80_FR_77135 80 FR 76897 - Revisions to the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4) for Public Water Systems and Announcement of a Public Meeting

80 FR 76897 - Revisions to the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4) for Public Water Systems and Announcement of a Public Meeting

ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 238 (December 11, 2015)

Page Range76897-76923
FR Document2015-30824

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing a Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) rule that requires public water systems to collect occurrence data for contaminants that may be present in tap water but are not yet subject to EPA's drinking water standards set under SDWA. This rule, revised every five years as required by SDWA, benefits public health by providing EPA and other interested parties with scientifically valid data on the national occurrence of selected contaminants in drinking water, such as cyanotoxins associated with harmful algal blooms. This data set is one of the primary sources of information on occurrence, levels of exposure and population exposure the Agency uses to develop regulatory decisions for emerging contaminants in the public drinking water supply. This proposal identifies eleven analytical methods to support water system monitoring for a total of 30 chemical contaminants/groups, consisting of ten cyanotoxins/groups; two metals; eight pesticides plus one pesticide manufacturing byproduct (hereinafter collectively referred to as ``pesticides''); three brominated haloacetic acid groups of disinfection byproducts; three alcohols; and three semivolatile organic chemicals. EPA is also announcing a public webinar to discuss this proposal of the fourth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 238 (Friday, December 11, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 238 (Friday, December 11, 2015)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 76897-76923]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-30824]


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ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY

40 CFR Part 141

[EPA-HQ-OW-2015-0218; FRL-9935-74-OW]
RIN 2040-AF10


Revisions to the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4) 
for Public Water Systems and Announcement of a Public Meeting

AGENCY: Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

ACTION: Proposed rule and notice of public meeting.

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

SUMMARY: The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing a 
Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) rule that requires public water systems 
to collect occurrence data for contaminants that may be present in tap 
water but are not yet subject to EPA's drinking water standards set 
under SDWA. This rule, revised every five years as required by SDWA, 
benefits public health by providing EPA and other interested parties 
with scientifically valid data on the national occurrence of selected 
contaminants in drinking water, such as cyanotoxins associated with 
harmful algal blooms. This data set is one of the primary sources of 
information on occurrence, levels of exposure and population exposure 
the Agency uses to develop regulatory decisions for emerging 
contaminants in the public drinking water supply. This proposal 
identifies eleven analytical methods to support water system monitoring 
for a total of 30 chemical contaminants/groups, consisting of ten 
cyanotoxins/groups; two metals; eight pesticides plus one pesticide 
manufacturing byproduct (hereinafter collectively referred to as 
``pesticides''); three brominated haloacetic acid groups of 
disinfection byproducts; three alcohols; and three semivolatile organic 
chemicals. EPA is also announcing a public webinar to discuss this 
proposal of the fourth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule.

DATES: Comments must be received on or before February 9, 2016. Under 
the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), comments on the information 
collection provisions are best assured of consideration if the Office 
of Management and Budget (OMB) receives a copy of your comments on or 
before January 11, 2016. The public webinar will be held on January 13, 
2016, from 1:00 p.m.. to 4:30 p.m., eastern time. Persons wishing to 
participate in the webinar must register

[[Page 76898]]

by January 10, 2016, as described in section II.M.

ADDRESSES: Submit your comments, identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-
2015-0218, at http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the online 
instructions for submitting comments. Once submitted, comments cannot 
be edited or removed from Regulations.gov. 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. 
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. The EPA 
will generally not consider comments or comment contents located 
outside of the primary submission (i.e. on the web, cloud, or other 
file sharing system). For additional submission methods, the full EPA 
public comment policy, information about CBI or multimedia submissions, 
and general guidance on making effective comments, please visit http://www2.epa.gov/dockets/commenting-epa-dockets.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Brenda D. Parris, Standards and Risk 
Management Division (SRMD), Office of Ground Water and Drinking Water 
(OGWDW) (MS 140), Environmental Protection Agency, 26 West Martin 
Luther King Drive, Cincinnati, OH 45268; telephone number: (513) 569-
7961; or email address: [email protected]; or Melissa Simic, SRMD, 
OGWDW (MS 140), Environmental Protection Agency, 26 West Martin Luther 
King Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio 45268; telephone number: (513) 569-7864; 
or email address: [email protected]. For general information, 
contact the Safe Drinking Water Hotline. Callers within the United 
States can reach the Hotline at (800) 426-4791. The Hotline is open 
Monday through Friday, excluding federal holidays, from 10 a.m. to 4 
p.m., eastern time. The Safe Drinking Water Hotline can also be found 
on the Internet at: http://water.epa.gov/drink/hotline/.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Table of Contents

I. General Information
    A. Does this action apply to me?
    B. What action is the Agency taking and why?
    C. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?
    D. What is the estimated cost of this proposed action?
II. Background
    A. How has EPA implemented the Unregulated Contaminant 
Monitoring Program?
    B. How are the Contaminant Candidate List (CCL), the UCMR 
program, the Regulatory Determination process and the NCOD 
interrelated?
    C. What notable changes are being proposed for UCMR 4?
    D. How did EPA prioritize candidate contaminants and what 
contaminants are proposed for UCMR 4?
    E. What is the proposed applicability date?
    F. What are the proposed UCMR 4 sampling design and timeline of 
activities?
    1. Sampling Frequency, Timing
    2. Sampling Locations
    3. Phased Sample Analysis for Microcystins
    4. Representative Sampling
    5. Summary
    G. What are reporting requirements for UCMR 4?
    1. Data Elements
    2. Duplicate Samples
    H. What are Minimum Reporting Levels (MRLs) and how were they 
determined?
    I. How do laboratories become approved to conduct UCMR 4 
analyses?
    1. Request to Participate
    2. Registration
    3. Application Package
    4. EPA's Review of Application Package
    5. Proficiency Testing
    6. Written EPA Approval
    J. What documents are being incorporated by reference?
    1. Methods From the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
    2. Methods From ``ASTM International''
    3. Methods From ``Standard Methods for the Examination of Water 
& Wastewater''
    4. Methods From ``Standard Methods Online''
    5. Method From ``Ohio EPA''
    K. What is the states' role in the UCMR program?
    L. What stakeholder meetings have been held in preparation for 
UCMR 4?
    M. How do I participate in the upcoming stakeholder meeting?
    1. Webinar Participation
    2. Webinar Materials
    N. How did EPA consider Children's Environmental Health?
    O. How did EPA address Environmental Justice?
III. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews
    A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and 
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
    B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
    C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
    D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)
    E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism
    F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation and Coordination With 
Indian Tribal Governments
    G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of Children From 
Environmental Health Risks and Safety Risks
    H. Executive Order 13211: Actions Concerning Regulations That 
Significantly Affect Energy Supply, Distribution or Use
    I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act and 1 CFR 
Part 51
    J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions To Address 
Environmental Justice in Minority Populations and Low-Income 
Populations
IV. References

Abbreviations and Acronyms

[mu]g/L Microgram per liter
ADDA (2S, 3S, 8S, 9S, 4E, 6E)-3-amino-9-methoxy-2,6,8-trimethyl-10-
phenyl-4, 6-decadienoic acid
ASDWA Association of State Drinking Water Administrators
ASTM ASTM International
CAS Chemical Abstract Service
CBI Confidential Business Information
CCC Continuing Calibration Check
CCL Contaminant Candidate List
CFR Code of Federal Regulations
CLDA Chlorine Dioxide Applied After SR Sample Location
CLDB Chlorine Dioxide Applied Before SR Sample Location
CWS Community Water System
DBPR Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule
DSMRT Distribution System Maximum Residence Time
ELISA Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay
EPA United States Environmental Protection Agency
EPTDS Entry Point to the Distribution System
FR Federal Register
GC Gas Chromatography
GC/ECD Gas Chromatography/Electron Capture Detection
GC/MS Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry
GW Ground Water
GWUDI Ground Water Under the Direct Influence of Surface Water
HAAs Haloacetic Acids
HAA5 Dibromoacetic Acid, Dichloroacetic Acid, Monobromoacetic Acid, 
Monochloroacetic Acid, Trichloroacetic Acid
HAA6Br Bromochloroacetic Acid, Bromodichloroacetic Acid, 
Dibromoacetic Acid, Dibromochloroacetic Acid, Monobromoacetic Acid, 
Tribromoacetic Acid
HAA9 Bromochloroacetic Acid, Bromodichloroacetic Acid, 
Chlorodibromoacetic Acid, Dibromoacetic Acid, Dichloroacetic Acid, 
Monobromoacetic Acid, Monochloroacetic Acid, Tribromoacetic Acid, 
Trichloroacetic Acid
HPXA Hydrogen Peroxide Applied After Source Water Sample Location
HPXB Hydrogen Peroxide Applied Before Source Water Sample Location
IC-MS/MS Ion Chromatography/Tandem Mass Spectrometry
ICP-MS Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass Spectrometry
ICR Information Collection Request
IDC Initial Demonstration of Capability
IS Internal Standard
LFB Laboratory Fortified Blank

[[Page 76899]]

LRB Laboratory Reagent Blank
LCMRL Lowest Concentration Minimum Reporting Level
LC/ECI-MS/MS Liquid Chromatography/Electrospray Ionization/Tandem 
Mass Spectrometry
LC/MS/MS Liquid Chromatography/Tandem Mass Spectrometry
LT2 Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule
M Million
MRL Minimum Reporting Level
NAICS North American Industry Classification System
NCOD National Drinking Water Contaminant Occurrence Database
NPDWRs National Primary Drinking Water Regulations
NTNCWS Non-transient Non-community Water System
OGWDW Office of Ground Water and Drinking Water
OMB Office of Management and Budget
PA Partnership Agreement
PEMA Permanganate Applied After Source Water Sample Location
PEMB Permanganate Applied Before Source Water Sample Location
PRA Paperwork Reduction Act
PT Proficiency Testing
PWS Public Water System
QCS Quality Control Sample
QH Quality HAA Sample
RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act
SDWA Safe Drinking Water Act
SDWARS Safe Drinking Water Accession and Review System
SDWIS/Fed Federal Safe Drinking Water Information System
SM Standard Methods
SMP State Monitoring Plan
SOP Standard Operating Procedure
SPE Solid Phase Extraction
SR Source Water
SRF Drinking Water State Revolving Fund
SRMD Standards and Risk Management Division
SUR Surrogate Standard
SVOCs Semivolatile Organic Chemicals
SW Surface Water
TNCWS Transient Non-Community Water System
TOC Total Organic Carbon
UCMR Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule
UMRA Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
USEPA United States Environmental Protection Agency

I. General Information

A. Does this action apply to me?

    Public water systems (PWSs) would be regulated by this proposed, 
fourth Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4). PWSs are 
systems that provide water for human consumption through pipes, or 
other constructed conveyances, to at least 15 service connections or 
that regularly serve an average of at least 25 individuals daily at 
least 60 days out of the year. Under this proposal, all large community 
and non-transient non-community water systems (NTNCWSs) serving more 
than 10,000 people would be required to monitor. A community water 
system (CWS) means a PWS that has at least 15 service connections used 
by year-round residents or regularly serves at least 25 year-round 
residents. A NTNCWS means a PWS that is not a CWS and that regularly 
serves at least 25 of the same people over six months per year. A 
nationally representative sample of CWSs and NTNCWSs serving 10,000 or 
fewer people would also be required to monitor (see ``Statistical 
Design and Sample Selection for the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring 
Regulation'' (USEPA, 2001b) for a description of the statistical 
approach for the nationally representative sample). As is generally the 
case for UCMR monitoring, transient non-community water systems 
(TNCWSs) (i.e., non-community water systems that do not regularly serve 
at least 25 of the same people over six months per year) would not be 
required to monitor under UCMR 4. States, territories and tribes, with 
primary enforcement responsibility (primacy) to administer the 
regulatory program for PWSs under SDWA, can participate in the 
implementation of UCMR 4 through Partnership Agreements (PAs) (see 
discussion of PAs in section II.K). Primacy agencies with PAs can 
choose to be involved in various aspects of the UCMR 4 monitoring for 
PWSs they oversee; however, the PWS remains responsible for compliance. 
Potentially regulated categories and entities are identified in the 
following table.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                     Examples of
           Category             potentially regulated      NAICS \a\
                                       entities
------------------------------------------------------------------------
State, local, & tribal          States, local and                 924110
 governments.                    tribal governments
                                 that analyze water
                                 samples on behalf of
                                 PWSs required to
                                 conduct such
                                 analysis; states,
                                 local and tribal
                                 governments that
                                 directly operate
                                 CWSs and NTNCWSs
                                 required to monitor.
Industry......................  Private operators of              221310
                                 CWSs and NTNCWSs
                                 required to monitor.
Municipalities................  Municipal operators               924110
                                 of CWSs and NTNCWSs
                                 required to monitor.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\a\ NAICS = North American Industry Classification System.

    This table is not intended to be exhaustive, but rather provides a 
guide for readers regarding entities likely to be regulated by this 
action. This table summarizes the types of entities that EPA is aware 
could potentially be regulated by this action. If you are uncertain 
whether your entity is regulated by this action after carefully 
examining the definition of PWS found in Sec. Sec.  141.2 and 141.3, 
and the applicability criteria found in Sec.  141.40(a)(1) and (2) of 
Title 40 in the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR), please consult the 
contacts listed in the preceding FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT 
section.

B. What action is the Agency taking and why?

    EPA is proposing a rule to require PWSs to analyze drinking water 
samples for unregulated contaminants that do not have health based 
standards set under SDWA and to report their results to EPA. This will 
be the fourth national monitoring effort under the UCMR program (see 
section II.D). The monitoring provides data to inform future regulatory 
actions to protect public health.
    The public will benefit from information about whether or not 
unregulated contaminants are present in their drinking water. If 
contaminants are not found, consumer confidence in their drinking water 
will improve. If contaminants are found, illnesses may be avoided when 
subsequent actions, such as regulations, reduce or eliminate those 
contaminants.

C. What is the Agency's authority for taking this action?

    As part of its responsibilities under SDWA, EPA implements section 
1445(a)(2), Monitoring Program for Unregulated Contaminants. This 
section, as amended in 1996, requires that once every five years, 
beginning in August 1999, EPA issue a list of no more than 30 
unregulated contaminants to be monitored by PWSs. SDWA requires that 
EPA enter the monitoring data into the Agency's publically available 
National Contaminant Occurrence Database (NCOD). EPA's UCMR program 
must ensure that systems serving a population larger than 10,000 
people, as well as a nationally representative

[[Page 76900]]

sample of PWSs serving 10,000 or fewer people, are required to monitor. 
EPA must vary the frequency and schedule for monitoring based on the 
number of persons served, the source of supply and the contaminants 
likely to be found. EPA is using this authority as the basis for 
monitoring 29 of the 30 contaminants/groups proposed under this rule.
    Section 1445(a)(1)(A) of SDWA, as amended in 1996, requires that 
every person who is subject to any SDWA requirement establish and 
maintain such records, make such reports, conduct such monitoring and 
provide such information as the Administrator may reasonably require by 
regulation to assist the Administrator in establishing SDWA 
regulations. Pursuant to this provision, EPA can also require the 
monitoring of contaminants already subject to EPA's drinking water 
standards. EPA is using this authority as the basis for monitoring one 
of the chemical groups (Haloacetic Acids 5 (HAA5)) proposed under this 
rule. Sample collection and analysis for HAA5 can be done concurrent 
with the unregulated HAA monitoring described in section II.F 
(resulting in no substantive additional burden) and would allow EPA to 
better understand co-occurrence between regulated and unregulated 
disinfection byproducts.
    Hereinafter, all 30 proposed contaminants/groups are collectively 
referred to as ``contaminants.''

D. What is the estimated cost of this proposed action?

    EPA estimates the total average national cost of this proposed 
action will be $25.3 million per year from 2017-2021. EPA has 
documented the assumptions and data sources used in the preparation of 
this estimate in the Information Collection Request (ICR) (USEPA, 
2015a). EPA proposes using eleven analytical methods (eight EPA-
developed analytical methods, one state-developed methodology and two 
alternate equivalent consensus organization-developed methods) to 
analyze samples for 30 UCMR 4 chemical contaminants. EPA's estimate of 
the analytical cost for the UCMR 4 contaminants and related indicators 
is $2,562 per sample set. EPA calculated these costs by summing the 
laboratory unit cost of each method. Exhibit 1 presents a breakdown of 
EPA estimated annual average national costs. Estimated PWS (i.e., large 
and very large) and EPA costs reflect the analytical cost (i.e., non-
labor) for all UCMR 4 methods. EPA pays for the analytical costs for 
all systems serving a population of 10,000 or fewer people. Laboratory 
analysis and sample shipping account for approximately 80% of the total 
national cost for UCMR 4 implementation. EPA estimated laboratory unit 
costs based on consultations with multiple commercial drinking water 
laboratories and, in the case of new methods, a review of the costs of 
analytical methods similar to those proposed in this action. The cost 
of the laboratory methods includes shipping as part of the cost for the 
analysis.
    EPA expects that states would incur labor costs associated with 
voluntary assistance with UCMR 4 implementation. EPA estimated state 
costs using the relevant assumptions from the State Resource Model that 
was developed by the Association of State Drinking Water Administrators 
(ASDWA) (ASDWA, 2013) to help states forecast resource needs. Model 
estimates were adjusted to account for actual levels of state 
participation under UCMR 3. State participation is voluntary; thus, the 
level of effort is expected to vary among states and would depend on 
their individual agreements with EPA.
    EPA assumes that one-third of the systems would monitor during each 
of the three monitoring years from January 2018 through December 2020. 
The total estimated annual costs (labor and non-labor) would be 
incurred as follows:

           Exhibit 1--Estimated Average Annual Costs of UCMR 4
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                        Avg. annual cost
                      Respondent                        all respondents
                                                        (2017-2021) \ 1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Small Systems (25-10,000), including labor \2\ only              $0.16 m
 (non-labor costs \3\ paid for by EPA)...............
Large Systems (10,001-100,000), including labor and              $15.7 m
 non-labor costs.....................................
Very Large Systems (100,001 and greater), including               $4.3 m
 labor and non-labor costs...........................
States, including labor costs related to                         $0.50 m
 implementation coordination.........................
EPA, including labor for implementation, non-labor                $4.7 m
 for small system testing............................
------------------------------------------------------------------------
    AVERAGE ANNUAL NATIONAL TOTAL....................            $25.3 m
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Totals may not equal the sum of components due to rounding.
\2\ Labor costs pertain to systems, states and EPA. Costs include
  activities such as reading the rule, notifying systems selected to
  participate, sample collection, data review, reporting and record
  keeping.
\3\ Non-labor costs would be incurred primarily by EPA and by very large
  and large PWSs. They include the cost of shipping samples to
  laboratories for testing and the cost of the laboratory analyses.

    Additional details regarding EPA's cost assumptions and estimates 
can be found in the ``DRAFT Information Collection Request for the 
Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4)'' (USEPA, 2015a) ICR 
Number 2192.07, which presents estimated cost and burden for the 2017-
2019 period, consistent with the 3-year time frame for ICRs. Estimates 
of costs over the entire 5-year UCMR 4 sequence of 2017-2021 are 
attached as an appendix to the ICR. Copies of the ICR and its appendix 
may be obtained from the EPA public docket for this proposed rule, 
under Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-2015-0218.

II. Background

A. How has EPA implemented the unregulated contaminant monitoring 
program?

    EPA published the list of contaminants for the first UCMR (UCMR 1) 
in the Federal Register (FR) on September 17, 1999 (64 FR 50556, 
(USEPA, 1999)), the second UCMR (UCMR 2) on January 4, 2007 (72 FR 368, 
(USEPA, 2007)) and the third UCMR (UCMR 3) on May 2, 2012 (77 FR 26072, 
(USEPA, 2012c)). EPA established a three-tiered approach for monitoring 
contaminants under the UCMR program that takes into account the 
availability of analytical methods, the source of water supply and the 
contaminants likely to be found. Assessment Monitoring for ``List 1'' 
contaminants typically relies on analytical methods, techniques or 
technologies that are in common use by drinking water laboratories. 
Screening Survey monitoring for ``List 2''

[[Page 76901]]

contaminants typically relies on newer analytical methods that are not 
as commonly used, such that laboratory capacity to perform List 2 
analyses may be limited. Finally, Pre-Screen Testing for ``List 3'' 
contaminants is often associated with analytical methods that are very 
recently developed and/or are particularly complex. In addition to 
method complexity and laboratory capacity, EPA considers sampling 
frequency and/or the relevant universe of PWSs when deciding which of 
the three tiers is appropriate for a contaminant.
    EPA designed the Assessment Monitoring sampling approach (USEPA, 
2001b) to ensure that sample results would yield a high level of 
confidence and a low margin of error. The design for a nationally 
representative sample of small systems called for the sample to be 
stratified by water source type (ground water (GW) or surface water 
(SW)), service size category and state (where each state is allocated a 
minimum of two systems in its state monitoring plan (SMP)).
    This action proposes 30 contaminants for List 1, Assessment 
Monitoring from 2018-2020, with pre-monitoring activity in 2017 and 
post-monitoring activity in 2021. EPA developed this proposal after 
considering input from an EPA-state workgroup as well as other 
stakeholders.

B. How are the Contaminant Candidate List (CCL), the UCMR program, the 
Regulatory Determination process and the NCOD interrelated?

    Under the 1996 amendments to SDWA, Congress established a stepwise, 
risk-based approach for determining which contaminants would become 
subject to drinking water standards. Under the first step, EPA is 
required to publish, every five years, a list of contaminants that are 
not yet regulated but which are known or anticipated to occur in PWSs; 
this is the Contaminant Candidate List (CCL). Under the second step, 
EPA must require, every five years, monitoring of up to 30 unregulated 
contaminants to determine their occurrence in drinking water systems; 
this is the UCMR program. Under the third step, EPA is required to 
determine, every five years, whether or not at least five contaminants 
from the CCL warrant regulation, based in part on the UCMR occurrence 
information; this is known as a Regulatory Determination where the 
following questions are evaluated:
    (1) Which contaminants may have an adverse effect on human health?
    (2) Which contaminants are known to occur or are likely to occur in 
drinking water with a frequency and at levels of public health concern?
    (3) Does regulation of such contaminants present a meaningful 
opportunity for risk reduction? Finally, SDWA requires EPA to issue 
national primary drinking water regulations (NPDWRs) for contaminants 
the Agency determines should be regulated.
    The CCL process identifies contaminants that may require 
regulation, while the UCMR program helps provide the data necessary for 
the Regulatory Determination process outlined above. The data collected 
through the UCMR program are stored in the NCOD to facilitate analysis 
and review of contaminant occurrence, and support the Administrator's 
determination on whether regulation of a contaminant is in the public 
health interest, as required under SDWA section 1412(b)(1). UCMR 
results can be viewed by the public at: http://www2.epa.gov/dwucmr.

C. What notable changes are being proposed for UCMR 4?

    This proposed action refines the existing UCMR, as reflected in the 
Code of Federal Regulations, to address the contaminants proposed for 
UCMR 4 monitoring and to reflect lessons learned through prior 
experience implementing UCMRs. EPA's proposed approach and rationale 
for changes are described in the following sections. Key aspects of the 
UCMR program that would remain the same, and are outside the scope of 
today's proposal, include direct implementation of the rule by EPA; the 
number and types of systems included in Assessment Monitoring for the 
majority of the proposed contaminants; and EPA funding for the small 
system testing. Proposed changes include the list of UCMR 4 
contaminants, the analytical methods, monitoring time frame, sampling 
locations, the revised data elements outlined in Exhibit 2 and 
conforming and editorial changes, such as those necessary to remove 
requirements solely related to UCMR 3. A track-changes version of the 
rule language comparing UCMR 3 to the proposed changes for UCMR 4 is 
included in the public docket (Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW 2015-0218) for 
this proposed rule (USEPA, 2015h).

                                 Exhibit 2--Notable Changes Proposed for UCMR 4
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                        CFR Rule section
----------------------------------------------------------------  Description of rule change     Corresponding
                Number                     Title/Description                                    preamble section
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec.   141.40(a)(3)..................  Analytes to be monitored  Revises Table 1 to include a               II.D
                                        and related               new list of contaminants
                                        specifications.           and associated analytical
                                                                  methods.
Sec.  Sec.   141.35(a) and 141.40(a).  Applicability...........  Revises the Federal Safe                   II.E
                                                                  Drinking Water Information                II.F
                                                                  System (SDWIS/Fed)
                                                                  applicability date (i.e.,
                                                                  the date used to determine
                                                                  which systems are subject
                                                                  to monitoring) to December
                                                                  31, 2015.
                                                                 Revises the monitoring dates
                                                                  to January 2018 through
                                                                  December 2020.

[[Page 76902]]

 
Sec.   141.40(a)(4)..................  Sampling design           Updates Table 2 to change                  II.F
                                        requirements--Frequency.  the sample collection time
                                                                  frame to March--November,
                                                                  and excludes December--
                                                                  February. Additionally,
                                                                  updates the frequency such
                                                                  that, with the exception of
                                                                  cyanotoxins, monitoring
                                                                  would occur every two
                                                                  months (bi-monthly) for SW
                                                                  or ground water under the
                                                                  direct influence of surface
                                                                  water (GWUDI) systems and
                                                                  every six months for GW
                                                                  systems.
                                                                 Updates Table 2 to include
                                                                  monitoring requirements for
                                                                  cyanotoxins for PWSs with
                                                                  SW and GWUDI sources at a
                                                                  frequency of twice a month
                                                                  for four consecutive months
                                                                  (for a total of eight
                                                                  cyanotoxin sampling events).
Sec.   141.40(a)(4)..................  Sampling design           Specifies revised sampling                 II.F
                                        requirements--Location.   locations for Assessment
                                                                  Monitoring, including HAA5
                                                                  Stage 2 compliance and/or
                                                                  distribution system maximum
                                                                  residence time (DSMRT)
                                                                  locations for the
                                                                  brominated haloacetic acids
                                                                  (HAAs), and source water
                                                                  intake locations for total
                                                                  organic carbon (TOC), total
                                                                  microcystins (i.e. the sum
                                                                  of congeners as measured by
                                                                  ADDA-ELISA), pH and
                                                                  temperature.
Sec.   141.35(e).....................  Reporting requirements--  Updates, revises, adds and               II.G.1
                                        Data elements.            removes data elements to
                                                                  account for the
                                                                  contaminants being
                                                                  proposed, and requires the
                                                                  reporting of quality
                                                                  control data by all
                                                                  laboratories.
Sec.   141.40(a)(4)(ii)(F)...........  Small systems sampling    Removes the requirement for              II.G.2
                                        requirements--Duplicate   small system duplicate
                                        samples.                  quality control samples,
                                                                  although EPA may in the
                                                                  future select a subset of
                                                                  systems to collect
                                                                  duplicate samples if the
                                                                  Agency becomes aware of a
                                                                  need to include this type
                                                                  of quality control.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

D. How did EPA prioritize candidate contaminants and what contaminants 
are proposed for UCMR 4?

    In establishing the proposed list of contaminants for UCMR 4, EPA 
started with a priority set of contaminants from the draft fourth 
Contaminant Candidate List (CCL 4), which includes 100 chemicals or 
chemical groups and 12 microbes (80 FR 6076, February 4, 2015 (USEPA, 
2015b)). The evaluation and selection process that led to the draft CCL 
4 carried forward the final list of CCL 3 contaminants (except for 
those with regulatory determinations), requested and evaluated 
contaminant nominations from the public and evaluated any new data from 
previous negative regulatory determinations for potential inclusion on 
CCL 4 (77 FR 27057, May 8, 2012 (USEPA, 2012b)).
    EPA selected the proposed UCMR 4 contaminants using a stepwise 
prioritization process. The first step included identifying 
contaminants that: (1) Were not monitored under UCMR 2 or UCMR 3; (2) 
are anticipated to have significant occurrence nationally; and (3) are 
expected to have a completed, validated drinking water method in time 
for rule proposal. This resulted in a set of 45 draft CCL 4 
contaminants and another set of related non-CCL analytes with potential 
health effects of concern that can be measured concurrently using the 
analytical methods for the CCL contaminants. Including related non-CCL 
analytes creates a more cost-effective design and reduces the 
likelihood of needing to include them in a subsequent UCMR.
    The next step was to select contaminants associated with one or 
more of the following considerations: an available health assessment to 
facilitate regulatory determinations; high public concern; critical 
health endpoints (e.g., likely or suggestive carcinogen); active use 
(e.g., pesticides); and an occurrence data gap. This step identified 31 
CCL contaminants, and 18 related non-CCL analytes that can be measured 
using the analytical methods for the CCL contaminants.
    During the final step, EPA considered workgroup and stakeholder 
input; looked at cost-effectiveness of the method/contaminant groups; 
considered implementation factors (e.g., laboratory capacity); and 
further evaluated health, occurrence, and persistence/mobility data to 
identify a proposed list of 30 UCMR 4 contaminants.
    Further information on this prioritization process, as well as 
contaminant-specific information (source, use, production, release, 
persistence, mobility, health effects and occurrence), that EPA used to 
select the proposed analyte list, is contained in ``UCMR 4 Candidate 
Contaminants--Information Compendium'' (USEPA, 2015i). Copies of the 
Compendium may be obtained from the EPA public docket for this proposed 
rule, under Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-2015-0218.
    EPA invites comment on the proposed UCMR 4 contaminants and their 
associated analytical methods identified in Exhibit 3, as well as any 
other priority contaminants commenters wish to recommend. In 
particular, the Agency welcomes comments on the following contaminants 
that were considered by the workgroup, but not included in the proposed 
list because they were deemed a lower UCMR 4 priority than the 
contaminants identified in Exhibit 3: Legionella pneumophila and 
Mycobacterium avium (both are part of the draft CCL 4); ammonia 
(considered as an indicator of distribution system nitrification 
potential); and the pesticides vinclozolin, hexazinone and disulfoton 
(additional analytes in EPA Method 525.3). More specific information on 
why these contaminants were not included on the proposed list can be 
found in the Information Compendium (USEPA, 2015i) cited

[[Page 76903]]

above. In your comments, please identify the following: Any new 
contaminant(s) that you think the Agency should include in UCMR 4 
monitoring; any contaminant(s) in Exhibit 3 that you think represent a 
lower priority than your new recommendation(s) or that should otherwise 
be removed from the list; the recommended analytical method(s) for any 
new contaminant(s) that you propose; and other relevant details (e.g., 
reporting level, sampling location and sampling frequency). Comments 
that provide supporting data or rationale are especially helpful to the 
Agency.

                 Exhibit 3--30 Proposed UCMR 4 Analytes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                             List 1 Analytes
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                  One Cyanotoxin Group Using ELISA \1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
total microcystins
------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Seven Cyanotoxins Using EPA Method 544 (SPE LC/MS/MS) \2\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
microcystin-LA                              microcystin-RR
microcystin-LF                              microcystin-YR
microcystin-LR                              Nodularin
microcystin-LY
------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Two Cyanotoxins Using EPA Method 545 (LC/ECI-MS/MS) \3\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
anatoxin-a                                  Cylindrospermopsin
------------------------------------------------------------------------
  Two Metals Using EPA Method 200.8 (ICP-MS) \4\ or Alternate SM \5\ or
                                ASTM \6\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Germanium                                   Manganese
------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Nine Pesticides Using EPA Method 525.3 (SPE GC/MS) \7\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
alpha-hexachlorocyclohexane                 Profenofos
chlorpyrifos                                Tebuconazole
Dimethipin                                  total permethrin (cis- &
                                             trans-)
Ethoprop                                    Tribufos
Oxyfluorfen
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Three Brominated HAA Groups Using EPA Method 552.3 (GC/ECD) or 557 (IC/
                         ECI-MS/MS) \8\ \9\ \10\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HAA5                                        HAA9
HAA6Br
------------------------------------------------------------------------
            Three Alcohols Using EPA Method 541 (GC/MS) \11\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1-butanol                                   2-propen-1-ol
2-methoxyethanol
------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Three Semivolatile Organic Chemicals (SVOCs) Using EPA Method 530 (GC/
                                MS) \12\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
butylated hydroxyanisole                    quinolone
o-toluidine
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ ELISA Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) (Ohio EPA, 2015). EPA
  anticipates having an EPA ELISA method available by the publication of
  the final rule and anticipates that this method will be similar to the
  Ohio EPA methodology. Monitoring includes measuring for pH using one
  of the following methods: EPA Method 150.1 and 150.2 (USEPA, 1983a and
  1983b), ASTM D1293-12 (ASTM, 2012a), SM 4500-H+ B (SM, 2005c), SM 4500-
  H+ B-00 (SM Online, 2000a). Monitoring also includes measuring for
  water temperature using one of the following methods: SM 2550 (SM,
  2005a) or SM 2550-10 (SM Online, 2010).
\2\ EPA Method 544 (Solid Phase Extraction (SPE) Liquid chromatography/
  tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS)) (USEPA, 2015f). This method would
  only be used if analyses by ELISA (for ``total microcystins'') yielded
  results above reporting limits.
\3\ EPA Method 545 (Liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization/tandem
  mass spectrometry (LC/ESI-MS/MS)) (USEPA, 2015g).
\4\ EPA Method 200.8 (Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP-
  MS)) (USEPA, 1994).
\5\ Standard Methods (SM) 3125 (SM, 2005b) or SM 3125-09 (SM Online,
  2009).
\6\ ASTM International (ASTM) D5673-10 (ASTM, 2010).
\7\ EPA Method 525.3 (SPE Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS))
  (USEPA, 2012a).
\8\ EPA Method 552.3 (GC/Electron capture detection (ECD)) (USEPA, 2003)
  and EPA Method 557 (Ion chromatography-electrospray ionization-tandem
  mass spectrometry (IC-ESI-MS/MS)) (USEPA, 2009b). HAA5 includes:
  dibromoacetic acid, dichloroacetic acid, monobromoacetic acid,
  monochloroacetic acid, trichloroacetic acid. HAA6Br includes:
  bromochloroacetic acid, bromodichloroacetic acid, dibromoacetic acid,
  dibromochloroacetic acid, monobromoacetic acid, tribromoacetic acid.
  HAA9 includes: bromochloroacetic acid, bromodichloroacetic acid,
  chlorodibromoacetic acid, dibromoacetic acid, dichloroacetic acid,
  monobromoacetic acid, monochloroacetic acid, tribromoacetic acid,
  trichloroacetic acid.
\9\ Regulated HAAs (HAA5) are included in the proposed monitoring
  program to gain a better understanding of co-occurrence with currently
  unregulated disinfection byproducts.
\10\ Brominated HAA monitoring also includes sampling for indicators TOC
  and bromide using methods approved for compliance monitoring. TOC
  methods include: SM 5310B, SM 5310C, SM 5310D (SM, 2005d, 2005e,
  2005f), or SM 5310B-00, SM 5310C-00, SM 5310D-00 (SM Online, 2000b,
  2000c, 2000d), EPA Method 415.3 (Rev. 1.1 or 1.2) (USEPA, 2005,
  2009a). Bromide methods include: EPA Methods 300.0 (Rev. 2.1), 300.1
  (Rev. 1.0), 317.0 (Rev. 2.0), 326.0 (Rev. 1.0) (USEPA, 1993, 1997,
  2001a, 2002) or ASTM D 6581-12 (ASTM, 2012b).
\11\ EPA Method 541 (GC/MS) (USEPA, 2015e).
\12\ EPA Method 530 (GC/MS) (USEPA, 2015d).


[[Page 76904]]

E. What is the proposed applicability date?

    EPA proposes (in Sec.  141.40(a)) a new applicability date of 
December 31, 2015. That is, the determination of whether a PWS is 
required to monitor under UCMR 4 is based on the type of system (e.g., 
CWS, NTNCWS, etc.) and its retail population served, as indicated by 
the SDWIS/Fed inventory on December 31, 2015. If a PWS believes its 
retail population served in SDWIS/Fed is inaccurate, the system should 
contact its state to verify its population as of the applicability date 
and request a correction if necessary. The 5-year UCMR 4 program would 
take place from January 2017 through December 2021.

F. What are the proposed UCMR 4 sampling design and timeline of 
activities?

    The proposed rule identifies sampling and analysis for List 1 
contaminants within the 2018 to 2020 time frame. Preparations prior to 
2018 are expected to include coordination of laboratory approval, 
selection of representative small systems, development of SMPs and 
establishment of monitoring schedules. EPA anticipates that there is 
enough laboratory capacity to meet the needs of Assessment Monitoring. 
Exhibit 4 illustrates the major activities that we expect will take 
place in preparation for and during the implementation of UCMR 4.

                                Exhibit 4--Proposed Timeline of UCMR 4 Activities
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
               2017                       2018               2019               2020                2021
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
After proposed rule publication:             [larr] Assessment Monitoring [rarr]            Complete reporting
 EPA                                                                                         and analysis of
 laboratory approval program                         List 1 Contaminants                     data.
 begins.
After final rule publication: EPA/    All large systems serving more than 10,000 people;
 state
 primacy authorities (1) develop       800 small systems serving 10,000 or fewer people
 SMPs
 (including the nationally                             for cyanotoxins;
 representa-
 tive sample); and (2) inform          800 small systems serving 10,000 or fewer people
 PWSs/
 establish monitoring plans.                   for the 20 additional chemicals.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To minimize the impact of the rule on small systems (those serving 
10,000 or fewer people), EPA pays for the sample kit preparation, 
sample shipping fees and analysis costs for these systems. In addition, 
no small system would be required to monitor for both cyanotoxins and 
the 20 additional UCMR chemicals. Consistent with prior UCMRs, large 
systems (those serving more than 10,000 people) pay for all costs 
associated with their monitoring. A summary of the estimated number of 
systems subject to monitoring is shown in Exhibit 5.

                             Exhibit 5--Systems To Participate in UCMR 4 Monitoring
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                 National sample assessment monitoring
                                        ------------------------------------------------------  Total number of
 System size (number of people served)                                 20 Additional List 1     systems per size
                                           10 List 1 cyanotoxins            chemicals               category
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Small Systems: \1\
    25-10,000..........................  800 randomly selected SW   800 randomly selected SW,              1,600
                                          or GWUDI systems.          GWUDI and GW systems.
Large Systems: \2\
    10,001 and over....................  All SW or GWUDI systems    All SW, GWUDI and GW                   4,292
                                          (1,987).                   systems (4,292).
                                        ------------------------------------------------------------------------
        Total..........................  2,787....................  5,092....................              5,892
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Total for small systems is additive because these systems would only be selected for one component of UCMR 4
  sampling (10 cyanotoxins or 20 additional chemicals). EPA would pay for all analytical costs associated with
  monitoring at small systems.
\2\ Large system counts are approximate. The number of large systems is not additive. All SW and GWUDI systems
  would monitor for cyanotoxins; those same systems would also monitor for the 20 additional List 1 chemicals,
  as would the large GW systems.

1. Sampling Frequency, Timing
    The number of samples for SW, GWUDI and GW systems would generally 
be consistent with those during prior UCMR cycles, with the exceptions 
noted for the monitoring of cyanotoxins. Water systems would be 
required to collect samples during the monitoring time frame of March 
through November (excluding December, January and February). With the 
exception of cyanotoxin monitoring, sampling would take place every two 
months for SW and GWUDI systems (a total of four sampling events), and 
at 6-month intervals for GW systems (a total of two sampling events). 
For cyanotoxin monitoring, SW and GWUDI systems would collect samples 
twice a month for four consecutive months (total of eight sampling 
events). GW systems would be excluded from cyanotoxin monitoring.
    The Assessment Monitoring sampling time frame would take place 
during the compressed period of March through November to better 
reflect the times of year when contaminants are more likely to occur in 
drinking water. Populations of cyanobacteria generally peak when water 
temperature is highest (Graham et al., 2008). Seasonality of pesticide 
occurrence in surface waters has been well documented, and generally 
relates to the timing of pesticide applications in the watershed, 
rainfall or irrigation patterns and watershed size (USGS, 2014; Ryberg 
and Gilliom, 2015). Based on this information, EPA anticipates that 
sampling in the December through February time period would not 
accurately reflect occurrence for some of the contaminants, 
particularly cyanotoxins and pesticides. Industry and laboratory 
stakeholders have also observed that the traditional UCMR approach has 
the potential to underestimate exposure for some contaminants because 
of seasonal occurrence (Roberson and Eaton, 2014). Therefore, EPA is 
proposing that no sampling take place during those winter months, 
except for resampling purposes. EPA welcomes comments on this approach.
    Large system schedules (year and months of monitoring) would 
initially be determined by EPA in conjunction

[[Page 76905]]

with the states (as described in section II.K) and these PWSs would 
have an opportunity to modify this schedule for planning purposes or 
other reasons (e.g., to conduct monitoring during the months the system 
or the state believes are most vulnerable, spread costs over multiple 
years, a sampling location will be closed during the scheduled month of 
monitoring, etc.). PWSs would not be permitted to reschedule monitoring 
specifically to avoid sample collection during a suspected vulnerable 
period. EPA proposes to schedule and coordinate small system monitoring 
by working closely with partnering states. SMPs provide an opportunity 
for states to review and revise the initial sampling schedules that EPA 
proposes (see discussion of SMPs in section II.K).
2. Sampling Locations
    Sample collection for the UCMR 4 contaminants would take place at 
the entry point to the distribution system (EPTDS), with the following 
exceptions/additions. Sampling for ``total microcystins'' (i.e., the 
sum of congeners as measured by ADDA-ELISA) would also take place at 
the source water intake (concurrent with the collection of cyanotoxin 
samples at the EPTDS) unless the PWS purchases 100 percent of their 
water. ``Consecutive systems'' would only sample for cyanotoxins at 
their EPTDS. Measurements for temperature and pH would take place at 
the source water intake (concurrent with total microcystin sampling). 
HAA sampling would take place in the distribution system. Sampling for 
TOC and bromide would take place at a single source water intake 
(concurrent with HAA sampling in the distribution system). The 
indicator data, along with the disinfectant type and water treatment 
information, would aid in the understanding of brominated HAA and 
cyanotoxin occurrence and treatment efficacy.
    For purposes of total microcystin sampling, temperature and pH 
measurement, and TOC and bromide sampling, EPA defines source water 
under UCMR as untreated water entering the water treatment plant (i.e., 
at a location prior to any treatment). Systems that are subject to the 
Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (LT2) would use their 
source water sampling site(s) that have been identified under that rule 
(71 FR 654, January 5, 2006 (USEPA, 2006a)). Systems subject to the 
Stage 1 Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule (DBPR) would use 
their TOC source water sampling site(s) (63 FR 69390, December 16, 1998 
(USEPA, 1998c)). TOC source water sampling site(s) were set under Stage 
1 DBPR and remain unchanged under Stage 2 DBPR. If a system has two 
different source water sampling locations for LT2 and Stage 1 DBPR, the 
system would be permitted to select the sample point that best 
represents the definition of source water sample location(s) for UCMR.
    EPA proposes that PWSs monitor for HAAs only in the distribution 
system. If the system's treatment plant/water source is subject to 
sampling requirements under Sec.  141.622 (monitoring requirements for 
Stage 2 DBPR), the water systems must collect samples for the HAAs at 
the sampling locations identified under that rule (71 FR 388, January 
4, 2006 (USEPA, 2006b)). If a treatment plant/water source is not 
subject to Stage 2 DBPR monitoring, then the water system must collect 
HAA distribution system samples at a location that represents the 
DSMRT. UCMR 4 HAA samples and HAA5 Stage 2 DBPR compliance monitoring 
samples may be collected by the PWS at the same time. However, in such 
cases, PWSs would be required to arrange for UCMR 4 HAA samples to be 
analyzed by a UCMR 4 approved laboratory using EPA Method 552.3 or 557 
(compliance methods used for analysis of Stage 2 DBPR samples).
3. Phased Sample Analysis for Microcystins
    EPA is proposing a phased sample analysis approach for microcystins 
to reduce analytical costs (i.e., PWSs must collect all required 
samples for each sampling event but not all samples may need to be 
analyzed). Two samples would be collected for ADDA ELISA (one source 
water intake sample and one EPTDS), and one sample would be collected 
for EPA Method 544 at the EPTDS. Initially, source water intake samples 
(collected by ``non-consecutive'' SW and GWUDI PWSs) would be analyzed 
for total microcystins as defined by an ADDA specific ELISA 
methodology. ADDA ELISA is a widely used screening assay that allows 
for the aggregate detection of numerous microcystin congeners; it does 
not allow for measurement of the individual congeners (USEPA, 2015c; 
Fischer et al., 2001; McElhiney and Lawton, 2005; Zeck et al., 2001). 
If the source water intake ELISA result is less than 0.3 micrograms per 
liter ([mu]g/L) (i.e., the reporting limit for total microcystins), 
then the other collected samples (from the EPTDS) would not be analyzed 
for that sample event and only the source water result would be 
reported to EPA. If the ELISA result from the source water intake is 
greater than or equal to 0.3 [mu]g/L, the result would be reported to 
EPA and the sample from the EPTDS would then also be analyzed for total 
microcystins by ELISA. ELISA analysis of the EPTDS sample would be the 
first step for consecutive systems. If the EPTDS ELISA result is less 
than 0.3 [mu]g/L, then no additional analyses would be required for 
that particular sample event and the result would be reported to EPA. 
If the EPTDS ELISA result is greater than or equal to 0.3 [mu]g/L, then 
that result would be reported to EPA and the other microcystin sample 
collected at the EPTDS would be analyzed using EPA Method 544 to 
identify and quantify six particular microcystin congeners and a 
related toxin, nodularin. Method 544 uses liquid chromatography with 
tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) to quantify and speciate 
microcystin congeners at low concentrations. Using Method 544 to 
analyze EPTDS samples that tested positive for microcystins by ELISA is 
expected to help EPA and the states to establish the degree to which 
particular congener occurrence compares with total microcystin 
occurrence as measured by ADDA ELISA (USEPA, 2015c).
    This phased sample analysis approach for microcystins has the 
potential to achieve significant cost savings. A similar approach is 
not practical for cylindrospermopsin and anatoxin-a samples. Therefore, 
EPA proposes that cylindrospermopsin and anatoxin-a sampling be 
conducted simultaneously with the microcystins, twice a month for four 
consecutive months only at the EPTDS, and that the samples be analyzed 
using EPA Method 545.
4. Representative Sampling
    As during past UCMRs and as described in Sec.  141.35(c)(3), the 
proposed rule would allow large GW systems that have multiple EPTDSs, 
with prior approval, to sample at representative sampling locations 
rather than at each EPTDS. Representative sampling plans approved under 
prior UCMRs will be recognized as valid for UCMR 4 and these systems 
must submit a copy of documentation from their state or EPA that 
approves their alternative sampling plan. Any new GW representative 
monitoring plans must be submitted to be reviewed by the state or EPA 
within 120 days from publication of the final rule. Once approved, 
these representative EPTDS locations, along with previously approved 
EPTDS locations from prior UCMRs, must be loaded into the Safe Drinking 
Water

[[Page 76906]]

Accession and Review System (SDWARS) by December 31, 2017.
5. Summary
    With the exception of the increased sample frequency, phased sample 
analysis for microcystins, revised sampling locations and the 
compressed monitoring schedule, the approach to UCMR 4 Assessment 
Monitoring remains consistent with that established for UCMR 3.
    EPA invites comments regarding the cyanotoxin monitoring approach 
and the usefulness of collecting temperature and pH data (concurrently 
with the ELISA sample) at the source water intake, as well as 
designating source water type (e.g., lakes/reservoirs or flowing 
streams), as potential indicators of cyanotoxin occurrence. EPA also 
invites comments on the appropriateness of other potential cyanotoxin 
indicators, recognizing that the cost of any additional indicator 
monitoring would need to be weighed with consideration given to the 
likelihood of any other parameters serving as effective indicators.
    Finally, EPA recognizes the trade-off between PWS burden and 
occurrence-data representativeness, and has attempted to strike a 
reasonable balance in selecting the affected PWSs and establishing the 
monitoring frequency. The Agency welcomes comment on this particular 
point, including input regarding the appropriateness of collecting 
occurrence data from fewer PWSs. This could include employing the 
Screening Survey approach used in UCMR 3 or an alternative design. EPA 
requests that commenters suggesting alternatives describe how their 
proposed approach would be nationally representative of the frequency 
and level of contaminant occurrence.

G. What are reporting requirements for UCMR 4?

1. Data Elements
    EPA proposes the following changes to the reporting requirements 
listed in Table 1 of Sec.  141.35(e) to account for the UCMR 4 
contaminants being proposed and the associated indicators. 
Additionally, EPA proposes to collect quality control information 
related to sample analysis. This information would further ensure that 
methods are followed as written, and would provide continuous quality 
assurance of data reported. EPA collected this information for small 
systems in previous UCMRs and found that doing so helps ensure that 
laboratories consistently follow the methods.
     Add Public Water System Name. New data element to be 
assigned once by the PWS.
     Add Public Water System Facility Name. New data element to 
be assigned once by the PWS for every facility identification code.
     Add Public Water System Facility Type. New data element to 
be assigned once by the PWS for every facility.
     Update Sampling Point Identification Code. Added ``source 
water'' as an example of applicable sampling locations.
     Add Sampling Point Name. New data element to be assigned 
once by the PWS for every sampling point identification code.
     Update Sample Point Type Code. Add source water (SR) to 
account for brominated HAA indicators and microcystin monitoring at the 
intake to the treatment plant.
     Update Disinfectant Type. Adding the following primary 
disinfectant/oxidation practices: Permanganate applied before SR sample 
location (PEMB) and after (PEMA), hydrogen peroxide applied before SR 
sample location (HPXB) and after (HPXA), and chlorine dioxide applied 
before SR sample location (CLDB) and after (CLDA).
     Add Treatment Information. New data element to capture 
treatment associated with the water being sampled.
     Add Disinfectant Residual Type. New data element to 
capture disinfectant residual type information associated with the 
water being sampled.
     Add Extraction Batch Identification Code. New data element 
to allow evaluation of quality control elements associated with 
extraction of samples in methods where extraction is required.
     Add Extraction Date. New data element identifying the date 
of sample extraction.
     Add Analysis Batch Identification Code. New data element 
to allow evaluation of quality control elements associated with 
analyzing samples.
     Add Analysis Date. New data element identifying the start 
date of sample analysis.
     Update Sample Analysis Type. The following elements are 
proposed as quality assurance measures:
    [cir] Continuing calibration check (CCC), an element that verifies 
the accuracy of method calibration;
    [cir] Internal standard (IS), an element that measures the relative 
response of contaminants;
    [cir] Laboratory fortified blank (LFB), an element that verifies 
method performance in the absence of a sample matrix;
    [cir] Laboratory reagent blank (LRB), an element that verifies the 
absence of interferences in the reagents and equipment;
    [cir] Quality control sample (QCS), an element that verifies the 
accuracy of the calibration standards;
    [cir] Quality HAA (QH), HAA sample collected and submitted for 
quality control; and,
    [cir] Surrogate standard (SUR), an element that assesses method 
performance for each extraction.
     Update Analytical Result--Value. Update to ``Analytical 
Result--Measured Value.'' The measured value is the analytical result 
for the contaminant.
     Add Additional Value. This element is used for quality 
control samples and is the amount of contaminant added to a QCS.
     Update Sample Event Code. Revise sample event codes to 
uniquely identify sampling events with specific codes for cyanotoxin 
and additional chemical monitoring.
2. Duplicate Samples
    Currently, Sec.  141.40(a)(4)(ii)(F), requires EPA to randomly 
select a small percentage of small water systems to collect duplicate 
water samples for quality control purposes. Based on experience from 
previous UCMRs, this requirement did not provide significant useful 
information and EPA proposes to remove the requirement for the 
collection of duplicate samples from UCMR 4.

H. What are Minimum Reporting Levels (MRLs) and how were they 
determined?

    The analyte minimum reporting level (MRL) is a quantitation level 
designed to be an estimate of the reporting level that is achievable, 
with 95% confidence, by a capable analyst/laboratory at least 75% of 
the time, using the prescribed method. Demonstration of the ability to 
reliably make quality measurements at or below the MRL is intended to 
ensure that high quality results are being reported by participating 
laboratories. MRLs are generally established as low as is reasonable 
(and are typically lower than the current health reference levels and 
health advisories), so that the occurrence data reported to EPA will 
support sound decision making, including those cases where new 
information might lead to lower health reference levels. EPA 
established the proposed MRL for each analyte/method by obtaining data 
from several laboratories performing ``lowest concentration minimum 
reporting level'' (LCMRL) studies. For further information on the LCMRL 
and MRL

[[Page 76907]]

process, see ``Technical Basis for the Lowest Concentration Minimum 
Reporting Level (LCMRL) Calculator'' (USEPA, 2010), available on the 
Internet at (http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods). EPA will consider raising MRLs if the Agency 
becomes aware of evidence that a proposed MRL is unattainable or 
impractical.

I. How do laboratories become approved to conduct UCMR 4 analyses?

    The proposed rule would require EPA approval for all laboratories 
conducting analyses for UCMR 4. EPA anticipates following the 
traditional Agency approach to approving UCMR laboratories, which would 
require laboratories seeking approval to: (1) Provide EPA with data 
that demonstrate a successful completion of an initial demonstration of 
capability (IDC) as outlined in each method; (2) verify successful 
performance at or below the MRLs as specified in this action; (3) 
provide information about laboratory operating procedures; and (4) 
successfully participate in an EPA proficiency testing (PT) program for 
the analytes of interest. Audits of laboratories may be conducted by 
EPA prior to and/or following approval. The ``UCMR 4 Laboratory 
Approval Requirements and Information Document'' (USEPA, 2015j) will 
provide guidance on the EPA laboratory approval program and the 
specific method acceptance criteria.
    EPA may supply analytical reference standards for select analytes 
to participating/approved laboratories when reliable standards are not 
readily available through commercial sources.
    The structure of the proposed UCMR 4 laboratory approval program is 
the same as that employed in previous UCMRs, and would provide an 
assessment of the ability of laboratories to perform analyses using the 
methods listed in Sec.  141.40(a)(3), Table 1. The UCMR 4 laboratory 
approval process is designed to assess whether laboratories possess the 
required equipment and can meet laboratory-performance and data-
reporting criteria described in this action. Laboratory participation 
in the UCMR laboratory approval program is voluntary. However, as in 
previous UCMRs and as proposed for UCMR 4, EPA would require PWSs to 
exclusively use laboratories that have been approved under the program. 
EPA expects to post a list of approved UCMR 4 laboratories to: http://www2.epa.gov/dwucmr. Laboratories are encouraged to apply for UCMR 4 
approval as early as possible, as EPA anticipates that large PWSs 
scheduled for monitoring in the first year will be making arrangements 
for sample analyses soon after the final rule is published. The 
anticipated steps and requirements for the laboratory approval process 
are listed in the following paragraphs, steps 1 through 6.
1. Request To Participate
    Laboratories interested in the UCMR 4 laboratory approval program 
would first email EPA at: [email protected] to request 
registration materials. EPA expects to accept such requests beginning 
December 11, 2015. EPA anticipates that the final opportunity for a 
laboratory to complete and submit the necessary registration 
information will be 60 days after final rule publication.
2. Registration
    Laboratory applicants provide registration information that 
includes: laboratory name, mailing address, shipping address, contact 
name, phone number, email address and a list of the UCMR 4 methods for 
which the laboratory is seeking approval. This registration step 
provides EPA with the necessary contact information, and ensures that 
each laboratory receives a customized application package.
3. Application Package
    Laboratories that wish to participate complete and return a 
customized application package that includes the following: IDC data, 
including precision, accuracy and results of MRL studies; information 
regarding analytical equipment and other materials; proof of current 
drinking water laboratory certification (for select compliance 
monitoring methods); and example chromatograms for each method under 
review.
    As a condition of receiving and maintaining approval, the 
laboratory is expected to confirm that it will post UCMR 4 monitoring 
results and quality control data that meet method criteria (on behalf 
of its PWS clients) to EPA's UCMR electronic data reporting system, 
SDWARS.
4. EPA's Review of Application Package
    EPA will review the application packages and, if necessary, request 
follow-up information. Laboratories that successfully complete the 
application process become eligible to participate in the UCMR 4 PT 
program.
5. Proficiency Testing
    A PT sample is a synthetic sample containing a concentration of an 
analyte or mixture of analytes that is known to EPA, but unknown to the 
laboratory. To be approved, a laboratory is expected to meet specific 
acceptance criteria for the analysis of a UCMR 4 PT sample(s) for each 
analyte in each method, for which the laboratory is seeking approval. 
EPA intends to offer up to four opportunities for a laboratory to 
successfully analyze UCMR 4 PT samples. Up to three of these studies 
will be conducted prior to the publication of the final rule, and at 
least one study will be conducted after publication of the final rule. 
This allows laboratories to complete their portion of the laboratory 
approval process prior to publication of the final rule and receive 
their approval immediately following the publication of the final rule. 
A laboratory is expected to pass one of the PT studies for each 
analytical method for which it is requesting approval, and will not be 
required to pass a PT study for a method it already passed in a 
previous UCMR 4 PT study. EPA does not expect to conduct additional PT 
studies after the start of system monitoring; however, laboratory 
audits will likely be ongoing throughout UCMR 4 implementation. Initial 
laboratory approval is expected to be contingent on successful 
completion of a PT study. Continued laboratory approval is contingent 
on successful completion of the audit process and satisfactorily 
meeting all the other stated conditions.
6. Written EPA Approval
    After successfully completing the preceding steps 1 through 5, EPA 
expects to send each laboratory a letter listing the methods for which 
approval is pending (i.e., pending promulgation of the final rule if 
the PT studies have been conducted prior to that time), or for which 
approval is granted (if after promulgation of the final rule). 
Laboratories receiving pending approval are expected to be granted 
approval without further action following promulgation of the final 
rule if no changes have been made to the rule that impact the 
laboratory approval program. EPA expects to contact the laboratory if 
changes are made between the proposed and final rules that warrant 
additional action by the laboratory.

J. What documents are being incorporated by reference?

    The following methods are being incorporated by reference into this 
section for UCMR 4 monitoring. All approved material except for the 
Standard Method Online, is available for inspection electronically at 
http://www.regulations.gov (Docket ID No. OW-2015-0218), or from the 
sources listed for each method. EPA has worked to make these methods 
and documents

[[Page 76908]]

reasonably available to interested parties. The versions of the EPA and 
non-EPA methods that may be used to support monitoring under this rule 
are as follows:
1. Methods From the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
    The following methods are from the U.S. Environmental Protection 
Agency, Water Docket, EPA/DC, EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution 
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20004.
    (i) EPA Method 150.1 ``pH Electrometric, in Methods for Chemical 
Analysis of Water and Wastes,'' 1983, EPA/600/4-79/020. Available on 
the Internet at http://www.nemi.gov. This is an EPA method for 
measuring pH in water samples using a meter with a glass electrode and 
reference electrode or a combination electrode. The proposal includes 
measurement of pH as a potential indicator for cyanotoxins.
    (ii) EPA Method 150.2 ``pH, Continuous Monitoring (Electrometric), 
in Methods for Chemical Analysis of Water and Wastes,'' 1983, EPA/600/
4-79/020. Available on the Internet at http://www.nemi.gov. This is an 
EPA method for measuring pH of in-line water samples using a continuous 
flow meter with a glass electrode and reference electrode or a 
combination electrode.
    (iii) EPA Method 200.8 ``Determination of Trace Elements in Waters 
and Wastes by Inductively Coupled Plasma--Mass Spectrometry,'' Revision 
5.4, 1994. Available on the Internet at https://www.nemi.gov. This is 
an EPA method for the analysis of elements in water by ICP-MS and is 
proposed to measure germanium and manganese.
    (iv) EPA Method 300.0 ``Determination of Inorganic Anions by Ion 
Chromatography Samples,'' Revision 2.1, 1993. Available on the Internet 
at http://www.nemi.gov. This is an EPA method for the analysis of 
inorganic anions in water samples using ion chromatography (IC) with 
conductivity detection. The proposal includes measurement of bromide as 
a potential indicator for HAAs.
    (v) EPA Method 300.1 ``Determination of Inorganic Anions in 
Drinking Water by Ion Chromatography,'' Revision 1.0, 1997. Available 
on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods. This is an EPA method for the 
analysis of inorganic anions in water samples using IC with 
conductivity detection.
    (vi) EPA Method 317.0 ``Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide 
Disinfection By-Products in Drinking Water Using Ion Chromatography 
with the Addition of a Postcolumn Reagent for Trace Bromate Analysis,'' 
Revision 2.0, 2001, EPA 815-B-01-001. Available on the Internet at 
http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods. This is an EPA method for the analysis of inorganic 
anions in water samples using IC with conductivity detection.
    (vii) EPA Method 326.0 ``Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide 
Disinfection By-Products in Drinking Water Using Ion Chromatography 
Incorporating the Addition of a Suppressor Acidified Postcolumn Reagent 
for Trace Bromate Analysis,'' Revision 1.0, 2002, EPA 815-R-03-007. 
Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods. This is an EPA method for 
the analysis of inorganic anions in water samples using IC with 
conductivity detection.
    (viii) EPA Method 415.3 ``Determination of Total Organic Carbon and 
Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm in Source Water and Drinking Water,'' 
Revision 1.1, 2005, EPA/600/R-05/055. Available on the Internet at 
http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods. 
This is an EPA method for the analysis of TOC in water samples using a 
conductivity detector or a nondispersive infrared detector.
    (ix) EPA Method 415.3 ``Determination of Total Organic Carbon and 
Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm in Source Water and Drinking Water,'' 
Revision 1.2, 2009, EPA/600/R-09/122.Available on the Internet at 
http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods. 
This is an EPA method for the analysis of TOC in water samples using a 
conductivity detector or a nondispersive infrared detector.
    (x) EPA Method 525.3 ``Determination of Semivolatile Organic 
Chemicals in Drinking Water by Solid Phase Extraction and Capillary 
Column Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS),'' Version 1.0, 
February 2012, EPA/600/R-12/010. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods. This 
is an EPA method for the analysis of semivolatile organic chemicals in 
drinking water using SPE and GC/MS and is proposed to measure nine 
pesticides (alpha-hexachlorocyclohexane, chlorpyrifos, dimethipin, 
ethoprop, oxyfluorfen, profenofos, tebuconazole, total cis- and trans- 
permethrin, and tribufos).
    (xi) EPA Method 530 ``Determination of Select Semivolatile Organic 
Chemicals in Drinking Water by Solid Phase Extraction and Gas 
Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS),'' Version 1.0, January 2015, 
EPA/600/R-14/442. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods. This is an EPA 
method for the analysis of semivolatile organic chemicals in drinking 
water using SPE and GC/MS and is proposed to measure butylated 
hydroxyanisole, o-toluidine, and quinoline.
    (xii) EPA Method 541 ``Determination of 1-Butanol, 1,4-Dioxane, 2-
Methoxyethanol and 2-Propen-1-ol in Drinking Water by Solid Phase 
Extraction and Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry,'' November 2015, 
EPA 815-R-15-011. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods. This is 
an EPA method for the analysis of selected alcohols and 1,4-dioxane in 
drinking water using SPE and GC/MS and is proposed to measure 1-
butanol, 2-methoxyethanol and 2-propen-1-ol.
    (xiii) EPA Method 544 ``Determination of Microcystins and Nodularin 
in Drinking Water by Solid Phase Extraction and Liquid Chromatography/
Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC/MS/MS),'' Version 1.0, February 2015, EPA/
600/R-14/474. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods. This is an EPA method for 
the analysis of selected cyanotoxins in drinking water using SPE and 
LC-MS/MS with electrospray ionization (ESI) and is proposed to measure 
six microcystins (microcystin-LA, microcystin-LF, microcystin-LR, 
microcystin-LY, microcystin-RR, and microcystin-YR) and nodularin.
    (xiv) EPA Method 545 ``Determination of Cylindrospermopsin and 
Anatoxin-a in Drinking Water by Liquid Chromatography Electrospray 
Ionization Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC/ESI-MS/MS),'' April 2015, EPA 
815-R-15-009. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods. This is 
an EPA method for the analysis of selected cyanotoxins in drinking 
water using LC-MS/MS with electrospray ionization (ESI) and is proposed 
to measure cylindrospermopsin and anatoxin-a.
    (xv) EPA Method 552.3 ``Determination of Haloacetic Acids and 
Dalapon in Drinking Water by Liquid-Liquid Microextraction, 
Derivatization,

[[Page 76909]]

and Gas Chromatography with Electron Capture Detection,'' Revision 1.0, 
July 2003, EPA 815-B-03-002. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods. This is an EPA method for the analysis of haloacetic acids and 
dalapon in drinking water using liquid-liquid microextraction, 
derivatization, and GC with electron capture detection (ECD) and is 
proposed to measure three HAA groups (HAA5, HAA6Br and HAA9).
    (xvi) EPA Method 557 ``Determination of Haloacetic Acids, Bromate, 
and Dalapon in Drinking Water by Ion Chromatography Electrospray 
Ionization Tandem Mass Spectrometry (IC-ESI-MS/MS),'' Version 1.0, 
September 2009, EPA 815-B-09-012. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods. This is an EPA method for the analysis of haloacetic acids, 
bromate, and dalapon in drinking water using IC-MS/MS with electrospray 
ionization (ESI) and is proposed to measure three HAA groups (HAA5, 
HAA6Br and HAA9).
2. Methods From ``ASTM International''
    The following methods are from ``ASTM International'', 100 Barr 
Harbor Drive, West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959.
    (i) ASTM D1293-12 ``Standard Test Methods for pH of Water.'' 
Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.astm.org/Standards/D1293.htm. This is an ASTM method for measuring pH in water 
samples using a meter and associated electrodes.
    (ii) ASTM D5673-10 ``Standard Test Method for Elements in Water by 
Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry,'' approved August 1, 
2010. Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.astm.org/Standards/D5673.htm. This is an ASTM method for the analysis of 
elements in water by ICP-MS and is proposed to measure germanium and 
manganese.
    (iii) ASTM D6581-12 ``Standard Test Methods for Bromate, Bromide, 
Chlorate, and Chlorite in Drinking Water by Suppressed Ion 
Chromatography.'' Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.astm.org/Standards/D6581.htm. This is an ASTM method for the 
analysis of inorganic anions in water samples using IC with 
conductivity detection. The proposal includes measurement of bromide as 
a potential indicator for HAAs.
3. Methods From ``Standard Methods for the Examination of Water & 
Wastewater''
    The following methods are from ``Standard Methods for the 
Examination of Water & Wastewater'', 21st edition (2005), American 
Public Health Association, 800 I Street NW., Washington, DC 20001-3710.
    (i) SM 2550 ``Temperature.'' This is a Standard Method for 
temperature measurements using a thermometer (mercury). The proposal 
includes measurement of temperature as a potential indicator for 
cyanotoxins.
    (ii) SM 3125 ``Metals by Inductively Coupled Plasma/Mass 
Spectrometry.'' This is a Standard Method for the analysis of metals 
and metalloids in water by ICP-MS and is proposed for the analysis of 
germanium and manganese.
    (iii) SM 4500-H+ B ``pH Value in Water by Potentiometry Using a 
Standard Hydrogen Electrode.'' This is a Standard Method for measuring 
pH of water samples using a meter, standard hydrogen electrode, and 
reference electrode.
    (iv) SM 5310B ``The Determination of Total Organic Carbon by High-
Temperature Combustion Method.'' This is a Standard Method for the 
analysis of TOC in water samples using a a conductivity detector or a 
nondispersive infrared detector.
    (v) SM 5310C ``Total organic carbon by Persulfate-UV or Heated-
Persulfate Oxidation Method.'' This is a Standard Method for the 
analysis of TOC in water samples using conductivity detector or a 
nondispersive infrared detector.
    (vi) SM 5310D ``Total organic carbon by Wet-Oxidation Method.'' 
This is a Standard Method for the analysis of TOC in water samples 
using a conductivity detector or a nondispersive infrared detector.
4. Methods From ``Standard Methods Online''
    The following methods are from ``Standard Methods Online,'' 
available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.standardmethods.org.
    (i) SM 2550-10 ``Temperature.'' This is a Standard Method for 
temperature measurements using a thermometer (fluid filled or 
electronic).
    (ii) SM 3125-09 ``Metals by Inductively Coupled Plasma/Mass 
Spectrometry (Editorial revisions, 2011).'' This is a Standard Method 
for the analysis of metals and metalloids in water by ICP-MS and is 
proposed to measure germanium and manganese.
    (iii) SM 4500-H+ B-00 ``pH Value in Water by Potentiometry Using a 
Standard Hydrogen Electrode.'' This is a Standard Method for measuring 
pH in water samples using a meter, standard hydrogen electrode, and 
reference electrode.
    (iv) SM 5310B-00 ``The Determination of Total Organic Carbon by 
High-Temperature Combustion Method.'' This is a Standard Method for the 
analysis of TOC in water samples using a conductivity detector or a 
nondispersive infrared detector.
    (v) SM 5310C-00 ``Total organic carbon by Persulfate-UV or Heated-
Persulfate Oxidation Method.'' This is a Standard Method for the 
analysis of TOC in water samples using a conductivity detector or a 
nondispersive infrared detector.
    (vi) SM 5310D-00 ``Total organic carbon by Wet-Oxidation Method.'' 
This is a Standard Method for the analysis of TOC in water samples 
using a conductivity detector or a nondispersive infrared detector.
5. Method From ``Ohio EPA''
    The following methodology is from Ohio EPA, Columbus, OH.
    (i) ELISA SOP ``Ohio EPA Total (Extracellular and Intracellular) 
Microcystins--ADDA by ELISA Analytical Methodology,'' Version 2.0. 
January 2015, available on the Internet at http://www.epa.ohio.gov/Portals/28/documents/habs/HAB_Analytical_Methodology.pdf. This is an 
Ohio EPA method for the analysis of cyanotoxins (microcystins and 
nodularin) in drinking water using an ELISA technique. The proposal 
includes measurement of ``total microcystins'' using this technique.

K. What is the states' role in the UCMR program?

    UCMR is a direct implementation rule (i.e., EPA has primary 
responsibility for its implementation) and state participation is 
voluntary. Under previous UCMRs, specific activities that individual 
states, tribes and territories agreed to carry out or assist with were 
identified and established exclusively through Partnership Agreements 
(PAs). Through PAs, states, tribes and territories can help EPA 
implement the UCMR program and help ensure that the UCMR data are of 
the highest quality possible to best support Agency decision making. 
Under UCMR 4, EPA expects to continue to use the PA process to 
determine and document the following: The process for review and 
revision of the SMPs; replacing and updating system information; review 
and approval of proposed ground water representative monitoring plans; 
notification and instructions for

[[Page 76910]]

systems; and compliance assistance. EPA recognizes that states/primacy 
agencies often have the best information about PWSs in their state and 
encourages states to partner.
    SMPs include tabular listings of the systems that EPA selected and 
the proposed schedule for their monitoring. Initial SMPs also typically 
include instructions to states for revising and/or correcting system 
information in the SMPs, including modifying the sampling schedules for 
small systems. EPA expects to incorporate revisions from states, 
resolve any outstanding questions and return the final SMPs to each 
state.

L. What stakeholder meetings have been held in preparation for UCMR 4?

    EPA incorporates stakeholder involvement into each UCMR cycle. 
Specific to the development of UCMR 4, EPA held two public stakeholder 
meetings and is announcing a third in this proposal (see sections II.L 
and II.M). EPA held a meeting focused on drinking water methods for CCL 
contaminants on May 15, 2013, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Participants 
included representatives of state agencies, laboratories, PWSs, 
environmental organizations and drinking water associations. Meeting 
topics included an overview of the regulatory process (CCL, UCMR and 
Regulatory Determination) and drinking water methods under development, 
primarily for CCL contaminants (see USEPA, 2013 for presentation 
materials). EPA held a second stakeholder meeting on June 25, 2014, in 
Washington, DC. Attendees representing state agencies, tribes, 
laboratories, PWSs, environmental organizations and drinking water 
associations participated in the meeting via webinar and in person. 
Meeting topics included a status update on UCMR 3; UCMR 4 potential 
sampling design changes relative to UCMR 3; UCMR 4 candidate analytes 
and rationale; and the laboratory approval process (see USEPA, 2014 for 
meeting materials).

M. How do I participate in the upcoming stakeholder meeting?

    EPA will hold the third public stakeholder meeting (via webinar) on 
January 13, 2016. Topics will include the proposed UCMR 4 monitoring 
requirements, analyte selection and rationale, analytical methods, the 
laboratory approval process and ground water representative monitoring 
plans.
1. Webinar Participation
    Those who wish to participate in the public webinar must register 
in advance no later than 5:00 p.m., eastern time on January 10, 2016, 
https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/7326881974233959170. To 
ensure adequate time for public statements, individuals or 
organizations interested in making a statement should identify their 
interest when they register. We ask that only one person present on 
behalf of a group or organization, and that the presentation be limited 
to ten minutes. Any additional statements from attendees will be taken 
during the webinar if time permits; alternatively, official comments 
can be submitted to the docket. The number of webinar connections 
available for the meeting is limited and will be available on a first-
come, first-served basis. Further details about registration and 
participation in the webinar can be found on EPA's Unregulated 
Contaminant Monitoring Program Meetings and Materials Web page at 
http://www2.epa.gov/dwucmr/unregulated-contaminant-monitoring-rule-ucmr-meetings-and-materials.
2. Webinar Materials
    Meeting materials are expected to be sent by email to all 
registered attendees prior to the public webinar. EPA will post the 
materials on the Agency's Web site for persons who are unable to attend 
the webinar. Please note, these materials could be posted after the 
webinar.

N. How did EPA consider Children's Environmental Health?

    Executive Order 13045 does not apply to UCMR 4, however, EPA's 
Policy on Evaluating Health Risks to Children is applicable (See III.G. 
Executive Order 13045). By monitoring for unregulated contaminants that 
may pose health risks via drinking water, UCMR furthers the protection 
of public health for all citizens, including children. EPA considered 
children's health risks during the proposed rule development process 
for UCMR 4, including the decision-making process for prioritizing 
candidate contaminants, and included a representative from EPA's Office 
of Children's Health Protection as a participant on the UCMR 4 
workgroup.
    The objective of UCMR 4 is to collect nationally representative 
drinking water data on a set of unregulated contaminants. Wherever 
feasible, EPA collects occurrence data for contaminants at levels below 
current ``reference concentrations'' (e.g., health advisories and 
health reference levels). By setting reporting levels as low as we 
reasonably can, the Agency positions itself to better address updated 
risk information in the future, including that associated with unique 
risks to children. EPA requests comments regarding any further steps 
that may be taken to evaluate and address health risks to children 
within the scope of UCMR 4.

O. How did EPA address Environmental Justice?

    EPA did not identify any disproportionately high or adverse human 
health or environmental effects on minority, low-income or indigenous 
populations in the process of developing the proposed rule for UCMR 4 
(See III.J. Executive Order 12898). By seeking to identify unregulated 
contaminants that may pose health risks via drinking water from all 
PWSs, UCMR furthers the protection of public health for all citizens. 
EPA recognizes that unregulated contaminants in drinking water are of 
interest to all populations and structured the rulemaking process and 
implementation of the proposed UCMR 4 rule to allow for meaningful 
involvement and transparency. EPA organized public meetings/webinars to 
share information regarding the development of UCMR 4; coordinated with 
tribal governments; and convened a workgroup with representatives from 
the EPA Regions, EPA Program Offices, EPA's Office of Research and 
Development and several states.
    EPA proposes to continue to collect U.S. Postal Service Zip Codes 
for each PWS's service area, as collected under UCMR 3, to support an 
assessment of whether or not minority, low-income and/or indigenous-
population communities are uniquely impacted by particular drinking 
water contaminants. EPA solicits comment on additional actions the 
Agency could take to further address environmental justice within the 
UCMR program. EPA welcomes, for example, comments regarding sampling 
and/or modeling approaches, and the feasibility and utility of applying 
these approaches to determine disproportionate impacts.

III. 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 and was 
therefore not submitted to OMB.

B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)

    The information collection activities in this proposed rule have 
been submitted for approval to OMB under the PRA. The ICR document that 
the EPA prepared has been assigned EPA ICR number 2192.07. You can find 
a

[[Page 76911]]

copy of the ICR in the docket for this rule, and it is briefly 
summarized here.
    The information that EPA proposes to collect under this rule 
fulfills the statutory requirements of section 1445(a)(2) of SDWA, as 
amended in 1996. The data will describe the source of the water, 
location and test results for samples taken from PWSs. The information 
collected will support Agency decisions as to whether or not to 
regulate particular contaminants under SDWA. Reporting is mandatory. 
The data are not subject to confidentiality protection.
    The annual burden and cost estimates described in this section are 
based on the implementation assumptions described in section II.F. 
Respondents to UCMR 4 include 1,600 small PWSs (800 for cyanotoxin 
monitoring and a different set of 800 for monitoring the additional 20 
chemicals), the ~4,292 large PWSs and the 56 states and primacy 
agencies (~5,948 total respondents). The frequency of response varies 
across respondents and years. System costs (particularly laboratory 
analytical costs) vary depending on the number of sampling locations. 
For cost estimates, EPA assumed that systems would conduct sampling 
evenly across March 2018 through November 2020, excluding December, 
January or February of each year, except for resampling purposes (i.e., 
one-third of the systems in each year of monitoring). Because the 
applicable ICR period is 2017-2019, one year of monitoring activity 
(i.e., 2020) is not captured in the ICR estimates; this will be 
addressed in a subsequent ICR renewal for UCMR 4.
    Small PWSs that are selected for UCMR 4 monitoring would sample an 
average of 6.7 times per PWS (i.e., number of responses per PWS) across 
the 3-year ICR period. The average burden per response for small PWSs 
is estimated to be 2.8 hours. Large PWSs (those serving 10,001 to 
100,000 people) and very large PWSs (those serving more than 100,000 
people) would sample and report an average of 11.4 and 14.1 times per 
PWS, respectively, across the 3-year ICR period. The average burden per 
response for large and very large PWSs is estimated at 6.1 and 9.9 
hours, respectively. States are assumed to have an annual average 
burden of 366.5 hours related to coordination with EPA and PWSs. In 
aggregate, during the ICR period, the average response (e.g., responses 
from PWSs and states) is associated with a burden of 6.9 hours, with a 
labor plus non-labor cost of $1,705 per response.
    The annual average per-respondent burden hours and costs for the 
ICR period are: Small PWSs--6.2 hours, or $171, for labor; large PWSs--
23.3 hours, or $682, for labor, and $6,047 for analytical costs; very 
large PWSs--46.5 hours, or $1,248, for labor, and $16,298 for 
analytical costs; and states--244.3 hours, or $11,598, for labor. 
Annual average burden and cost per respondent (including both systems 
and states) is estimated to be 23.4 hours, with a labor plus non-labor 
cost of $3,470 per respondent. Burden is defined at 5 CFR 1320.3(b).
    An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required 
to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a 
currently valid OMB control number. The OMB control numbers for EPA's 
rules in 40 CFR are listed in 40 CFR part 9.
    To comment on the Agency's need for this information, accuracy of 
the burden estimates or to provide suggested methods for minimizing 
respondent burden, reference the public docket for this rule, which 
includes the ICR. Submit any comments related to the ICR to EPA and 
OMB. See the ADDRESSES section at the beginning of this notice for 
where to submit comments to EPA and OMB. OMB is required to make a 
decision concerning the ICR between 30 and 60 days after December 11, 
2015. Comments should be sent to OMB by January 11, 2016 for the 
comment to be appropriately considered. The final rule will contain 
responses to any OMB or public comments on the information collection 
requirements contained in this proposal.

C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)

    For purposes of assessing the impacts of this proposed rule on 
small entities, EPA considered small entities to be PWSs serving 10,000 
or fewer people, because this is the system size specified in SDWA as 
requiring special consideration with respect to small system 
flexibility. As required by the RFA, EPA proposed using this 
alternative definition in the FR, (63 FR 7606, February 13, 1998 
(USEPA, 1998b)), requested public comment, consulted with the Small 
Business Administration and finalized the alternative definition in the 
Consumer Confidence Reports rulemaking, (63 FR 44512, August 19, 1998 
(USEPA, 1998a)). As stated in that Final Rule, the alternative 
definition would be applied to future drinking water rules, including 
this rule.
    The evaluation of the overall impact on small systems, summarized 
in the preceding discussion, is further described as follows. EPA 
analyzed the impacts for privately-owned and publicly-owned water 
systems separately, due to the different economic characteristics of 
these ownership types, such as different rate structures and profit 
goals. However, for both publicly- and privately-owned systems, EPA 
used the ``revenue test,'' which compares annual system costs 
attributed to the rule to the system's annual revenues. EPA used median 
revenue data from the 2006 CWS Survey for public and private water 
systems. The revenue figures were updated to 2014 dollars, and to 
account for 3 percent inflation. EPA assumes that the distribution of 
the sample of participating small systems will reflect the proportions 
of publicly- and privately-owned systems in the national inventory. The 
estimated distribution of the representative sample, categorized by 
ownership type, source water and system size, is presented in Exhibit 
6.

               Exhibit 6--Number of Publicly- and Privately-Owned Small Systems Subject to UCMR 4
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
              System size (number of people served)                 Publicly-owned    Privately-owned  Total \1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                  Ground Water
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
500 and under....................................................                21                64         85
501 to 3,300.....................................................               161                62        223
3,301 to 10,000..................................................               179                41        220
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------
    Subtotal GW..................................................               361               167        528
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            Surface Water (and GWUDI)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
500 and under....................................................                18                21         39

[[Page 76912]]

 
501 to 3,300.....................................................               241                86        327
3,301 to 10,000..................................................               548               158        706
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------
    Subtotal SW..................................................               807               265      1,072
                                                                  ----------------------------------------------
        Total of Small Water Systems.............................             1,168               432      1,600
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ PWS counts were adjusted to display as whole numbers in each size category.

    The basis for the proposed UCMR 4 RFA certification is as follows: 
For the 1,600 small water systems that would be affected, the average 
annual cost for complying with this rule represents no more than 0.8% 
of system revenues (the highest estimated percentage is for GW systems 
serving 500 or fewer people, at 0.8% of its median revenue). Exhibit 7 
presents the yearly cost to small systems and to EPA for the small 
system sampling program, along with an illustration of system 
participation for each year of UCMR 4.

                                                  Exhibit 7--Implementation of UCMR 4 at Small Systems
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
           Cost description                2017              2018                      2019                      2020               2021      Total \1\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              Costs to EPA for Small System Program (Assessment Monitoring)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                               $0  $5,971,948..............  $5,971,948..............  $5,971,948..............         $0   $17,915,845
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Costs to Small Systems (Assessment Monitoring)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                0  $273,210................  $273,210................  $273,210................          0      $819,631
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Total Costs to EPA and Small Systems for UCMR 4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                0  $6,245,159..............  $6,245,159..............  $6,245,159..............          0   $18,735,476
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         System Monitoring Activity Timeline \2\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assessment Monitoring: Cyanotoxins....  .........  1/3 PWSs Sample.........  1/3 PWSs Sample.........  1/3 PWSs Sample.........  .........           800
Assessment Monitoring: 20 Additional    .........  1/3 PWSs Sample.........  1/3 PWSs Sample.........  1/3 PWSs Sample.........  .........           800
 Chemicals.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Totals may not equal the sum of components due to rounding.
\2\ Total number of systems is 1,600. No small system conducts Assessment Monitoring for both cyanotoxins and the 20 additional chemicals.

    PWS costs are attributed to the labor required for reading about 
UCMR 4 requirements, monitoring, reporting and record keeping. The 
estimated average annual burden across the 5-year UCMR 4 implementation 
period of 2017-2021 is 2.8 hours at $103 per small system. Average 
annual cost, in all cases, is less than 0.8% of system revenues. By 
assuming all costs for laboratory analyses, shipping and quality 
control for small entities, EPA incurs the entirety of the non-labor 
costs associated with UCMR 4 small system monitoring, or 96% of total 
small system testing costs. Exhibit 8 and Exhibit 9 present the 
estimated economic impacts in the form of a revenue test for publicly- 
and privately-owned systems.

                    Exhibit 8--UCMR 4 Relative Cost Analysis for Small Publicly-Owned Systems
                                                   [2017-2021]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     Average         Average
                                                 Annual  number   annual hours     annual cost     Revenue test
     System size (number of people served)         of  systems     per system      per system        \2\ (%)
                                                  impacted \1\     (2017-2021)     (2017-2021)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              Ground Water Systems
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
500 and under..................................               4             1.6             $59             0.16
501 to 3,300...................................              32             1.7              63             0.04
3,301 to 10,000................................              36             1.9              67             0.01
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        Surface Water (and GWUDI) Systems
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
500 and under..................................               4             3.3             118             0.17
501 to 3,300...................................              48             3.3             118             0.04

[[Page 76913]]

 
3,301 to 10,000................................             109             3.4             123             0.01
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ PWS counts were adjusted to display as whole numbers in each size category.
\2\ The Revenue Test was used to evaluate the economic impact of an information collection on small government
  entities (e.g., publicly-owned systems); costs are presented as a percentage of median annual revenue in each
  size category.


                   Exhibit 9--UCMR 4 Relative Cost Analysis for Small Privately-Owned Systems
                                                   [2017-2021]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                     Average         Average
                                                 Annual  number   annual hours     annual cost     Revenue test
     System size (number of people served)         of  systems     per system      per system        \2\ (%)
                                                  impacted \1\     (2017-2021)     (2017-2021)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                              Ground Water Systems
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
500 and under..................................              13             1.6             $59             0.81
501 to 3,300...................................              12             1.7              63             0.05
3,301 to 10,000................................               8             1.9              67             0.01
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                        Surface Water (and GWUDI) Systems
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
500 and under..................................               4             3.3             118             0.29
501 to 3,300...................................              17             3.3             118             0.04
3,301 to 10,000................................              32             3.4             123             0.01
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ PWS counts were adjusted to display as whole numbers in each size category.
\2\ The Revenue Test was used to evaluate the economic impact of an information collection on small government
  entities (e.g., privately-owned systems); costs are presented as a percentage of median annual revenue in each
  size category.

    The Agency has determined that 1,600 small PWSs (for Assessment 
Monitoring), or approximately 4.2% of all small systems, would 
experience an impact of no more than 0.8% of revenues; the remainder of 
small systems would not be impacted.
    Although this proposed rule will not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities, EPA has attempted to 
reduce this impact by assuming all costs for analyses of the samples 
and for shipping the samples from small systems to laboratories 
contracted by EPA to analyze UCMR 4 samples (the cost of shipping is 
now included in the cost of each analytical method). EPA has set aside 
$2.0 million each year from the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund 
(SRF) with its authority to use SRF monies for the purposes of 
implementing this provision of SDWA. Thus, the costs to these small 
systems will be limited to the labor associated with collecting a 
sample and preparing it for shipping.
    I certify that this action will not have a significant economic 
impact on a substantial number of small entities under the RFA. In 
making this determination, the impact of concern is any significant 
adverse economic impact on small entities. Although EPA has concluded 
that this action will have no significant net regulatory burden for 
directly regulated small entities, the Agency continues to be 
interested in the potential impacts of the proposed rule on small 
entities and welcomes comments on issues related to such impacts.

D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA)

    This action does not contain an annual unfunded mandate of $100 
million or more as described in UMRA, 2 U.S.C. 1531-1538, and does not 
significantly or uniquely affect small governments.

E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism

    This action does not have federalism implications. It will not have 
substantial direct effects on the states, on the relationship between 
the national government and the states, or on the distribution of power 
and responsibilities among the various levels of government.
    Consistent with EPA policy to promote communications between EPA 
and state and local governments, EPA specifically solicits comment on 
the proposed rule from state and local officials.

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

    This action will neither impose substantial direct compliance costs 
on federally recognized tribal governments, nor preempt tribal law. As 
described previously, this proposed rule requires monitoring by all 
large PWSs. Information in the SDWIS/Fed water system inventory 
indicates there are approximately 17 large tribal PWSs (ranging in size 
from 10,001 to 40,000 customers). EPA estimates the average annual cost 
to each of these large PWSs, over the 5-year rule period, to be $4,037. 
This cost is based on a labor component (associated with the collection 
of samples), and a non-labor component (associated with shipping and 
laboratory fees), and represents less than 1.2% of average revenue/
sales for large PWSs. UCMR also requires monitoring by a nationally 
representative sample of small PWSs. EPA estimates that less than 2% of 
small tribal systems will be selected as a nationally representative 
sample for Assessment Monitoring. EPA estimates the average annual cost 
to small tribal systems over the 5-year rule period to be $103. Such 
cost is based on the labor associated with collecting a sample and 
preparing it for shipping

[[Page 76914]]

and represents less than 0.8% of average revenue/sales for small PWSs. 
All other small-PWS expenses (associated with shipping and laboratory 
fees) are paid by EPA.
    EPA consulted with tribal officials under the EPA Policy on 
Consultation and Coordination with Indian Tribes early in the process 
of developing this proposed rule to permit them to have meaningful and 
timely input into its development. A summary of that consultation is 
provided in the electronic docket listed in the ADDRESSES section at 
the beginning of this notice. EPA specifically solicits additional 
comment on this proposed rule from tribal officials.

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

    This action is not subject to Executive Order 13045 because it is 
not economically significant as defined in Executive Order 12866, and 
because EPA does not think the environmental health or safety risks 
addressed by this action present a disproportionate risk to children. 
This action's health and risk assessments are addressed in section II.N 
of the preamble.

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

    This action is not subject to Executive Order 13211, because it is 
not a significant regulatory action under Executive Order 12866.

I. National Technology Transfer and Advancement Act and 1 CFR Part 51

    This action involves technical standards. EPA proposes to use 
methods developed by the Agency, three major voluntary consensus method 
organizations and the Ohio EPA to support UCMR 4 monitoring. The 
voluntary consensus method organizations are Standard Methods, 
Association of Analytical Communities International and ASTM 
International. EPA identified acceptable consensus method organization 
standards for the analysis of manganese and germanium. Additionally, 
EPA identified an Ohio EPA method for the analysis of total 
microcystins using ADDA by ELISA. EPA therefore proposes using a 
collection of analytical methods published by these parties for the 
UCMR 4 analytes. In addition, there are several consensus standards 
that are approved for compliance monitoring that will be available for 
use in the analysis of TOC and bromide, and for the measurement of 
temperature and pH. A summary of each method along with how the method 
specifically applies to UCMR 4 can be found in section II.J of the 
preamble.
    All of these standards are reasonably available for public use. The 
Agency methods are free for download on EPA's Web site. The methods in 
the Standard Method 21st edition are consensus standards, available for 
purchase from the publisher, and are commonly used by the drinking 
water community. The methods in the Standard Method Online are 
consensus standards, available for purchase from the publisher's Web 
site, and are commonly used by the drinking water community. The 
methods from ASTM International are consensus standards, are free for 
download from the publisher's Web site, and are commonly used by the 
drinking water community. The Ohio EPA method is free for download on 
their Web site and is increasingly being used by the drinking water 
community.
    EPA welcomes comments on this aspect of the proposed rulemaking; 
the Agency specifically invites the public to identify potentially-
applicable voluntary consensus standards and explain why such standards 
should be used in this rule.

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

    The EPA believes the human health or environmental risk addressed 
by this action will not have potential disproportionately high and 
adverse human health or environmental effects on minority, low-income 
or indigenous populations. The results of this evaluation are contained 
in section II.O of this preamble and an additional supporting document 
has been placed in the docket.

IV. References

ASDWA. 2013. Insufficient Resources for State Drinking Water 
Programs Threaten Public Health: An Analysis of State Drinking Water 
Programs' Resources and Needs. December 2013.
ASTM. 2010. ASTM D5673-10--Standard Test Method for Elements in 
Water by Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry. Approved 
August 1, 2010. Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.astm.org/Standards/D5673.htm.
ASTM. 2012a. ASTM D1293-12--Standard Test Methods for pH of Water. 
Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.astm.org/Standards/D1293.htm.
ASTM. 2012b. ASTM D6581-12--Standard Test Methods for Bromate, 
Bromide, Chlorate, and Chlorite in Drinking Water by Suppressed Ion 
Chromatography. Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.astm.org/Standards/D6581.htm.
Fischer, W.J., Garthwaite, I., Miles, C.O., Ross, K.M., Aggen, J.B., 
Chamberlin, A.R., Towers, N.R., Dietrich, D.R. 2001. Congener-
Independent Immunoassay for Microcystins and Nodularins. 
Environmental Science & Technology, 35 (24), pp 4849-4856. Available 
for purchase on the Internet at http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/es011182f.
Graham, J.L., Loftin, K.A., Ziegler, A.C., and Meyer, M.T. 2008. 
Guidelines for Design and Sampling for Cyanobacterial Toxin and 
Taste-and-Odor Studies in Lakes and Reservoirs: U.S. Geological 
Survey Scientific Investigations Report 2008-5038. Available on the 
Internet at http://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2008/5038/.
McElhiney, J., and Lawton, L.A. 2005. Detection of the 
Cyanobacterial Hepatotoxins Microcystins. Toxicology and Applied 
Pharmacology, 203 (3): 219-230. Available for purchase on the 
Internet at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.taap.2004.06.002.
Ohio EPA. 2015. Ohio EPA Total (Extracellular and Intracellular) 
Microcystins--ADDA by ELISA Analytical Methodology. Version 2.0. 
January 2015. Available on the Internet at http://www.epa.ohio.gov/Portals/28/documents/habs/HAB_Analytical_Methodology.pdf.
Roberson, J.A., and Eaton, A. 2014. Retrospective Analysis of 
Mandated National Occurrence Monitoring and Regulatory Decisions. 
Journal of the American Water Works Association, 106 (3): E116-E128. 
Available on the Internet at http://dx.doi.org/10.5942/jawwa.2014.106.0040.
Ryberg, K.R., and Gilliom, R.J. 2015. Trends in Pesticide 
Concentrations and Use for Major Rivers of the United States. 
Science of the Total Environment, 538: 431-444. Available for 
purchase on the Internet at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2015.06.095.
SM Online. 2000a. SM 4500-H+ B-00--pH Value in Water by 
Potentiometry Using a Standard Hydrogen Electrode. Standard Methods 
Online. Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.standardmethods.org.
SM Online. 2000b. SM 5310B-00--The Determination of Total Organic 
Carbon by High-Temperature Combustion Method. Standard Methods 
Online. Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.standardmethods.org.
SM Online. 2000c. SM 5310C-00--Total organic carbon by Persulfate-UV 
or Heated-Persulfate Oxidation Method. Standard Methods Online. 
Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.standardmethods.org.
SM Online. 2000d. SM 5310D-00--Total organic carbon by Wet-Oxidation 
Method. Standard Methods Online. Available for purchase on the 
Internet at http://www.standardmethods.org.
SM Online. 2009. SM 3125-09--Metals by Inductively Coupled Plasma/
Mass Spectrometry (Editorial revisions, 2011). Standard Methods 
Online. Available for

[[Page 76915]]

purchase on the Internet at http://www.standardmethods.org.
SM Online. 2010. SM 2550-10--Temperature. Standard Methods Online. 
Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.standardmethods.org.
SM. 2005a. SM 2550--Temperature. Standard Methods for the 
Examination of Water & Wastewater, 21st edition. American Public 
Health Association, 800 I Street NW., Washington, DC 20001-3710.
SM. 2005b. SM 3125--Metals by Inductively Coupled Plasma/Mass 
Spectrometry. Standard Methods for the Examination of Water & 
Wastewater, 21st edition. American Public Health Association, 800 I 
Street NW., Washington, DC 20001-3710.
SM. 2005c. SM 4500-H+ B--pH Value in Water by Potentiometry Using a 
Standard Hydrogen Electrode. Standard Methods for the Examination of 
Water & Wastewater, 21st edition. American Public Health 
Association, 800 I Street NW., Washington, DC 20001-3710.
SM. 2005d. SM 5310B--The Determination of Total Organic Carbon by 
High-Temperature Combustion Method. Standard Methods for the 
Examination of Water & Wastewater, 21st edition. American Public 
Health Association, 800 I Street NW., Washington, DC 20001-3710.
SM. 2005e. SM 5310C-00--Total Organic Carbon by Persulfate-UV or 
Heated-Persulfate Oxidation Method. Standard Methods for the 
Examination of Water & Wastewater, 21st edition. American Public 
Health Association, 800 I Street NW., Washington, DC 20001-3710.
SM. 2005f. SM 5310D--Total Organic Carbon by Wet-Oxidation Method. 
Standard Methods for the Examination of Water & Wastewater, 21st 
edition. American Public Health Association, 800 I Street NW., 
Washington, DC 20001-3710.
USEPA. 1983a. EPA Method 150.1--pH Electrometric, in Methods for 
Chemical Analysis of Water and Wastes. EPA/600/4-79/020. Available 
on the Internet at http://www.nemi.gov.
USEPA. 1983b. EPA Method 150.2--pH, Continuous Monitoring 
(Electrometric), in Methods for Chemical Analysis of Water and 
Wastes. EPA/600/4-79/020. Available on the Internet at http://www.nemi.gov.
USEPA. 1993. EPA Method 300.0--Determination of Inorganic Anions by 
Ion Chromatography Samples. Revision 2.1. Available on the Internet 
at http://www.nemi.gov.
USEPA. 1994. EPA Method 200.8--Determination of Trace Elements in 
Waters and Wastes by Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry. 
Revision 5.4. Available on the Internet at https://www.nemi.gov/.
USEPA. 1997. EPA Method 300.1--Determination of Inorganic Anions in 
Drinking Water by Ion Chromatography. Revision 1.0. 1997. Available 
on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
USEPA. 1998a. National Primary Drinking Water Regulation: Consumer 
Confidence Reports; Final Rule. Federal Register. Vol. 63, No. 160, 
p. 44512, August 19, 1998.
USEPA. 1998b. National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: Consumer 
Confidence Reports; Proposed Rule. Federal Register. Vol. 63, No. 
30, p. 7606, February 13, 1998.
USEPA. 1998c. National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: 
Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts; Final Rule. Federal 
Register. Vol. 63, No. 241, p. 69390, December 16, 1998.
USEPA. 1999. Revisions to the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring 
Regulation for Public Water Systems; Final Rule. Federal Register. 
Vol. 64, No. 180, p. 50556, September 17, 1999.
USEPA. 2001a. EPA Method 317.0--Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide 
Disinfection By-Products in Drinking Water Using Ion Chromatography 
with the Addition of a Postcolumn Reagent for Trace Bromate 
Analysis. Revision 2.0. EPA 815-B-01-001. Available on the Internet 
at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
USEPA. 2001b. Statistical Design and Sample Selection for the 
Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Regulation (1999). EPA 815-R-01-
004, August 2001.
USEPA. 2002. EPA Method 326.0--Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide 
Disinfection By-Products in Drinking Water Using Ion Chromatography 
Incorporating the Addition of a Suppressor Acidified Postcolumn 
Reagent for Trace Bromate Analysis. Revision 1.0. EPA 815-R-03-007. 
Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
USEPA. 2003. EPA Method 552.3--Determination of Haloacetic Acids and 
Dalapon in Drinking Water by Liquid-Liquid Microextraction, 
Derivatization, and Gas Chromatography with Electron Capture 
Detection. Revision 1.0. EPA 815-B-03-002, July 2003. Available on 
the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
USEPA. 2005. EPA Method 415.3--Determination of Total Organic Carbon 
and Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm in Source Water and Drinking 
Water. Revision 1.1. EPA/600/R-05/055, February 2005. Available on 
the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
USEPA. 2006a. National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: Long Term 
2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule; Final Rule. Federal 
Register. Vol. 71, No. 3, p. 654, January 5, 2006.
USEPA. 2006b. National Primary Drinking Water Regulations: Stage 2 
Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rule; Final Rule. Federal 
Register. Vol. 71, No. 3, p. 388, January 4, 2006.
USEPA. 2007. Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Regulation (UCMR) 
for Public Water Systems Revisions. Federal Register. Vol. 72, No. 
2, p. 368, January 4, 2007.
USEPA. 2009a. EPA Method 415.3--Determination of Total Organic 
Carbon and Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm in Source Water and 
Drinking Water. Revision 1.2. EPA/600/R-09/122, September 2009. 
Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
USEPA. 2009b. EPA Method 557--Determination of Haloacetic Acids, 
Bromate, and Dalapon in Drinking Water by Ion Chromatography 
Electrospray Ionization Tandem Mass Spectrometry (IC-ESI-MS/MS). 
Version 1.0. EPA 815-B-09-012, September 2009. Available on the 
Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
USEPA. 2010. Technical Basis for the Lowest Concentration Minimum 
Reporting Level (LCMRL) Calculator. EPA 815-R-11-001, December 2010. 
Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
USEPA. 2012a. EPA Method 525.3--Determination of Semivolatile 
Organic Chemicals in Drinking Water by Solid Phase Extraction and 
Capillary Column Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS). 
Version 1.0. EPA/600/R-12/010, February 2012. Available on the 
Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
USEPA. 2012b. Request for Nominations of Drinking Water Contaminants 
for the Fourth Contaminant Candidate List. Federal Register. Vol. 
77, No. 89, p. 27057, May 8, 2012.
USEPA. 2012c. Revisions to the Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring 
Regulation (UCMR 3) for Public Water Systems; Final Rule. Federal 
Register. Vol. 77, No. 85, p. 26071, May 2, 2012.
USEPA. 2013. Meetings and Materials for the Unregulated Contaminant 
Monitoring Program. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwucmr/unregulated-contaminant-monitoring-rule-ucmr-meetings-and-materials.
USEPA. 2014. Stakeholder Meeting Slides Regarding Revisions to the 
Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Regulation.
USEPA. 2015a. DRAFT Information Collection Request for the 
Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4). October 2015. EPA 
815-B-15-003.
USEPA. 2015b. Drinking Water Contaminant Candidate List 4--Draft. 
Federal Register, Vol. 80, No. 23, p. 6076, February 4, 2015.
USEPA. 2015c. Drinking Water Health Advisory for the Cyanobacterial 
Microcystin Toxins. EPA 820-R-15-100, June 2015. Available on the 
Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/sites/production/files/2015-06/documents/microcystins-report-2015.pdf.
USEPA. 2015d. EPA Method 530--Determination of Select Semivolatile 
Organic Chemicals in Drinking Water by

[[Page 76916]]

Solid Phase Extraction and Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/
MS). Version 1.0. EPA/600/R-14/442, January 2015. Available on the 
Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
USEPA. 2015e. EPA Method 541--Determination of 1-Butanol, 1,4-
Dioxane, 2-Methoxyethanol and 2-Propen-1-ol in Drinking Water by 
Solid Phase Extraction and Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry. EPA 
815-R-15-011, November 2015. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
USEPA. 2015f. EPA Method 544--Determination of Microcystins and 
Nodularin in Drinking Water by Solid Phase Extraction and Liquid 
Chromatography/Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC/MS/MS). Version 1.0. 
EPA-600-R-14/474, February 2015. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
USEPA. 2015g. EPA Method 545--Determination of Cylindrospermopsin 
and Anatoxin-a in Drinking Water by Liquid Chromatography 
Electrospray Ionization Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC/ESI-MS/MS). EPA 
815-R-15-009, April 2015. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
USEPA. 2015h. Proposed Revisions to CFR parts 141.35 and 141.40. EPA 
815-B-15-006, November 2015. Available in EPA public docket (under 
Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-OW-2015-0218) on the Internet at http://www.regulations.gov.
USEPA. 2015i. UCMR 4 Candidate Contaminants--Information Compendium. 
EPA 815-B-15-005, November 2015.
USEPA. 2015j. UCMR 4 Laboratory Approval Requirements and 
Information Document. EPA 815-B-15-004, November 2015.
USGS. 2014. Pesticides in Surface Waters: Seasonality of Pesticides 
in Surface Waters. U.S. Geological Survey Fact Sheet FS-039-97. 
Available on the Internet at http://water.usgs.gov/nawqa/pnsp/pubs/fs97039/sw5.html.
Zeck, A., Weller, M.G., Bursill, D., Niessner, R. 2001. Generic 
Microcystin Immunoassay Based on Monoclonal Antibodies Against Adda. 
Analyst, 126: 2002-2007. Available for purchase on the Internet at 
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/B105064H.

List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 141

    Environmental protection, Chemicals, Incorporation by reference, 
Indian-lands, Intergovernmental relations, Radiation protection, 
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Water supply.

    Dated: November 30, 2015.
Gina McCarthy,
Administrator.

    For the reasons set forth in the preamble, EPA proposes to amend 40 
CFR part 141 as follows:

PART 141--NATIONAL PRIMARY DRINKING WATER REGULATIONS

0
1. The authority citation for part 141 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 42 U.S.C. 300f, 300g-1, 300g-2, 300g-3, 300g-4, 300g-
5, 300g-6, 300j-4, 300j-9, and 300j-11.

Subpart D--Reporting and Recordkeeping

0
2. In Sec.  141.35:
0
a. Revise the third sentence in paragraph (b)(1).
0
b. Revise the second and third sentences in paragraph (b)(2).
0
c. Remove ``October 1, 2012,'' and add in its place ``December 31, 
2017,'' in paragraph (c)(1).
0
d. Revise the second and third sentences in paragraph (c)(2).
0
e. Revise the last sentence in paragraph (c)(3)(i).
0
f. Revise the fifth sentence in paragraph (c)(3)(ii).
0
g. Remove ``October 1, 2012,'' and add in its place ``[WITHIN 120 DAYS 
FROM PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE],'' in paragraph (c)(4).
0
h. Revise paragraphs (c)(5)(i), (c)(6) introductory text, (d)(2), and 
(e).
    The revisions and additions read as follows:


Sec.  141.35  Reporting for unregulated contaminant monitoring results.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (1) * * * Information that must be submitted using EPA's electronic 
data reporting system must be submitted through: http://www2.epa.gov/dwucmr. * * *
    (2) * * * If you have received a letter from EPA or your State 
concerning your required monitoring and your system does not meet the 
applicability criteria for UCMR established in Sec.  141.40(a)(1) or 
(2), or if a change occurs at your system that may affect your 
requirements under UCMR as defined in Sec.  141.40(a)(3) through (5), 
you must mail or email a letter to EPA, as specified in paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section. The letter must be from your PWS Official and 
must include your PWS Identification (PWSID) Code along with an 
explanation as to why the UCMR requirements are not applicable to your 
PWS, or have changed for your PWS, along with the appropriate contact 
information. * * *
    (c) * * *
    (2) * * * You must provide your sampling location(s) and associate 
each source water location with its entry point location(s) by December 
31, 2017, using EPA's electronic data reporting system. You must 
submit, verify or update the following information for each sampling 
location, or for each approved representative sampling location (as 
specified in paragraph (c)(3) of this section regarding representative 
sampling locations): PWSID Code; PWS Name; PWS Facility Identification 
Code; PWS Facility Name; PWS Facility Type; Water Source Type; Sampling 
Point Identification Code; Sampling Point Name; and Sampling Point Type 
Code; (as defined in Table 1 of paragraph (e) of this section).
    (3) * * *
    (i) * * * You must submit a copy of the existing alternate EPTDS 
sampling plan or your representative well proposal, as appropriate, 
[DATE 120 DAYS AFTER PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE], as specified in 
paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
    (ii) * * * You must submit the following information for each 
proposed representative sampling location: PWSID Code; PWS Name; PWS 
Facility Identification Code; PWS Facility Name; PWS Facility Type; 
Sampling Point Identification Code; and Sampling Point Name (as defined 
in Table 1, paragraph (e) of this section). * * *
* * * * *
    (5) * * *
    (i) General rescheduling notification requirements. Large systems 
may change their monitoring schedules up to December 31, 2017, using 
EPA's electronic data reporting system, as specified in paragraph 
(b)(1) of this section. After this date has passed, if your PWS cannot 
sample according to your assigned sampling schedule (e.g., because of 
budget constraints, or if a sampling location will be closed during the 
scheduled month of monitoring), you must mail or email a letter to EPA, 
as specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section, prior to the 
scheduled sampling date. You must include an explanation of why the 
samples cannot be taken according to the assigned schedule, and you 
must provide the alternative schedule you are requesting. You must not 
reschedule monitoring specifically to avoid sample collection during a 
suspected vulnerable period. You are subject to your assigned UCMR 
sampling schedule or the schedule that you revised on or before 
December 31, 2017, unless and until you receive a

[[Page 76917]]

letter from EPA specifying a new schedule.
* * * * *
    (6) Reporting monitoring results. For UCMR samples, you must report 
all data elements specified in Table 1 of paragraph (e) of this 
section, using EPA's electronic data reporting system. You also must 
report any changes, relative to what is currently posted, made to data 
elements 1 through 9 to EPA, in writing, explaining the nature and 
purpose of the proposed change, as specified in paragraph (b)(1) of 
this section.
* * * * *
    (d) * * *
    (2) Reporting sampling information. You must provide your sampling 
location(s) and associate each source water location with its entry 
point location(s) by December 31, 2017, using EPA's electronic data 
reporting system, as specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section. If 
this information changes, you must report updates, including new 
sources and sampling locations that are put in use before or during the 
PWS' UCMR sampling period, to EPA's electronic data reporting system 
within 30 days of the change, as specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section. You must record all data elements listed in Table 1 of 
paragraph (e) of this section on each sample form and sample bottle, as 
appropriate, provided to you by the UCMR Sampling Coordinator. You must 
send this information as specified in the instructions of your sampling 
kit, which will include the due date and return address. You must 
report any changes made in data elements 1 through 9 by mailing or 
emailing an explanation of the nature and purpose of the proposed 
change to EPA, as specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
    (e) Data elements. Table 1 defines the data elements that must be 
provided for UCMR monitoring.

   Table 1--Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Reporting Requirements
------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Data element                          Definition
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Public Water System         The code used to identify each PWS. The
 Identification (PWSID) Code.   code begins with the standard 2-
                                character postal State abbreviation or
                                Region code; the remaining 7 numbers are
                                unique to each PWS in the State. The
                                same identification code must be used to
                                represent the PWS identification for all
                                current and future UCMR monitoring.
2. Public Water System Name..  Unique name, assigned once by the PWS.
3. Public Water System         An identification code established by the
 Facility Identification Code.  State or, at the State's discretion, by
                                the PWS, following the format of a 5-
                                digit number unique within each PWS for
                                each applicable facility (i.e., for each
                                source of water, treatment plant,
                                distribution system, or any other
                                facility associated with water treatment
                                or delivery). The same identification
                                code must be used to represent the
                                facility for all current and future UCMR
                                monitoring.
4. Public Water System         Unique name, assigned once by the PWS,
 Facility Name.                 for every facility ID (e.g., Treatment
                                Plant).
5. Public Water System         That code that identifies that type of
 Facility Type.                 facility as either:
                               CC = consecutive connection
                               DS = distribution system
                               IN = source water intake
                               SS = sampling station
                               TP = treatment plant
                               OT = other
6. Water Source Type.........  The type of source water that supplies a
                                water system facility. Systems must
                                report one of the following codes for
                                each sampling location:
                               SW = surface water (to be reported for
                                water facilities that are served all or
                                in part by a surface water source at any
                                time during the twelve-month period).
                               GW = ground water (to be reported for
                                water facilities that are served
                                entirely by a ground water source).
                               GU = ground water under the direct
                                influence of surface water (to be
                                reported for water facilities that are
                                served all or in part by ground water
                                under the direct influence of surface
                                water at any time during the twelve-
                                month sampling period), and are not
                                served at all by surface water during
                                this period.
7. Sampling Point              An identification code established by the
 Identification Code.           State, or at the State's discretion, by
                                the PWS, that uniquely identifies each
                                sampling point. Each sampling code must
                                be unique within each applicable
                                facility, for each applicable sampling
                                location (i.e., entry point to the
                                distribution system, source water intake
                                or distribution system sample at maximum
                                residence time). The same identification
                                code must be used to represent the
                                sampling location for all current and
                                future UCMR monitoring.
8. Sampling Point Name.......  Unique sample point name, assigned once
                                by the PWS, for every sample point ID
                                (e.g., Entry Point).
9. Sampling Point Type Code..  A code that identifies the location of
                                the sampling point as either:
                               SR = source water taken from plant
                                intake; untreated water entering the
                                water treatment plant (i.e., a location
                                prior to any treatment).
                               EP = entry point to the distribution
                                system.
                               MR = distribution system sample at
                                maximum residence time.
10. Disinfectant Type........  All of the primary disinfectants/oxidants
                                that have been added in the treatment
                                plant to the water being sampled. To be
                                reported by systems for each sampling
                                point.
                               PEMB = Permanganate (applied before SR
                                sample location)
                               PEMA = Permanganate (applied after SR
                                sample location)
                               HPXB = Hydrogen peroxide (applied before
                                SR sample location)
                               HPXA = Hydrogen peroxide (applied after
                                SR sample location)
                               CLGA = Gaseous chlorine
                               CLOF = Offsite Generated Hypochlorite
                                (stored as a liquid form)
                               CLON = Onsite Generated Hypochlorite
                               CAGC = Chloramine (formed from gaseous
                                chlorine)
                               CAOF = Chloramine (formed from offsite
                                hypochlorite)
                               CAON = Chloramine (formed from onsite
                                hypochlorite)
                               CLDB = Chlorine dioxide (applied before
                                SR sample location)
                               CLDA = Chlorine dioxide (applied after SR
                                sample location)
                               OZON = Ozone

[[Page 76918]]

 
                               ULVL = Ultraviolet light
                               OTHD = All other types of disinfectant/
                                oxidant
                               NODU = No disinfectant/oxidant used
11. Treatment Information....  Treatment information associated with the
                                water being sampled.
                               CON = Conventional (non-softening)
                               SCO = Softening conventional
                               RBF = River bank filtration
                               PSD = Pre-sedimentation
                               INF = In-line filtration
                               DFL = Direct filtration
                               PCF = Precoat filtration
                               SSF = Slow sand filtration
                               BIO = Biological filtration
                               REC = Reactor clarification (e.g. solids
                                contact clarification, slurry
                                recirculation clarification,
                                Aciflo[supreg])
                               SBC = Sludge blanket clarification (e.g.
                                Pulsator[supreg], Super
                                Pulsator[supreg], contact adsorption
                                clarifiers, floc-blanket clarifiers)
                               ADC = Adsorption clarification (contact
                                adsorption clarification)
                               UTR = Unfiltered treatment
                               PAC = Application of powder activated
                                carbon
                               GAC = Granular activated carbon (not part
                                of filters in CON, SCO, INF, DFL, or
                                SSF)
                               AIR = Air stripping (packed towers,
                                diffused gas contactors)
                               POB = Pre-oxidation/disinfection with
                                chlorine (applied before SR sample
                                location)
                               POA = Pre-oxidation/disinfection with
                                chlorine (applied after SR sample
                                location)
                               MFL = Membrane filtration
                               IEX = Ionic exchange
                               UVT = Ultraviolet light
                               AOX = Advanced oxidation (ultraviolet
                                light with hydrogen peroxide and/or
                                ozone)
                               DAF = Dissolved air floatation
                               CWL = Clear well/finished water storage
                                without aeration
                               CWA = Clear well/finished water storage
                                with aeration
                               ADS = Aeration in distribution system
                                (localized treatment)
                               OTH = All other types of treatment
                               NTU = No treatment used
12. Disinfectant Residual      Secondary disinfectant type added in the
 Type.                          distribution system for each finished
                                water sample.
                               CL2 = Chlorine (i.e., originating from
                                addition of free chlorine only)
                               CLM = Chloramines (originating from with
                                addition of chlorine and ammonia or pre-
                                formed chloramines)
                               CAC = Chlorine and chloramines (if being
                                mixed from chlorinated and chloraminated
                                water)
                               NOD = No disinfectant residual
13. Sample Collection Date...  The date the sample is collected,
                                reported as 4-digit year, 2-digit month,
                                and 2-digit day (YYYY/MM/DD).
14. Sample Identification      An alphanumeric value up to 30 characters
 Code.                          assigned by the laboratory to uniquely
                                identify containers, or groups of
                                containers, containing water samples
                                collected at the same sampling location
                                for the same sampling date.
15. Contaminant..............  The unregulated contaminant for which the
                                sample is being analyzed.
16. Analytical Method Code...  The identification code of the analytical
                                method used.
17. Extraction Batch           Laboratory assigned extraction batch ID.
 Identification Code.           Must be unique for each extraction batch
                                within the laboratory for each method.
                                For CCC samples report the Analysis
                                Batch Identification Code as the value
                                for this field. For methods without an
                                extraction batch, leave this field null.
18. Extraction Date..........  Date for the start of the extraction
                                batch (YYYY/MM/DD). For methods without
                                an extraction batch, leave this field
                                null.
19. Analysis Batch             Laboratory assigned analysis batch ID.
 Identification Code.           Must be unique for each analysis batch
                                within the laboratory for each method.
20. Analysis Date............  Date for the start of the analysis batch
                                (YYYY/MM/DD).
21. Sample Analysis Type.....  The type of sample collected and/or
                                prepared, as well as the fortification
                                level. Permitted values include:
                               CF = concentration fortified; the
                                concentration of a known contaminant
                                added to a field sample reported with
                                sample analysis types LFSM, LFSMD, LFB,
                                CCC and QCS.
                               CCC = continuing calibration check; a
                                calibration standard containing the
                                contaminant, the internal standard, and
                                surrogate analyzed to verify the
                                existing calibration for those
                                contaminants.
                               FS = field sample; sample collected and
                                submitted for analysis under this rule.
                               IS = internal standard; a standard that
                                measures the relative response of
                                contaminants.
                               LFB = laboratory fortified blank; an
                                aliquot of reagent water fortified with
                                known quantities of the contaminants and
                                all preservation compounds.
                               LRB = laboratory reagent blank; an
                                aliquot of reagent water treated exactly
                                as a field sample, including the
                                addition of preservatives, internal
                                standards, and surrogates to determine
                                if interferences are present in the
                                laboratory, reagents, or other
                                equipment.
                               LFSM = laboratory fortified sample
                                matrix; a UCMR field sample with a known
                                amount of the contaminant of interest
                                and all preservation compounds added.
                               LFSMD = laboratory fortified sample
                                matrix duplicate; duplicate of the
                                laboratory fortified sample matrix.
                               QCS = quality control sample; a sample
                                prepared with a source external to the
                                one used for initial calibration and
                                CCC. The QCS is used to check
                                calibration standard integrity.
                               QH = quality HAA; HAA sample collected
                                and submitted for quality control
                                purposes.
                               SUR = surrogate standard; a standard that
                                assesses method performance for each
                                extraction.
22. Analytical Results--Sign.  A value indicating whether the sample
                                analysis result was:

[[Page 76919]]

 
                               (<) ``less than'' means the contaminant
                                was not detected, or was detected at a
                                level below the Minimum Reporting Level.
                               (=) ``equal to'' means the contaminant
                                was detected at the level reported in
                                ``Analytical Result-- Measured Value.''
23. Analytical Result--        The actual numeric value of the
 Measured Value.                analytical results for: field samples;
                                laboratory fortified matrix samples;
                                laboratory fortified sample matrix
                                duplicates; and concentration fortified.
24. Additional Value.........  Represents the true value or the
                                fortified concentration for spiked
                                samples for QC Sample Analysis Types
                                (CCC, EQC, LFB, LFSM and LFSMD). For
                                Sample Analysis Type FS and LRB and for
                                IS and surrogate QC Contaminants, leave
                                this field null.
25. Laboratory Identification  The code, assigned by EPA, used to
 Code.                          identify each laboratory. The code
                                begins with the standard two-character
                                State postal abbreviation; the remaining
                                five numbers are unique to each
                                laboratory in the State.
26. Sample Event Code........  A code assigned by the PWS for each
                                sample event. This will associate
                                samples with the PWS monitoring plan to
                                allow EPA to track compliance and
                                completeness. Systems must assign the
                                following codes:
                               SEC1, SEC2, SEC3, SEC4, SEC5, SEC6, SEC7
                                and SEC8--represent samples collected to
                                meet UCMR Assessment Monitoring
                                requirements for cyanotoxins; where
                                ``SEC1'' represents the first sampling
                                period, ``SEC2'' the second period and
                                so forth, for all eight sampling events.
                               SEA1, SEA2, SEA3 and SEA4--represent
                                samples collected to meet UCMR
                                Assessment Monitoring requirements for
                                the additional chemicals; where ``SEA1''
                                and ``SEA2'' represent the first and
                                second sampling period for all water
                                types; and ``SEA3'' and ``SEA4''
                                represent the third and fourth sampling
                                period for SW and GU sources only.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

Subpart E--Special Regulations, Including Monitoring Regulations 
and Prohibition on Lead Use

0
3. In Sec.  141.40:
0
a. Remove ``December 31, 2010'' and add in its place ``December 31, 
2015'' in paragraph (a) introductory text.
0
b. Revise paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2)(i)(A), (a)(2)(ii)(A) and (C), 
(a)(3), and (a)(4)(i)(B) and (C).
0
c. Remove ``October 1, 2012.'' and add in its place ``December 31, 
2017.'' in paragraph (a)(4)(i).
0
d. Revise paragraph (a)(4)(ii) introductory text.
0
e. Remove and reserve paragraph (a)(4)(ii)(F).
0
f. Add paragraph (a)(4)(iii).
0
g. Remove ``August 1, 2012.'' and add in its place ``[DATE 60 DAYS 
AFTER PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE], and necessary application 
material [DATE 120 DAYS AFTER PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE].'' in 
paragraph (a)(5)(ii).
0
h. Revise paragraph (a)(5)(v), the second sentence in paragraph 
(a)(5)(vi), and paragraph (c).
    The revisions and addition read as follows:


Sec.  141.40  Monitoring requirements for unregulated contaminants.

    (a) * * *
    (1) Applicability to transient non-community systems. If you own or 
operate a transient non-community water system, you are not subject to 
monitoring requirements in this section.
    (2) * * *
    (i) * * *
    (A) Assessment monitoring. You must monitor for the contaminants on 
List 1, per Table 1, UCMR Contaminant List, in paragraph (a)(3) of this 
section. If you serve a retail population of more than 10,000 people, 
you are required to perform this monitoring regardless of whether you 
have been notified by the State or EPA.
* * * * *
    (ii) * * *
    (A) Assessment monitoring. You must monitor for the contaminants on 
List 1: Assessment Monitoring Cyanotoxin Chemical Contaminants, or List 
1: Assessment Monitoring Additional Chemical Contaminants, per Table 1, 
in paragraph (a)(3) of this section, if you are notified by your State 
or EPA that you are part of the State Monitoring Plan for Assessment 
Monitoring.
* * * * *
    (C) Pre-screen testing. You must monitor for the unregulated 
contaminants on List 3 of Table 1, in paragraph (a)(3) of this section, 
if you are notified by your State or EPA that you are part of the State 
Monitoring Plan for Pre-Screen Testing.
    (3) Analytes to be monitored. Lists 1, 2, and 3 contaminants are 
provided in the following table:

                                                             Table 1--UCMR Contaminant List
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                                                                      6--Period during
           1--Contaminant                2--CAS registry     3--Analytical  methods   4--Minimum reporting  5--Sampling  location   which monitoring to
                                             number                    \a\                 level \b\                 \c\                be completed
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                           List 1: Assessment Monitoring Cyanotoxin Chemical Contaminants \e\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
total microcystin..................  N/A...................  ELISA.................  0.3 [micro]g/L.......  EPTDS and SR.........  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
anatoxin-a.........................  64285-06-9............  EPA 545...............  0.03 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
cylindrospermopsin.................  143545-90-8...........  EPA 545...............  0.09 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
microcystin-LA.....................  96180-79-9............  EPA 544...............  0.008 [micro]g/L.....  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
microcystin-LF.....................  154037-70-4...........  EPA 544...............  0.006 [micro]g/L.....  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
microcystin-LR.....................  101043-37-2...........  EPA 544...............  0.02 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
microcystin-LY.....................  123304-10-9...........  EPA 544...............  0.009 [micro]g/L.....  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
microcystin-RR.....................  111755-37-4...........  EPA 544...............  0.006 [micro]g/L.....  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
microcystin-YR.....................  101064-48-6...........  EPA 544...............  0.02 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
nodularin..........................  118399-22-7...........  EPA 544...............  0.005 [micro]g/L.....  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 76920]]

 
                                             List 1: Assessment Monitoring Additional Chemical Contaminants
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                         Metals
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
germanium..........................  7440-56-4.............  EPA 200.8,............  0.3 [micro]g/L.......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
                                                             ASTM D5673-10, SM 3125
manganese..........................  7439-96-5.............  EPA 200.8,............  0.4 [micro]g/L.......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
                                                             ASTM D5673-10, SM 3125
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                   Pesticides and a Pesticide Manufacturing Byproduct
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
alpha-hexachloro- cyclohexane......  319-84-6..............  EPA 525.3.............  0.01 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
chlorpyrifos.......................  2921-88-2.............  EPA 525.3.............  0.03 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
dimethipin.........................  55290-64-7............  EPA 525.3.............  0.2 [micro]g/L.......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
ethoprop...........................  13194-48-4............  EPA 525.3.............  0.03 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
oxyfluorfen........................  42874-03-3............  EPA 525.3.............  0.05 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
profenofos.........................  41198-08-7............  EPA 525.3.............  0.3 [micro]g/L.......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
tebuconazole.......................  107534-96-3...........  EPA 525.3.............  0.2 [micro]g/L.......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
total permethrin (cis- & trans-)...  52645-53-1............  EPA 525.3.............  0.04 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
 
tribufos...........................  78-48-8...............  EPA 525.3.............  0.07 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                       Brominated Haloacetic Acid (HAA) Groups \d\
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HAA5...............................  N/A...................  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557..  N/A..................  Stage 2 DBPR and/or    3/1/2018-11/30/2020
                                                                                                             DSMRT.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HAA6Br.............................  N/A...................  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557..  N/A..................  Stage 2 DBPR and/or    3/1/2018-11/30/2020
                                                                                                             DSMRT.
HAA9...............................  N/A...................  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557..  N/A..................  Stage 2 DBPR and/or    3/1/2018-11/30/2020
                                                                                                             DSMRT.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                        Alcohols
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1-butanol..........................  71-36-3...............  EPA 541...............  2.0 [micro]g/L.......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
2-methoxyethanol...................  109-86-4..............  EPA 541...............  0.4 [micro]g/L.......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
2-propen-1-ol......................  107-18-6..............  EPA 541...............  0.5 [micro]g/L.......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                              Other Semivolatile Chemicals
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
butylated hydroxanisole............  25013-16-5............  EPA 530...............  0.03 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
o-toluidine........................  95-53-4...............  EPA 530...............  0.007 [micro]g/L.....  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
quinoline..........................  91-22-5...............  EPA 530...............  0.02 [micro]g/L......  EPTDS................  3/1/2018-11/30/2020
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                List 2: Screening Survey
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reserved...........................  Reserved..............  Reserved..............  Reserved.............  Reserved.............  Reserved
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                               List 3: Pre-Screen Testing
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reserved...........................  Reserved..............  Reserved..............  Reserved.............  Reserved.............  Reserved
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Column headings are:
1--Contaminant: The name of the contaminant to be analyzed.
2--CAS (Chemical Abstract Service) Registry Number or Identification Number: A unique number identifying the chemical contaminants.
3--Analytical Methods: Method numbers identifying the methods that must be used to test the contaminants.
4--Minimum Reporting Level (MRL): The value and unit of measure at or above which the concentration of the contaminant must be measured using the
  approved analytical methods. If EPA determines, after the first six months of monitoring that the specified MRLs result in excessive resampling, EPA
  will establish alternate MRLs and will notify affected PWSs and laboratories of the new MRLs. N/A is defined as non-applicable.
5--Sampling Location: The locations within a PWS at which samples must be collected.
6--Period During Which Monitoring to be Completed: The time period during which the sampling and testing will occur for the indicated contaminant.
\a\ The analytical procedures shall be performed in accordance with the documents associated with each method, see paragraph (c) of this section.
\b\ The MRL is the minimum concentration of each analyte that must be reported to EPA.

[[Page 76921]]

 
\c\ Sampling must occur at entry points to the distribution system (EPTDSs), after treatment is applied, that represent each non-emergency water source
  in routine use over the 12-month period of monitoring. Systems that purchase water with multiple connections from the same wholesaler may select one
  representative connection from that wholesaler. This EPTDS sampling location must be representative of the highest annual volume connections. If the
  connection selected as the representative EPTDS is not available for sampling, an alternate highest volume representative connection must be sampled.
  See 40 CFR 141.35(c)(3) for an explanation of the requirements related to the use of representative ground water EPTDSs. Sampling for brominated HAA
  groups must be conducted at the Stage 2 Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproduct Rule (DBPR) sampling locations (40 CFR 141.622). If these locations
  are not defined, the PWS is required to collect samples at locations that best represent the distribution system maximum residence time (DSMRT). DSMRT
  is defined as an active point (i.e., a location that currently provides water to customers) in the distribution system where the water has been in the
  system the longest relative to the EPTDS. Sampling must occur at source water (SR) intake locations defined by EPA under the UCMR as untreated water
  entering the water treatment plant (i.e., a location prior to any treatment). Systems subject to the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule
  (LT2) should use their source water sampling site(s) from 40 CFR 141.703. Systems subject to the Stage 1 DBPR should use their TOC source water
  sampling site(s) from 40 CFR 141.132. TOC source water sampling site(s) were set under Stage 1 DBPR and remain unchanged under Stage 2 DBPR. If a
  system has two different sampling locations for LT2 and Stage 1 DBPR, the system should select the sample point the best represents the definition of
  source water sample location(s) for UCMR. For each EPTDS there should be one source water sample point associated with that EPTDS. It is possible that
  different EPTDSs share the same source water. PWSs that purchase 100 percent of their water; ``consecutive systems'' are not required to collect
  source water samples.
\d\ TOC and bromide must be collected at the same time as HAA samples. These indicator samples must be collected at a single source water intake (as
  defined in footnote c, above) using methods already approved for compliance monitoring. TOC methods include: SM 5310 B, SM 5310 C, SM 5310 D (21st
  edition), or SM 5310 B-00, SM 5310 C-00, SM 5310 D-00 (SM Online), EPA Method 415.3 (Rev. 1.1 or 1.2). Bromide methods include: EPA Methods 300.0
  (Rev. 2.1), 300.1 (Rev. 1.0), 317.0 (Rev. 2.0), 326.0 (Rev. 1.0) or ASTM D 6581-12. The MRLs for the individual HAAs are discussed in paragraph
  (a)(5)(v) of this section.
\e\ Temperature and pH must be measured at the same time as cyanotoxin samples at the source water intake as described in footnote c, above. pH methods
  include: EPA Method 150.1 and 150.2, ASTM D1293-12, SM 4500-H+ B (21st edition) or SM 4500-H+ B-00 (SM Online). Temperature methods include: SM 2550
  (21st edition), or SM 2550-10 (SM Online).

    (4) * * *
    (i) * * *
    (B) Frequency. You must collect the samples within the time frame 
and according to the frequency specified by contaminant type and water 
source type for each sampling location, as specified in Table 2, in 
this paragraph. For the second or subsequent round of sampling, if a 
sample location is non-operational for more than one month before and 
one month after the scheduled sampling month (i.e., it is not possible 
for you to sample within the window specified in Table 2, in this 
paragraph), you must notify EPA as specified in Sec.  141.35(c)(5) to 
reschedule your sampling.

                       Table 2--Monitoring Frequency by Contaminant and Water Source Types
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
         Contaminant type                Water source type          Time frame \1\           Frequency \2\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
List 1 Cyanotoxins Chemicals......  Surface water or Ground     March-November.......  You must monitor twice a
                                     water under the direct                             month for four
                                     influence of surface                               consecutive months
                                     water (GWUDI).                                     (total of eight sampling
                                                                                        events). Sample events
                                                                                        must occur two week
                                                                                        apart.
List 1 Contaminants--Additional     Surface water or GWUDI....  March-November.......  You must monitor four
 Chemicals.                                                                             times during your 12-
                                                                                        month monitoring period.
                                                                                        Sample events must occur
                                                                                        two months apart.
                                                                                        (Example: If your first
                                                                                        sampling event is in
                                                                                        March, the second
                                                                                        monitoring must occur
                                                                                        during May, the third
                                                                                        during July, and the
                                                                                        fourth during
                                                                                        September).
                                    Ground water..............  March-November.......  You must monitor two
                                                                                        times during your 12-
                                                                                        month monitoring period.
                                                                                        Sample events must occur
                                                                                        six months apart.
                                                                                        (Example: If your first
                                                                                        monitoring is in March,
                                                                                        the second monitoring
                                                                                        must occur during
                                                                                        September. If your first
                                                                                        monitoring is in
                                                                                        November, the second
                                                                                        monitoring must occur in
                                                                                        May).
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ No sampling will take place during the months of December, January or February, except for resampling
  purposes.
\2\ Systems must assign a sample event code for each contaminant listed in Table 1. Sample event codes must be
  assigned by the PWS for each sample event. For more information on sample event codes see Sec.   141.35(e)
  Table 1.

    (C) Location. You must collect samples for each List 1 Assessment 
Monitoring contaminant, and, if applicable, for each List 2 Screening 
Survey, or List 3 Pre-Screen Testing contaminant, as specified in Table 
1, in paragraph (a)(3) of this section. Samples must be collected at 
each sample point that is specified in column 5 and footnote c of Table 
1, in paragraph (a)(3) of this section. PWSs conducting List 1 
monitoring for the brominated HAA groups must collect TOC and bromide 
samples as specified in footnote d of Table 1, in paragraph (a)(3) of 
this section. PWSs conducting List 1 monitoring for cyanotoxins must 
measure temperature and pH as specified in footnote e of Table 1, in 
paragraph (a)(3) of this section. If you are a ground water system with 
multiple EPTDSs, and you request and receive approval from EPA or the 
State for sampling at representative EPTDS(s), as specified in Sec.  
141.35(c)(3), you must collect your samples from the approved 
representative sampling location(s).
* * * * *
    (ii) Small systems. If you serve 10,000 or fewer people and are 
notified that you are part of the State Monitoring Plan for Assessment 
Monitoring, Screening Survey or Pre-Screen monitoring, you must comply 
with the requirements specified in paragraphs (a)(4)(ii)(A) through (H) 
of this section. If EPA or the State informs you that they will be 
collecting your UCMR samples,

[[Page 76922]]

you must assist them in identifying the appropriate sampling locations 
and in collecting the samples.
* * * * *
    (iii) Phased sample analysis for microcystins. You must collect the 
three required samples (one at the source water intake and two at the 
EPTDS) for each sampling event, but not all samples may need to be 
analyzed. PWSs that purchase 100 percent of their water; ``consecutive 
systems'' only sample at their EPTDS. If the ELISA result from the 
source water intake is less than 0.3 [micro]g/L, report that result and 
do not analyze the additional EPTDS samples for that sample event. If 
the ELISA result from the source water intake is greater than or equal 
to 0.3 [micro]g/L, report that value and analyze the EPTDS ELISA 
sample. If the EPTDS ELISA result is less than 0.3 [micro]g/L, report 
that result and do not analyze the additional EPTDS samples for that 
sample event. If the EPTDS ELISA result is greater than or equal to 0.3 
[micro]g/L, report the value and analyze the other microcystin samples 
collected at the EPTDS using EPA Method 544.
* * * * *
    (5) * * *
    (v) Method defined quality control. You must ensure that your 
laboratory analyzes Laboratory Fortified Blanks and conducts Laboratory 
Performance Checks, as appropriate to the method's requirements, for 
those methods listed in Table 1, column 3, in paragraph (a)(3) of this 
section. Each method specifies acceptance criteria for these QC checks. 
The following HAA results must be reported using EPA's electronic data 
reporting system for quality control purposes.

                                                                 Table 4--HAA QC Results
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                  2--CAS  Registry    3--Analytical methods        4--Minimum
         1--Contaminant                  No.                   \a\            reporting level \b\   5--HAA6Br group     6--HAA9 group     7--HAA5 group
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                         Brominated Haloacetic Acid (HAA) Groups
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bromochloroacetic acid (BCAA)..  5589-96-8.........  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557...  0.3 [micro]g/L.....  HAA6Br...........  HAA9............
Bromodichloroacetic acid         71133-14-7........  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557...  0.5 [micro]g/L.....
 (BDCAA).
Chlorodibromoacetic acid         5278-95-5.........  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557...  0.3 [micro]g/L.....
 (CDBAA).
Tribromoacetic acid (TBAA).....  75-96-7...........  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557...  2.0 [micro]g/L.....
Monobromoacetic acid (MBAA)....  79-08-3...........  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557...  0.3 [micro]g/L.....  .................  ................  HAA5.
Dibromoacetic acid (DBAA)......  631-64-1..........  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557...  0.3 [micro]g/L.....
Dichloroacetic acid (DCAA).....  79-43-6...........  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557...  0.2 [micro]g/L.....
Monochloroacetic acid (MCAA)...  79-11-8...........  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557...  2.0 [micro]g/L.....
Trichloroacetic acid (TCAA)....  76-03-9...........  EPA 552.3 or EPA 557...  0.5 [micro]g/L.....
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Column headings are:
1--Contaminant: The name of the contaminant to be analyzed.
2--CAS (Chemical Abstract Service) Registry Number or Identification Number: A unique number identifying the chemical contaminants.
3--Analytical Methods: Method numbers identifying the methods that must be used to test the contaminants.
4--Minimum Reporting Level (MRL): The value and unit of measure at or above which the concentration of the contaminant must be measured using the
  approved analytical methods. If EPA determines, after the first six months of monitoring that the specified MRLs result in excessive resampling, EPA
  will establish alternate MRLs and will notify affected PWSs and laboratories of the new MRLs.
5-7--HAA groups identified in paragraph (a)(3) of this section to be monitored as UCMR contaminants.
\a\ The analytical procedures shall be performed in accordance with the documents associated with each method, see paragraph (c) of this section, and
  must meet all quality control requirements outlined paragraph (a)(5) of this section.
\b\ The MRL is the minimum concentration of each analyte that must be reported to EPA.

    (vi) * * * You must require your laboratory to submit these data 
electronically to the State and EPA using EPA's electronic data 
reporting system, accessible at http://www2.epa.gov/dwucmr, within 120 
days from the sample collection date. * * *
* * * * *
    (c) Incorporation by reference. These standards are incorporated by 
reference into this section with the approval of the Director of the 
Federal Register under 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51. All approved 
material is available for inspection either electronically at http://www.regulations.gov, in hard copy at the Water Docket, EPA/DC, and from 
the sources as follows. The Public Reading Room (EPA West, Room 3334, 
1301 Constitution Ave. NW., Washington, DC) is open from 8:30 a.m. to 
4:30 p.m., Monday through Friday, excluding legal holidays. The 
telephone number for this Public Reading Room is (202) 566-1744, and 
the telephone number for the Water Docket is (202) 566-2426. The 
material is also available for inspection at the National Archives and 
Records Administration (NARA). For information on the availability of 
this material at NARA, call (202) 741-6030 or go to http://www.archives.gov/federal-register/cfr/about.html.
    (1) The following methods are from the U.S. Environmental 
Protection Agency, Water Docket, EPA/DC, EPA West, Room 3334, 1301 
Constitution Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20004.
    (i) EPA Method 150.1 ``pH Electrometric, in Methods for Chemical 
Analysis of Water and Wastes,'' 1983, EPA/600/4-79/020. Available on 
the Internet at http://www.nemi.gov.
    (ii) EPA Method 150.2 ``pH, Continuous Monitoring (Electrometric), 
in Methods for Chemical Analysis of Water and Wastes,'' 1983, EPA/600/
4-79/020. Available on the Internet at http://www.nemi.gov.
    (iii) EPA Method 200.8 ``Determination of Trace Elements in Waters 
and Wastes by Inductively Coupled Plasma--Mass Spectrometry,'' Revision 
5.4, 1994. Available on the Internet at https://www.nemi.gov.
    (iv) EPA Method 300.0 ``Determination of Inorganic Anions by Ion 
Chromatography Samples,'' Revision 2.1, 1993. Available on the Internet 
at http://www.nemi.gov.
    (v) EPA Method 300.1 ``Determination of Inorganic Anions in 
Drinking Water by Ion Chromatography,'' Revision 1.0, 1997. Available 
on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
    (vi) EPA Method 317.0 ``Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide 
Disinfection By-Products in Drinking Water Using Ion Chromatography 
with the Addition of a Postcolumn Reagent for Trace Bromate Analysis,'' 
Revision 2.0, 2001, EPA 815-B-01-001. Available on the Internet at 
http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/

[[Page 76923]]

approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
    (vii) EPA Method 326.0 ``Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide 
Disinfection By-Products in Drinking Water Using Ion Chromatography 
Incorporating the Addition of a Suppressor Acidified Postcolumn Reagent 
for Trace Bromate Analysis,'' Revision 1.0, 2002, EPA 815-R-03-007. 
Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
    (viii) EPA Method 415.3 ``Determination of Total Organic Carbon and 
Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm in Source Water and Drinking Water,'' 
Revision 1.1, 2005, EPA/600/R-05/055. Available on the Internet at 
http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
    (ix) EPA Method 415.3 ``Determination of Total Organic Carbon and 
Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm in Source Water and Drinking Water,'' 
Revision 1.2, 2009, EPA/600/R-09/122. Available on the Internet at 
http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
    (x) EPA Method 525.3 ``Determination of Semivolatile Organic 
Chemicals in Drinking Water by Solid Phase Extraction and Capillary 
Column Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS),'' Version 1.0, 
February 2012, EPA/600/R-12/010. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
    (xi) EPA Method 530 ``Determination of Select Semivolatile Organic 
Chemicals in Drinking Water by Solid Phase Extraction and Gas 
Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (GC/MS),'' Version 1.0, January 2015, 
EPA/600/R-14/442. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
    (xii) EPA Method 541 ``Determination of 1-Butanol, 1,4-Dioxane, 2-
Methoxyethanol and 2-Propen-1-ol in Drinking Water by Solid Phase 
Extraction and Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry,'' November 2015, 
EPA 815-R-15-011. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
    (xiii) EPA Method 544 ``Determination of Microcystins and Nodularin 
in Drinking Water by Solid Phase Extraction and Liquid Chromatography/
Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC/MS/MS),'' Version 1.0, February 2015, EPA 
600-R-14/474. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-drinking-water-research-methods.
    (xiv) EPA Method 545 ``Determination of Cylindrospermopsin and 
Anatoxin-a in Drinking Water by Liquid Chromatography Electrospray 
Ionization Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC/ESI-MS/MS),'' April 2015, EPA 
815-R-15-009. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
    (xv) EPA Method 552.3 ``Determination of Haloacetic Acids and 
Dalapon in Drinking Water by Liquid-Liquid Microextraction, 
Derivatization, and Gas Chromatography with Electron Capture 
Detection,'' Revision 1.0, July 2003, EPA 815-B-03-002. Available on 
the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
    (xvi) EPA Method 557 ``Determination of Haloacetic Acids, Bromate, 
and Dalapon in Drinking Water by Ion Chromatography Electrospray 
Ionization Tandem Mass Spectrometry (IC-ESI-MS/MS),'' Version 1.0, 
September 2009, EPA 815-B-09-012. Available on the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/approved-drinking-water-analytical-methods.
    (2) The following methods are from ``ASTM International,'' 100 Barr 
Harbor Drive, West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959.
    (i) ASTM D1293-12 ``Standard Test Methods for pH of Water.'' 
Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.astm.org/Standards/D1293.htm.
    (ii) ASTM D5673-10 ``Standard Test Method for Elements in Water by 
Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry,'' approved August 1, 
2010. Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.astm.org/Standards/D5673.htm.
    (iii) ASTM D6581-12 ``Standard Test Methods for Bromate, Bromide, 
Chlorate, and Chlorite in Drinking Water by Suppressed Ion 
Chromatography.'' Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.astm.org/Standards/D6581.htm.
    (3) The following methods are from ``Standard Methods for the 
Examination of Water & Wastewater,'' 21st edition (2005), American 
Public Health Association, 800 I Street NW., Washington, DC 20001-3710.
    (i) SM 2550. ``Temperature.''
    (ii) SM 3125 ``Metals by Inductively Coupled Plasma/Mass 
Spectrometry.''
    (iii) SM 4500-H+ B ``pH Value in Water by Potentiometry Using a 
Standard Hydrogen Electrode.''
    (iv) SM 5310B ``The Determination of Total Organic Carbon by High-
Temperature Combustion Method.''
    (v) SM 5310C ``Total Organic Carbon by Persulfate-UV or Heated-
Persulfate Oxidation Method.''
    (vi) SM 5310D ``Total Organic Carbon by Wet-Oxidation Method.''
    (4) The following methods are from ``Standard Methods Online.'' 
Available for purchase on the Internet at http://www.standardmethods.org.
    (i) SM 2550-10 ``Temperature.''
    (ii) SM 3125-09 ``Metals by Inductively Coupled Plasma/Mass 
Spectrometry (Editorial revisions, 2011).''
    (iii) SM 4500-H+ B-00 ``pH Value in Water by Potentiometry Using a 
Standard Hydrogen Electrode.''
    (iv) SM 5310B-00 ``The Determination of Total Organic Carbon by 
High-Temperature Combustion Method.''
    (v) SM 5310C-00 ``Total Organic Carbon by Persulfate-UV or Heated-
Persulfate Oxidation Method.''
    (vi) SM 5310D-00 ``Total Organic Carbon by Wet-Oxidation Method.''
    (5) The following methodology is from Ohio EPA, Columbus, OH.
    (i) ELISA SOP. ``Ohio EPA Total (Extracellular and Intracellular) 
Microcystins--ADDA by ELISA Analytical Methodology,'' Version 2.0, 
January 2015. Available on the Internet at http://www.epa.ohio.gov/Portals/28/documents/habs/HAB_Analytical_Methodology.pdf.
    (ii) [Reserved]

[FR Doc. 2015-30824 Filed 12-10-15; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6560-50-P



                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                         76897

                                                      (6) Testing, monitoring, reporting and                of the Paperwork Reduction Act (44                    ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
                                                    recordkeeping requirements for the                      U.S.C. 3501 et seq.);                                 AGENCY
                                                    designated facilities;                                     • is certified as not having a
                                                      (7) Records of the public hearing on                  significant economic impact on a                      40 CFR Part 141
                                                    the State SSI plan; and,                                substantial number of small entities                  [EPA–HQ–OW–2015–0218; FRL–9935–74–
                                                      (8) Provisions for annual state                       under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5               OW]
                                                    progress reports to EPA on                              U.S.C. 601 et seq.);                                  RIN 2040–AF10
                                                    implementation of the State plan.                          • does not contain any unfunded
                                                      The EPA proposes to determine that                    mandate or significantly or uniquely                  Revisions to the Unregulated
                                                    Puerto Rico’s State SSI plan for existing               affect small governments, as described                Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR
                                                    SSI units includes all the required State               in the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                   4) for Public Water Systems and
                                                    plan elements described in section                      of 1995 (Pub. L. 104–4);                              Announcement of a Public Meeting
                                                    60.5015 of the EG.
                                                                                                               • does not have Federalism                         AGENCY:  Environmental Protection
                                                    B. What approval criteria did the EPA                   implications as specified in Executive                Agency (EPA).
                                                    use to evaluate Puerto Rico’s State SSI                 Order 13132 (64 FR 43255, August 10,                  ACTION: Proposed rule and notice of
                                                    plan?                                                   1999);                                                public meeting.
                                                       The EPA reviewed Puerto Rico’s State                    • is not an economically significant
                                                    SSI plan for approval against the                       regulatory action based on health or                  SUMMARY:   The U.S. Environmental
                                                    following criteria: 40 CFR 60.23 through                safety risks subject to Executive Order               Protection Agency (EPA) is proposing a
                                                    60.26, ‘‘Subpart B—Adoption and                         13045 (62 FR 19885, April 23, 1997);                  Safe Drinking Water Act (SDWA) rule
                                                    Submittal of State Plans for Designated                    • is not a significant regulatory action           that requires public water systems to
                                                    Facilities;’’ and 40 CFR 60.5000 through                subject to Executive Order 13211 (66 FR               collect occurrence data for contaminants
                                                    60.5250, ‘‘Subpart MMMM—Emission                        28355, May 22, 2001);                                 that may be present in tap water but are
                                                    Guidelines and Compliance Times for                                                                           not yet subject to EPA’s drinking water
                                                                                                               • is not subject to requirements of                standards set under SDWA. This rule,
                                                    Existing Sewage Sludge Incineration                     Section 12(d) of the National
                                                    Units;’’ and 40 CFR 62, subpart A,                                                                            revised every five years as required by
                                                                                                            Technology Transfer and Advancement                   SDWA, benefits public health by
                                                    ‘‘General Provisions’’ for ‘‘Approval and               Act of 1995 (15 U.S.C. 272 note) because
                                                    Promulgation of State Plans for                                                                               providing EPA and other interested
                                                                                                            application of those requirements would               parties with scientifically valid data on
                                                    Designated Facilities and Pollutants.’’                 be inconsistent with the Clean Air Act;               the national occurrence of selected
                                                    IV. What is the EPA’s Conclusion?                       and                                                   contaminants in drinking water, such as
                                                      The EPA has determined that Puerto                       • does not provide EPA with the                    cyanotoxins associated with harmful
                                                    Rico’s State SSI plan meets all the                     discretionary authority to address, as                algal blooms. This data set is one of the
                                                    applicable approval criteria as discussed               appropriate, disproportionate human                   primary sources of information on
                                                    above and, therefore, the EPA is                        health or environmental effects, using                occurrence, levels of exposure and
                                                    proposing to approve Puerto Rico’s                      practicable and legally permissible                   population exposure the Agency uses to
                                                    sections 111(d) and 129 State plan for                  methods, under Executive Order 12898                  develop regulatory decisions for
                                                    existing sewage sludge incineration                     (59 FR 7629, February 16, 1994).                      emerging contaminants in the public
                                                    units. As explained above, at the request                  The 111(d)/129 plan is not approved                drinking water supply. This proposal
                                                    of Puerto Rico, the EPA is proposing to                 to apply on any Indian reservation land               identifies eleven analytical methods to
                                                    not take any action on the affirmative                  or in any other area where EPA or an                  support water system monitoring for a
                                                    defense provisions in Puerto Rico’s                     Indian tribe has demonstrated that a                  total of 30 chemical contaminants/
                                                    State SSI plan.                                         tribe has jurisdiction. In those areas of             groups, consisting of ten cyanotoxins/
                                                                                                            Indian Nation Land, the rule does not                 groups; two metals; eight pesticides plus
                                                    V. Statutory and Executive Order                        have tribal implications and will not                 one pesticide manufacturing byproduct
                                                    Reviews                                                 impose substantial direct costs on tribal             (hereinafter collectively referred to as
                                                      Under the CAA, the Administrator is                   governments or preempt tribal law as                  ‘‘pesticides’’); three brominated
                                                    required to approve a 111(d)/129 plan                   specified by Executive Order 13175 (65                haloacetic acid groups of disinfection
                                                    submission that complies with the                       FR 67249, November 9, 2000).                          byproducts; three alcohols; and three
                                                    provisions of the Act and applicable                                                                          semivolatile organic chemicals. EPA is
                                                                                                            List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 62                    also announcing a public webinar to
                                                    Federal regulations. 40 CFR 62.04. Thus,
                                                    in reviewing 111(d)/129 plan                               Environmental protection,                          discuss this proposal of the fourth
                                                    submissions, EPA’s role is to approve                   Administrative practice and procedure,                Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring
                                                    state choices, provided that they meet                  Air pollution control, Aluminum,                      Rule.
                                                    the criteria of the CAA. Accordingly,                   Fertilizers, Fluoride, Intergovernmental              DATES:  Comments must be received on
                                                    this action merely approves state law as                relations, Paper and paper products                   or before February 9, 2016. Under the
                                                    meeting Federal requirements and does                   industry, Phosphate, Reporting and                    Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA),
                                                    not impose additional requirements                      recordkeeping requirements, Sulfur                    comments on the information collection
                                                    beyond those imposed by state law. For                  oxides, Sulfur acid plants, waste                     provisions are best assured of
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    that reason, this action:                               treatment and disposal.                               consideration if the Office of
                                                      • Is not a ‘‘significant regulatory                     Authority: 42 U.S.C. 7401 et seq.                   Management and Budget (OMB)
                                                    action’’ subject to review by the Office                                                                      receives a copy of your comments on or
                                                    of Management and Budget under                            Dated: November 30, 2015.                           before January 11, 2016. The public
                                                    Executive Order 12866 (58 FR 51735,                     Judith A. Enck,                                       webinar will be held on January 13,
                                                    October 4, 1993);                                       Regional Administrator, Region 2.                     2016, from 1:00 p.m.. to 4:30 p.m.,
                                                      • does not impose an information                      [FR Doc. 2015–31182 Filed 12–10–15; 8:45 am]          eastern time. Persons wishing to
                                                    collection burden under the provisions                  BILLING CODE 6560–50–P                                participate in the webinar must register


                                               VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:54 Dec 10, 2015   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00025   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\11DEP1.SGM   11DEP1


                                                    76898                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    by January 10, 2016, as described in                    II. Background                                             Significantly Affect Energy Supply,
                                                    section II.M.                                              A. How has EPA implemented the                          Distribution or Use
                                                                                                                  Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring                I. National Technology Transfer and
                                                    ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
                                                                                                                  Program?                                             Advancement Act and 1 CFR Part 51
                                                    identified by Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–                        B. How are the Contaminant Candidate List            J. Executive Order 12898: Federal Actions
                                                    OW–2015–0218, at http://                                      (CCL), the UCMR program, the                         To Address Environmental Justice in
                                                    www.regulations.gov. Follow the online                        Regulatory Determination process and                 Minority Populations and Low-Income
                                                    instructions for submitting comments.                         the NCOD interrelated?                               Populations
                                                    Once submitted, comments cannot be                         C. What notable changes are being                  IV. References
                                                    edited or removed from Regulations.gov.                       proposed for UCMR 4?
                                                                                                               D. How did EPA prioritize candidate                Abbreviations and Acronyms
                                                    The EPA may publish any comment
                                                                                                                  contaminants and what contaminants are          mg/L Microgram per liter
                                                    received to its public docket. Do not                         proposed for UCMR 4?
                                                    submit electronically any information                                                                         ADDA (2S, 3S, 8S, 9S, 4E, 6E)-3-amino-9-
                                                                                                               E. What is the proposed applicability date?          methoxy-2,6,8-trimethyl-10-phenyl-4, 6-
                                                    you consider to be Confidential                            F. What are the proposed UCMR 4                      decadienoic acid
                                                    Business Information (CBI) or other                           sampling design and timeline of                 ASDWA Association of State Drinking
                                                    information whose disclosure is                               activities?                                       Water Administrators
                                                    restricted by statute. Multimedia                          1. Sampling Frequency, Timing                      ASTM ASTM International
                                                    submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be                   2. Sampling Locations                              CAS Chemical Abstract Service
                                                    accompanied by a written comment.                          3. Phased Sample Analysis for                      CBI Confidential Business Information
                                                                                                                  Microcystins
                                                    The written comment is considered the                      4. Representative Sampling
                                                                                                                                                                  CCC Continuing Calibration Check
                                                    official comment and should include                                                                           CCL Contaminant Candidate List
                                                                                                               5. Summary
                                                    discussion of all points you wish to                                                                          CFR Code of Federal Regulations
                                                                                                               G. What are reporting requirements for
                                                    make. The EPA will generally not                                                                              CLDA Chlorine Dioxide Applied After SR
                                                                                                                  UCMR 4?
                                                                                                                                                                    Sample Location
                                                    consider comments or comment                               1. Data Elements
                                                                                                                                                                  CLDB Chlorine Dioxide Applied Before SR
                                                    contents located outside of the primary                    2. Duplicate Samples
                                                                                                                                                                    Sample Location
                                                    submission (i.e. on the web, cloud, or                     H. What are Minimum Reporting Levels
                                                                                                                                                                  CWS Community Water System
                                                    other file sharing system). For                               (MRLs) and how were they determined?
                                                                                                               I. How do laboratories become approved to          DBPR Disinfectants and Disinfection
                                                    additional submission methods, the full                       conduct UCMR 4 analyses?                          Byproducts Rule
                                                    EPA public comment policy,                                 1. Request to Participate                          DSMRT Distribution System Maximum
                                                    information about CBI or multimedia                        2. Registration                                      Residence Time
                                                    submissions, and general guidance on                       3. Application Package                             ELISA Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent
                                                                                                               4. EPA’s Review of Application Package               Assay
                                                    making effective comments, please visit                                                                       EPA United States Environmental
                                                    http://www2.epa.gov/dockets/                               5. Proficiency Testing
                                                                                                               6. Written EPA Approval                              Protection Agency
                                                    commenting-epa-dockets.                                                                                       EPTDS Entry Point to the Distribution
                                                                                                               J. What documents are being incorporated
                                                    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:                              by reference?                                     System
                                                    Brenda D. Parris, Standards and Risk                       1. Methods From the U.S. Environmental             FR Federal Register
                                                    Management Division (SRMD), Office of                         Protection Agency                               GC Gas Chromatography
                                                    Ground Water and Drinking Water                            2. Methods From ‘‘ASTM International’’             GC/ECD Gas Chromatography/Electron
                                                                                                               3. Methods From ‘‘Standard Methods for               Capture Detection
                                                    (OGWDW) (MS 140), Environmental                                                                               GC/MS Gas Chromatography/Mass
                                                    Protection Agency, 26 West Martin                             the Examination of Water & Wastewater’’
                                                                                                               4. Methods From ‘‘Standard Methods                   Spectrometry
                                                    Luther King Drive, Cincinnati, OH                                                                             GW Ground Water
                                                                                                                  Online’’
                                                    45268; telephone number: (513) 569–                        5. Method From ‘‘Ohio EPA’’                        GWUDI Ground Water Under the Direct
                                                    7961; or email address: parris.brenda@                     K. What is the states’ role in the UCMR              Influence of Surface Water
                                                    epa.gov; or Melissa Simic, SRMD,                              program?                                        HAAs Haloacetic Acids
                                                    OGWDW (MS 140), Environmental                              L. What stakeholder meetings have been             HAA5 Dibromoacetic Acid, Dichloroacetic
                                                    Protection Agency, 26 West Martin                             held in preparation for UCMR 4?                   Acid, Monobromoacetic Acid,
                                                    Luther King Drive, Cincinnati, Ohio                        M. How do I participate in the upcoming              Monochloroacetic Acid, Trichloroacetic
                                                                                                                  stakeholder meeting?                              Acid
                                                    45268; telephone number: (513) 569–                                                                           HAA6Br Bromochloroacetic Acid,
                                                    7864; or email address: simic.melissa@                     1. Webinar Participation
                                                                                                               2. Webinar Materials                                 Bromodichloroacetic Acid, Dibromoacetic
                                                    epa.gov. For general information,                          N. How did EPA consider Children’s                   Acid, Dibromochloroacetic Acid,
                                                    contact the Safe Drinking Water Hotline.                      Environmental Health?                             Monobromoacetic Acid, Tribromoacetic
                                                    Callers within the United States can                       O. How did EPA address Environmental                 Acid
                                                    reach the Hotline at (800) 426–4791.                          Justice?                                        HAA9 Bromochloroacetic Acid,
                                                    The Hotline is open Monday through                      III. Statutory and Executive Order Reviews              Bromodichloroacetic Acid,
                                                    Friday, excluding federal holidays, from                   A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory                 Chlorodibromoacetic Acid, Dibromoacetic
                                                    10 a.m. to 4 p.m., eastern time. The Safe                     Planning and Review and Executive                 Acid, Dichloroacetic Acid,
                                                                                                                  Order 13563: Improving Regulation and             Monobromoacetic Acid, Monochloroacetic
                                                    Drinking Water Hotline can also be                                                                              Acid, Tribromoacetic Acid, Trichloroacetic
                                                                                                                  Regulatory Review
                                                    found on the Internet at: http://                                                                               Acid
                                                                                                               B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
                                                    water.epa.gov/drink/hotline/.                              C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)                HPXA Hydrogen Peroxide Applied After
                                                    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                                 D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                      Source Water Sample Location
                                                                                                                  (UMRA)                                          HPXB Hydrogen Peroxide Applied Before
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                                                    Table of Contents                                          E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism                 Source Water Sample Location
                                                    I. General Information                                     F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation             IC–MS/MS Ion Chromatography/Tandem
                                                       A. Does this action apply to me?                           and Coordination With Indian Tribal               Mass Spectrometry
                                                       B. What action is the Agency taking and                    Governments                                     ICP–MS Inductively Coupled Plasma Mass
                                                         why?                                                  G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of              Spectrometry
                                                       C. What is the Agency’s authority for                      Children From Environmental Health              ICR Information Collection Request
                                                         taking this action?                                      Risks and Safety Risks                          IDC Initial Demonstration of Capability
                                                       D. What is the estimated cost of this                   H. Executive Order 13211: Actions                  IS Internal Standard
                                                         proposed action?                                         Concerning Regulations That                     LFB Laboratory Fortified Blank



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                                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                               76899

                                                    LRB Laboratory Reagent Blank                                          SOP Standard Operating Procedure                      residents or regularly serves at least 25
                                                    LCMRL Lowest Concentration Minimum                                    SPE Solid Phase Extraction                            year-round residents. A NTNCWS
                                                      Reporting Level                                                     SR Source Water
                                                                                                                                                                                means a PWS that is not a CWS and that
                                                    LC/ECI–MS/MS Liquid Chromatography/                                   SRF Drinking Water State Revolving Fund
                                                      Electrospray Ionization/Tandem Mass                                 SRMD Standards and Risk Management                    regularly serves at least 25 of the same
                                                      Spectrometry                                                          Division                                            people over six months per year. A
                                                    LC/MS/MS Liquid Chromatography/                                       SUR Surrogate Standard                                nationally representative sample of
                                                      Tandem Mass Spectrometry                                            SVOCs Semivolatile Organic Chemicals                  CWSs and NTNCWSs serving 10,000 or
                                                    LT2 Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water                                SW Surface Water                                      fewer people would also be required to
                                                      Treatment Rule                                                      TNCWS Transient Non-Community Water
                                                    M Million                                                               System                                              monitor (see ‘‘Statistical Design and
                                                    MRL Minimum Reporting Level                                           TOC Total Organic Carbon                              Sample Selection for the Unregulated
                                                    NAICS North American Industry                                         UCMR Unregulated Contaminant                          Contaminant Monitoring Regulation’’
                                                      Classification System                                                 Monitoring Rule                                     (USEPA, 2001b) for a description of the
                                                    NCOD National Drinking Water                                          UMRA Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of                  statistical approach for the nationally
                                                      Contaminant Occurrence Database                                       1995
                                                                                                                                                                                representative sample). As is generally
                                                    NPDWRs National Primary Drinking Water                                USEPA United States Environmental
                                                      Regulations                                                           Protection Agency                                   the case for UCMR monitoring, transient
                                                    NTNCWS Non-transient Non-community                                                                                          non-community water systems
                                                      Water System                                                        I. General Information                                (TNCWSs) (i.e., non-community water
                                                    OGWDW Office of Ground Water and                                      A. Does this action apply to me?                      systems that do not regularly serve at
                                                      Drinking Water                                                                                                            least 25 of the same people over six
                                                    OMB Office of Management and Budget                                      Public water systems (PWSs) would
                                                    PA Partnership Agreement                                              be regulated by this proposed, fourth                 months per year) would not be required
                                                    PEMA Permanganate Applied After Source                                Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring                    to monitor under UCMR 4. States,
                                                      Water Sample Location                                               Rule (UCMR 4). PWSs are systems that                  territories and tribes, with primary
                                                    PEMB Permanganate Applied Before Source
                                                                                                                          provide water for human consumption                   enforcement responsibility (primacy) to
                                                      Water Sample Location                                                                                                     administer the regulatory program for
                                                    PRA Paperwork Reduction Act                                           through pipes, or other constructed
                                                                                                                          conveyances, to at least 15 service                   PWSs under SDWA, can participate in
                                                    PT Proficiency Testing
                                                    PWS Public Water System                                               connections or that regularly serve an                the implementation of UCMR 4 through
                                                    QCS Quality Control Sample                                            average of at least 25 individuals daily              Partnership Agreements (PAs) (see
                                                    QH Quality HAA Sample                                                 at least 60 days out of the year. Under               discussion of PAs in section II.K).
                                                    RFA Regulatory Flexibility Act                                        this proposal, all large community and                Primacy agencies with PAs can choose
                                                    SDWA Safe Drinking Water Act                                          non-transient non-community water                     to be involved in various aspects of the
                                                    SDWARS Safe Drinking Water Accession                                                                                        UCMR 4 monitoring for PWSs they
                                                      and Review System
                                                                                                                          systems (NTNCWSs) serving more than
                                                    SDWIS/Fed Federal Safe Drinking Water                                 10,000 people would be required to                    oversee; however, the PWS remains
                                                      Information System                                                  monitor. A community water system                     responsible for compliance. Potentially
                                                    SM Standard Methods                                                   (CWS) means a PWS that has at least 15                regulated categories and entities are
                                                    SMP State Monitoring Plan                                             service connections used by year-round                identified in the following table.

                                                                           Category                                                        Examples of potentially regulated entities                        NAICS a

                                                    State, local, & tribal governments ...........                  States, local and tribal governments that analyze water samples on behalf of                  924110
                                                                                                                      PWSs required to conduct such analysis; states, local and tribal governments
                                                                                                                      that directly operate CWSs and NTNCWSs required to monitor.
                                                    Industry ....................................................   Private operators of CWSs and NTNCWSs required to monitor ............................        221310
                                                    Municipalities ...........................................      Municipal operators of CWSs and NTNCWSs required to monitor ........................          924110
                                                       a NAICS      = North American Industry Classification System.


                                                      This table is not intended to be                                    B. What action is the Agency taking and               such as regulations, reduce or eliminate
                                                    exhaustive, but rather provides a guide                               why?                                                  those contaminants.
                                                    for readers regarding entities likely to be                             EPA is proposing a rule to require                  C. What is the Agency’s authority for
                                                    regulated by this action. This table                                  PWSs to analyze drinking water samples                taking this action?
                                                    summarizes the types of entities that                                 for unregulated contaminants that do
                                                    EPA is aware could potentially be                                     not have health based standards set                     As part of its responsibilities under
                                                    regulated by this action. If you are                                  under SDWA and to report their results                SDWA, EPA implements section
                                                    uncertain whether your entity is                                      to EPA. This will be the fourth national              1445(a)(2), Monitoring Program for
                                                    regulated by this action after carefully                              monitoring effort under the UCMR                      Unregulated Contaminants. This
                                                    examining the definition of PWS found                                 program (see section II.D). The                       section, as amended in 1996, requires
                                                    in §§ 141.2 and 141.3, and the                                        monitoring provides data to inform                    that once every five years, beginning in
                                                    applicability criteria found in                                       future regulatory actions to protect                  August 1999, EPA issue a list of no more
                                                    § 141.40(a)(1) and (2) of Title 40 in the                             public health.                                        than 30 unregulated contaminants to be
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                                                    Code of Federal Regulations (CFR),                                      The public will benefit from                        monitored by PWSs. SDWA requires
                                                    please consult the contacts listed in the                             information about whether or not                      that EPA enter the monitoring data into
                                                    preceding FOR FURTHER INFORMATION                                     unregulated contaminants are present in               the Agency’s publically available
                                                    CONTACT section.                                                      their drinking water. If contaminants are             National Contaminant Occurrence
                                                                                                                          not found, consumer confidence in their               Database (NCOD). EPA’s UCMR program
                                                                                                                          drinking water will improve. If                       must ensure that systems serving a
                                                                                                                          contaminants are found, illnesses may                 population larger than 10,000 people, as
                                                                                                                          be avoided when subsequent actions,                   well as a nationally representative


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                                                    76900                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    sample of PWSs serving 10,000 or fewer                           Hereinafter, all 30 proposed                approximately 80% of the total national
                                                    people, are required to monitor. EPA                           contaminants/groups are collectively          cost for UCMR 4 implementation. EPA
                                                    must vary the frequency and schedule                           referred to as ‘‘contaminants.’’              estimated laboratory unit costs based on
                                                    for monitoring based on the number of                                                                        consultations with multiple commercial
                                                                                                                   D. What is the estimated cost of this
                                                    persons served, the source of supply                                                                         drinking water laboratories and, in the
                                                                                                                   proposed action?
                                                    and the contaminants likely to be found.                                                                     case of new methods, a review of the
                                                    EPA is using this authority as the basis                          EPA estimates the total average            costs of analytical methods similar to
                                                    for monitoring 29 of the 30                                    national cost of this proposed action         those proposed in this action. The cost
                                                    contaminants/groups proposed under                             will be $25.3 million per year from           of the laboratory methods includes
                                                    this rule.                                                     2017–2021. EPA has documented the             shipping as part of the cost for the
                                                      Section 1445(a)(1)(A) of SDWA, as                            assumptions and data sources used in          analysis.
                                                    amended in 1996, requires that every                           the preparation of this estimate in the
                                                                                                                   Information Collection Request (ICR)             EPA expects that states would incur
                                                    person who is subject to any SDWA
                                                                                                                   (USEPA, 2015a). EPA proposes using            labor costs associated with voluntary
                                                    requirement establish and maintain
                                                                                                                   eleven analytical methods (eight EPA-         assistance with UCMR 4
                                                    such records, make such reports,
                                                    conduct such monitoring and provide                            developed analytical methods, one             implementation. EPA estimated state
                                                    such information as the Administrator                          state-developed methodology and two           costs using the relevant assumptions
                                                    may reasonably require by regulation to                        alternate equivalent consensus                from the State Resource Model that was
                                                    assist the Administrator in establishing                       organization-developed methods) to            developed by the Association of State
                                                    SDWA regulations. Pursuant to this                             analyze samples for 30 UCMR 4                 Drinking Water Administrators
                                                    provision, EPA can also require the                            chemical contaminants. EPA’s estimate         (ASDWA) (ASDWA, 2013) to help states
                                                    monitoring of contaminants already                             of the analytical cost for the UCMR 4         forecast resource needs. Model
                                                    subject to EPA’s drinking water                                contaminants and related indicators is        estimates were adjusted to account for
                                                    standards. EPA is using this authority as                      $2,562 per sample set. EPA calculated         actual levels of state participation under
                                                    the basis for monitoring one of the                            these costs by summing the laboratory         UCMR 3. State participation is
                                                    chemical groups (Haloacetic Acids 5                            unit cost of each method. Exhibit 1           voluntary; thus, the level of effort is
                                                    (HAA5)) proposed under this rule.                              presents a breakdown of EPA estimated         expected to vary among states and
                                                    Sample collection and analysis for                             annual average national costs. Estimated would depend on their individual
                                                    HAA5 can be done concurrent with the                           PWS (i.e., large and very large) and EPA agreements with EPA.
                                                    unregulated HAA monitoring described                           costs reflect the analytical cost (i.e., non-    EPA assumes that one-third of the
                                                    in section II.F (resulting in no                               labor) for all UCMR 4 methods. EPA            systems would monitor during each of
                                                    substantive additional burden) and                             pays for the analytical costs for all         the three monitoring years from January
                                                    would allow EPA to better understand                           systems serving a population of 10,000        2018 through December 2020. The total
                                                    co-occurrence between regulated and                            or fewer people. Laboratory analysis and estimated annual costs (labor and non-
                                                    unregulated disinfection byproducts.                           sample shipping account for                   labor) would be incurred as follows:

                                                                                                 EXHIBIT 1—ESTIMATED AVERAGE ANNUAL COSTS OF UCMR 4
                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Avg. annual cost
                                                                                                                            Respondent                                                                                  all respondents
                                                                                                                                                                                                                       (2017–2021) 1

                                                    Small Systems (25–10,000), including labor 2 only (non-labor costs 3 paid for by EPA) .............................................................                         $0.16   m
                                                    Large Systems (10,001–100,000), including labor and non-labor costs ......................................................................................                  $15.7   m
                                                    Very Large Systems (100,001 and greater), including labor and non-labor costs .......................................................................                        $4.3   m
                                                    States, including labor costs related to implementation coordination ...........................................................................................            $0.50   m
                                                    EPA, including labor for implementation, non-labor for small system testing ..............................................................................                   $4.7   m

                                                         AVERAGE ANNUAL NATIONAL TOTAL .............................................................................................................................            $25.3 m
                                                       1 Totals may not equal the sum of components due to rounding.
                                                       2 Labor  costs pertain to systems, states and EPA. Costs include activities such as reading the rule, notifying systems selected to participate,
                                                    sample collection, data review, reporting and record keeping.
                                                      3 Non-labor costs would be incurred primarily by EPA and by very large and large PWSs. They include the cost of shipping samples to labora-
                                                    tories for testing and the cost of the laboratory analyses.


                                                      Additional details regarding EPA’s                           for this proposed rule, under Docket ID                        UCMR (UCMR 3) on May 2, 2012 (77 FR
                                                    cost assumptions and estimates can be                          No. EPA–HQ–OW–2015–0218.                                       26072, (USEPA, 2012c)). EPA
                                                    found in the ‘‘DRAFT Information                               II. Background                                                 established a three-tiered approach for
                                                    Collection Request for the Unregulated                                                                                        monitoring contaminants under the
                                                    Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR                              A. How has EPA implemented the                                 UCMR program that takes into account
                                                    4)’’ (USEPA, 2015a) ICR Number                                 unregulated contaminant monitoring                             the availability of analytical methods,
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                                                    2192.07, which presents estimated cost                         program?                                                       the source of water supply and the
                                                    and burden for the 2017–2019 period,                                                                                          contaminants likely to be found.
                                                                                                                     EPA published the list of
                                                    consistent with the 3-year time frame for                      contaminants for the first UCMR (UCMR                          Assessment Monitoring for ‘‘List 1’’
                                                    ICRs. Estimates of costs over the entire                       1) in the Federal Register (FR) on                             contaminants typically relies on
                                                    5-year UCMR 4 sequence of 2017–2021                            September 17, 1999 (64 FR 50556,                               analytical methods, techniques or
                                                    are attached as an appendix to the ICR.                        (USEPA, 1999)), the second UCMR                                technologies that are in common use by
                                                    Copies of the ICR and its appendix may                         (UCMR 2) on January 4, 2007 (72 FR                             drinking water laboratories. Screening
                                                    be obtained from the EPA public docket                         368, (USEPA, 2007)) and the third                              Survey monitoring for ‘‘List 2’’


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                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                     76901

                                                    contaminants typically relies on newer                             risk-based approach for determining                        support the Administrator’s
                                                    analytical methods that are not as                                 which contaminants would become                            determination on whether regulation of
                                                    commonly used, such that laboratory                                subject to drinking water standards.                       a contaminant is in the public health
                                                    capacity to perform List 2 analyses may                            Under the first step, EPA is required to                   interest, as required under SDWA
                                                    be limited. Finally, Pre-Screen Testing                            publish, every five years, a list of                       section 1412(b)(1). UCMR results can be
                                                    for ‘‘List 3’’ contaminants is often                               contaminants that are not yet regulated                    viewed by the public at: http://
                                                    associated with analytical methods that                            but which are known or anticipated to                      www2.epa.gov/dwucmr.
                                                    are very recently developed and/or are                             occur in PWSs; this is the Contaminant
                                                    particularly complex. In addition to                               Candidate List (CCL). Under the second                     C. What notable changes are being
                                                    method complexity and laboratory                                   step, EPA must require, every five years,                  proposed for UCMR 4?
                                                    capacity, EPA considers sampling                                   monitoring of up to 30 unregulated                           This proposed action refines the
                                                    frequency and/or the relevant universe                             contaminants to determine their                            existing UCMR, as reflected in the Code
                                                    of PWSs when deciding which of the                                 occurrence in drinking water systems;                      of Federal Regulations, to address the
                                                    three tiers is appropriate for a                                   this is the UCMR program. Under the                        contaminants proposed for UCMR 4
                                                    contaminant.                                                       third step, EPA is required to determine,
                                                                                                                                                                                  monitoring and to reflect lessons
                                                       EPA designed the Assessment                                     every five years, whether or not at least
                                                                                                                                                                                  learned through prior experience
                                                    Monitoring sampling approach (USEPA,                               five contaminants from the CCL warrant
                                                                                                                                                                                  implementing UCMRs. EPA’s proposed
                                                    2001b) to ensure that sample results                               regulation, based in part on the UCMR
                                                                                                                                                                                  approach and rationale for changes are
                                                    would yield a high level of confidence                             occurrence information; this is known
                                                                                                                                                                                  described in the following sections. Key
                                                    and a low margin of error. The design                              as a Regulatory Determination where the
                                                                                                                                                                                  aspects of the UCMR program that
                                                    for a nationally representative sample of                          following questions are evaluated:
                                                                                                                          (1) Which contaminants may have an                      would remain the same, and are outside
                                                    small systems called for the sample to
                                                    be stratified by water source type                                 adverse effect on human health?                            the scope of today’s proposal, include
                                                    (ground water (GW) or surface water                                   (2) Which contaminants are known to                     direct implementation of the rule by
                                                    (SW)), service size category and state                             occur or are likely to occur in drinking                   EPA; the number and types of systems
                                                    (where each state is allocated a                                   water with a frequency and at levels of                    included in Assessment Monitoring for
                                                    minimum of two systems in its state                                public health concern?                                     the majority of the proposed
                                                    monitoring plan (SMP)).                                               (3) Does regulation of such                             contaminants; and EPA funding for the
                                                       This action proposes 30 contaminants                            contaminants present a meaningful                          small system testing. Proposed changes
                                                    for List 1, Assessment Monitoring from                             opportunity for risk reduction? Finally,                   include the list of UCMR 4
                                                    2018–2020, with pre-monitoring activity                            SDWA requires EPA to issue national                        contaminants, the analytical methods,
                                                    in 2017 and post-monitoring activity in                            primary drinking water regulations                         monitoring time frame, sampling
                                                    2021. EPA developed this proposal after                            (NPDWRs) for contaminants the Agency                       locations, the revised data elements
                                                    considering input from an EPA-state                                determines should be regulated.                            outlined in Exhibit 2 and conforming
                                                    workgroup as well as other                                            The CCL process identifies                              and editorial changes, such as those
                                                    stakeholders.                                                      contaminants that may require                              necessary to remove requirements solely
                                                                                                                       regulation, while the UCMR program                         related to UCMR 3. A track-changes
                                                    B. How are the Contaminant Candidate                               helps provide the data necessary for the                   version of the rule language comparing
                                                    List (CCL), the UCMR program, the                                  Regulatory Determination process                           UCMR 3 to the proposed changes for
                                                    Regulatory Determination process and                               outlined above. The data collected                         UCMR 4 is included in the public
                                                    the NCOD interrelated?                                             through the UCMR program are stored                        docket (Docket ID No. EPA–HQ–OW
                                                      Under the 1996 amendments to                                     in the NCOD to facilitate analysis and                     2015–0218) for this proposed rule
                                                    SDWA, Congress established a stepwise,                             review of contaminant occurrence, and                      (USEPA, 2015h).

                                                                                                        EXHIBIT 2—NOTABLE CHANGES PROPOSED FOR UCMR 4
                                                                                      CFR Rule section                                                                                                       Corresponding
                                                                                                                                                                    Description of rule change              preamble section
                                                                        Number                                     Title/Description

                                                    § 141.40(a)(3) ......................................   Analytes to be monitored                Revises Table 1 to include a new list of contaminants                II.D
                                                                                                              and related specifica-                  and associated analytical methods.
                                                                                                              tions.
                                                    §§ 141.35(a) and 141.40(a) ................             Applicability .......................   Revises the Federal Safe Drinking Water Information                  II.E
                                                                                                                                                      System (SDWIS/Fed) applicability date (i.e., the                   II.F
                                                                                                                                                      date used to determine which systems are subject
                                                                                                                                                      to monitoring) to December 31, 2015.
                                                                                                                                                    Revises the monitoring dates to January 2018
                                                                                                                                                      through December 2020.
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                                                    76902                       Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                                                              EXHIBIT 2—NOTABLE CHANGES PROPOSED FOR UCMR 4—Continued
                                                                                       CFR Rule section                                                                                                Corresponding
                                                                                                                                                              Description of rule change              preamble section
                                                                         Number                                   Title/Description

                                                    § 141.40(a)(4) ......................................    Sampling design require-       Updates Table 2 to change the sample collection time                   II.F
                                                                                                               ments—Frequency.               frame to March—November, and excludes Decem-
                                                                                                                                              ber—February. Additionally, updates the frequency
                                                                                                                                              such that, with the exception of cyanotoxins, moni-
                                                                                                                                              toring would occur every two months (bi-monthly)
                                                                                                                                              for SW or ground water under the direct influence
                                                                                                                                              of surface water (GWUDI) systems and every six
                                                                                                                                              months for GW systems.
                                                                                                                                            Updates Table 2 to include monitoring requirements
                                                                                                                                              for cyanotoxins for PWSs with SW and GWUDI
                                                                                                                                              sources at a frequency of twice a month for four
                                                                                                                                              consecutive months (for a total of eight cyanotoxin
                                                                                                                                              sampling events).
                                                    § 141.40(a)(4) ......................................    Sampling design require-       Specifies revised sampling locations for Assessment                    II.F
                                                                                                               ments—Location.                Monitoring, including HAA5 Stage 2 compliance
                                                                                                                                              and/or distribution system maximum residence time
                                                                                                                                              (DSMRT) locations for the brominated haloacetic
                                                                                                                                              acids (HAAs), and source water intake locations for
                                                                                                                                              total organic carbon (TOC), total microcystins (i.e.
                                                                                                                                              the sum of congeners as measured by ADDA–
                                                                                                                                              ELISA), pH and temperature.
                                                    § 141.35(e) ..........................................   Reporting requirements—        Updates, revises, adds and removes data elements to                  II.G.1
                                                                                                               Data elements.                 account for the contaminants being proposed, and
                                                                                                                                              requires the reporting of quality control data by all
                                                                                                                                              laboratories.
                                                    § 141.40(a)(4)(ii)(F) .............................      Small systems sampling         Removes the requirement for small system duplicate                   II.G.2
                                                                                                              requirements—Duplicate          quality control samples, although EPA may in the
                                                                                                              samples.                        future select a subset of systems to collect dupli-
                                                                                                                                              cate samples if the Agency becomes aware of a
                                                                                                                                              need to include this type of quality control.



                                                    D. How did EPA prioritize candidate                              with potential health effects of concern               persistence, mobility, health effects and
                                                    contaminants and what contaminants                               that can be measured concurrently using                occurrence), that EPA used to select the
                                                    are proposed for UCMR 4?                                         the analytical methods for the CCL                     proposed analyte list, is contained in
                                                                                                                     contaminants. Including related non-                   ‘‘UCMR 4 Candidate Contaminants—
                                                      In establishing the proposed list of
                                                                                                                     CCL analytes creates a more cost-                      Information Compendium’’ (USEPA,
                                                    contaminants for UCMR 4, EPA started
                                                                                                                     effective design and reduces the                       2015i). Copies of the Compendium may
                                                    with a priority set of contaminants from
                                                                                                                     likelihood of needing to include them in               be obtained from the EPA public docket
                                                    the draft fourth Contaminant Candidate
                                                                                                                     a subsequent UCMR.                                     for this proposed rule, under Docket ID
                                                    List (CCL 4), which includes 100                                    The next step was to select
                                                    chemicals or chemical groups and 12                                                                                     No. EPA–HQ–OW–2015–0218.
                                                                                                                     contaminants associated with one or
                                                    microbes (80 FR 6076, February 4, 2015                           more of the following considerations: an                  EPA invites comment on the proposed
                                                    (USEPA, 2015b)). The evaluation and                              available health assessment to facilitate              UCMR 4 contaminants and their
                                                    selection process that led to the draft                          regulatory determinations; high public                 associated analytical methods identified
                                                    CCL 4 carried forward the final list of                          concern; critical health endpoints (e.g.,              in Exhibit 3, as well as any other
                                                    CCL 3 contaminants (except for those                             likely or suggestive carcinogen); active               priority contaminants commenters wish
                                                    with regulatory determinations),                                 use (e.g., pesticides); and an occurrence              to recommend. In particular, the Agency
                                                    requested and evaluated contaminant                              data gap. This step identified 31 CCL                  welcomes comments on the following
                                                    nominations from the public and                                  contaminants, and 18 related non-CCL                   contaminants that were considered by
                                                    evaluated any new data from previous                             analytes that can be measured using the                the workgroup, but not included in the
                                                    negative regulatory determinations for                           analytical methods for the CCL                         proposed list because they were deemed
                                                    potential inclusion on CCL 4 (77 FR                              contaminants.                                          a lower UCMR 4 priority than the
                                                    27057, May 8, 2012 (USEPA, 2012b)).                                 During the final step, EPA considered               contaminants identified in Exhibit 3:
                                                      EPA selected the proposed UCMR 4                               workgroup and stakeholder input;                       Legionella pneumophila and
                                                    contaminants using a stepwise                                    looked at cost-effectiveness of the                    Mycobacterium avium (both are part of
                                                    prioritization process. The first step                           method/contaminant groups; considered                  the draft CCL 4); ammonia (considered
                                                    included identifying contaminants that:                          implementation factors (e.g., laboratory               as an indicator of distribution system
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    (1) Were not monitored under UCMR 2                              capacity); and further evaluated health,               nitrification potential); and the
                                                    or UCMR 3; (2) are anticipated to have                           occurrence, and persistence/mobility                   pesticides vinclozolin, hexazinone and
                                                    significant occurrence nationally; and                           data to identify a proposed list of 30                 disulfoton (additional analytes in EPA
                                                    (3) are expected to have a completed,                            UCMR 4 contaminants.                                   Method 525.3). More specific
                                                    validated drinking water method in time                             Further information on this                         information on why these contaminants
                                                    for rule proposal. This resulted in a set                        prioritization process, as well as                     were not included on the proposed list
                                                    of 45 draft CCL 4 contaminants and                               contaminant-specific information                       can be found in the Information
                                                    another set of related non-CCL analytes                          (source, use, production, release,                     Compendium (USEPA, 2015i) cited


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                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                            76903

                                                    above. In your comments, please                          lower priority than your new                            reporting level, sampling location and
                                                    identify the following: Any new                          recommendation(s) or that should                        sampling frequency). Comments that
                                                    contaminant(s) that you think the                        otherwise be removed from the list; the                 provide supporting data or rationale are
                                                    Agency should include in UCMR 4                          recommended analytical method(s) for                    especially helpful to the Agency.
                                                    monitoring; any contaminant(s) in                        any new contaminant(s) that you
                                                    Exhibit 3 that you think represent a                     propose; and other relevant details (e.g.,

                                                                                                        EXHIBIT 3—30 PROPOSED UCMR 4 ANALYTES

                                                                                                                                List 1 Analytes

                                                                                                                   One Cyanotoxin Group Using ELISA 1

                                                    total microcystins

                                                                                                 Seven Cyanotoxins Using EPA Method 544 (SPE LC/MS/MS) 2

                                                    microcystin-LA                                                                         microcystin-RR
                                                    microcystin-LF                                                                         microcystin-YR
                                                    microcystin-LR                                                                         Nodularin
                                                    microcystin-LY

                                                                                                  Two Cyanotoxins Using EPA Method 545 (LC/ECI–MS/MS) 3

                                                    anatoxin-a                                                                             Cylindrospermopsin

                                                                                          Two Metals Using EPA Method 200.8 (ICP–MS) 4 or Alternate SM 5 or ASTM 6

                                                    Germanium                                                                              Manganese

                                                                                                       Nine Pesticides Using EPA Method 525.3 (SPE GC/MS) 7

                                                    alpha-hexachlorocyclohexane                                                            Profenofos
                                                    chlorpyrifos                                                                           Tebuconazole
                                                    Dimethipin                                                                             total permethrin (cis- & trans-)
                                                    Ethoprop                                                                               Tribufos
                                                    Oxyfluorfen

                                                                            Three Brominated HAA Groups Using EPA Method 552.3 (GC/ECD) or 557 (IC/ECI–MS/MS) 8 9 10

                                                    HAA5                                                                                   HAA9
                                                    HAA6Br

                                                                                                          Three Alcohols Using EPA Method 541 (GC/MS) 11

                                                    1-butanol                                                                              2-propen-1-ol
                                                    2-methoxyethanol

                                                                                    Three Semivolatile Organic Chemicals (SVOCs) Using EPA Method 530 (GC/MS) 12

                                                    butylated hydroxyanisole                                                               quinolone
                                                    o-toluidine
                                                       1 ELISA Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) (Ohio EPA, 2015). EPA anticipates having an EPA ELISA method available by the publication
                                                    of the final rule and anticipates that this method will be similar to the Ohio EPA methodology. Monitoring includes measuring for pH using one of
                                                    the following methods: EPA Method 150.1 and 150.2 (USEPA, 1983a and 1983b), ASTM D1293–12 (ASTM, 2012a), SM 4500–H+ B (SM,
                                                    2005c), SM 4500–H+ B–00 (SM Online, 2000a). Monitoring also includes measuring for water temperature using one of the following methods:
                                                    SM 2550 (SM, 2005a) or SM 2550–10 (SM Online, 2010).
                                                       2 EPA Method 544 (Solid Phase Extraction (SPE) Liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS)) (USEPA, 2015f). This
                                                    method would only be used if analyses by ELISA (for ‘‘total microcystins’’) yielded results above reporting limits.
                                                       3 EPA Method 545 (Liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization/tandem mass spectrometry (LC/ESI–MS/MS)) (USEPA, 2015g).
                                                       4 EPA Method 200.8 (Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (ICP–MS)) (USEPA, 1994).
                                                       5 Standard Methods (SM) 3125 (SM, 2005b) or SM 3125–09 (SM Online, 2009).
                                                       6 ASTM International (ASTM) D5673–10 (ASTM, 2010).
                                                       7 EPA Method 525.3 (SPE Gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS)) (USEPA, 2012a).
                                                       8 EPA Method 552.3 (GC/Electron capture detection (ECD)) (USEPA, 2003) and EPA Method 557 (Ion chromatography-electrospray ioniza-
                                                    tion-tandem mass spectrometry (IC–ESI–MS/MS)) (USEPA, 2009b). HAA5 includes: dibromoacetic acid, dichloroacetic acid, monobromoacetic
                                                    acid, monochloroacetic acid, trichloroacetic acid. HAA6Br includes: bromochloroacetic acid, bromodichloroacetic acid, dibromoacetic acid,
                                                    dibromochloroacetic acid, monobromoacetic acid, tribromoacetic acid. HAA9 includes: bromochloroacetic acid, bromodichloroacetic acid,
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    chlorodibromoacetic acid, dibromoacetic acid, dichloroacetic acid, monobromoacetic acid, monochloroacetic acid, tribromoacetic acid,
                                                    trichloroacetic acid.
                                                       9 Regulated HAAs (HAA5) are included in the proposed monitoring program to gain a better understanding of co-occurrence with currently un-
                                                    regulated disinfection byproducts.
                                                       10 Brominated HAA monitoring also includes sampling for indicators TOC and bromide using methods approved for compliance monitoring.
                                                    TOC methods include: SM 5310B, SM 5310C, SM 5310D (SM, 2005d, 2005e, 2005f), or SM 5310B–00, SM 5310C–00, SM 5310D–00 (SM On-
                                                    line, 2000b, 2000c, 2000d), EPA Method 415.3 (Rev. 1.1 or 1.2) (USEPA, 2005, 2009a). Bromide methods include: EPA Methods 300.0 (Rev.
                                                    2.1), 300.1 (Rev. 1.0), 317.0 (Rev. 2.0), 326.0 (Rev. 1.0) (USEPA, 1993, 1997, 2001a, 2002) or ASTM D 6581–12 (ASTM, 2012b).
                                                       11 EPA Method 541 (GC/MS) (USEPA, 2015e).
                                                       12 EPA Method 530 (GC/MS) (USEPA, 2015d).




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                                                    76904                       Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    E. What is the proposed applicability                                  inaccurate, the system should contact its                                 Preparations prior to 2018 are expected
                                                    date?                                                                  state to verify its population as of the                                  to include coordination of laboratory
                                                                                                                           applicability date and request a                                          approval, selection of representative
                                                       EPA proposes (in § 141.40(a)) a new                                 correction if necessary. The 5-year                                       small systems, development of SMPs
                                                    applicability date of December 31, 2015.                               UCMR 4 program would take place from                                      and establishment of monitoring
                                                    That is, the determination of whether a                                January 2017 through December 2021.                                       schedules. EPA anticipates that there is
                                                    PWS is required to monitor under
                                                                                                                           F. What are the proposed UCMR 4                                           enough laboratory capacity to meet the
                                                    UCMR 4 is based on the type of system
                                                                                                                           sampling design and timeline of                                           needs of Assessment Monitoring.
                                                    (e.g., CWS, NTNCWS, etc.) and its retail
                                                                                                                           activities?                                                               Exhibit 4 illustrates the major activities
                                                    population served, as indicated by the
                                                    SDWIS/Fed inventory on December 31,                                      The proposed rule identifies sampling                                   that we expect will take place in
                                                    2015. If a PWS believes its retail                                     and analysis for List 1 contaminants                                      preparation for and during the
                                                    population served in SDWIS/Fed is                                      within the 2018 to 2020 time frame.                                       implementation of UCMR 4.

                                                                                                           EXHIBIT 4—PROPOSED TIMELINE OF UCMR 4 ACTIVITIES
                                                                             2017                                          2018                            2019                            2020                                            2021

                                                    After proposed rule publication: EPA                                             ← Assessment Monitoring →                                                  Complete reporting and analysis of
                                                      laboratory approval program begins.                                                List 1 Contaminants                                                      data.
                                                    After final rule publication: EPA/state                             All large systems serving more than 10,000 people;
                                                      primacy authorities (1) develop SMPs                              800 small systems serving 10,000 or fewer people
                                                      (including the nationally representa-                                                for cyanotoxins;
                                                      tive sample); and (2) inform PWSs/                                800 small systems serving 10,000 or fewer people
                                                      establish monitoring plans.                                                  for the 20 additional chemicals.



                                                      To minimize the impact of the rule on                                addition, no small system would be                                        more than 10,000 people) pay for all
                                                    small systems (those serving 10,000 or                                 required to monitor for both                                              costs associated with their monitoring.
                                                    fewer people), EPA pays for the sample                                 cyanotoxins and the 20 additional                                         A summary of the estimated number of
                                                    kit preparation, sample shipping fees                                  UCMR chemicals. Consistent with prior                                     systems subject to monitoring is shown
                                                    and analysis costs for these systems. In                               UCMRs, large systems (those serving                                       in Exhibit 5.

                                                                                                     EXHIBIT 5—SYSTEMS TO PARTICIPATE IN UCMR 4 MONITORING
                                                           System size                                                               National sample assessment monitoring                                                                        Total number of
                                                        (number of people                                                                                                                                                                           systems per
                                                             served)                                         10 List 1 cyanotoxins                                                20 Additional List 1 chemicals                                   size category

                                                    Small Systems: 1
                                                       25–10,000 ..............           800 randomly selected SW or GWUDI systems                                  800 randomly selected SW, GWUDI and GW                                                  1,600
                                                                                                                                                                       systems.
                                                    Large Systems: 2
                                                        10,001 and over .....             All SW or GWUDI systems (1,987) ...................                        All SW, GWUDI and GW systems (4,292) ........                                           4,292

                                                                 Total ................   2,787 ..................................................................   5,092 ..................................................................                5,892
                                                       1 Total
                                                             for small systems is additive because these systems would only be selected for one component of UCMR 4 sampling (10 cyanotoxins
                                                    or 20 additional chemicals). EPA would pay for all analytical costs associated with monitoring at small systems.
                                                      2 Large system counts are approximate. The number of large systems is not additive. All SW and GWUDI systems would monitor for
                                                    cyanotoxins; those same systems would also monitor for the 20 additional List 1 chemicals, as would the large GW systems.


                                                    1. Sampling Frequency, Timing                                          four consecutive months (total of eight                                   that sampling in the December through
                                                       The number of samples for SW,                                       sampling events). GW systems would be                                     February time period would not
                                                    GWUDI and GW systems would                                             excluded from cyanotoxin monitoring.                                      accurately reflect occurrence for some of
                                                    generally be consistent with those                                       The Assessment Monitoring sampling                                      the contaminants, particularly
                                                    during prior UCMR cycles, with the                                     time frame would take place during the                                    cyanotoxins and pesticides. Industry
                                                    exceptions noted for the monitoring of                                 compressed period of March through                                        and laboratory stakeholders have also
                                                    cyanotoxins. Water systems would be                                    November to better reflect the times of                                   observed that the traditional UCMR
                                                    required to collect samples during the                                 year when contaminants are more likely                                    approach has the potential to
                                                    monitoring time frame of March through                                 to occur in drinking water. Populations                                   underestimate exposure for some
                                                    November (excluding December,                                          of cyanobacteria generally peak when                                      contaminants because of seasonal
                                                    January and February). With the                                        water temperature is highest (Graham et                                   occurrence (Roberson and Eaton, 2014).
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    exception of cyanotoxin monitoring,                                    al., 2008). Seasonality of pesticide                                      Therefore, EPA is proposing that no
                                                    sampling would take place every two                                    occurrence in surface waters has been                                     sampling take place during those winter
                                                    months for SW and GWUDI systems (a                                     well documented, and generally relates                                    months, except for resampling purposes.
                                                    total of four sampling events), and at 6-                              to the timing of pesticide applications in                                EPA welcomes comments on this
                                                    month intervals for GW systems (a total                                the watershed, rainfall or irrigation                                     approach.
                                                    of two sampling events). For cyanotoxin                                patterns and watershed size (USGS,                                          Large system schedules (year and
                                                    monitoring, SW and GWUDI systems                                       2014; Ryberg and Gilliom, 2015). Based                                    months of monitoring) would initially
                                                    would collect samples twice a month for                                on this information, EPA anticipates                                      be determined by EPA in conjunction


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                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                         76905

                                                    with the states (as described in section                (USEPA, 1998c)). TOC source water                     from the source water intake is greater
                                                    II.K) and these PWSs would have an                      sampling site(s) were set under Stage 1               than or equal to 0.3 mg/L, the result
                                                    opportunity to modify this schedule for                 DBPR and remain unchanged under                       would be reported to EPA and the
                                                    planning purposes or other reasons (e.g.,               Stage 2 DBPR. If a system has two                     sample from the EPTDS would then also
                                                    to conduct monitoring during the                        different source water sampling                       be analyzed for total microcystins by
                                                    months the system or the state believes                 locations for LT2 and Stage 1 DBPR, the               ELISA. ELISA analysis of the EPTDS
                                                    are most vulnerable, spread costs over                  system would be permitted to select the               sample would be the first step for
                                                    multiple years, a sampling location will                sample point that best represents the                 consecutive systems. If the EPTDS
                                                    be closed during the scheduled month                    definition of source water sample                     ELISA result is less than 0.3 mg/L, then
                                                    of monitoring, etc.). PWSs would not be                 location(s) for UCMR.                                 no additional analyses would be
                                                    permitted to reschedule monitoring                        EPA proposes that PWSs monitor for                  required for that particular sample event
                                                    specifically to avoid sample collection                 HAAs only in the distribution system. If              and the result would be reported to
                                                    during a suspected vulnerable period.                   the system’s treatment plant/water                    EPA. If the EPTDS ELISA result is
                                                    EPA proposes to schedule and                            source is subject to sampling                         greater than or equal to 0.3 mg/L, then
                                                    coordinate small system monitoring by                   requirements under § 141.622                          that result would be reported to EPA
                                                    working closely with partnering states.                 (monitoring requirements for Stage 2                  and the other microcystin sample
                                                    SMPs provide an opportunity for states                  DBPR), the water systems must collect                 collected at the EPTDS would be
                                                    to review and revise the initial sampling               samples for the HAAs at the sampling                  analyzed using EPA Method 544 to
                                                    schedules that EPA proposes (see                        locations identified under that rule (71              identify and quantify six particular
                                                    discussion of SMPs in section II.K).                    FR 388, January 4, 2006 (USEPA,                       microcystin congeners and a related
                                                                                                            2006b)). If a treatment plant/water                   toxin, nodularin. Method 544 uses
                                                    2. Sampling Locations                                   source is not subject to Stage 2 DBPR                 liquid chromatography with tandem
                                                       Sample collection for the UCMR 4                     monitoring, then the water system must                mass spectrometry (LC/MS/MS) to
                                                    contaminants would take place at the                    collect HAA distribution system                       quantify and speciate microcystin
                                                    entry point to the distribution system                  samples at a location that represents the             congeners at low concentrations. Using
                                                    (EPTDS), with the following exceptions/                 DSMRT. UCMR 4 HAA samples and                         Method 544 to analyze EPTDS samples
                                                    additions. Sampling for ‘‘total                         HAA5 Stage 2 DBPR compliance                          that tested positive for microcystins by
                                                    microcystins’’ (i.e., the sum of                        monitoring samples may be collected by                ELISA is expected to help EPA and the
                                                    congeners as measured by ADDA–                          the PWS at the same time. However, in                 states to establish the degree to which
                                                    ELISA) would also take place at the                     such cases, PWSs would be required to                 particular congener occurrence
                                                    source water intake (concurrent with the                arrange for UCMR 4 HAA samples to be                  compares with total microcystin
                                                    collection of cyanotoxin samples at the                 analyzed by a UCMR 4 approved                         occurrence as measured by ADDA
                                                    EPTDS) unless the PWS purchases 100                     laboratory using EPA Method 552.3 or                  ELISA (USEPA, 2015c).
                                                    percent of their water. ‘‘Consecutive                   557 (compliance methods used for                         This phased sample analysis
                                                    systems’’ would only sample for                         analysis of Stage 2 DBPR samples).                    approach for microcystins has the
                                                    cyanotoxins at their EPTDS.                                                                                   potential to achieve significant cost
                                                    Measurements for temperature and pH                     3. Phased Sample Analysis for
                                                                                                                                                                  savings. A similar approach is not
                                                    would take place at the source water                    Microcystins
                                                                                                                                                                  practical for cylindrospermopsin and
                                                    intake (concurrent with total                              EPA is proposing a phased sample                   anatoxin-a samples. Therefore, EPA
                                                    microcystin sampling). HAA sampling                     analysis approach for microcystins to                 proposes that cylindrospermopsin and
                                                    would take place in the distribution                    reduce analytical costs (i.e., PWSs must              anatoxin-a sampling be conducted
                                                    system. Sampling for TOC and bromide                    collect all required samples for each                 simultaneously with the microcystins,
                                                    would take place at a single source                     sampling event but not all samples may                twice a month for four consecutive
                                                    water intake (concurrent with HAA                       need to be analyzed). Two samples                     months only at the EPTDS, and that the
                                                    sampling in the distribution system).                   would be collected for ADDA ELISA                     samples be analyzed using EPA Method
                                                    The indicator data, along with the                      (one source water intake sample and                   545.
                                                    disinfectant type and water treatment                   one EPTDS), and one sample would be
                                                    information, would aid in the                           collected for EPA Method 544 at the                   4. Representative Sampling
                                                    understanding of brominated HAA and                     EPTDS. Initially, source water intake                    As during past UCMRs and as
                                                    cyanotoxin occurrence and treatment                     samples (collected by ‘‘non-                          described in § 141.35(c)(3), the proposed
                                                    efficacy.                                               consecutive’’ SW and GWUDI PWSs)                      rule would allow large GW systems that
                                                       For purposes of total microcystin                    would be analyzed for total                           have multiple EPTDSs, with prior
                                                    sampling, temperature and pH                            microcystins as defined by an ADDA                    approval, to sample at representative
                                                    measurement, and TOC and bromide                        specific ELISA methodology. ADDA                      sampling locations rather than at each
                                                    sampling, EPA defines source water                      ELISA is a widely used screening assay                EPTDS. Representative sampling plans
                                                    under UCMR as untreated water                           that allows for the aggregate detection of            approved under prior UCMRs will be
                                                    entering the water treatment plant (i.e.,               numerous microcystin congeners; it                    recognized as valid for UCMR 4 and
                                                    at a location prior to any treatment).                  does not allow for measurement of the                 these systems must submit a copy of
                                                    Systems that are subject to the Long                    individual congeners (USEPA, 2015c;                   documentation from their state or EPA
                                                    Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water                           Fischer et al., 2001; McElhiney and                   that approves their alternative sampling
                                                    Treatment Rule (LT2) would use their                    Lawton, 2005; Zeck et al., 2001). If the              plan. Any new GW representative
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    source water sampling site(s) that have                 source water intake ELISA result is less              monitoring plans must be submitted to
                                                    been identified under that rule (71 FR                  than 0.3 micrograms per liter (mg/L) (i.e.,           be reviewed by the state or EPA within
                                                    654, January 5, 2006 (USEPA, 2006a)).                   the reporting limit for total                         120 days from publication of the final
                                                    Systems subject to the Stage 1                          microcystins), then the other collected               rule. Once approved, these
                                                    Disinfectants and Disinfection                          samples (from the EPTDS) would not be                 representative EPTDS locations, along
                                                    Byproducts Rule (DBPR) would use                        analyzed for that sample event and only               with previously approved EPTDS
                                                    their TOC source water sampling site(s)                 the source water result would be                      locations from prior UCMRs, must be
                                                    (63 FR 69390, December 16, 1998                         reported to EPA. If the ELISA result                  loaded into the Safe Drinking Water


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                                                    76906                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    Accession and Review System                               • Add Public Water System Name.                        Æ Laboratory reagent blank (LRB), an
                                                    (SDWARS) by December 31, 2017.                          New data element to be assigned once                  element that verifies the absence of
                                                                                                            by the PWS.                                           interferences in the reagents and
                                                    5. Summary                                                • Add Public Water System Facility                  equipment;
                                                       With the exception of the increased                  Name. New data element to be assigned                    Æ Quality control sample (QCS), an
                                                    sample frequency, phased sample                         once by the PWS for every facility                    element that verifies the accuracy of the
                                                    analysis for microcystins, revised                      identification code.                                  calibration standards;
                                                    sampling locations and the compressed                     • Add Public Water System Facility                     Æ Quality HAA (QH), HAA sample
                                                    monitoring schedule, the approach to                    Type. New data element to be assigned                 collected and submitted for quality
                                                    UCMR 4 Assessment Monitoring                            once by the PWS for every facility.                   control; and,
                                                    remains consistent with that established                  • Update Sampling Point                                Æ Surrogate standard (SUR), an
                                                                                                            Identification Code. Added ‘‘source                   element that assesses method
                                                    for UCMR 3.
                                                                                                            water’’ as an example of applicable                   performance for each extraction.
                                                       EPA invites comments regarding the                   sampling locations.                                      • Update Analytical Result—Value.
                                                    cyanotoxin monitoring approach and                        • Add Sampling Point Name. New                      Update to ‘‘Analytical Result—
                                                    the usefulness of collecting temperature                data element to be assigned once by the               Measured Value.’’ The measured value
                                                    and pH data (concurrently with the                      PWS for every sampling point                          is the analytical result for the
                                                    ELISA sample) at the source water                       identification code.                                  contaminant.
                                                    intake, as well as designating source                     • Update Sample Point Type Code.                       • Add Additional Value. This
                                                    water type (e.g., lakes/reservoirs or                   Add source water (SR) to account for                  element is used for quality control
                                                    flowing streams), as potential indicators               brominated HAA indicators and                         samples and is the amount of
                                                    of cyanotoxin occurrence. EPA also                      microcystin monitoring at the intake to               contaminant added to a QCS.
                                                    invites comments on the                                 the treatment plant.                                     • Update Sample Event Code. Revise
                                                    appropriateness of other potential                        • Update Disinfectant Type. Adding                  sample event codes to uniquely identify
                                                    cyanotoxin indicators, recognizing that                 the following primary disinfectant/                   sampling events with specific codes for
                                                    the cost of any additional indicator                    oxidation practices: Permanganate                     cyanotoxin and additional chemical
                                                    monitoring would need to be weighed                     applied before SR sample location                     monitoring.
                                                    with consideration given to the                         (PEMB) and after (PEMA), hydrogen
                                                    likelihood of any other parameters                      peroxide applied before SR sample                     2. Duplicate Samples
                                                    serving as effective indicators.                        location (HPXB) and after (HPXA), and                    Currently, § 141.40(a)(4)(ii)(F),
                                                       Finally, EPA recognizes the trade-off                chlorine dioxide applied before SR                    requires EPA to randomly select a small
                                                    between PWS burden and occurrence-                      sample location (CLDB) and after                      percentage of small water systems to
                                                    data representativeness, and has                        (CLDA).                                               collect duplicate water samples for
                                                    attempted to strike a reasonable balance                  • Add Treatment Information. New                    quality control purposes. Based on
                                                    in selecting the affected PWSs and                      data element to capture treatment                     experience from previous UCMRs, this
                                                    establishing the monitoring frequency.                  associated with the water being                       requirement did not provide significant
                                                    The Agency welcomes comment on this                     sampled.                                              useful information and EPA proposes to
                                                                                                              • Add Disinfectant Residual Type.                   remove the requirement for the
                                                    particular point, including input
                                                                                                            New data element to capture                           collection of duplicate samples from
                                                    regarding the appropriateness of
                                                                                                            disinfectant residual type information                UCMR 4.
                                                    collecting occurrence data from fewer
                                                                                                            associated with the water being
                                                    PWSs. This could include employing                      sampled.                                              H. What are Minimum Reporting Levels
                                                    the Screening Survey approach used in                     • Add Extraction Batch Identification               (MRLs) and how were they determined?
                                                    UCMR 3 or an alternative design. EPA                    Code. New data element to allow
                                                    requests that commenters suggesting                                                                              The analyte minimum reporting level
                                                                                                            evaluation of quality control elements                (MRL) is a quantitation level designed to
                                                    alternatives describe how their                         associated with extraction of samples in
                                                    proposed approach would be nationally                                                                         be an estimate of the reporting level that
                                                                                                            methods where extraction is required.                 is achievable, with 95% confidence, by
                                                    representative of the frequency and                       • Add Extraction Date. New data
                                                    level of contaminant occurrence.                                                                              a capable analyst/laboratory at least
                                                                                                            element identifying the date of sample                75% of the time, using the prescribed
                                                    G. What are reporting requirements for                  extraction.                                           method. Demonstration of the ability to
                                                    UCMR 4?                                                   • Add Analysis Batch Identification
                                                                                                                                                                  reliably make quality measurements at
                                                                                                            Code. New data element to allow
                                                    1. Data Elements                                                                                              or below the MRL is intended to ensure
                                                                                                            evaluation of quality control elements
                                                                                                                                                                  that high quality results are being
                                                                                                            associated with analyzing samples.
                                                      EPA proposes the following changes                      • Add Analysis Date. New data                       reported by participating laboratories.
                                                    to the reporting requirements listed in                 element identifying the start date of                 MRLs are generally established as low
                                                    Table 1 of § 141.35(e) to account for the               sample analysis.                                      as is reasonable (and are typically lower
                                                    UCMR 4 contaminants being proposed                        • Update Sample Analysis Type. The                  than the current health reference levels
                                                    and the associated indicators.                          following elements are proposed as                    and health advisories), so that the
                                                    Additionally, EPA proposes to collect                   quality assurance measures:                           occurrence data reported to EPA will
                                                    quality control information related to                    Æ Continuing calibration check (CCC),               support sound decision making,
                                                    sample analysis. This information                                                                             including those cases where new
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                                                                                                            an element that verifies the accuracy of
                                                    would further ensure that methods are                   method calibration;                                   information might lead to lower health
                                                    followed as written, and would provide                    Æ Internal standard (IS), an element                reference levels. EPA established the
                                                    continuous quality assurance of data                    that measures the relative response of                proposed MRL for each analyte/method
                                                    reported. EPA collected this information                contaminants;                                         by obtaining data from several
                                                    for small systems in previous UCMRs                       Æ Laboratory fortified blank (LFB), an              laboratories performing ‘‘lowest
                                                    and found that doing so helps ensure                    element that verifies method                          concentration minimum reporting
                                                    that laboratories consistently follow the               performance in the absence of a sample                level’’ (LCMRL) studies. For further
                                                    methods.                                                matrix;                                               information on the LCMRL and MRL


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                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                           76907

                                                    process, see ‘‘Technical Basis for the                  PWSs scheduled for monitoring in the                  be approved, a laboratory is expected to
                                                    Lowest Concentration Minimum                            first year will be making arrangements                meet specific acceptance criteria for the
                                                    Reporting Level (LCMRL) Calculator’’                    for sample analyses soon after the final              analysis of a UCMR 4 PT sample(s) for
                                                    (USEPA, 2010), available on the Internet                rule is published. The anticipated steps              each analyte in each method, for which
                                                    at (http://www2.epa.gov/                                and requirements for the laboratory                   the laboratory is seeking approval. EPA
                                                    dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                           approval process are listed in the                    intends to offer up to four opportunities
                                                    drinking-water-analytical-methods).                     following paragraphs, steps 1 through 6.              for a laboratory to successfully analyze
                                                    EPA will consider raising MRLs if the                                                                         UCMR 4 PT samples. Up to three of
                                                    Agency becomes aware of evidence that                   1. Request To Participate                             these studies will be conducted prior to
                                                    a proposed MRL is unattainable or                          Laboratories interested in the UCMR 4              the publication of the final rule, and at
                                                    impractical.                                            laboratory approval program would first               least one study will be conducted after
                                                                                                            email EPA at: UCMR_Sampling_                          publication of the final rule. This allows
                                                    I. How do laboratories become approved
                                                                                                            Coordinator@epa.gov to request                        laboratories to complete their portion of
                                                    to conduct UCMR 4 analyses?
                                                                                                            registration materials. EPA expects to                the laboratory approval process prior to
                                                       The proposed rule would require EPA                  accept such requests beginning                        publication of the final rule and receive
                                                    approval for all laboratories conducting                December 11, 2015. EPA anticipates that               their approval immediately following
                                                    analyses for UCMR 4. EPA anticipates                    the final opportunity for a laboratory to             the publication of the final rule. A
                                                    following the traditional Agency                        complete and submit the necessary                     laboratory is expected to pass one of the
                                                    approach to approving UCMR                              registration information will be 60 days              PT studies for each analytical method
                                                    laboratories, which would require                       after final rule publication.                         for which it is requesting approval, and
                                                    laboratories seeking approval to: (1)                                                                         will not be required to pass a PT study
                                                    Provide EPA with data that demonstrate                  2. Registration                                       for a method it already passed in a
                                                    a successful completion of an initial                      Laboratory applicants provide                      previous UCMR 4 PT study. EPA does
                                                    demonstration of capability (IDC) as                    registration information that includes:               not expect to conduct additional PT
                                                    outlined in each method; (2) verify                     laboratory name, mailing address,                     studies after the start of system
                                                    successful performance at or below the                  shipping address, contact name, phone                 monitoring; however, laboratory audits
                                                    MRLs as specified in this action; (3)                   number, email address and a list of the               will likely be ongoing throughout
                                                    provide information about laboratory                    UCMR 4 methods for which the                          UCMR 4 implementation. Initial
                                                    operating procedures; and (4)                           laboratory is seeking approval. This                  laboratory approval is expected to be
                                                    successfully participate in an EPA                      registration step provides EPA with the               contingent on successful completion of
                                                    proficiency testing (PT) program for the                necessary contact information, and                    a PT study. Continued laboratory
                                                    analytes of interest. Audits of                         ensures that each laboratory receives a               approval is contingent on successful
                                                    laboratories may be conducted by EPA                    customized application package.                       completion of the audit process and
                                                    prior to and/or following approval. The                                                                       satisfactorily meeting all the other stated
                                                    ‘‘UCMR 4 Laboratory Approval                            3. Application Package
                                                                                                                                                                  conditions.
                                                    Requirements and Information                               Laboratories that wish to participate
                                                    Document’’ (USEPA, 2015j) will provide                  complete and return a customized                      6. Written EPA Approval
                                                    guidance on the EPA laboratory                          application package that includes the                    After successfully completing the
                                                    approval program and the specific                       following: IDC data, including                        preceding steps 1 through 5, EPA
                                                    method acceptance criteria.                             precision, accuracy and results of MRL                expects to send each laboratory a letter
                                                       EPA may supply analytical reference                  studies; information regarding analytical             listing the methods for which approval
                                                    standards for select analytes to                        equipment and other materials; proof of               is pending (i.e., pending promulgation
                                                    participating/approved laboratories                     current drinking water laboratory                     of the final rule if the PT studies have
                                                    when reliable standards are not readily                 certification (for select compliance                  been conducted prior to that time), or
                                                    available through commercial sources.                   monitoring methods); and example                      for which approval is granted (if after
                                                       The structure of the proposed UCMR                   chromatograms for each method under                   promulgation of the final rule).
                                                    4 laboratory approval program is the                    review.                                               Laboratories receiving pending approval
                                                    same as that employed in previous                          As a condition of receiving and                    are expected to be granted approval
                                                    UCMRs, and would provide an                             maintaining approval, the laboratory is               without further action following
                                                    assessment of the ability of laboratories               expected to confirm that it will post                 promulgation of the final rule if no
                                                    to perform analyses using the methods                   UCMR 4 monitoring results and quality                 changes have been made to the rule that
                                                    listed in § 141.40(a)(3), Table 1. The                  control data that meet method criteria                impact the laboratory approval program.
                                                    UCMR 4 laboratory approval process is                   (on behalf of its PWS clients) to EPA’s               EPA expects to contact the laboratory if
                                                    designed to assess whether laboratories                 UCMR electronic data reporting system,                changes are made between the proposed
                                                    possess the required equipment and can                  SDWARS.                                               and final rules that warrant additional
                                                    meet laboratory-performance and data-                                                                         action by the laboratory.
                                                    reporting criteria described in this                    4. EPA’s Review of Application Package
                                                    action. Laboratory participation in the                                                                       J. What documents are being
                                                                                                               EPA will review the application
                                                    UCMR laboratory approval program is                                                                           incorporated by reference?
                                                                                                            packages and, if necessary, request
                                                    voluntary. However, as in previous                      follow-up information. Laboratories that                 The following methods are being
                                                    UCMRs and as proposed for UCMR 4,                       successfully complete the application                 incorporated by reference into this
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    EPA would require PWSs to exclusively                   process become eligible to participate in             section for UCMR 4 monitoring. All
                                                    use laboratories that have been                         the UCMR 4 PT program.                                approved material except for the
                                                    approved under the program. EPA                                                                               Standard Method Online, is available
                                                    expects to post a list of approved UCMR                 5. Proficiency Testing                                for inspection electronically at http://
                                                    4 laboratories to: http://www2.epa.gov/                    A PT sample is a synthetic sample                  www.regulations.gov (Docket ID No.
                                                    dwucmr. Laboratories are encouraged to                  containing a concentration of an analyte              OW–2015–0218), or from the sources
                                                    apply for UCMR 4 approval as early as                   or mixture of analytes that is known to               listed for each method. EPA has worked
                                                    possible, as EPA anticipates that large                 EPA, but unknown to the laboratory. To                to make these methods and documents


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                                                    76908                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    reasonably available to interested                      Water Using Ion Chromatography with                      (xi) EPA Method 530 ‘‘Determination
                                                    parties. The versions of the EPA and                    the Addition of a Postcolumn Reagent                  of Select Semivolatile Organic
                                                    non-EPA methods that may be used to                     for Trace Bromate Analysis,’’ Revision                Chemicals in Drinking Water by Solid
                                                    support monitoring under this rule are                  2.0, 2001, EPA 815–B–01–001.                          Phase Extraction and Gas
                                                    as follows:                                             Available on the Internet at http://                  Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry
                                                                                                            www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/                     (GC/MS),’’ Version 1.0, January 2015,
                                                    1. Methods From the U.S.
                                                                                                            approved-drinking-water-analytical-                   EPA/600/R–14/442. Available on the
                                                    Environmental Protection Agency
                                                                                                            methods. This is an EPA method for the                Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-
                                                       The following methods are from the                   analysis of inorganic anions in water                 research/epa-drinking-water-research-
                                                    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,                   samples using IC with conductivity                    methods. This is an EPA method for the
                                                    Water Docket, EPA/DC, EPA West,                         detection.                                            analysis of semivolatile organic
                                                    Room 3334, 1301 Constitution Avenue                        (vii) EPA Method 326.0                             chemicals in drinking water using SPE
                                                    NW., Washington, DC 20004.                              ‘‘Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide                and GC/MS and is proposed to measure
                                                       (i) EPA Method 150.1 ‘‘pH                            Disinfection By-Products in Drinking                  butylated hydroxyanisole, o-toluidine,
                                                    Electrometric, in Methods for Chemical                  Water Using Ion Chromatography                        and quinoline.
                                                    Analysis of Water and Wastes,’’ 1983,                   Incorporating the Addition of a                          (xii) EPA Method 541 ‘‘Determination
                                                    EPA/600/4–79/020. Available on the                      Suppressor Acidified Postcolumn                       of 1-Butanol, 1,4-Dioxane, 2-
                                                    Internet at http://www.nemi.gov. This is                Reagent for Trace Bromate Analysis,’’                 Methoxyethanol and 2-Propen-1-ol in
                                                    an EPA method for measuring pH in                       Revision 1.0, 2002, EPA 815–R–03–007.                 Drinking Water by Solid Phase
                                                    water samples using a meter with a glass                Available on the Internet at http://                  Extraction and Gas Chromatography/
                                                    electrode and reference electrode or a                  www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/                     Mass Spectrometry,’’ November 2015,
                                                    combination electrode. The proposal                     approved-drinking-water-analytical-                   EPA 815–R–15–011. Available on the
                                                    includes measurement of pH as a                         methods. This is an EPA method for the                Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/
                                                    potential indicator for cyanotoxins.                    analysis of inorganic anions in water                 dwanalyticalmethods/approved-
                                                       (ii) EPA Method 150.2 ‘‘pH,                                                                                drinking-water-analytical-methods. This
                                                                                                            samples using IC with conductivity
                                                    Continuous Monitoring (Electrometric),                                                                        is an EPA method for the analysis of
                                                                                                            detection.
                                                    in Methods for Chemical Analysis of                                                                           selected alcohols and 1,4-dioxane in
                                                    Water and Wastes,’’ 1983, EPA/600/4–                       (viii) EPA Method 415.3
                                                                                                            ‘‘Determination of Total Organic Carbon               drinking water using SPE and GC/MS
                                                    79/020. Available on the Internet at                                                                          and is proposed to measure 1-butanol,
                                                    http://www.nemi.gov. This is an EPA                     and Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm
                                                                                                                                                                  2-methoxyethanol and 2-propen-1-ol.
                                                    method for measuring pH of in-line                      in Source Water and Drinking Water,’’
                                                                                                                                                                     (xiii) EPA Method 544
                                                    water samples using a continuous flow                   Revision 1.1, 2005, EPA/600/R–05/055.                 ‘‘Determination of Microcystins and
                                                    meter with a glass electrode and                        Available on the Internet at http://                  Nodularin in Drinking Water by Solid
                                                    reference electrode or a combination                    www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-                      Phase Extraction and Liquid
                                                    electrode.                                              drinking-water-research-methods. This                 Chromatography/Tandem Mass
                                                       (iii) EPA Method 200.8                               is an EPA method for the analysis of                  Spectrometry (LC/MS/MS),’’ Version
                                                    ‘‘Determination of Trace Elements in                    TOC in water samples using a                          1.0, February 2015, EPA/600/R–14/474.
                                                    Waters and Wastes by Inductively                        conductivity detector or a nondispersive              Available on the Internet at http://
                                                    Coupled Plasma—Mass Spectrometry,’’                     infrared detector.                                    www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-
                                                    Revision 5.4, 1994. Available on the                       (ix) EPA Method 415.3                              drinking-water-research-methods. This
                                                    Internet at https://www.nemi.gov. This                  ‘‘Determination of Total Organic Carbon               is an EPA method for the analysis of
                                                    is an EPA method for the analysis of                    and Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm                  selected cyanotoxins in drinking water
                                                    elements in water by ICP–MS and is                      in Source Water and Drinking Water,’’                 using SPE and LC–MS/MS with
                                                    proposed to measure germanium and                       Revision 1.2, 2009, EPA/600/R–09/                     electrospray ionization (ESI) and is
                                                    manganese.                                              122.Available on the Internet at http://              proposed to measure six microcystins
                                                       (iv) EPA Method 300.0                                www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-                      (microcystin-LA, microcystin-LF,
                                                    ‘‘Determination of Inorganic Anions by                  drinking-water-research-methods. This                 microcystin-LR, microcystin-LY,
                                                    Ion Chromatography Samples,’’                           is an EPA method for the analysis of                  microcystin-RR, and microcystin-YR)
                                                    Revision 2.1, 1993. Available on the                    TOC in water samples using a                          and nodularin.
                                                    Internet at http://www.nemi.gov. This is                conductivity detector or a nondispersive                 (xiv) EPA Method 545 ‘‘Determination
                                                    an EPA method for the analysis of                       infrared detector.                                    of Cylindrospermopsin and Anatoxin-a
                                                    inorganic anions in water samples using                    (x) EPA Method 525.3 ‘‘Determination               in Drinking Water by Liquid
                                                    ion chromatography (IC) with                            of Semivolatile Organic Chemicals in                  Chromatography Electrospray Ionization
                                                    conductivity detection. The proposal                    Drinking Water by Solid Phase                         Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC/ESI–
                                                    includes measurement of bromide as a                    Extraction and Capillary Column Gas                   MS/MS),’’ April 2015, EPA 815–R–15–
                                                    potential indicator for HAAs.                           Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry                      009. Available on the Internet at
                                                       (v) EPA Method 300.1 ‘‘Determination                 (GC/MS),’’ Version 1.0, February 2012,                http://www2.epa.gov/
                                                    of Inorganic Anions in Drinking Water                   EPA/600/R–12/010. Available on the                    dwanalyticalmethods/approved-
                                                    by Ion Chromatography,’’ Revision 1.0,                  Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-                drinking-water-analytical-methods. This
                                                    1997. Available on the Internet at                      research/epa-drinking-water-research-                 is an EPA method for the analysis of
                                                    http://www2.epa.gov/                                    methods. This is an EPA method for the                selected cyanotoxins in drinking water
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                                                    dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                           analysis of semivolatile organic                      using LC–MS/MS with electrospray
                                                    drinking-water-analytical-methods. This                 chemicals in drinking water using SPE                 ionization (ESI) and is proposed to
                                                    is an EPA method for the analysis of                    and GC/MS and is proposed to measure                  measure cylindrospermopsin and
                                                    inorganic anions in water samples using                 nine pesticides (alpha-                               anatoxin-a.
                                                    IC with conductivity detection.                         hexachlorocyclohexane, chlorpyrifos,                     (xv) EPA Method 552.3
                                                       (vi) EPA Method 317.0                                dimethipin, ethoprop, oxyfluorfen,                    ‘‘Determination of Haloacetic Acids and
                                                    ‘‘Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide                  profenofos, tebuconazole, total cis- and              Dalapon in Drinking Water by Liquid-
                                                    Disinfection By-Products in Drinking                    trans- permethrin, and tribufos).                     Liquid Microextraction, Derivatization,


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                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                         76909

                                                    and Gas Chromatography with Electron                    3. Methods From ‘‘Standard Methods for                Standard Hydrogen Electrode.’’ This is a
                                                    Capture Detection,’’ Revision 1.0, July                 the Examination of Water &                            Standard Method for measuring pH in
                                                    2003, EPA 815–B–03–002. Available on                    Wastewater’’                                          water samples using a meter, standard
                                                    the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/                       The following methods are from                     hydrogen electrode, and reference
                                                    dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                           ‘‘Standard Methods for the Examination                electrode.
                                                    drinking-water-analytical-methods. This                                                                          (iv) SM 5310B–00 ‘‘The
                                                                                                            of Water & Wastewater’’, 21st edition
                                                    is an EPA method for the analysis of                                                                          Determination of Total Organic Carbon
                                                                                                            (2005), American Public Health
                                                    haloacetic acids and dalapon in                                                                               by High-Temperature Combustion
                                                                                                            Association, 800 I Street NW.,
                                                    drinking water using liquid-liquid                                                                            Method.’’ This is a Standard Method for
                                                                                                            Washington, DC 20001–3710.                            the analysis of TOC in water samples
                                                    microextraction, derivatization, and GC                    (i) SM 2550 ‘‘Temperature.’’ This is a
                                                                                                                                                                  using a conductivity detector or a
                                                    with electron capture detection (ECD)                   Standard Method for temperature
                                                                                                                                                                  nondispersive infrared detector.
                                                    and is proposed to measure three HAA                    measurements using a thermometer                         (v) SM 5310C–00 ‘‘Total organic
                                                    groups (HAA5, HAA6Br and HAA9).                         (mercury). The proposal includes                      carbon by Persulfate-UV or Heated-
                                                       (xvi) EPA Method 557 ‘‘Determination                 measurement of temperature as a                       Persulfate Oxidation Method.’’ This is a
                                                    of Haloacetic Acids, Bromate, and                       potential indicator for cyanotoxins.                  Standard Method for the analysis of
                                                    Dalapon in Drinking Water by Ion                           (ii) SM 3125 ‘‘Metals by Inductively               TOC in water samples using a
                                                    Chromatography Electrospray Ionization                  Coupled Plasma/Mass Spectrometry.’’                   conductivity detector or a nondispersive
                                                    Tandem Mass Spectrometry (IC–ESI–                       This is a Standard Method for the                     infrared detector.
                                                                                                            analysis of metals and metalloids in                     (vi) SM 5310D–00 ‘‘Total organic
                                                    MS/MS),’’ Version 1.0, September 2009,
                                                                                                            water by ICP–MS and is proposed for                   carbon by Wet-Oxidation Method.’’ This
                                                    EPA 815–B–09–012. Available on the
                                                                                                            the analysis of germanium and                         is a Standard Method for the analysis of
                                                    Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/
                                                                                                            manganese.                                            TOC in water samples using a
                                                    dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                              (iii) SM 4500–H+ B ‘‘pH Value in
                                                    drinking-water-analytical-methods. This                                                                       conductivity detector or a nondispersive
                                                                                                            Water by Potentiometry Using a                        infrared detector.
                                                    is an EPA method for the analysis of                    Standard Hydrogen Electrode.’’ This is a
                                                    haloacetic acids, bromate, and dalapon                  Standard Method for measuring pH of                   5. Method From ‘‘Ohio EPA’’
                                                    in drinking water using IC–MS/MS with                   water samples using a meter, standard                    The following methodology is from
                                                    electrospray ionization (ESI) and is                    hydrogen electrode, and reference                     Ohio EPA, Columbus, OH.
                                                    proposed to measure three HAA groups                    electrode.                                               (i) ELISA SOP ‘‘Ohio EPA Total
                                                    (HAA5, HAA6Br and HAA9).                                   (iv) SM 5310B ‘‘The Determination of               (Extracellular and Intracellular)
                                                    2. Methods From ‘‘ASTM International’’                  Total Organic Carbon by High-                         Microcystins—ADDA by ELISA
                                                                                                            Temperature Combustion Method.’’                      Analytical Methodology,’’ Version 2.0.
                                                       The following methods are from                       This is a Standard Method for the                     January 2015, available on the Internet
                                                    ‘‘ASTM International’’, 100 Barr Harbor                 analysis of TOC in water samples using                at http://www.epa.ohio.gov/Portals/28/
                                                    Drive, West Conshohocken, PA 19428–                     a a conductivity detector or a                        documents/habs/HAB_Analytical_
                                                    2959.                                                   nondispersive infrared detector.                      Methodology.pdf. This is an Ohio EPA
                                                                                                               (v) SM 5310C ‘‘Total organic carbon                method for the analysis of cyanotoxins
                                                       (i) ASTM D1293–12 ‘‘Standard Test
                                                                                                            by Persulfate-UV or Heated-Persulfate                 (microcystins and nodularin) in
                                                    Methods for pH of Water.’’ Available for
                                                                                                            Oxidation Method.’’ This is a Standard                drinking water using an ELISA
                                                    purchase on the Internet at http://                     Method for the analysis of TOC in water               technique. The proposal includes
                                                    www.astm.org/Standards/D1293.htm.                       samples using conductivity detector or                measurement of ‘‘total microcystins’’
                                                    This is an ASTM method for measuring                    a nondispersive infrared detector.                    using this technique.
                                                    pH in water samples using a meter and                      (vi) SM 5310D ‘‘Total organic carbon
                                                    associated electrodes.                                                                                        K. What is the states’ role in the UCMR
                                                                                                            by Wet-Oxidation Method.’’ This is a
                                                                                                                                                                  program?
                                                       (ii) ASTM D5673–10 ‘‘Standard Test                   Standard Method for the analysis of
                                                    Method for Elements in Water by                         TOC in water samples using a                             UCMR is a direct implementation rule
                                                    Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass                         conductivity detector or a nondispersive              (i.e., EPA has primary responsibility for
                                                    Spectrometry,’’ approved August 1,                      infrared detector.                                    its implementation) and state
                                                    2010. Available for purchase on the                                                                           participation is voluntary. Under
                                                                                                            4. Methods From ‘‘Standard Methods                    previous UCMRs, specific activities that
                                                    Internet at http://www.astm.org/                        Online’’
                                                    Standards/D5673.htm. This is an ASTM                                                                          individual states, tribes and territories
                                                    method for the analysis of elements in                     The following methods are from                     agreed to carry out or assist with were
                                                    water by ICP–MS and is proposed to                      ‘‘Standard Methods Online,’’ available                identified and established exclusively
                                                    measure germanium and manganese.                        for purchase on the Internet at http://               through Partnership Agreements (PAs).
                                                                                                            www.standardmethods.org.                              Through PAs, states, tribes and
                                                       (iii) ASTM D6581–12 ‘‘Standard Test                     (i) SM 2550–10 ‘‘Temperature.’’ This               territories can help EPA implement the
                                                    Methods for Bromate, Bromide,                           is a Standard Method for temperature                  UCMR program and help ensure that the
                                                    Chlorate, and Chlorite in Drinking                      measurements using a thermometer                      UCMR data are of the highest quality
                                                    Water by Suppressed Ion                                 (fluid filled or electronic).                         possible to best support Agency
                                                    Chromatography.’’ Available for                            (ii) SM 3125–09 ‘‘Metals by                        decision making. Under UCMR 4, EPA
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                                                    purchase on the Internet at http://                     Inductively Coupled Plasma/Mass                       expects to continue to use the PA
                                                    www.astm.org/Standards/D6581.htm.                       Spectrometry (Editorial revisions,                    process to determine and document the
                                                    This is an ASTM method for the                          2011).’’ This is a Standard Method for                following: The process for review and
                                                    analysis of inorganic anions in water                   the analysis of metals and metalloids in              revision of the SMPs; replacing and
                                                    samples using IC with conductivity                      water by ICP–MS and is proposed to                    updating system information; review
                                                    detection. The proposal includes                        measure germanium and manganese.                      and approval of proposed ground water
                                                    measurement of bromide as a potential                      (iii) SM 4500–H+ B–00 ‘‘pH Value in                representative monitoring plans;
                                                    indicator for HAAs.                                     Water by Potentiometry Using a                        notification and instructions for


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                                                    76910                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    systems; and compliance assistance.                     no later than 5:00 p.m., eastern time on              further steps that may be taken to
                                                    EPA recognizes that states/primacy                      January 10, 2016, https://                            evaluate and address health risks to
                                                    agencies often have the best information                attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/                    children within the scope of UCMR 4.
                                                    about PWSs in their state and                           7326881974233959170. To ensure
                                                                                                                                                                  O. How did EPA address Environmental
                                                    encourages states to partner.                           adequate time for public statements,
                                                       SMPs include tabular listings of the                                                                       Justice?
                                                                                                            individuals or organizations interested
                                                    systems that EPA selected and the                       in making a statement should identify                    EPA did not identify any
                                                    proposed schedule for their monitoring.                 their interest when they register. We ask             disproportionately high or adverse
                                                    Initial SMPs also typically include                     that only one person present on behalf                human health or environmental effects
                                                    instructions to states for revising and/or              of a group or organization, and that the              on minority, low-income or indigenous
                                                    correcting system information in the                    presentation be limited to ten minutes.               populations in the process of
                                                    SMPs, including modifying the                           Any additional statements from                        developing the proposed rule for UCMR
                                                    sampling schedules for small systems.                   attendees will be taken during the                    4 (See III.J. Executive Order 12898). By
                                                    EPA expects to incorporate revisions                    webinar if time permits; alternatively,               seeking to identify unregulated
                                                    from states, resolve any outstanding                    official comments can be submitted to                 contaminants that may pose health risks
                                                    questions and return the final SMPs to                  the docket. The number of webinar                     via drinking water from all PWSs,
                                                    each state.                                             connections available for the meeting is              UCMR furthers the protection of public
                                                                                                            limited and will be available on a first-             health for all citizens. EPA recognizes
                                                    L. What stakeholder meetings have been
                                                                                                            come, first-served basis. Further details             that unregulated contaminants in
                                                    held in preparation for UCMR 4?
                                                                                                            about registration and participation in               drinking water are of interest to all
                                                       EPA incorporates stakeholder                         the webinar can be found on EPA’s                     populations and structured the
                                                    involvement into each UCMR cycle.                       Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring                    rulemaking process and implementation
                                                    Specific to the development of UCMR 4,                  Program Meetings and Materials Web                    of the proposed UCMR 4 rule to allow
                                                    EPA held two public stakeholder                         page at http://www2.epa.gov/dwucmr/                   for meaningful involvement and
                                                    meetings and is announcing a third in                   unregulated-contaminant-monitoring-                   transparency. EPA organized public
                                                    this proposal (see sections II.L and II.M).             rule-ucmr-meetings-and-materials.                     meetings/webinars to share information
                                                    EPA held a meeting focused on drinking                                                                        regarding the development of UCMR 4;
                                                    water methods for CCL contaminants on                   2. Webinar Materials
                                                                                                                                                                  coordinated with tribal governments;
                                                    May 15, 2013, in Cincinnati, Ohio.                         Meeting materials are expected to be               and convened a workgroup with
                                                    Participants included representatives of                sent by email to all registered attendees             representatives from the EPA Regions,
                                                    state agencies, laboratories, PWSs,                     prior to the public webinar. EPA will                 EPA Program Offices, EPA’s Office of
                                                    environmental organizations and                         post the materials on the Agency’s Web                Research and Development and several
                                                    drinking water associations. Meeting                    site for persons who are unable to attend             states.
                                                    topics included an overview of the                      the webinar. Please note, these materials                EPA proposes to continue to collect
                                                    regulatory process (CCL, UCMR and                       could be posted after the webinar.                    U.S. Postal Service Zip Codes for each
                                                    Regulatory Determination) and drinking                  N. How did EPA consider Children’s                    PWS’s service area, as collected under
                                                    water methods under development,                        Environmental Health?                                 UCMR 3, to support an assessment of
                                                    primarily for CCL contaminants (see                                                                           whether or not minority, low-income
                                                    USEPA, 2013 for presentation                               Executive Order 13045 does not apply
                                                                                                            to UCMR 4, however, EPA’s Policy on                   and/or indigenous-population
                                                    materials). EPA held a second                                                                                 communities are uniquely impacted by
                                                    stakeholder meeting on June 25, 2014,                   Evaluating Health Risks to Children is
                                                                                                            applicable (See III.G. Executive Order                particular drinking water contaminants.
                                                    in Washington, DC. Attendees                                                                                  EPA solicits comment on additional
                                                    representing state agencies, tribes,                    13045). By monitoring for unregulated
                                                                                                            contaminants that may pose health risks               actions the Agency could take to further
                                                    laboratories, PWSs, environmental                                                                             address environmental justice within
                                                    organizations and drinking water                        via drinking water, UCMR furthers the
                                                                                                            protection of public health for all                   the UCMR program. EPA welcomes, for
                                                    associations participated in the meeting                                                                      example, comments regarding sampling
                                                    via webinar and in person. Meeting                      citizens, including children. EPA
                                                                                                            considered children’s health risks                    and/or modeling approaches, and the
                                                    topics included a status update on                                                                            feasibility and utility of applying these
                                                    UCMR 3; UCMR 4 potential sampling                       during the proposed rule development
                                                                                                            process for UCMR 4, including the                     approaches to determine
                                                    design changes relative to UCMR 3;                                                                            disproportionate impacts.
                                                    UCMR 4 candidate analytes and                           decision-making process for prioritizing
                                                    rationale; and the laboratory approval                  candidate contaminants, and included a                III. Statutory and Executive Order
                                                    process (see USEPA, 2014 for meeting                    representative from EPA’s Office of                   Reviews
                                                    materials).                                             Children’s Health Protection as a
                                                                                                            participant on the UCMR 4 workgroup.                  A. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
                                                    M. How do I participate in the upcoming                    The objective of UCMR 4 is to collect              Planning and Review and Executive
                                                    stakeholder meeting?                                    nationally representative drinking water              Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
                                                                                                            data on a set of unregulated                          Regulatory Review
                                                      EPA will hold the third public
                                                    stakeholder meeting (via webinar) on                    contaminants. Wherever feasible, EPA                    This action is not a significant
                                                    January 13, 2016. Topics will include                   collects occurrence data for                          regulatory action and was therefore not
                                                                                                            contaminants at levels below current                  submitted to OMB.
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    the proposed UCMR 4 monitoring
                                                    requirements, analyte selection and                     ‘‘reference concentrations’’ (e.g., health
                                                                                                            advisories and health reference levels).              B. Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
                                                    rationale, analytical methods, the
                                                    laboratory approval process and ground                  By setting reporting levels as low as we                The information collection activities
                                                    water representative monitoring plans.                  reasonably can, the Agency positions                  in this proposed rule have been
                                                                                                            itself to better address updated risk                 submitted for approval to OMB under
                                                    1. Webinar Participation                                information in the future, including that             the PRA. The ICR document that the
                                                       Those who wish to participate in the                 associated with unique risks to children.             EPA prepared has been assigned EPA
                                                    public webinar must register in advance                 EPA requests comments regarding any                   ICR number 2192.07. You can find a


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                                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                                      76911

                                                    copy of the ICR in the docket for this                                    and 14.1 times per PWS, respectively,                                   collection requirements contained in
                                                    rule, and it is briefly summarized here.                                  across the 3-year ICR period. The                                       this proposal.
                                                       The information that EPA proposes to                                   average burden per response for large
                                                                                                                                                                                                      C. Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA)
                                                    collect under this rule fulfills the                                      and very large PWSs is estimated at 6.1
                                                    statutory requirements of section                                         and 9.9 hours, respectively. States are                                    For purposes of assessing the impacts
                                                    1445(a)(2) of SDWA, as amended in                                         assumed to have an annual average                                       of this proposed rule on small entities,
                                                    1996. The data will describe the source                                   burden of 366.5 hours related to                                        EPA considered small entities to be
                                                    of the water, location and test results for                               coordination with EPA and PWSs. In                                      PWSs serving 10,000 or fewer people,
                                                    samples taken from PWSs. The                                              aggregate, during the ICR period, the                                   because this is the system size specified
                                                    information collected will support                                        average response (e.g., responses from                                  in SDWA as requiring special
                                                    Agency decisions as to whether or not                                     PWSs and states) is associated with a                                   consideration with respect to small
                                                    to regulate particular contaminants                                       burden of 6.9 hours, with a labor plus                                  system flexibility. As required by the
                                                    under SDWA. Reporting is mandatory.                                       non-labor cost of $1,705 per response.                                  RFA, EPA proposed using this
                                                    The data are not subject to                                                  The annual average per-respondent                                    alternative definition in the FR, (63 FR
                                                    confidentiality protection.                                               burden hours and costs for the ICR                                      7606, February 13, 1998 (USEPA,
                                                       The annual burden and cost estimates                                   period are: Small PWSs—6.2 hours, or                                    1998b)), requested public comment,
                                                    described in this section are based on                                    $171, for labor; large PWSs—23.3 hours,                                 consulted with the Small Business
                                                    the implementation assumptions                                            or $682, for labor, and $6,047 for                                      Administration and finalized the
                                                    described in section II.F. Respondents to                                 analytical costs; very large PWSs—46.5                                  alternative definition in the Consumer
                                                    UCMR 4 include 1,600 small PWSs (800                                      hours, or $1,248, for labor, and $16,298                                Confidence Reports rulemaking, (63 FR
                                                    for cyanotoxin monitoring and a                                           for analytical costs; and states—244.3                                  44512, August 19, 1998 (USEPA,
                                                    different set of 800 for monitoring the                                   hours, or $11,598, for labor. Annual                                    1998a)). As stated in that Final Rule, the
                                                    additional 20 chemicals), the ∼4,292                                      average burden and cost per respondent                                  alternative definition would be applied
                                                    large PWSs and the 56 states and                                          (including both systems and states) is                                  to future drinking water rules, including
                                                    primacy agencies (∼5,948 total                                            estimated to be 23.4 hours, with a labor                                this rule.
                                                    respondents). The frequency of response                                   plus non-labor cost of $3,470 per                                          The evaluation of the overall impact
                                                    varies across respondents and years.                                      respondent. Burden is defined at 5 CFR                                  on small systems, summarized in the
                                                    System costs (particularly laboratory                                     1320.3(b).                                                              preceding discussion, is further
                                                    analytical costs) vary depending on the                                      An agency may not conduct or                                         described as follows. EPA analyzed the
                                                    number of sampling locations. For cost                                    sponsor, and a person is not required to                                impacts for privately-owned and
                                                    estimates, EPA assumed that systems                                       respond to, a collection of information                                 publicly-owned water systems
                                                    would conduct sampling evenly across                                      unless it displays a currently valid OMB                                separately, due to the different
                                                    March 2018 through November 2020,                                         control number. The OMB control                                         economic characteristics of these
                                                    excluding December, January or                                            numbers for EPA’s rules in 40 CFR are                                   ownership types, such as different rate
                                                    February of each year, except for                                         listed in 40 CFR part 9.                                                structures and profit goals. However, for
                                                    resampling purposes (i.e., one-third of                                      To comment on the Agency’s need for                                  both publicly- and privately-owned
                                                    the systems in each year of monitoring).                                  this information, accuracy of the burden                                systems, EPA used the ‘‘revenue test,’’
                                                    Because the applicable ICR period is                                      estimates or to provide suggested                                       which compares annual system costs
                                                    2017–2019, one year of monitoring                                         methods for minimizing respondent                                       attributed to the rule to the system’s
                                                    activity (i.e., 2020) is not captured in the                              burden, reference the public docket for                                 annual revenues. EPA used median
                                                    ICR estimates; this will be addressed in                                  this rule, which includes the ICR.                                      revenue data from the 2006 CWS Survey
                                                    a subsequent ICR renewal for UCMR 4.                                      Submit any comments related to the ICR                                  for public and private water systems.
                                                       Small PWSs that are selected for                                       to EPA and OMB. See the ADDRESSES                                       The revenue figures were updated to
                                                    UCMR 4 monitoring would sample an                                         section at the beginning of this notice                                 2014 dollars, and to account for 3
                                                    average of 6.7 times per PWS (i.e.,                                       for where to submit comments to EPA                                     percent inflation. EPA assumes that the
                                                    number of responses per PWS) across                                       and OMB. OMB is required to make a                                      distribution of the sample of
                                                    the 3-year ICR period. The average                                        decision concerning the ICR between 30                                  participating small systems will reflect
                                                    burden per response for small PWSs is                                     and 60 days after December 11, 2015.                                    the proportions of publicly- and
                                                    estimated to be 2.8 hours. Large PWSs                                     Comments should be sent to OMB by                                       privately-owned systems in the national
                                                    (those serving 10,001 to 100,000 people)                                  January 11, 2016 for the comment to be                                  inventory. The estimated distribution of
                                                    and very large PWSs (those serving                                        appropriately considered. The final rule                                the representative sample, categorized
                                                    more than 100,000 people) would                                           will contain responses to any OMB or                                    by ownership type, source water and
                                                    sample and report an average of 11.4                                      public comments on the information                                      system size, is presented in Exhibit 6.

                                                                        EXHIBIT 6—NUMBER OF PUBLICLY- AND PRIVATELY-OWNED SMALL SYSTEMS SUBJECT TO UCMR 4
                                                                                                            System size                                                                              Publicly-owned   Privately-owned   Total 1
                                                                                                      (number of people served)

                                                                                                                                                       Ground Water
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    500 and under .............................................................................................................................                  21                64         85
                                                    501 to 3,300 .................................................................................................................................              161                62        223
                                                    3,301 to 10,000 ............................................................................................................................                179                41        220

                                                          Subtotal GW .........................................................................................................................                 361               167        528

                                                                                                                                           Surface Water (and GWUDI)

                                                    500 and under .............................................................................................................................                  18                21         39



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                                                    76912                         Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                            EXHIBIT 6—NUMBER OF PUBLICLY- AND PRIVATELY-OWNED SMALL SYSTEMS SUBJECT TO UCMR 4—Continued
                                                                                                            System size                                                                               Publicly-owned           Privately-owned                Total 1
                                                                                                      (number of people served)

                                                    501 to 3,300 .................................................................................................................................                    241                              86             327
                                                    3,301 to 10,000 ............................................................................................................................                      548                             158             706

                                                          Subtotal SW ..........................................................................................................................                        807                           265       1,072

                                                                 Total of Small Water Systems ......................................................................................                                1,168                             432       1,600
                                                       1 PWS      counts were adjusted to display as whole numbers in each size category.


                                                       The basis for the proposed UCMR 4                                      more than 0.8% of system revenues (the                                   and to EPA for the small system
                                                    RFA certification is as follows: For the                                  highest estimated percentage is for GW                                   sampling program, along with an
                                                    1,600 small water systems that would be                                   systems serving 500 or fewer people, at                                  illustration of system participation for
                                                    affected, the average annual cost for                                     0.8% of its median revenue). Exhibit 7                                   each year of UCMR 4.
                                                    complying with this rule represents no                                    presents the yearly cost to small systems

                                                                                                         EXHIBIT 7—IMPLEMENTATION OF UCMR 4 AT SMALL SYSTEMS
                                                           Cost description                        2017                         2018                                    2019                                 2020                     2021                  Total 1

                                                                                                            Costs to EPA for Small System Program (Assessment Monitoring)

                                                                                                           $0     $5,971,948 ...................          $5,971,948 ...................         $5,971,948 ...................                $0       $17,915,845

                                                                                                                          Costs to Small Systems (Assessment Monitoring)

                                                                                                             0    $273,210 ......................         $273,210 ......................        $273,210 ......................                 0          $819,631

                                                                                                                        Total Costs to EPA and Small Systems for UCMR 4

                                                                                                             0    $6,245,159 ...................          $6,245,159 ...................         $6,245,159 ...................                  0      $18,735,476

                                                                                                                                    System Monitoring Activity Timeline 2

                                                    Assessment Monitoring:     ................                   1/3 PWSs Sample .......                 1/3 PWSs Sample .......                1/3 PWSs Sample .......           ................                   800
                                                      Cyanotoxins.
                                                    Assessment Monitoring:     ................                   1/3 PWSs Sample .......                 1/3 PWSs Sample .......                1/3 PWSs Sample .......           ................                   800
                                                      20 Additional Chemicals.
                                                       1 Totals   may not equal the sum of components due to rounding.
                                                       2 Total   number of systems is 1,600. No small system conducts Assessment Monitoring for both cyanotoxins and the 20 additional chemicals.


                                                       PWS costs are attributed to the labor                                  Average annual cost, in all cases, is less                               monitoring, or 96% of total small
                                                    required for reading about UCMR 4                                         than 0.8% of system revenues. By                                         system testing costs. Exhibit 8 and
                                                    requirements, monitoring, reporting and                                   assuming all costs for laboratory                                        Exhibit 9 present the estimated
                                                    record keeping. The estimated average                                     analyses, shipping and quality control                                   economic impacts in the form of a
                                                    annual burden across the 5-year UCMR                                      for small entities, EPA incurs the                                       revenue test for publicly- and privately-
                                                    4 implementation period of 2017–2021                                      entirety of the non-labor costs                                          owned systems.
                                                    is 2.8 hours at $103 per small system.                                    associated with UCMR 4 small system

                                                                                  EXHIBIT 8—UCMR 4 RELATIVE COST ANALYSIS FOR SMALL PUBLICLY-OWNED SYSTEMS
                                                                                                                                                         [2017–2021]

                                                                                                                                                                              Annual                   Average              Average
                                                                                              System size                                                                   number of                annual hours          annual cost                Revenue test 2
                                                                                        (number of people served)                                                            systems                  per system           per system                     (%)
                                                                                                                                                                            impacted 1               (2017–2021)          (2017–2021)

                                                                                                                                               Ground Water Systems
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    500 and under ...............................................................................................                            4                    1.6                    $59                      0.16
                                                    501 to 3,300 ...................................................................................................                        32                    1.7                     63                      0.04
                                                    3,301 to 10,000 ..............................................................................................                          36                    1.9                     67                      0.01

                                                                                                                                    Surface Water (and GWUDI) Systems

                                                    500 and under ...............................................................................................                            4                    3.3                    118                      0.17
                                                    501 to 3,300 ...................................................................................................                        48                    3.3                    118                      0.04




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                                                                                  Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                                 76913

                                                                      EXHIBIT 8—UCMR 4 RELATIVE COST ANALYSIS FOR SMALL PUBLICLY-OWNED SYSTEMS—Continued
                                                                                                                                                       [2017–2021]

                                                                                                                                                                          Annual           Average              Average
                                                                                              System size                                                               number of        annual hours          annual cost   Revenue test 2
                                                                                        (number of people served)                                                        systems          per system           per system        (%)
                                                                                                                                                                        impacted 1       (2017–2021)          (2017–2021)

                                                    3,301 to 10,000 ..............................................................................................                109                3.4               123             0.01
                                                       1 PWS counts were adjusted to display as whole numbers in each size category.
                                                      2 The Revenue Test was used to evaluate the economic impact of an information collection on small government entities (e.g., publicly-owned
                                                    systems); costs are presented as a percentage of median annual revenue in each size category.

                                                                                EXHIBIT 9—UCMR 4 RELATIVE COST ANALYSIS FOR SMALL PRIVATELY-OWNED SYSTEMS
                                                                                                                                                       [2017–2021]

                                                                                                                                                                          Annual           Average              Average
                                                                                              System size                                                               number of        annual hours          annual cost   Revenue test 2
                                                                                        (number of people served)                                                        systems          per system           per system        (%)
                                                                                                                                                                        impacted 1       (2017–2021)          (2017–2021)

                                                                                                                                              Ground Water Systems

                                                    500 and under ...............................................................................................                   13               1.6               $59             0.81
                                                    501 to 3,300 ...................................................................................................                12               1.7                63             0.05
                                                    3,301 to 10,000 ..............................................................................................                   8               1.9                67             0.01

                                                                                                                                   Surface Water (and GWUDI) Systems

                                                    500 and under ...............................................................................................                    4               3.3               118             0.29
                                                    501 to 3,300 ...................................................................................................                17               3.3               118             0.04
                                                    3,301 to 10,000 ..............................................................................................                  32               3.4               123             0.01
                                                       1 PWS counts were adjusted to display as whole numbers in each size category.
                                                       2 The
                                                           Revenue Test was used to evaluate the economic impact of an information collection on small government entities (e.g., privately-owned
                                                    systems); costs are presented as a percentage of median annual revenue in each size category.


                                                       The Agency has determined that                                        has concluded that this action will have                       F. Executive Order 13175: Consultation
                                                    1,600 small PWSs (for Assessment                                         no significant net regulatory burden for                       and Coordination With Indian Tribal
                                                    Monitoring), or approximately 4.2% of                                    directly regulated small entities, the                         Governments
                                                    all small systems, would experience an                                   Agency continues to be interested in the
                                                    impact of no more than 0.8% of                                           potential impacts of the proposed rule                            This action will neither impose
                                                    revenues; the remainder of small                                         on small entities and welcomes                                 substantial direct compliance costs on
                                                    systems would not be impacted.                                           comments on issues related to such                             federally recognized tribal governments,
                                                       Although this proposed rule will not                                  impacts.                                                       nor preempt tribal law. As described
                                                    have a significant economic impact on                                                                                                   previously, this proposed rule requires
                                                    a substantial number of small entities,                                  D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                                monitoring by all large PWSs.
                                                    EPA has attempted to reduce this                                         (UMRA)                                                         Information in the SDWIS/Fed water
                                                    impact by assuming all costs for                                                                                                        system inventory indicates there are
                                                                                                                               This action does not contain an
                                                    analyses of the samples and for shipping                                 annual unfunded mandate of $100                                approximately 17 large tribal PWSs
                                                    the samples from small systems to                                        million or more as described in UMRA,                          (ranging in size from 10,001 to 40,000
                                                    laboratories contracted by EPA to                                        2 U.S.C. 1531–1538, and does not                               customers). EPA estimates the average
                                                    analyze UCMR 4 samples (the cost of                                      significantly or uniquely affect small                         annual cost to each of these large PWSs,
                                                    shipping is now included in the cost of                                  governments.                                                   over the 5-year rule period, to be $4,037.
                                                    each analytical method). EPA has set                                                                                                    This cost is based on a labor component
                                                    aside $2.0 million each year from the                                    E. Executive Order 13132: Federalism                           (associated with the collection of
                                                    Drinking Water State Revolving Fund                                                                                                     samples), and a non-labor component
                                                    (SRF) with its authority to use SRF                                        This action does not have federalism                         (associated with shipping and
                                                    monies for the purposes of                                               implications. It will not have substantial                     laboratory fees), and represents less than
                                                    implementing this provision of SDWA.                                     direct effects on the states, on the                           1.2% of average revenue/sales for large
                                                    Thus, the costs to these small systems                                   relationship between the national                              PWSs. UCMR also requires monitoring
                                                    will be limited to the labor associated                                  government and the states, or on the                           by a nationally representative sample of
                                                    with collecting a sample and preparing                                   distribution of power and                                      small PWSs. EPA estimates that less
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    it for shipping.                                                         responsibilities among the various                             than 2% of small tribal systems will be
                                                       I certify that this action will not have                              levels of government.                                          selected as a nationally representative
                                                    a significant economic impact on a                                         Consistent with EPA policy to                                sample for Assessment Monitoring. EPA
                                                    substantial number of small entities                                     promote communications between EPA                             estimates the average annual cost to
                                                    under the RFA. In making this                                            and state and local governments, EPA                           small tribal systems over the 5-year rule
                                                    determination, the impact of concern is                                  specifically solicits comment on the                           period to be $103. Such cost is based on
                                                    any significant adverse economic                                         proposed rule from state and local                             the labor associated with collecting a
                                                    impact on small entities. Although EPA                                   officials.                                                     sample and preparing it for shipping


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                                                    76914                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    and represents less than 0.8% of average                each method along with how the                            http://www.astm.org/Standards/
                                                    revenue/sales for small PWSs. All other                 method specifically applies to UCMR 4                     D6581.htm.
                                                    small-PWS expenses (associated with                     can be found in section II.J of the                   Fischer, W.J., Garthwaite, I., Miles, C.O.,
                                                                                                                                                                      Ross, K.M., Aggen, J.B., Chamberlin,
                                                    shipping and laboratory fees) are paid                  preamble.
                                                                                                                                                                      A.R., Towers, N.R., Dietrich, D.R. 2001.
                                                    by EPA.                                                    All of these standards are reasonably                  Congener-Independent Immunoassay for
                                                      EPA consulted with tribal officials                   available for public use. The Agency                      Microcystins and Nodularins.
                                                    under the EPA Policy on Consultation                    methods are free for download on EPA’s                    Environmental Science & Technology, 35
                                                    and Coordination with Indian Tribes                     Web site. The methods in the Standard                     (24), pp 4849–4856. Available for
                                                    early in the process of developing this                 Method 21st edition are consensus                         purchase on the Internet at http://
                                                    proposed rule to permit them to have                    standards, available for purchase from                    dx.doi.org/10.1021/es011182f.
                                                    meaningful and timely input into its                    the publisher, and are commonly used                  Graham, J.L., Loftin, K.A., Ziegler, A.C., and
                                                    development. A summary of that                          by the drinking water community. The                      Meyer, M.T. 2008. Guidelines for Design
                                                    consultation is provided in the                                                                                   and Sampling for Cyanobacterial Toxin
                                                                                                            methods in the Standard Method Online                     and Taste-and-Odor Studies in Lakes
                                                    electronic docket listed in the                         are consensus standards, available for                    and Reservoirs: U.S. Geological Survey
                                                    ADDRESSES section at the beginning of                   purchase from the publisher’s Web site,                   Scientific Investigations Report 2008–
                                                    this notice. EPA specifically solicits                  and are commonly used by the drinking                     5038. Available on the Internet at
                                                    additional comment on this proposed                     water community. The methods from                         http://pubs.usgs.gov/sir/2008/5038/.
                                                    rule from tribal officials.                             ASTM International are consensus                      McElhiney, J., and Lawton, L.A. 2005.
                                                                                                            standards, are free for download from                     Detection of the Cyanobacterial
                                                    G. Executive Order 13045: Protection of                                                                           Hepatotoxins Microcystins. Toxicology
                                                    Children From Environmental Health                      the publisher’s Web site, and are
                                                                                                                                                                      and Applied Pharmacology, 203 (3):
                                                    Risks and Safety Risks                                  commonly used by the drinking water
                                                                                                                                                                      219–230. Available for purchase on the
                                                                                                            community. The Ohio EPA method is                         Internet at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/
                                                       This action is not subject to Executive              free for download on their Web site and                   j.taap.2004.06.002.
                                                    Order 13045 because it is not                           is increasingly being used by the                     Ohio EPA. 2015. Ohio EPA Total
                                                    economically significant as defined in                  drinking water community.                                 (Extracellular and Intracellular)
                                                    Executive Order 12866, and because                         EPA welcomes comments on this                          Microcystins—ADDA by ELISA
                                                    EPA does not think the environmental                    aspect of the proposed rulemaking; the                    Analytical Methodology. Version 2.0.
                                                    health or safety risks addressed by this                Agency specifically invites the public to                 January 2015. Available on the Internet
                                                    action present a disproportionate risk to               identify potentially-applicable                           at http://www.epa.ohio.gov/Portals/28/
                                                    children. This action’s health and risk                 voluntary consensus standards and                         documents/habs/HAB_Analytical_
                                                    assessments are addressed in section                                                                              Methodology.pdf.
                                                                                                            explain why such standards should be
                                                    II.N of the preamble.                                                                                         Roberson, J.A., and Eaton, A. 2014.
                                                                                                            used in this rule.                                        Retrospective Analysis of Mandated
                                                    H. Executive Order 13211: Actions                       J. Executive Order 12898: Federal                         National Occurrence Monitoring and
                                                    Concerning Regulations That                             Actions To Address Environmental                          Regulatory Decisions. Journal of the
                                                    Significantly Affect Energy Supply,                                                                               American Water Works Association, 106
                                                                                                            Justice in Minority Populations and
                                                    Distribution or Use                                                                                               (3): E116–E128. Available on the Internet
                                                                                                            Low-Income Populations                                    at http://dx.doi.org/10.5942/
                                                      This action is not subject to Executive                  The EPA believes the human health or                   jawwa.2014.106.0040.
                                                    Order 13211, because it is not a                        environmental risk addressed by this                  Ryberg, K.R., and Gilliom, R.J. 2015. Trends
                                                    significant regulatory action under                     action will not have potential                            in Pesticide Concentrations and Use for
                                                    Executive Order 12866.                                  disproportionately high and adverse                       Major Rivers of the United States.
                                                                                                                                                                      Science of the Total Environment, 538:
                                                    I. National Technology Transfer and                     human health or environmental effects
                                                                                                                                                                      431–444. Available for purchase on the
                                                    Advancement Act and 1 CFR Part 51                       on minority, low-income or indigenous                     Internet at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/
                                                                                                            populations. The results of this                          j.scitotenv.2015.06.095.
                                                       This action involves technical                       evaluation are contained in section II.O              SM Online. 2000a. SM 4500–H+ B–00—pH
                                                    standards. EPA proposes to use methods                  of this preamble and an additional                        Value in Water by Potentiometry Using
                                                    developed by the Agency, three major                    supporting document has been placed                       a Standard Hydrogen Electrode.
                                                    voluntary consensus method                              in the docket.                                            Standard Methods Online. Available for
                                                    organizations and the Ohio EPA to                                                                                 purchase on the Internet at http://
                                                    support UCMR 4 monitoring. The                          IV. References                                            www.standardmethods.org.
                                                    voluntary consensus method                              ASDWA. 2013. Insufficient Resources for               SM Online. 2000b. SM 5310B–00—The
                                                    organizations are Standard Methods,                        State Drinking Water Programs Threaten                 Determination of Total Organic Carbon
                                                    Association of Analytical Communities                      Public Health: An Analysis of State                    by High-Temperature Combustion
                                                    International and ASTM International.                      Drinking Water Programs’ Resources and                 Method. Standard Methods Online.
                                                                                                               Needs. December 2013.                                  Available for purchase on the Internet at
                                                    EPA identified acceptable consensus
                                                                                                            ASTM. 2010. ASTM D5673–10—Standard                        http://www.standardmethods.org.
                                                    method organization standards for the                                                                         SM Online. 2000c. SM 5310C–00—Total
                                                                                                               Test Method for Elements in Water by
                                                    analysis of manganese and germanium.                                                                              organic carbon by Persulfate-UV or
                                                                                                               Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass
                                                    Additionally, EPA identified an Ohio                       Spectrometry. Approved August 1, 2010.                 Heated-Persulfate Oxidation Method.
                                                    EPA method for the analysis of total                       Available for purchase on the Internet at              Standard Methods Online. Available for
                                                    microcystins using ADDA by ELISA.                          http://www.astm.org/Standards/                         purchase on the Internet at http://
                                                    EPA therefore proposes using a                             D5673.htm.                                             www.standardmethods.org.
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    collection of analytical methods                        ASTM. 2012a. ASTM D1293–12—Standard                   SM Online. 2000d. SM 5310D–00—Total
                                                    published by these parties for the UCMR                    Test Methods for pH of Water. Available                organic carbon by Wet-Oxidation
                                                                                                               for purchase on the Internet at http://                Method. Standard Methods Online.
                                                    4 analytes. In addition, there are several
                                                                                                               www.astm.org/Standards/D1293.htm.                      Available for purchase on the Internet at
                                                    consensus standards that are approved                   ASTM. 2012b. ASTM D6581–12—Standard                       http://www.standardmethods.org.
                                                    for compliance monitoring that will be                     Test Methods for Bromate, Bromide,                 SM Online. 2009. SM 3125–09—Metals by
                                                    available for use in the analysis of TOC                   Chlorate, and Chlorite in Drinking Water               Inductively Coupled Plasma/Mass
                                                    and bromide, and for the measurement                       by Suppressed Ion Chromatography.                      Spectrometry (Editorial revisions, 2011).
                                                    of temperature and pH. A summary of                        Available for purchase on the Internet at              Standard Methods Online. Available for



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                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                            76915

                                                        purchase on the Internet at http://                 USEPA. 1998a. National Primary Drinking                  Public Water Systems Revisions. Federal
                                                        www.standardmethods.org.                               Water Regulation: Consumer Confidence                 Register. Vol. 72, No. 2, p. 368, January
                                                    SM Online. 2010. SM 2550–10—                               Reports; Final Rule. Federal Register.                4, 2007.
                                                        Temperature. Standard Methods Online.                  Vol. 63, No. 160, p. 44512, August 19,             USEPA. 2009a. EPA Method 415.3—
                                                        Available for purchase on the Internet at              1998.                                                 Determination of Total Organic Carbon
                                                        http://www.standardmethods.org.                     USEPA. 1998b. National Primary Drinking                  and Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm
                                                    SM. 2005a. SM 2550—Temperature.                            Water Regulations: Consumer                           in Source Water and Drinking Water.
                                                        Standard Methods for the Examination                   Confidence Reports; Proposed Rule.                    Revision 1.2. EPA/600/R–09/122,
                                                        of Water & Wastewater, 21st edition.                   Federal Register. Vol. 63, No. 30, p.                 September 2009. Available on the
                                                        American Public Health Association, 800                7606, February 13, 1998.                              Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-
                                                        I Street NW., Washington, DC 20001–                 USEPA. 1998c. National Primary Drinking                  research/epa-drinking-water-research-
                                                        3710.                                                  Water Regulations: Disinfectants and                  methods.
                                                    SM. 2005b. SM 3125—Metals by Inductively                   Disinfection Byproducts; Final Rule.               USEPA. 2009b. EPA Method 557—
                                                        Coupled Plasma/Mass Spectrometry.                      Federal Register. Vol. 63, No. 241, p.                Determination of Haloacetic Acids,
                                                        Standard Methods for the Examination                   69390, December 16, 1998.                             Bromate, and Dalapon in Drinking Water
                                                        of Water & Wastewater, 21st edition.                USEPA. 1999. Revisions to the Unregulated                by Ion Chromatography Electrospray
                                                        American Public Health Association, 800                Contaminant Monitoring Regulation for                 Ionization Tandem Mass Spectrometry
                                                        I Street NW., Washington, DC 20001–                    Public Water Systems; Final Rule.                     (IC–ESI–MS/MS). Version 1.0. EPA 815–
                                                        3710.                                                  Federal Register. Vol. 64, No. 180, p.                B–09–012, September 2009. Available on
                                                    SM. 2005c. SM 4500–H+ B—pH Value in                        50556, September 17, 1999.                            the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/
                                                        Water by Potentiometry Using a                      USEPA. 2001a. EPA Method 317.0—                          dwanalyticalmethods/approved-
                                                        Standard Hydrogen Electrode. Standard                  Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide                  drinking-water-analytical-methods.
                                                        Methods for the Examination of Water &                 Disinfection By-Products in Drinking               USEPA. 2010. Technical Basis for the Lowest
                                                        Wastewater, 21st edition. American                     Water Using Ion Chromatography with                   Concentration Minimum Reporting Level
                                                        Public Health Association, 800 I Street                the Addition of a Postcolumn Reagent                  (LCMRL) Calculator. EPA 815–R–11–
                                                        NW., Washington, DC 20001–3710.                        for Trace Bromate Analysis. Revision                  001, December 2010. Available on the
                                                    SM. 2005d. SM 5310B—The Determination                      2.0. EPA 815–B–01–001. Available on                   Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/
                                                        of Total Organic Carbon by High-                       the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/                  dwanalyticalmethods/approved-
                                                        Temperature Combustion Method.                         dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                         drinking-water-analytical-methods.
                                                        Standard Methods for the Examination                   drinking-water-analytical-methods.                 USEPA. 2012a. EPA Method 525.3—
                                                        of Water & Wastewater, 21st edition.                USEPA. 2001b. Statistical Design and                     Determination of Semivolatile Organic
                                                                                                               Sample Selection for the Unregulated                  Chemicals in Drinking Water by Solid
                                                        American Public Health Association, 800
                                                                                                               Contaminant Monitoring Regulation
                                                        I Street NW., Washington, DC 20001–                                                                          Phase Extraction and Capillary Column
                                                                                                               (1999). EPA 815–R–01–004, August
                                                        3710.                                                                                                        Gas Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry
                                                                                                               2001.
                                                    SM. 2005e. SM 5310C–00—Total Organic                                                                             (GC/MS). Version 1.0. EPA/600/R–12/
                                                                                                            USEPA. 2002. EPA Method 326.0—
                                                        Carbon by Persulfate-UV or Heated-                                                                           010, February 2012. Available on the
                                                                                                               Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide
                                                        Persulfate Oxidation Method. Standard                                                                        Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-
                                                                                                               Disinfection By-Products in Drinking
                                                        Methods for the Examination of Water &                                                                       research/epa-drinking-water-research-
                                                                                                               Water Using Ion Chromatography
                                                        Wastewater, 21st edition. American                     Incorporating the Addition of a                       methods.
                                                        Public Health Association, 800 I Street                Suppressor Acidified Postcolumn                    USEPA. 2012b. Request for Nominations of
                                                        NW., Washington, DC 20001–3710.                        Reagent for Trace Bromate Analysis.                   Drinking Water Contaminants for the
                                                    SM. 2005f. SM 5310D—Total Organic Carbon                   Revision 1.0. EPA 815–R–03–007.                       Fourth Contaminant Candidate List.
                                                        by Wet-Oxidation Method. Standard                      Available on the Internet at http://                  Federal Register. Vol. 77, No. 89, p.
                                                        Methods for the Examination of Water &                 www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/                     27057, May 8, 2012.
                                                        Wastewater, 21st edition. American                     approved-drinking-water-analytical-                USEPA. 2012c. Revisions to the Unregulated
                                                        Public Health Association, 800 I Street                methods.                                              Contaminant Monitoring Regulation
                                                        NW., Washington, DC 20001–3710.                     USEPA. 2003. EPA Method 552.3—                           (UCMR 3) for Public Water Systems;
                                                    USEPA. 1983a. EPA Method 150.1—pH                          Determination of Haloacetic Acids and                 Final Rule. Federal Register. Vol. 77, No.
                                                        Electrometric, in Methods for Chemical                 Dalapon in Drinking Water by Liquid-                  85, p. 26071, May 2, 2012.
                                                        Analysis of Water and Wastes. EPA/600/                 Liquid Microextraction, Derivatization,            USEPA. 2013. Meetings and Materials for the
                                                        4–79/020. Available on the Internet at                 and Gas Chromatography with Electron                  Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring
                                                        http://www.nemi.gov.                                   Capture Detection. Revision 1.0. EPA                  Program. Available on the Internet at
                                                    USEPA. 1983b. EPA Method 150.2—pH,                         815–B–03–002, July 2003. Available on                 http://www2.epa.gov/dwucmr/
                                                        Continuous Monitoring (Electrometric),                 the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/                  unregulated-contaminant-monitoring-
                                                        in Methods for Chemical Analysis of                    dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                         rule-ucmr-meetings-and-materials.
                                                        Water and Wastes. EPA/600/4–79/020.                    drinking-water-analytical-methods.                 USEPA. 2014. Stakeholder Meeting Slides
                                                        Available on the Internet at http://                USEPA. 2005. EPA Method 415.3—                           Regarding Revisions to the Unregulated
                                                        www.nemi.gov.                                          Determination of Total Organic Carbon                 Contaminant Monitoring Regulation.
                                                    USEPA. 1993. EPA Method 300.0—                             and Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm               USEPA. 2015a. DRAFT Information
                                                        Determination of Inorganic Anions by                   in Source Water and Drinking Water.                   Collection Request for the Unregulated
                                                        Ion Chromatography Samples. Revision                   Revision 1.1. EPA/600/R–05/055,                       Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR 4).
                                                        2.1. Available on the Internet at http://              February 2005. Available on the Internet              October 2015. EPA 815–B–15–003.
                                                        www.nemi.gov.                                          at http://www2.epa.gov/water-research/             USEPA. 2015b. Drinking Water Contaminant
                                                    USEPA. 1994. EPA Method 200.8—                             epa-drinking-water-research-methods.                  Candidate List 4—Draft. Federal
                                                        Determination of Trace Elements in                  USEPA. 2006a. National Primary Drinking                  Register, Vol. 80, No. 23, p. 6076,
                                                        Waters and Wastes by Inductively                       Water Regulations: Long Term 2                        February 4, 2015.
                                                        Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry.                      Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule;             USEPA. 2015c. Drinking Water Health
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                        Revision 5.4. Available on the Internet at             Final Rule. Federal Register. Vol. 71, No.            Advisory for the Cyanobacterial
                                                        https://www.nemi.gov/.                                 3, p. 654, January 5, 2006.                           Microcystin Toxins. EPA 820–R–15–100,
                                                    USEPA. 1997. EPA Method 300.1—                          USEPA. 2006b. National Primary Drinking                  June 2015. Available on the Internet at
                                                        Determination of Inorganic Anions in                   Water Regulations: Stage 2 Disinfectants              http://www2.epa.gov/sites/production/
                                                        Drinking Water by Ion Chromatography.                  and Disinfection Byproducts Rule; Final               files/2015-06/documents/microcystins-
                                                        Revision 1.0. 1997. Available on the                   Rule. Federal Register. Vol. 71, No. 3, p.            report-2015.pdf.
                                                        Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/                       388, January 4, 2006.                              USEPA. 2015d. EPA Method 530—
                                                        dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                       USEPA. 2007. Unregulated Contaminant                     Determination of Select Semivolatile
                                                        drinking-water-analytical-methods.                     Monitoring Regulation (UCMR) for                      Organic Chemicals in Drinking Water by



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                                                    76916                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                        Solid Phase Extraction and Gas                        Dated: November 30, 2015.                              (c) * * *
                                                        Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry                    Gina McCarthy,                                           (2) * * * You must provide your
                                                        (GC/MS). Version 1.0. EPA/600/R–14/                 Administrator.
                                                        442, January 2015. Available on the
                                                                                                                                                                  sampling location(s) and associate each
                                                        Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-                For the reasons set forth in the                    source water location with its entry
                                                        research/epa-drinking-water-research-               preamble, EPA proposes to amend 40                    point location(s) by December 31, 2017,
                                                        methods.                                            CFR part 141 as follows:                              using EPA’s electronic data reporting
                                                    USEPA. 2015e. EPA Method 541—                                                                                 system. You must submit, verify or
                                                        Determination of 1-Butanol, 1,4-Dioxane,            PART 141—NATIONAL PRIMARY                             update the following information for
                                                        2-Methoxyethanol and 2-Propen-1-ol in               DRINKING WATER REGULATIONS                            each sampling location, or for each
                                                        Drinking Water by Solid Phase                                                                             approved representative sampling
                                                        Extraction and Gas Chromatography/                  ■ 1. The authority citation for part 141
                                                                                                                                                                  location (as specified in paragraph (c)(3)
                                                        Mass Spectrometry. EPA 815–R–15–011,                continues to read as follows:
                                                                                                                                                                  of this section regarding representative
                                                        November 2015. Available on the                       Authority: 42 U.S.C. 300f, 300g–1, 300g–2,          sampling locations): PWSID Code; PWS
                                                        Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/                    300g–3, 300g–4, 300g–5, 300g–6, 300j–4,               Name; PWS Facility Identification Code;
                                                        dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                       300j–9, and 300j–11.                                  PWS Facility Name; PWS Facility Type;
                                                        drinking-water-analytical-methods.                                                                        Water Source Type; Sampling Point
                                                    USEPA. 2015f. EPA Method 544—                           Subpart D—Reporting and
                                                                                                            Recordkeeping                                         Identification Code; Sampling Point
                                                        Determination of Microcystins and
                                                        Nodularin in Drinking Water by Solid
                                                                                                                                                                  Name; and Sampling Point Type Code;
                                                        Phase Extraction and Liquid
                                                                                                            ■ 2. In § 141.35:                                     (as defined in Table 1 of paragraph (e)
                                                        Chromatography/Tandem Mass
                                                                                                            ■ a. Revise the third sentence in                     of this section).
                                                        Spectrometry (LC/MS/MS). Version 1.0.               paragraph (b)(1).                                        (3) * * *
                                                                                                            ■ b. Revise the second and third
                                                        EPA–600–R–14/474, February 2015.
                                                                                                            sentences in paragraph (b)(2).                           (i) * * * You must submit a copy of
                                                        Available on the Internet at http://
                                                        www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-                    ■ c. Remove ‘‘October 1, 2012,’’ and add              the existing alternate EPTDS sampling
                                                        drinking-water-research-methods.                    in its place ‘‘December 31, 2017,’’ in                plan or your representative well
                                                    USEPA. 2015g. EPA Method 545—                           paragraph (c)(1).                                     proposal, as appropriate, [DATE 120
                                                        Determination of Cylindrospermopsin                 ■ d. Revise the second and third                      DAYS AFTER PUBLICATION OF THE
                                                        and Anatoxin-a in Drinking Water by                 sentences in paragraph (c)(2).                        FINAL RULE], as specified in paragraph
                                                        Liquid Chromatography Electrospray                  ■ e. Revise the last sentence in                      (b)(1) of this section.
                                                        Ionization Tandem Mass Spectrometry                 paragraph (c)(3)(i).                                     (ii) * * * You must submit the
                                                        (LC/ESI–MS/MS). EPA 815–R–15–009,                   ■ f. Revise the fifth sentence in
                                                                                                                                                                  following information for each proposed
                                                        April 2015. Available on the Internet at            paragraph (c)(3)(ii).                                 representative sampling location:
                                                        http://www2.epa.gov/                                ■ g. Remove ‘‘October 1, 2012,’’ and add
                                                                                                                                                                  PWSID Code; PWS Name; PWS Facility
                                                        dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                       in its place ‘‘[WITHIN 120 DAYS FROM
                                                                                                                                                                  Identification Code; PWS Facility Name;
                                                        drinking-water-analytical-methods.                  PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE],’’
                                                    USEPA. 2015h. Proposed Revisions to CFR
                                                                                                                                                                  PWS Facility Type; Sampling Point
                                                                                                            in paragraph (c)(4).
                                                        parts 141.35 and 141.40. EPA 815–B–15–                                                                    Identification Code; and Sampling Point
                                                                                                            ■ h. Revise paragraphs (c)(5)(i), (c)(6)
                                                        006, November 2015. Available in EPA                                                                      Name (as defined in Table 1, paragraph
                                                                                                            introductory text, (d)(2), and (e).
                                                        public docket (under Docket ID No.                    The revisions and additions read as                 (e) of this section). * * *
                                                        EPA–HQ–OW–2015–0218) on the                         follows:                                              *       *    *     *    *
                                                        Internet at http://www.regulations.gov.
                                                    USEPA. 2015i. UCMR 4 Candidate                          § 141.35 Reporting for unregulated
                                                                                                                                                                     (5) * * *
                                                        Contaminants—Information                            contaminant monitoring results.                          (i) General rescheduling notification
                                                        Compendium. EPA 815–B–15–005,                       *     *       *    *    *                             requirements. Large systems may
                                                        November 2015.                                        (b) * * *                                           change their monitoring schedules up to
                                                    USEPA. 2015j. UCMR 4 Laboratory Approval                  (1) * * * Information that must be                  December 31, 2017, using EPA’s
                                                        Requirements and Information                        submitted using EPA’s electronic data                 electronic data reporting system, as
                                                        Document. EPA 815–B–15–004,                         reporting system must be submitted                    specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this
                                                        November 2015.                                      through: http://www2.epa.gov/dwucmr.                  section. After this date has passed, if
                                                    USGS. 2014. Pesticides in Surface Waters:
                                                                                                            * * *                                                 your PWS cannot sample according to
                                                        Seasonality of Pesticides in Surface
                                                                                                              (2) * * * If you have received a letter             your assigned sampling schedule (e.g.,
                                                        Waters. U.S. Geological Survey Fact
                                                        Sheet FS–039–97. Available on the                   from EPA or your State concerning your                because of budget constraints, or if a
                                                        Internet at http://water.usgs.gov/nawqa/            required monitoring and your system                   sampling location will be closed during
                                                        pnsp/pubs/fs97039/sw5.html.                         does not meet the applicability criteria              the scheduled month of monitoring),
                                                    Zeck, A., Weller, M.G., Bursill, D., Niessner,          for UCMR established in § 141.40(a)(1)                you must mail or email a letter to EPA,
                                                        R. 2001. Generic Microcystin                        or (2), or if a change occurs at your                 as specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this
                                                        Immunoassay Based on Monoclonal                     system that may affect your                           section, prior to the scheduled sampling
                                                        Antibodies Against Adda. Analyst, 126:              requirements under UCMR as defined in                 date. You must include an explanation
                                                        2002–2007. Available for purchase on                § 141.40(a)(3) through (5), you must                  of why the samples cannot be taken
                                                        the Internet at http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/          mail or email a letter to EPA, as                     according to the assigned schedule, and
                                                        B105064H.                                           specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this                 you must provide the alternative
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    List of Subjects in 40 CFR Part 141                     section. The letter must be from your                 schedule you are requesting. You must
                                                                                                            PWS Official and must include your                    not reschedule monitoring specifically
                                                      Environmental protection, Chemicals,                  PWS Identification (PWSID) Code along                 to avoid sample collection during a
                                                    Incorporation by reference, Indian-                     with an explanation as to why the                     suspected vulnerable period. You are
                                                    lands, Intergovernmental relations,                     UCMR requirements are not applicable                  subject to your assigned UCMR
                                                    Radiation protection, Reporting and                     to your PWS, or have changed for your                 sampling schedule or the schedule that
                                                    recordkeeping requirements, Water                       PWS, along with the appropriate contact               you revised on or before December 31,
                                                    supply.                                                 information. * * *                                    2017, unless and until you receive a


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                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                             76917

                                                    letter from EPA specifying a new                           (d) * * *                                           Table 1 of paragraph (e) of this section
                                                    schedule.                                                  (2) Reporting sampling information.                 on each sample form and sample bottle,
                                                    *      *    *     *    *                                 You must provide your sampling                        as appropriate, provided to you by the
                                                                                                             location(s) and associate each source                 UCMR Sampling Coordinator. You must
                                                       (6) Reporting monitoring results. For                 water location with its entry point
                                                    UCMR samples, you must report all data                                                                         send this information as specified in the
                                                                                                             location(s) by December 31, 2017, using               instructions of your sampling kit, which
                                                    elements specified in Table 1 of                         EPA’s electronic data reporting system,
                                                    paragraph (e) of this section, using                                                                           will include the due date and return
                                                                                                             as specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this              address. You must report any changes
                                                    EPA’s electronic data reporting system.                  section. If this information changes, you
                                                    You also must report any changes,                                                                              made in data elements 1 through 9 by
                                                                                                             must report updates, including new
                                                    relative to what is currently posted,                                                                          mailing or emailing an explanation of
                                                                                                             sources and sampling locations that are
                                                    made to data elements 1 through 9 to                     put in use before or during the PWS’                  the nature and purpose of the proposed
                                                    EPA, in writing, explaining the nature                   UCMR sampling period, to EPA’s                        change to EPA, as specified in
                                                    and purpose of the proposed change, as                   electronic data reporting system within               paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
                                                    specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this                    30 days of the change, as specified in                  (e) Data elements. Table 1 defines the
                                                    section.                                                 paragraph (b)(1) of this section. You                 data elements that must be provided for
                                                    *      *    *     *    *                                 must record all data elements listed in               UCMR monitoring.
                                                                               TABLE 1—UNREGULATED CONTAMINANT MONITORING REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
                                                            Data element                                                                              Definition

                                                    1. Public Water System                The code used to identify each PWS. The code begins with the standard 2-character postal State abbreviation or
                                                      Identification (PWSID)                Region code; the remaining 7 numbers are unique to each PWS in the State. The same identification code
                                                      Code.                                 must be used to represent the PWS identification for all current and future UCMR monitoring.
                                                    2. Public Water System                Unique name, assigned once by the PWS.
                                                      Name.
                                                    3. Public Water System Fa-            An identification code established by the State or, at the State’s discretion, by the PWS, following the format of a
                                                      cility Identification Code.           5-digit number unique within each PWS for each applicable facility (i.e., for each source of water, treatment
                                                                                            plant, distribution system, or any other facility associated with water treatment or delivery). The same identifica-
                                                                                            tion code must be used to represent the facility for all current and future UCMR monitoring.
                                                    4. Public Water System Fa-            Unique name, assigned once by the PWS, for every facility ID (e.g., Treatment Plant).
                                                      cility Name.
                                                    5. Public Water System Fa-            That code that identifies that type of facility as either:
                                                      cility Type.                        CC = consecutive connection
                                                                                          DS = distribution system
                                                                                          IN = source water intake
                                                                                          SS = sampling station
                                                                                          TP = treatment plant
                                                                                          OT = other
                                                    6. Water Source Type ..........       The type of source water that supplies a water system facility. Systems must report one of the following codes for
                                                                                             each sampling location:
                                                                                          SW = surface water (to be reported for water facilities that are served all or in part by a surface water source at
                                                                                             any time during the twelve-month period).
                                                                                          GW = ground water (to be reported for water facilities that are served entirely by a ground water source).
                                                                                          GU = ground water under the direct influence of surface water (to be reported for water facilities that are served
                                                                                             all or in part by ground water under the direct influence of surface water at any time during the twelve-month
                                                                                             sampling period), and are not served at all by surface water during this period.
                                                    7. Sampling Point Identifica-         An identification code established by the State, or at the State’s discretion, by the PWS, that uniquely identifies
                                                      tion Code.                             each sampling point. Each sampling code must be unique within each applicable facility, for each applicable
                                                                                             sampling location (i.e., entry point to the distribution system, source water intake or distribution system sample
                                                                                             at maximum residence time). The same identification code must be used to represent the sampling location for
                                                                                             all current and future UCMR monitoring.
                                                    8. Sampling Point Name ......         Unique sample point name, assigned once by the PWS, for every sample point ID (e.g., Entry Point).
                                                    9. Sampling Point Type                A code that identifies the location of the sampling point as either:
                                                      Code.                               SR = source water taken from plant intake; untreated water entering the water treatment plant (i.e., a location
                                                                                             prior to any treatment).
                                                                                          EP = entry point to the distribution system.
                                                                                          MR = distribution system sample at maximum residence time.
                                                    10. Disinfectant Type ...........     All of the primary disinfectants/oxidants that have been added in the treatment plant to the water being sampled.
                                                                                             To be reported by systems for each sampling point.
                                                                                          PEMB = Permanganate (applied before SR sample location)
                                                                                          PEMA = Permanganate (applied after SR sample location)
                                                                                          HPXB = Hydrogen peroxide (applied before SR sample location)
                                                                                          HPXA = Hydrogen peroxide (applied after SR sample location)
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                                                                                          CLGA = Gaseous chlorine
                                                                                          CLOF = Offsite Generated Hypochlorite (stored as a liquid form)
                                                                                          CLON = Onsite Generated Hypochlorite
                                                                                          CAGC = Chloramine (formed from gaseous chlorine)
                                                                                          CAOF = Chloramine (formed from offsite hypochlorite)
                                                                                          CAON = Chloramine (formed from onsite hypochlorite)
                                                                                          CLDB = Chlorine dioxide (applied before SR sample location)
                                                                                          CLDA = Chlorine dioxide (applied after SR sample location)
                                                                                          OZON = Ozone



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                                                    76918                   Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                                       TABLE 1—UNREGULATED CONTAMINANT MONITORING REPORTING REQUIREMENTS—Continued
                                                             Data element                                                                              Definition

                                                                                           ULVL = Ultraviolet light
                                                                                           OTHD = All other types of disinfectant/oxidant
                                                                                           NODU = No disinfectant/oxidant used
                                                    11. Treatment Information ....         Treatment information associated with the water being sampled.
                                                                                           CON = Conventional (non-softening)
                                                                                           SCO = Softening conventional
                                                                                           RBF = River bank filtration
                                                                                           PSD = Pre-sedimentation
                                                                                           INF = In-line filtration
                                                                                           DFL = Direct filtration
                                                                                           PCF = Precoat filtration
                                                                                           SSF = Slow sand filtration
                                                                                           BIO = Biological filtration
                                                                                           REC = Reactor clarification (e.g. solids contact clarification, slurry recirculation clarification, Aciflo®)
                                                                                           SBC = Sludge blanket clarification (e.g. Pulsator®, Super Pulsator®, contact adsorption clarifiers, floc-blanket
                                                                                             clarifiers)
                                                                                           ADC = Adsorption clarification (contact adsorption clarification)
                                                                                           UTR = Unfiltered treatment
                                                                                           PAC = Application of powder activated carbon
                                                                                           GAC = Granular activated carbon (not part of filters in CON, SCO, INF, DFL, or SSF)
                                                                                           AIR = Air stripping (packed towers, diffused gas contactors)
                                                                                           POB = Pre-oxidation/disinfection with chlorine (applied before SR sample location)
                                                                                           POA = Pre-oxidation/disinfection with chlorine (applied after SR sample location)
                                                                                           MFL = Membrane filtration
                                                                                           IEX = Ionic exchange
                                                                                           UVT = Ultraviolet light
                                                                                           AOX = Advanced oxidation (ultraviolet light with hydrogen peroxide and/or ozone)
                                                                                           DAF = Dissolved air floatation
                                                                                           CWL = Clear well/finished water storage without aeration
                                                                                           CWA = Clear well/finished water storage with aeration
                                                                                           ADS = Aeration in distribution system (localized treatment)
                                                                                           OTH = All other types of treatment
                                                                                           NTU = No treatment used
                                                    12. Disinfectant Residual              Secondary disinfectant type added in the distribution system for each finished water sample.
                                                      Type.                                CL2 = Chlorine (i.e., originating from addition of free chlorine only)
                                                                                           CLM = Chloramines (originating from with addition of chlorine and ammonia or pre-formed chloramines)
                                                                                           CAC = Chlorine and chloramines (if being mixed from chlorinated and chloraminated water)
                                                                                           NOD = No disinfectant residual
                                                    13. Sample Collection Date             The date the sample is collected, reported as 4-digit year, 2-digit month, and 2-digit day (YYYY/MM/DD).
                                                    14. Sample Identification              An alphanumeric value up to 30 characters assigned by the laboratory to uniquely identify containers, or groups
                                                      Code.                                  of containers, containing water samples collected at the same sampling location for the same sampling date.
                                                    15. Contaminant ...................    The unregulated contaminant for which the sample is being analyzed.
                                                    16. Analytical Method Code             The identification code of the analytical method used.
                                                    17. Extraction Batch Identi-           Laboratory assigned extraction batch ID. Must be unique for each extraction batch within the laboratory for each
                                                      fication Code.                         method. For CCC samples report the Analysis Batch Identification Code as the value for this field. For methods
                                                                                             without an extraction batch, leave this field null.
                                                    18. Extraction Date ..............     Date for the start of the extraction batch (YYYY/MM/DD). For methods without an extraction batch, leave this field
                                                                                             null.
                                                    19. Analysis Batch Identifica-         Laboratory assigned analysis batch ID. Must be unique for each analysis batch within the laboratory for each
                                                      tion Code.                             method.
                                                    20. Analysis Date .................    Date for the start of the analysis batch (YYYY/MM/DD).
                                                    21. Sample Analysis Type ...           The type of sample collected and/or prepared, as well as the fortification level. Permitted values include:
                                                                                           CF = concentration fortified; the concentration of a known contaminant added to a field sample reported with
                                                                                             sample analysis types LFSM, LFSMD, LFB, CCC and QCS.
                                                                                           CCC = continuing calibration check; a calibration standard containing the contaminant, the internal standard, and
                                                                                             surrogate analyzed to verify the existing calibration for those contaminants.
                                                                                           FS = field sample; sample collected and submitted for analysis under this rule.
                                                                                           IS = internal standard; a standard that measures the relative response of contaminants.
                                                                                           LFB = laboratory fortified blank; an aliquot of reagent water fortified with known quantities of the contaminants
                                                                                             and all preservation compounds.
                                                                                           LRB = laboratory reagent blank; an aliquot of reagent water treated exactly as a field sample, including the addi-
                                                                                             tion of preservatives, internal standards, and surrogates to determine if interferences are present in the labora-
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                                                                                             tory, reagents, or other equipment.
                                                                                           LFSM = laboratory fortified sample matrix; a UCMR field sample with a known amount of the contaminant of in-
                                                                                             terest and all preservation compounds added.
                                                                                           LFSMD = laboratory fortified sample matrix duplicate; duplicate of the laboratory fortified sample matrix.
                                                                                           QCS = quality control sample; a sample prepared with a source external to the one used for initial calibration and
                                                                                             CCC. The QCS is used to check calibration standard integrity.
                                                                                           QH = quality HAA; HAA sample collected and submitted for quality control purposes.
                                                                                           SUR = surrogate standard; a standard that assesses method performance for each extraction.
                                                    22. Analytical Results—Sign            A value indicating whether the sample analysis result was:



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                                                                               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                                         76919

                                                                         TABLE 1—UNREGULATED CONTAMINANT MONITORING REPORTING REQUIREMENTS—Continued
                                                              Data element                                                                                            Definition

                                                                                              (<) ‘‘less than’’ means the contaminant was not detected, or was detected at a level below the Minimum Report-
                                                                                                ing Level.
                                                                                              (=) ‘‘equal to’’ means the contaminant was detected at the level reported in ‘‘Analytical Result— Measured
                                                                                                Value.’’
                                                    23. Analytical Result—Meas-               The actual numeric value of the analytical results for: field samples; laboratory fortified matrix samples; laboratory
                                                      ured Value.                               fortified sample matrix duplicates; and concentration fortified.
                                                    24. Additional Value .............        Represents the true value or the fortified concentration for spiked samples for QC Sample Analysis Types (CCC,
                                                                                                EQC, LFB, LFSM and LFSMD). For Sample Analysis Type FS and LRB and for IS and surrogate QC Contami-
                                                                                                nants, leave this field null.
                                                    25. Laboratory Identification             The code, assigned by EPA, used to identify each laboratory. The code begins with the standard two-character
                                                      Code.                                     State postal abbreviation; the remaining five numbers are unique to each laboratory in the State.
                                                    26. Sample Event Code .......             A code assigned by the PWS for each sample event. This will associate samples with the PWS monitoring plan
                                                                                                to allow EPA to track compliance and completeness. Systems must assign the following codes:
                                                                                              SEC1, SEC2, SEC3, SEC4, SEC5, SEC6, SEC7 and SEC8—represent samples collected to meet UCMR As-
                                                                                                sessment Monitoring requirements for cyanotoxins; where ‘‘SEC1’’ represents the first sampling period, ‘‘SEC2’’
                                                                                                the second period and so forth, for all eight sampling events.
                                                                                              SEA1, SEA2, SEA3 and SEA4—represent samples collected to meet UCMR Assessment Monitoring require-
                                                                                                ments for the additional chemicals; where ‘‘SEA1’’ and ‘‘SEA2’’ represent the first and second sampling period
                                                                                                for all water types; and ‘‘SEA3’’ and ‘‘SEA4’’ represent the third and fourth sampling period for SW and GU
                                                                                                sources only.



                                                    Subpart E—Special Regulations,                                       ■ h. Revise paragraph (a)(5)(v), the                                 (ii) * * *
                                                    Including Monitoring Regulations and                                 second sentence in paragraph (a)(5)(vi),                             (A) Assessment monitoring. You must
                                                    Prohibition on Lead Use                                              and paragraph (c).                                                monitor for the contaminants on List 1:
                                                                                                                           The revisions and addition read as
                                                    ■ 3. In § 141.40:                                                                                                                      Assessment Monitoring Cyanotoxin
                                                                                                                         follows:
                                                    ■ a. Remove ‘‘December 31, 2010’’ and                                                                                                  Chemical Contaminants, or List 1:
                                                    add in its place ‘‘December 31, 2015’’ in                            § 141.40 Monitoring requirements for                              Assessment Monitoring Additional
                                                    paragraph (a) introductory text.                                     unregulated contaminants.                                         Chemical Contaminants, per Table 1, in
                                                    ■ b. Revise paragraphs (a)(1),                                         (a) * * *                                                       paragraph (a)(3) of this section, if you
                                                    (a)(2)(i)(A), (a)(2)(ii)(A) and (C), (a)(3),                           (1) Applicability to transient non-                             are notified by your State or EPA that
                                                    and (a)(4)(i)(B) and (C).                                            community systems. If you own or                                  you are part of the State Monitoring
                                                    ■ c. Remove ‘‘October 1, 2012.’’ and add                             operate a transient non-community                                 Plan for Assessment Monitoring.
                                                    in its place ‘‘December 31, 2017.’’ in                               water system, you are not subject to
                                                                                                                         monitoring requirements in this section.                          *       *   *     *     *
                                                    paragraph (a)(4)(i).
                                                    ■ d. Revise paragraph (a)(4)(ii)                                       (2) * * *                                                          (C) Pre-screen testing. You must
                                                    introductory text.                                                     (i) * * *                                                       monitor for the unregulated
                                                    ■ e. Remove and reserve paragraph                                      (A) Assessment monitoring. You must                             contaminants on List 3 of Table 1, in
                                                    (a)(4)(ii)(F).                                                       monitor for the contaminants on List 1,                           paragraph (a)(3) of this section, if you
                                                    ■ f. Add paragraph (a)(4)(iii).                                      per Table 1, UCMR Contaminant List, in                            are notified by your State or EPA that
                                                    ■ g. Remove ‘‘August 1, 2012.’’ and add                              paragraph (a)(3) of this section. If you                          you are part of the State Monitoring
                                                    in its place ‘‘[DATE 60 DAYS AFTER                                   serve a retail population of more than                            Plan for Pre-Screen Testing.
                                                    PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE],                                      10,000 people, you are required to
                                                    and necessary application material                                   perform this monitoring regardless of                                (3) Analytes to be monitored. Lists 1,
                                                    [DATE 120 DAYS AFTER                                                 whether you have been notified by the                             2, and 3 contaminants are provided in
                                                    PUBLICATION OF THE FINAL RULE].’’                                    State or EPA.                                                     the following table:
                                                    in paragraph (a)(5)(ii).                                             *     *     *     *     *

                                                                                                                         TABLE 1—UCMR CONTAMINANT LIST
                                                                                                                                                                                                                              6—Period during
                                                                                          2—CAS registry                       3—Analytical               4—Minimum reporting                  5—Sampling
                                                        1—Contaminant                                                                                                                                                        which monitoring to
                                                                                            number                              methods a                       level b                         location c                     be completed

                                                                                                     List 1: Assessment Monitoring Cyanotoxin Chemical Contaminants e

                                                    total microcystin .........       N/A ............................   ELISA ........................   0.3 μg/L .....................   EPTDS   and SR .........         3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    anatoxin-a ...................    64285–06–9 ..............          EPA 545 ....................     0.03 μg/L ...................    EPTDS   ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                                                                                                                          0.09 μg/L ...................
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                                                    cylindrospermopsin ....           143545–90–8 ............           EPA 545 ....................                                      EPTDS   ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    microcystin-LA ............       96180–79–9 ..............          EPA 544 ....................     0.008 μg/L .................     EPTDS   ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    microcystin-LF ............       154037–70–4 ............           EPA 544 ....................     0.006 μg/L .................     EPTDS   ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    microcystin-LR ............       101043–37–2 ............           EPA 544 ....................     0.02 μg/L ...................    EPTDS   ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    microcystin-LY ............       123304–10–9 ............           EPA 544 ....................     0.009 μg/L .................     EPTDS   ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    microcystin-RR ...........        111755–37–4 ............           EPA 544 ....................     0.006 μg/L .................     EPTDS   ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    microcystin-YR ...........        101064–48–6 ............           EPA 544 ....................     0.02 μg/L ...................    EPTDS   ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    nodularin .....................   118399–22–7 ............           EPA 544 ....................     0.005 μg/L .................     EPTDS   ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020




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                                                    76920                       Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                                                                                TABLE 1—UCMR CONTAMINANT LIST—Continued
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     6—Period during
                                                                                            2—CAS registry                       3—Analytical                4—Minimum reporting                     5—Sampling
                                                        1—Contaminant                                                                                                                                                               which monitoring to
                                                                                              number                              methods a                        level b                            location c                      be completed

                                                                                                         List 1: Assessment Monitoring Additional Chemical Contaminants

                                                                                                                                                     Metals

                                                    germanium .................         7440–56–4 ................         EPA 200.8, ................       0.3 μg/L .....................     EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                                                                                           ASTM D5673–10, SM
                                                                                                                            3125.
                                                    manganese .................         7439–96–5 ................         EPA 200.8, ................       0.4 μg/L .....................     EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                                                                                           ASTM D5673–10, SM
                                                                                                                            3125.

                                                                                                                   Pesticides and a Pesticide Manufacturing Byproduct

                                                    alpha-hexachloro-                   319–84–6 ..................        EPA 525.3 .................       0.01 μg/L ...................      EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                       cyclohexane.
                                                    chlorpyrifos .................      2921–88–2 ................         EPA   525.3   .................   0.03 μg/L ...................      EPTDS     ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    dimethipin ...................      55290–64–7 ..............          EPA   525.3   .................   0.2 μg/L .....................     EPTDS     ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    ethoprop .....................      13194–48–4 ..............          EPA   525.3   .................   0.03 μg/L ...................      EPTDS     ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    oxyfluorfen ..................      42874–03–3 ..............          EPA   525.3   .................   0.05 μg/L ...................      EPTDS     ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    profenofos ..................       41198–08–7 ..............          EPA   525.3   .................   0.3 μg/L .....................     EPTDS     ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    tebuconazole ..............         107534–96–3 ............           EPA   525.3   .................   0.2 μg/L .....................     EPTDS     ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    total permethrin (cis- &            52645–53–1 ..............          EPA   525.3   .................   0.04 μg/L ...................      EPTDS     ......................   3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                       trans-).
                                                    .
                                                    tribufos ........................   78–48–8 ....................       EPA 525.3 .................       0.07 μg/L ...................      EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020

                                                                                                                           Brominated Haloacetic Acid (HAA)                    Groups d

                                                    HAA5 ..........................     N/A ............................   EPA 552.3 or EPA                  N/A ............................   Stage 2 DBPR and/or                3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                                                                                             557.                                                                 DSMRT.

                                                    HAA6Br ......................       N/A ............................   EPA 552.3 or EPA                  N/A ............................   Stage 2 DBPR and/or                3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                                                                                             557.                                                                 DSMRT.
                                                    HAA9 ..........................     N/A ............................   EPA 552.3 or EPA                  N/A ............................   Stage 2 DBPR and/or                3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                                                                                             557.                                                                 DSMRT.

                                                                                                                                                   Alcohols

                                                    1-butanol ....................      71–36–3 ....................       EPA 541 ....................      2.0 μg/L .....................     EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    2-methoxyethanol .......            109–86–4 ..................        EPA 541 ....................      0.4 μg/L .....................     EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    2-propen-1-ol ..............        107–18–6 ..................        EPA 541 ....................      0.5 μg/L .....................     EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020

                                                                                                                                   Other Semivolatile Chemicals

                                                    butylated                           25013–16–5 ..............          EPA 530 ....................      0.03 μg/L ...................      EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                      hydroxanisole.

                                                    o-toluidine ...................     95–53–4 ....................       EPA 530 ....................      0.007 μg/L .................       EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020
                                                    quinoline .....................     91–22–5 ....................       EPA 530 ....................      0.02 μg/L ...................      EPTDS ......................       3/1/2018–11/30/2020

                                                                                                                                       List 2: Screening Survey

                                                    Reserved ....................       Reserved ...................       Reserved ...................      Reserved ...................       Reserved ...................       Reserved

                                                                                                                                      List 3: Pre-Screen Testing

                                                    Reserved ....................       Reserved ...................       Reserved ...................      Reserved ...................       Reserved ...................       Reserved
                                                       Column headings are:
                                                       1—Contaminant: The name of the contaminant to be analyzed.
                                                       2—CAS (Chemical Abstract Service) Registry Number or Identification Number: A unique number identifying the chemical contaminants.
                                                       3—Analytical Methods: Method numbers identifying the methods that must be used to test the contaminants.
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                       4—Minimum Reporting Level (MRL): The value and unit of measure at or above which the concentration of the contaminant must be meas-
                                                    ured using the approved analytical methods. If EPA determines, after the first six months of monitoring that the specified MRLs result in exces-
                                                    sive resampling, EPA will establish alternate MRLs and will notify affected PWSs and laboratories of the new MRLs. N/A is defined as non-appli-
                                                    cable.
                                                       5—Sampling Location: The locations within a PWS at which samples must be collected.
                                                       6—Period During Which Monitoring to be Completed: The time period during which the sampling and testing will occur for the indicated con-
                                                    taminant.
                                                       a The analytical procedures shall be performed in accordance with the documents associated with each method, see paragraph (c) of this sec-
                                                    tion.
                                                       b The MRL is the minimum concentration of each analyte that must be reported to EPA.




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                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                                         76921
                                                       c Sampling must occur at entry points to the distribution system (EPTDSs), after treatment is applied, that represent each non-emergency
                                                    water source in routine use over the 12-month period of monitoring. Systems that purchase water with multiple connections from the same
                                                    wholesaler may select one representative connection from that wholesaler. This EPTDS sampling location must be representative of the highest
                                                    annual volume connections. If the connection selected as the representative EPTDS is not available for sampling, an alternate highest volume
                                                    representative connection must be sampled. See 40 CFR 141.35(c)(3) for an explanation of the requirements related to the use of representative
                                                    ground water EPTDSs. Sampling for brominated HAA groups must be conducted at the Stage 2 Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproduct Rule
                                                    (DBPR) sampling locations (40 CFR 141.622). If these locations are not defined, the PWS is required to collect samples at locations that best
                                                    represent the distribution system maximum residence time (DSMRT). DSMRT is defined as an active point (i.e., a location that currently provides
                                                    water to customers) in the distribution system where the water has been in the system the longest relative to the EPTDS. Sampling must occur
                                                    at source water (SR) intake locations defined by EPA under the UCMR as untreated water entering the water treatment plant (i.e., a location
                                                    prior to any treatment). Systems subject to the Long Term 2 Enhanced Surface Water Treatment Rule (LT2) should use their source water sam-
                                                    pling site(s) from 40 CFR 141.703. Systems subject to the Stage 1 DBPR should use their TOC source water sampling site(s) from 40 CFR
                                                    141.132. TOC source water sampling site(s) were set under Stage 1 DBPR and remain unchanged under Stage 2 DBPR. If a system has two
                                                    different sampling locations for LT2 and Stage 1 DBPR, the system should select the sample point the best represents the definition of source
                                                    water sample location(s) for UCMR. For each EPTDS there should be one source water sample point associated with that EPTDS. It is possible
                                                    that different EPTDSs share the same source water. PWSs that purchase 100 percent of their water; ‘‘consecutive systems’’ are not required to
                                                    collect source water samples.
                                                       d TOC and bromide must be collected at the same time as HAA samples. These indicator samples must be collected at a single source water
                                                    intake (as defined in footnote c, above) using methods already approved for compliance monitoring. TOC methods include: SM 5310 B, SM 5310
                                                    C, SM 5310 D (21st edition), or SM 5310 B–00, SM 5310 C–00, SM 5310 D–00 (SM Online), EPA Method 415.3 (Rev. 1.1 or 1.2). Bromide
                                                    methods include: EPA Methods 300.0 (Rev. 2.1), 300.1 (Rev. 1.0), 317.0 (Rev. 2.0), 326.0 (Rev. 1.0) or ASTM D 6581–12. The MRLs for the in-
                                                    dividual HAAs are discussed in paragraph (a)(5)(v) of this section.
                                                       e Temperature and pH must be measured at the same time as cyanotoxin samples at the source water intake as described in footnote c,
                                                    above. pH methods include: EPA Method 150.1 and 150.2, ASTM D1293–12, SM 4500–H+ B (21st edition) or SM 4500–H+ B–00 (SM Online).
                                                    Temperature methods include: SM 2550 (21st edition), or SM 2550–10 (SM Online).


                                                      (4) * * *                                                 for each sampling location, as specified                    scheduled sampling month (i.e., it is not
                                                      (i) * * *                                                 in Table 2, in this paragraph. For the                      possible for you to sample within the
                                                      (B) Frequency. You must collect the                       second or subsequent round of                               window specified in Table 2, in this
                                                    samples within the time frame and                           sampling, if a sample location is non-                      paragraph), you must notify EPA as
                                                    according to the frequency specified by                     operational for more than one month                         specified in § 141.35(c)(5) to reschedule
                                                    contaminant type and water source type                      before and one month after the                              your sampling.

                                                                             TABLE 2—MONITORING FREQUENCY BY CONTAMINANT AND WATER SOURCE TYPES
                                                       Contaminant type                            Water source type                                    Time frame 1                          Frequency 2

                                                    List 1 Cyanotoxins           Surface water or Ground water under the di-                       March–November .......    You must monitor twice a month for four con-
                                                      Chemicals.                   rect influence of surface water (GWUDI).                                                    secutive months (total of eight sampling
                                                                                                                                                                               events). Sample events must occur two
                                                                                                                                                                               week apart.
                                                    List 1 Contaminants—         Surface water or GWUDI ................................           March–November .......    You must monitor four times during your 12-
                                                      Additional Chemicals.                                                                                                    month monitoring period. Sample events
                                                                                                                                                                               must occur two months apart. (Example: If
                                                                                                                                                                               your first sampling event is in March, the
                                                                                                                                                                               second monitoring must occur during May,
                                                                                                                                                                               the third during July, and the fourth during
                                                                                                                                                                               September).
                                                                                 Ground water ..................................................   March–November .......    You must monitor two times during your 12-
                                                                                                                                                                               month monitoring period. Sample events
                                                                                                                                                                               must occur six months apart. (Example: If
                                                                                                                                                                               your first monitoring is in March, the sec-
                                                                                                                                                                               ond monitoring must occur during Sep-
                                                                                                                                                                               tember. If your first monitoring is in Novem-
                                                                                                                                                                               ber, the second monitoring must occur in
                                                                                                                                                                               May).
                                                       1
                                                       No sampling will take place during the months of December, January or February, except for resampling purposes.
                                                       2
                                                       Systems must assign a sample event code for each contaminant listed in Table 1. Sample event codes must be assigned by the PWS for
                                                    each sample event. For more information on sample event codes see § 141.35(e) Table 1.


                                                      (C) Location. You must collect                            Table 1, in paragraph (a)(3) of this                        collect your samples from the approved
                                                    samples for each List 1 Assessment                          section. PWSs conducting List 1                             representative sampling location(s).
                                                    Monitoring contaminant, and, if                             monitoring for cyanotoxins must                             *       *    *     *    *
                                                    applicable, for each List 2 Screening                       measure temperature and pH as
                                                    Survey, or List 3 Pre-Screen Testing                                                                                       (ii) Small systems. If you serve 10,000
                                                                                                                specified in footnote e of Table 1, in
                                                    contaminant, as specified in Table 1, in                                                                                or fewer people and are notified that
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                                                                                paragraph (a)(3) of this section. If you
                                                    paragraph (a)(3) of this section. Samples                                                                               you are part of the State Monitoring
                                                                                                                are a ground water system with multiple
                                                    must be collected at each sample point                                                                                  Plan for Assessment Monitoring,
                                                                                                                EPTDSs, and you request and receive
                                                    that is specified in column 5 and                                                                                       Screening Survey or Pre-Screen
                                                                                                                approval from EPA or the State for
                                                    footnote c of Table 1, in paragraph (a)(3)                                                                              monitoring, you must comply with the
                                                                                                                sampling at representative EPTDS(s), as
                                                    of this section. PWSs conducting List 1                                                                                 requirements specified in paragraphs
                                                                                                                specified in § 141.35(c)(3), you must
                                                    monitoring for the brominated HAA                                                                                       (a)(4)(ii)(A) through (H) of this section.
                                                    groups must collect TOC and bromide                                                                                     If EPA or the State informs you that they
                                                    samples as specified in footnote d of                                                                                   will be collecting your UCMR samples,


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                                                    76922                 Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules

                                                    you must assist them in identifying the                 analyze the additional EPTDS samples                               (5) * * *
                                                    appropriate sampling locations and in                   for that sample event. If the ELISA                                (v) Method defined quality control.
                                                    collecting the samples.                                 result from the source water intake is                           You must ensure that your laboratory
                                                    *       *    *    *    *                                greater than or equal to 0.3 mg/L, report                        analyzes Laboratory Fortified Blanks
                                                       (iii) Phased sample analysis for                     that value and analyze the EPTDS
                                                                                                                                                                             and conducts Laboratory Performance
                                                    microcystins. You must collect the three                ELISA sample. If the EPTDS ELISA
                                                                                                                                                                             Checks, as appropriate to the method’s
                                                    required samples (one at the source                     result is less than 0.3 mg/L, report that
                                                                                                            result and do not analyze the additional                         requirements, for those methods listed
                                                    water intake and two at the EPTDS) for
                                                                                                            EPTDS samples for that sample event. If                          in Table 1, column 3, in paragraph (a)(3)
                                                    each sampling event, but not all samples
                                                                                                            the EPTDS ELISA result is greater than                           of this section. Each method specifies
                                                    may need to be analyzed. PWSs that
                                                    purchase 100 percent of their water;                    or equal to 0.3 mg/L, report the value                           acceptance criteria for these QC checks.
                                                    ‘‘consecutive systems’’ only sample at                  and analyze the other microcystin                                The following HAA results must be
                                                    their EPTDS. If the ELISA result from                   samples collected at the EPTDS using                             reported using EPA’s electronic data
                                                    the source water intake is less than 0.3                EPA Method 544.                                                  reporting system for quality control
                                                    mg/L, report that result and do not                     *     *      *    *     *                                        purposes.

                                                                                                                    TABLE 4—HAA QC RESULTS
                                                                                                                                                                4—Minimum
                                                                                                   2—CAS                                              a                               5—HAA6Br               6—HAA9               7—HAA5
                                                               1—Contaminant                                           3—Analytical methods                      reporting
                                                                                                  Registry No.                                                                          group                 group                group
                                                                                                                                                                  level b

                                                                                                            Brominated Haloacetic Acid (HAA) Groups

                                                    Bromochloroacetic acid (BCAA) ........       5589–96–8 ....      EPA   552.3   or   EPA   557   .........   0.3   μg/L ........   HAA6Br ....           HAA9.
                                                    Bromodichloroacetic acid (BDCAA) ..          71133–14–7 ..       EPA   552.3   or   EPA   557   .........   0.5   μg/L.
                                                    Chlorodibromoacetic acid (CDBAA) ..          5278–95–5 ....      EPA   552.3   or   EPA   557   .........   0.3   μg/L.
                                                    Tribromoacetic acid (TBAA) ..............    75–96–7 ........    EPA   552.3   or   EPA   557   .........   2.0   μg/L.
                                                    Monobromoacetic acid (MBAA) ........         79–08–3 ........    EPA   552.3   or   EPA   557   .........   0.3   μg/L ........   ...................   ...................   HAA5.
                                                    Dibromoacetic acid (DBAA) ..............     631–64–1 ......     EPA   552.3   or   EPA   557   .........   0.3   μg/L.
                                                    Dichloroacetic acid (DCAA) ...............   79–43–6 ........    EPA   552.3   or   EPA   557   .........   0.2   μg/L.
                                                    Monochloroacetic acid (MCAA) .........       79–11–8 ........    EPA   552.3   or   EPA   557   .........   2.0   μg/L.
                                                    Trichloroacetic acid (TCAA) ..............   76–03–9 ........    EPA   552.3   or   EPA   557   .........   0.5   μg/L.
                                                       Column headings are:
                                                       1—Contaminant: The name of the contaminant to be analyzed.
                                                       2—CAS (Chemical Abstract Service) Registry Number or Identification Number: A unique number identifying the chemical contaminants.
                                                       3—Analytical Methods: Method numbers identifying the methods that must be used to test the contaminants.
                                                       4—Minimum Reporting Level (MRL): The value and unit of measure at or above which the concentration of the contaminant must be meas-
                                                    ured using the approved analytical methods. If EPA determines, after the first six months of monitoring that the specified MRLs result in exces-
                                                    sive resampling, EPA will establish alternate MRLs and will notify affected PWSs and laboratories of the new MRLs.
                                                       5–7—HAA groups identified in paragraph (a)(3) of this section to be monitored as UCMR contaminants.
                                                       a The analytical procedures shall be performed in accordance with the documents associated with each method, see paragraph (c) of this sec-
                                                    tion, and must meet all quality control requirements outlined paragraph (a)(5) of this section.
                                                       b The MRL is the minimum concentration of each analyte that must be reported to EPA.




                                                      (vi) * * * You must require your                      Docket is (202) 566–2426. The material                           Waters and Wastes by Inductively
                                                    laboratory to submit these data                         is also available for inspection at the                          Coupled Plasma—Mass Spectrometry,’’
                                                    electronically to the State and EPA                     National Archives and Records                                    Revision 5.4, 1994. Available on the
                                                    using EPA’s electronic data reporting                   Administration (NARA). For                                       Internet at https://www.nemi.gov.
                                                    system, accessible at http://                           information on the availability of this                             (iv) EPA Method 300.0
                                                    www2.epa.gov/dwucmr, within 120                         material at NARA, call (202) 741–6030                            ‘‘Determination of Inorganic Anions by
                                                    days from the sample collection date.                   or go to http://www.archives.gov/                                Ion Chromatography Samples,’’
                                                    * * *                                                   federal-register/cfr/about.html.                                 Revision 2.1, 1993. Available on the
                                                    *     *     *     *    *                                   (1) The following methods are from                            Internet at http://www.nemi.gov.
                                                      (c) Incorporation by reference. These                 the U.S. Environmental Protection
                                                    standards are incorporated by reference                 Agency, Water Docket, EPA/DC, EPA                                   (v) EPA Method 300.1 ‘‘Determination
                                                    into this section with the approval of                  West, Room 3334, 1301 Constitution                               of Inorganic Anions in Drinking Water
                                                    the Director of the Federal Register                    Ave. NW., Washington, DC 20004.                                  by Ion Chromatography,’’ Revision 1.0,
                                                    under 5 U.S.C. 552(a) and 1 CFR part 51.                   (i) EPA Method 150.1 ‘‘pH                                     1997. Available on the Internet at http://
                                                    All approved material is available for                  Electrometric, in Methods for Chemical                           www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/
                                                    inspection either electronically at http://             Analysis of Water and Wastes,’’ 1983,                            approved-drinking-water-analytical-
                                                    www.regulations.gov, in hard copy at                    EPA/600/4–79/020. Available on the                               methods.
                                                    the Water Docket, EPA/DC, and from the                  Internet at http://www.nemi.gov.                                    (vi) EPA Method 317.0
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    sources as follows. The Public Reading                     (ii) EPA Method 150.2 ‘‘pH,                                   ‘‘Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide
                                                    Room (EPA West, Room 3334, 1301                         Continuous Monitoring (Electrometric),                           Disinfection By-Products in Drinking
                                                    Constitution Ave. NW., Washington,                      in Methods for Chemical Analysis of                              Water Using Ion Chromatography with
                                                    DC) is open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.,                Water and Wastes,’’ 1983, EPA/600/4–                             the Addition of a Postcolumn Reagent
                                                    Monday through Friday, excluding legal                  79/020. Available on the Internet at                             for Trace Bromate Analysis,’’ Revision
                                                    holidays. The telephone number for this                 http://www.nemi.gov.                                             2.0, 2001, EPA 815–B–01–001.
                                                    Public Reading Room is (202) 566–1744,                     (iii) EPA Method 200.8                                        Available on the Internet at http://
                                                    and the telephone number for the Water                  ‘‘Determination of Trace Elements in                             www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/


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                                                                          Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 238 / Friday, December 11, 2015 / Proposed Rules                                               76923

                                                    approved-drinking-water-analytical-                     www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-                         (v) SM 5310C ‘‘Total Organic Carbon
                                                    methods.                                                drinking-water-research-methods.                      by Persulfate-UV or Heated-Persulfate
                                                       (vii) EPA Method 326.0                                  (xiv) EPA Method 545 ‘‘Determination               Oxidation Method.’’
                                                    ‘‘Determination of Inorganic Oxyhalide                  of Cylindrospermopsin and Anatoxin-a                     (vi) SM 5310D ‘‘Total Organic Carbon
                                                    Disinfection By-Products in Drinking                    in Drinking Water by Liquid                           by Wet-Oxidation Method.’’
                                                    Water Using Ion Chromatography                          Chromatography Electrospray Ionization                   (4) The following methods are from
                                                    Incorporating the Addition of a                         Tandem Mass Spectrometry (LC/ESI–                     ‘‘Standard Methods Online.’’ Available
                                                    Suppressor Acidified Postcolumn                         MS/MS),’’ April 2015, EPA 815–R–15–                   for purchase on the Internet at http://
                                                    Reagent for Trace Bromate Analysis,’’                   009. Available on the Internet at http://             www.standardmethods.org.
                                                    Revision 1.0, 2002, EPA 815–R–03–007.                   www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/                        (i) SM 2550–10 ‘‘Temperature.’’
                                                    Available on the Internet at http://                    approved-drinking-water-analytical-                      (ii) SM 3125–09 ‘‘Metals by
                                                    www2.epa.gov/dwanalyticalmethods/                       methods.                                              Inductively Coupled Plasma/Mass
                                                    approved-drinking-water-analytical-                        (xv) EPA Method 552.3                              Spectrometry (Editorial revisions,
                                                    methods.                                                ‘‘Determination of Haloacetic Acids and               2011).’’
                                                                                                            Dalapon in Drinking Water by Liquid-                     (iii) SM 4500–H+ B–00 ‘‘pH Value in
                                                       (viii) EPA Method 415.3
                                                                                                            Liquid Microextraction, Derivatization,               Water by Potentiometry Using a
                                                    ‘‘Determination of Total Organic Carbon
                                                                                                            and Gas Chromatography with Electron                  Standard Hydrogen Electrode.’’
                                                    and Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm                                                                             (iv) SM 5310B–00 ‘‘The
                                                    in Source Water and Drinking Water,’’                   Capture Detection,’’ Revision 1.0, July
                                                                                                            2003, EPA 815–B–03–002. Available on                  Determination of Total Organic Carbon
                                                    Revision 1.1, 2005, EPA/600/R–05/055.                                                                         by High-Temperature Combustion
                                                    Available on the Internet at http://                    the Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/
                                                                                                            dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                         Method.’’
                                                    www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-                                                                                 (v) SM 5310C–00 ‘‘Total Organic
                                                    drinking-water-research-methods.                        drinking-water-analytical-methods.
                                                                                                               (xvi) EPA Method 557 ‘‘Determination               Carbon by Persulfate-UV or Heated-
                                                       (ix) EPA Method 415.3                                                                                      Persulfate Oxidation Method.’’
                                                    ‘‘Determination of Total Organic Carbon                 of Haloacetic Acids, Bromate, and
                                                                                                            Dalapon in Drinking Water by Ion                         (vi) SM 5310D–00 ‘‘Total Organic
                                                    and Specific UV Absorbance at 254 nm                                                                          Carbon by Wet-Oxidation Method.’’
                                                    in Source Water and Drinking Water,’’                   Chromatography Electrospray Ionization
                                                                                                                                                                     (5) The following methodology is
                                                    Revision 1.2, 2009, EPA/600/R–09/122.                   Tandem Mass Spectrometry (IC–ESI–
                                                                                                                                                                  from Ohio EPA, Columbus, OH.
                                                    Available on the Internet at http://                    MS/MS),’’ Version 1.0, September 2009,                   (i) ELISA SOP. ‘‘Ohio EPA Total
                                                    www2.epa.gov/water-research/epa-                        EPA 815–B–09–012. Available on the                    (Extracellular and Intracellular)
                                                    drinking-water-research-methods.                        Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/                      Microcystins—ADDA by ELISA
                                                       (x) EPA Method 525.3 ‘‘Determination                 dwanalyticalmethods/approved-                         Analytical Methodology,’’ Version 2.0,
                                                    of Semivolatile Organic Chemicals in                    drinking-water-analytical-methods.                    January 2015. Available on the Internet
                                                    Drinking Water by Solid Phase                              (2) The following methods are from
                                                                                                                                                                  at http://www.epa.ohio.gov/Portals/28/
                                                    Extraction and Capillary Column Gas                     ‘‘ASTM International,’’ 100 Barr Harbor
                                                                                                                                                                  documents/habs/HAB_Analytical_
                                                    Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry                        Drive, West Conshohocken, PA 19428–
                                                                                                                                                                  Methodology.pdf.
                                                    (GC/MS),’’ Version 1.0, February 2012,                  2959.                                                    (ii) [Reserved]
                                                                                                               (i) ASTM D1293–12 ‘‘Standard Test
                                                    EPA/600/R–12/010. Available on the                                                                            [FR Doc. 2015–30824 Filed 12–10–15; 8:45 am]
                                                                                                            Methods for pH of Water.’’ Available for
                                                    Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-
                                                                                                            purchase on the Internet at http://                   BILLING CODE 6560–50–P
                                                    research/epa-drinking-water-research-
                                                                                                            www.astm.org/Standards/D1293.htm.
                                                    methods.
                                                                                                               (ii) ASTM D5673–10 ‘‘Standard Test
                                                       (xi) EPA Method 530 ‘‘Determination                  Method for Elements in Water by                       FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS
                                                    of Select Semivolatile Organic                          Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass                       COMMISSION
                                                    Chemicals in Drinking Water by Solid                    Spectrometry,’’ approved August 1,
                                                    Phase Extraction and Gas                                2010. Available for purchase on the                   47 CFR Part 63
                                                    Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry                        Internet at http://www.astm.org/
                                                    (GC/MS),’’ Version 1.0, January 2015,                                                                         [GN Docket No. 13–5, WC Docket No. 05–
                                                                                                            Standards/D5673.htm.                                  25; Report No. 3035]
                                                    EPA/600/R–14/442. Available on the                         (iii) ASTM D6581–12 ‘‘Standard Test
                                                    Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-                  Methods for Bromate, Bromide,                         Petition for Reconsideration of Action
                                                    research/epa-drinking-water-research-                   Chlorate, and Chlorite in Drinking                    in a Rulemaking Proceeding
                                                    methods.                                                Water by Suppressed Ion
                                                       (xii) EPA Method 541 ‘‘Determination                                                                       AGENCY:  Federal Communications
                                                                                                            Chromatography.’’ Available for
                                                    of 1-Butanol, 1,4-Dioxane, 2-                                                                                 Commission.
                                                                                                            purchase on the Internet at http://
                                                    Methoxyethanol and 2-Propen-1-ol in                     www.astm.org/Standards/D6581.htm.                     ACTION: Petition for reconsideration.
                                                    Drinking Water by Solid Phase                              (3) The following methods are from
                                                    Extraction and Gas Chromatography/                                                                            SUMMARY:   In this document, a Petition
                                                                                                            ‘‘Standard Methods for the Examination                for Reconsideration (Petition) has been
                                                    Mass Spectrometry,’’ November 2015,                     of Water & Wastewater,’’ 21st edition
                                                    EPA 815–R–15–011. Available on the                                                                            filed in the Commission’s Rulemaking
                                                                                                            (2005), American Public Health                        Proceeding by Tamar E. Finn, on behalf
                                                    Internet at http://www2.epa.gov/water-                  Association, 800 I Street NW.,
                                                    research/epa-drinking-water-research-                                                                         of U.S. TelePacific Corp.
                                                                                                            Washington, DC 20001–3710.
                                                    methods.                                                                                                      DATES: Oppositions to the Petition must
                                                                                                               (i) SM 2550. ‘‘Temperature.’’
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                       (xiii) EPA Method 544                                   (ii) SM 3125 ‘‘Metals by Inductively               be filed on or before December 28, 2015.
                                                    ‘‘Determination of Microcystins and                     Coupled Plasma/Mass Spectrometry.’’                   Replies to an opposition must be filed
                                                    Nodularin in Drinking Water by Solid                       (iii) SM 4500–H+ B ‘‘pH Value in                   on or before January 5, 2016.
                                                    Phase Extraction and Liquid                             Water by Potentiometry Using a                        ADDRESSES: Federal Communications
                                                    Chromatography/Tandem Mass                              Standard Hydrogen Electrode.’’                        Commission, 445 12th Street SW.,
                                                    Spectrometry (LC/MS/MS),’’ Version                         (iv) SM 5310B ‘‘The Determination of               Washington DC 20554.
                                                    1.0, February 2015, EPA 600–R–14/474.                   Total Organic Carbon by High-                         FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                    Available on the Internet at http://                    Temperature Combustion Method.’’                      Michele Levy Berlove, Wireline


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Document Created: 2018-03-02 09:13:00
Document Modified: 2018-03-02 09:13:00
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 and notice of public meeting.
DatesComments must be received on or before February 9, 2016. Under the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA), comments on the information collection provisions are best assured of consideration if the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) receives a copy of your comments on or before January 11, 2016. The public webinar will be held on January 13, 2016, from 1:00 p.m.. to 4:30 p.m., eastern time. Persons wishing to participate in the webinar must register by January 10, 2016, as described in section II.M.
ContactBrenda D. Parris, Standards and Risk Management Division (SRMD), Office of Ground Water and Drinking Water (OGWDW) (MS 140), Environmental Protection Agency, 26 West Martin Luther King Drive, Cincinnati, OH 45268; telephone number: (513) 569-
FR Citation80 FR 76897 
RIN Number2040-AF10
CFR AssociatedEnvironmental Protection; Chemicals; Incorporation by Reference; Indian-Lands; Intergovernmental Relations; Radiation Protection; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements and Water Supply

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