Notice of Adoption of a Bureau of Indian Affairs Categorical Exclusion Under the National Environmental Policy Act, 80298-80300 [2023-25505]
Download as PDF
80298
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 221 / Friday, November 17, 2023 / Notices
TABLE III—TEST INFORMATION RECEIVED FROM 10/01/2023 TO 10/31/2023.—Continued
Case No.
Received date
P-20-0122, P-20-0139, P-20-0140,
P-20-0141, P-20-0142.
10/6/2023
P-20-0145, P-20-0147, P-20-0152,
P-20-0155, P-20-0159.
10/6/2023
P-17-0178, P-18-0013, P-18-0014,
P-18-0037, P-19-0078.
10/6/2023
P-22-0129, P-23-0050 ...............................
10/6/2023
Chemical substance
PAG 2A Direct Photolysis
Study Report,.
PAG 3A Direct Photolysis
Study Report,.
PAG 5 Direct Photolysis Study
Report.
PAG 2A Direct Photolysis
Study Report,.
PAG 3A Direct Photolysis
Study Report,.
PAG 5 Direct Photolysis Study
Report.
PAG 2A Direct Photolysis
Study Report,.
PAG 3A Direct Photolysis
Study Report,.
PAG 5 Direct Photolysis Study
Report.
PAG 2A Direct Photolysis
Study Report,.
PAG 3A Direct Photolysis
Study Report,.
PAG 5 Direct Photolysis Study
Report.
PAG 2 Direct Photolysis Study
Report.
(S) 1-(4-tert-butylphenyl)tetrahydro[214C]thiophen-1-ium nonaflate; (S) (4hydroxy[U-14C]phenyl)-diphenyl-sulfonium trifluoromethanesulfonate; (S)
tris(4-tert-butyl[mono-U14C]phenyl)sulfonium nonaflate.
(S) 1-(4-tert-butylphenyl)tetrahydro[214C]thiophen-1-ium nonaflate; (S) (4hydroxy[U-14C]phenyl)-diphenyl-sulfonium trifluoromethanesulfonate; (S)
tris(4-tert-butyl[mono-U14C]phenyl)sulfonium nonaflate.
(S) 1-(4-tert-butylphenyl)tetrahydro[214C]thiophen-1-ium nonaflate; (S) (4hydroxy[U-14C]phenyl)-diphenyl-sulfonium trifluoromethanesulfonate; (S)
tris(4-tert-butyl[mono-U14C]phenyl)sulfonium nonaflate.
(S) 1-(4-tert-butylphenyl)tetrahydro[214C]thiophen-1-ium nonaflate; (S) (4hydroxy[U-14C]phenyl)-diphenyl-sulfonium trifluoromethanesulfonate; (S)
tris(4-tert-butyl[mono-U14C]phenyl)sulfonium nonaflate.
(S) tri[mono-U-14C]phenylsulfonium 2(adamantane-1- carbonyloxy)-1,1difluoro-ethanesulfonate.
(S) tri[mono-U-14C]phenylsulfonium 2(adamantane-1- carbonyloxy)-1,1difluoro-ethanesulfonate
(S) tri[mono-U-14C]phenylsulfonium 2(adamantane-1- carbonyloxy)-1,1difluoro-ethanesulfonate.
(S) tri[mono-U-14C]phenylsulfonium 2(adamantane-1- carbonyloxy)-1,1difluoro-ethanesulfonate
(S) tri[mono-U-14C]phenylsulfonium 2(adamantane-1- carbonyloxy)-1,1difluoro-ethanesulfonate.
(G) 2-Propenoic acid, 2-methyl-, 2-hydroxyethyl ester, telomers with C18–
26-alkyl acrylate, 1-dodecanethiol, N(hydroxymethyl)-2-methyl-2propenamide, polyfluorooctyl methacrylate and vinylidene chloride, 2,2’-[1 ,2diazenediylbis(1methylethylidene)bis[4,5-dihydro-1 Himidazole] hydrochloride (1 :2)-initiated.
P-19-0079, P-19-0111, P-19-0112,
P-19-0114, P-19-0133.
10/27/2023
P-20-0122, P-20-0139, P-20-0140,
P-20-0141, P-20-0142.
10/27/2023
PAG 2 Direct Photolysis Study
Report.
P-20-0145, P-20-0147, P-20-0152,
P-20-0155, P-20-0159.
10/27/2023
PAG 2A Direct Photolysis
Study Report.
P-22-0129, P-23-0050 ...............................
10/27/2023
PAG 2 Direct Photolysis Study
Report.
P-17-0178, P-18-0013, P-18-0014,
P-18-0037, P-19-0078.
10/27/2023
PAG 2 Direct Photolysis Study
Report.
P-11-0557 ..................................................
10/31/2023
Annual reporting of Certificate
of Analysis test data and import volumes.
If you are interested in information
that is not included in these tables, you
may contact EPA’s technical
information contact or general
information contact as described under
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT to
access additional non-CBI information
that may be available.
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 2601 et seq.
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
Type of test information
Dated: November 13, 2023.
Pamela Myrick,
Director, Project Management and Operations
Division, Office of Pollution Prevention and
Toxics.
[FR Doc. 2023–25437 Filed 11–16–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
VerDate Sep<11>2014
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Jkt 262001
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
[FRL OP–OFA–095]
Notice of Adoption of a Bureau of
Indian Affairs Categorical Exclusion
Under the National Environmental
Policy Act
Environmental Protection
Agency.
ACTION: Notice of adoption of categorical
exclusion.
AGENCY:
The Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) has adopted a Bureau of
Indian Affairs’ (BIA) categorical
exclusion (CE) for waste management
activities involving remediation of
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00030
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
hazardous waste sites under the
National Environmental Policy Act
(NEPA) for use by the EPA’s
Contaminated Alaska Native Claims
Settlement Act (ANCSA) Lands
Assistance Program. This notice
describes the categories of proposed
actions for which EPA intends to use
BIA’s CE and describes the consultation
between the agencies.
This action is effective upon
publication.
DATES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Melissa Winters, Manager, Pollution
Prevention and Communities Branch,
Land, Chemicals, and Redevelopment
Division, EPA Region 10, by phone at
E:\FR\FM\17NON1.SGM
17NON1
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 221 / Friday, November 17, 2023 / Notices
206–553–5180, or by email at
winters.melissa@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
I. Background
NEPA and CEs
The National Environmental Policy
Act, as amended at, 42 U.S.C. 4321–
4347 (NEPA), requires all Federal
agencies to assess the environmental
impact of their actions. Congress
enacted NEPA in order to encourage
productive and enjoyable harmony
between humans and the environment,
recognizing the profound impact of
human activity and the critical
importance of restoring and maintaining
environmental quality to the overall
welfare of humankind. 42 U.S.C. 4321,
4331. NEPA’s twin aims are to ensure
agencies consider the environmental
effects of their proposed actions in their
decision-making processes and inform
and involve the public in that process.
42 U.S.C. 4331. NEPA created the
Council on Environmental Quality
(CEQ), which promulgated NEPA
implementing regulations, 40 CFR parts
1500 through 1508 (CEQ regulations).
To comply with NEPA, agencies
determine the appropriate level of
review—an environmental impact
statement (EIS), environmental
assessment (EA), or CE. 42 U.S.C. 4336.
If a proposed action is likely to have
significant environmental effects, the
agency must prepare an EIS and
document its decision in a record of
decision. 42 U.S.C. 4336. If the
proposed action is not likely to have
significant environmental effects or the
effects are unknown, the agency may
instead prepare an EA, which involves
a more concise analysis and process
than an EIS. 42 U.S.C. 4336. Following
the EA, the agency may conclude the
process with a finding of no significant
impact if the analysis shows that the
action will have no significant effects. If
the analysis in the EA finds that the
action is likely to have significant
effects, however, then an EIS is
required.
Under NEPA and the CEQ regulations,
a Federal agency also can establish
CEs—categories of actions that the
agency has determined normally do not
significantly affect the quality of the
human environment—in their agency
NEPA procedures. 42 U.S.C. 4336(e)(1);
40 CFR 1501.4, 1507.3(e)(2)(ii),
1508.1(d). If an agency determines that
a CE covers a proposed action, it then
evaluates the proposed action for
extraordinary circumstances in which a
normally excluded action may have a
significant effect. 40 CFR 1501.4(b). If
no extraordinary circumstances are
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18:57 Nov 16, 2023
Jkt 262001
present or if further analysis determines
that the extraordinary circumstances do
not involve the potential for significant
environmental impacts, the agency may
apply the CE to the proposed action
without preparing an EA or EIS. 42
U.S.C. 4336(a)(2), 40 CFR 1501.4. If the
extraordinary circumstances have the
potential to result in significant effects,
the agency is required to prepare an EA
or EIS.
Section 109 of NEPA, enacted as part
of the Fiscal Responsibility Act of 2023,
allows a Federal agency to ‘‘adopt’’ or
use another agency’s CEs for a category
of proposed agency actions. 42 U.S.C.
4336(c). To use another agency’s CEs
under section 109, an agency must
identify the relevant CEs listed in
another agency’s (‘‘establishing agency’’)
NEPA procedures that cover its category
of proposed actions or related actions;
consult with the establishing agency to
ensure that the proposed adoption of the
CE to a category of actions is
appropriate; identify to the public the
CE that the agency plans to use for its
proposed actions; and document
adoption of the CE. Id. This notice
describes EPA’s adoption of BIA’s CE
under section 109 of NEPA to use in
EPA’s program and funding
opportunities administered by EPA.
EPA’s Program
The Alaska Native Claims Settlement
Act (ANCSA) was enacted in 1971 to
settle aboriginal claims to public lands
through the conveyance of 46 million
acres of land to Alaska Native regional
and village corporations and the transfer
of one billion dollars from the state and
federal governments as compensation
for remaining claims. Some of the lands
promised and conveyed to corporations
pursuant to the settlement in ANCSA
were contaminated. The contaminants
on some of these lands—which include
arsenic, asbestos, lead, mercury,
pesticides, polychlorinated biphenyls,
and petroleum products—pose health
and other concerns to Indigenous
Alaskans and communities and are
present in quantities above state and
federal clean-up levels, negatively
impacting subsistence resources and
hampering cultural, social, and
economic activities.
In the fiscal year 2023 omnibus bill,
Congress appropriated $20 million for
EPA to establish and implement a grant
program to assist Alaska tribal entities
with addressing contamination on
ANCSA lands that were contaminated at
the time of conveyance. EPA has
initiated a new Contaminated ANCSA
Lands Assistance Program to assist
Alaska tribal and Alaska Native
PO 00000
Frm 00031
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
80299
Corporation entities with addressing
contamination on ANCSA lands.
The Contaminated ANCSA Lands
Assistance Program addresses
contamination left by Federal
departments and agencies on land that
was subsequently conveyed to Alaska
Native Corporations under the ANCSA.
The activities to be funded involve
remediation of hazardous materials sites
in compliance with applicable Federal
laws. Eligible entities include federally
recognized Indian Tribal Governments
(Tribes) in Alaska, Alaska Native
Regional Corporations, Alaskan Native
Village Corporations, Alaska Native
Nonprofit Organizations, Alaska Native
Nonprofit Associations, and Intertribal
consortia. The objectives of the EPA
program are to provide funding to
eligible entities to carry out cleanup
activities at ANCSA sites that were
contaminated at the time of conveyance.
II. BIA Categorical Exclusion
EPA has identified the following BIA
CE listed in the Department of the
Interior’s Departmental Manual (516 DM
10.5(K)(2)).
K. Waste Management.
(2) Activities involving remediation of
hazardous waste sites if done in
compliance with applicable federal
laws, such as the Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act (Pub. L. 94–580),
Comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation, and Liability
Act (Pub. L. 96–516) or Toxic
Substances Control Act (Pub. L. 94–
469).
EPA intends to apply this CE for
EPA’s grants awarded under its
Contaminated ANSCA Lands Assistance
Program when applicable.
III. Consultation With BIA and
Determination of Appropriateness
EPA consulted with BIA on the
appropriateness of EPA’s adoption of
the CE in September 2023. EPA and
BIA’s consultation included a review of
BIA’s experience developing and
applying the CE, as well as the types of
actions for which EPA plans to utilize
the CE. The EPA actions under the
Contaminated ANCSA Lands Assistance
Program are very similar to the type of
projects that BIA funds and therefore
the impacts of EPA projects will be very
similar to the impacts of BIA projects,
which are not significant, absent the
existence of extraordinary
circumstances that could involve
potentially significant impacts.
Therefore, EPA has determined that its
proposed use of the CE as described in
this notice is appropriate.
E:\FR\FM\17NON1.SGM
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80300
Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 221 / Friday, November 17, 2023 / Notices
IV. Consideration of Extraordinary
Circumstances
When applying this CE, EPA will
consider whether the proposed action
has the potential to result in significant
effects as described in EPA’s
extraordinary circumstances listed at 40
CFR 6.204(b). EPA defines extraordinary
circumstances as circumstances that
may cause a significant environmental
effect such that a proposed action that
otherwise meets the requirements of a
CE may not be categorically excluded.
40 CFR 6.102(b)(6). In addition, in
consultation with BIA, the EPA
determined that it will also apply two
applicable Department of the Interior
extraordinary circumstances regarding
Indian sacred sites and invasive species
(43 CFR. 46.215(k) and (l)) when
evaluating a proposed action.
V. Notice to the Public and
Documentation of Adoption
This notice serves to identify to the
public and document EPA’s adoption of
BIA’s CE. The notice identifies the types
of actions to which EPA will apply the
CE, as well as the considerations that
EPA will use in determining whether an
action is within the scope of the CE.
Amended Notice
EIS No. 20230153, Final, USDA, WA,
ADOPTION—Odessa Subarea Special
Study Columbia Basin Project To
Replace Groundwater Currently Used
for Irrigation Grant Adams Walla
Walla and Franklin Counties WA,
Review Period Ends: 12/04/2023,
Contact: Jules Riley 539–323–2941.
Revision to FR Notice Published 11/
3/2023; Correction to Review Period
Due Date from December 11, 2023 to
December 4, 2023.
Dated: November 13, 2023.
Julie Smith,
Acting Director, NEPA Compliance Division,
Office of Federal Activities.
[FR Doc. 2023–25454 Filed 11–16–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
EXPORT–IMPORT BANK
[Public Notice: EIB–2023–0018]
Dated: November 14, 2023.
Timothy Hamlin,
Director, Land, Chemicals, and
Redevelopment Division, EPA Region 10.
Application for Final Commitment for a
Long-Term Loan or Financial
Guarantee in Excess of $100 million:
AP089502XX
[FR Doc. 2023–25505 Filed 11–16–23; 8:45 am]
AGENCY:
BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
Export-Import Bank of the
United States.
ACTION: Notice.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
SUMMARY:
[FRL OP–OFA–096]
Environmental Impact Statements;
Notice of Availability
khammond on DSKJM1Z7X2PROD with NOTICES
EIS No. 20230161, Final, NMFS, WA,
The Makah Tribe Request to Hunt
Gray Whales, Review Period Ends: 12/
18/2023, Contact: Grace Ferrara 206–
526–6172.
Responsible Agency: Office of Federal
Activities, General Information 202–
564–5632 or https://www.epa.gov/nepa.
Weekly receipt of Environmental Impact
Statements (EIS)
Filed November 3, 2023 10 a.m. EST
Through November 13, 2023 10 a.m.
EST
Pursuant to 40 CFR 1506.9.
Notice: Section 309(a) of the Clean Air
Act requires that EPA make public its
comments on EISs issued by other
Federal agencies. EPA’s comment letters
on EISs are available at: https://
cdxapps.epa.gov/cdx-enepa-II/public/
action/eis/search.
EIS No. 20230160, Draft, USFWS, OR,
Draft Environmental Impact
Statement for the Barred Owl
Management Strategy, Comment
Period Ends: 01/16/2024, Contact:
Robin Bown 503–231–6923.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:57 Nov 16, 2023
Jkt 262001
This Notice is to inform the
public the Export-Import Bank of the
United States (‘‘EXIM’’) has received an
application for final commitment for a
long-term loan or financial guarantee in
excess of $100 million. Comments
received within the comment period
specified below will be presented to the
EXIM Board of Directors prior to final
action on this Transaction.
DATES: Comments must be received on
or before December 12, 2023 to be
assured of consideration before final
consideration of the transaction by the
Board of Directors of EXIM.
ADDRESSES: Comments may be
submitted through Regulations.gov at
www.regulations.gov. To submit a
comment, enterEIB–2023–0018 under
the heading ‘‘Enter Keyword or ID’’ and
select Search. Follow the instructions
provided at the Submit a Comment
screen. Please include your name,
company name (if any) and EIB–2023–
0018 on any attached document.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Reference: AP089502XX.
Purpose and Use:
PO 00000
Frm 00032
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
Brief description of the purpose of the
transaction: To support the export of
U.S.-manufactured locomotives to
Ukraine.
Brief non-proprietary description of
the anticipated use of the items being
exported: To be used for rail freight and
passenger transport services in Ukraine
and between Ukraine and other
countries.
To the extent that EXIM is reasonably
aware, the items being exported are not
expected to produce exports or provide
services in competition with the
exportation of goods or provision of
services by a United States industry.
Parties:
Principal Supplier: Wabtec
Corporation.
Obligor: Joint Stock Company
‘‘Ukrainian Railways’’.
Guarantor(s): Government of Ukraine.
Description of Items Being Exported:
Locomotives.
Information on Decision: Information
on the final decision for this transaction
will be available in the ‘‘Summary
Minutes of Meetings of Board of
Directors’’ on https://www.exim.gov/
news/meeting-minutes.
Confidential Information: Please note
that this notice does not include
confidential or proprietary business
information; information which, if
disclosed, would violate the Trade
Secrets Act; or information which
would jeopardize jobs in the United
States by supplying information that
competitors could use to compete with
companies in the United States.
Authority: Section 3(c)(10) of the ExportImport Bank Act of 1945, as amended (12
U.S.C. 635a(c)(10)).
Joyce B. Stone,
Assistant Corporate Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2023–25481 Filed 11–16–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6690–01–P
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
[No. 2023–N–14]
Privacy Act of 1974; System of
Records
Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
ACTION: Notice of a modified system of
records.
AGENCY:
In accordance with the
requirements of the Privacy Act of 1974,
as amended, (Privacy Act), the Federal
Housing Finance Agency (FHFA or
Agency) is proposing to modify the
current FHFA system of records titled,
‘‘FHFA–15, Payroll, Retirement, Time
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\17NON1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 221 (Friday, November 17, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 80298-80300]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-25505]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY
[FRL OP-OFA-095]
Notice of Adoption of a Bureau of Indian Affairs Categorical
Exclusion Under the National Environmental Policy Act
AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency.
ACTION: Notice of adoption of categorical exclusion.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has adopted a Bureau
of Indian Affairs' (BIA) categorical exclusion (CE) for waste
management activities involving remediation of hazardous waste sites
under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) for use by the EPA's
Contaminated Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) Lands
Assistance Program. This notice describes the categories of proposed
actions for which EPA intends to use BIA's CE and describes the
consultation between the agencies.
DATES: This action is effective upon publication.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Melissa Winters, Manager, Pollution
Prevention and Communities Branch, Land, Chemicals, and Redevelopment
Division, EPA Region 10, by phone at
[[Page 80299]]
206-553-5180, or by email at [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
NEPA and CEs
The National Environmental Policy Act, as amended at, 42 U.S.C.
4321-4347 (NEPA), requires all Federal agencies to assess the
environmental impact of their actions. Congress enacted NEPA in order
to encourage productive and enjoyable harmony between humans and the
environment, recognizing the profound impact of human activity and the
critical importance of restoring and maintaining environmental quality
to the overall welfare of humankind. 42 U.S.C. 4321, 4331. NEPA's twin
aims are to ensure agencies consider the environmental effects of their
proposed actions in their decision-making processes and inform and
involve the public in that process. 42 U.S.C. 4331. NEPA created the
Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ), which promulgated NEPA
implementing regulations, 40 CFR parts 1500 through 1508 (CEQ
regulations).
To comply with NEPA, agencies determine the appropriate level of
review--an environmental impact statement (EIS), environmental
assessment (EA), or CE. 42 U.S.C. 4336. If a proposed action is likely
to have significant environmental effects, the agency must prepare an
EIS and document its decision in a record of decision. 42 U.S.C. 4336.
If the proposed action is not likely to have significant environmental
effects or the effects are unknown, the agency may instead prepare an
EA, which involves a more concise analysis and process than an EIS. 42
U.S.C. 4336. Following the EA, the agency may conclude the process with
a finding of no significant impact if the analysis shows that the
action will have no significant effects. If the analysis in the EA
finds that the action is likely to have significant effects, however,
then an EIS is required.
Under NEPA and the CEQ regulations, a Federal agency also can
establish CEs--categories of actions that the agency has determined
normally do not significantly affect the quality of the human
environment--in their agency NEPA procedures. 42 U.S.C. 4336(e)(1); 40
CFR 1501.4, 1507.3(e)(2)(ii), 1508.1(d). If an agency determines that a
CE covers a proposed action, it then evaluates the proposed action for
extraordinary circumstances in which a normally excluded action may
have a significant effect. 40 CFR 1501.4(b). If no extraordinary
circumstances are present or if further analysis determines that the
extraordinary circumstances do not involve the potential for
significant environmental impacts, the agency may apply the CE to the
proposed action without preparing an EA or EIS. 42 U.S.C. 4336(a)(2),
40 CFR 1501.4. If the extraordinary circumstances have the potential to
result in significant effects, the agency is required to prepare an EA
or EIS.
Section 109 of NEPA, enacted as part of the Fiscal Responsibility
Act of 2023, allows a Federal agency to ``adopt'' or use another
agency's CEs for a category of proposed agency actions. 42 U.S.C.
4336(c). To use another agency's CEs under section 109, an agency must
identify the relevant CEs listed in another agency's (``establishing
agency'') NEPA procedures that cover its category of proposed actions
or related actions; consult with the establishing agency to ensure that
the proposed adoption of the CE to a category of actions is
appropriate; identify to the public the CE that the agency plans to use
for its proposed actions; and document adoption of the CE. Id. This
notice describes EPA's adoption of BIA's CE under section 109 of NEPA
to use in EPA's program and funding opportunities administered by EPA.
EPA's Program
The Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) was enacted in 1971
to settle aboriginal claims to public lands through the conveyance of
46 million acres of land to Alaska Native regional and village
corporations and the transfer of one billion dollars from the state and
federal governments as compensation for remaining claims. Some of the
lands promised and conveyed to corporations pursuant to the settlement
in ANCSA were contaminated. The contaminants on some of these lands--
which include arsenic, asbestos, lead, mercury, pesticides,
polychlorinated biphenyls, and petroleum products--pose health and
other concerns to Indigenous Alaskans and communities and are present
in quantities above state and federal clean-up levels, negatively
impacting subsistence resources and hampering cultural, social, and
economic activities.
In the fiscal year 2023 omnibus bill, Congress appropriated $20
million for EPA to establish and implement a grant program to assist
Alaska tribal entities with addressing contamination on ANCSA lands
that were contaminated at the time of conveyance. EPA has initiated a
new Contaminated ANCSA Lands Assistance Program to assist Alaska tribal
and Alaska Native Corporation entities with addressing contamination on
ANCSA lands.
The Contaminated ANCSA Lands Assistance Program addresses
contamination left by Federal departments and agencies on land that was
subsequently conveyed to Alaska Native Corporations under the ANCSA.
The activities to be funded involve remediation of hazardous materials
sites in compliance with applicable Federal laws. Eligible entities
include federally recognized Indian Tribal Governments (Tribes) in
Alaska, Alaska Native Regional Corporations, Alaskan Native Village
Corporations, Alaska Native Nonprofit Organizations, Alaska Native
Nonprofit Associations, and Intertribal consortia. The objectives of
the EPA program are to provide funding to eligible entities to carry
out cleanup activities at ANCSA sites that were contaminated at the
time of conveyance.
II. BIA Categorical Exclusion
EPA has identified the following BIA CE listed in the Department of
the Interior's Departmental Manual (516 DM 10.5(K)(2)).
K. Waste Management.
(2) Activities involving remediation of hazardous waste sites if
done in compliance with applicable federal laws, such as the Resource
Conservation and Recovery Act (Pub. L. 94-580), Comprehensive
Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (Pub. L. 96-
516) or Toxic Substances Control Act (Pub. L. 94-469).
EPA intends to apply this CE for EPA's grants awarded under its
Contaminated ANSCA Lands Assistance Program when applicable.
III. Consultation With BIA and Determination of Appropriateness
EPA consulted with BIA on the appropriateness of EPA's adoption of
the CE in September 2023. EPA and BIA's consultation included a review
of BIA's experience developing and applying the CE, as well as the
types of actions for which EPA plans to utilize the CE. The EPA actions
under the Contaminated ANCSA Lands Assistance Program are very similar
to the type of projects that BIA funds and therefore the impacts of EPA
projects will be very similar to the impacts of BIA projects, which are
not significant, absent the existence of extraordinary circumstances
that could involve potentially significant impacts. Therefore, EPA has
determined that its proposed use of the CE as described in this notice
is appropriate.
[[Page 80300]]
IV. Consideration of Extraordinary Circumstances
When applying this CE, EPA will consider whether the proposed
action has the potential to result in significant effects as described
in EPA's extraordinary circumstances listed at 40 CFR 6.204(b). EPA
defines extraordinary circumstances as circumstances that may cause a
significant environmental effect such that a proposed action that
otherwise meets the requirements of a CE may not be categorically
excluded. 40 CFR 6.102(b)(6). In addition, in consultation with BIA,
the EPA determined that it will also apply two applicable Department of
the Interior extraordinary circumstances regarding Indian sacred sites
and invasive species (43 CFR. 46.215(k) and (l)) when evaluating a
proposed action.
V. Notice to the Public and Documentation of Adoption
This notice serves to identify to the public and document EPA's
adoption of BIA's CE. The notice identifies the types of actions to
which EPA will apply the CE, as well as the considerations that EPA
will use in determining whether an action is within the scope of the
CE.
Dated: November 14, 2023.
Timothy Hamlin,
Director, Land, Chemicals, and Redevelopment Division, EPA Region 10.
[FR Doc. 2023-25505 Filed 11-16-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P