Hazardous Materials: Adjusting Registration and Fee Assessment Program; Notice of Public Meeting, 34227-34228 [2023-11298]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 102 / Friday, May 26, 2023 / Notices
34227
SPECIAL PERMITS DATA—Continued
Application No.
Applicant
Regulation(s) affected
Nature of the special permits thereof
21360–M ..........
ABG Bag, Inc .........................
173.12(b)(2)(ii)(C), 178.707(d)
21460–M ..........
Amerex Corporation ...............
173.309(c), 172.203(a),
172.301(c).
To modify the special permit to authorize Division 5.2 hazardous materials. (mode 1).
To modify the special permit to remove the requirement that
the special permit be provided to the air carrier and to authorize a copy of the special permit to be accessible electronically through a QR code directly applied to each extinguisher in lieu of having a paper copy of the special
permit be maintained at each facility where the extinguishers are offered or reoffered. (modes 1, 2, 3, 4, 5).
[FR Doc. 2023–11301 Filed 5–25–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
I. Background
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration
[Docket No. PHMSA–2022–0033 (Notice No.
2023–05)]
Hazardous Materials: Adjusting
Registration and Fee Assessment
Program; Notice of Public Meeting
Pipeline and Hazardous
Materials Safety Administration
(PHMSA), Department of Transportation
(DOT).
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
AGENCY:
PHMSA’s Office of Hazardous
Materials Safety will hold a public
meeting to solicit input on potential
adjustments to the statutorily mandated
hazardous materials registration and fee
assessment program. The potential
adjustment of fees may be necessary to
fund PHMSA’s national emergency
preparedness grant programs at the
newly authorized level in accordance
with the Infrastructure Investment and
Jobs Act of 2021.
DATES: The meeting will be held
virtually on June 28, 2023, from 1:00
p.m. until 4:00 p.m. Eastern Standard
Time. Requests to attend the meeting
must be received by June 21, 2023.
Requests for accommodations for a
disability must be received by June 21,
2023. Persons requesting to speak
during the meeting must submit a
written copy of their remarks to DOT by
June 21, 2023. Requests to submit
written materials to be reviewed during
the meeting must be received no later
than June 21, 2023.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held
virtually at the following: https://
usdot.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/
vJItde2gqzgtGcv6ewzeLw
34nzwwtO_IY68.
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
SUMMARY:
Yul
B. Baker Jr., Standards and Rulemaking
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:14 May 25, 2023
Jkt 259001
Division, Office of Hazardous Materials
Safety, 202–366–8553, PHMSA, East
Building, PHH10, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE, Washington, DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration (PHMSA) is
considering an adjustment to our
statutorily mandated registration and fee
assessment program for persons who
offer for transportation or transport
certain categories and quantities of
hazardous materials. PHMSA conducts
a national hazardous materials
registration program under the mandate
in 49 U.S.C. 5108 for a person who
offers 1 for transportation (i.e., shippers)
or transports certain hazardous
materials in intrastate, interstate, or
foreign commerce. The registration
program implements the mandate for
persons to file a registration statement
with the Secretary of Transportation—as
delegated to PHMSA—and collects
registration and processing fees from
persons required to file a registration
statement (hereafter referred to as
‘‘registrants’’) to fund the Emergency
Preparedness (EP) grants. EP grants
support hazardous materials emergency
response planning and training
activities by states, local governments,
and Native American tribes. EP grants
also fund nonprofit organizations to
provide ‘‘train-the-trainer’’ programs for
hazardous materials emergency
response training and hazardous
materials employee training.
Additionally, EP grants support the
development of the Emergency
Response Guidebook (ERG) that assists
emergency responders in determining
appropriate response measures and
provides funds for grantee monitoring
and technical assistance. Congress
recognized in the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 2 (IIJA)
(as evidenced by increased
authorization levels for the EP Grant
1 Defined
2 Public
PO 00000
in 49 CFR 171.8.
Law 117–58.
Program), and as congressional
testimony was reinforced in the
aftermath of the 2023 Norfolk Southern
train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio,
there is an increasing need for Federal
support for first responders, particularly
responders to hazardous materials
related incidents, such as are supported
through the EP grants.
To raise additional revenue to meet
the increasing needs for the EP Grant
Program, PHMSA has discretion to
require additional persons to register—
beyond those who offer, and transport
certain categories and quantities of
hazardous materials listed in 49 U.S.C.
5108(a)(1)—and to set the annual
registration fee between the statutorily
mandated minimum and maximum
amounts. See 49 U.S.C. 5108(b), 5116,
and 5128(b). PHMSA may currently set
an annual registration fee between a
minimum of $250 and maximum of
$3,000. In the HM–208J Advanced
Noticed of Proposed Rulemaking
(ANPRM),3 PHMSA presented a fee
scenario table and options to solicit
feedback from stakeholders on potential
methods and any alternative methods to
achieve the increased funding. PHMSA
presented nine options for
consideration, grouped between a
scenario where the maximum fee
remains $3,000 per year, and an
alternative scenario where Congress
increases the maximum fee. The options
included:
If registration fees remain at a
maximum $3,000 per year, PHMSA is
considering the following options for
comment:
1. Keep the existing registration
requirements (see 49 CFR 107.601) and
raise the registration fee for large
businesses from $2,575 to $3,000.
2. Keep the existing registration
requirements and apply a nominal fee
(e.g., $25) for each facility or geographic
location from which a registered person
(i.e., a company) offers for
transportation, or transports, certain
hazardous materials.
Frm 00102
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
3 87
FR 57859 (Sept. 22, 2022).
E:\FR\FM\26MYN1.SGM
26MYN1
ddrumheller on DSK120RN23PROD with NOTICES1
34228
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 102 / Friday, May 26, 2023 / Notices
3. Modify assignment of the
registration fee and/or amount based on
the commensurate hazard posed (e.g.,
shipping Packing Group I materials vs.
Packing Group III materials) 4 or risk
profile (e.g., frequent vs. infrequent
shipments).
4. Expand the registration
requirements. For example, certain
hazardous materials are not subject to
placarding when shipped domestically.
Therefore, a person who offers for
transportation, or transports, these
materials is generally exempt from
registration, but these requirements
could be expanded with appropriate
risk-based justifications.
5. Expand the registration fee
requirements to include certain persons
who acquire approvals or special
permits from PHMSA that otherwise are
not subject to registration, but which
should be based on a public risk-based
justification.
If Congress allows an increase in the
maximum fee, PHMSA is considering
the following options for comment:
1. Maintain the current maximum
registration fees and create an upper tier
of a higher fee for a certain category of
very large businesses. If this approach is
preferred, how should PHMSA define a
‘‘very large business?’’ Specifically,
what risk factors should go into
determining a very large business
classification to better account for
market-based risks to the public as well
as equity factors between applicants.
2. Change the registration
requirements to reduce the overall
number of registrants.
3. Keep the existing registration
requirements and raise the registration
fee for large businesses from $2,575 to
a dollar value below the Congressionally
authorized maximum fee (e.g., if the
maximum allowed were increased from
$3,000 to $5,000).
4. Raise fees for specific business
types, classes of material, or
commodities (e.g., poisonous by
inhalation material), which are
considered extremely high risk.
Once the comment period concluded
for the ANPRM, PHMSA received seven
sets of comments from the regulated
community—which provided some
insight on how to adjust the mandated
registration and fee assessment program.
Some ideas expressed within the
comments PHMSA received were:
1. Maintaining a two-tiered fee
structure and raising HAZMAT
registration fees in a manner that will
4 Packing group means a grouping according to
the degree of danger presented by hazardous
materials. Packing Group I indicates great danger;
Packing Group II, medium danger; Packing Group
III, minor danger.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:14 May 25, 2023
Jkt 259001
not disproportionately impact small
businesses.
2. Endorsing the current two-tiered
fee system based on the level of
commercial activity assigned to
business entities by the Small Business
Administration (SBA) and opposing
broadening the universe of registrants
beyond shippers and carriers of
placarded loads.
3. Raising the $3,000 per registrant fee
cap.
4. Supporting the current two-tiered
fee structure as well established and
capable of generating the additional
funds authorized in the IIJA,
minimizing complexity, and providing
clear identification of those who are
required to pay the appropriate fees.
5. Opposing additional criteria,
revising the defining criteria for small or
non-small businesses, or adding
additional types of businesses that
would need to register.
Due to the limited number of
comments received, PHMSA is holding
this public meeting in hopes of
garnering more substantive feedback
and information on the most
appropriate and equitable manner to
adjust the registration and fee
assessment program to meet the
authorized increase set forth in the IIJA.
Issued in Washington, DC, on May 23,
2023, under the authority delegated in 49
CFR 1.97.
William S. Schoonover,
Associate Administrator for Hazard Materials
Safety, Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration.
II. Meeting Agenda
DATES:
At this meeting, PHMSA will address
the following topics:
1. Data points PHMSA has garnered
from an independent working group.
2. Establishing a new registration
group (e.g., packaging manufacturers)
and potentially raising registration fees
on businesses other than small
businesses based on risk-based transport
of hazardous materials.
3. Open floor—any items not covered
in the ANPRM, or new suggestions
mentioned by commenters to the
ANPRM.
III. Public Participation
The meeting will be open to the
public; however, any member of the
public who wishes to attend must RSVP
in advance using the following: https://
usdot.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/
vJItde2gqzgtGcv6ewzeLw
34nzwwtO_IY68.
PHMSA is committed to providing
equal access for all citizens and
ensuring that information is available in
appropriate alternative formats to meet
the requirements of persons who have a
disability. If you require an alternative
version of files provided or alternative
accommodations, please contact
PHMSA-Accessibility@dot.gov no later
than June 21, 2023.
PO 00000
Frm 00103
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
[FR Doc. 2023–11298 Filed 5–25–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910–60–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials
Safety Administration
Hazardous Materials: Notice of
Applications for New Special Permits
Pipeline and Hazardous
Materials Safety Administration
(PHMSA), DOT.
ACTION: List of applications for special
permits.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
procedures governing the application
for, and the processing of, special
permits from the Department of
Transportation’s Hazardous Material
Regulations, notice is hereby given that
the Office of Hazardous Materials Safety
has received the application described
herein.
SUMMARY:
Comments must be received on
or before June 26, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Record Center, Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration U.S. Department of
Transportation Washington, DC 20590.
Comments should refer to the
application number and be submitted in
triplicate. If confirmation of receipt of
comments is desired, include a selfaddressed stamped postcard showing
the special permit number.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Donald Burger, Chief, Office of
Hazardous Materials Safety General
Approvals and Permits Branch, Pipeline
and Hazardous Materials Safety
Administration, U.S. Department of
Transportation, East Building, PHH–13,
1200 New Jersey Avenue Southeast,
Washington, DC 20590–0001, (202) 366–
4535.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Each
mode of transportation for which a
particular special permit is requested is
indicated by a number in the ‘‘Nature of
Application’’ portion of the table below
as follows: 1—Motor vehicle, 2—Rail
freight, 3—Cargo vessel, 4—Cargo
aircraft only, 5—Passenger-carrying
aircraft.
Copies of the applications are
available for inspection in the Records
Center, East Building, PHH–13, 1200
E:\FR\FM\26MYN1.SGM
26MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 102 (Friday, May 26, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 34227-34228]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-11298]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration
[Docket No. PHMSA-2022-0033 (Notice No. 2023-05)]
Hazardous Materials: Adjusting Registration and Fee Assessment
Program; Notice of Public Meeting
AGENCY: Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA),
Department of Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: PHMSA's Office of Hazardous Materials Safety will hold a
public meeting to solicit input on potential adjustments to the
statutorily mandated hazardous materials registration and fee
assessment program. The potential adjustment of fees may be necessary
to fund PHMSA's national emergency preparedness grant programs at the
newly authorized level in accordance with the Infrastructure Investment
and Jobs Act of 2021.
DATES: The meeting will be held virtually on June 28, 2023, from 1:00
p.m. until 4:00 p.m. Eastern Standard Time. Requests to attend the
meeting must be received by June 21, 2023. Requests for accommodations
for a disability must be received by June 21, 2023. Persons requesting
to speak during the meeting must submit a written copy of their remarks
to DOT by June 21, 2023. Requests to submit written materials to be
reviewed during the meeting must be received no later than June 21,
2023.
ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held virtually at the following: https://usdot.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/vJItde2gqzgtGcv6ewzeLw34nzwwtO_IY68.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Yul B. Baker Jr., Standards and
Rulemaking Division, Office of Hazardous Materials Safety, 202-366-
8553, PHMSA, East Building, PHH10, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE,
Washington, DC 20590.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA)
is considering an adjustment to our statutorily mandated registration
and fee assessment program for persons who offer for transportation or
transport certain categories and quantities of hazardous materials.
PHMSA conducts a national hazardous materials registration program
under the mandate in 49 U.S.C. 5108 for a person who offers \1\ for
transportation (i.e., shippers) or transports certain hazardous
materials in intrastate, interstate, or foreign commerce. The
registration program implements the mandate for persons to file a
registration statement with the Secretary of Transportation--as
delegated to PHMSA--and collects registration and processing fees from
persons required to file a registration statement (hereafter referred
to as ``registrants'') to fund the Emergency Preparedness (EP) grants.
EP grants support hazardous materials emergency response planning and
training activities by states, local governments, and Native American
tribes. EP grants also fund nonprofit organizations to provide ``train-
the-trainer'' programs for hazardous materials emergency response
training and hazardous materials employee training. Additionally, EP
grants support the development of the Emergency Response Guidebook
(ERG) that assists emergency responders in determining appropriate
response measures and provides funds for grantee monitoring and
technical assistance. Congress recognized in the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act of 2021 \2\ (IIJA) (as evidenced by increased
authorization levels for the EP Grant Program), and as congressional
testimony was reinforced in the aftermath of the 2023 Norfolk Southern
train derailment in East Palestine, Ohio, there is an increasing need
for Federal support for first responders, particularly responders to
hazardous materials related incidents, such as are supported through
the EP grants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Defined in 49 CFR 171.8.
\2\ Public Law 117-58.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To raise additional revenue to meet the increasing needs for the EP
Grant Program, PHMSA has discretion to require additional persons to
register--beyond those who offer, and transport certain categories and
quantities of hazardous materials listed in 49 U.S.C. 5108(a)(1)--and
to set the annual registration fee between the statutorily mandated
minimum and maximum amounts. See 49 U.S.C. 5108(b), 5116, and 5128(b).
PHMSA may currently set an annual registration fee between a minimum of
$250 and maximum of $3,000. In the HM-208J Advanced Noticed of Proposed
Rulemaking (ANPRM),\3\ PHMSA presented a fee scenario table and options
to solicit feedback from stakeholders on potential methods and any
alternative methods to achieve the increased funding. PHMSA presented
nine options for consideration, grouped between a scenario where the
maximum fee remains $3,000 per year, and an alternative scenario where
Congress increases the maximum fee. The options included:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 87 FR 57859 (Sept. 22, 2022).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
If registration fees remain at a maximum $3,000 per year, PHMSA is
considering the following options for comment:
1. Keep the existing registration requirements (see 49 CFR 107.601)
and raise the registration fee for large businesses from $2,575 to
$3,000.
2. Keep the existing registration requirements and apply a nominal
fee (e.g., $25) for each facility or geographic location from which a
registered person (i.e., a company) offers for transportation, or
transports, certain hazardous materials.
[[Page 34228]]
3. Modify assignment of the registration fee and/or amount based on
the commensurate hazard posed (e.g., shipping Packing Group I materials
vs. Packing Group III materials) \4\ or risk profile (e.g., frequent
vs. infrequent shipments).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Packing group means a grouping according to the degree of
danger presented by hazardous materials. Packing Group I indicates
great danger; Packing Group II, medium danger; Packing Group III,
minor danger.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. Expand the registration requirements. For example, certain
hazardous materials are not subject to placarding when shipped
domestically. Therefore, a person who offers for transportation, or
transports, these materials is generally exempt from registration, but
these requirements could be expanded with appropriate risk-based
justifications.
5. Expand the registration fee requirements to include certain
persons who acquire approvals or special permits from PHMSA that
otherwise are not subject to registration, but which should be based on
a public risk-based justification.
If Congress allows an increase in the maximum fee, PHMSA is
considering the following options for comment:
1. Maintain the current maximum registration fees and create an
upper tier of a higher fee for a certain category of very large
businesses. If this approach is preferred, how should PHMSA define a
``very large business?'' Specifically, what risk factors should go into
determining a very large business classification to better account for
market-based risks to the public as well as equity factors between
applicants.
2. Change the registration requirements to reduce the overall
number of registrants.
3. Keep the existing registration requirements and raise the
registration fee for large businesses from $2,575 to a dollar value
below the Congressionally authorized maximum fee (e.g., if the maximum
allowed were increased from $3,000 to $5,000).
4. Raise fees for specific business types, classes of material, or
commodities (e.g., poisonous by inhalation material), which are
considered extremely high risk.
Once the comment period concluded for the ANPRM, PHMSA received
seven sets of comments from the regulated community--which provided
some insight on how to adjust the mandated registration and fee
assessment program. Some ideas expressed within the comments PHMSA
received were:
1. Maintaining a two-tiered fee structure and raising HAZMAT
registration fees in a manner that will not disproportionately impact
small businesses.
2. Endorsing the current two-tiered fee system based on the level
of commercial activity assigned to business entities by the Small
Business Administration (SBA) and opposing broadening the universe of
registrants beyond shippers and carriers of placarded loads.
3. Raising the $3,000 per registrant fee cap.
4. Supporting the current two-tiered fee structure as well
established and capable of generating the additional funds authorized
in the IIJA, minimizing complexity, and providing clear identification
of those who are required to pay the appropriate fees.
5. Opposing additional criteria, revising the defining criteria for
small or non-small businesses, or adding additional types of businesses
that would need to register.
Due to the limited number of comments received, PHMSA is holding
this public meeting in hopes of garnering more substantive feedback and
information on the most appropriate and equitable manner to adjust the
registration and fee assessment program to meet the authorized increase
set forth in the IIJA.
II. Meeting Agenda
At this meeting, PHMSA will address the following topics:
1. Data points PHMSA has garnered from an independent working
group.
2. Establishing a new registration group (e.g., packaging
manufacturers) and potentially raising registration fees on businesses
other than small businesses based on risk-based transport of hazardous
materials.
3. Open floor--any items not covered in the ANPRM, or new
suggestions mentioned by commenters to the ANPRM.
III. Public Participation
The meeting will be open to the public; however, any member of the
public who wishes to attend must RSVP in advance using the following:
https://usdot.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/vJItde2gqzgtGcv6ewzeLw34nzwwtO_IY68.
PHMSA is committed to providing equal access for all citizens and
ensuring that information is available in appropriate alternative
formats to meet the requirements of persons who have a disability. If
you require an alternative version of files provided or alternative
accommodations, please contact [email protected] no later
than June 21, 2023.
Issued in Washington, DC, on May 23, 2023, under the authority
delegated in 49 CFR 1.97.
William S. Schoonover,
Associate Administrator for Hazard Materials Safety, Pipeline and
Hazardous Materials Safety Administration.
[FR Doc. 2023-11298 Filed 5-25-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4910-60-P