80_FR_50410 80 FR 50250 - Amendments to Regional Consistency Regulations

80 FR 50250 - Amendments to Regional Consistency Regulations

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 160 (August 19, 2015)

Page Range50250-50261
FR Document2015-20506

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to revise its Regional Consistency regulations to ensure the EPA has the flexibility necessary to implement Clean Air Act (CAA or Act) programs on a national scale while addressing court rulings that concern certain agency actions under the Act. In addition, the proposed revisions would help to foster overall fairness and predictability regarding the scope and impact of judicial decisions under the CAA.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 160 (Wednesday, August 19, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 160 (Wednesday, August 19, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 50250-50261]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-20506]


-----------------------------------------------------------------------

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

40 CFR Part 56

[EPA-HQ-OAR-2014-0616; FRL-9929-98-OAR]
RIN 2060-AS53


Amendments to Regional Consistency Regulations

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Proposed rule.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to 
revise its Regional Consistency regulations to ensure the EPA has the 
flexibility necessary to implement Clean Air Act (CAA or Act) programs 
on a national scale while addressing court rulings that concern certain 
agency actions under the Act. In addition, the proposed revisions would 
help to foster overall fairness and predictability regarding the scope 
and impact of judicial decisions under the CAA.

DATES: Comments must be received on or before October 19, 2015.
    Public hearing. If requested by September 3, 2015, then we will 
hold a public hearing. Additional information about the hearing, if 
requested, will be published in a subsequent Federal Register document.

ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-
OAR-2014-0616, to the Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online instructions for submitting 
comments. Once submitted, comments cannot be edited or withdrawn. The 
EPA may publish any comment received to its public docket. Do not 
submit electronically any information you consider to be Confidential 
Business Information (CBI) or other information whose disclosure is 
restricted by statute. If you need to include CBI as part of your 
comment, please visit http://www.epa.gov/dockets/comments.html for 
instructions. 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. For additional submission methods, the full EPA public comment 
policy, and general guidance on making effective comments, please visit 
http://www.epa.gov/dockets/comments.html.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For technical information, contact 
Greg Nizich, Air Quality Policy Division, Office of Air Quality 
Planning and Standards (C504-03), Environmental Protection Agency, 
Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711; telephone number (919) 
541-3078; fax number (919) 541-5509; email address: 
nizich.greg@epa.gov.
    To request a public hearing or information pertaining to a public 
hearing on this document, contact Ms. Pamela Long, Air Quality Policy 
Division, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards (C504-01), 
Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 
27711; telephone number (919) 541-0641; fax number (919) 541-5509; 
email address: long.pam@epa.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    Regulated entities. The Administrator determined that this action 
is subject to the provisions of CAA section 307(d). See CAA section 
307(d)(1)(V) (the provisions of CAA section 307(d) apply to ``such 
other actions as the Administrator may determine). These are amendments 
to existing regulations and could affect your facility if it is the 
subject of a CAA-related ruling by a federal court.
    The information in this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this 
preamble is organized as follows:

I. General Information
    A. Does this action apply to me?
    B. What should I consider as I prepare my comments for the EPA?
    C. Where can I get a copy of this document and other related 
information?
    D. How can I find information about a possible public hearing?
    E. What acronyms, abbreviations and units are used in this 
preamble?
II. Purpose
III. Background
    A. Purpose of the Regional Consistency Regulations
    B. Establishing the Regional Consistency Regulations
    C. Reasons for Revising the Regional Consistency Regulations
IV. Proposed Revisions to the Regional Consistency Rule

[[Page 50251]]

    A. What are the proposed revisions to the 40 CFR part 56 
Regional Consistency Regulations?
    B. What is the basis for the EPA's approach?
V. Environmental Justice Considerations
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
    C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
    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
    J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address 
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income 
Populations
    K. Determination Under Section 307(d)
VII. Statutory Authority

I. General Information

A. Does this action apply to me?

    Entities potentially affected directly by this proposal include the 
EPA and other governments that are delegated administrative authority 
to assist the EPA with the implementation of air program federal 
regulations. Entities potentially affected indirectly by this proposal 
include owners and operators of sources of air emissions that are 
subject to CAA regulations.

B. What should I consider as I prepare my comments for the EPA?

1. Submitting CBI
    Do not submit this information to the EPA through http://www.regulations.gov or email. Clearly mark the part or all of the 
information that you claim to be CBI. For CBI information in a disk or 
CD ROM that you mail to the EPA, mark the outside of the disk or CD ROM 
as CBI and then identify electronically within the disk or CD ROM the 
specific information that is claimed as CBI. In addition to one 
complete version of the comment that includes information claimed as 
CBI, a copy of the comment that does not contain the information 
claimed as CBI must be submitted for inclusion in the public docket. 
Information so marked will not be disclosed except in accordance with 
procedures set forth in 40 CFR part 2. Send or deliver information 
identified as CBI only to the following address: Tiffany Purifoy, OAQPS 
Document Control Officer (C404-02), Environmental Protection Agency, 
Research Triangle Park, NC 27711, Attention: Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OAR-
2014-0616.
2. Tips for Preparing Your Comments
    When submitting comments, remember to:
     Identify the rulemaking by docket number and other 
identifying information (subject heading, Federal Register date and 
page number).
     Follow directions--The agency may ask you to respond to 
specific questions or organize comments by referencing a Code of 
Federal Regulations (CFR) part or section number.
     Explain why you agree or disagree; suggest alternatives 
and substitute language for your requested changes.
     Describe any assumptions and provide any technical 
information and/or data that you used.
     If you estimate potential costs or burdens, explain how 
you arrived at your estimate in sufficient detail to allow for it to be 
reproduced.
     Provide specific examples to illustrate your concerns, and 
suggest alternatives.
     Explain your views as clearly as possible, avoiding the 
use of profanity or personal threats.
     Make sure to submit your comments by the comment period 
deadline identified.

C. Where can I get a copy of this document and other related 
information?

    In addition to being available in the docket, an electronic copy of 
this proposed rule will also be available on the World Wide Web. 
Following signature by the EPA Administrator, a copy of this proposed 
rule will be posted in the regulations and standards section of our New 
Source Review (NSR) Web site, under Regulations & Standards, at http://www.epa.gov/nsr.

D. How can I find information about a possible public hearing?

    To request a public hearing or information pertaining to a public 
hearing on this document, contact Ms. Pamela Long, Air Quality Policy 
Division, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards (C504-03), 
Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 
27711; telephone number (919) 541-0641; fax number (919) 541-5509; 
email address: long.pam@epa.gov.

E. What acronyms, abbreviations and units are used in this preamble?

    The following acronyms, abbreviations and units are used in this 
preamble:

CAA or Act Clean Air Act
EPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
FIP Federal Implementation Plan
ICR Information Collection Request
NSR New Source Review
NTTAA National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PSD Prevention of Significant Deterioration
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
SBA Small Business Administration
SIP State Implementation Plan
UMRA Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

II. Purpose

    The purpose of this rulemaking is to revise the EPA's Regional 
Consistency regulations--40 CFR part 56. Specifically, we are proposing 
to add a provision to the Regional Consistency regulations to 
accommodate the implications of federal court decisions that result 
from challenges to locally or regionally applicable actions. As 
explained more fully below, revising the Regional Consistency 
regulations to accommodate the implications of such federal court 
decisions is consistent with general principles of common law, the 
judicial review provisions of the CAA, and CAA section 301(a)(2). 
Furthermore, the proposed revisions will help to foster overall 
fairness and predictability regarding the scope and impact of judicial 
decisions under the CAA.

III. Background

A. Purpose of the Regional Consistency Regulations

    The CAA calls for the EPA to implement the Act in partnership with 
state, local and tribal governments. See Mountain States Legal Found. 
v. Costle, 630 F.2d 754, 757 (10th Cir. 1980). While the roles of that 
partnership vary depending on the nature of the air pollution problem, 
generally the EPA issues national standards or federal requirements to 
address air pollution, and state, local and tribal air agencies 
(hereinafter referred to simply as ``air agencies'') assume primary 
responsibility for implementing those standards and requirements. For 
example, the Act requires the EPA to establish, review and revise 
national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) for certain common air 
pollutants. The Act then assigns air agencies responsibility for 
developing enforceable state implementation plans (SIPs) to meet those 
standards. The EPA is required to review each SIP to

[[Page 50252]]

determine if it meets all of the applicable requirements of the CAA. If 
the SIP is approved, the air agency will implement the SIP in order to 
provide for attainment and maintenance of the NAAQS in areas under its 
jurisdiction. The EPA will provide technical and policy assistance to 
the air agency and also maintain an oversight role to ensure that the 
program is adequately implemented and enforced. If the EPA finds that 
an air agency has failed to submit a required SIP, or that an air 
agency's SIP is incomplete, or if the EPA disapproves a SIP in whole or 
in part, the CAA requires that the EPA promulgate a federal 
implementation plan (FIP) to provide for attainment and maintenance of 
the NAAQS in the corresponding area. The Act also requires 
preconstruction permits for major new and modified stationary sources 
of air pollution. In most areas, air agencies serve as the CAA 
permitting authority under an approved SIP; some air agencies implement 
the federal program under a delegation agreement; elsewhere, the EPA is 
the permitting authority under a FIP.
    How the EPA carries out its role in this cooperative partnership 
under the CAA is influenced by how the EPA is organized. The EPA is 
composed of various headquarters offices, each of which is responsible 
for nationwide execution of our programs, and ten regional offices, 
each of which is responsible for the execution of our programs within 
several states and territories. See 40 CFR part 1, subparts A and C 
(for more information, see the EPA Organizational Chart located at 
http://www2.epa.gov/aboutepa/epa-organization-chart). In carrying out 
responsibilities under the CAA, the EPA Administrator relies on input 
from various offices in headquarters, especially those within the 
Office of Air and Radiation, and in the regional offices. In fact, the 
CAA provides the EPA Administrator with the authority to delegate 
powers and duties necessary to carry out the Act to EPA officials in 
both the headquarters and regional offices (CAA section 301(a)(1)). 
Returning to the NAAQS example, headquarters offices take the lead in 
promulgating the NAAQS, while regional offices are primarily 
responsible for working directly with air agencies to assist them in 
their SIP submissions and approval or disapproval of such SIPs. In 
certain circumstances, headquarters and regional offices consult in 
developing a proposed and/or final decision regarding approval or 
disapproval of the SIP.

B. Establishing the Regional Consistency Regulations

    In the 1977 CAA Amendments, Congress added section 301(a)(2) (42 
U.S.C. 7601) in recognition of the role that staff from both 
headquarters and regions played in carrying out the Act's programs. CAA 
section 301(a)(2) required the EPA Administrator to promulgate 
regulations ``establishing general applicable procedures and policies'' 
for the EPA regional officers and employees to follow when carrying out 
activities delegated to them under the Act. Among other things, the CAA 
stated that these regulations should ``assure fairness and uniformity 
in the criteria, procedures, and policies applied'' by the EPA regional 
offices in their CAA activities and ``provide a mechanism'' to identify 
and standardize any inconsistent or varying criteria, procedures, and 
policies used by the EPA employees.
    Thereafter, the EPA took a number of actions to promulgate the 
Regional Consistency regulations required in CAA section 301(a)(2). In 
1978, the EPA issued an Advanced Notice of Proposed Rulemaking seeking 
comment on a number of consistency issues and inviting interested 
persons to participate in a series of public workshops to discuss the 
development of the Regional Consistency regulations (43 FR 4872). In 
1979, after receiving those comments and listening to input provided at 
the public workshops from representatives of industry, state, and 
public interest groups, the EPA issued its Notice of Proposed 
Rulemaking for the Regional Consistency regulations (44 FR 13043). 
Finally, in 1980, the EPA promulgated its final Regional Consistency 
regulations in 40 CFR part 56.
    As the EPA explained when it finalized the regulations, the 
``intended effect'' of these regulations was ``to assure fair and 
consistent application of rules, regulations and policy throughout the 
country by assuring that the action of each individual EPA Regional 
Office is consistent with one another and national policy'' (45 FR 
85400). Generally, the Regional Consistency regulations: (1) State the 
EPA policy of assuring ``fair and uniform'' application of the EPA 
rules, procedures, and policies necessary to implement and enforce the 
Act (see 56 CFR 56.3); (2) provide mechanisms for such application by 
headquarters and regional office employees (see 56 CFR 56.4 and 56.5, 
respectively); (3) require various headquarters offices to establish 
systems to disseminate policy and guidance relating to air programs 
(see 56 CFR 56.6); and (4) utilize the existing grants program for 
yearly evaluations of state performance in implementing and enforcing 
the Act (see 56 CFR 56.7).
    The EPA has been acting under these regulations for more than 30 
years to address consistency issues regarding various CAA programs, 
policy, and guidance. In this document, we are proposing to revise the 
rules to address a very specific consistency issue--how to treat 
Federal court decisions regarding locally or regionally applicable 
actions that may affect consistent application of national programs, 
policy, and guidance.

C. Reasons for Revising the Regional Consistency Regulations

    The EPA is undertaking this proposed revision to the Regional 
Consistency regulations, in part, as a result of a recent decision of 
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (D.C. 
Circuit Court) in National Environmental Development Association's 
Clean Air Project v. EPA, No. 13-1035 (D.C. Cir., May 30, 2014). That 
litigation involved a December 2012 memorandum from EPA headquarters to 
the EPA regions regarding the limited scope of a court decision issued 
by the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals addressing the EPA's 
interpretation of national permitting regulations as applied to a 
specific, local permitting decision.\1\ See Memorandum from Stephen D. 
Page, Director of the EPA's Office of Air Quality Planning and 
Standards, to Regional Air Division Directors, titled Applicability of 
the Summit Decision to the EPA Title V and NSR Source Determinations 
(December 21, 2012; available at http://www.epa.gov/region7/air/title5/t5memos/inter2012.pdf) (hereinafter, ``December 2012 memorandum''). The 
December 2012 memorandum reflected the EPA application of a widely 
recognized legal doctrine referred to as intercircuit nonaquiescence, a 
practice in which a decision by a federal circuit

[[Page 50253]]

court is binding only in those areas (in this case, specific states and 
the associated EPA regions) subject to the direct jurisdiction of the 
ruling circuit court. Intercircuit nonaquiescence is a practice that 
the EPA has historically followed with regard to decisions issued by 
both circuit and district courts and arising in local, non-nationwide 
actions.\2\ Therefore, in the December 2012 memorandum, the EPA 
continued that historic practice and noted that while the agency would 
follow the Sixth Circuit's decision in those states under the 
jurisdiction of the Sixth Circuit, the agency's longstanding 
interpretation of the permitting regulations addressed by the Sixth 
Circuit decision would continue to apply nationwide outside the Sixth 
Circuit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ That decision, Summit Petroleum Corp. v. EPA et al., 
Consolidated Case Nos. 09-4348 and 10-4572 (6th Cir. Aug. 7, 2012), 
addressed the scope of the term ``adjacent'' as used in the EPA's 
source determination regulations in the title V permitting program, 
which are similar to the source determination regulations used in 
the new source review and prevention of significant deterioration 
permitting programs, see 40 CFR 52.21(b)(6) and 71.2. The EPA is 
currently planning a separate rulemaking to address the term 
``adjacent'' in those permitting regulations, and we direct any 
commenters wishing to address the Summit decision or those 
regulations to do so in that separate action. See http://resources.regulations.gov/public/component/main?_dmfClientId=1434045425242&_dmfTzoff=240 for the EPA's Spring 
2015 Regulatory Agenda item titled, Source Determination for Certain 
Emissions Units in the Oil and Natural Gas Sector, RIN 2060-AS06.
    \2\ While intercircuit nonaquiescence is generally focused on 
circuit court decisions, the general principle also applies to 
decisions issued by district courts, which are by their very nature 
limited in scope, as discussed later in this preamble. For ease of 
discussion, this preamble will generally use ``intercircuit 
nonaquiescence'' to address locally and regionally applicable 
decisions issued by both circuit and district federal courts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    On February 19, 2013, the National Environmental Development 
Association's Clean Air Project (NEDACAP) filed a petition for review 
with the D.C. Circuit Court on the December 2012 memorandum. NEDACAP 
alleged that the December 2012 memorandum violated both CAA section 
301(a)(2) and the EPA's Regional Consistency regulations by 
establishing inconsistent permit criteria in different parts of the 
country.
    In May 2014, the D.C. Circuit Court issued a decision vacating the 
December 2012 memorandum. The D.C. Circuit Court agreed with NEDACAP 
that the memorandum was inconsistent with the EPA's Regional 
Consistency regulations located at 40 CFR part 56.\3\ The court found 
that the Regional Consistency regulations ``strongly articulate the 
EPA's firm commitment to national uniformity in the applications of its 
permitting rules'' without any indication that ``EPA intended to exempt 
variance created by a judicial decision.'' Slip op. at 17. The D.C. 
Circuit concluded that the EPA's current regulations ``preclude EPA's 
intercircuit nonaquiescence in this instance. . . .'' Slip op. at 19.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ The D.C. Circuit Court did not reach NEDACAP's argument that 
the memorandum was also inconsistent with the CAA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The D.C. Circuit Court presented three options that the EPA could 
pursue in response to an adverse decision: Revise the underlying 
regulation; appeal the decision; or revise the Regional Consistency 
regulations. By making the revisions proposed in this rulemaking, the 
EPA is following one of the options suggested by the court. Slip op. at 
18.
    First, the court suggested that the EPA consider revising the 
underlying regulations at issue in the Sixth Circuit decision. Id While 
this approach may resolve the narrow issue that is the subject of the 
Sixth Circuit decision, and the EPA is in fact in the process of 
revising the permitting regulations that were the subject of the Sixth 
Circuit Court decision and the December 2012 memorandum, this approach 
generally would require a new rulemaking following each adverse court 
decision regarding an issue of local applicability. Each national 
rulemaking of this nature would likely take more than a year--and 
possibly several years--to complete. By revising the EPA's Regional 
Consistency regulations to fully allow for intercircuit nonaquiescence, 
the agency can through one rulemaking save the considerable time and 
resources potentially required by several narrow rulemakings.
    Second, the court suggested that the EPA could have appealed the 
Sixth Circuit decision to the U.S. Supreme Court. Slip op. at 18. 
However, because the U.S. Supreme Court grants only about one percent 
of the petitions for certiorari (i.e., a petition requesting review of 
a lower court's decision) filed each year, there is a strong likelihood 
that the U.S. Supreme Court would decline to review a lower court's 
decision.\4\ Were we to rely solely on this option, absent review by 
the U.S. Supreme Court, a single federal court decision regarding an 
action of local applicability could change the EPA's policy nationwide 
unless and until the EPA undertook a rulemaking (see first option 
above). As discussed further below, this outcome would be inconsistent 
with the judicial review provisions of CAA section 307(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ See http://dailywrit.com/2013/01/likelihood-of-a-petition-being-granted/ which cites the following statistics: Petitions 
granted overall in the 2011-2012 term: .862 percent, and in the 
2012-2013 term: 1.03 percent.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Third, the court suggested that the EPA could revise the Regional 
Consistency regulations ``to account for regional variances created by 
judicial decisions or circuit splits.'' Slip op. at 18. This proposed 
rulemaking follows this option because we believe it most effectively 
addresses the issue presented by an adverse federal court decision 
addressing an action of local or regional applicability. As discussed 
further below, this proposed revision also would accommodate the EPA's 
proper and longstanding application of the doctrine of intercircuit 
nonaquiescence in future cases while eliminating the need for several 
lengthy, narrow rulemakings or review of a lower court's decision by 
the U.S. Supreme Court.

IV. Proposed Revisions to the Regional Consistency Rule

    This section discusses the proposed revisions to the Regional 
Consistency regulations and our rationale for proposing those changes. 
We solicit public comment on the changes being proposed and will 
consider those comments in developing the final rule.

A. What are the proposed revisions to the 40 CFR part 56 Regional 
Consistency Regulations?

    In this action, we propose three specific revisions to the general 
consistency policy put forward in the existing Regional Consistency 
regulations, 40 CFR part 56, to accommodate the implications of 
judicial decisions addressing ``locally or regionally applicable'' 
actions. Specifically, we propose to revise 40 CFR 56.3 to add a 
provision to acknowledge an exception to the ``policy'' of uniformity 
to provide that a decision of a federal court that arises from a 
challenge to ``locally or regionally applicable'' actions would not 
apply uniformly nationwide, and that only decisions of the U.S. Supreme 
Court and decisions of the D.C. Circuit Court that arise from 
challenges to ``nationally applicable regulations . . . or final 
action'' would apply uniformly nationwide. We also propose to revise 40 
CFR 56.4 to add a provision to clarify that EPA headquarters offices' 
employees would not need to issue mechanisms or revise existing 
mechanisms developed under 40 CFR 56.4(a) to address federal court 
decisions arising from challenges to ``locally or regionally 
applicable'' actions. Lastly, we propose to revise 40 CFR 56.5(b) to 
clarify that EPA regional offices' employees would not need to seek 
headquarters office concurrence to act inconsistently with national 
policy or interpretation if such action is required by a federal court 
decision arising from challenges to ``locally or regionally 
applicable'' actions. In other words, through this rulemaking, the 
agency would be authorizing a region to act inconsistently with 
nationwide policy or interpretation to the extent that the region must 
do so in order to act consistently with a decision issued by a federal 
court that has direct jurisdiction over the region's action.
    The manner in which the proposed revisions would affect the EPA's 
operational consistency may be explained by way of example related to a 
challenge to the title V applicability determination made by EPA Region 
5

[[Page 50254]]

for Summit Petroleum's oil and gas operations on tribal land in 
Michigan. This challenge led to the December 2012 memorandum reviewed 
in the D.C. Circuit Court's NEDACAP decision. In the course of a 
source-specific title V permitting action, EPA Region 5 had determined 
that Summit Petroleum's oil and gas production wells and gas sweetening 
plant should be considered adjacent, based on their proximity and 
interrelatedness to one another, and thus emissions from these units 
were aggregated into a single source for title V permitting purposes 
(see 40 CFR 71.2). Summit Petroleum challenged that determination in 
the Sixth Circuit, and the court ultimately issued a decision that 
vacated and remanded Region 5's determination. Summit Petroleum Corp. 
v. U.S. EPA, 690 F3d 733 (6th Cir. 2012). Although the EPA argued that 
its longstanding interpretation of ``adjacent'' as used in the source 
determination regulations included consideration of an activities' 
functional interrelatedness, see id. at 744-75 (noting the EPA's 
citation to nine such source determinations spanning more than 30 
years), the Sixth Circuit found that the term ``adjacent'' as used in 
the EPA's source determination regulations was unambiguous and related 
only to physical proximity, and thus could not include consideration of 
functional interrelatedness, see id. at 741-744. The EPA sought 
rehearing of the Summit case, but the request was ultimately denied on 
October 29, 2012.
    Thereafter, a number of EPA regional offices sought guidance from 
headquarters offices regarding the impact of the Summit decision on 
various permitting actions, sometimes in an effort to answer questions 
they were receiving from state permitting authorities and permittees. 
Accordingly, in December 2012, an official in EPA headquarters issued a 
memorandum to the Air Division Directors at the EPA's regional offices 
explaining the applicability of the Summit decision to other EPA title 
V and NSR source determinations.\5\ The December 2012 memorandum 
described briefly the determination at issue in the Summit case, and 
the Sixth Circuit's decision. It explained that under the court's 
decision, the EPA could no longer consider interrelatedness in 
determining the adjacency of different emissions units in title V or 
NSR permitting decisions within the Sixth Circuit's jurisdiction (i.e., 
Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee and Kentucky). The December 2012 memorandum 
noted that the agency was ``still assessing how to implement this 
decision in its permitting actions in the 6th Circuit,'' and explained 
that outside the Sixth Circuit, the EPA intended to continue to apply 
its longstanding approach of considering both the proximity and 
interrelatedness of operations in determining whether emissions units 
are ``adjacent'' for permitting purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ Memorandum from Stephen Page, Director of the EPA's Office 
of Air Quality Planning and Standards to the Air Division Directors. 
(Titled, Applicability of the Summit Decision to the EPA Title V and 
NSR Source Determinations; available at http://www.epa.gov/region7/air/title5/t5memos/inter2012.pdf)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    If the proposed revisions to the Regional Consistency regulations 
had already been in place, this type of memorandum from EPA 
headquarters would not have been necessary because regions, states, and 
other potentially affected entities would have had certainty and 
predictability regarding the application of such a judicial decision--
they would have known that this type of permit-specific, local and 
regional decision would only apply in the areas under the jurisdiction 
of the Sixth Circuit. Accordingly, with the changes proposed, it would 
have been clear to everyone that EPA regions would not be bound to 
apply the findings of the Summit decision in states outside the Sixth 
Circuit, and could continue to apply the longstanding practice that had 
not been successfully challenged in other federal circuit courts in 
their regions or decided nationally by the D.C. Circuit Court or U.S. 
Supreme Court.
    If the proposed revisions to the Regional Consistency regulations 
are finalized, it will be clear that an adverse federal court decision 
in a case regarding locally or regionally applicable actions does not 
apply nationwide. As soon as these regulatory changes are effective, 
the EPA regional offices that are outside of the jurisdiction of a 
court will be able to apply the agency's nationwide practices in a 
consistent manner in any actions they take going forward, and they will 
not need to seek concurrence from headquarters offices for that 
continued application. Likewise, under the revised regulations, it 
would be clear that any such adverse decision that is or has been 
issued would be applied to those areas or parties that are under the 
issuing court's jurisdiction in any regional actions going forward. 
Moreover, those regions would not need to seek concurrence from EPA 
headquarters offices in order to follow the relevant decision, even if 
doing so would mean they were acting inconsistently with other EPA 
regional offices or national policy.
    Note that these proposed regulatory changes, if finalized, would 
only apply to activities conducted at EPA offices (both regional and 
headquarters) and also to states delegated to implement EPA rules. The 
proposed revisions would not affect a state implementing its SIP-
approved program, as they are bound to follow their own regulations.

B. What is the basis for the EPA's approach?

    In this rulemaking action, we are proposing to revise 40 CFR part 
56 to ``account for regional variances created by a judicial decision 
or circuit splits'' by creating a specific accommodation to the general 
policy of uniformity of EPA actions. As explained more fully below, 
revising the Regional Consistency regulations to accommodate federal 
circuit and district court decisions that result from challenges to 
locally or regionally applicable actions, and thus providing for 
intercircuit nonaquiescence, is consistent with general principles of 
common law, CAA sections 301(a)(2) and 307(b)(1). It will also help to 
foster overall fairness and predictability regarding the scope and 
impact of judicial decisions under the CAA, and is a reasonable 
extension of the EPA's existing part 56 regulations.
1. Accommodating Intercircuit Nonaquiescence in the Regional 
Consistency Regulations Is Consistent With General Principles of Common 
Law
    Federal courts are courts of limited jurisdiction; they have only 
the authority to hear and decide cases granted to them by Congress. See 
generally U.S. Constitution, Article II, Section 1 (``The judicial 
Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court, and 
in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain 
and establish.''). Thus, Congress must grant a federal court subject 
matter jurisdiction over the type of dispute in question.
    A court of appeals generally hears appeals from the district courts 
located within its circuit, and the circuit is delineated by the states 
it contains. See generally 28 U.S.C. 41 (establishing the number and 
composition of the thirteen circuits; the composition is denoted by the 
names of states in a circuit).\6\ As a general matter, while an opinion 
from one circuit court of appeals may be persuasive precedent, it is 
not binding on other courts of appeals. See Hart v. Massanari, 266 F. 
3d 1155, 1172-73 (9th

[[Page 50255]]

Cir. 2001). As the Ninth Circuit explained, ``[T]here are also very 
important differences between controlling and persuasive authority. As 
noted, one of these is that, if a controlling precedent is determined 
to be on point, it must be followed. Another important distinction 
concerns the scope of controlling authority. Thus, an opinion of our 
court is binding within our circuit, not elsewhere in the country. The 
courts of appeals, and even the lower courts of other circuits, may 
decline to follow the rule we announce--and often do. This ability to 
develop different interpretations of the law among the circuits is 
considered a strength of our system. It allows experimentation with 
different approaches to the same legal problem, so that when the 
Supreme Court eventually reviews the issue it has the benefit of 
``percolation'' within the lower courts.'' Id. (emphasis added). This 
last point is critical to an effective federal judiciary. By revising 
the regulations in part 56 to fully accommodate intercircuit 
nonaquiescence, the EPA is acting consistently with the purpose of the 
federal judicial system by allowing the robust percolation of case law 
through the circuit courts until such time as U.S. Supreme Court review 
is appropriate. The vast majority of cases that the U.S. Supreme Court 
hears arise from circuit splits.\7\ Thus, revising the Regional 
Consistency regulations to accommodate intercircuit nonaquiescence 
advances the federal judiciary's ability to experiment with different 
approaches to similar legal problems, and the development of a circuit 
split that could eventually lead to U.S. Supreme Court review of 
important issues under the CAA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ The exception is the Federal Circuit, which hears certain 
types of cases from anywhere in the country.
    \7\ See Ryan Stephenson, Federal Circuit Case Selection at the 
U.S. Supreme Court: An Empirical Analysis, 102 Georgetown L.J. 272, 
273 (2013) (``As many as 70% of the cases before the Court where 
certiorari has been granted present clear conflicts between either 
the federal courts of appeals or state courts of last resort.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As the U.S. Supreme Court has explained, circuit splits are a 
common and acknowledged aspect of the federal legal system. E. I. du 
Pont de Nemours & Co. v. Train, 430 U.S. 112, 135 n.26 (1977) (there is 
wisdom in ``allowing difficult issues to mature through full 
consideration by the courts of appeals''). With regard to judicial 
consideration of the actions and decisions of federal agencies, a judge 
on the D.C. Circuit Court has noted that ``after one circuit has 
disagreed with its position, an agency is entitled to maintain its 
independent assessment of the dictates of the statutes and regulations 
it is charged with administering, in the hope that other circuits, the 
U.S. Supreme Court, or Congress will ultimately uphold the agency's 
position.'' Indep. Petroleum Ass'n of Am. v. Babbitt, 92 F.3d 1248, 
1261 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (J. Rogers, dissenting). Likewise, legal scholars 
have explained that ``compel[ling] an agency to follow the adverse 
ruling of a particular court of appeals would be to give that court 
undue influence in the intercircuit dialogue by diminishing the 
opportunity for other courts of proper venue to consider, and possibly 
sustain, the agency's position.'' S. Estreicher & R. Revesz, 
Nonaquiescence by Federal Administrative Agencies, 98 Yale L. J. 679, 
764 (Feb.1989). As the U.S. Supreme Court has noted, preventing the 
government from addressing an issue in more than one forum ``would 
substantially thwart the development of important questions of law by 
freezing the first final decision rendered on a particular legal 
issue.'' United States v. Mendoza, 464 U.S. 154, 160 (1984). In light 
of this important function, the U.S. Supreme Court has sought to 
preserve government discretion to relitigate an issue across different 
circuits. Id. at 163. Thus, though circuit conflict may undermine 
national uniformity of federal law to some degree for some period of 
time, it also advances the quality of decisions interpreting the law 
over time. See generally Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Pena, 
44 F.3d 437, 446 (7th Cir. 1994) (J. Easterbrook, concurring) (agencies 
and courts balance whether ``it is more important that the applicable 
rule of law be settled'' or ``that it be settled right'') (internal 
quotation and citation omitted).
2. Accommodating Intercircuit Nonaquiescence in the Regional 
Consistency Regulations Is Consistent With the CAA's Judicial Review 
Provisions
    We are also proposing these revisions to ensure that the Regional 
Consistency regulations are in harmony with the CAA's judicial review 
provisions. Congress specifically addressed in the CAA the ability of 
the various courts of appeals to hear appeals of decisions of the EPA. 
Congress created a very specific system of judicial review to address 
how the CAA is implemented. Specifically, Congress granted the 
authority to review agency actions of nationwide applicability under 
the CAA only to the D.C. Circuit Court. In 1977, at the same time it 
added the directive for the EPA to promulgate what would ultimately 
become the Regional Consistency regulations, Congress amended the Act 
to ensure that the D.C. Circuit Court, and no other circuit courts, 
would review nationally applicable regulations. Specifically, CAA 
section 307(b)(1) states that ``A petition for review of action of the 
Administrator in promulgating any national primary or secondary ambient 
air quality standard, any emission standard or requirement under 
section 112, any standard of performance or requirement under section 
111, any standard under section 202 (other than a standard required to 
be prescribed under section 202(b)(1)), any determination under section 
202(b)(5), any control or prohibition under section 211, any standard 
under section 231, any rule issued under section 113, 119, or under 
section 120, or any other nationally applicable regulations 
promulgated, or final action taken, by the Administrator under this Act 
may be filed only in the United States Court of Appeals for the 
District of Columbia.'' CAA section 307(b)(1) (emphasis added). 
Congress then declared that other final CAA actions of the 
Administrator that are ``locally or regionally applicable may be filed 
only in the United States Court of Appeals for the appropriate 
circuit.'' Id. For example, under this system, challenges to the EPA's 
regulations addressing prevention of significant deterioration (PSD)--
which are nationally applicable--would be heard in the D.C. Circuit 
Court, while challenges to application of those PSD regulations to 
specific permitting actions--which are locally applicable--would be 
heard in the appropriate circuit court. See, e.g., Alabama Power v. 
Costle, 636 F.2d 323 (D.C. Cir. 1979) (challenge to the EPA's PSD 
rules) and Sierra Club v. EPA, 499 F.3d 653 (7th Cir. 2007) (challenge 
to the application of those rules to a specific permitting action).
    The Committee Report accompanying the bill that ultimately became 
the CAA Amendments of 1977 states that the amendments to section 
307(b)(1) make ``it clear that any nationally applicable regulations 
promulgated by the Administrator under the Clean Air Act could be 
reviewed only in the U.S. Court of Appeal for the District of 
Columbia.'' H.R.Rep. No. 95-294, p. 323 (1977). See also Harrison v. 
PPG Industries, Inc. et al., 100 S.Ct. 1889, 1896 (1980) (noting that 
the legislative history focused on the proper venue between the D.C. 
Circuit Court and other federal courts). Only ``essentially locally, 
statewide, or regionally applicable rules or orders are to be reviewed 
in U.S. court of appeals for the circuit in which such locality, State 
or region is located.'' H.R.Rep. No. 95-294,

[[Page 50256]]

at 323. The legislative history notes that in adopting this revision, 
the committee was largely approving portions of recommendation 305.76-
4(A) of the Administrative Conference of the United States, which deals 
with venue, as well as the separate statement of G. William Frick that 
accompanied the Administrative Conference's views. Id. at 324. In his 
statement, Mr. Frick stated that ``Congress intended review in the D.C. 
Circuit of `matters on which national uniformity is desirable.' Among 
the reasons for this are the D.C. Circuit's obvious expertise in 
administrative law matters and its sensitivity to Congressional 
mandates.'' 41 FR 56767, 56769 (1976). Mr. Frick went on to note that 
the D.C. Circuit Court had become quite familiar with the CAA, while 
other circuit courts lacked frequent exposure to the Act and its 
legislative history.
    By placing review of nationally applicable decisions in the D.C. 
Circuit Court alone, Congress struck the balance between the 
countervailing values of improved development of the law on the one 
hand and national uniformity on the other. By consolidating review of 
nationally applicable final agency actions in the D.C. Circuit Court, 
Congress advanced the objective of ``even and consistent national 
application'' of certain EPA regulations (and other ``final'' actions) 
that are national in scope. Oljato Chapter of Navajo Tribe v. Train, 
515 F.2d 654, 660 (D.C. Cir. 1975) (quoting S. Rep. No. 91-1196, 91st 
Cong., 2d Sess., 41(1970)). At the same time, Congress left the door 
open to intercircuit conflicts by granting jurisdiction over locally or 
regionally applicable ``final'' actions--like the applicability 
determination discussed in the example below--to the regionally-based 
courts of appeal. There is nothing in the legislative history to 
suggest that at the same time, Congress intended for the Regional 
Consistency provisions to somehow upset this careful balance and 
require the EPA to apply a locally or regionally applicable decision in 
all regions in order to maintain consistency.
    This proposal would firmly reestablish the balance that Congress 
struck in CAA section 307(b)(1), to the extent the current Regional 
Consistency regulations upset that balance. Thus, this proposal would 
ensure that only the U.S. Supreme Court and the D.C. Circuit Court 
would issue decisions with mandatory nationwide effect, which is 
consistent with the clear statutory language of CAA section 307(b)(1), 
as well as its legislative history. As explained below, there is 
nothing in the language or intent of CAA section 301(a)(2) that trumps 
the clear statutory directive of CAA section 307(b)(1) establishing 
which courts have jurisdiction over which final agency actions.\8\ 
Therefore, we believe it is reasonable for the EPA to revise the 
Regional Consistency regulations to provide a specific accommodation 
for locally and regionally applicable court decisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ Moreover, to the extent there is a conflict, a canon of 
statutory construction states that the specific--such as the 
language in CAA section 307(b)(1) addressing which courts may rule 
on issues of national applicability--trumps the general--such as the 
language in section 301(a)(2) regarding regulations on fairness and 
uniformity. See RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC v. Amalgamated Bank, 132 
S. Ct. 2065, 2070-71 (2012) (`` `[I]t is a commonplace of statutory 
construction that the specific governs the general.''' quoting 
Morales v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 504 U.S. 374, 384 (1992)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

3. Accommodating Intercircuit Nonaquiescence in the Regional 
Consistency Regulations Is Consistent With CAA Section 301(a)(2)
    A specific accommodation for locally and regionally applicable 
court decisions also is compatible with the statutory language and 
Congressional intent of CAA section 301(a)(2). As described above, 
those provisions require the EPA Administrator to develop regulations 
to ``assure fairness and uniformity'' of agency actions. Notably, there 
is nothing in the text of CAA section 301(a)(2) or in the limited 
legislative history of that provision that would suggest Congress 
intended for the requirement to promulgate fairness and uniformity 
regulations under CAA section 301 to either upset the balance Congress 
struck when establishing judicial review provisions in CAA section 307, 
or disrupt the general principles of common law that have allowed for 
the percolation of issues up through the various circuit courts, as 
discussed above. Section 301(a)(2) of the Act does not specifically 
discuss whether the fairness and uniformity objectives must be applied 
to all court decisions; nor does it address how the agency should 
respond to adverse court decisions. Congress also did not include 
language in CAA section 301 that would expressly prohibit the EPA from 
promulgating regulations that accommodate intercircuit nonaquiescence, 
consistent with CAA section 307.
    In addition, the text of CAA section 301(a)(2)(A) necessitates a 
balance between uniformity and fairness; however, one does not always 
guarantee the other in all circumstances. These revisions would ensure 
the EPA has the flexibility to maintain that balance, as appropriate.
    Fairness is defined by one source as ``agreeing with what is 
thought to be right or acceptable; treating people in a way that does 
not favor some over others'' (http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fairness). As we have already discussed, it is generally 
acceptable to apply a Circuit Court decision only in those states over 
which the circuit has jurisdiction. And, as explained using an example 
below, there are circumstances under which applying the decision of a 
lower court nationwide could favor sources located in the applicable 
lower court's jurisdiction over those located in other circuits. As 
such, a standard that would specifically allow for intercircuit 
nonaquiescence for all CAA decisions other than those issued by the 
D.C. Circuit Court in response to challenges of nationwide actions 
would provide a uniform standard for the EPA's application of court 
decisions that could be anticipated by those who implement the 
regulations and the regulated community.
    It is not clear that the automatic, immediate nationwide 
application of one court's decision based on the specific facts of a 
locally-applicable decision would always be ``fair'' in the absence of 
the type of accommodation proposed here. For example, consider widget 
factories that have been diligently complying with the EPA's 
longstanding interpretation that the Act supports permit limits of 1.00 
ppm or lower (i.e., more stringent) at widget extrusion units at major 
sources. However, in a challenge by a community group to a single 
widget factory permit in New England containing a limit of 1.00 ppm for 
the extrusion units, the First Circuit Court of Appeals issues a ruling 
with a different interpretation of the Act than the EPA's that supports 
a limit of 0.50 ppm or lower. A reasonable person might not find it 
fair to require then that all widget factories nationwide get permit 
revisions to establish limits of 0.50 ppm. Those factories would have 
been relying on the 1.00 ppm limit for years when planning budgets and 
making business decisions, and would likely find complying with the 
lower limit costly and disruptive. Arguably, fairness might be better 
served by limiting the impact of the First Circuit decision to the 
source whose permit was before the First Circuit and any other widget 
factories within the jurisdiction of the First Circuit, while the EPA 
determines how best to proceed.
    While CAA section 301(a)(2) directed the EPA to create mechanisms 
for identifying and standardizing various criteria, there is nothing to 
suggest that

[[Page 50257]]

such standardization requires exact duplication by all EPA regions in 
all circumstances, including regional responses to court decisions. CAA 
section 301 generally relates to procedures to be followed by the EPA 
employees in carrying out a delegation of authority from the 
Administrator. Paragraph 301(a)(1) of the Act authorizes the 
Administrator to delegate certain powers to other EPA officials, while 
section 301(a)(2) of the Act requires the Administrator to establish 
``general applicable procedures and policies for regional officers and 
employees'' to follow in carrying out delegated authorities. CAA 
section 301(a)(1)-(2). While the statute further directs that such 
regulations shall be designed to, among other requirements, ``assure 
fairness and uniformity in the criteria, procedures, and policies 
applied by the various regions in implementing and enforcing the 
chapter,'' on its face, CAA section 301(a)(2) does not impose a 
standalone requirement to attain uniformity. Cf. Air Pollution Control 
Dist. v. EPA, 739 F.2d 1071, 1085 (6th Cir. 1984) (rejecting claim that 
CAA section 301(a)(2) establishes a substantive standard that requires 
similar or uniform emission limitations for all sources). In addition, 
the section does not direct the Administrator to revise an existing 
regulation following an adverse court decision in a local or regional 
case, or otherwise constrain the EPA's existing regulatory authority. 
Instead, the provision requires the EPA to establish procedures that 
apply to its regional officers and employees, but it does not address 
whether or how the EPA should address judicial decisions in those 
procedures. To the extent that Congress prioritized judicially-created 
uniformity, this was expressed in CAA section 307(b)(1)--which, as 
discussed above, allows for regional divergence among circuit courts--
not CAA section 301(a)(2)(A).
4. Accommodating Intercircuit Nonaquiescence in the Regional 
Consistency Regulations Fosters Overall Fairness and Predictability 
Regarding the Scope and Impact of Judicial Decisions Under the CAA
    Revising the Regional Consistency regulations to include a specific 
accommodation for intercircuit nonaquiescence in appropriate 
circumstances would also help to assure fairness and predictability in 
the implementation of the CAA overall. Such an accommodation would 
foster predictability by ensuring that, unless there is an affirmative 
nationwide and deliberate change in the EPA's rules or policies, lower 
court decisions would apply only in those states/areas within the 
jurisdiction of the lower court, with the exception of the D.C. Circuit 
Court reviewing final agency actions of national applicability, 
consistent with CAA section 307(b)(1). Under the revised Regional 
Consistency regulations, as proposed, a source subject to the CAA 
would, as usual, need to know and follow the law in the circuit where 
it is located, and the law of the D.C. Circuit Court and the U.S. 
Supreme Court. It would not be required to follow every CAA case in 
every court across the country to ensure compliance with the Act.
    By revising the regulations, the EPA also accommodates the 
possibility that a split in the circuits could preclude the EPA from 
complying with both court decisions at once. Consider the following 
example: In a case involving a permit issued in New York, the Second 
Circuit upholds the EPA's longstanding position and, in doing so, 
confirms that the EPA's interpretation is compelled by the Act under 
Step One of Chevron.\9\ As a result, the EPA continues to apply its 
longstanding interpretation, consistent with the Second Circuit's 
decision, in a permit issued in Alabama, an Eleventh Circuit state. In 
an appeal of that permit, however, the Eleventh Circuit holds that not 
only is the EPA's interpretation not compelled by the CAA, it is 
prohibited by the CAA. There are now two court decisions with 
conflicting Chevron Step One holdings--how could the EPA apply both of 
those decisions uniformly across the country? While the U.S. Supreme 
Court could review the issue, it might not. Further, even if the U.S. 
Supreme Court eventually resolved the conflict, there could be a multi-
year period during which both decisions would remain applicable case 
law. This proposed revisions would acknowledge and address those 
instances in which the EPA may not be able to comply with two, 
conflicting decisions at the same time.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \9\ Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, 
Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984) (Step one of Chevron refers to cases where 
the intent of Congress is clear, and therefore a court, as well as 
the agency, must give effect to the unambiguously expressed intent 
of Congress).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Moreover, sometimes court decisions reviewing a regulation or 
statute are reversed on appeal. In other cases, a court decision may 
contain a ruling that appears to invalidate a national rule in the 
context of a source-specific action, which is inconsistent with CAA 
section 307(b)(1), as explained above. When either outcome occurs, 
intercircuit nonaquiescence allows the EPA to limit the impact of the 
court's ruling while it undertakes other actions. For example, in 
Environmental Defense v. Duke Energy Corp., 549 U.S. 561 (2007), the 
U.S. Supreme Court reversed the Fourth Circuit's implicit invalidation 
of the EPA's regulations in the context of an enforcement action. In 
that case, the U.S. Supreme Court found that the court of appeals had 
been too rigid in its insistence that the EPA interpret the term 
``modification'' in its PSD regulations in the same way that the agency 
interpreted that term under the New Source Performance Standards 
program. Id. at 572-577. While it is true the U.S. Supreme Court 
eventually reversed the lower court, there was a 2-year period during 
which the Fourth Circuit's decision remained in place. Under the D.C. 
Circuit Court's interpretation of the existing Regional Consistency 
regulations, the EPA arguably would have been required to follow that 
later-reversed Fourth Circuit interpretation of its regulations 
nationwide during that 2 year period, even though that interpretation 
``read those PSD regulations in a way that seems to [the Supreme Court] 
too far a stretch for the language used.'' Id. at 577.
    As discussed earlier, since the U.S. Supreme Court only grants a 
very limited number of petitions for certiorari, it is highly likely 
that an adverse court of appeals decision could remain in place 
indefinitely. This possibility is exacerbated if the EPA is prohibited 
by its own regulations governing consistency from seeking to create a 
circuit split on the issue by non-acquiescing to the first adverse 
decision, and maintaining its national position before other courts. 
Moreover, if the lower court decision is based on an interpretation of 
the CAA statutory language, the EPA may not be able to ``fix'' the 
problem by revising the underlying regulation because the agency could 
arguably be required to follow the statutory construction set forth in 
the lower court's decision. Such a result would be inconsistent with 
the general structure of the federal judiciary, the specific structure 
of the Act's judicial review provision, and the general directive to 
assure both fairness and uniformity in CAA section 301(a)(2).
5. Accommodating Intercircuit Nonaquiescence in the Regional 
Consistency Regulations is a Reasonable Extension of the EPA's Part 56 
Regulations
    As noted above, because there is nothing in the statutory text of 
CAA section 301(a)(2) that would prohibit the

[[Page 50258]]

EPA from revising the Regional Consistency regulations to specifically 
accommodate intercircuit nonaquiescence, we wish to evaluate that 
approach. Nothing in the preambles to the proposed and final Regional 
Consistency regulations indicates that either commenters or the EPA 
considered the question whether or how the rules would be applied 
following judicial decisions (see generally 44 FR 13043-048 and 45 FR 
85400-405, respectively). In addition, while the D.C. Circuit Court's 
NEDACAP decision relied heavily on the general policy statements 
contained in 40 CFR 56.3 of the existing regulations--which broadly 
endorse the fair and uniform application of criteria, policy, and 
procedures by EPA regional office employees--there is nothing in those 
general statements or any other provisions of the regulations that 
mandate that the EPA adopt nationwide the interpretation of the court 
that first addresses a legal matter in all circumstances. The lack of 
such a mandate shows that the focused revisions we are proposing in 
this rulemaking are a natural extension of the agency's existing 
regulations.
    The Regional Consistency regulations generally establish certain 
mechanisms with the goal of ``identifying, preventing, and resolving 
regional inconsistencies'' (45 FR 85400). For the EPA headquarters 
office employees, the regulations do this by targeting particular 
aspects of the Act that have the potential to present consistency 
problems--any rule or regulation proposed or promulgated under part 51, 
which sets forth requirements for the preparation, adoption and 
submittal of state implementation plans, and part 58, which contains 
requirements for measuring, monitoring, and reporting ambient air 
quality. However, the consistency regulations do not state a 
requirement for headquarters offices to apply these parts consistently 
in all circumstances. Instead the regulations direct headquarters 
office employees to develop mechanisms to assure that such rules or 
regulations are implemented and enforced fairly and uniformly by the 
regional offices. In so doing, the regulations do not state that 
headquarters employees are required to assure that a decision of one 
judicial circuit is always applied consistently in all EPA regions.
    Likewise, the provisions of the Regional Consistency regulations 
that apply to the EPA regional office employees also do not contain a 
requirement that all regional officials act the same way in all 
circumstances, nor do they address judicial decisions. While the EPA 
could change any such requirement if it did exist in our regulations, 
we do not need to make such a change because the narrow revisions we 
are proposing in this rulemaking are a natural extension of the 
existing regulations, which state that regional officials must assure 
that actions are ``carried out fairly and in a manner that is 
consistent with the Act and Agency policy'' and are ``as consistent as 
reasonably possible with the activities of other Regional Offices'' 40 
CFR 56.5(a)(1)-(2) (emphasis added).
    As discussed above, Congress specifically addressed the role of and 
allowed for regional office divergence among circuit courts in CAA 
section 307(b)(1), and it would be both reasonable and fair to allow 
for inconsistencies among the actions of regional officials to respect 
those directives. Perhaps more importantly, the Regional Consistency 
regulations already allow for some variation between the regional 
offices. Specifically, 40 CFR 56.5(b) provides that regional officials 
``seek concurrence'' from the EPA headquarters with respect to any 
interpretations of the Act, rule, regulation, or guidance that ``may 
result in inconsistent application among the regional Offices.'' Thus, 
the EPA has already acknowledged that certain regions may in some 
instances act inconsistently with others, and the revisions proposed in 
this action would simply be identifying and authorizing such 
inconsistency specifically when necessitated by a federal court 
decision reviewing an action of local or regional applicability.
    In fact, the proposed revisions would further the overall goals of 
the existing Regional Consistency regulations by specifically 
identifying the possibility of potential inconsistent actions across 
the EPA regions, especially where multiple courts have already 
addressed an issue in different ways, and standardizing a response that 
can be followed by all the regions, such that regions only have to 
apply local and regional decisions issued by courts in those areas in 
which the court has jurisdiction.
6. Accommodating District Court Decisions in the Regional Consistency 
Regulations Is Also Appropriate
    As we have explained above, revising the Regional Consistency 
regulations to specifically accommodate circuit court decisions via 
intercircuit nonaquiescence is consistent with general principles of 
common law, and CAA sections 307(b)(1) and 301(a)(2). In addition, it 
will help to foster overall fairness and predictability regarding the 
scope and impact of judicial decisions under the CAA, and is a 
reasonable extension of the EPA's existing part 56 regulations. To the 
extent one could read the NEDACAP decision to imply that the Regional 
Consistency regulations would also require the EPA to apply district 
court decisions uniformly across the nation, the revisions also 
appropriately accommodate district court decisions, which are by their 
very nature even more limited in scope.
    The federal district courts are the general trial courts of the 
federal judiciary system. See generally 28 U.S.C. 81-131 (establishing 
district courts for each of the 50 states and the District of 
Columbia). The district courts only have the authority to hear cases in 
a specific geographic area that raise specific claims for which 
Congress has granted the court jurisdiction. See generally 28 U.S.C. 
1390-1431 (discussing the venue of the district courts) and 1330-1369 
(discussing the jurisdiction of the district courts). A district court 
decision is based on the application of the law to the specific facts 
of a case, involving the parties to the case. Thus, while a decision 
from a circuit court is binding on those district courts located in the 
circuit, as a general matter, a decision from a district court is 
applicable only to those parties in the specific case in which it is 
issued and has no binding precedential effect on any other parties, 
courts or even other judges in the same district. See Hart v. 
Massanari, 266 F.3d at 1174. Given this very limited scope of district 
court decisions, it is reasonable to revise the Regional Consistency 
regulations to clearly accommodate district court decisions that result 
from specific locally or regionally cases in which the EPA is a party. 
Without such a revision, a party may try to argue that, pursuant to the 
Regional Consistency regulations, a single district court decision 
based on the specific facts in one case forms the basis for a uniform 
nationwide EPA position, elevating the impact of that district court 
decision well beyond the scope that is usually provided to district 
court decisions, and thus upsetting the general principles of U.S. 
common law upon which our federal judiciary is based.
    Likewise, as noted above, Congress created a very specific system 
of judicial review to address how the Act is implemented, and that 
system is focused on challenges to specific final actions in the 
circuit courts. There is nothing in CAA section 307(b)(1) or in the 
statutory language requiring the EPA to promulgate regional consistency 
rules that would suggest that Congress intended district court 
decisions in

[[Page 50259]]

specific cases to have a potentially broad binding effect on the 
agency. Not only would such an outcome elevate a district court 
decision to the same level of a D.C. Circuit Court decision under CAA 
section 307(b)(1), but it would be directly opposed to the idea of 
``fairness'' put forward by Congress in CAA section 301(a)(2). If the 
Regional Consistency regulations cannot accommodate various district 
court decisions, a fundamental unfairness would arise when a district 
court decision applying its interpretation of an agency rule to the 
specific facts of one EPA case in Alaska could impact how the agency 
would address the same rule but with very different facts in Florida. 
Given the various reasons set forth above for limiting application of 
circuit court decisions resulting from challenges to locally or 
regionally applicable actions, and the fact that the scope of district 
court decisions in the federal court system is even more narrowly 
defined than that of circuit court decisions, it is only reasonable to 
revise the Regional Consistency regulations to clearly limit the 
application of district court decisions only to the specific parties 
and facts addressed in the decision.
7. Accommodating Intercircuit Nonaquiescence in the Regional 
Consistency Regulations Maintains EPA's Ability To Exercise Discretion
    Although the proposed rule revisions would make clear that the EPA 
is not obligated to follow judicial decisions of a federal circuit 
court addressing ``locally or regionally applicable'' actions in other 
circuits (or district court decisions in instances that do not involve 
parties to such decision), the proposal is not intended to preclude 
anyone from advocating that the agency exercise its discretion to 
follow such decisions in appropriate cases. The EPA recognizes that 
national policy can be influenced by insights and reasoning from 
judicial decisions and we do not mean to imply through this proposal 
that the agency would ignore persuasive judicial opinions issued in 
cases involving ``locally or regionally applicable'' actions. Such 
opinions may address issues of nationwide importance and could, in 
appropriate circumstances, lead the agency to adopt new national 
policy.

V. Environmental Justice Considerations

    This document is proposing a rule revision to give the EPA 
flexibility to implement court decisions of a limited scope (i.e., 
those having local or regional applicability) while also allowing us to 
implement our national program under the CAA. The EPA did not conduct 
an environmental analysis for this rule because this rule would not 
directly affect the air emissions of particular sources. Because this 
rule will not directly affect the air emissions of particular sources, 
it does not affect the level of protection provided to human health or 
the environment. Therefore, this action will not have potential 
disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental 
effects on minority, low-income or indigenous populations.

VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews

A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and Executive 
Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review

    This action is not a ``significant regulatory action'' under the 
terms of Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735, October 4, 1993) and is 
therefore not subject to review under Executive Orders 12866 and 13563 
(76 FR 3821, January 21, 2011) because it does not result in an impact 
greater than $100 million in any one year or raise novel legal or 
policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's 
priorities, or the principles set forth in this Executive Order.

B. Paperwork Reduction Act

    This action does not impose any new information collection burden. 
The proposed rule would not create any new requirements for regulated 
entities, but rather provides flexibility to EPA in implementing 
numerous programs on a national basis.

C. Regulatory Flexibility Act

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act generally requires an agency to 
prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis of any rule subject to notice 
and comment rulemaking requirements under the Administrative Procedures 
Act or any other statute unless the agency certifies that the rule will 
not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small 
entities. Small entities include small businesses, small organizations 
and small governmental jurisdictions.
    For purposes of assessing the impacts of this proposed action on 
small entities, small entity is defined as: (1) A small business as 
defined in the U.S. Small Business Administration size standards at 13 
CFR 121.201; (2) a small governmental jurisdiction that is a government 
of a city, county, town, school district or special district with a 
population of less than 50,000; or (3) a small organization that is any 
not-for-profit enterprise that is independently owned and operated and 
is not dominant in its field.
    After considering the economic impacts of this proposed rule on 
small entities, I certify that this action will not have a significant 
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. This 
proposed rule will not impose any requirements directly on small 
entities. Entities potentially affected directly by this proposal 
include federal, state, local and tribal governments, none of which 
qualify as small entities.
    We continue to be interested in the potential impacts of the 
proposed rule on small entities and welcome comments on issues related 
to such impacts.

D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act

    This action contains no federal mandates under the provisions of 
Title II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2 U.S.C. 
1531-1538 for state, local or tribal governments or the private sector. 
The action imposes no enforceable duty on any state, local or tribal 
governments or the private sector. Therefore, this action is not 
subject to the requirements of sections 202 and 205 of the UMRA.
    This rule is also not subject to the requirements of section 203 of 
UMRA because it contains no regulatory requirements that might 
significantly or uniquely affect small governments. As noted 
previously, the effect of the proposed rule would be neutral or relieve 
regulatory burden.

E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism

    This proposed rule 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, 
as specified in Executive Order 13132. This proposed rule would revise 
regulations that apply to the EPA, and any delegated state/local 
governments, only, and would not, therefore, affect the relationship 
between the national government and the states or the distribution of 
power and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
    In the spirit of Executive Order 13132 and consistent with the EPA 
policy to promote communications between the EPA and state and local 
governments, the EPA specifically solicits comment on this proposed 
rule from state and local officials.

[[Page 50260]]

F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With Indian 
Tribal Governments

    This proposed rule does not have tribal implications, as specified 
in Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249, November 9, 2000). It will not 
have substantial direct effects on tribal governments, on the 
relationship between the federal government and Indian tribes or on the 
distribution of power and responsibilities between the federal 
government and Indian tribes, as specified in Executive Order 13175. 
This proposed rule only affects our flexibility regarding judicial 
decisions as they apply to implementing air programs on a national 
basis. Thus, Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this rule.

G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From Environmental 
Health and Safety Risks

    The EPA interprets Executive Order 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 
1997) as applying only to those regulatory actions that concern health 
or safety risks, such that the analysis required under section 5-501 of 
the Executive Order has the potential to influence the regulation. This 
action is not subject to Executive Order 13045 because it does not 
establish an environmental standard intended to mitigate health or 
safety risks.

H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That Significantly Affect Energy 
Supply, Distribution or Use

    This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, 
May 22, 2001), because it is not a significant regulatory action under 
Executive Order 12866.

I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act

    Section 12(d) of the National Technology Transfer and Advancement 
Act of 1995 (NTTAA), Public Law 104-113, 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272 note) 
directs the EPA to use voluntary consensus standards in its regulatory 
activities unless to do so would be inconsistent with applicable law or 
otherwise impractical. Voluntary consensus standards are technical 
standards (e.g., materials specifications, test methods, sampling 
procedures and business practices) that are developed or adopted by 
voluntary consensus standards bodies. The NTTAA directs the EPA to 
provide Congress, through the OMB, explanations when the agency decides 
not to use available and applicable voluntary consensus standards.
    This proposed rulemaking does not involve technical standards. 
Therefore, the EPA did not consider the use of any voluntary consensus 
standards.

J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address Environmental 
Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income Populations

    Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994) establishes 
federal executive policy on environmental justice. Its main provision 
directs federal agencies, to the greatest extent practicable and 
permitted by law, to make environmental justice part of their mission 
by identifying and addressing, as appropriate, disproportionately high 
and adverse human health or environmental effects of their programs, 
policies and activities on minority populations and low-income 
populations in the United States.
    The EPA has determined that this proposed rule will not have 
disproportionately high and adverse human health or environmental 
effects on minority or low-income populations because it does not 
affect the level of protection provided to human health or the 
environment. The proposed rule would provide flexibility to the EPA in 
issuing guidance to implement its regulations with respect to judicial 
decisions. The results of this evaluation are contained in section V of 
the preamble titled ``Environmental Justice Considerations.''

K. Determination Under Section 307(d)

    Pursuant to section 307(d)(1)(V) of the CAA, the Administrator 
determines that this action is subject to the provisions of section 
307(d). Section 307(d)(1)(V) provides that the provisions of section 
307(d) apply to ``such other actions as the Administrator may 
determine.''

VII. Statutory Authority

    The statutory authority for this action is provided by section 301 
of the CAA as amended (42 U.S.C. 7601).

List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 56

    Environmental protection, Air pollution control.

    Dated: August 5, 2015.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.

    For the reasons stated in the preamble, title 40, chapter I of the 
Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended as follows:

PART 56--REGIONAL CONSISTENCY

0
1. The authority citation for part 56 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  Sec. 301(a)(2) of the Clean Air Act as amended (42 
U.S.C. 7601).

0
2. Section 56.3 is amended by adding paragraph (d) to read as follows:


Sec.  56.3  Policy.

* * * * *
    (d) Recognize that only the decisions of the U.S. Supreme Court and 
decisions of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit Court that 
arise from challenges to ``nationally applicable regulations . . . or 
final action,'' as discussed in Clean Air Act section 307(b) (42 U.S.C. 
7607(b)), shall apply uniformly, and to provide for exceptions to the 
general policy stated in paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section with 
regard to decisions of the Federal courts that arise from challenges to 
``locally or regionally applicable'' actions, as provided in Clean Air 
Act section 307(b) (42 U.S.C. 7607(b)).
0
3. Section 56.4 is amended by adding paragraph (c) to read as follows:


Sec.  56.4  Mechanisms for fairness and uniformity--Responsibilities of 
Headquarters employees.

* * * * *
    (c) The Administrator shall not be required to issue new mechanisms 
or revise existing mechanisms developed under paragraph (a) of this 
section to address the inconsistent application of any rule, 
regulation, or policy that may arise in response to the limited 
jurisdiction of either a Federal circuit court decision arising from 
challenges to ``locally or regionally applicable'' actions, as provided 
in Clean Air Act section 307(b) (42 U.S.C. 7607(b)), or a Federal 
district court decision.
0
4. Section 56.5 is amended by adding a sentence at the end of paragraph 
(b) and paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) to read as follows:


Sec.  56.5  Mechanisms for fairness and uniformity--Responsibilities of 
Regional Office employees.

* * * * *
    (b) * * * However, the responsible official in a regional office 
will not be required to seek such concurrence from the appropriate EPA 
headquarters office for actions that may result in inconsistent 
application if such inconsistent application is required in order to 
act in accordance with a Federal court decision:

[[Page 50261]]

    (1) Issued by a Circuit Court in challenges to ``locally or 
regionally applicable'' actions, as provided in Clean Air Act section 
307(b) (42 U.S.C. 7607(b)), if that Circuit Court has direct 
jurisdiction over the geographic areas that the regional office 
official is addressing, or
    (2) Issued by a District Court in a specific case if the party the 
regional office official is addressing was also a party in the case 
that resulted in the decision.
* * * * *
[FR Doc. 2015-20506 Filed 8-18-15; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6560-50-P



                                                 50250               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 V. Statutory and Executive Order                        governments or preempt tribal law as                  If you need to include CBI as part of
                                                 Reviews                                                 specified by Executive Order 13175 (65                your comment, please visit http://
                                                    Under the CAA, the Administrator is                  FR 67249, November 9, 2000).                          www.epa.gov/dockets/comments.html
                                                 required to approve a SIP submission                                                                          for instructions. Multimedia
                                                                                                         List of Subjects in 40 CFR part 52
                                                 that complies with the provisions of the                                                                      submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
                                                                                                           Environmental protection, Air                       accompanied by a written comment.
                                                 Act and applicable Federal regulations.
                                                                                                         pollution control, Incorporation by                   The written comment is considered the
                                                 42 U.S.C. 7410(k); 40 CFR 52.02(a).
                                                                                                         reference, Particulate matter, Reporting              official comment and should include
                                                 Thus, in reviewing SIP submissions, the
                                                                                                         and recordkeeping requirements.                       discussion of all points you wish to
                                                 EPA’s role is to approve state choices,
                                                 provided that they meet the criteria of                   Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.                   make. For additional submission
                                                 the CAA. Accordingly, this action                                                                             methods, the full EPA public comment
                                                                                                           Dated: August 5, 2015.
                                                 merely proposes to approve state law as                                                                       policy, and general guidance on making
                                                                                                         Ron Curry,                                            effective comments, please visit http://
                                                 meeting Federal requirements and does                   Regional Administrator, Region 6.
                                                 not impose additional requirements                                                                            www.epa.gov/dockets/comments.html.
                                                                                                         [FR Doc. 2015–20499 Filed 8–18–15; 8:45 am]           FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
                                                 beyond those imposed by state law. For
                                                 that reason, this action:
                                                                                                         BILLING CODE 6560–50–P                                technical information, contact Greg
                                                    • Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory                                                                        Nizich, Air Quality Policy Division,
                                                 action’’ subject to review by the Office                                                                      Office of Air Quality Planning and
                                                                                                         ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION                              Standards (C504–03), Environmental
                                                 of Management and Budget under                          AGENCY
                                                 Executive Orders 12866 (58 FR 51735,                                                                          Protection Agency, Research Triangle
                                                 October 4, 1993) and 13563 (76 FR 3821,                 40 CFR Part 56                                        Park, North Carolina 27711; telephone
                                                 January 21, 2011);                                                                                            number (919) 541–3078; fax number
                                                    • Does not impose an information                     [EPA–HQ–OAR–2014–0616; FRL–9929–98–                   (919) 541–5509; email address:
                                                 collection burden under the provisions                  OAR]                                                  nizich.greg@epa.gov.
                                                 of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44                      RIN 2060–AS53
                                                                                                                                                                  To request a public hearing or
                                                 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);                                                                                         information pertaining to a public
                                                    • Is certified as not having a                       Amendments to Regional Consistency                    hearing on this document, contact Ms.
                                                 significant economic impact on a                        Regulations                                           Pamela Long, Air Quality Policy
                                                 substantial number of small entities                                                                          Division, Office of Air Quality Planning
                                                 under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5                 AGENCY:  Environmental Protection                     and Standards (C504–01),
                                                 U.S.C. 601 et seq.);                                    Agency (EPA).                                         Environmental Protection Agency,
                                                    • Does not contain any unfunded                      ACTION: Proposed rule.                                Research Triangle Park, North Carolina
                                                 mandate or significantly or uniquely                                                                          27711; telephone number (919) 541–
                                                                                                         SUMMARY:    The U.S. Environmental                    0641; fax number (919) 541–5509; email
                                                 affect small governments, as described
                                                                                                         Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing to               address: long.pam@epa.gov.
                                                 in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                                                                         revise its Regional Consistency                       SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                 of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);
                                                                                                         regulations to ensure the EPA has the
                                                    • Does not have Federalism                                                                                    Regulated entities. The Administrator
                                                                                                         flexibility necessary to implement Clean              determined that this action is subject to
                                                 implications as specified in Executive
                                                                                                         Air Act (CAA or Act) programs on a                    the provisions of CAA section 307(d).
                                                 Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,
                                                                                                         national scale while addressing court                 See CAA section 307(d)(1)(V) (the
                                                 1999);
                                                                                                         rulings that concern certain agency
                                                    • Is not an economically significant                                                                       provisions of CAA section 307(d) apply
                                                                                                         actions under the Act. In addition, the               to ‘‘such other actions as the
                                                 regulatory action based on health or
                                                                                                         proposed revisions would help to foster               Administrator may determine). These
                                                 safety risks subject to Executive Order
                                                                                                         overall fairness and predictability                   are amendments to existing regulations
                                                 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);
                                                    • Is not a significant regulatory action             regarding the scope and impact of                     and could affect your facility if it is the
                                                 subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR                 judicial decisions under the CAA.                     subject of a CAA-related ruling by a
                                                 28355, May 22, 2001);                                   DATES: Comments must be received on                   federal court.
                                                    • Is not subject to requirements of                  or before October 19, 2015.                              The information in this
                                                 section 12(d) of the National                              Public hearing. If requested by                    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of
                                                 Technology Transfer and Advancement                     September 3, 2015, then we will hold a                this preamble is organized as follows:
                                                 Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because                public hearing. Additional information                I. General Information
                                                 application of those requirements would                 about the hearing, if requested, will be                 A. Does this action apply to me?
                                                 be inconsistent with the CAA; and                       published in a subsequent Federal                        B. What should I consider as I prepare my
                                                    • Does not provide the EPA with the                  Register document.                                          comments for the EPA?
                                                 discretionary authority to address, as                  ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,                         C. Where can I get a copy of this document
                                                                                                                                                                     and other related information?
                                                 appropriate, disproportionate human                     identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–                      D. How can I find information about a
                                                 health or environmental effects, using                  OAR–2014–0616, to the Federal                               possible public hearing?
                                                 practicable and legally permissible                     eRulemaking Portal: http://                              E. What acronyms, abbreviations and units
                                                 methods, under Executive Order 12898                    www.regulations.gov. Follow the online                      are used in this preamble?
                                                 (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).                        instructions for submitting comments.                 II. Purpose
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    In addition, the SIP is not approved                 Once submitted, comments cannot be                    III. Background
                                                 to apply on any Indian reservation land                 edited or withdrawn. The EPA may                         A. Purpose of the Regional Consistency
                                                 or in any other area where the EPA or                   publish any comment received to its                         Regulations
                                                                                                                                                                  B. Establishing the Regional Consistency
                                                 an Indian tribe has demonstrated that a                 public docket. Do not submit                                Regulations
                                                 tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of               electronically any information you                       C. Reasons for Revising the Regional
                                                 Indian country, the proposed rule does                  consider to be Confidential Business                        Consistency Regulations
                                                 not have tribal implications and will not               Information (CBI) or other information                IV. Proposed Revisions to the Regional
                                                 impose substantial direct costs on tribal               whose disclosure is restricted by statute.                  Consistency Rule



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00026   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                            50251

                                                   A. What are the proposed revisions to the             Control Officer (C404–02),                            E. What acronyms, abbreviations and
                                                      40 CFR part 56 Regional Consistency                Environmental Protection Agency,                      units are used in this preamble?
                                                      Regulations?                                       Research Triangle Park, NC 27711,
                                                   B. What is the basis for the EPA’s                                                                            The following acronyms,
                                                                                                         Attention: Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–                      abbreviations and units are used in this
                                                      approach?
                                                 V. Environmental Justice Considerations                 OAR–2014–0616.                                        preamble:
                                                 VI. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews               2. Tips for Preparing Your Comments                   CAA or Act Clean Air Act
                                                   A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory                                                                        EPA U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
                                                      Planning and Review and Executive                     When submitting comments,                          FIP Federal Implementation Plan
                                                      Order 13563: Improving Regulation and              remember to:                                          ICR Information Collection Request
                                                      Regulatory Review                                                                                        NSR New Source Review
                                                   B. Paperwork Reduction Act                               • Identify the rulemaking by docket                NTTAA National Technology Transfer and
                                                   C. Regulatory Flexibility Act                         number and other identifying                            Advancement Act
                                                   D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                       information (subject heading, Federal                 OMB Office of Management and Budget
                                                   E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism                  Register date and page number).                       PSD Prevention of Significant Deterioration
                                                   F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation                                                                      RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                      and Coordination With Indian Tribal                   • Follow directions—The agency may
                                                                                                                                                               SBA Small Business Administration
                                                      Governments                                        ask you to respond to specific questions              SIP State Implementation Plan
                                                   G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of               or organize comments by referencing a                 UMRA Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                      Children From Environmental Health                 Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) part
                                                      and Safety Risks                                   or section number.                                    II. Purpose
                                                   H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That                                                                         The purpose of this rulemaking is to
                                                      Significantly Affect Energy Supply,                   • Explain why you agree or disagree;
                                                      Distribution or Use                                suggest alternatives and substitute                   revise the EPA’s Regional Consistency
                                                   I. National Technology Transfer and                   language for your requested changes.                  regulations—40 CFR part 56.
                                                      Advancement Act                                                                                          Specifically, we are proposing to add a
                                                                                                            • Describe any assumptions and                     provision to the Regional Consistency
                                                   J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
                                                                                                         provide any technical information and/                regulations to accommodate the
                                                      To Address Environmental Justice in
                                                      Minority Populations and Low-Income                or data that you used.                                implications of federal court decisions
                                                      Populations                                           • If you estimate potential costs or               that result from challenges to locally or
                                                   K. Determination Under Section 307(d)                 burdens, explain how you arrived at                   regionally applicable actions. As
                                                 VII. Statutory Authority                                your estimate in sufficient detail to                 explained more fully below, revising the
                                                 I. General Information                                  allow for it to be reproduced.                        Regional Consistency regulations to
                                                 A. Does this action apply to me?                           • Provide specific examples to                     accommodate the implications of such
                                                                                                         illustrate your concerns, and suggest                 federal court decisions is consistent
                                                   Entities potentially affected directly                alternatives.                                         with general principles of common law,
                                                 by this proposal include the EPA and                                                                          the judicial review provisions of the
                                                 other governments that are delegated                       • Explain your views as clearly as
                                                                                                                                                               CAA, and CAA section 301(a)(2).
                                                 administrative authority to assist the                  possible, avoiding the use of profanity
                                                                                                                                                               Furthermore, the proposed revisions
                                                 EPA with the implementation of air                      or personal threats.
                                                                                                                                                               will help to foster overall fairness and
                                                 program federal regulations. Entities                      • Make sure to submit your                         predictability regarding the scope and
                                                 potentially affected indirectly by this                 comments by the comment period                        impact of judicial decisions under the
                                                 proposal include owners and operators                   deadline identified.                                  CAA.
                                                 of sources of air emissions that are                    C. Where can I get a copy of this                     III. Background
                                                 subject to CAA regulations.                             document and other related
                                                                                                         information?                                          A. Purpose of the Regional Consistency
                                                 B. What should I consider as I prepare
                                                                                                                                                               Regulations
                                                 my comments for the EPA?
                                                                                                           In addition to being available in the                  The CAA calls for the EPA to
                                                 1. Submitting CBI                                       docket, an electronic copy of this                    implement the Act in partnership with
                                                    Do not submit this information to the                proposed rule will also be available on               state, local and tribal governments. See
                                                 EPA through http://www.regulations.gov                  the World Wide Web. Following                         Mountain States Legal Found. v. Costle,
                                                 or email. Clearly mark the part or all of               signature by the EPA Administrator, a                 630 F.2d 754, 757 (10th Cir. 1980).
                                                 the information that you claim to be                    copy of this proposed rule will be                    While the roles of that partnership vary
                                                 CBI. For CBI information in a disk or CD                posted in the regulations and standards               depending on the nature of the air
                                                 ROM that you mail to the EPA, mark the                  section of our New Source Review                      pollution problem, generally the EPA
                                                 outside of the disk or CD ROM as CBI                    (NSR) Web site, under Regulations &                   issues national standards or federal
                                                 and then identify electronically within                 Standards, at http://www.epa.gov/nsr.                 requirements to address air pollution,
                                                 the disk or CD ROM the specific                         D. How can I find information about a                 and state, local and tribal air agencies
                                                 information that is claimed as CBI. In                  possible public hearing?                              (hereinafter referred to simply as ‘‘air
                                                 addition to one complete version of the                                                                       agencies’’) assume primary
                                                 comment that includes information                         To request a public hearing or                      responsibility for implementing those
                                                 claimed as CBI, a copy of the comment                   information pertaining to a public                    standards and requirements. For
                                                 that does not contain the information                   hearing on this document, contact Ms.                 example, the Act requires the EPA to
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 claimed as CBI must be submitted for                    Pamela Long, Air Quality Policy                       establish, review and revise national
                                                 inclusion in the public docket.                         Division, Office of Air Quality Planning              ambient air quality standards (NAAQS)
                                                 Information so marked will not be                       and Standards (C504–03),                              for certain common air pollutants. The
                                                 disclosed except in accordance with                     Environmental Protection Agency,                      Act then assigns air agencies
                                                 procedures set forth in 40 CFR part 2.                  Research Triangle Park, North Carolina                responsibility for developing
                                                 Send or deliver information identified                  27711; telephone number (919) 541–                    enforceable state implementation plans
                                                 as CBI only to the following address:                   0641; fax number (919) 541–5509; email                (SIPs) to meet those standards. The EPA
                                                 Tiffany Purifoy, OAQPS Document                         address: long.pam@epa.gov.                            is required to review each SIP to


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00027   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                 50252               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 determine if it meets all of the                        B. Establishing the Regional Consistency              grants program for yearly evaluations of
                                                 applicable requirements of the CAA. If                  Regulations                                           state performance in implementing and
                                                 the SIP is approved, the air agency will                   In the 1977 CAA Amendments,                        enforcing the Act (see 56 CFR 56.7).
                                                 implement the SIP in order to provide                   Congress added section 301(a)(2) (42                    The EPA has been acting under these
                                                 for attainment and maintenance of the                   U.S.C. 7601) in recognition of the role               regulations for more than 30 years to
                                                 NAAQS in areas under its jurisdiction.                                                                        address consistency issues regarding
                                                                                                         that staff from both headquarters and
                                                 The EPA will provide technical and                                                                            various CAA programs, policy, and
                                                                                                         regions played in carrying out the Act’s
                                                 policy assistance to the air agency and                                                                       guidance. In this document, we are
                                                                                                         programs. CAA section 301(a)(2)
                                                 also maintain an oversight role to ensure                                                                     proposing to revise the rules to address
                                                                                                         required the EPA Administrator to
                                                 that the program is adequately                                                                                a very specific consistency issue—how
                                                                                                         promulgate regulations ‘‘establishing
                                                 implemented and enforced. If the EPA                                                                          to treat Federal court decisions
                                                                                                         general applicable procedures and
                                                 finds that an air agency has failed to                                                                        regarding locally or regionally
                                                                                                         policies’’ for the EPA regional officers
                                                 submit a required SIP, or that an air                                                                         applicable actions that may affect
                                                                                                         and employees to follow when carrying
                                                                                                                                                               consistent application of national
                                                 agency’s SIP is incomplete, or if the EPA               out activities delegated to them under
                                                                                                                                                               programs, policy, and guidance.
                                                 disapproves a SIP in whole or in part,                  the Act. Among other things, the CAA
                                                 the CAA requires that the EPA                           stated that these regulations should                  C. Reasons for Revising the Regional
                                                 promulgate a federal implementation                     ‘‘assure fairness and uniformity in the               Consistency Regulations
                                                 plan (FIP) to provide for attainment and                criteria, procedures, and policies                       The EPA is undertaking this proposed
                                                 maintenance of the NAAQS in the                         applied’’ by the EPA regional offices in              revision to the Regional Consistency
                                                 corresponding area. The Act also                        their CAA activities and ‘‘provide a                  regulations, in part, as a result of a
                                                 requires preconstruction permits for                    mechanism’’ to identify and standardize               recent decision of the U.S. Court of
                                                 major new and modified stationary                       any inconsistent or varying criteria,                 Appeals for the District of Columbia
                                                 sources of air pollution. In most areas,                procedures, and policies used by the                  Circuit (D.C. Circuit Court) in National
                                                 air agencies serve as the CAA permitting                EPA employees.                                        Environmental Development
                                                 authority under an approved SIP; some                      Thereafter, the EPA took a number of               Association’s Clean Air Project v. EPA,
                                                 air agencies implement the federal                      actions to promulgate the Regional                    No. 13–1035 (D.C. Cir., May 30, 2014).
                                                 program under a delegation agreement;                   Consistency regulations required in                   That litigation involved a December
                                                 elsewhere, the EPA is the permitting                    CAA section 301(a)(2). In 1978, the EPA               2012 memorandum from EPA
                                                 authority under a FIP.                                  issued an Advanced Notice of Proposed                 headquarters to the EPA regions
                                                                                                         Rulemaking seeking comment on a                       regarding the limited scope of a court
                                                    How the EPA carries out its role in                  number of consistency issues and
                                                 this cooperative partnership under the                                                                        decision issued by the Sixth Circuit
                                                                                                         inviting interested persons to participate            Court of Appeals addressing the EPA’s
                                                 CAA is influenced by how the EPA is                     in a series of public workshops to
                                                 organized. The EPA is composed of                                                                             interpretation of national permitting
                                                                                                         discuss the development of the Regional               regulations as applied to a specific, local
                                                 various headquarters offices, each of                   Consistency regulations (43 FR 4872). In              permitting decision.1 See Memorandum
                                                 which is responsible for nationwide                     1979, after receiving those comments                  from Stephen D. Page, Director of the
                                                 execution of our programs, and ten                      and listening to input provided at the                EPA’s Office of Air Quality Planning
                                                 regional offices, each of which is                      public workshops from representatives                 and Standards, to Regional Air Division
                                                 responsible for the execution of our                    of industry, state, and public interest               Directors, titled Applicability of the
                                                 programs within several states and                      groups, the EPA issued its Notice of                  Summit Decision to the EPA Title V and
                                                 territories. See 40 CFR part 1, subparts                Proposed Rulemaking for the Regional                  NSR Source Determinations (December
                                                 A and C (for more information, see the                  Consistency regulations (44 FR 13043).                21, 2012; available at http://
                                                 EPA Organizational Chart located at                     Finally, in 1980, the EPA promulgated                 www.epa.gov/region7/air/title5/
                                                 http://www2.epa.gov/aboutepa/epa-                       its final Regional Consistency                        t5memos/inter2012.pdf) (hereinafter,
                                                 organization-chart). In carrying out                    regulations in 40 CFR part 56.                        ‘‘December 2012 memorandum’’). The
                                                 responsibilities under the CAA, the EPA                    As the EPA explained when it                       December 2012 memorandum reflected
                                                 Administrator relies on input from                      finalized the regulations, the ‘‘intended             the EPA application of a widely
                                                 various offices in headquarters,                        effect’’ of these regulations was ‘‘to                recognized legal doctrine referred to as
                                                 especially those within the Office of Air               assure fair and consistent application of             intercircuit nonaquiescence, a practice
                                                 and Radiation, and in the regional                      rules, regulations and policy throughout              in which a decision by a federal circuit
                                                 offices. In fact, the CAA provides the                  the country by assuring that the action
                                                 EPA Administrator with the authority to                 of each individual EPA Regional Office                   1 That decision, Summit Petroleum Corp. v. EPA

                                                 delegate powers and duties necessary to                 is consistent with one another and                    et al., Consolidated Case Nos. 09–4348 and 10–4572
                                                 carry out the Act to EPA officials in both                                                                    (6th Cir. Aug. 7, 2012), addressed the scope of the
                                                                                                         national policy’’ (45 FR 85400).                      term ‘‘adjacent’’ as used in the EPA’s source
                                                 the headquarters and regional offices                   Generally, the Regional Consistency                   determination regulations in the title V permitting
                                                 (CAA section 301(a)(1)). Returning to                   regulations: (1) State the EPA policy of              program, which are similar to the source
                                                 the NAAQS example, headquarters                         assuring ‘‘fair and uniform’’ application             determination regulations used in the new source
                                                 offices take the lead in promulgating the                                                                     review and prevention of significant deterioration
                                                                                                         of the EPA rules, procedures, and                     permitting programs, see 40 CFR 52.21(b)(6) and
                                                 NAAQS, while regional offices are                       policies necessary to implement and                   71.2. The EPA is currently planning a separate
                                                 primarily responsible for working                       enforce the Act (see 56 CFR 56.3); (2)                rulemaking to address the term ‘‘adjacent’’ in those
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 directly with air agencies to assist them               provide mechanisms for such                           permitting regulations, and we direct any
                                                 in their SIP submissions and approval                                                                         commenters wishing to address the Summit
                                                                                                         application by headquarters and                       decision or those regulations to do so in that
                                                 or disapproval of such SIPs. In certain                 regional office employees (see 56 CFR                 separate action. See http://
                                                 circumstances, headquarters and                         56.4 and 56.5, respectively); (3) require             resources.regulations.gov/public/component/
                                                 regional offices consult in developing a                various headquarters offices to establish             main?_dmfClientId=1434045425242&_
                                                                                                                                                               dmfTzoff=240 for the EPA’s Spring 2015 Regulatory
                                                 proposed and/or final decision                          systems to disseminate policy and                     Agenda item titled, Source Determination for
                                                 regarding approval or disapproval of the                guidance relating to air programs (see 56             Certain Emissions Units in the Oil and Natural Gas
                                                 SIP.                                                    CFR 56.6); and (4) utilize the existing               Sector, RIN 2060–AS06.



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00028   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                              50253

                                                 court is binding only in those areas (in                 the EPA is following one of the options                  rulemakings or review of a lower court’s
                                                 this case, specific states and the                       suggested by the court. Slip op. at 18.                  decision by the U.S. Supreme Court.
                                                 associated EPA regions) subject to the                      First, the court suggested that the EPA
                                                                                                          consider revising the underlying                         IV. Proposed Revisions to the Regional
                                                 direct jurisdiction of the ruling circuit
                                                                                                          regulations at issue in the Sixth Circuit                Consistency Rule
                                                 court. Intercircuit nonaquiescence is a
                                                 practice that the EPA has historically                   decision. Id While this approach may                       This section discusses the proposed
                                                 followed with regard to decisions issued                 resolve the narrow issue that is the                     revisions to the Regional Consistency
                                                 by both circuit and district courts and                  subject of the Sixth Circuit decision,                   regulations and our rationale for
                                                 arising in local, non-nationwide                         and the EPA is in fact in the process of                 proposing those changes. We solicit
                                                 actions.2 Therefore, in the December                     revising the permitting regulations that                 public comment on the changes being
                                                 2012 memorandum, the EPA continued                       were the subject of the Sixth Circuit                    proposed and will consider those
                                                 that historic practice and noted that                    Court decision and the December 2012                     comments in developing the final rule.
                                                 while the agency would follow the Sixth                  memorandum, this approach generally                      A. What are the proposed revisions to
                                                 Circuit’s decision in those states under                 would require a new rulemaking                           the 40 CFR part 56 Regional Consistency
                                                 the jurisdiction of the Sixth Circuit, the               following each adverse court decision                    Regulations?
                                                 agency’s longstanding interpretation of                  regarding an issue of local applicability.
                                                 the permitting regulations addressed by                  Each national rulemaking of this nature                     In this action, we propose three
                                                 the Sixth Circuit decision would                         would likely take more than a year—and                   specific revisions to the general
                                                 continue to apply nationwide outside                     possibly several years—to complete. By                   consistency policy put forward in the
                                                 the Sixth Circuit.                                       revising the EPA’s Regional Consistency                  existing Regional Consistency
                                                    On February 19, 2013, the National                    regulations to fully allow for intercircuit              regulations, 40 CFR part 56, to
                                                 Environmental Development                                nonaquiescence, the agency can through                   accommodate the implications of
                                                 Association’s Clean Air Project                          one rulemaking save the considerable                     judicial decisions addressing ‘‘locally or
                                                 (NEDACAP) filed a petition for review                    time and resources potentially required                  regionally applicable’’ actions.
                                                 with the D.C. Circuit Court on the                       by several narrow rulemakings.                           Specifically, we propose to revise 40
                                                 December 2012 memorandum.                                   Second, the court suggested that the                  CFR 56.3 to add a provision to
                                                 NEDACAP alleged that the December                        EPA could have appealed the Sixth                        acknowledge an exception to the
                                                 2012 memorandum violated both CAA                        Circuit decision to the U.S. Supreme                     ‘‘policy’’ of uniformity to provide that a
                                                 section 301(a)(2) and the EPA’s Regional                 Court. Slip op. at 18. However, because                  decision of a federal court that arises
                                                 Consistency regulations by establishing                  the U.S. Supreme Court grants only                       from a challenge to ‘‘locally or
                                                 inconsistent permit criteria in different                about one percent of the petitions for                   regionally applicable’’ actions would
                                                 parts of the country.                                    certiorari (i.e., a petition requesting                  not apply uniformly nationwide, and
                                                    In May 2014, the D.C. Circuit Court                   review of a lower court’s decision) filed                that only decisions of the U.S. Supreme
                                                 issued a decision vacating the December                  each year, there is a strong likelihood                  Court and decisions of the D.C. Circuit
                                                 2012 memorandum. The D.C. Circuit                        that the U.S. Supreme Court would                        Court that arise from challenges to
                                                 Court agreed with NEDACAP that the                       decline to review a lower court’s                        ‘‘nationally applicable regulations . . .
                                                 memorandum was inconsistent with the                     decision.4 Were we to rely solely on this                or final action’’ would apply uniformly
                                                 EPA’s Regional Consistency regulations                   option, absent review by the U.S.                        nationwide. We also propose to revise
                                                 located at 40 CFR part 56.3 The court                    Supreme Court, a single federal court                    40 CFR 56.4 to add a provision to clarify
                                                 found that the Regional Consistency                      decision regarding an action of local                    that EPA headquarters offices’
                                                 regulations ‘‘strongly articulate the                    applicability could change the EPA’s                     employees would not need to issue
                                                 EPA’s firm commitment to national                        policy nationwide unless and until the                   mechanisms or revise existing
                                                 uniformity in the applications of its                    EPA undertook a rulemaking (see first                    mechanisms developed under 40 CFR
                                                 permitting rules’’ without any                           option above). As discussed further                      56.4(a) to address federal court
                                                 indication that ‘‘EPA intended to                        below, this outcome would be                             decisions arising from challenges to
                                                 exempt variance created by a judicial                    inconsistent with the judicial review                    ‘‘locally or regionally applicable’’
                                                 decision.’’ Slip op. at 17. The D.C.                     provisions of CAA section 307(b)(1).                     actions. Lastly, we propose to revise 40
                                                 Circuit concluded that the EPA’s current                    Third, the court suggested that the                   CFR 56.5(b) to clarify that EPA regional
                                                 regulations ‘‘preclude EPA’s intercircuit                EPA could revise the Regional                            offices’ employees would not need to
                                                 nonaquiescence in this instance. . . .’’                 Consistency regulations ‘‘to account for                 seek headquarters office concurrence to
                                                 Slip op. at 19.                                          regional variances created by judicial                   act inconsistently with national policy
                                                    The D.C. Circuit Court presented three                decisions or circuit splits.’’ Slip op. at               or interpretation if such action is
                                                 options that the EPA could pursue in                     18. This proposed rulemaking follows                     required by a federal court decision
                                                 response to an adverse decision: Revise                  this option because we believe it most                   arising from challenges to ‘‘locally or
                                                 the underlying regulation; appeal the                    effectively addresses the issue presented                regionally applicable’’ actions. In other
                                                 decision; or revise the Regional                         by an adverse federal court decision                     words, through this rulemaking, the
                                                 Consistency regulations. By making the                   addressing an action of local or regional                agency would be authorizing a region to
                                                 revisions proposed in this rulemaking,                   applicability. As discussed further                      act inconsistently with nationwide
                                                                                                          below, this proposed revision also                       policy or interpretation to the extent
                                                    2 While intercircuit nonaquiescence is generally      would accommodate the EPA’s proper                       that the region must do so in order to
                                                 focused on circuit court decisions, the general          and longstanding application of the                      act consistently with a decision issued
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 principle also applies to decisions issued by district   doctrine of intercircuit nonaquiescence
                                                 courts, which are by their very nature limited in
                                                                                                                                                                   by a federal court that has direct
                                                 scope, as discussed later in this preamble. For ease     in future cases while eliminating the                    jurisdiction over the region’s action.
                                                 of discussion, this preamble will generally use          need for several lengthy, narrow                            The manner in which the proposed
                                                 ‘‘intercircuit nonaquiescence’’ to address locally                                                                revisions would affect the EPA’s
                                                 and regionally applicable decisions issued by both         4 See http://dailywrit.com/2013/01/likelihood-of-
                                                                                                                                                                   operational consistency may be
                                                 circuit and district federal courts.                     a-petition-being-granted/ which cites the following
                                                    3 The D.C. Circuit Court did not reach                statistics: Petitions granted overall in the 2011–2012
                                                                                                                                                                   explained by way of example related to
                                                 NEDACAP’s argument that the memorandum was               term: .862 percent, and in the 2012–2013 term: 1.03      a challenge to the title V applicability
                                                 also inconsistent with the CAA.                          percent.                                                 determination made by EPA Region 5


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00029   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM    19AUP1


                                                 50254               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 for Summit Petroleum’s oil and gas                      units in title V or NSR permitting                       Note that these proposed regulatory
                                                 operations on tribal land in Michigan.                  decisions within the Sixth Circuit’s                  changes, if finalized, would only apply
                                                 This challenge led to the December 2012                 jurisdiction (i.e., Michigan, Ohio,                   to activities conducted at EPA offices
                                                 memorandum reviewed in the D.C.                         Tennessee and Kentucky). The                          (both regional and headquarters) and
                                                 Circuit Court’s NEDACAP decision. In                    December 2012 memorandum noted                        also to states delegated to implement
                                                 the course of a source-specific title V                 that the agency was ‘‘still assessing how             EPA rules. The proposed revisions
                                                 permitting action, EPA Region 5 had                     to implement this decision in its                     would not affect a state implementing
                                                 determined that Summit Petroleum’s oil                  permitting actions in the 6th Circuit,’’              its SIP-approved program, as they are
                                                 and gas production wells and gas                        and explained that outside the Sixth                  bound to follow their own regulations.
                                                 sweetening plant should be considered                   Circuit, the EPA intended to continue to
                                                 adjacent, based on their proximity and                  apply its longstanding approach of                    B. What is the basis for the EPA’s
                                                 interrelatedness to one another, and                    considering both the proximity and                    approach?
                                                 thus emissions from these units were                    interrelatedness of operations in                        In this rulemaking action, we are
                                                 aggregated into a single source for title               determining whether emissions units                   proposing to revise 40 CFR part 56 to
                                                 V permitting purposes (see 40 CFR                       are ‘‘adjacent’’ for permitting purposes.             ‘‘account for regional variances created
                                                 71.2). Summit Petroleum challenged                         If the proposed revisions to the                   by a judicial decision or circuit splits’’
                                                 that determination in the Sixth Circuit,                Regional Consistency regulations had                  by creating a specific accommodation to
                                                 and the court ultimately issued a                       already been in place, this type of                   the general policy of uniformity of EPA
                                                 decision that vacated and remanded                      memorandum from EPA headquarters                      actions. As explained more fully below,
                                                 Region 5’s determination. Summit                        would not have been necessary because                 revising the Regional Consistency
                                                 Petroleum Corp. v. U.S. EPA, 690 F3d                    regions, states, and other potentially                regulations to accommodate federal
                                                 733 (6th Cir. 2012). Although the EPA                   affected entities would have had                      circuit and district court decisions that
                                                 argued that its longstanding                            certainty and predictability regarding                result from challenges to locally or
                                                 interpretation of ‘‘adjacent’’ as used in               the application of such a judicial                    regionally applicable actions, and thus
                                                 the source determination regulations                    decision—they would have known that                   providing for intercircuit
                                                 included consideration of an activities’                this type of permit-specific, local and               nonaquiescence, is consistent with
                                                 functional interrelatedness, see id. at                 regional decision would only apply in                 general principles of common law, CAA
                                                 744–75 (noting the EPA’s citation to                    the areas under the jurisdiction of the               sections 301(a)(2) and 307(b)(1). It will
                                                 nine such source determinations                         Sixth Circuit. Accordingly, with the                  also help to foster overall fairness and
                                                 spanning more than 30 years), the Sixth                 changes proposed, it would have been                  predictability regarding the scope and
                                                 Circuit found that the term ‘‘adjacent’’                clear to everyone that EPA regions                    impact of judicial decisions under the
                                                 as used in the EPA’s source                             would not be bound to apply the                       CAA, and is a reasonable extension of
                                                 determination regulations was                           findings of the Summit decision in                    the EPA’s existing part 56 regulations.
                                                 unambiguous and related only to                         states outside the Sixth Circuit, and
                                                 physical proximity, and thus could not                  could continue to apply the                           1. Accommodating Intercircuit
                                                 include consideration of functional                     longstanding practice that had not been               Nonaquiescence in the Regional
                                                 interrelatedness, see id. at 741–744. The               successfully challenged in other federal              Consistency Regulations Is Consistent
                                                 EPA sought rehearing of the Summit                      circuit courts in their regions or decided            With General Principles of Common
                                                 case, but the request was ultimately                    nationally by the D.C. Circuit Court or               Law
                                                 denied on October 29, 2012.                             U.S. Supreme Court.                                      Federal courts are courts of limited
                                                   Thereafter, a number of EPA regional                     If the proposed revisions to the                   jurisdiction; they have only the
                                                 offices sought guidance from                            Regional Consistency regulations are                  authority to hear and decide cases
                                                 headquarters offices regarding the                      finalized, it will be clear that an adverse           granted to them by Congress. See
                                                 impact of the Summit decision on                        federal court decision in a case                      generally U.S. Constitution, Article II,
                                                 various permitting actions, sometimes                   regarding locally or regionally                       Section 1 (‘‘The judicial Power of the
                                                 in an effort to answer questions they                   applicable actions does not apply                     United States, shall be vested in one
                                                 were receiving from state permitting                    nationwide. As soon as these regulatory               supreme Court, and in such inferior
                                                 authorities and permittees. Accordingly,                changes are effective, the EPA regional               Courts as the Congress may from time to
                                                 in December 2012, an official in EPA                    offices that are outside of the                       time ordain and establish.’’). Thus,
                                                 headquarters issued a memorandum to                     jurisdiction of a court will be able to               Congress must grant a federal court
                                                 the Air Division Directors at the EPA’s                 apply the agency’s nationwide practices               subject matter jurisdiction over the type
                                                 regional offices explaining the                         in a consistent manner in any actions                 of dispute in question.
                                                 applicability of the Summit decision to                 they take going forward, and they will                   A court of appeals generally hears
                                                 other EPA title V and NSR source                        not need to seek concurrence from                     appeals from the district courts located
                                                 determinations.5 The December 2012                      headquarters offices for that continued               within its circuit, and the circuit is
                                                 memorandum described briefly the                        application. Likewise, under the revised              delineated by the states it contains. See
                                                 determination at issue in the Summit                    regulations, it would be clear that any               generally 28 U.S.C. 41 (establishing the
                                                 case, and the Sixth Circuit’s decision. It              such adverse decision that is or has                  number and composition of the thirteen
                                                 explained that under the court’s                        been issued would be applied to those                 circuits; the composition is denoted by
                                                 decision, the EPA could no longer                       areas or parties that are under the                   the names of states in a circuit).6 As a
                                                 consider interrelatedness in determining                issuing court’s jurisdiction in any                   general matter, while an opinion from
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 the adjacency of different emissions                    regional actions going forward.                       one circuit court of appeals may be
                                                                                                         Moreover, those regions would not need                persuasive precedent, it is not binding
                                                    5 Memorandum from Stephen Page, Director of          to seek concurrence from EPA                          on other courts of appeals. See Hart v.
                                                 the EPA’s Office of Air Quality Planning and            headquarters offices in order to follow               Massanari, 266 F. 3d 1155, 1172–73 (9th
                                                 Standards to the Air Division Directors. (Titled,       the relevant decision, even if doing so
                                                 Applicability of the Summit Decision to the EPA
                                                 Title V and NSR Source Determinations; available
                                                                                                         would mean they were acting                             6 The exception is the Federal Circuit, which

                                                 at http://www.epa.gov/region7/air/title5/t5memos/       inconsistently with other EPA regional                hears certain types of cases from anywhere in the
                                                 inter2012.pdf)                                          offices or national policy.                           country.



                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00030   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                         50255

                                                 Cir. 2001). As the Ninth Circuit                        that other circuits, the U.S. Supreme                 Circuit Court, and no other circuit
                                                 explained, ‘‘[T]here are also very                      Court, or Congress will ultimately                    courts, would review nationally
                                                 important differences between                           uphold the agency’s position.’’ Indep.                applicable regulations. Specifically,
                                                 controlling and persuasive authority. As                Petroleum Ass’n of Am. v. Babbitt, 92                 CAA section 307(b)(1) states that ‘‘A
                                                 noted, one of these is that, if a                       F.3d 1248, 1261 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (J.                  petition for review of action of the
                                                 controlling precedent is determined to                  Rogers, dissenting). Likewise, legal                  Administrator in promulgating any
                                                 be on point, it must be followed.                       scholars have explained that                          national primary or secondary ambient
                                                 Another important distinction concerns                  ‘‘compel[ling] an agency to follow the                air quality standard, any emission
                                                 the scope of controlling authority. Thus,               adverse ruling of a particular court of               standard or requirement under section
                                                 an opinion of our court is binding                      appeals would be to give that court                   112, any standard of performance or
                                                 within our circuit, not elsewhere in the                undue influence in the intercircuit                   requirement under section 111, any
                                                 country. The courts of appeals, and even                dialogue by diminishing the                           standard under section 202 (other than
                                                 the lower courts of other circuits, may                 opportunity for other courts of proper                a standard required to be prescribed
                                                 decline to follow the rule we                           venue to consider, and possibly sustain,              under section 202(b)(1)), any
                                                 announce—and often do. This ability to                  the agency’s position.’’ S. Estreicher &              determination under section 202(b)(5),
                                                 develop different interpretations of the                R. Revesz, Nonaquiescence by Federal                  any control or prohibition under section
                                                 law among the circuits is considered a                  Administrative Agencies, 98 Yale L. J.                211, any standard under section 231,
                                                 strength of our system. It allows                       679, 764 (Feb.1989). As the U.S.                      any rule issued under section 113, 119,
                                                 experimentation with different                          Supreme Court has noted, preventing                   or under section 120, or any other
                                                 approaches to the same legal problem,                   the government from addressing an                     nationally applicable regulations
                                                 so that when the Supreme Court                          issue in more than one forum ‘‘would                  promulgated, or final action taken, by
                                                 eventually reviews the issue it has the                 substantially thwart the development of               the Administrator under this Act may be
                                                 benefit of ‘‘percolation’’ within the lower             important questions of law by freezing                filed only in the United States Court of
                                                 courts.’’ Id. (emphasis added). This last               the first final decision rendered on a                Appeals for the District of Columbia.’’
                                                 point is critical to an effective federal               particular legal issue.’’ United States v.            CAA section 307(b)(1) (emphasis
                                                 judiciary. By revising the regulations in               Mendoza, 464 U.S. 154, 160 (1984). In                 added). Congress then declared that
                                                 part 56 to fully accommodate                            light of this important function, the U.S.            other final CAA actions of the
                                                 intercircuit nonaquiescence, the EPA is                 Supreme Court has sought to preserve                  Administrator that are ‘‘locally or
                                                 acting consistently with the purpose of                 government discretion to relitigate an                regionally applicable may be filed only
                                                 the federal judicial system by allowing                 issue across different circuits. Id. at 163.          in the United States Court of Appeals
                                                 the robust percolation of case law                      Thus, though circuit conflict may                     for the appropriate circuit.’’ Id. For
                                                 through the circuit courts until such                   undermine national uniformity of                      example, under this system, challenges
                                                 time as U.S. Supreme Court review is                    federal law to some degree for some                   to the EPA’s regulations addressing
                                                 appropriate. The vast majority of cases                 period of time, it also advances the                  prevention of significant deterioration
                                                 that the U.S. Supreme Court hears arise                 quality of decisions interpreting the law             (PSD)—which are nationally
                                                 from circuit splits.7 Thus, revising the                over time. See generally Atchison,                    applicable—would be heard in the D.C.
                                                 Regional Consistency regulations to                     Topeka & Santa Fe Ry. Co. v. Pena, 44                 Circuit Court, while challenges to
                                                 accommodate intercircuit                                F.3d 437, 446 (7th Cir. 1994) (J.                     application of those PSD regulations to
                                                 nonaquiescence advances the federal                     Easterbrook, concurring) (agencies and                specific permitting actions—which are
                                                 judiciary’s ability to experiment with                  courts balance whether ‘‘it is more                   locally applicable—would be heard in
                                                 different approaches to similar legal                   important that the applicable rule of law             the appropriate circuit court. See, e.g.,
                                                 problems, and the development of a                      be settled’’ or ‘‘that it be settled right’’)         Alabama Power v. Costle, 636 F.2d 323
                                                 circuit split that could eventually lead                (internal quotation and citation                      (D.C. Cir. 1979) (challenge to the EPA’s
                                                 to U.S. Supreme Court review of                         omitted).                                             PSD rules) and Sierra Club v. EPA, 499
                                                 important issues under the CAA.                                                                               F.3d 653 (7th Cir. 2007) (challenge to
                                                    As the U.S. Supreme Court has                        2. Accommodating Intercircuit
                                                                                                         Nonaquiescence in the Regional                        the application of those rules to a
                                                 explained, circuit splits are a common
                                                                                                         Consistency Regulations Is Consistent                 specific permitting action).
                                                 and acknowledged aspect of the federal
                                                 legal system. E. I. du Pont de Nemours                  With the CAA’s Judicial Review                           The Committee Report accompanying
                                                 & Co. v. Train, 430 U.S. 112, 135 n.26                  Provisions                                            the bill that ultimately became the CAA
                                                 (1977) (there is wisdom in ‘‘allowing                      We are also proposing these revisions              Amendments of 1977 states that the
                                                 difficult issues to mature through full                 to ensure that the Regional Consistency               amendments to section 307(b)(1) make
                                                 consideration by the courts of appeals’’).              regulations are in harmony with the                   ‘‘it clear that any nationally applicable
                                                 With regard to judicial consideration of                CAA’s judicial review provisions.                     regulations promulgated by the
                                                 the actions and decisions of federal                    Congress specifically addressed in the                Administrator under the Clean Air Act
                                                 agencies, a judge on the D.C. Circuit                   CAA the ability of the various courts of              could be reviewed only in the U.S.
                                                 Court has noted that ‘‘after one circuit                appeals to hear appeals of decisions of               Court of Appeal for the District of
                                                 has disagreed with its position, an                     the EPA. Congress created a very                      Columbia.’’ H.R.Rep. No. 95–294, p. 323
                                                 agency is entitled to maintain its                      specific system of judicial review to                 (1977). See also Harrison v. PPG
                                                 independent assessment of the dictates                  address how the CAA is implemented.                   Industries, Inc. et al., 100 S.Ct. 1889,
                                                 of the statutes and regulations it is                   Specifically, Congress granted the                    1896 (1980) (noting that the legislative
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 charged with administering, in the hope                 authority to review agency actions of                 history focused on the proper venue
                                                                                                         nationwide applicability under the CAA                between the D.C. Circuit Court and
                                                   7 See Ryan Stephenson, Federal Circuit Case           only to the D.C. Circuit Court. In 1977,              other federal courts). Only ‘‘essentially
                                                 Selection at the U.S. Supreme Court: An Empirical       at the same time it added the directive               locally, statewide, or regionally
                                                 Analysis, 102 Georgetown L.J. 272, 273 (2013) (‘‘As     for the EPA to promulgate what would                  applicable rules or orders are to be
                                                 many as 70% of the cases before the Court where
                                                 certiorari has been granted present clear conflicts
                                                                                                         ultimately become the Regional                        reviewed in U.S. court of appeals for the
                                                 between either the federal courts of appeals or state   Consistency regulations, Congress                     circuit in which such locality, State or
                                                 courts of last resort.’’).                              amended the Act to ensure that the D.C.               region is located.’’ H.R.Rep. No. 95–294,


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00031   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                 50256               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 at 323. The legislative history notes that              directive of CAA section 307(b)(1)                        Fairness is defined by one source as
                                                 in adopting this revision, the committee                establishing which courts have                         ‘‘agreeing with what is thought to be
                                                 was largely approving portions of                       jurisdiction over which final agency                   right or acceptable; treating people in a
                                                 recommendation 305.76–4(A) of the                       actions.8 Therefore, we believe it is                  way that does not favor some over
                                                 Administrative Conference of the                        reasonable for the EPA to revise the                   others’’ (http://www.merriam-
                                                 United States, which deals with venue,                  Regional Consistency regulations to                    webster.com/dictionary/fairness). As we
                                                 as well as the separate statement of G.                 provide a specific accommodation for                   have already discussed, it is generally
                                                 William Frick that accompanied the                      locally and regionally applicable court                acceptable to apply a Circuit Court
                                                 Administrative Conference’s views. Id.                  decisions.                                             decision only in those states over which
                                                 at 324. In his statement, Mr. Frick stated                                                                     the circuit has jurisdiction. And, as
                                                                                                         3. Accommodating Intercircuit
                                                 that ‘‘Congress intended review in the                                                                         explained using an example below,
                                                                                                         Nonaquiescence in the Regional
                                                 D.C. Circuit of ‘matters on which                                                                              there are circumstances under which
                                                                                                         Consistency Regulations Is Consistent
                                                 national uniformity is desirable.’ Among                                                                       applying the decision of a lower court
                                                                                                         With CAA Section 301(a)(2)
                                                 the reasons for this are the D.C. Circuit’s                                                                    nationwide could favor sources located
                                                 obvious expertise in administrative law                    A specific accommodation for locally                in the applicable lower court’s
                                                 matters and its sensitivity to                          and regionally applicable court                        jurisdiction over those located in other
                                                 Congressional mandates.’’ 41 FR 56767,                  decisions also is compatible with the                  circuits. As such, a standard that would
                                                 56769 (1976). Mr. Frick went on to note                 statutory language and Congressional                   specifically allow for intercircuit
                                                 that the D.C. Circuit Court had become                  intent of CAA section 301(a)(2). As                    nonaquiescence for all CAA decisions
                                                 quite familiar with the CAA, while other                described above, those provisions                      other than those issued by the D.C.
                                                 circuit courts lacked frequent exposure                 require the EPA Administrator to                       Circuit Court in response to challenges
                                                 to the Act and its legislative history.                 develop regulations to ‘‘assure fairness               of nationwide actions would provide a
                                                    By placing review of nationally                      and uniformity’’ of agency actions.                    uniform standard for the EPA’s
                                                 applicable decisions in the D.C. Circuit                Notably, there is nothing in the text of               application of court decisions that could
                                                 Court alone, Congress struck the balance                CAA section 301(a)(2) or in the limited                be anticipated by those who implement
                                                 between the countervailing values of                    legislative history of that provision that             the regulations and the regulated
                                                 improved development of the law on                      would suggest Congress intended for the                community.
                                                 the one hand and national uniformity                    requirement to promulgate fairness and                    It is not clear that the automatic,
                                                 on the other. By consolidating review of                uniformity regulations under CAA                       immediate nationwide application of
                                                 nationally applicable final agency                      section 301 to either upset the balance                one court’s decision based on the
                                                 actions in the D.C. Circuit Court,                      Congress struck when establishing                      specific facts of a locally-applicable
                                                 Congress advanced the objective of                      judicial review provisions in CAA                      decision would always be ‘‘fair’’ in the
                                                 ‘‘even and consistent national                          section 307, or disrupt the general                    absence of the type of accommodation
                                                 application’’ of certain EPA regulations                principles of common law that have                     proposed here. For example, consider
                                                 (and other ‘‘final’’ actions) that are                  allowed for the percolation of issues up               widget factories that have been
                                                 national in scope. Oljato Chapter of                    through the various circuit courts, as                 diligently complying with the EPA’s
                                                 Navajo Tribe v. Train, 515 F.2d 654, 660                discussed above. Section 301(a)(2) of the              longstanding interpretation that the Act
                                                 (D.C. Cir. 1975) (quoting S. Rep. No. 91–               Act does not specifically discuss                      supports permit limits of 1.00 ppm or
                                                 1196, 91st Cong., 2d Sess., 41(1970)). At               whether the fairness and uniformity                    lower (i.e., more stringent) at widget
                                                 the same time, Congress left the door                   objectives must be applied to all court                extrusion units at major sources.
                                                 open to intercircuit conflicts by granting              decisions; nor does it address how the                 However, in a challenge by a
                                                 jurisdiction over locally or regionally                 agency should respond to adverse court                 community group to a single widget
                                                 applicable ‘‘final’’ actions—like the                   decisions. Congress also did not include               factory permit in New England
                                                 applicability determination discussed in                language in CAA section 301 that would                 containing a limit of 1.00 ppm for the
                                                 the example below—to the regionally-                    expressly prohibit the EPA from                        extrusion units, the First Circuit Court
                                                 based courts of appeal. There is nothing                promulgating regulations that                          of Appeals issues a ruling with a
                                                 in the legislative history to suggest that              accommodate intercircuit                               different interpretation of the Act than
                                                 at the same time, Congress intended for                 nonaquiescence, consistent with CAA                    the EPA’s that supports a limit of 0.50
                                                 the Regional Consistency provisions to                  section 307.                                           ppm or lower. A reasonable person
                                                 somehow upset this careful balance and                     In addition, the text of CAA section                might not find it fair to require then that
                                                 require the EPA to apply a locally or                   301(a)(2)(A) necessitates a balance                    all widget factories nationwide get
                                                 regionally applicable decision in all                   between uniformity and fairness;                       permit revisions to establish limits of
                                                 regions in order to maintain                            however, one does not always guarantee                 0.50 ppm. Those factories would have
                                                 consistency.                                            the other in all circumstances. These                  been relying on the 1.00 ppm limit for
                                                    This proposal would firmly                           revisions would ensure the EPA has the                 years when planning budgets and
                                                 reestablish the balance that Congress                   flexibility to maintain that balance, as               making business decisions, and would
                                                 struck in CAA section 307(b)(1), to the                 appropriate.                                           likely find complying with the lower
                                                 extent the current Regional Consistency                                                                        limit costly and disruptive. Arguably,
                                                 regulations upset that balance. Thus,                      8 Moreover, to the extent there is a conflict, a    fairness might be better served by
                                                 this proposal would ensure that only the                canon of statutory construction states that the        limiting the impact of the First Circuit
                                                 U.S. Supreme Court and the D.C. Circuit                 specific—such as the language in CAA section           decision to the source whose permit was
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 Court would issue decisions with                        307(b)(1) addressing which courts may rule on          before the First Circuit and any other
                                                                                                         issues of national applicability—trumps the
                                                 mandatory nationwide effect, which is                   general—such as the language in section 301(a)(2)      widget factories within the jurisdiction
                                                 consistent with the clear statutory                     regarding regulations on fairness and uniformity.      of the First Circuit, while the EPA
                                                 language of CAA section 307(b)(1), as                   See RadLAX Gateway Hotel, LLC v. Amalgamated           determines how best to proceed.
                                                 well as its legislative history. As                     Bank, 132 S. Ct. 2065, 2070–71 (2012) (‘‘ ‘[I]t is a      While CAA section 301(a)(2) directed
                                                                                                         commonplace of statutory construction that the
                                                 explained below, there is nothing in the                specific governs the general.’’’ quoting Morales v.
                                                                                                                                                                the EPA to create mechanisms for
                                                 language or intent of CAA section                       Trans World Airlines, Inc., 504 U.S. 374, 384          identifying and standardizing various
                                                 301(a)(2) that trumps the clear statutory               (1992)).                                               criteria, there is nothing to suggest that


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00032   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                             50257

                                                 such standardization requires exact                     policies, lower court decisions would                  the impact of the court’s ruling while it
                                                 duplication by all EPA regions in all                   apply only in those states/areas within                undertakes other actions. For example,
                                                 circumstances, including regional                       the jurisdiction of the lower court, with              in Environmental Defense v. Duke
                                                 responses to court decisions. CAA                       the exception of the D.C. Circuit Court                Energy Corp., 549 U.S. 561 (2007), the
                                                 section 301 generally relates to                        reviewing final agency actions of                      U.S. Supreme Court reversed the Fourth
                                                 procedures to be followed by the EPA                    national applicability, consistent with                Circuit’s implicit invalidation of the
                                                 employees in carrying out a delegation                  CAA section 307(b)(1). Under the                       EPA’s regulations in the context of an
                                                 of authority from the Administrator.                    revised Regional Consistency                           enforcement action. In that case, the
                                                 Paragraph 301(a)(1) of the Act                          regulations, as proposed, a source                     U.S. Supreme Court found that the court
                                                 authorizes the Administrator to delegate                subject to the CAA would, as usual,                    of appeals had been too rigid in its
                                                 certain powers to other EPA officials,                  need to know and follow the law in the                 insistence that the EPA interpret the
                                                 while section 301(a)(2) of the Act                      circuit where it is located, and the law               term ‘‘modification’’ in its PSD
                                                 requires the Administrator to establish                 of the D.C. Circuit Court and the U.S.                 regulations in the same way that the
                                                 ‘‘general applicable procedures and                     Supreme Court. It would not be required                agency interpreted that term under the
                                                 policies for regional officers and                      to follow every CAA case in every court                New Source Performance Standards
                                                 employees’’ to follow in carrying out                   across the country to ensure compliance                program. Id. at 572–577. While it is true
                                                 delegated authorities. CAA section                      with the Act.                                          the U.S. Supreme Court eventually
                                                 301(a)(1)–(2). While the statute further                   By revising the regulations, the EPA                reversed the lower court, there was a 2-
                                                 directs that such regulations shall be                  also accommodates the possibility that a               year period during which the Fourth
                                                 designed to, among other requirements,                  split in the circuits could preclude the               Circuit’s decision remained in place.
                                                 ‘‘assure fairness and uniformity in the                 EPA from complying with both court                     Under the D.C. Circuit Court’s
                                                 criteria, procedures, and policies                      decisions at once. Consider the                        interpretation of the existing Regional
                                                 applied by the various regions in                       following example: In a case involving                 Consistency regulations, the EPA
                                                 implementing and enforcing the                          a permit issued in New York, the                       arguably would have been required to
                                                 chapter,’’ on its face, CAA section                     Second Circuit upholds the EPA’s                       follow that later-reversed Fourth Circuit
                                                 301(a)(2) does not impose a standalone                  longstanding position and, in doing so,                interpretation of its regulations
                                                 requirement to attain uniformity. Cf. Air               confirms that the EPA’s interpretation is              nationwide during that 2 year period,
                                                 Pollution Control Dist. v. EPA, 739 F.2d                compelled by the Act under Step One of                 even though that interpretation ‘‘read
                                                 1071, 1085 (6th Cir. 1984) (rejecting                   Chevron.9 As a result, the EPA                         those PSD regulations in a way that
                                                 claim that CAA section 301(a)(2)                        continues to apply its longstanding                    seems to [the Supreme Court] too far a
                                                 establishes a substantive standard that                 interpretation, consistent with the                    stretch for the language used.’’ Id. at
                                                 requires similar or uniform emission                    Second Circuit’s decision, in a permit                 577.
                                                 limitations for all sources). In addition,              issued in Alabama, an Eleventh Circuit                    As discussed earlier, since the U.S.
                                                 the section does not direct the                         state. In an appeal of that permit,                    Supreme Court only grants a very
                                                 Administrator to revise an existing                     however, the Eleventh Circuit holds that               limited number of petitions for
                                                 regulation following an adverse court                   not only is the EPA’s interpretation not               certiorari, it is highly likely that an
                                                 decision in a local or regional case, or                compelled by the CAA, it is prohibited                 adverse court of appeals decision could
                                                 otherwise constrain the EPA’s existing                  by the CAA. There are now two court                    remain in place indefinitely. This
                                                 regulatory authority. Instead, the                      decisions with conflicting Chevron Step                possibility is exacerbated if the EPA is
                                                 provision requires the EPA to establish                 One holdings—how could the EPA                         prohibited by its own regulations
                                                 procedures that apply to its regional                   apply both of those decisions uniformly                governing consistency from seeking to
                                                 officers and employees, but it does not                 across the country? While the U.S.                     create a circuit split on the issue by non-
                                                 address whether or how the EPA should                   Supreme Court could review the issue,                  acquiescing to the first adverse decision,
                                                 address judicial decisions in those                     it might not. Further, even if the U.S.                and maintaining its national position
                                                 procedures. To the extent that Congress                 Supreme Court eventually resolved the                  before other courts. Moreover, if the
                                                 prioritized judicially-created                          conflict, there could be a multi-year                  lower court decision is based on an
                                                 uniformity, this was expressed in CAA                   period during which both decisions                     interpretation of the CAA statutory
                                                 section 307(b)(1)—which, as discussed                   would remain applicable case law. This                 language, the EPA may not be able to
                                                 above, allows for regional divergence                   proposed revisions would acknowledge                   ‘‘fix’’ the problem by revising the
                                                 among circuit courts—not CAA section                    and address those instances in which                   underlying regulation because the
                                                 301(a)(2)(A).                                           the EPA may not be able to comply with                 agency could arguably be required to
                                                                                                         two, conflicting decisions at the same                 follow the statutory construction set
                                                 4. Accommodating Intercircuit                           time.                                                  forth in the lower court’s decision. Such
                                                 Nonaquiescence in the Regional                             Moreover, sometimes court decisions                 a result would be inconsistent with the
                                                 Consistency Regulations Fosters Overall                 reviewing a regulation or statute are                  general structure of the federal
                                                 Fairness and Predictability Regarding                   reversed on appeal. In other cases, a                  judiciary, the specific structure of the
                                                 the Scope and Impact of Judicial                        court decision may contain a ruling that               Act’s judicial review provision, and the
                                                 Decisions Under the CAA                                 appears to invalidate a national rule in               general directive to assure both fairness
                                                    Revising the Regional Consistency                    the context of a source-specific action,               and uniformity in CAA section
                                                 regulations to include a specific                       which is inconsistent with CAA section                 301(a)(2).
                                                 accommodation for intercircuit                          307(b)(1), as explained above. When
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 nonaquiescence in appropriate                           either outcome occurs, intercircuit                    5. Accommodating Intercircuit
                                                 circumstances would also help to assure                 nonaquiescence allows the EPA to limit                 Nonaquiescence in the Regional
                                                 fairness and predictability in the                                                                             Consistency Regulations is a Reasonable
                                                 implementation of the CAA overall.                        9 Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources           Extension of the EPA’s Part 56
                                                 Such an accommodation would foster                      Defense Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837 (1984) (Step one   Regulations
                                                                                                         of Chevron refers to cases where the intent of
                                                 predictability by ensuring that, unless                 Congress is clear, and therefore a court, as well as
                                                                                                                                                                   As noted above, because there is
                                                 there is an affirmative nationwide and                  the agency, must give effect to the unambiguously      nothing in the statutory text of CAA
                                                 deliberate change in the EPA’s rules or                 expressed intent of Congress).                         section 301(a)(2) that would prohibit the


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00033   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                 50258               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 EPA from revising the Regional                          requirement if it did exist in our                    under the CAA, and is a reasonable
                                                 Consistency regulations to specifically                 regulations, we do not need to make                   extension of the EPA’s existing part 56
                                                 accommodate intercircuit                                such a change because the narrow                      regulations. To the extent one could
                                                 nonaquiescence, we wish to evaluate                     revisions we are proposing in this                    read the NEDACAP decision to imply
                                                 that approach. Nothing in the preambles                 rulemaking are a natural extension of                 that the Regional Consistency
                                                 to the proposed and final Regional                      the existing regulations, which state that            regulations would also require the EPA
                                                 Consistency regulations indicates that                  regional officials must assure that                   to apply district court decisions
                                                 either commenters or the EPA                            actions are ‘‘carried out fairly and in a             uniformly across the nation, the
                                                 considered the question whether or how                  manner that is consistent with the Act                revisions also appropriately
                                                 the rules would be applied following                    and Agency policy’’ and are ‘‘as                      accommodate district court decisions,
                                                 judicial decisions (see generally 44 FR                 consistent as reasonably possible with                which are by their very nature even
                                                 13043–048 and 45 FR 85400–405,                          the activities of other Regional Offices’’            more limited in scope.
                                                 respectively). In addition, while the D.C.              40 CFR 56.5(a)(1)–(2) (emphasis added).                  The federal district courts are the
                                                 Circuit Court’s NEDACAP decision                           As discussed above, Congress                       general trial courts of the federal
                                                 relied heavily on the general policy                    specifically addressed the role of and                judiciary system. See generally 28
                                                 statements contained in 40 CFR 56.3 of                  allowed for regional office divergence                U.S.C. 81–131 (establishing district
                                                 the existing regulations—which broadly                  among circuit courts in CAA section                   courts for each of the 50 states and the
                                                 endorse the fair and uniform application                307(b)(1), and it would be both                       District of Columbia). The district courts
                                                 of criteria, policy, and procedures by                  reasonable and fair to allow for                      only have the authority to hear cases in
                                                 EPA regional office employees—there is                  inconsistencies among the actions of                  a specific geographic area that raise
                                                 nothing in those general statements or                  regional officials to respect those                   specific claims for which Congress has
                                                 any other provisions of the regulations                 directives. Perhaps more importantly,                 granted the court jurisdiction. See
                                                 that mandate that the EPA adopt                         the Regional Consistency regulations                  generally 28 U.S.C. 1390–1431
                                                 nationwide the interpretation of the                    already allow for some variation                      (discussing the venue of the district
                                                 court that first addresses a legal matter               between the regional offices.                         courts) and 1330–1369 (discussing the
                                                 in all circumstances. The lack of such a                Specifically, 40 CFR 56.5(b) provides                 jurisdiction of the district courts). A
                                                 mandate shows that the focused                          that regional officials ‘‘seek                        district court decision is based on the
                                                 revisions we are proposing in this                      concurrence’’ from the EPA                            application of the law to the specific
                                                 rulemaking are a natural extension of                   headquarters with respect to any                      facts of a case, involving the parties to
                                                 the agency’s existing regulations.                      interpretations of the Act, rule,                     the case. Thus, while a decision from a
                                                    The Regional Consistency regulations                 regulation, or guidance that ‘‘may result             circuit court is binding on those district
                                                 generally establish certain mechanisms                  in inconsistent application among the                 courts located in the circuit, as a general
                                                 with the goal of ‘‘identifying,                         regional Offices.’’ Thus, the EPA has                 matter, a decision from a district court
                                                 preventing, and resolving regional                      already acknowledged that certain                     is applicable only to those parties in the
                                                 inconsistencies’’ (45 FR 85400). For the                regions may in some instances act                     specific case in which it is issued and
                                                 EPA headquarters office employees, the                  inconsistently with others, and the                   has no binding precedential effect on
                                                 regulations do this by targeting                        revisions proposed in this action would               any other parties, courts or even other
                                                 particular aspects of the Act that have                 simply be identifying and authorizing                 judges in the same district. See Hart v.
                                                 the potential to present consistency                    such inconsistency specifically when                  Massanari, 266 F.3d at 1174. Given this
                                                 problems—any rule or regulation                         necessitated by a federal court decision              very limited scope of district court
                                                 proposed or promulgated under part 51,                  reviewing an action of local or regional              decisions, it is reasonable to revise the
                                                 which sets forth requirements for the                   applicability.                                        Regional Consistency regulations to
                                                 preparation, adoption and submittal of                     In fact, the proposed revisions would              clearly accommodate district court
                                                 state implementation plans, and part 58,                further the overall goals of the existing             decisions that result from specific
                                                 which contains requirements for                         Regional Consistency regulations by                   locally or regionally cases in which the
                                                 measuring, monitoring, and reporting                    specifically identifying the possibility of           EPA is a party. Without such a revision,
                                                 ambient air quality. However, the                       potential inconsistent actions across the             a party may try to argue that, pursuant
                                                 consistency regulations do not state a                  EPA regions, especially where multiple                to the Regional Consistency regulations,
                                                 requirement for headquarters offices to                 courts have already addressed an issue                a single district court decision based on
                                                 apply these parts consistently in all                   in different ways, and standardizing a                the specific facts in one case forms the
                                                 circumstances. Instead the regulations                  response that can be followed by all the              basis for a uniform nationwide EPA
                                                 direct headquarters office employees to                 regions, such that regions only have to               position, elevating the impact of that
                                                 develop mechanisms to assure that such                  apply local and regional decisions                    district court decision well beyond the
                                                 rules or regulations are implemented                    issued by courts in those areas in which              scope that is usually provided to district
                                                 and enforced fairly and uniformly by                    the court has jurisdiction.                           court decisions, and thus upsetting the
                                                 the regional offices. In so doing, the                                                                        general principles of U.S. common law
                                                                                                         6. Accommodating District Court
                                                 regulations do not state that                                                                                 upon which our federal judiciary is
                                                                                                         Decisions in the Regional Consistency
                                                 headquarters employees are required to                                                                        based.
                                                                                                         Regulations Is Also Appropriate                          Likewise, as noted above, Congress
                                                 assure that a decision of one judicial
                                                 circuit is always applied consistently in                  As we have explained above, revising               created a very specific system of judicial
                                                 all EPA regions.                                        the Regional Consistency regulations to               review to address how the Act is
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    Likewise, the provisions of the                      specifically accommodate circuit court                implemented, and that system is
                                                 Regional Consistency regulations that                   decisions via intercircuit                            focused on challenges to specific final
                                                 apply to the EPA regional office                        nonaquiescence is consistent with                     actions in the circuit courts. There is
                                                 employees also do not contain a                         general principles of common law, and                 nothing in CAA section 307(b)(1) or in
                                                 requirement that all regional officials act             CAA sections 307(b)(1) and 301(a)(2). In              the statutory language requiring the EPA
                                                 the same way in all circumstances, nor                  addition, it will help to foster overall              to promulgate regional consistency rules
                                                 do they address judicial decisions.                     fairness and predictability regarding the             that would suggest that Congress
                                                 While the EPA could change any such                     scope and impact of judicial decisions                intended district court decisions in


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00034   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                             50259

                                                 specific cases to have a potentially                    implement our national program under                  population of less than 50,000; or (3) a
                                                 broad binding effect on the agency. Not                 the CAA. The EPA did not conduct an                   small organization that is any not-for-
                                                 only would such an outcome elevate a                    environmental analysis for this rule                  profit enterprise that is independently
                                                 district court decision to the same level               because this rule would not directly                  owned and operated and is not
                                                 of a D.C. Circuit Court decision under                  affect the air emissions of particular                dominant in its field.
                                                 CAA section 307(b)(1), but it would be                  sources. Because this rule will not                      After considering the economic
                                                 directly opposed to the idea of                         directly affect the air emissions of                  impacts of this proposed rule on small
                                                 ‘‘fairness’’ put forward by Congress in                 particular sources, it does not affect the            entities, I certify that this action will not
                                                 CAA section 301(a)(2). If the Regional                  level of protection provided to human                 have a significant economic impact on
                                                 Consistency regulations cannot                          health or the environment. Therefore,                 a substantial number of small entities.
                                                 accommodate various district court                      this action will not have potential                   This proposed rule will not impose any
                                                 decisions, a fundamental unfairness                     disproportionately high and adverse                   requirements directly on small entities.
                                                 would arise when a district court                       human health or environmental effects                 Entities potentially affected directly by
                                                 decision applying its interpretation of                 on minority, low-income or indigenous                 this proposal include federal, state, local
                                                 an agency rule to the specific facts of                 populations.                                          and tribal governments, none of which
                                                 one EPA case in Alaska could impact                                                                           qualify as small entities.
                                                 how the agency would address the same                   VI. Statutory and Executive Order
                                                                                                         Reviews                                                  We continue to be interested in the
                                                 rule but with very different facts in                                                                         potential impacts of the proposed rule
                                                 Florida. Given the various reasons set                  A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory                  on small entities and welcome
                                                 forth above for limiting application of                 Planning and Review and Executive                     comments on issues related to such
                                                 circuit court decisions resulting from                  Order 13563: Improving Regulation and                 impacts.
                                                 challenges to locally or regionally                     Regulatory Review
                                                 applicable actions, and the fact that the                                                                     D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
                                                 scope of district court decisions in the                  This action is not a ‘‘significant
                                                                                                         regulatory action’’ under the terms of                   This action contains no federal
                                                 federal court system is even more                                                                             mandates under the provisions of Title
                                                 narrowly defined than that of circuit                   Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,
                                                                                                         October 4, 1993) and is therefore not                 II of the Unfunded Mandates Reform
                                                 court decisions, it is only reasonable to                                                                     Act of 1995 (UMRA), 2 U.S.C. 1531–
                                                 revise the Regional Consistency                         subject to review under Executive
                                                                                                         Orders 12866 and 13563 (76 FR 3821,                   1538 for state, local or tribal
                                                 regulations to clearly limit the                                                                              governments or the private sector. The
                                                 application of district court decisions                 January 21, 2011) because it does not
                                                                                                         result in an impact greater than $100                 action imposes no enforceable duty on
                                                 only to the specific parties and facts                                                                        any state, local or tribal governments or
                                                 addressed in the decision.                              million in any one year or raise novel
                                                                                                         legal or policy issues arising out of legal           the private sector. Therefore, this action
                                                 7. Accommodating Intercircuit                           mandates, the President’s priorities, or              is not subject to the requirements of
                                                 Nonaquiescence in the Regional                          the principles set forth in this Executive            sections 202 and 205 of the UMRA.
                                                 Consistency Regulations Maintains                       Order.                                                   This rule is also not subject to the
                                                 EPA’s Ability To Exercise Discretion                                                                          requirements of section 203 of UMRA
                                                                                                         B. Paperwork Reduction Act                            because it contains no regulatory
                                                    Although the proposed rule revisions
                                                 would make clear that the EPA is not                      This action does not impose any new                 requirements that might significantly or
                                                 obligated to follow judicial decisions of               information collection burden. The                    uniquely affect small governments. As
                                                 a federal circuit court addressing                      proposed rule would not create any new                noted previously, the effect of the
                                                 ‘‘locally or regionally applicable’’                    requirements for regulated entities, but              proposed rule would be neutral or
                                                 actions in other circuits (or district court            rather provides flexibility to EPA in                 relieve regulatory burden.
                                                 decisions in instances that do not                      implementing numerous programs on a                   E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
                                                 involve parties to such decision), the                  national basis.
                                                 proposal is not intended to preclude                                                                            This proposed rule does not have
                                                                                                         C. Regulatory Flexibility Act                         federalism implications. It will not have
                                                 anyone from advocating that the agency
                                                 exercise its discretion to follow such         The Regulatory Flexibility Act                                 substantial direct effects on the states,
                                                 decisions in appropriate cases. The EPA     generally requires an agency to prepare                           on the relationship between the national
                                                 recognizes that national policy can be      a regulatory flexibility analysis of any                          government and the states or on the
                                                 influenced by insights and reasoning        rule subject to notice and comment                                distribution of power and
                                                 from judicial decisions and we do not       rulemaking requirements under the                                 responsibilities among the various
                                                 mean to imply through this proposal         Administrative Procedures Act or any                              levels of government, as specified in
                                                 that the agency would ignore persuasive     other statute unless the agency certifies                         Executive Order 13132. This proposed
                                                 judicial opinions issued in cases           that the rule will not have a significant                         rule would revise regulations that apply
                                                 involving ‘‘locally or regionally           economic impact on a substantial                                  to the EPA, and any delegated state/
                                                 applicable’’ actions. Such opinions may     number of small entities. Small entities                          local governments, only, and would not,
                                                 address issues of nationwide                include small businesses, small                                   therefore, affect the relationship
                                                 importance and could, in appropriate        organizations and small governmental                              between the national government and
                                                 circumstances, lead the agency to adopt     jurisdictions.                                                    the states or the distribution of power
                                                 new national policy.                           For purposes of assessing the impacts                          and responsibilities among the various
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                                                             of this proposed action on small                                  levels of government.
                                                 V. Environmental Justice                    entities, small entity is defined as: (1) A                         In the spirit of Executive Order 13132
                                                 Considerations                              small business as defined in the U.S.                             and consistent with the EPA policy to
                                                   This document is proposing a rule         Small Business Administration size                                promote communications between the
                                                 revision to give the EPA flexibility to     standards at 13 CFR 121.201; (2) a small                          EPA and state and local governments,
                                                 implement court decisions of a limited      governmental jurisdiction that is a                               the EPA specifically solicits comment
                                                 scope (i.e., those having local or regional government of a city, county, town,                               on this proposed rule from state and
                                                 applicability) while also allowing us to    school district or special district with a                        local officials.


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00035   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                 50260               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                 F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation                    This proposed rulemaking does not                   PART 56—REGIONAL CONSISTENCY
                                                 and Coordination With Indian Tribal                     involve technical standards. Therefore,
                                                 Governments                                             the EPA did not consider the use of any               ■ 1. The authority citation for part 56
                                                    This proposed rule does not have                     voluntary consensus standards.                        continues to read as follows:
                                                 tribal implications, as specified in                    J. Executive Order 12898: Federal                      Authority: Sec. 301(a)(2) of the Clean Air
                                                 Executive Order 13175 (65 FR 67249,                     Actions To Address Environmental                      Act as amended (42 U.S.C. 7601).
                                                 November 9, 2000). It will not have                     Justice in Minority Populations and
                                                 substantial direct effects on tribal                                                                          ■ 2. Section 56.3 is amended by adding
                                                                                                         Low-Income Populations
                                                 governments, on the relationship                                                                              paragraph (d) to read as follows:
                                                 between the federal government and                        Executive Order 12898 (59 FR 7629,                  § 56.3       Policy.
                                                 Indian tribes or on the distribution of                 February 16, 1994) establishes federal
                                                 power and responsibilities between the                  executive policy on environmental                     *        *       *     *   *
                                                 federal government and Indian tribes, as                justice. Its main provision directs                      (d) Recognize that only the decisions
                                                 specified in Executive Order 13175.                     federal agencies, to the greatest extent              of the U.S. Supreme Court and decisions
                                                 This proposed rule only affects our                     practicable and permitted by law, to                  of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C.
                                                 flexibility regarding judicial decisions                make environmental justice part of their              Circuit Court that arise from challenges
                                                 as they apply to implementing air                       mission by identifying and addressing,                to ‘‘nationally applicable regulations
                                                 programs on a national basis. Thus,                     as appropriate, disproportionately high               . . . or final action,’’ as discussed in
                                                 Executive Order 13175 does not apply                    and adverse human health or                           Clean Air Act section 307(b) (42 U.S.C.
                                                 to this rule.                                           environmental effects of their programs,              7607(b)), shall apply uniformly, and to
                                                                                                         policies and activities on minority                   provide for exceptions to the general
                                                 G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of
                                                                                                         populations and low-income                            policy stated in paragraphs (a) and (b)
                                                 Children From Environmental Health
                                                                                                         populations in the United States.                     of this section with regard to decisions
                                                 and Safety Risks
                                                                                                                                                               of the Federal courts that arise from
                                                    The EPA interprets Executive Order                      The EPA has determined that this                   challenges to ‘‘locally or regionally
                                                 13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997) as                  proposed rule will not have                           applicable’’ actions, as provided in
                                                 applying only to those regulatory                       disproportionately high and adverse                   Clean Air Act section 307(b) (42 U.S.C.
                                                 actions that concern health or safety                   human health or environmental effects                 7607(b)).
                                                 risks, such that the analysis required                  on minority or low-income populations
                                                                                                         because it does not affect the level of               ■ 3. Section 56.4 is amended by adding
                                                 under section 5–501 of the Executive
                                                                                                         protection provided to human health or                paragraph (c) to read as follows:
                                                 Order has the potential to influence the
                                                 regulation. This action is not subject to               the environment. The proposed rule                    § 56.4 Mechanisms for fairness and
                                                 Executive Order 13045 because it does                   would provide flexibility to the EPA in               uniformity—Responsibilities of
                                                 not establish an environmental standard                 issuing guidance to implement its                     Headquarters employees.
                                                 intended to mitigate health or safety                   regulations with respect to judicial                  *      *     *    *     *
                                                 risks.                                                  decisions. The results of this evaluation
                                                                                                         are contained in section V of the                        (c) The Administrator shall not be
                                                 H. Executive Order 13211: Actions That                  preamble titled ‘‘Environmental Justice               required to issue new mechanisms or
                                                 Significantly Affect Energy Supply,                     Considerations.’’                                     revise existing mechanisms developed
                                                 Distribution or Use                                                                                           under paragraph (a) of this section to
                                                   This action is not subject to Executive               K. Determination Under Section 307(d)                 address the inconsistent application of
                                                 Order 13211 (66 FR 28355, May 22,                                                                             any rule, regulation, or policy that may
                                                                                                           Pursuant to section 307(d)(1)(V) of the             arise in response to the limited
                                                 2001), because it is not a significant                  CAA, the Administrator determines that
                                                 regulatory action under Executive Order                                                                       jurisdiction of either a Federal circuit
                                                                                                         this action is subject to the provisions              court decision arising from challenges to
                                                 12866.                                                  of section 307(d). Section 307(d)(1)(V)               ‘‘locally or regionally applicable’’
                                                 I. National Technology Transfer and                     provides that the provisions of section               actions, as provided in Clean Air Act
                                                 Advancement Act                                         307(d) apply to ‘‘such other actions as               section 307(b) (42 U.S.C. 7607(b)), or a
                                                   Section 12(d) of the National                         the Administrator may determine.’’                    Federal district court decision.
                                                 Technology Transfer and Advancement                     VII. Statutory Authority                              ■ 4. Section 56.5 is amended by adding
                                                 Act of 1995 (NTTAA), Public Law 104–                                                                          a sentence at the end of paragraph (b)
                                                 113, 12(d) (15 U.S.C. 272 note) directs                    The statutory authority for this action            and paragraphs (b)(1) and (2) to read as
                                                 the EPA to use voluntary consensus                      is provided by section 301 of the CAA                 follows:
                                                 standards in its regulatory activities                  as amended (42 U.S.C. 7601).
                                                 unless to do so would be inconsistent                                                                         § 56.5 Mechanisms for fairness and
                                                                                                         List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 56                    uniformity—Responsibilities of Regional
                                                 with applicable law or otherwise
                                                                                                                                                               Office employees.
                                                 impractical. Voluntary consensus                          Environmental protection, Air
                                                 standards are technical standards (e.g.,                                                                      *     *      *     *    *
                                                                                                         pollution control.
                                                 materials specifications, test methods,                                                                         (b) * * * However, the responsible
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 sampling procedures and business                          Dated: August 5, 2015.                              official in a regional office will not be
                                                 practices) that are developed or adopted                Gina McCarthy,                                        required to seek such concurrence from
                                                 by voluntary consensus standards                        Administrator.                                        the appropriate EPA headquarters office
                                                 bodies. The NTTAA directs the EPA to                                                                          for actions that may result in
                                                 provide Congress, through the OMB,                        For the reasons stated in the                       inconsistent application if such
                                                 explanations when the agency decides                    preamble, title 40, chapter I of the Code             inconsistent application is required in
                                                 not to use available and applicable                     of Federal Regulations is proposed to be              order to act in accordance with a
                                                 voluntary consensus standards.                          amended as follows:                                   Federal court decision:


                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   17:03 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00036   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1


                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 160 / Wednesday, August 19, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                 50261

                                                   (1) Issued by a Circuit Court in                      that the regional office official is                  party in the case that resulted in the
                                                 challenges to ‘‘locally or regionally                   addressing, or                                        decision.
                                                 applicable’’ actions, as provided in                      (2) Issued by a District Court in a                 *     *    *     *      *
                                                 Clean Air Act section 307(b) (42 U.S.C.                 specific case if the party the regional               [FR Doc. 2015–20506 Filed 8–18–15; 8:45 am]
                                                 7607(b)), if that Circuit Court has direct
                                                                                                         office official is addressing was also a              BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
                                                 jurisdiction over the geographic areas
rmajette on DSK2VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                            VerDate Sep<11>2014   15:11 Aug 18, 2015   Jkt 235001   PO 00000   Frm 00037   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 9990   E:\FR\FM\19AUP1.SGM   19AUP1



Document Created: 2015-12-15 11:58:27
Document Modified: 2015-12-15 11:58:27
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionProposed rule.
DatesComments must be received on or before October 19, 2015.
ContactFor technical information, contact Greg Nizich, Air Quality Policy Division, Office of Air Quality Planning and Standards (C504-03), Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina 27711; telephone number (919)
FR Citation80 FR 50250 
RIN Number2060-AS53
CFR AssociatedEnvironmental Protection and Air Pollution Control

2024 Federal Register | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
USC | CFR | eCFR