiry of whether tribal reserved rights
apply and, where reserved rights are applicable, how those reserved
rights could be protected through implementation of the requirements of
the proposed rulemaking. Specifically, determinations regarding
protection of tribal reserved rights should be made through a process
of mutual consideration and discussion between right holders, states,
and the Federal government.
In addition to seeking input from potential right holders, EPA will
also consider other sources of information regarding applicable tribal
reserved rights including the language of the treaties, statutes, or
Executive orders and relevant judicial precedent.\49\
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\49\ Although, as stated above, legal agreements tribes have
entered into solely with states and other non-Federal government
entities are not Federal law and therefore not within the scope of
this rulemaking, EPA recommends that states use a similar framework
to consider tribal rights reserved under state law when developing
and revising WQS.
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2. Protecting Applicable Reserved Rights
Proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a) would require states to derive WQS to
protect any tribal reserved rights that were determined to be
applicable. This would require determining the level of water quality
necessary to protect users of the resource and/or the aquatic or
aquatic-dependent resource itself, based on available data. This level
of water quality is to be determined by applying proposed 40 CFR
131.9(a)(1) and (2), described further below. Once applicable reserved
rights to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent resources have been
identified, the proposed regulations provide a mechanism for
establishing WQS at a level of water quality that protects those
resources and users of those resources, consistent with the CWA.
i. Determining the Level of Water Quality Necessary To Protect the
Right
Determining the level of water quality necessary to protect any
aquatic or aquatic-dependent resource or users of that resource can be
a complex endeavor that involves weighing multiple lines of evidence.
However, this endeavor will largely mirror the process states already
follow in developing their WQS. Examples of such evidence include fish
consumption rate surveys, studies or accounts of heritage fish
consumption rates,\50\ peer-reviewed articles or reports on the types
and levels of pollutants that can adversely affect the resource in
question, and monitoring data reflecting historic and/or current water
quality. EPA requests comment on the types of historic information that
states and EPA should consider.
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\50\ A heritage rate is the amount of fish consumed prior to
non-indigenous or modern sources of contamination and interference
with the natural lifecycle of fish, in addition to changes in human
society. While it is often thought of as a historic rate, it can
also be reflective of a current unsuppressed rate. See: USEPA. 2016.
Guidance for Conducting Fish Consumption Surveys. EPA-823B16002.
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In some instances, readily available information would be
sufficient to identify specific numeric levels of water quality (e.g.,
numeric criteria) necessary to protect the right. In other instances,
such data and information may not be currently available. 40 CFR
131.9(a) acknowledges this by providing that WQS must be consistent
with 40 CFR 131.9(a)(1) and (2) ``to the extent supported by available
data and information.'' Where data and information are not currently
available to support establishing numeric levels of water quality, or
where data are inconclusive, states may adopt narrative WQS to protect
the right. EPA is available to assist states in gathering more
information, in coordination with the right holders, for future use.
In complying with the new regulation, EPA encourages ongoing
communication between states and right holders to help states ascertain
where reserved rights apply and what data are available to inform the
level of water quality necessary to protect those rights. EPA would be
available to facilitate dialogue and information-sharing as needed.
Proposed 40 CFR 131.6(g) would require states to submit ``data and
methods used'' to develop WQS that protect tribal reserved rights. As
with information regarding the tribal reserved rights themselves,
information regarding the types and levels of pollutants that may
impact those rights should also be informed by engagement with the
right holders. EPA recommends that states request information from the
right holders such as types of pollutants perceived to be impacting
their rights, key aquatic species, and/or consumption rates that would
be useful in developing protective WQS, pursuant to proposed 40 CFR
131.20(a). EPA recommends that right holders proactively share any such
information with states and EPA. Obtaining these data is another reason
that states should work closely with right holders and EPA early in the
process of evaluating and revising WQS. As with all WQS actions, states
must transparently share information with the public during their
process for reviewing and revising WQS (40 CFR 131.20(b)). The data and
information gathered and submitted pursuant to proposed 40 CFR 131.6(g)
will inform implementation of proposed 40 CFR 131.9.
ii. Accounting for Suppression Effects
Proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a)(1) would require that WQS, to the extent
supported by available data and information, be established to protect
``the exercise of the tribal reserved rights unsuppressed by water
quality or availability of the aquatic or aquatic-dependent resource.''
This proposed requirement is intended to address situations where
existing water quality is lower than necessary to allow for right
holders to fully exercise their tribal reserved rights. For example,
fish consumption by tribes exercising their treaty-protected right to
fish for subsistence may be suppressed due to availability of fish or
concerns about the safety of fish for human consumption.\51\ Treaty-
protected harvesting of wild rice on waterbodies where harvesting
historically occurred may likewise be suppressed due to diminished wild
rice populations.
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\51\ As noted by the National Environmental Justice Advisory
Council in the 2002 publication Fish Consumption and Environmental
Justice, ``a suppression effect may arise when fish upon which
humans rely are no longer available in historical quantities (and
kinds), such that humans are unable to catch and consume as much
fish as they had or would. Such depleted fisheries may result from a
variety of affronts, including an aquatic environment that is
contaminated, altered (due, among other things, to the presence of
dams), overdrawn, and/or overfished. Were the fish not depleted,
these people would consume fish at more robust baseline levels. . .
.In the Pacific Northwest, for example, compromised aquatic
ecosystems mean that fish are no longer available for tribal members
to take, as they are entitled to do in exercise of their treaty
rights.''). National Environmental Justice Advisory Council, Fish
Consumption and Environmental Justice, p.44, 46 (2002) (NEJAC Fish
Consumption Report) available at https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2015-02/documents/fish-consump-report_1102.pdf.
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This rulemaking does not establish any nationally applicable
thresholds for unsuppressed levels or use of a resource. As described
in the National Environmental Justice Advisory Committee (NEJAC)'s 2002
report ``Fish Consumption and Environmental Justice,'' the unsuppressed
level of a resource for particular right holders will depend on the
factors affecting water quality and availability of the resources for
that group.\52\
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\52\ Id, p.49. Using the term ``baseline'' to refer to the
unsuppressed fish consumption rate, the report says the appropriate
baseline for determining an unsuppressed level of fish consumption
``will likely differ according to the circumstances surrounding and
the group affected by the observed suppression effect . . . . An
appropriate baseline [unsuppressed level] might mean examination
into what people had consumed as well as aspiration for what people
would consume were there `fair access for all to a full range of
resources,' or were the conditions fulfilled for full exercise of
treaty- and trust-protected rights and purposes.''
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[[Page 74369]]
The unsuppressed level should balance heritage use of a resource
with what is currently reasonably achievable for a particular
waterbody. For example, in determining the unsuppressed level of a
resource for the purpose of establishing WQS, it may be appropriate to
take into consideration both heritage rates of use of that resource and
factors that have substantially altered the pollutant burden,
hydrology, or availability of the resource, such that use of the
resource at heritage rates is not feasible. For example, EPA approved
the Spokane Tribe's human health criteria based on a fish consumption
rate of 865 g/day. This fish consumption rate maintains the caloric
intake characteristic of a traditional subsistence lifestyle while
accounting for the lesser quantity and diversity of fish currently
available to the Tribe as a result of the construction of the Grand
Coulee Dam.\53\
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\53\ U.S. EPA Region 10. Technical Support Document for Action
on the Revised Surface Water Quality Standards of the Spokane Tribe
of Indians Submitted April 2010. December 11, 2013.
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Another example is determining which waters to designate for wild
rice protection in the Great Lakes region. To determine the scope of
the corresponding designated use, it is appropriate to consider whether
waters that do not currently support wild rice uses may do so again in
the future. A state might consider historical growing patterns and
planned efforts to restore the hydrologic regime and reduce nonpoint
sources of pollution, while also accounting for hydrologic changes and
legacy contaminants that may not be feasible to remedy at this time.
For the purpose of establishing WQS to fulfill the requirements of
this rulemaking, the unsuppressed level or use of a resource should
account for situations where restoration efforts are planned or
underway (e.g., efforts to improve habitat or reduce contamination),
such that it would be reasonable to expect the opportunities for use of
the resource to increase in the future. In these situations, where
supported by available data and information, EPA is proposing to
require that WQS must be set at levels that reflect unsuppressed
exercise of the reserved right.
This emphasis on avoiding suppression effects builds on EPA's
approach, previously set forth in guidance including EPA's 2000
Methodology for Deriving Ambient Water Quality Criteria for the
Protection of Human Health \54\ (2000 Methodology), 2016 Guidance for
Conducting Fish Consumption Surveys,\55\ and 1985 Guidelines for
Deriving Numerical National Water Quality Criteria for the Protection
of Aquatic Organisms and Their Uses.\56\ Each of these documents
contains information and recommendations that should be considered when
synthesizing water quality-related data. However, these documents do
not all speak to setting WQS to protect tribal reserved rights for CWA
purposes. Accordingly, in its discretion in prescribing WQS regulations
that give effect to applicable reserved rights, EPA is proposing at 40
CFR 131.9(a)(1) to require that where tribal reserved rights apply, and
where supported by available data and information, WQS must be
established to protect ``the exercise of the tribal reserved rights
unsuppressed by water quality or availability of the aquatic or
aquatic-dependent resource.'' \57\
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\54\ USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving Ambient Water Quality
Criteria for the Protection of Human Health. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC EPA-822-B-00-004.
https://www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-criteria-and-methods-toxics.
\55\ USEPA. 2016. Guidance for Conducting Fish Consumption
Surveys. EPA-823B16002.
\56\ USEPA. 1985. Guidelines for Deriving Numerical National
Water Quality Criteria for the Protection of Aquatic Organisms and
Their Uses. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water,
Washington, DC PB85-227049.
\57\ In its 2019 approval of Idaho's water quality standards,
EPA noted that ``[n]othing in the CWA or the EPA's regulations and
guidance, including the 2000 Methodology, requires a state to set a
FCR based on an estimate of unsuppressed consumption'' and asserted
that the concept of requiring a state to use an unsuppressed fish
consumption rate should be presented for ``thorough public notice
and comment.'' EPA's Approval of Idaho's New and Revised Human
Health Water Quality Criteria for Toxics and Other [WQS] Provisions
(April 4, 2019), p. 12. In this proposed rule, for the reasons
explained herein, EPA is proposing to amend its WQS regulations to
require that states use an unsuppressed rate where tribal reserved
rights apply and where supported by available data and information.
Consistent with its 2019 letter, EPA is requesting public comment on
this proposed requirement.
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This proposed requirement is consistent with the CWA goal to
``restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity
of the Nation's waters'' (CWA section 101(a)). Indeed, this requirement
is necessary to ensure that WQS do not merely reinforce an existing
suppressed use that may already limit right holders' ability to
exercise their reserved rights, or worse, set in motion a ``downward
spiral'' \58\ of further reduction/suppression. Therefore, where
exercise of reserved rights is suppressed, states would need to seek
available information about past and present use of the resource, and
any information about reasonably anticipated future uses, to help
ascertain the level of water quality necessary to fully protect the
right.\59\ EPA strongly encourages states to coordinate with right
holders to gather information about unsuppressed uses and for right
holders to proactively share such information with states and EPA. EPA
is available to participate in discussions with right holders and
states on this issue.
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\58\ NEJAC Fish Consumption report, at p. 49.
\59\ EPA provides guidance on determining unsuppressed fish
consumption rates. See USEPA. 2016. Guidance for Conducting Fish
Consumption Surveys. EPA-823B16002.
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EPA requests comment on whether additional language should be
included in the final rule specifying the considerations for
determining unsuppressed WQS.
iii. Protecting Right Holders to the Same Risk Level as the General
Population
Additionally, proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a)(2) would require that the
health of right holders be protected to at least the same risk level as
the general population of the state would have been protected, had the
general population been the ``target population'' for water quality
protections in the waters at issue. EPA anticipates the primary
application of this provision to be in using a cancer risk level
appropriate for a general population (i.e., at least 10-5
along with a fish consumption rate that reflects the reserved right, as
discussed above, for the purpose of calculating human health criteria.
EPA requests comment on whether there may be other situations where
this provision could apply.
Under EPA's 2000 Methodology, a key step in deriving human health
criteria is identifying the population subgroup that the criteria
should protect. The 2000 Methodology explains that states and
authorized tribes could set criteria to protect individuals with
``average'' or ``typical'' exposure, or to protect more highly exposed
individuals.\60\ EPA's 304(a) criteria use a combination of median
values, mean values, and percentile estimates targeted at the high end
of the general population (i.e., the target population or the criteria-
basis population).\61\ The 2000 Methodology also recommends use of
conservative exposure parameters to ensure that water quality criteria
are protective not
[[Page 74370]]
only of the general population, but also of subpopulations who, because
of high exposure, such as high fish intake rates, have an increased
risk of receiving a dose that would elicit adverse effects.\62\ With
respect to carcinogens, the 2000 Methodology states that
10-\5\ and 10-\6\ risk levels may be acceptable
for the general population and that highly exposed populations should
not exceed a 10-\4\ risk level.63 64
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\60\ USEPA. 2000. Methodology for Deriving Ambient Water Quality
Criteria for the Protection of Human Health. U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, Office of Water, Washington, DC EPA-822-B-00-004.
https://www.epa.gov/wqc/human-health-water-quality-criteria-and-methods-toxics. p. 2-1.
\61\ Id.
\62\ Id. p.1-11.
\63\ Id. p.2-6.
\64\ Future iterations of this methodology may make different
recommendations regarding cancer risk level; the requirement in this
proposed rulemaking is not tied to a specific cancer risk level
value, but rather requires that states establish WQS that provide
the same level of protection between their general populations and
right holders.
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EPA's national guidance has not previously addressed, however, how
tribal reserved rights to aquatic and/or aquatic dependent resources
should be considered in identifying the target population for deriving
water quality criteria. Nor has the agency addressed what constitutes
acceptable risk for tribal members whose exercise of reserved rights
may put them at greater risk than the general population (e.g., due to
higher rates of fish consumption). The agency considered whether it
should treat tribal members exercising reserved rights in the same
manner as other highly exposed individuals and subpopulations as
generally laid out in the 2000 Methodology but has decided protection
of tribal members exercising reserved rights warrants a distinct
approach. EPA recognizes that treaties, statutes, executive orders, or
other sources of law establishing reserved rights vary in many respects
and may or may not themselves speak to right holders' exercising their
rights relative to a state's general population. Nonetheless, unlike
other individuals and subpopulations, tribal members exercising
reserved rights are a distinct, identifiable class of individuals
holding legal rights to resources, whose reserved rights are unique to
them and have a defined geographic scope. In EPA's judgment, their
unique status as right holders warrants treating them as the target
population for purposes of deriving human health criteria.
The proposed rulemaking does not dictate what cancer risk level
must be used in deriving human health water quality criteria for
carcinogens where there are applicable reserved rights. Instead,
proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a)(2) requires that WQS protect the health of the
right holders ``to at least the same risk level as provided to the
general population of the state.'' EPA's 2000 Methodology recommends
that states and authorized tribes set human health criteria based on a
cancer risk level of 10-\5\ or 10-\6\ for the
target population which, under the proposed rulemaking, would be tribal
members exercising applicable reserved rights. This approach recognizes
the special nature of such reserved rights and status of right holders.
It also helps ensure protection of tribal members whose exposure (and
consequent risk of adverse effects) may vary. For example, if a state
or authorized tribe protects the general population at a risk level of
10-\5\, under the proposed rulemaking they would need to
adopt the same risk level for tribes exercising reserved rights. The
state or authorized tribe would also select an appropriate fish
consumption rate for deriving criteria pursuant to 40 CFR 131.9(a)(1),
as discussed above.
In its 2019 decision document reversing its prior disapproval of
Washington's human health criteria, EPA made the following assertion:
``[T]he EPA's longstanding view, consistent with the 2000 Methodology,
is that a state may consider tribes with reserved fishing rights to be
highly exposed populations, rather than the target general population,
in order to derive criteria, and that such consideration gives due
effect to reserved fishing rights.'' \65\ EPA has reconsidered this
assertion and is proposing to require that WQS protect the health of
right holders to at least the same risk level as a state's general
population, rather than treating right holders as a highly exposed
population. EPA has determined that it is appropriate, in exercising
its discretion in implementing CWA section 303(c), to give effect to
reserved rights within the WQS-setting paradigm by requiring that the
right holders receive protection to at least the same risk level as
recommended for a state's general population and is accordingly
proposing the requirement set forth in proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a)(2).
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\65\ May 10, 2019 Decision Document. p. 23.
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iv. Implementation of These Proposed Requirements
EPA anticipates that the circumstances where WQS may need to be
adjusted to protect tribal reserved rights would fall primarily into
two categories:
1. Human health criteria to protect fish consumers, where tribes
with reserved fishing rights consume more fish and are therefore
exposed to greater levels of contaminants in fish. This is because
there is a differential health risk between right holders and the
general population of the state because right holders are more highly
exposed to the resource.
2. Where a reserved right is not already accounted for as a
designated or presently attained use for a waterbody, but that
waterbody could be reasonably expected to support that right in the
future (e.g., if restoration efforts are underway). EPA anticipates
that this could arise with uses to protect aquatic life, aquatic-
dependent wildlife, and users of those resources, where those uses are
not already designated or presently attained.
For many aquatic and aquatic-dependent resources that tribes have
rights to fish, hunt or gather, the existing Federal WQS regulations
already require states to provide a level of protection consistent with
this proposed rulemaking. In accordance with the interim goal specified
by CWA section 101(a)(2) of ``water quality which provides for the
protection and propagation of fish, shellfish, and wildlife and
provides for recreation in and on the water,'' the existing Federal WQS
regulation requires that state WQS protect fish, shellfish and
wildlife, and recreation in and on the water, wherever attainable.\66\
As a result, states typically designate most of their waters for those
uses. In addition, the existing WQS regulation at 40 CFR 131.11
requires that states adopt water quality criteria that protect their
designated uses. As a result, where a tribe has the right to hunt an
aquatic-dependent species, for example, the species may already be
protected in accordance with this proposed rulemaking by a state's
``wildlife'' designated use and associated criteria, such that this
rulemaking would not require any additional protection of that species
beyond what is already required under the CWA and EPA's existing WQS
regulation.
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\66\ See 40 CFR 131.6
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Additionally, if use of an aquatic or aquatic-dependent resource
pursuant to a tribal reserved right is a use that is presently being
attained, EPA's existing regulation at 40 CFR 131.10(i) requires states
to revise their WQS to reflect the presently attained use. For example,
if a tribe has a right to gather an aquatic plant in a state waterbody
and that use is presently attained, state WQS should already reflect
that as a designated use, per 40 CFR 131.10(i), and thus this resource
should be protected in accordance with proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a),
discussed further below.
With respect to aquatic life criteria, EPA provides guidance for
deriving criteria that generally protect aquatic
[[Page 74371]]
organisms,\67\ including commercially or recreationally important
species. EPA does not anticipate that more stringent criteria to
protect aquatic or aquatic-dependent resources themselves would be
necessary in most cases to comply with this proposed rulemaking than
already required by the existing Federal WQS regulations.
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\67\ USEPA. 1985. Guidelines for Deriving Numerical National
Water Quality Criteria for the Protection of Aquatic Organisms and
Their Uses. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Office of Water,
Washington, DC PB85-227049.
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This proposed rulemaking would complement the existing regulatory
requirements set forth in EPA's WQS regulation. In certain
circumstances, these existing requirements may already be operating to
ensure water quality levels are protective of particular tribal
reserved rights. By requiring states to seek information regarding
applicable reserved rights as they review and revise their WQS, the
proposed requirements would equip states with information to determine
whether current WQS adequately protect applicable reserved rights.
EPA's identification of two categories of circumstances where
compliance with the proposed rulemaking is most likely to necessitate
new or revised WQS is consistent with input from tribes during pre-
proposal consultation, which focused primarily on protection of fish
consumers and protection of wild rice.\68\ EPA requests comment on
whether there are other instances where WQS may need to be adjusted to
protect tribal reserved rights consistent with this proposed
rulemaking. This request for comment includes, but is not limited to,
whether there are tribal reserved rights to aquatic or aquatic-
dependent resources that may require more stringent criteria than
otherwise required to protect applicable designated uses in order to
comply with this proposed rulemaking and whether there are differential
health risks for right holders associated with activities other than
fish consumption such that new or revised criteria may be necessary to
comply with this proposed rulemaking.
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\68\ See USEPA 2021. Summary Report of Tribal Consultation for
the Proposed Rule: Water Quality Standards Regulatory Revisions to
Protect Tribal Reserved Rights, available in the docket for this
proposed rulemaking.
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Where information is conflicting, there are gaps in information,
and/or a difference of opinion exists between the state and one or more
tribes about the level of water quality necessary to protect a reserved
right, EPA will take action based on the best available information in
the same way that EPA currently makes WQS decisions in these
circumstances in other contexts, e.g., determining whether criteria are
scientifically defensible in situations where there is conflicting
science, there are gaps in the science, and/or there are different
conclusions among stakeholders. EPA requests comment on whether there
are other factors it should consider when making decisions under these
circumstances.
3. Options for Establishing WQS To Protect Tribal Reserved Rights
After determining whether tribal reserved rights apply and the
level of water quality necessary to protect those rights, states would
be required to revise their WQS if needed to ensure protection of those
rights using designated uses, criteria, and/or antidegradation as
described at proposed 40 CFR 131.9(c).
The first option is to adopt designated uses that explicitly
recognize and identify tribal reserved rights to aquatic and/or
aquatic-dependent resources and water quality criteria to protect those
uses. For example, a state could adopt a separate designated use of
``customary and traditional fishing'' and apply it to waterbodies where
tribes hold reserved rights to fish for subsistence. A state would also
determine and adopt protective criteria set at the level of water
quality that was determined to protect the customary and traditional
fishing designated use. An advantage to establishing designated uses
that explicitly recognize specific tribal reserved rights is that it is
a transparent way to identify where those rights apply and how they are
protected. Designated uses express the desired condition of the water
and do not need to be currently attained to be designated.\69\
Therefore, it would be appropriate and reasonable to recognize and
identify tribal reserved rights as explicit designated uses to define
the desired condition for the waters where the rights apply and to then
determine and adopt protective criteria to define the minimum
conditions necessary to achieve those objectives. As noted above, if
use of an aquatic or aquatic-dependent resource pursuant to a tribal
reserved right is a use that is presently being attained, EPA's
existing regulation at 40 CFR 131.10(i) requires states to revise their
WQS to reflect the presently attained use.
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\69\ 40 CFR 131.3(f)
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As a second option, the state could adopt criteria protective of
tribal reserved rights and associate those criteria with a current
designated use that already encompasses the tribal reserved rights. For
example, a state may have a designated use of ``fishing'' that is
intended to capture a broad range of fishing activities. In this case,
it may be reasonable for a state to focus on identifying and
synthesizing data on fish consumption rates to determine criteria that
will protect the ``fishing'' use to an extent consistent with the
reserved right, including ensuring that tribes with reserved fishing
rights are protected to a level appropriate to protect to the general
population as outlined in EPA's 2000 Methodology or EPA's latest
guidance for establishing human health criteria.
As a third option, the state could use its antidegradation policy
to protect tribal reserved rights. EPA is seeking public comment on
whether the following two antidegradation policy options related to
Tier 2 and Tier 3 could be used to protect tribal reserved rights in
lieu of the options identified in proposed 40 CFR 131.9(c)(1) and (2)
and explained earlier in this section. An additional advantage of the
antidegradation policy options described in the following paragraph is
that in situations where a waterbody's existing water quality exceeds
the levels that protect tribal reserved rights, these options would
provide a mechanism to maintain high water quality and provide a margin
of safety that would afford the water body increased resilience to
potential future stressors, including climate change. Protecting such
high-quality waters would potentially be more cost-effective and
resource-efficient than investing in long-term restoration or remedial
actions in the future.
Option 1: States could assign a water body as an Outstanding
National Resource Water (ONRW) \70\ which would bring it under 40 CFR
131.12(a)(3), which requires the water quality of such ONRWs to be
maintained and protected.
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\70\ Waters provided the highest level of protection under a
state's antidegradation policy. EPA Water Quality Standards
Handbook, Chapter 4: Antidegradation. p.12. EPA-823-B-12-002.
https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2014-10/documents/handbook-chapter4.pdf.
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Option 2: States could amend their antidegradation policy and/or
other legally binding procedures to include a provision that ensures
that any lowering of water quality in a high-quality water that is
authorized by the state, in accordance with 40 CFR 131.12(a)(2),
results in water quality that continues to protect applicable reserved
rights.
EPA is requesting comment on these two options for implementing
antidegradation requirements to protect tribal reserved rights. EPA is
also
[[Page 74372]]
requesting comment on alternative ways that states could use their
antidegradation policies and implementation methods to protect tribal
reserved rights, as defined in proposed 40 CFR 131.9(a).
States could also choose to combine these methods, such as by
assigning ONRW status to a waterbody to prevent any additional lowering
of water quality, while also establishing a tribal resource designated
use goal and criteria that must be met to achieve that goal.
If use of an aquatic or aquatic-dependent resource pursuant to a
tribal reserved right is an existing use pursuant to 40 CFR
131.3(e),\71\ EPA's current WQS regulation at 40 CFR 131.12(a)(1)
requires that the use and the water quality necessary to protect that
use be maintained and protected. Thus, implementation of 40 CFR
131.12(a)(1) would protect this resource in accordance with proposed 40
CFR 131.9(a).
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\71\ 40 CFR 131.3(e) Existing uses are those uses actually
attained in the water body on or after November 28, 1975, whether or
not they are included in the water quality standards.
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EPA recognizes that there may be areas where multiple right holders
hold reserved rights to the same aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent
resources. In these cases, right holders may have different positions
on how to ensure the WQS protect the resources, consistent with
proposed 40 CFR 131.9. Additionally, tribal reserved rights to a
particular resource may span across multiple states. These situations
would likely require significant coordination among all parties to
develop WQS to protect all applicable rights. EPA is available to
facilitate dialogue between and among states and tribes, where
appropriate.
4. Use Attainability Analyses and Tribal Reserved Rights
EPA recognizes that there may be situations where a waterbody may
not be able to support a reserved right to an aquatic and/or aquatic-
dependent resource because attaining that use in that waterbody is not
currently feasible. The CWA and EPA's regulations provide that such
uses could be revised if shown to be unattainable based on one of six
reasons. However, there may also be situations where it may be critical
to maintain the designated uses and continue to strive for attainment
of such uses to protect a tribal reserved right consistent with the
obligations of treaties and other Federal laws. EPA requests comment on
whether and how states can revise designated uses, as provided for by
40 CFR 131.10, while also ensuring the protection of tribal reserved
rights per proposed 40 CFR 131.9. EPA is not considering modifying the
existing requirements in 40 CFR 131.10 or otherwise reopening those
requirements for comment but, rather, is requesting comment only on
whether any discrete additions to the current regulatory framework may
be necessary to protect tribal reserved rights. For example, should EPA
include in 40 CFR 131.9 specifics on whether or how a state can revise
designated uses and still protect tribal reserved rights?
D. EPA's Role
1. Engagement With States
EPA makes itself available to engage early and often to provide
support when states are adopting and revising WQS. EPA support includes
providing triennial review ``kick off'' letters that outline EPA's
recommendations for WQS revisions, participating in state public
processes, and providing comments to states on their proposed WQS. EPA
intends to support states by providing input and information on any
tribal reserved rights and the level of water quality to protect those
rights. As previously mentioned, EPA is also available to facilitate
dialogue between states and tribes.
2. Consultation With Tribes
As mentioned in section III.A. of this preamble, any new or revised
WQS must be submitted to EPA for review and approval or disapproval to
determine whether it meets CWA and corresponding EPA regulatory
requirements (CWA section 303(c)(2)(A) and (c)(3); 40 CFR 131.5;
131.21). EPA's policy \72\ is to consult on a government-to-government
basis with tribes when EPA actions and decisions such as WQS actions
may affect tribal interests. Accordingly, in addition to early
engagement with right holders in the development of new or revised WQS,
EPA will also consult with right holders as it reviews relevant state
WQS submissions. EPA intends to codify in proposed 40 CFR 131.9(b) that
EPA would initiate consultation with the right holders on state WQS
submissions in determining whether applicable reserved rights are
protected. This consultation will inform EPA's determination pursuant
to 40 CFR 131.5(a)(9) as to whether WQS protect tribal reserved rights,
where applicable.
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\72\ USEPA 2011. EPA Policy on Consultation and Coordination
with Indian Tribes. (see https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2013-08/documents/cons-and-coord-with-indian-tribes-policy.pdf)
USEPA 2016. EPA Policy on Consultation and Coordination with
Indian Tribes: Guidance for Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights. https://www.epa.gov/tribal/tribal-treaty-rights;
Executive Order 13175, Consultation and Coordination with Indian
Tribal Governments (see https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2000/11/09/00-29003/consultation-and-coordination-with-indian-tribal-governments);
January 26, 2021 Presidential Memorandum on Tribal Consultation
and Strengthening Nation-to-Nation Relationships (see https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2021/01/26/memorandum-on-tribal-consultation-and-strengthening-nation-to-nation-relationships/).
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EPA defines consultation in its 2011 Policy on Consultation and
Coordination with Tribes \73\ as ``a process of meaningful
communication and coordination between EPA and tribal officials prior
to EPA taking actions or implementing decisions that may affect
tribes.'' As a process, consultation includes several methods of
interaction that may occur at different levels. The appropriate level
of interaction is determined by past and current practices, policy
adjustments, the continuing dialogue between EPA and tribal
governments, and program and regional office consultation procedures
and plans.
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\73\ USEPA 2011. EPA Policy on Consultation and Coordination
with Indian Tribes. (see https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2013-08/documents/cons-and-coord-with-indian-tribes-policy.pdf)
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Under proposed 40 CFR 131.9(b), EPA would seek information and
input regarding applicable tribal reserved rights in accordance with
the 2011 EPA Policy on Consultation and Coordination with Tribes, the
2016 EPA Policy on Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribes:
Guidance for Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights,\74\ applicable EPA
regional consultation procedures,\75\ and any other applicable EPA
tribal consultation policies in effect when the proposed rulemaking
would be applied. Although proposed 40 CFR 131.9(b) would specifically
apply to EPA's review of state WQS submissions, EPA intends per its
2011 Policy on Consultation and Coordination with Tribes, the 2016 EPA
Policy on Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribes: Guidance
for Discussing Tribal Treaty Rights,\76\ and applicable EPA regional
consultation procedures, to initiate consultation with tribes in the
geographic area where any WQS decision under EPA's consideration may
affect tribal interests, including reserved rights. EPA would consider
all relevant
[[Page 74373]]
information obtained through consultation to help ensure that the
agency is fully informed before taking a WQS action.
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\74\ Available online at https://www.epa.gov/tribal/epa-policy-consultation-and-coordination-indian-tribes-guidance-discussing-
tribal-treaty.
\75\ Available online at https://www.epa.gov/tribal/forms/consultation-and-coordination-tribes.
\76\ Available online at https://www.epa.gov/tribal/epa-policy-consultation-and-coordination-indian-tribes-guidance-discussing-
tribal-treaty.
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EPA would attempt to honor consultation requests from tribal
governments considering the nature of the activity, past consultation
efforts, available resources, timing considerations, and all other
relevant factors. EPA would generally agree to consult when such a
request for consultation is made by a tribal government, assuming the
proposed action may affect that tribe.
E. How would the proposed regulatory revisions apply to States in the
Great Lakes system?
During pre-proposal tribal consultation and coordination, some
tribes questioned whether 40 CFR part 132, Water Quality Guidance for
the Great Lakes System, which identifies minimum WQS for the Great
Lakes System to protect human health, aquatic life, and wildlife, may
limit the ability of states subject to this regulation, once finalized,
to revise their WQS to protect tribal reserved rights. 40 CFR part 132
allows for greater levels of protection than specified in the
regulation. For example, 40 CFR 132.4(i) provides that, ``[n]othing in
this part shall prohibit the Great Lakes States and Tribes from
adopting numeric water quality criteria, narrative criteria, or water
quality values that are more stringent than'' the criteria and values
derived using the methodologies specified in 40 CFR part 132.
Therefore, 40 CFR part 132 does not limit the ability of states subject
to its requirements to revise their WQS to be more stringent if
necessary to protect tribal reserved rights. In addition, for waters in
the Great Lakes basin, states must meet the requirements of both 40 CFR
parts 131 and 132. Where regulations in 40 CFR parts 131 and 132
overlap, the more stringent regulation applies.
For these reasons, revisions to 40 CFR part 132 are not necessary
to protect tribal reserved rights.
F. Role of Other WQS Provisions in Protecting Tribal Reserved Rights
EPA requests comment on whether EPA should specify in 40 CFR 131.9
how other WQS provisions, such as general policies under 40 CFR 131.13,
WQS variances under 40 CFR 131.14, and permit compliance schedules
under 40 CFR 131.15, should be used to ensure protection of tribal
reserved rights. EPA is not proposing to modify the existing language
in these sections and is not reopening them for comment. Rather, EPA is
considering whether potential discrete additions to the current
regulatory scheme set forth in this rule may be necessary. For example,
just as the agency has outlined options for designated use revisions,
criteria revisions and use of state antidegradation policies, should
EPA include in 40 CFR 131.9 specifics on whether or how a state can
adopt a WQS variance and still protect tribal reserved rights?
V. Economic Analysis
Pursuant to Executive Orders 12866 (Regulatory Planning and Review)
and 13563 (Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review), EPA has
prepared an economic analysis to inform the public of potential costs
and benefits of this proposed rulemaking. This analysis is not required
by the CWA. EPA's economic analysis is documented in Economic Analysis
for Water Quality Standards Regulatory Revisions to Protect Tribal
Reserved Rights (Proposed Rule) and can be found in the docket for this
proposal.
EPA evaluated the potential incremental administrative burdens and
costs that may be associated with this proposal, beyond the burden and
costs associated with implementation of the current WQS regulation.
This proposal would not establish any requirements directly applicable
to regulated entities, such as industrial dischargers or municipal
wastewater treatment facilities, but could ultimately lead to
additional compliance costs to meet permit limits put in place to
comply with new WQS adopted by states because of this proposed
rulemaking. In general, facilities meet water quality-based limits
through pollution prevention programs, product substitution, altered
engineering processes, or end-of-pipe treatment. Other aspects of WQS,
such as variances which facilitate feasible progress toward a less
stringent interim goal, may mitigate compliance costs. However, because
of the uncertainty of the specific outcome of application of this
proposed rulemaking, both in terms of location and pollutants involved,
EPA is unable to provide estimates of costs to those regulated
entities. Instead, the focus of EPA's economic analysis is to estimate
the potential administrative burden and costs to state governments. EPA
does not anticipate this rule would impose any compliance costs on
territorial governments because EPA is not aware of any federally
recognized tribes with reserved rights in or downstream of any U.S.
territory. EPA also does not anticipate costs to authorized tribes \77\
because:
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\77\ An ``authorized tribe'' for the purpose of this rulemaking
means a tribe authorized for treatment in a manner similar to a
state (TAS) under Clean Water Act (CWA) Section 518(e).
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EPA anticipates that few, if any tribes have reserved
rights to resources on another tribe's reservation or otherwise under
the jurisdiction of another tribe. EPA requests comment on whether any
such situations may exist.
EPA anticipates that if there are tribes with reserved
rights to resources under the jurisdiction of a different tribe that is
an authorized tribe, their interests may align such that any adopted
WQS would reflect protecting such rights in absence of this proposed
rulemaking. Should this not be the case, then authorized tribes could
be subject to similar administrative costs as presented below for
states.
EPA also does not anticipate that this proposed rulemaking would
directly impose costs to right holders because it does not impose any
requirements on right holders. EPA acknowledges that the proposed
requirement to evaluate whether WQS protect relevant tribal reserved
rights, as informed by the right holders, may lead to increased
information-sharing among states, right-holders, and EPA. However, the
proposed rulemaking would not require any additional coordination
beyond that which already occurs in connection with WQS public
participation processes and EPA's consultations with tribal
governments. EPA has, on occasion, provided funding to tribes to
develop tribal fish consumption rates that are used to inform the level
of water quality necessary to support tribal reserved rights. EPA could
support similar projects in the future, as appropriate and as funding
allows. While EPA anticipates that states and EPA would bear the
majority of the burden for determining the extent of reserved rights
and water quality necessary to protect those rights, EPA acknowledges
that some tribes may choose to incur costs, such as legal fees or
scientific studies to support their position on the scope and nature of
their rights and/or water quality necessary to protect them.
EPA assessed the potential incremental burden and costs associated
with these proposed regulatory revisions on states by first identifying
those elements of the proposed revisions that may impose incremental
burdens and costs. Then, EPA estimated the incremental number of labor
hours potentially required by states to comply with those elements of
the proposed
[[Page 74374]]
regulatory revisions, and then estimated the costs associated with
those additional labor hours.
EPA assumed for the purpose of this analysis that all 50 states
would each undertake three WQS rulemakings to protect tribal reserved
rights. The agency assumed one rulemaking for each of the following
purposes:
To evaluate or revise WQS for protection of human health;
To evaluate or revise WQS for protection of aquatic life;
and
To account for any other WQS changes needed to protect
tribal reserved rights, including addressing the emergence of any
information in the future that informs either the applicability of the
reserved rights or the necessary level of water quality.
EPA assumed incremental burden and costs for all 50 states,
although it is likely that tribal reserved rights to aquatic and/or
aquatic-dependent resources do not exist in all 50 states. EPA
considered the costs associated with labor from economists, engineers,
scientists, and lawyers for development of state regulations. EPA did
not include any labor or other costs associated with potential
litigation of state regulations as this would not be a direct
consequence of this proposed rulemaking and would be highly
speculative. Estimates of the incremental administrative burden and
costs to state governments associated with this proposal are summarized
in the following Table 2:
Table 2--Summary of Potential Administrative Burdens and Costs to States Associated With the Proposed Rule
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Number of
Burden per Cost per State (2020$) potentially Total burden (hours) Total cost (2020$; one-
Rulemaking effort \1\ State (hours) \2\ affected \4\ time) \5\
States \3\
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Rulemaking #1................................ 100-500 $7,465-$37,325 50 5,000-25,000 $373,250-$1,866,250
Rulemaking #2................................ 90-450 6,718-33,592 50 4,500-22,500 335,925-1,679,625
Rulemaking #3................................ 75-375 5,599-27,994 50 3,750-18,750 279,938-1,399,688
Total \7\.................................... 265-1,325 19,782-98,911 50 13,250-66,250 989,112-4,945,562
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Reflects potential new or increased rulemaking activities to adopt provisions consistent with the proposed rulemaking into WQS.
\2\ Hours per state multiplied by average hourly labor rate of $74.65 and rounded to the nearest dollar.
\3\ Includes 50 states, but no territories or tribes.
\4\ Burden per state multiplied by total number of potentially affected states.
\5\ Total burden for all potentially affected states multiplied by average hourly labor rate of $74.65 and rounded to the nearest dollar.
Total one-time costs for this proposal are estimated to range from
$989,112 to $4,945,562. EPA chose not to annualize these costs given
uncertainty about the period over which that annualization would occur.
In addition to estimating potential burden and costs, EPA also
evaluated the potential benefits associated with this proposal. While
this rulemaking would not directly lead to improvements in water
quality, if finalized, this rulemaking would establish a framework that
would encourage future improvements in water quality in geographic
areas where tribes hold reserved rights. EPA anticipates that the
proposed rulemaking will enhance the ability of states and tribes to
protect their water resources by clarifying and prescribing how to
protect waters with applicable tribal reserved rights and improving
coordination between Federal, state, and tribal governments. Tribal
members and the general public may indirectly benefit from this
rulemaking through targeted improvements to water quality that are
implemented to meet more stringent state WQS adopted in accordance with
this rulemaking.
EPA acknowledges that achievement of any benefits associated with
cleaner water would involve additional control measures, and thus costs
to regulated entities and nonpoint sources, that have not been included
in the economic analysis for this proposed rulemaking. EPA has not
attempted to quantify either the costs of control measures that might
ultimately be required as a result of this rulemaking, or the benefits
they would provide. However, better protection of tribal reserved
rights has the potential to provide a variety of economic benefits
associated with cleaner water.
The primary benefits of the proposed rulemaking for reserved right
holders would likely be improved ability to maintain traditions and
cultural landscapes and reduced risk to human health. Reducing
pollutant levels so that traditional foods such as fish and wild rice
are abundant and safe to eat in subsistence quantities allows for
unsuppressed levels of tribal subsistence consumption of these
resources, which in turn contributes to restoring and maintaining
traditional lifeways, preserving indigenous knowledge, and cultural
self-determination. The recognition of tribal reserved rights can also
lead to direct economic benefits to tribal members. For example, a 1974
court decision allocating 50% of the Columbia River salmon and
steelhead catch to the tribes with reserved rights to this resource
resulted in a near doubling of revenue for these tribes.\78\ This
rulemaking seeks to ensure that water quality does not limit right
holders' ability to utilize their rights, and therefore achieve the
corresponding economic and social benefits.
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\78\ Parker, D.P., Rucker, R.R., & Nickerson, P.H. (2016). The
Legacy of United States v. Washington: Economic Effects of the Boldt
and Rafeedie Decisions. In Unlocking the Wealth of Indian Nations,
ed. T.L. Anderson, Rowman and Littlefield Press.
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Other potential benefits include the availability of clean, safe,
and affordable drinking water, greater recreational opportunities,
water of adequate quality for agricultural and industrial use, and
water quality that supports the commercial fishing industry and higher
property values. These benefits could accrue to both tribal and
nontribal populations.
As mentioned above, this proposal does not establish any
requirements directly applicable to regulated point sources or nonpoint
sources of pollution, although EPA recognizes that these sources could
potentially incur future costs as a result of changes to WQS adopted by
states as a result of this rulemaking (states could also adopt new or
revised WQS independent of this proposed rulemaking). However, this
proposal does not lend itself to identification of readily predictable
outcomes regarding changes to state WQS that might result. Likewise,
EPA could not predict requirements that could ultimately be imposed on
NPDES permittees and nonpoint sources. Thus, EPA has not analyzed
potential costs or
[[Page 74375]]
cost savings associated with any consequences of potential revised
state WQS.
EPA seeks comment on all aspects of the accompanying economic
analysis.
VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
Additional information about these statutes and Executive Orders
can be found at https://www.epa.gov/laws-regulations/laws-and-executive-orders.
A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
This action is a significant regulatory action that was submitted
to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for review. Any changes
made in response to OMB recommendations have been documented in the
docket.
EPA prepared an analysis of the potential costs and benefits
associated with this action. This analysis is summarized in section V
of the preamble and is available in the docket.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
The information collection requirements in this proposed rule have
been submitted for approval to the OMB under the Paperwork Reduction
Act, 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq. The Information Collection Request (ICR)
document prepared by EPA has been assigned EPA ICR number 2700.01. You
can find a copy of the ICR in the docket for this rule, and it is
briefly summarized here. The information collection requirements in
this proposed rule will be in addition to requirements described in the
existing ICR for the Water Quality Standards Regulation and approved by
OMB through February 2025.\79\ At this time EPA is not proposing to
revise the existing ICR to consolidate the requirements of this
proposed rule. EPA intends to do so when it requests renewal of the
existing ICR in 2025.
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\79\ ``Information Collection Request for Water Quality
Standards Regulation,'' OMB Control Number 2040-0049, EPA ICR Number
0988.15, expiration date February 28, 2025.
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EPA would use the information required by this proposed rule to
carry out its responsibilities under the CWA to review and approve or
disapprove new and revised WQS submitted by states. In reviewing state
WQS submissions, EPA considers whether those submissions are consistent
with the WQS regulation at 40 CFR part 131. The current regulation
requires states to include supporting information to accompany WQS
submissions to help EPA determine whether the submitted new and revised
WQS are consistent with 40 CFR part 131. This proposed rule would add a
new requirement to 40 CFR part 131 to require, where applicable, that
state WQS submissions provide additional supporting information about
whether the submitted WQS protect tribal reserved rights, including
information about the scope, nature, and current and past use of the
tribal reserved rights, and data and methods used to develop the WQS.
This mandatory information collection would provide EPA with
information necessary to review and approve or disapprove standards in
accordance with the CWA, 40 CFR part 131, and other Federal laws.
If the information collection activities in this proposed
rulemaking are not carried out, states and EPA may not be able to
ensure that WQS comply with treaties and other Federal laws. In some
cases, this could result in implementation and control steps such as
TMDLs and NPDES permits that also do not comply with treaties and other
Federal laws.
Respondents/affected entities: states, territories, and tribes
authorized for treatment in a manner similar to a state for purposes of
establishing WQS under the CWA. While tribal right holders would not be
direct respondents, EPA acknowledges that the proposed regulation would
require that state submissions be informed by the right holders. EPA
believes this would not lead to increased burden on right holders
because the proposed rule would not require additional coordination
beyond that which already occurs during WQS public participation
processes and EPA's consultations with tribal governments. EPA requests
comment on this conclusion.
Respondent's obligation to respond: mandatory.
Estimated number of respondents: 50.
Frequency of response: on occasion/as necessary.
Total estimated burden: 13,250-66,250 hours. Burden is defined at 5
CFR 1320.3(b).
Total estimated labor cost: $989,112-$4,945,562 one-time costs (not
annualized).
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. The OMB control numbers for EPA's
regulations in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
Submit your comments on the Agency's need for this information, the
accuracy of the provided burden estimates and any suggested methods for
minimizing respondent burden to the EPA using the docket identified at
the beginning of this rule. You may also send your ICR-related comments
to OMB's Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs using the
interface at www.reginfo.gov/public/do/PRAMain. Find this particular
information collection by selecting ``Currently under Review-- Open for
Public Comments'' or by using the search function. OMB must receive
comments no later than February 3, 2023. EPA will respond to any ICR-
related comments in the final rule.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
I certify that this action will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act. This action will not impose any requirements on small
entities. Small entities are not directly regulated by this rule and
this action will not impose any requirements on small entities; rather,
this action will impose requirements only on states to take into
consideration how their WQS must protect aquatic and aquatic-dependent
resources reserved to tribes through treaties, statutes, Executive
orders, or other sources of Federal law.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
This action does not contain any unfunded mandate as described in
UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not significantly or uniquely affect
small governments. The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state,
local or tribal governments or the private sector.
E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
EPA has concluded that this action does not have federalism
implications. It will not have substantial direct effects on the
states, on the relationship between the national government and the
states, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government. This rule would clarify and prescribe how
WQS for a state's waters must protect aquatic and aquatic-dependent
resources reserved to tribes through treaties, statutes, Executive
orders, or other sources of Federal law. States continue to have
considerable discretion in adopting and implementing WQS. Thus,
Executive Order 13132 does not apply to this action.
In the spirit of Executive Order 13132 and consistent with EPA's
policy to promote communications between EPA and state and local
governments, EPA provided a conceptual overview of the draft rule for
the Association of Clean Water Agencies (ACWA)'s Monitoring, Standards
and Assessment
[[Page 74376]]
Subcommittee, and during three additional one-on-one meetings with
individual states held upon request.\80\ In these discussions states
requested additional clarification about EPA's expectations for how
they should determine where tribal reserved rights apply, what
resources and tools will be available, e.g., geospatial data, and how
to handle situations where data are not available, the state and tribe
disagree, or multiple tribes have overlapping rights and do not agree
on the level of protection. EPA took these discussions into account
during the drafting of this rule. EPA specifically solicits comments on
this proposed action from state and local officials.
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\80\ The slides EPA presented at its meeting with ACWA are
included in the docket for this rulemaking. These are representative
of the slides EPA presented at its one-on-one meetings with states.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After publishing this proposed rulemaking, EPA will conduct
additional outreach and engagement with state and local government
officials, or their representative national organizations, prior to
finalizing a rule. All comment letters and recommendations received by
EPA during the comment period from state and local governments will be
included in the proposed rulemaking docket (Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-
2021-0791).
F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian
Tribal Governments
This action has tribal implications, however it will neither impose
substantial direct compliance costs on federally recognized tribal
governments, nor preempt tribal law. This rulemaking may affect tribes
with reserved rights to aquatic and/or aquatic-dependent resources in
waters subject to state WQS, and it may also affect tribes
administering a CWA 303 WQS program. As of November 15, 2022, 80 Indian
tribes have been approved for treatment in a manner similar to a state
(TAS) for CWA sections 303 and 401.\81\ All or some of these authorized
tribes could be subject to this proposed rule, depending on the
location and nature of any other tribes' downstream rights.
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\81\ For the most current information please refer to https://www.epa.gov/wqs-tech/epa-actions-tribal-water-quality-standards-and-contacts.
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EPA consulted with tribal officials early in the process of
developing this regulation to permit them to have meaningful and timely
input into its development. EPA held a 90-day tribal consultation and
coordination period from June 15 through September 13, 2021 with
federally recognized tribes to inform development of the proposed rule.
EPA conducted the consultation and coordination process in accordance
with the EPA Policy on Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribes
(https://www.epa.gov/tribal/epa-policy-consultation-and-coordination-indian-tribes). In addition to two national tribal listening sessions
held in July and August 2021, EPA presented at 20 meetings of tribal
staff and leadership, as well as held seven staff-level coordination/
engagement meetings and held seven leader-to-leader meetings at the
request of tribes. EPA continued outreach and engagement with tribes at
national and regional tribal meetings after the end of the consultation
period. Nearly all commenters were supportive of the potential rule in
concept. EPA considered all pre-proposal tribal input received as it
developed the proposed rule.
A summary of that consultation (``Summary of EPA's Pre-Proposal
Consultation, Coordination, and Outreach with Federally Recognized
Tribes on Potential Revisions to the Federal Water Quality Standards
Regulation to Protect Tribal Reserved Rights'') is available in the
docket for this proposal.
G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental
Health and Safety Risks
This action is not subject to Executive Order 13045 because it is
not economically significant as defined in E.O. 12866, and because it
does not concern an environmental health risk or safety risk that may
disproportionately affect children.
H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect Energy
Supply, Distribution, or Use
This action is not a ``significant energy action'' because it is
not likely to have a significant adverse effect on the supply,
distribution or use of energy. This action impacts state and tribal
water quality standards, which do not regulate the supply,
distribution, or use of energy.
I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act of 1995
This proposed rulemaking does not involve technical standards.
J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations
For the reasons explained below, EPA concludes that this action
does not have disproportionately high and adverse human health or
environmental effects on minority populations, low-income populations
and/or indigenous peoples, as specified in Executive Order 12898 (59 FR
7629, February 16, 1994). Instead, EPA believes that this rule will
address some of the many disproportionate impacts to tribal
communities.
EPA defines Environmental Justice (EJ) as the fair treatment and
meaningful involvement of all people regardless of race, color,
national origin, or income with respect to the development,
implementation and enforcement of environmental laws, regulations and
policies.\82\ Three Executive Orders (E.O. 12898 \83\, 13985 \84\ and
14008 \85\) advance EJ by calling on Federal agencies to identify and
address disproportionate impacts on historically underserved,
marginalized, and economically disadvantaged people. Additionally, EPA
has expressed a commitment to conducting EJ analyses for rulemakings as
described in the April 30, 2021, revisions to the Cross-State Air
Pollution Rule (CSAPR).\86\ This rule is
[[Page 74377]]
consistent with EPA's strategic goal of advancing EJ.\87\
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\82\ Fair treatment means that ``no group of people should bear
a disproportionate burden of environmental harms and risks,
including those resulting from the negative environmental
consequences of industrial, governmental and commercial operations
or programs and policies.'' Meaningful involvement occurs when ``(1)
potentially affected populations have an appropriate opportunity to
participate in decisions about a proposed activity [e.g.,
rulemaking] that will affect their environment and/or health; (2)
the public's contribution can influence [the EPA's rulemaking]
decision; (3) the concerns of all participants involved will be
considered in the decision-making process; and (4) [the EPA will]
seek out and facilitate the involvement of those potentially
affected.'' A potential EJ concern is defined as ``the actual or
potential lack of fair treatment or meaningful involvement of
minority populations, low-income populations, tribes, and tribal
peoples in the development, implementation and enforcement of
environmental laws, regulations and policies.'' See ``Guidance on
Considering Environmental Justice During the Development of an
Action.'' Environmental Protection Agency, www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice/guidanceconsidering-environmental-justice-duringdevelopment-action. See also https://www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice.
\83\ Federal Actions to Address Environmental Justice in
Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations. Available at
https://www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice/federal-actions-address-environmental-justice-minority-populations-and-low.
\84\ Advancing Racial Equity and Support for Underserved
Communities Through the Federal Government. Available at https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/01/25/2021-01753/advancing-racial-equity-and-support-for-underserved-communities-through-the-federal-government.
\85\ Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad. Available
at https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2021/02/01/2021-02177/tackling-the-climate-crisis-at-home-and-abroad.
\86\ 86 FR 23054, 23162 (April 30, 2021) (``Going forward, EPA
is committed to conducting environmental justice analysis for
rulemakings based on a framework similar to what is outlined here,
in addition to investigating ways to further weave environmental
justice into the fabric of the rulemaking process including through
enhanced meaningful engagement with environmental justice
communities.'').
\87\ FY2022-2026 EPA Strategic Plan. Available online at https://www.epa.gov/planandbudget/strategicplan.
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Environmental impacts to tribes may be considered under the
category of EJ in recognition that tribes may at times be more
susceptible to impacts from environmental degradation. In addition,
E.O. 12898 directs Federal agencies, as appropriate and practical, to
evaluate and communicate the risks associated with consumption patterns
for populations that rely on fish and/or wildlife for subsistence.
There is a unique set of EJ considerations for tribes, particularly
where tribes are exercising their cultural practices, both on and off
their reservations. For EPA, the government-to-government relationship
and trust responsibility that the Federal government has with federally
recognized tribal governments further sets EJ issues for tribes apart
from those in other communities.\88\
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\88\ EPA recognizes our responsibility to work with both
federally recognized tribes and all other indigenous peoples, per
the EPA Policy on Environmental Justice for Working with Federally
Recognized Tribes and Indigenous Peoples (2014) (available online at
https://www.epa.gov/environmentaljustice/epa-policy-environmental-justice-working-federally-recognized-tribes-and) to address their EJ
concerns. As defined in the policy, Indigenous Peoples ``includes
state-recognized tribes; indigenous and tribal community-based
organizations; individual members of federally recognized tribes,
including those living on a different reservation or living outside
Indian country; individual members of state-recognized tribes;
Native Hawaiians; Native Pacific Islanders; and individual Native
Americans.''
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EPA and other Federal agencies focus on resolving EJ issues
affecting tribes through (1) supporting the tribes' sovereignty and
exercise of their own environmental authorities and (2) taking direct
action on behalf of the tribes as part of the Federal government's
tribal trust responsibility. This proposed rulemaking is relying on a
combination of both approaches, as discussed below.
Many tribes rely on aquatic and aquatic-dependent resources for
their lifeways. Attaining and sustaining clean water to protect human
health is essential to ensuring tribes can continue to practice these
traditional lifeways. However, due to water quality issues, many tribes
are unable to do so. The contamination of aquatic food resources above
levels safe to consume in desired quantities results in what is often
described as a suppression effect. An illustration of a suppression
effect is when the fish consumption rate for a given tribe reflects a
current level of consumption that is artificially diminished relative
to the tribe's heritage fish consumption rate.89 90 91
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\89\ National Environmental Justice Advisory Council (NEJAC).
2002. Fish Consumption and Environmental Justice. https://www.epa.gov/sites/default/files/2015-02/documents/fish-consump-report_1102.pdf. p. vii.
\90\ EPA. 2016. Idaho Tribal Fish Consumption Survey. https://www.epa.gov/columbiariver/idaho-tribal-fish-consumption-survey.
\91\ Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission, 2019. Opposition to
EPA's 2019 Actions to Roll Back Washington's Human Health Water
Quality Criteria, Docket No. EPA-HQ-OW-2015-0174. Available online
at https://www.regulations.gov/comment/EPA-HQ-OW-2015-0174-0970.
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The negative impacts of suppression extend well beyond tribal
health, leading to consequences for tribal economies and cultures as
well. Given that aquatic resources often support a tribe's cultural
self-determination and can be pivotal to the economic well-being of the
community, impacts to these resources can affect the very foundation of
tribal social and political organization,\92\ as well as impact a
tribe's ability to provide for present and future generations and the
maintenance of their lifeways.
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\92\ Ranco, D.J., O'Neill, C.A., Donatuto, J., & Harper, B.L.
2011. Environmental Justice, American Indians and the Cultural
Dilemma: Developing Environmental Management for Tribal Health and
Well-being. Environmental Justice 4;4, DOI: 10.1089/env.2010.0036.
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Tribes have a unique legal and political status, and environmental
issues affecting tribes must be viewed in the context of tribal
sovereignty. In giving reserved rights an explicit role in CWA
regulations, EPA's goal is to support tribal sovereignty. The proposed
rulemaking recognizes how critical reserved rights are for many tribes'
cultural and economic survival by providing a platform for states and
EPA to consider the nature and scope of the very rights that tribes
have reserved to themselves and have been enshrined in legal
instruments.
Tribes, unlike other communities with EJ concerns, cannot be viewed
as subpopulations, differentiated only by exposures and other
vulnerabilities. Tribal communities' relationship with their resources
is unique and should be understood in terms of both the past and
present relationship the particular tribal communities have with these
resources and their dependence on those resources. Impacts to tribal
communities may be disproportionate by definition because of their
unique relationship to the environment.\93\ It is often the resource
base that provides for their cultural self-determination and can be
pivotal to the economic well-being of the community. Indeed, many of
the reserved rights expressly include subsistence and economic
components.\94\ Impacts to their resource base could affect the very
foundation of their tribal social and political organization,\95\ as
well as impact their ability to provide for present and future
generations and the maintenance of their lifeways.
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\93\ Suagee, D.B. (2003). Environmental Justice and Indian
Country. Human Rights, Vol. 30, No. 4, p.16-17.
\94\ Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians
v. Wisconsin, 758 F. Supp. 1262 (W.D. Wisc. 1991).
\95\ Ranco, D.J., O'Neill, C.A., Donatuto, J., & Harper, B.L.
(2011). Environmental Justice, American Indians and the Cultural
Dilemma: Developing Environmental Management for Tribal Health and
Well-being. Environmental Justice 4;4, DOI: 10.1089/env.2010.0036.
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This proposed rulemaking's emphasis on treating the applicable
tribe or tribes as the target population speaks to this unique status.
And the goal of protecting treaty resources that may not be otherwise
fully protected under the CWA may indeed have a subsistence and an
economic component. Further, the concept of addressing suppression, as
described in section IV.C.2.ii. of this preamble, takes on a unique
approach where tribal members are concerned by examining not only the
current context but may also look at historical and cultural practices
to establish the appropriate baseline. Many tribes have continued their
traditional practices and/or seek to return to those practices, yet
they may have also developed new approaches and relationships to their
resource base. Both contexts should be considered in furthering the
goal of protecting resources for which tribes have reserved rights.
The role these resources play in tribal communities can be complex.
Understanding which resources, how they may be used, and in what
quantities, is essential in protecting tribal sovereignty and the
cultural and economic survival of tribal communities. And each tribe
will likely have a very different set of values and relationships with
the resources, which may be different world views from those of the
surrounding community, and from state and local governments.\96\
Successful implementation of this proposed rulemaking therefore
necessitates close coordination with tribes and a greater understanding
of the unique approaches that tribes may have toward managing their
resources. The foundation of this coordination in this
[[Page 74378]]
WQS context necessarily includes the state, with CWA authority to set
standards in the reserved rights areas in question, local governments,
who often have even more direct contact with tribal members and their
governments, tribes holding those rights, and the Federal government.
This proposed rulemaking recognizes the importance of coordination with
tribes by establishing an express mechanism for tribal input in the
state WQS setting process.
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\96\ Ranco, D.J., O'Neill, C.A., Donatuto, J., & Harper, B.L.
(2011). Environmental Justice, American Indians and the Cultural
Dilemma: Developing Environmental Management for Tribal Health and
Well-being. Environmental Justice 4;4, DOI: 10.1089/env.2010.0036
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Reaching consensus can pose challenges, particularly given the
deep-seated sense of stewardship and responsibility tribes often feel
toward these resources even when under the jurisdiction of the state.
But it is often when tribal resources are not under the jurisdiction of
the tribes themselves that tribes see the biggest environmental justice
impacts.\97\ It is EPA's goal that the sovereignty and management role
of both state and tribal governments will be better understood and
aligned through implementation of this rulemaking.
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\97\ Id
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EPA recognizes that tribes without federally reserved rights to
aquatic or aquatic-dependent resources will not be directly impacted by
this rulemaking. The agency also acknowledges that since this
rulemaking only covers locations with reserved rights, other aquatic
resources upon which tribes depend may not be covered. It is EPA's
expectation that many of the coordination and collaboration processes
that will be developed to implement this rule will also lead to better
protection of aquatic and aquatic-dependent resources not referenced in
treaties and similar instruments because this rulemaking aims to
facilitate greater coordination between state and tribal governments.
EPA will continue to work with states and tribes to help reach this
goal. While this rulemaking does not address all obstacles to the full
exercise of these rights, EPA believes it takes a positive step in that
direction.
List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 131
Environmental protection, Indians--lands, Intergovernmental
relations, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Water pollution
control.
Michael S. Regan,
Administrator.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, EPA proposes to amend 40
CFR part 131 as follows:
PART 131--WATER QUALITY STANDARDS
0
1. The authority citation for part 131 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 33 U.S.C. 1251 et seq.
Subpart A--General Provisions
0
2. Amend Sec. 131.3 by adding paragraphs (r) and (s) to read as
follows:
Sec. 131.3 Definitions.
* * * * *
(r) Tribal reserved rights are any rights to aquatic and/or
aquatic-dependent resources reserved or held by tribes, either
expressly or implicitly, through treaties, statutes, executive orders,
or other sources of Federal law.
(s) Right holders are tribes holding rights to aquatic and/or
aquatic-dependent resources pursuant to an applicable treaty, statute,
executive order, or other source of Federal law.
0
3. Amend Sec. 131.5 by adding paragraph (a)(9) and revising paragraph
(b) to read as follows:
Sec. 131.5 EPA authority.
(a) * * *
(9) Whether any State adopted water quality standards protect
tribal reserved rights, where applicable, consistent with Sec. 131.9.
(b) If EPA determines that the State's or Tribe's water quality
standards are consistent with the factors listed in paragraphs (a)(1)
through (9) of this section, EPA approves the standards. EPA must
disapprove the State's or Tribe's water quality standards and
promulgate Federal standards under section 303(c)(4), and for Great
Lakes States or Great Lakes Tribes under section 118(c)(2)(C) of the
Act, if State or Tribal adopted standards are not consistent with the
factors listed in paragraphs (a)(1) through (9) of this section. EPA
may also promulgate a new or revised standard when necessary to meet
the requirements of the Act.
* * * * *
0
4. Amend Sec. 131.6 by adding paragraph (g) to read as follows:
Sec. 131.6 Minimum requirements for water quality standards
submission.
* * * * *
(g) Where applicable, information which will aid the agency in
evaluating whether the submission protects tribal reserved rights
consistent with Sec. 131.9, including:
(1) Information about the scope, nature, and current and past use
of the tribal reserved rights, as informed by the right holders; and
(2) Data and methods used to develop the water quality standards.
Subpart B--Establishment of Water Quality Standards
0
5. Add Sec. 131.9 to subpart B to read as follows:
Sec. 131.9 Protection of tribal reserved rights.
(a) Water quality standards must protect tribal reserved rights
applicable to waters subject to such standards. To protect tribal
reserved rights, water quality standards must, to the extent supported
by available data and information, be established to protect:
(1) The exercise of tribal reserved rights unsuppressed by water
quality or availability of the aquatic or aquatic-dependent resource;
and
(2) The health of the right holders to at least the same risk level
as provided to the general population of the State.
(b) In reviewing State water quality standards submissions under
this section, EPA will initiate tribal consultation with the right
holders, consistent with applicable EPA tribal consultation policies,
in determining whether State water quality standards protect applicable
tribal reserved rights in accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section.
(c) In order to meet the requirements in paragraph (a) of this
section, States must:
(1) Designate uses consistent with Sec. 131.10 that either
expressly incorporate protection of the tribal reserved rights or
encompass such rights; and
(2) Establish water quality criteria consistent with Sec. 131.11
to protect tribal reserved rights; and/or
(3) Use applicable antidegradation requirements consistent with
Sec. 131.12 to maintain and protect water quality that protects tribal
reserved rights.
Subpart C--Procedures for Review and Revision of Water Quality
Standards
0
6.Amend Sec. 131.20 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 131.20 State review and revision of water quality standards.
(a) State review. The State shall from time to time, but at least
once every 3 years, hold public hearings for the purpose of reviewing
applicable water quality standards adopted pursuant to Sec. Sec.
131.10 through 131.15 and Federally promulgated water quality standards
and, as appropriate, modifying and adopting standards. This review
shall include evaluating whether there are tribal reserved rights
applicable to State waters and whether water quality standards need to
be revised to protect those rights pursuant to Sec. 131.9. The State
shall also re-examine any
[[Page 74379]]
waterbody segment with water quality standards that do not include the
uses specified in section 101(a)(2) of the Act every 3 years to
determine if any new information has become available. If such new
information indicates that the uses specified in section 101(a)(2) of
the Act are attainable, the State shall revise its standards
accordingly. Procedures States establish for identifying and reviewing
water bodies for review should be incorporated into their Continuing
Planning Process. In addition, if a State does not adopt new or revised
criteria for parameters for which EPA has published new or updated CWA
section 304(a) criteria recommendations, then the State shall provide
an explanation when it submits the results of its triennial review to
the Regional Administrator consistent with CWA section 303(c)(1) and
the requirements of paragraph (c) of this section.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2022-26240 Filed 12-2-22; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P