81_FR_36928 81 FR 36818 - Examinations of Working Places in Metal and Nonmetal Mines

81 FR 36818 - Examinations of Working Places in Metal and Nonmetal Mines

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Mine Safety and Health Administration

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 110 (June 8, 2016)

Page Range36818-36826
FR Document2016-13218

The Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) is proposing to amend the Agency's standards for the examination of working places in metal and nonmetal (MNM) mines. The purpose of this proposed rule is to ensure that mine operators identify and correct conditions that may adversely affect miners' safety or health. MSHA is proposing to require that an examination of the working place be conducted before miners begin work in an area and that the operator notifies miners in the working place of any conditions found that may adversely affect their safety or health. MSHA is also proposing that the competent person conducting the examination sign and date the examination record before the end of each shift, that the record includes information regarding adverse conditions found and corrective actions taken, and that operators make such records available to miners and their representatives. The proposal would enhance the quality of working place examinations in MNM mines and help assure that violations of mandatory health or safety standards are identified and corrected, thereby improving protections for miners.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 110 (Wednesday, June 8, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 110 (Wednesday, June 8, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 36818-36826]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-13218]


=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Mine Safety and Health Administration

30 CFR Parts 56 and 57

[Docket No. MSHA-2014-0030]
RIN 1219-AB87


Examinations of Working Places in Metal and Nonmetal Mines

AGENCY: Mine Safety and Health Administration, Labor.

ACTION: Proposed rule; notice of public hearings.

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

SUMMARY: The Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) is proposing 
to amend the Agency's standards for the examination of working places 
in metal and nonmetal (MNM) mines. The purpose of this proposed rule is 
to ensure that mine operators identify and correct conditions that may 
adversely affect miners' safety or health. MSHA is proposing to require 
that an examination of the working place be conducted before miners 
begin work in an area and that the operator notifies miners in the 
working place of any conditions found that may adversely affect their 
safety or health. MSHA is also proposing that the competent person 
conducting the examination sign and date the examination record before 
the end of each shift, that the record includes information regarding 
adverse conditions found and corrective actions taken, and that 
operators make such records available to miners and their 
representatives. The proposal would enhance the quality of working 
place examinations in MNM mines and help assure that violations of 
mandatory health or safety standards are identified and corrected, 
thereby improving protections for miners.

DATES: Comments must be received or postmarked by midnight Eastern Time 
on September 6, 2016.
    Hearing Dates: July 19, 2016, July 21, 2016, July 26, 2016, and 
August 4, 2016. The locations are listed in the Public Hearings section 
in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section of this document. Post-hearing 
comments must be received by midnight Eastern Standard Time on 
September 6, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Submit comments and informational materials, identified by 
RIN 1219-AB87 or Docket No. MSHA-2014-0030, by one of the following 
methods:
     Federal E-Rulemaking Portal: http://www.regulations.gov. 
Follow the on-line instructions for submitting comments.
     E-Mail: [email protected].
     Mail: MSHA, Office of Standards, Regulations, and 
Variances, 201 12th Street South, Suite 4E401, Arlington, Virginia 
22202-5452.
     Hand Delivery or Courier: 201 12th Street South, Suite 
4E401, Arlington, Virginia, between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Monday 
through Friday, except Federal holidays. Sign in at the receptionist's 
desk on the 4th floor East, Suite 4E401.
     Fax: 202-693-9441.
    Information Collection Requirements: Comments concerning the 
information collection requirements of this proposed rule must be 
clearly identified with RIN 1219-AB87 or Docket No. MSHA-2014-0030, and 
sent to both MSHA and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). 
Comments to MSHA may be sent by one of the methods in the ADDRESSES 
section above. Comments to OMB may be sent by mail addressed to the 
Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and 
Budget, New Executive Office Building, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, 
DC 20503, Attn: Desk Officer for MSHA.
    Instructions: All submissions must include RIN 1219-AB87 or Docket 
No. MSHA-2014-0030. Do not include personal information that you do not 
want publicly disclosed; MSHA will post all comments without change, 
including any personal information provided.
    Docket: For access to the docket to read comments received, go to 
http://www.regulations.gov or http://www.msha.gov/currentcomments.asp. 
To read background documents, go to http://www.regulations.gov. Review 
the docket in person at MSHA, Office of Standards, Regulations, and 
Variances, 201 12th Street South, Arlington, Virginia, between 9:00 
a.m. and 5:00 p.m. EST Monday through Friday, except Federal holidays. 
Sign in at the receptionist's desk on the 4th floor East, Suite 4E401.
    E-Mail Notification: To subscribe to receive an email notification 
when MSHA publishes rules in the Federal Register, go to http://www.msha.gov.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Table of Contents

I. Introduction
    A. Public Hearings
    B. Statutory and Regulatory History
II. Background Information
III. Section-by-Section Analysis
IV. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory Planning and Review and 
Executive Order 13563: Improving Regulation and Regulatory Review
V. Feasibility
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and Small Business Regulatory 
Enforcement Fairness Act
VII. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
VIII. Other Regulatory Considerations
IX. References

I. Introduction

A. Public Hearings

    MSHA will hold four public hearings on the proposed rule to provide 
the public with an opportunity to present oral statements, written 
comments, and other information on this rulemaking. The public hearings 
will begin at 9 a.m. and end after the last presenter speaks, and in 
any event not later than 5 p.m., on the following dates at the 
locations indicated:

------------------------------------------------------------------------
             Date                     Location          Contact number
------------------------------------------------------------------------
July 19, 2016................  Homewood Suites by         (801) 363-6700
                                Hilton, Salt Lake
                                City-Downtown, 423
                                West 300 South, Salt
                                Lake City, UT 84101.

[[Page 36819]]

 
July 21, 2016................  Hyatt Place                (412) 321-3000
                                Pittsburgh--North
                                Shore, 260 North
                                Shore Drive,
                                Pittsburgh, PA 15212.
July 26, 2016................  Mine Safety and            (202) 693-9440
                                Health
                                Administration
                                Headquarters, 201
                                12th Street, South,
                                Rooms 7W204 & 7W206,
                                Arlington, VA 22202.
August 4, 2016...............  Sheraton Birmingham        (205) 324-5000
                                Hotel, 2101 Richard
                                Arrington Jr.
                                Boulevard North,
                                Birmingham, AL 35203.
------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The hearings will begin with an opening statement from MSHA, 
followed by an opportunity for members of the public to make oral 
presentations. You do not have to make a written request to speak; 
however, persons and organizations wishing to speak are encouraged to 
notify MSHA in advance for scheduling purposes.
    Speakers and other attendees may present information to MSHA for 
inclusion in the rulemaking record. The hearings will be conducted in 
an informal manner. Formal rules of evidence or cross examination will 
not apply.
    A verbatim transcript of the proceedings will be prepared and made 
a part of the rulemaking record. Copies of the transcript will be 
available to the public. The transcript may also be viewed on MSHA's 
Web site at http://arlweb.msha.gov/currentcomments.asp, under Comments 
on Public Rule Making. MSHA will accept post-hearing written comments 
and other appropriate information for the record from any interested 
party, including those not presenting oral statements.

B. Statutory and Regulatory History

    On July 31, 1969, MSHA's predecessor, the Department of the 
Interior's Bureau of Mines, published a final rule (34 FR 12503) 
addressing health and safety standards for Metal and Nonmetallic Open 
Pit Mines; Sand, Gravel, and Crushed Stone Operations; and Metal and 
Nonmetallic Underground Mines. These standards were promulgated 
pursuant to the 1966 Federal Metal and Nonmetallic Mine Safety Act (MNM 
Act). The final rule included some mandatory standards and some 
advisory standards. The final rule at Sec. Sec.  55.18-8, 56.18-8, and 
57.18-8 set forth an advisory standard stating that each working place 
``should be visited by a supervisor or a designated person at least 
once each shift and more frequently as necessary to insure that work is 
being done in a safe manner.''
    The Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977 (Mine Act) amended 
the Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969 (Coal Act) to 
include MNM mines and repealed the MNM Act. The Mine Act retained the 
mandatory standards and regulations promulgated under the Coal Act and 
the MNM Act. In addition, section 301(b)(2) of the Mine Act required 
the Secretary of Labor to establish an advisory committee to review all 
advisory standards under the MNM Act and to either revoke them or make 
them mandatory (with or without revision). On August 17, 1979 (44 FR 
48490), MSHA revised, renumbered, and made mandatory the Agency's 
advisory standards regarding working place examinations. This resulted 
in standards, set forth at Sec. Sec.  55.18-2, 56.18-2, and 57.18-2, 
that mirrored the language that currently exists at Sec. Sec.  56.18002 
and 57.18002.
    On January 29, 1985 (50 FR 4048), MSHA combined and recodified the 
standards in 30 CFR parts 55 and 56 into a single part 56 that applies 
to all surface MNM mines. As a part of this effort, the MNM working 
place examination standards were redesignated as 30 CFR 56.18002 and 
57.18002. No change was made to the language of the standards.

II. Background Information

    Mining continues to be one of the nation's most hazardous 
occupations. Mining operations have dynamic work environments where 
working conditions can change rapidly and without warning. Under the 
Mine Act, mine operators with the assistance of the miners have the 
primary responsibility to prevent the existence of unsafe and 
unhealthful conditions and practices. Compliance with safety and health 
standards and adoption of safe work practices provide a substantial 
measure of protection against hazards that cause accidents, injuries, 
and fatalities. MSHA has determined that effective accident prevention 
strategies include an examination of working places.
    Under existing Sec. Sec.  56.18002 and 57.18002, MSHA requires that 
a competent person designated by the operator examine each working 
place at least once each shift for conditions that may adversely affect 
safety or health, that the operator promptly initiate appropriate 
action to correct such conditions, and that the operator keep records 
for one year that the examinations were conducted. These standards also 
require the operator to withdraw persons from an area where conditions 
may present an imminent danger, except those persons referred to in 
section 104(c) of the Mine Act, until the danger is abated.
    The proposal would require that operators promptly notify miners of 
any adverse conditions found that may adversely affect safety or 
health. It would also require that the examination record include 
additional information that MSHA believes would help assure that 
adverse conditions are identified and corrected, and that the record be 
made available to miners and their representatives so that they can be 
made aware of these conditions. MSHA is proposing that the record 
include: (1) The locations of all areas examined and a description of 
each condition found that could adversely affect the safety or health 
of miners; and (2) a description of the corrective action and date the 
corrective action was taken. The proposal would also require that the 
competent person who conducted the examination sign and date the 
examination record before the end of each shift.
    MSHA believes that making and maintaining a record of adverse 
conditions found and corrective actions taken would help mine operators 
and miners and their representatives become more aware of potential 
dangers and more proactive in their approach to correcting these issues 
before they cause or contribute to an accident, injury, or fatality. 
Under this proposed rule, MSHA anticipates that improved communication 
at the mine site about adverse conditions and the best practices used 
to correct the conditions will encourage awareness and participation at 
all levels, fostering a culture of safety and health at the mine.
    In developing the proposed rule, MSHA reviewed accident 
investigation reports and the Agency's enforcement data from January 
2010 through mid-December 2015. During this period, 122 miners were 
killed in 110 accidents at MNM mines. MSHA conducted investigations 
into each of these 110 fatal accidents and issued 252 citations and 
orders for violations of 95 different mandatory safety and health 
standards. MSHA's analysis of the accident investigations further 
revealed that in

[[Page 36820]]

more than 60 percent of the fatal accidents (67 out of 110), the Agency 
had issued at least one citation or order for a violation of a 
mandatory safety or health standard identified in MSHA's Rules to Live 
By (RTLB) initiative, launched in February 2010. Violations of the 19 
MNM RTLB standards represent the conditions or practices that have been 
most frequently cited as causing or contributing to fatal accidents.
    At this point, MSHA believes that most operators and miners should 
be familiar with the RTLB standards. Under the proposal, the additional 
communication that would be required by operators (1) notifying miners 
of conditions that violate RTLB standards and other adverse conditions 
and (2) recording additional information about these conditions in the 
examination record should further serve to educate miners, their 
representatives, and operators about adverse conditions and encourage 
prompt corrective action. In this way, MSHA believes the proposal will 
help prevent fatalities and other accidents.
    Over the years, MSHA has issued Program Policy Letters (PPL) 
regarding working place examinations, including PPL No. P94-IV-5 
(1994); PPL No. P96-IV-2 (1996); PPL No. P10-IV-3 (2010); PPL No. P14-
IV-01 (2014); and PPL P15-IV-01 (July 22, 2015). The PPLs are MSHA's 
guidance and best practices regarding compliance with the existing 
standards. MSHA inspectors, miners, mine operators, trainers, and the 
mining community use these PPLs as guidance in determining how best to 
comply with MSHA's standards on working place examinations.
    As discussed in PPL No. P15-IV-01 and other PPLs, MSHA believes 
that, for a record to provide meaningful information, it should contain 
the following: (1) The date of the examination; (2) the examiner's 
name; and (3) the working places examined. As reflected in the PPLs, 
MSHA also believes that, as a best practice, the record should include 
a description of the conditions found that adversely affect safety or 
health.
    Effective working place examinations are a fundamental accident 
prevention tool; they allow operators to find and fix adverse 
conditions and violations of health and safety standards before they 
cause injury or death to miners. MSHA believes that notifying miners of 
adverse conditions in their working place allows the miner to take 
appropriate precautions until the adverse condition is corrected. 
Records alert operators to take prompt corrective action. The following 
are recent examples of adverse conditions that existed for more than 
one shift prior to causing or contributing to a fatal accident.\1\ MSHA 
believes that, had the person making the examination noted these 
conditions prior to miners working in an area, had the conditions been 
recorded, and had the operator warned miners about these conditions, 
the accidents may have been prevented.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ Examples of accidents cited may be in litigation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In March 2011, a contract supervisor was fatally injured when he 
was struck by a section of pipe. He was supervising the operation of 
joining two ends of pipe using a pipe-fusion machine. The positioning 
cylinder was defective and had been removed from the pipe-fusion 
machine eight days prior to the accident. Since the positioning 
cylinder was removed, the machine could not hold the pipe in place. 
MSHA believes that, had a competent person identified and recorded the 
adverse condition before miners used the machine, the operator could 
have warned miners and removed the machine from service until the 
cylinder was repaired and replaced, thus preventing the fatal accident.
    In January 2015, a fatal accident occurred at a phosphate rock 
mine. A heavy equipment operator was operating an excavator near a 
water-filled ditch when the excavator tipped on its side, into the 
water, trapping the miner inside the nearly submerged cab. The 
equipment operator was rescued from the cab and hospitalized, but died 
later that day. Three days prior to the accident, several inches of 
rain fell in the area causing the ditch to fill with water and 
overflow, making the ditch invisible to persons working in the area. 
MSHA believes that had a competent person conducted a workplace 
examination before miners started working in the area the hazard would 
have been identified; notification to affected miners of the water-
filled ditch would have made them aware of the hazardous condition; and 
a record of the hazardous condition would have prompted corrective 
action and prevented the fatality.
    Another fatal accident in March 2015 involved a haul truck driver 
at a sand and gravel mine. The driver was driving on an elevated 
roadway on an embankment next to the mine's dredge pond. The roadway, 
which was recently established, had no berm as a barrier to the drop-
off as required by MSHA standards. The truck went off the roadway into 
the pond. The driver was hospitalized and died two days later. MSHA 
believes that the operator should have recognized during a workplace 
examination that a berm was not in place along the banks of the 
elevated haul road and warned miners before miners started work in that 
area. MSHA also believes that a record of this hazard likely would have 
prompted corrective action and that these actions would have prevented 
the accident that occurred.
    From 2013 through 2015, there were 68 fatalities at MNM mines, as 
compared with 54 fatalities in the preceding three years (2010-2012). 
To reduce fatalities at MNM mines, MSHA has engaged, and continues to 
share best practices and training materials with stakeholders in the 
MNM industry. The Agency has provided stakeholders with guidance and 
compliance assistance materials to help mine operators find and fix 
violations of mandatory safety and health standards. These efforts 
included stakeholder conferences, online training sessions, and a 
``walk and talk'' safety initiative in which MSHA's inspectors and 
field staff provided operators and miners information about potentially 
hazardous tasks and conditions, as well as best mining practices to 
prevent accidents, injuries, and fatalities. These efforts, however, 
have not been sufficient to address the increase in fatalities that 
began in 2013.
    This proposed rule is intended to strengthen MSHA's requirements 
for MNM working place examinations to help prevent the kind of 
accidents discussed above. MSHA believes that the proposed requirements 
that operators examine working places before miners begin work in an 
area and notify miners of any adverse conditions that may adversely 
affect safety or health would assure that miners and operators are 
aware of hazards and take proactive actions to correct hazards. In 
addition, the record required under the proposed rule would help assure 
that adverse conditions are identified and corrected promptly.

III. Section-by-Section Analysis

    This proposed rule would help reduce common causes of accidents, 
injuries, and fatalities at MNM mines by enhancing the effectiveness of 
working place examinations.

A. Sections 56.18002(a) and 57.18002(a)--Requirements for Conducting 
Working Place Examinations

    Proposed Sec. Sec.  56.18002(a) and 57.18002(a) would require an 
examination of each working place at least once each shift, before work 
begins in an area, for conditions that may adversely affect the safety 
or health of miners.

[[Page 36821]]

    Existing Sec. Sec.  56.2 and 57.2 define the phrase ``working 
place'' as: ``any place in or about a mine where work is being 
performed.'' In PPL No. P15-IV-01, MSHA clarifies that ``working 
place'' applies to all locations at a mine where miners work in the 
extraction or milling processes. The Agency further explains that this 
includes areas where work is performed on an infrequent basis, such as 
areas accessed primarily during periods of maintenance or clean-up, if 
miners will be performing work in these areas during the shift. As 
discussed in previous guidance, the ``working place'' would not include 
roads not directly involved in the mining process, administrative 
office buildings, parking lots, lunchrooms, toilet facilities, or 
inactive storage areas. Operators would be required to examine 
isolated, abandoned, or idle areas of mines or mills only when miners 
have to perform work in these areas during the shift.
    The existing standards for examinations of working places in MNM 
mines in Sec. Sec.  56.18002(a) and 57.18002(a) require that a 
competent person designated by the mine operator examine each working 
place at least once per shift for conditions that may adversely affect 
safety or health and promptly initiate appropriate action to correct 
such conditions. While the existing standards permit the examination to 
be made at any time during the shift, MSHA is proposing that the 
examination start before work begins in an area. MSHA believes that the 
proposal is consistent with the remedial intent of the Mine Act and the 
existing standards. MSHA also believes that the proposed requirement 
that operators conduct an examination of working places before work 
begins in an area would provide better protection of miners. MSHA 
requests comments on whether the Agency should require that 
examinations be conducted within a specified time period, e.g., 2 
hours, before miners start work in an area. Please provide specific 
rationale for your position, and include the merits for your argument.
    Like the existing rule, the proposed rule would require that the 
examination be made by a competent person designated by the mine 
operator. In PPL No. P15-IV-01, MSHA emphasized that the competent 
person designated by the operator to conduct working place examinations 
should be able to recognize hazards and adverse conditions that are 
expected or known to occur in a specific work area or that are 
predictable to someone familiar with the mining industry. MSHA states 
in various PPLs that, although a best practice is for a foreman or 
other supervisor to conduct the examination in most cases, an 
experienced non-supervisory person may also be ``competent.'' The PPLs 
emphasized that a competent person designated by the operator under 
Sec. Sec.  56.18002(a) and 57.18002(a) must already have the experience 
and training to be able to perform the examination and identify safety 
and health hazards.
    MSHA requests comment on whether the Agency should require that the 
competent person conducting a working place examination have a minimum 
level of experience or particular training or knowledge to identify 
workplace hazards. The Agency requests information on whether a 
competent person should have a certain ability, experience, knowledge, 
or training that would enable the person to recognize conditions that 
could adversely affect safety or health. Please provide the rationale, 
including supporting documentation.
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  56.18002(a)(1) and 57.18002(a)(1) incorporate 
the existing requirements in Sec. Sec.  56.18002(a) and 57.18002(a) 
that the mine operator promptly initiate action to correct conditions 
that may adversely affect safety or health that are found during the 
examination, and would add a new requirement that the operator promptly 
notify the miners in any affected areas of any adverse conditions found 
during the working place examination. MSHA believes that miners need to 
know about adverse conditions in their working place so that they can 
take precautions to avoid an accident or injury.
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  56.18002(a)(2) and 57.18002(a)(2) are 
substantively the same as existing Sec. Sec.  56.18002(c) and 
57.18002(c). These provisions would require that, if the competent 
person finds conditions that may present an imminent danger, these 
conditions must be brought to the immediate attention of the operator. 
The operator must immediately withdraw all persons from the affected 
area until the danger is abated, except persons referred to in section 
104(c) of the Mine Act who are necessary to eliminate the imminent 
danger.
    Imminent danger is defined in section 3(j) of the Mine Act as the 
existence of any condition or practice which could reasonably be 
expected to cause death or serious physical harm before such condition 
or practice can be abated. From January 2010 through December 2015, 
MSHA has issued 1,819 imminent danger orders under section 107(a) of 
the Mine Act in MNM mines.

B. Sections 56.18002(b) and 57.18002(b)--Requirements for Records of 
Working Place Examinations

    MSHA believes that, to be effective, working place examinations 
must be timely, made by a competent person, and made in the areas where 
miners work. MSHA is proposing that working place examination records 
include additional information the Agency believes is necessary to 
accomplish the intent of the standards.
    The proposed rule would add new requirements addressing the 
contents of the examination record. The introductory text to proposed 
Sec. Sec.  56.18002(b) and 57.18002(b) would continue to require that a 
record of the working place examination be made. The proposed rule 
would add the requirement that the competent person who conducted the 
examination sign and date the record before the end of the shift for 
which the examination was made. Proposed Sec. Sec.  56.18002(b)(1) and 
57.18002(b)(1) would require the record to include the locations 
examined and a description of any adverse conditions found. MSHA 
believes that this proposed requirement for a description of the 
adverse conditions found would expedite the correction of these 
conditions. Proposed Sec. Sec.  56.18002(b)(2)(i) through (iii) and 
57.18002(b)(2)(i) through (iii) are new provisions; they would require 
that, if any adverse condition is found, the record must include:
     A description of the action taken to correct the adverse 
condition,
     The date that the corrective action was taken, and
     The name of the person who made the record of the 
corrective action and the date the corrective action was taken. (MSHA 
expects that the person taking the corrective action would make this 
record.)
    The proposed rule would redesignate the requirement for 
recordkeeping in existing Sec. Sec.  56.18002(b) and 57.18002(b) as 
proposed Sec. Sec.  56.18002(b)(3) and 57.18002(b)(3). Existing 
Sec. Sec.  56.18002(b) and 57.18002(b) require that a record that such 
working place examinations were conducted shall be kept by the operator 
for a period of one year and shall be made available for review by the 
Secretary or his authorized representative. The proposed rule would add 
new requirements that the record also be made available to miners and 
their representatives and that a copy be provided to the Secretary or 
his authorized representative or a miners' representative when they 
request a copy. MSHA solicits comments on these proposed requirements.

[[Page 36822]]

C. Request for Comments

    Please provide any other data or information that would be useful 
to MSHA as the Agency evaluates its proposal related to working place 
examinations in MNM mines. Please provide the rationale and sufficient 
detail in your comments to enable proper Agency review and 
consideration. Where possible, include specific examples to support the 
rationale and other relevant information, including past experience, 
studies and articles, and standard professional practices. Include any 
related cost and benefit data with your submission, and information on 
economic and technological feasibility.
    Based data reported on MSHA Form 7000-2, 90 percent of MNM mines 
employ fewer than 20 miners. In addition, almost all (98 percent) of 
MNM mines are surface operations. Over half of all MNM mines are 
surface sand and gravel or crushed stone operations that operate 
intermittently or seasonally and employ five or fewer miners. For this 
reason, MSHA is particularly interested in comments related to the 
impact of the proposed rule on small mines, particularly comments and 
suggestions on alternatives and best practices that small mines might 
use to implement more effective working place examinations.

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

    Executive Orders 13563 and 12866 direct agencies to assess all 
costs and benefits of available regulatory alternatives and, if 
regulation is necessary, to select regulatory approaches that maximize 
net benefits (including potential economic, environmental, public 
health and safety effects, distributive impacts, and equity). Executive 
Order 13563 emphasizes the importance of quantifying both costs and 
benefits, of reducing costs, of harmonizing rules, and of promoting 
flexibility.
    Under Executive Order (E.O.) 12866, the Agency must determine 
whether a regulatory action is ``significant'' and subject to review by 
the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). Section 3(f) of E.O. 12866 
defines a ``significant regulatory action'' as an action that is likely 
to result in a rule: (1) Having an annual effect on the economy of $100 
million or more, or adversely and materially affecting a sector of the 
economy, productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public 
health or safety, or state, local, or tribal governments or communities 
(also referred to as ``economically significant''); (2) creating 
serious inconsistency or otherwise interfering with an action taken or 
planned by another agency; (3) materially altering the budgetary 
impacts of entitlements, grants, user fees, or loan programs or the 
rights and obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raising novel 
legal or policy issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's 
priorities, or the principles set forth in this Executive Order.
    Based on its assessment of the costs and benefits, MSHA has 
determined that this proposed rule would not have an annual effect of 
$100 million or more on the economy and, therefore, would not be an 
economically significant regulatory action pursuant to section 3(f) of 
E.O. 12866. MSHA requests comments on all cost and benefit estimates 
presented in this preamble and on the data and assumptions the Agency 
used to develop estimates.

A. Population at Risk

    The proposed rule would apply to all MNM mines in the United 
States. In 2014, there were approximately 11,800 MNM mines employing 
145,800 miners, excluding office workers, and 75,800 contractors 
working at MNM mines.
    Table 1 presents the number of MNM mines and employment by mine 
size.

                Table 1--MNM Mines and Employment in 2014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                               Total
                                                           employment at
                Mine size                  No. of mines       mines,
                                                             excluding
                                                          office workers
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1-19 Employees..........................          10,599          52,328
20-500 Employees........................           1,162          73,253
501+ Employees..........................              26          20,186
Contractors.............................  ..............          75,762
                                         -------------------------------
    Total...............................          11,787         221,529
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: MSHA MSIS Data (reported on MSHA Form 7000-2) August 26, 2015.

    The U.S. Department of the Interior (DOI) estimated the value of 
the U.S. mining industry's MNM output in 2014 to be $77.6 billion.\2\ 
Table 2 presents the hours worked and revenue produced at MNM mines by 
mine size.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ Production revenue estimates are from DOI, U.S. Geological 
Survey (USGS), Mineral Commodity Summaries 2015, February 2015, page 
8.

              Table 2--MNM Total Hours and Revenues in 2014
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                            Total hours     Revenue (in
                Mine size                  reported for     millions of
                                               year          dollars)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1-19 Employees..........................      86,704,486         $23,539
20-500 Employees........................     156,402,789         $42,461
501+ Employees..........................      42,730,947         $11,600
                                         -------------------------------

[[Page 36823]]

 
    Total...............................     285,838,222         $77,600
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source: MSHA MSIS Data (total hours worked at MNM mines reported on MSHA
  Form 7000-2) and estimated DOI reported mine revenues for 2014 by mine
  size.

B. Benefits

    The proposed rule would require additional recordkeeping provisions 
to assure that adverse conditions are recorded and corrected. The 
proposed rule would provide for more detailed examination records that 
include essential information that the operator can use to correct 
recognized hazards and protect miners. The proposed provisions to 
record the adverse conditions found during the examinations and the 
corrective actions taken to mitigate the hazards, and to notify miners 
of the adverse conditions that may adversely affect safety or health, 
would better achieve the protections intended under the existing 
requirements. The additional information recorded in the examination 
records would assist MSHA, mine operators, and miners in focusing 
efforts on correcting hazardous conditions.
    MSHA is unable to quantify the benefits from this proposed 
rulemaking, including the proposed provisions that an examination of 
the working place be conducted before miners begin work in an area; 
that the operator notify miners in the working place of any conditions 
found that may adversely affect their safety or health; and that the 
examination record include a description of the adverse conditions 
found and the corrective actions taken. MSHA anticipates, however, that 
there would be benefits from the proposed requirements, such as 
expedited correction of adverse conditions, which would be expected to 
result in fewer injuries and fatalities. MSHA requests information and 
data on the benefits from this proposed rulemaking. Please be specific 
to facilitate any benefits quantification that may be possible.
    Net benefits under MSHA's current analysis would be negative (zero 
quantified benefits minus quantified costs). MSHA also believes that 
there would be a financial benefit to MNM mine operators who conduct 
working place examinations to find and fix adverse conditions and 
violations of health and safety standards before these conditions cause 
injury or death. Mine operators who conduct effective working place 
examinations could achieve a financial benefit from reduced penalties. 
From January 2010 through December 2015, penalties for MNM mine 
operators were $152 million for violations of all mandatory safety and 
health standards.

C. Compliance Costs

    The quantified cost associated with this proposed rule would be the 
additional cost for the expanded recordkeeping requirements. Some mine 
operators already conduct and record working place examinations that 
satisfy the proposed requirements and would have little or no 
additional cost. Many adverse conditions found during the working place 
examination are corrected immediately before miners have an opportunity 
to encounter the condition; therefore, MSHA also believes that the cost 
associated with examining areas before miners begin work in that area 
and with notifying miners of any adverse conditions would be de 
minimis. MSHA requests information and data on the costs of this 
proposed rulemaking.
    For the purpose of this analysis, MSHA estimates that the competent 
person making the record of the examination of working places would 
earn $31.14 (including benefits). The wage rate is from U.S. Metal and 
Industrial Mineral Mine Salaries, Wages, and Benefits--2012 Survey 
Results, InfoMine USA, Inc., 2012. MSHA updated rates from 2012 to 2014 
for inflation using a percent change of 3.8 percent derived from the 
BLS Employment Cost Index (CIU2010000405000I), total compensation for 
private industry workers in construction, extraction, farming, fishing, 
and forestry occupations (Index available at http://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CIU2010000405000I).
    MSHA also estimates that--
     Mines with 1-19 employees operate one shift per day, 300 
days per year; and
     Mines with 20+ employees operate two shifts per day, 300 
days per year.

    MSHA recognizes that there are many seasonal and intermittent mines 
that would be covered by this proposed rule. MSHA requests information 
and data on the Agency's estimates on the number of days per year a 
mine operates; the number of working place examinations made each 
shift; the number of competent persons required to conduct multiple 
examinations during a single shift; the amount of time required to 
record the examination and record corrective actions taken; and the 
number of shifts per day, by mine size.
Records of Working Place Examinations
    The proposed rule would revise existing Sec. Sec.  56.18002(b) and 
57.18002(b) by adding requirements that the record of the examination 
include the locations of all areas examined and a description of each 
adverse condition found, and that the competent person conducting the 
examination sign and date this record before the end of the shift for 
which the examination was made. Also, if an adverse condition is found, 
the record must include a description of the actions taken to correct 
the adverse condition, the date that corrective action was taken, and 
the name of the person updating the record as well as the date the 
record was updated. MSHA expects that the person taking the corrective 
action would update the record on completion of the corrective action. 
MSHA has no data on the number of corrective actions that would be 
recorded under this proposed rule. However, the Agency believes that 
the time to record the corrective actions would be minimal at best.
    MSHA estimates that it will take a competent person approximately 5 
additional minutes to make the record after each examination. MSHA 
estimates that the annual cost of making this record for all MNM mines 
is approximately $10.1 million:
     $8.3 million in mines with 1-19 employees (10,599 mines x 
1 exam/day x 300 days/yr x 5 mins x $31.14/hr);
     $1.8 million in mines with 20-500 employees (1,162 mines x 
2 exams/day x 300 days/yr x 5 mins x $31.14/hr); and
     $40,482 in mines with 501+ employees (26 mines x 2 exams/
day x 300 days/yr x 5 mins x $31.14/hr).
Discounting
    Discounting is a technique used to apply the economic concept that 
the preference for the value of money decreases over time. In this 
analysis,

[[Page 36824]]

MSHA provides cost totals at zero, 3, and 7 percent discount rates. The 
zero percent discount rate is referred to as the undiscounted rate. 
MSHA used the Excel Net Present Value (NPV) function to determine the 
present value of costs and computed an annualized cost from the present 
value using the Excel PMT function.\3\ The negative value of the PMT 
function provides the annualized cost over 10 years at a 3 and 7 
percent discount rate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ Office of Management and Budget, Office of Information and 
Regulatory Affairs, Regulatory Impact Analysis: Frequently Asked 
Questions, February 7, 2011. [http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/omb/assets/OMB/circulars/a004/a-4_FAQ.pdf.]
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Summary of Costs
    MSHA estimates that the total undiscounted cost of the proposed 
rule over a 10-year period would be approximately $101.0 million, $86.2 
million at a 3 percent rate, and $70.9 million at a 7 percent rate. The 
total undiscounted cost annualized over 10 years would be approximately 
$10.1 million per year, $9.8 million per year at a 3 percent rate, and 
$9.4 million per year at a 7 percent rate.

V. Feasibility

A. Technological Feasibility

    The proposed rule contains recordkeeping requirements; the proposed 
rule is not technology-forcing. MSHA concludes that the rule is 
technologically feasible.

B. Economic Feasibility

    MSHA has traditionally used a revenue screening test--whether the 
yearly impacts of a regulation are less than one percent of revenues--
to establish presumptively that the regulation is economically feasible 
for the mining community. The proposed rule is projected to cost 
approximately $10.1 million per year and the MNM industry has estimated 
annual revenues of $77.6 billion, which is less than one percent of 
revenues. MSHA concludes that the proposed rule would be economically 
feasible for the MNM mining industry.

VI. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and Small Business Regulatory 
Enforcement Fairness Act

    Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) of 1980, as 
amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act 
(SBREFA), MSHA has analyzed the impact of the proposed rule on small 
entities. Based on that analysis, MSHA certifies that the proposed rule 
would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of 
small entities. The Agency, therefore, is not required to develop an 
initial regulatory flexibility analysis. The factual basis for this 
certification is presented below.

A. Definition of a Small Mine

    Under the RFA, in analyzing the impact of a rule on small entities, 
MSHA must use the Small Business Administration's (SBA's) definition 
for a small entity, or after consultation with the SBA Office of 
Advocacy, establish an alternative definition for the mining industry 
by publishing that definition in the Federal Register for notice and 
comment. MSHA has not established an alternative definition and, 
therefore, must use SBA's definition. The SBA defines a small entity in 
the mining industry as an establishment with 500 or fewer employees.
    MSHA has also examined the impact of the proposed rule on mines 
with fewer than 20 employees, which MSHA and the mining community have 
traditionally referred to as ``small mines.'' These small mines differ 
from larger mines not only in the number of employees, but also in 
economies of scale in material produced, in the type and amount of 
production equipment, and in supply inventory. Therefore, the impact of 
MSHA's rules and the costs of complying with them will also tend to 
differ for these small mines. This analysis complies with the 
requirements of the RFA for an analysis of the impact on ``small 
entities'' using both SBA's definition for small entities in the mining 
industry and MSHA's traditional definition.

B. Factual Basis for Certification

    MSHA initially evaluates the impacts on small entities by comparing 
the estimated compliance costs of a rule for small entities in the 
sector affected by the rule to the estimated revenues for the affected 
sector. When estimated compliance costs are less than one percent of 
the estimated revenues, the Agency believes it is generally appropriate 
to conclude that there is no significant economic impact on a 
substantial number of small entities. When estimated compliance costs 
exceed one percent of revenues, MSHA investigates whether further 
analysis is required. MSHA projects that the proposed compliance costs 
of $10.1 million for MNM mines with 1 to 500 employees is less than one 
percent of the $66 billion revenue of these mines in 2014. Proposed 
compliance costs for MNM mines with 1 to 19 employees is $8.3 million, 
which is less than one percent of the $23.5 billion revenue of these 
mines in 2014.

VII. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995

A. Summary

    This proposed rule contains changes that affect the burden in an 
existing paperwork package with OMB Control Number 1219-0089. MSHA 
estimates that the proposed rule will result in 324,375 additional 
burden hours with an associated additional cost of approximately $10.1 
million annually. MSHA requests information and data on the Agency's 
estimates used to calculate the additional burden hours in the 
information collection package for this proposed rule.
Records of Working Place Examinations
    Proposed Sec. Sec.  56.18002(b)(1) and (2) and 57.18002(b)(1) and 
(2) would revise the existing provisions in Sec. Sec.  56.18002(b) and 
57.18002(b) by requiring competent persons to include in the record of 
the examination: (1) The locations of all areas examined, (2) a 
description of any adverse condition found, (3) a description of the 
actions taken to correct the adverse condition, and (4) the date that 
corrective action was taken. The competent person must sign and date 
this record before the end of the shift for which the examination was 
made. Also, if the record is updated, it must include the date and name 
of the person updating the record.
    MSHA estimates that a MNM competent person who conducts working 
place examinations earns $31.14 an hour (includes benefits, see cost 
section above). MSHA estimates that--
     Mines with 1-19 employees operate one shift per day, 300 
days per year;
     Mines with 20-500 employees operate two shifts per day, 
300 days per year; and
     Mines with 501+ employees operate two shifts per day, 300 
days per year.
    MSHA's estimates of MNM mine operators' additional annual burden 
hours and burden hour costs for examination records are presented 
below.
Additional Burden Hours
     10,599 mines (with 1-19 employees) x 1 exam x 300 days x 5 
min = 264,975 hr
     1,162 mines (with 20-500 employees) x 2 exams x 300 days x 
5 min = 58,100 hr
     26 mines (with >500 employees) x 2 exams x 300 days x 5 
min = 1,300 hr
     Total Burden Hours = 324,375 hr
Additional Burden Hour Costs
     Total Burden Hour Costs = 324,375 hr x $31.14/hr = 
$10,101,038

    There are no other associated burden hour costs because the 
proposed rule

[[Page 36825]]

only adds documentation requirements to a record already required by 
existing standards.

B. Procedural Details

    The information collection package for this proposed rule has been 
submitted to OMB for review under 44 U.S.C. 3504, paragraph (h) of the 
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, as amended. Comments on the 
information collection requirements should be sent to both OMB and 
MSHA. Addresses for both offices can be found in the ADDRESSES section 
of this preamble.

VIII. Other Regulatory Considerations

A. The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995

    MSHA has reviewed the proposed rule under the Unfunded Mandates 
Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1501 et seq.). MSHA has determined that 
this proposed rule does not include any federal mandate that may result 
in increased expenditures by State, local, or tribal governments; nor 
will it increase private sector expenditures by more than $100 million 
(adjusted for inflation) in any one year or significantly or uniquely 
affect small governments. Accordingly, the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act 
requires no further Agency action or analysis.

B. The Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act of 1999: 
Assessment of Federal Regulations and Policies on Families

    Section 654 of the Treasury and General Government Appropriations 
Act of 1999 (5 U.S.C. 601 note) requires agencies to assess the impact 
of Agency action on family well-being. MSHA has determined that this 
proposed rule will have no effect on family stability or safety, 
marital commitment, parental rights and authority, or income or poverty 
of families and children. Accordingly, MSHA certifies that this 
proposed rule would not impact family well-being.

C. Executive Order 12630: Government Actions and Interference With 
Constitutionally Protected Property Rights

    Section 5 of Executive Order (E.O.) 12630 requires Federal agencies 
to ``identify the takings implications of proposed regulatory actions . 
. . .'' MSHA has determined that this proposed rule does not include a 
regulatory or policy action with takings implications. Accordingly, 
E.O. 12630 requires no further Agency action or analysis.

D. Executive Order 12988: Civil Justice Reform

    Section 3 of Executive Order (E.O.) 12988 contains requirements for 
Federal agencies promulgating new regulations or reviewing existing 
regulations to minimize litigation by eliminating drafting errors and 
ambiguity, providing a clear legal standard for affected conduct rather 
than a general standard, promoting simplification, and reducing burden. 
MSHA has reviewed this proposed rule and has determined that it would 
meet the applicable standards provided in E.O. 12988 to minimize 
litigation and undue burden on the Federal court system.

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

    MSHA has determined that this proposed rule will have no adverse 
impact on children. Accordingly, E.O. 13045 requires no further Agency 
action or analysis.

F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism

    MSHA has determined that this proposed rule does not have 
federalism implications because 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. Accordingly, 
E.O. 13132 requires no further Agency action or analysis.

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

    MSHA has determined that this proposed rule does not have tribal 
implications because it will not have substantial direct effects on one 
or more Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal 
Government and Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and 
responsibilities between the Federal Government and Indian tribes. 
Accordingly, E.O. 13175 requires no further Agency action or analysis.

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

    Executive Order 13211 requires agencies to publish a statement of 
energy effects when a rule has a significant energy action that 
adversely affects energy supply, distribution, or use. MSHA has 
reviewed this proposed rule for its energy effects because the proposed 
rule applies to the metal and nonmetal mining sector. Although this 
proposed rule will result in yearly costs of approximately $10.1 
million to the metal and nonmetal mining industry, only the impact on 
uranium mines is applicable in this case. MSHA data show only three 
active uranium mines in 2014. The Energy Information Administration's 
annual uranium report for 2014 \4\ shows 4.7 million pounds at an 
average price of $39.17, for sales of approximately $185.9 million. 
Using average annual costs, the impact to all active uranium mine 
operators is less than $4,000. MSHA has concluded that it is not a 
significant energy action because it is not likely to have a 
significant adverse effect on the supply, distribution, or use of 
energy. Accordingly, under this analysis, no further Agency action or 
analysis is required.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ http://www.eia.gov/uranium/production/annual/pdf/dupr.pdf, 
page 6.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

I. Executive Order 13272: Proper Consideration of Small Entities in 
Agency Rulemaking

    MSHA has reviewed the proposed rule to assess and take appropriate 
account of its potential impact on small businesses, small governmental 
jurisdictions, and small organizations. MSHA has determined that the 
proposed rule would not have a significant economic impact on a 
substantial number of small entities.

IX. References

    Salzer, Krista Noyes, survey results compilation ``2012 U.S. 
Coal Mines Salaries, Wages, and Benefits--2012, U.S. Metal and 
Industrial Mineral Mine Salaries, Wages, and Benefits'', InfoMine 
USA, Inc.
    U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, Mineral 
Commodity Summaries 2015, February 2015, page 8.
    U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Employment 
Cost Index CIU2010000405000I, total compensation for private 
industry workers in construction, extraction, farming, fishing, and 
forestry occupations, Index.
    U.S. Energy Information Administration, Independent Statistics & 
Analysis: Domestic Uranium Production Report 2014, April 2015.
    U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Office of Information and 
Regulatory Affairs, Regulatory Impact Analysis: Frequently Asked 
Questions, February 7, 2011.

List of Subjects in 30 CFR Parts 56 and 57

    Explosives, Fire prevention, Hazardous substances, Metals, Mine

[[Page 36826]]

safety and health, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.

Joseph A. Main,
Assistant Secretary of Labor for Mine Safety and Health.

    For the reasons set out in the preamble, and under the authority of 
the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977, as amended by the Mine 
Improvement and New Emergency Response Act of 2006, MSHA is proposing 
to amend chapter I of title 30 of the Code of Federal Regulations as 
follows:

PART 56--SAFETY AND HEALTH STANDARDS--SURFACE METAL AND NONMETAL 
MINES

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

    Authority: 30 U.S.C. 811.

0
2. Revise Sec.  56.18002 to read as follows:


Sec.  56.18002  Examination of working places.

    (a) A competent person designated by the operator shall examine 
each working place at least once each shift, before miners begin work 
in that place, for conditions that may adversely affect safety or 
health.
    (1) The operator shall promptly notify miners in any affected areas 
of any adverse conditions found that may adversely affect safety or 
health and promptly initiate appropriate action to correct such 
conditions.
    (2) Conditions noted by the person conducting the examination that 
may present an imminent danger shall be brought to the immediate 
attention of the operator who shall withdraw all persons from the area 
affected (except persons referred to in section 104(c) of the Federal 
Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977) until the danger is abated.
    (b) A record of each examination shall be made and the person 
conducting the examination shall sign and date the record before the 
end of the shift for which the examination was made.
    (1) The record shall include the locations of all areas examined 
and a description of each condition found that may adversely affect the 
safety or health of miners.
    (2) The record also shall include:
    (i) A description of the corrective action taken,
    (ii) The date that the corrective action was taken, and
    (iii) The name of the person who made the record of the corrective 
action and the date the record of the corrective action was made.
    (3) The operator shall maintain the examination records for at 
least one year; shall make the records available for inspection by 
authorized representatives of the Secretary and the representatives of 
miners; and shall provide these representatives a copy on request.

PART 57--SAFETY AND HEALTH STANDARDS--UNDERGROUND METAL AND 
NONMETAL MINES

0
3. The authority citation for part 57 continues to read as follows:

    Authority:  30 U.S.C. 811.

0
4. Revise Sec.  57.18002 to read as follows:


Sec.  57.18002  Examination of working places.

    (a) A competent person designated by the operator shall examine 
each working place at least once each shift, before miners begin work 
in that place, for conditions that may adversely affect safety or 
health.
    (1) The operator shall promptly notify miners in any affected areas 
of any adverse conditions found that may adversely affect safety or 
health and promptly initiate appropriate action to correct such 
conditions.
    (2) Conditions noted by the person conducting the examination that 
may present an imminent danger shall be brought to the immediate 
attention of the operator who shall withdraw all persons from the area 
affected (except persons referred to in section 104(c) of the Federal 
Mine Safety and Health Act of 1977) until the danger is abated.
    (b) A record of each examination shall be made and the person 
conducting the examination shall sign and date the record before the 
end of the shift for which the examination was made.
    (1) The record shall include the locations of all areas examined 
and a description of each condition found that may adversely affect the 
safety or health of miners.
    (2) The record also shall include:
    (i) A description of the corrective action taken,
    (ii) The date that the corrective action was taken, and
    (iii) The name of the person who made the record of the corrective 
action and the date the record of the corrective action was made.
    (3) The operator shall maintain the examination records for at 
least one year; shall make the records available for inspection by 
authorized representatives of the Secretary and the representatives of 
miners; and shall provide these representatives a copy on request.

[FR Doc. 2016-13218 Filed 6-7-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4520-43-P



                                               36818                        Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 8, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                  (2) * * *                                                    an area and that the operator notifies                 OMB may be sent by mail addressed to
                                                  (ii) Conversion transactions occurring                       miners in the working place of any                     the Office of Information and Regulatory
                                               on or after June 7, 2016. Paragraphs                            conditions found that may adversely                    Affairs, Office of Management and
                                               (a)(1), (a)(2)(vi), (b)(4), (c)(1), (c)(6), and                 affect their safety or health. MSHA is                 Budget, New Executive Office Building,
                                               (f) of this section will apply to                               also proposing that the competent                      725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC
                                               conversion transactions occurring on or                         person conducting the examination sign                 20503, Attn: Desk Officer for MSHA.
                                               after June 7, 2016 and to conversion                            and date the examination record before                   Instructions: All submissions must
                                               transactions and related section 355                            the end of each shift, that the record                 include RIN 1219–AB87 or Docket No.
                                               distributions for which the conversion                          includes information regarding adverse                 MSHA–2014–0030. Do not include
                                               transaction occurs before, and the                              conditions found and corrective actions                personal information that you do not
                                               related section 355 distribution occurs                         taken, and that operators make such                    want publicly disclosed; MSHA will
                                               on or after, June 7, 2016. For conversion                       records available to miners and their                  post all comments without change,
                                               transactions that occurred on or after                          representatives. The proposal would                    including any personal information
                                               January 2, 2002 and before June 7, 2016,                        enhance the quality of working place                   provided.
                                               see § 1.337(d)–7 as contained in 26 CFR                         examinations in MNM mines and help                       Docket: For access to the docket to
                                               part 1 in effect on April 1, 2016.                              assure that violations of mandatory                    read comments received, go to http://
                                                  (iii) [The text of the proposed                              health or safety standards are identified              www.regulations.gov or http://
                                               amendment to § 1.337(d)–7(g)(2)(iii) is                         and corrected, thereby improving                       www.msha.gov/currentcomments.asp.
                                               the same as the text of § 1.337(d)–                             protections for miners.                                To read background documents, go to
                                               7T(g)(2)(iii) published elsewhere in this                       DATES: Comments must be received or                    http://www.regulations.gov. Review the
                                               issue of the Federal Register].                                 postmarked by midnight Eastern Time                    docket in person at MSHA, Office of
                                                  (iv) Converted property. Paragraph                           on September 6, 2016.                                  Standards, Regulations, and Variances,
                                               (a)(2)(vii) of this section applies to                            Hearing Dates: July 19, 2016, July 21,               201 12th Street South, Arlington,
                                               conversion transactions that occur on or                        2016, July 26, 2016, and August 4, 2016.               Virginia, between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00
                                               after the date these regulations are                            The locations are listed in the Public                 p.m. EST Monday through Friday,
                                               published in the Federal Register as                            Hearings section in the SUPPLEMENTARY                  except Federal holidays. Sign in at the
                                               final regulations.                                              INFORMATION section of this document.                  receptionist’s desk on the 4th floor East,
                                               John Dalrymple,                                                 Post-hearing comments must be                          Suite 4E401.
                                                                                                               received by midnight Eastern Standard                    E-Mail Notification: To subscribe to
                                               Deputy Commissioner for Services and
                                               Enforcement.                                                    Time on September 6, 2016.                             receive an email notification when
                                                                                                               ADDRESSES: Submit comments and                         MSHA publishes rules in the Federal
                                               [FR Doc. 2016–13425 Filed 6–7–16; 8:45 am]
                                                                                                               informational materials, identified by                 Register, go to http://www.msha.gov.
                                               BILLING CODE 4830–01–P
                                                                                                               RIN 1219–AB87 or Docket No. MSHA–                      SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                                                                               2014–0030, by one of the following
                                                                                                                                                                      Table of Contents
                                                                                                               methods:
                                               DEPARTMENT OF LABOR                                               • Federal E-Rulemaking Portal:                       I. Introduction
                                                                                                               http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the                    A. Public Hearings
                                               Mine Safety and Health Administration                                                                                     B. Statutory and Regulatory History
                                                                                                               on-line instructions for submitting
                                                                                                               comments.                                              II. Background Information
                                               30 CFR Parts 56 and 57                                                                                                 III. Section-by-Section Analysis
                                                                                                                 • E-Mail: zzMSHA-comments@
                                                                                                                                                                      IV. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory
                                               [Docket No. MSHA–2014–0030]                                     dol.gov.                                                     Planning and Review and Executive
                                                                                                                 • Mail: MSHA, Office of Standards,                         Order 13563: Improving Regulation and
                                               RIN 1219–AB87                                                   Regulations, and Variances, 201 12th                         Regulatory Review
                                               Examinations of Working Places in                               Street South, Suite 4E401, Arlington,                  V. Feasibility
                                               Metal and Nonmetal Mines                                        Virginia 22202–5452.                                   VI. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and Small
                                                                                                                  • Hand Delivery or Courier: 201 12th                      Business Regulatory Enforcement
                                               AGENCY:  Mine Safety and Health                                 Street South, Suite 4E401, Arlington,                        Fairness Act
                                               Administration, Labor.                                          Virginia, between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00                   VII. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
                                                                                                               p.m. Monday through Friday, except                     VIII. Other Regulatory Considerations
                                               ACTION: Proposed rule; notice of public                                                                                IX. References
                                               hearings.                                                       Federal holidays. Sign in at the
                                                                                                               receptionist’s desk on the 4th floor East,             I. Introduction
                                               SUMMARY:  The Mine Safety and Health                            Suite 4E401.
                                                                                                                                                                      A. Public Hearings
                                               Administration (MSHA) is proposing to                              • Fax: 202–693–9441.
                                               amend the Agency’s standards for the                               Information Collection Requirements:                  MSHA will hold four public hearings
                                               examination of working places in metal                          Comments concerning the information                    on the proposed rule to provide the
                                               and nonmetal (MNM) mines. The                                   collection requirements of this proposed               public with an opportunity to present
                                               purpose of this proposed rule is to                             rule must be clearly identified with RIN               oral statements, written comments, and
                                               ensure that mine operators identify and                         1219–AB87 or Docket No. MSHA–2014–                     other information on this rulemaking.
                                               correct conditions that may adversely                           0030, and sent to both MSHA and the                    The public hearings will begin at 9 a.m.
                                               affect miners’ safety or health. MSHA is                        Office of Management and Budget                        and end after the last presenter speaks,
                                               proposing to require that an                                    (OMB). Comments to MSHA may be                         and in any event not later than 5 p.m.,
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               examination of the working place be                             sent by one of the methods in the                      on the following dates at the locations
                                               conducted before miners begin work in                           ADDRESSES section above. Comments to                   indicated:

                                                                       Date                                                                      Location                                        Contact number

                                               July 19, 2016 ..........................................   Homewood Suites by Hilton, Salt Lake City–Downtown, 423 West 300 South,                   (801) 363–6700
                                                                                                            Salt Lake City, UT 84101.



                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014       14:36 Jun 07, 2016      Jkt 238001    PO 00000   Frm 00009   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\08JNP1.SGM   08JNP1


                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 8, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                             36819

                                                                       Date                                                                      Location                                      Contact number

                                               July 21, 2016 ..........................................   Hyatt Place Pittsburgh—North Shore, 260 North Shore Drive, Pittsburgh, PA              (412) 321–3000
                                                                                                            15212.
                                               July 26, 2016 ..........................................   Mine Safety and Health Administration Headquarters, 201 12th Street, South,            (202) 693–9440
                                                                                                            Rooms 7W204 & 7W206, Arlington, VA 22202.
                                               August 4, 2016 .......................................     Sheraton Birmingham Hotel, 2101 Richard Arrington Jr. Boulevard North, Bir-            (205) 324–5000
                                                                                                            mingham, AL 35203.



                                                 The hearings will begin with an                                under the Coal Act and the MNM Act.                   withdraw persons from an area where
                                               opening statement from MSHA,                                     In addition, section 301(b)(2) of the                 conditions may present an imminent
                                               followed by an opportunity for members                           Mine Act required the Secretary of                    danger, except those persons referred to
                                               of the public to make oral presentations.                        Labor to establish an advisory                        in section 104(c) of the Mine Act, until
                                               You do not have to make a written                                committee to review all advisory                      the danger is abated.
                                               request to speak; however, persons and                           standards under the MNM Act and to                       The proposal would require that
                                               organizations wishing to speak are                               either revoke them or make them                       operators promptly notify miners of any
                                               encouraged to notify MSHA in advance                             mandatory (with or without revision).                 adverse conditions found that may
                                               for scheduling purposes.                                         On August 17, 1979 (44 FR 48490),                     adversely affect safety or health. It
                                                 Speakers and other attendees may                               MSHA revised, renumbered, and made                    would also require that the examination
                                               present information to MSHA for                                  mandatory the Agency’s advisory                       record include additional information
                                               inclusion in the rulemaking record. The                          standards regarding working place                     that MSHA believes would help assure
                                               hearings will be conducted in an                                 examinations. This resulted in                        that adverse conditions are identified
                                               informal manner. Formal rules of                                 standards, set forth at §§ 55.18–2, 56.18–            and corrected, and that the record be
                                               evidence or cross examination will not                           2, and 57.18–2, that mirrored the                     made available to miners and their
                                               apply.                                                           language that currently exists at                     representatives so that they can be made
                                                 A verbatim transcript of the                                   §§ 56.18002 and 57.18002.                             aware of these conditions. MSHA is
                                               proceedings will be prepared and made                               On January 29, 1985 (50 FR 4048),                  proposing that the record include: (1)
                                               a part of the rulemaking record. Copies                          MSHA combined and recodified the                      The locations of all areas examined and
                                               of the transcript will be available to the                       standards in 30 CFR parts 55 and 56                   a description of each condition found
                                               public. The transcript may also be                               into a single part 56 that applies to all             that could adversely affect the safety or
                                               viewed on MSHA’s Web site at http://                             surface MNM mines. As a part of this                  health of miners; and (2) a description
                                               arlweb.msha.gov/currentcomments.asp,                             effort, the MNM working place                         of the corrective action and date the
                                               under Comments on Public Rule                                    examination standards were                            corrective action was taken. The
                                               Making. MSHA will accept post-hearing                            redesignated as 30 CFR 56.18002 and                   proposal would also require that the
                                               written comments and other appropriate                           57.18002. No change was made to the                   competent person who conducted the
                                               information for the record from any                              language of the standards.                            examination sign and date the
                                               interested party, including those not                                                                                  examination record before the end of
                                                                                                                II. Background Information                            each shift.
                                               presenting oral statements.
                                                                                                                   Mining continues to be one of the                     MSHA believes that making and
                                               B. Statutory and Regulatory History                              nation’s most hazardous occupations.                  maintaining a record of adverse
                                                  On July 31, 1969, MSHA’s                                      Mining operations have dynamic work                   conditions found and corrective actions
                                               predecessor, the Department of the                               environments where working conditions                 taken would help mine operators and
                                               Interior’s Bureau of Mines, published a                          can change rapidly and without                        miners and their representatives become
                                               final rule (34 FR 12503) addressing                              warning. Under the Mine Act, mine                     more aware of potential dangers and
                                               health and safety standards for Metal                            operators with the assistance of the                  more proactive in their approach to
                                               and Nonmetallic Open Pit Mines; Sand,                            miners have the primary responsibility                correcting these issues before they cause
                                               Gravel, and Crushed Stone Operations;                            to prevent the existence of unsafe and                or contribute to an accident, injury, or
                                               and Metal and Nonmetallic                                        unhealthful conditions and practices.                 fatality. Under this proposed rule,
                                               Underground Mines. These standards                               Compliance with safety and health                     MSHA anticipates that improved
                                               were promulgated pursuant to the 1966                            standards and adoption of safe work                   communication at the mine site about
                                               Federal Metal and Nonmetallic Mine                               practices provide a substantial measure               adverse conditions and the best
                                               Safety Act (MNM Act). The final rule                             of protection against hazards that cause              practices used to correct the conditions
                                               included some mandatory standards                                accidents, injuries, and fatalities. MSHA             will encourage awareness and
                                               and some advisory standards. The final                           has determined that effective accident                participation at all levels, fostering a
                                               rule at §§ 55.18–8, 56.18–8, and 57.18–                          prevention strategies include an                      culture of safety and health at the mine.
                                               8 set forth an advisory standard stating                         examination of working places.                           In developing the proposed rule,
                                               that each working place ‘‘should be                                 Under existing §§ 56.18002 and                     MSHA reviewed accident investigation
                                               visited by a supervisor or a designated                          57.18002, MSHA requires that a                        reports and the Agency’s enforcement
                                               person at least once each shift and more                         competent person designated by the                    data from January 2010 through mid-
                                               frequently as necessary to insure that                           operator examine each working place at                December 2015. During this period, 122
                                                                                                                least once each shift for conditions that             miners were killed in 110 accidents at
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               work is being done in a safe manner.’’
                                                  The Federal Mine Safety and Health                            may adversely affect safety or health,                MNM mines. MSHA conducted
                                               Act of 1977 (Mine Act) amended the                               that the operator promptly initiate                   investigations into each of these 110
                                               Federal Coal Mine Health and Safety                              appropriate action to correct such                    fatal accidents and issued 252 citations
                                               Act of 1969 (Coal Act) to include MNM                            conditions, and that the operator keep                and orders for violations of 95 different
                                               mines and repealed the MNM Act. The                              records for one year that the                         mandatory safety and health standards.
                                               Mine Act retained the mandatory                                  examinations were conducted. These                    MSHA’s analysis of the accident
                                               standards and regulations promulgated                            standards also require the operator to                investigations further revealed that in


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014       14:36 Jun 07, 2016      Jkt 238001    PO 00000   Frm 00010   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\08JNP1.SGM   08JNP1


                                               36820                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 8, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               more than 60 percent of the fatal                       adverse conditions that existed for more                  place along the banks of the elevated
                                               accidents (67 out of 110), the Agency                   than one shift prior to causing or                        haul road and warned miners before
                                               had issued at least one citation or order               contributing to a fatal accident.1 MSHA                   miners started work in that area. MSHA
                                               for a violation of a mandatory safety or                believes that, had the person making the                  also believes that a record of this hazard
                                               health standard identified in MSHA’s                    examination noted these conditions                        likely would have prompted corrective
                                               Rules to Live By (RTLB) initiative,                     prior to miners working in an area, had                   action and that these actions would
                                               launched in February 2010. Violations                   the conditions been recorded, and had                     have prevented the accident that
                                               of the 19 MNM RTLB standards                            the operator warned miners about these                    occurred.
                                               represent the conditions or practices                   conditions, the accidents may have been                      From 2013 through 2015, there were
                                               that have been most frequently cited as                 prevented.                                                68 fatalities at MNM mines, as
                                               causing or contributing to fatal                           In March 2011, a contract supervisor                   compared with 54 fatalities in the
                                               accidents.                                              was fatally injured when he was struck                    preceding three years (2010–2012). To
                                                  At this point, MSHA believes that                    by a section of pipe. He was supervising                  reduce fatalities at MNM mines, MSHA
                                               most operators and miners should be                     the operation of joining two ends of                      has engaged, and continues to share best
                                               familiar with the RTLB standards.                       pipe using a pipe-fusion machine. The                     practices and training materials with
                                               Under the proposal, the additional                      positioning cylinder was defective and                    stakeholders in the MNM industry. The
                                               communication that would be required                    had been removed from the pipe-fusion                     Agency has provided stakeholders with
                                               by operators (1) notifying miners of                    machine eight days prior to the                           guidance and compliance assistance
                                               conditions that violate RTLB standards                  accident. Since the positioning cylinder                  materials to help mine operators find
                                               and other adverse conditions and (2)                    was removed, the machine could not                        and fix violations of mandatory safety
                                               recording additional information about                  hold the pipe in place. MSHA believes                     and health standards. These efforts
                                               these conditions in the examination                     that, had a competent person identified                   included stakeholder conferences,
                                               record should further serve to educate                  and recorded the adverse condition                        online training sessions, and a ‘‘walk
                                               miners, their representatives, and                      before miners used the machine, the                       and talk’’ safety initiative in which
                                               operators about adverse conditions and                  operator could have warned miners and                     MSHA’s inspectors and field staff
                                               encourage prompt corrective action. In                  removed the machine from service until                    provided operators and miners
                                               this way, MSHA believes the proposal                    the cylinder was repaired and replaced,                   information about potentially hazardous
                                               will help prevent fatalities and other                  thus preventing the fatal accident.                       tasks and conditions, as well as best
                                               accidents.                                                 In January 2015, a fatal accident                      mining practices to prevent accidents,
                                                  Over the years, MSHA has issued                      occurred at a phosphate rock mine. A                      injuries, and fatalities. These efforts,
                                               Program Policy Letters (PPL) regarding                  heavy equipment operator was                              however, have not been sufficient to
                                               working place examinations, including                   operating an excavator near a water-                      address the increase in fatalities that
                                               PPL No. P94–IV–5 (1994); PPL No. P96–                   filled ditch when the excavator tipped                    began in 2013.
                                               IV–2 (1996); PPL No. P10–IV–3 (2010);                   on its side, into the water, trapping the                    This proposed rule is intended to
                                               PPL No. P14–IV–01 (2014); and PPL                       miner inside the nearly submerged cab.                    strengthen MSHA’s requirements for
                                               P15–IV–01 (July 22, 2015). The PPLs are                 The equipment operator was rescued                        MNM working place examinations to
                                               MSHA’s guidance and best practices                      from the cab and hospitalized, but died                   help prevent the kind of accidents
                                               regarding compliance with the existing                  later that day. Three days prior to the                   discussed above. MSHA believes that
                                               standards. MSHA inspectors, miners,                     accident, several inches of rain fell in                  the proposed requirements that
                                               mine operators, trainers, and the mining                the area causing the ditch to fill with                   operators examine working places
                                               community use these PPLs as guidance                    water and overflow, making the ditch                      before miners begin work in an area and
                                               in determining how best to comply with                  invisible to persons working in the area.                 notify miners of any adverse conditions
                                               MSHA’s standards on working place                       MSHA believes that had a competent                        that may adversely affect safety or
                                               examinations.                                           person conducted a workplace                              health would assure that miners and
                                                  As discussed in PPL No. P15–IV–01                    examination before miners started                         operators are aware of hazards and take
                                               and other PPLs, MSHA believes that, for                 working in the area the hazard would                      proactive actions to correct hazards. In
                                               a record to provide meaningful                          have been identified; notification to                     addition, the record required under the
                                               information, it should contain the                      affected miners of the water-filled ditch                 proposed rule would help assure that
                                               following: (1) The date of the                          would have made them aware of the                         adverse conditions are identified and
                                               examination; (2) the examiner’s name;                   hazardous condition; and a record of the                  corrected promptly.
                                               and (3) the working places examined.                    hazardous condition would have
                                               As reflected in the PPLs, MSHA also                     prompted corrective action and                            III. Section-by-Section Analysis
                                               believes that, as a best practice, the                  prevented the fatality.                                      This proposed rule would help reduce
                                               record should include a description of                     Another fatal accident in March 2015                   common causes of accidents, injuries,
                                               the conditions found that adversely                     involved a haul truck driver at a sand                    and fatalities at MNM mines by
                                               affect safety or health.                                and gravel mine. The driver was driving                   enhancing the effectiveness of working
                                                  Effective working place examinations                 on an elevated roadway on an                              place examinations.
                                               are a fundamental accident prevention                   embankment next to the mine’s dredge
                                               tool; they allow operators to find and fix              pond. The roadway, which was recently                     A. Sections 56.18002(a) and
                                               adverse conditions and violations of                    established, had no berm as a barrier to                  57.18002(a)—Requirements for
                                               health and safety standards before they                 the drop-off as required by MSHA                          Conducting Working Place
                                               cause injury or death to miners. MSHA                                                                             Examinations
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                                                                       standards. The truck went off the
                                               believes that notifying miners of adverse               roadway into the pond. The driver was                       Proposed §§ 56.18002(a) and
                                               conditions in their working place allows                hospitalized and died two days later.                     57.18002(a) would require an
                                               the miner to take appropriate                           MSHA believes that the operator should                    examination of each working place at
                                               precautions until the adverse condition                 have recognized during a workplace                        least once each shift, before work begins
                                               is corrected. Records alert operators to                examination that a berm was not in                        in an area, for conditions that may
                                               take prompt corrective action. The                                                                                adversely affect the safety or health of
                                               following are recent examples of                          1 Examples   of accidents cited may be in litigation.   miners.


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:36 Jun 07, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00011   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\08JNP1.SGM    08JNP1


                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 8, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                           36821

                                                 Existing §§ 56.2 and 57.2 define the                  supervisor to conduct the examination                  B. Sections 56.18002(b) and
                                               phrase ‘‘working place’’ as: ‘‘any place                in most cases, an experienced non-                     57.18002(b)—Requirements for Records
                                               in or about a mine where work is being                  supervisory person may also be                         of Working Place Examinations
                                               performed.’’ In PPL No. P15–IV–01,                      ‘‘competent.’’ The PPLs emphasized that                  MSHA believes that, to be effective,
                                               MSHA clarifies that ‘‘working place’’                   a competent person designated by the                   working place examinations must be
                                               applies to all locations at a mine where                operator under §§ 56.18002(a) and                      timely, made by a competent person,
                                               miners work in the extraction or milling                57.18002(a) must already have the                      and made in the areas where miners
                                               processes. The Agency further explains                  experience and training to be able to                  work. MSHA is proposing that working
                                               that this includes areas where work is                  perform the examination and identify                   place examination records include
                                               performed on an infrequent basis, such                  safety and health hazards.                             additional information the Agency
                                               as areas accessed primarily during                                                                             believes is necessary to accomplish the
                                               periods of maintenance or clean-up, if                     MSHA requests comment on whether
                                                                                                       the Agency should require that the                     intent of the standards.
                                               miners will be performing work in these                                                                          The proposed rule would add new
                                               areas during the shift. As discussed in                 competent person conducting a working
                                                                                                       place examination have a minimum                       requirements addressing the contents of
                                               previous guidance, the ‘‘working place’’                                                                       the examination record. The
                                               would not include roads not directly                    level of experience or particular training
                                                                                                       or knowledge to identify workplace                     introductory text to proposed
                                               involved in the mining process,
                                                                                                       hazards. The Agency requests                           §§ 56.18002(b) and 57.18002(b) would
                                               administrative office buildings, parking
                                                                                                       information on whether a competent                     continue to require that a record of the
                                               lots, lunchrooms, toilet facilities, or
                                                                                                       person should have a certain ability,                  working place examination be made.
                                               inactive storage areas. Operators would
                                                                                                       experience, knowledge, or training that                The proposed rule would add the
                                               be required to examine isolated,
                                                                                                       would enable the person to recognize                   requirement that the competent person
                                               abandoned, or idle areas of mines or
                                                                                                       conditions that could adversely affect                 who conducted the examination sign
                                               mills only when miners have to perform
                                                                                                       safety or health. Please provide the                   and date the record before the end of the
                                               work in these areas during the shift.
                                                 The existing standards for                            rationale, including supporting                        shift for which the examination was
                                               examinations of working places in                                                                              made. Proposed §§ 56.18002(b)(1) and
                                                                                                       documentation.
                                               MNM mines in §§ 56.18002(a) and                                                                                57.18002(b)(1) would require the record
                                                                                                          Proposed §§ 56.18002(a)(1) and                      to include the locations examined and
                                               57.18002(a) require that a competent
                                                                                                       57.18002(a)(1) incorporate the existing                a description of any adverse conditions
                                               person designated by the mine operator
                                                                                                       requirements in §§ 56.18002(a) and                     found. MSHA believes that this
                                               examine each working place at least
                                                                                                       57.18002(a) that the mine operator                     proposed requirement for a description
                                               once per shift for conditions that may
                                               adversely affect safety or health and                   promptly initiate action to correct                    of the adverse conditions found would
                                               promptly initiate appropriate action to                 conditions that may adversely affect                   expedite the correction of these
                                               correct such conditions. While the                      safety or health that are found during                 conditions. Proposed
                                               existing standards permit the                           the examination, and would add a new                   §§ 56.18002(b)(2)(i) through (iii) and
                                               examination to be made at any time                      requirement that the operator promptly                 57.18002(b)(2)(i) through (iii) are new
                                               during the shift, MSHA is proposing                     notify the miners in any affected areas                provisions; they would require that, if
                                               that the examination start before work                  of any adverse conditions found during                 any adverse condition is found, the
                                               begins in an area. MSHA believes that                   the working place examination. MSHA                    record must include:
                                               the proposal is consistent with the                     believes that miners need to know about                  • A description of the action taken to
                                               remedial intent of the Mine Act and the                 adverse conditions in their working                    correct the adverse condition,
                                               existing standards. MSHA also believes                  place so that they can take precautions                  • The date that the corrective action
                                               that the proposed requirement that                      to avoid an accident or injury.                        was taken, and
                                               operators conduct an examination of                        Proposed §§ 56.18002(a)(2) and                        • The name of the person who made
                                               working places before work begins in an                 57.18002(a)(2) are substantively the                   the record of the corrective action and
                                               area would provide better protection of                 same as existing §§ 56.18002(c) and                    the date the corrective action was taken.
                                               miners. MSHA requests comments on                                                                              (MSHA expects that the person taking
                                                                                                       57.18002(c). These provisions would
                                               whether the Agency should require that                                                                         the corrective action would make this
                                                                                                       require that, if the competent person
                                               examinations be conducted within a                                                                             record.)
                                                                                                       finds conditions that may present an
                                               specified time period, e.g., 2 hours,                                                                            The proposed rule would redesignate
                                                                                                       imminent danger, these conditions must
                                               before miners start work in an area.                                                                           the requirement for recordkeeping in
                                                                                                       be brought to the immediate attention of
                                               Please provide specific rationale for                                                                          existing §§ 56.18002(b) and 57.18002(b)
                                                                                                       the operator. The operator must
                                               your position, and include the merits for                                                                      as proposed §§ 56.18002(b)(3) and
                                                                                                       immediately withdraw all persons from
                                               your argument.                                                                                                 57.18002(b)(3). Existing §§ 56.18002(b)
                                                                                                       the affected area until the danger is                  and 57.18002(b) require that a record
                                                 Like the existing rule, the proposed                  abated, except persons referred to in
                                               rule would require that the examination                                                                        that such working place examinations
                                                                                                       section 104(c) of the Mine Act who are                 were conducted shall be kept by the
                                               be made by a competent person
                                                                                                       necessary to eliminate the imminent                    operator for a period of one year and
                                               designated by the mine operator. In PPL
                                                                                                       danger.                                                shall be made available for review by
                                               No. P15–IV–01, MSHA emphasized that
                                               the competent person designated by the                     Imminent danger is defined in section               the Secretary or his authorized
                                               operator to conduct working place                       3(j) of the Mine Act as the existence of               representative. The proposed rule
                                                                                                       any condition or practice which could                  would add new requirements that the
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               examinations should be able to
                                               recognize hazards and adverse                           reasonably be expected to cause death                  record also be made available to miners
                                               conditions that are expected or known                   or serious physical harm before such                   and their representatives and that a
                                               to occur in a specific work area or that                condition or practice can be abated.                   copy be provided to the Secretary or his
                                               are predictable to someone familiar with                From January 2010 through December                     authorized representative or a miners’
                                               the mining industry. MSHA states in                     2015, MSHA has issued 1,819 imminent                   representative when they request a
                                               various PPLs that, although a best                      danger orders under section 107(a) of                  copy. MSHA solicits comments on these
                                               practice is for a foreman or other                      the Mine Act in MNM mines.                             proposed requirements.


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:36 Jun 07, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00012   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\08JNP1.SGM   08JNP1


                                               36822                           Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 8, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               C. Request for Comments                                                     IV. Executive Order 12866: Regulatory                                         inconsistency or otherwise interfering
                                                  Please provide any other data or                                         Planning and Review and Executive                                             with an action taken or planned by
                                               information that would be useful to                                         Order 13563: Improving Regulation and                                         another agency; (3) materially altering
                                               MSHA as the Agency evaluates its                                            Regulatory Review                                                             the budgetary impacts of entitlements,
                                               proposal related to working place                                              Executive Orders 13563 and 12866                                           grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
                                               examinations in MNM mines. Please                                           direct agencies to assess all costs and                                       rights and obligations of recipients
                                               provide the rationale and sufficient                                        benefits of available regulatory                                              thereof; or (4) raising novel legal or
                                               detail in your comments to enable                                           alternatives and, if regulation is                                            policy issues arising out of legal
                                               proper Agency review and                                                    necessary, to select regulatory                                               mandates, the President’s priorities, or
                                               consideration. Where possible, include                                      approaches that maximize net benefits                                         the principles set forth in this Executive
                                               specific examples to support the                                            (including potential economic,                                                Order.
                                               rationale and other relevant                                                environmental, public health and safety
                                                                                                                                                                                                            Based on its assessment of the costs
                                               information, including past experience,                                     effects, distributive impacts, and
                                               studies and articles, and standard                                          equity). Executive Order 13563                                                and benefits, MSHA has determined
                                               professional practices. Include any                                         emphasizes the importance of                                                  that this proposed rule would not have
                                               related cost and benefit data with your                                     quantifying both costs and benefits, of                                       an annual effect of $100 million or more
                                               submission, and information on                                              reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,                                         on the economy and, therefore, would
                                               economic and technological feasibility.                                     and of promoting flexibility.                                                 not be an economically significant
                                                  Based data reported on MSHA Form                                            Under Executive Order (E.O.) 12866,                                        regulatory action pursuant to section
                                               7000–2, 90 percent of MNM mines                                             the Agency must determine whether a                                           3(f) of E.O. 12866. MSHA requests
                                               employ fewer than 20 miners. In                                             regulatory action is ‘‘significant’’ and                                      comments on all cost and benefit
                                               addition, almost all (98 percent) of                                        subject to review by the Office of                                            estimates presented in this preamble
                                               MNM mines are surface operations.                                           Management and Budget (OMB).                                                  and on the data and assumptions the
                                               Over half of all MNM mines are surface                                      Section 3(f) of E.O. 12866 defines a                                          Agency used to develop estimates.
                                               sand and gravel or crushed stone                                            ‘‘significant regulatory action’’ as an
                                               operations that operate intermittently or                                   action that is likely to result in a rule:                                    A. Population at Risk
                                               seasonally and employ five or fewer                                         (1) Having an annual effect on the
                                                                                                                                                                                                           The proposed rule would apply to all
                                               miners. For this reason, MSHA is                                            economy of $100 million or more, or
                                                                                                                                                                                                         MNM mines in the United States. In
                                               particularly interested in comments                                         adversely and materially affecting a
                                                                                                                                                                                                         2014, there were approximately 11,800
                                               related to the impact of the proposed                                       sector of the economy, productivity,
                                               rule on small mines, particularly                                           competition, jobs, the environment,                                           MNM mines employing 145,800 miners,
                                               comments and suggestions on                                                 public health or safety, or state, local, or                                  excluding office workers, and 75,800
                                               alternatives and best practices that small                                  tribal governments or communities (also                                       contractors working at MNM mines.
                                               mines might use to implement more                                           referred to as ‘‘economically                                                   Table 1 presents the number of MNM
                                               effective working place examinations.                                       significant’’); (2) creating serious                                          mines and employment by mine size.

                                                                                                                TABLE 1—MNM MINES AND EMPLOYMENT IN 2014
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                Total
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            employment
                                                                                                                             Mine size                                                                                           No. of mines                 at mines,
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              excluding
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           office workers

                                               1–19 Employees ......................................................................................................................................................                         10,599                52,328
                                               20–500 Employees ..................................................................................................................................................                             1,162               73,253
                                               501+ Employees ......................................................................................................................................................                                26             20,186
                                               Contractors ..............................................................................................................................................................       ........................           75,762

                                                     Total ..................................................................................................................................................................               11,787               221,529
                                                  Source: MSHA MSIS Data (reported on MSHA Form 7000–2) August 26, 2015.


                                                 The U.S. Department of the Interior                                       mining industry’s MNM output in 2014                                          hours worked and revenue produced at
                                               (DOI) estimated the value of the U.S.                                       to be $77.6 billion.2 Table 2 presents the                                    MNM mines by mine size.

                                                                                                            TABLE 2—MNM TOTAL HOURS AND REVENUES IN 2014
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  Total hours                 Revenue
                                                                                                                             Mine size                                                                                             reported                (in millions of
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   for year                    dollars)

                                               1–19 Employees ......................................................................................................................................................                 86,704,486                  $23,539
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               20–500 Employees ..................................................................................................................................................                  156,402,789                  $42,461
                                               501+ Employees ......................................................................................................................................................                 42,730,947                  $11,600




                                                 2 Production revenue estimates are from DOI, U.S.

                                               Geological Survey (USGS), Mineral Commodity
                                               Summaries 2015, February 2015, page 8.

                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014         14:36 Jun 07, 2016         Jkt 238001       PO 00000        Frm 00013        Fmt 4702       Sfmt 4702        E:\FR\FM\08JNP1.SGM              08JNP1


                                                                              Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 8, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                                                       36823

                                                                                              TABLE 2—MNM TOTAL HOURS AND REVENUES IN 2014—Continued
                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Total hours      Revenue
                                                                                                                            Mine size                                                                                           reported     (in millions of
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                for year         dollars)

                                                    Total ..................................................................................................................................................................   285,838,222         $77,600
                                                 Source: MSHA MSIS Data (total hours worked at MNM mines reported on MSHA Form 7000–2) and estimated DOI reported mine revenues
                                               for 2014 by mine size.


                                               B. Benefits                                                                achieve a financial benefit from reduced                                      days per year a mine operates; the
                                                  The proposed rule would require                                         penalties. From January 2010 through                                          number of working place examinations
                                               additional recordkeeping provisions to                                     December 2015, penalties for MNM                                              made each shift; the number of
                                               assure that adverse conditions are                                         mine operators were $152 million for                                          competent persons required to conduct
                                               recorded and corrected. The proposed                                       violations of all mandatory safety and                                        multiple examinations during a single
                                               rule would provide for more detailed                                       health standards.                                                             shift; the amount of time required to
                                               examination records that include                                                                                                                         record the examination and record
                                                                                                                          C. Compliance Costs                                                           corrective actions taken; and the
                                               essential information that the operator
                                               can use to correct recognized hazards                                        The quantified cost associated with                                         number of shifts per day, by mine size.
                                               and protect miners. The proposed                                           this proposed rule would be the
                                                                                                                                                                                                        Records of Working Place Examinations
                                               provisions to record the adverse                                           additional cost for the expanded
                                                                                                                          recordkeeping requirements. Some mine                                            The proposed rule would revise
                                               conditions found during the
                                                                                                                          operators already conduct and record                                          existing §§ 56.18002(b) and 57.18002(b)
                                               examinations and the corrective actions
                                                                                                                          working place examinations that satisfy                                       by adding requirements that the record
                                               taken to mitigate the hazards, and to
                                                                                                                          the proposed requirements and would                                           of the examination include the locations
                                               notify miners of the adverse conditions
                                                                                                                          have little or no additional cost. Many                                       of all areas examined and a description
                                               that may adversely affect safety or
                                                                                                                          adverse conditions found during the                                           of each adverse condition found, and
                                               health, would better achieve the
                                                                                                                          working place examination are                                                 that the competent person conducting
                                               protections intended under the existing
                                                                                                                          corrected immediately before miners                                           the examination sign and date this
                                               requirements. The additional
                                                                                                                          have an opportunity to encounter the                                          record before the end of the shift for
                                               information recorded in the
                                                                                                                          condition; therefore, MSHA also                                               which the examination was made. Also,
                                               examination records would assist
                                                                                                                          believes that the cost associated with                                        if an adverse condition is found, the
                                               MSHA, mine operators, and miners in
                                                                                                                          examining areas before miners begin                                           record must include a description of the
                                               focusing efforts on correcting hazardous
                                                                                                                          work in that area and with notifying                                          actions taken to correct the adverse
                                               conditions.
                                                  MSHA is unable to quantify the                                          miners of any adverse conditions would                                        condition, the date that corrective action
                                               benefits from this proposed rulemaking,                                    be de minimis. MSHA requests                                                  was taken, and the name of the person
                                               including the proposed provisions that                                     information and data on the costs of this                                     updating the record as well as the date
                                               an examination of the working place be                                     proposed rulemaking.                                                          the record was updated. MSHA expects
                                               conducted before miners begin work in                                        For the purpose of this analysis,                                           that the person taking the corrective
                                               an area; that the operator notify miners                                   MSHA estimates that the competent                                             action would update the record on
                                               in the working place of any conditions                                     person making the record of the                                               completion of the corrective action.
                                               found that may adversely affect their                                      examination of working places would                                           MSHA has no data on the number of
                                               safety or health; and that the                                             earn $31.14 (including benefits). The                                         corrective actions that would be
                                               examination record include a                                               wage rate is from U.S. Metal and                                              recorded under this proposed rule.
                                                                                                                          Industrial Mineral Mine Salaries,                                             However, the Agency believes that the
                                               description of the adverse conditions
                                                                                                                          Wages, and Benefits—2012 Survey                                               time to record the corrective actions
                                               found and the corrective actions taken.
                                                                                                                          Results, InfoMine USA, Inc., 2012.                                            would be minimal at best.
                                               MSHA anticipates, however, that there                                                                                                                       MSHA estimates that it will take a
                                               would be benefits from the proposed                                        MSHA updated rates from 2012 to 2014
                                                                                                                          for inflation using a percent change of                                       competent person approximately 5
                                               requirements, such as expedited                                                                                                                          additional minutes to make the record
                                               correction of adverse conditions, which                                    3.8 percent derived from the BLS
                                                                                                                                                                                                        after each examination. MSHA estimates
                                               would be expected to result in fewer                                       Employment Cost Index
                                                                                                                                                                                                        that the annual cost of making this
                                               injuries and fatalities. MSHA requests                                     (CIU2010000405000I), total
                                                                                                                                                                                                        record for all MNM mines is
                                               information and data on the benefits                                       compensation for private industry
                                                                                                                                                                                                        approximately $10.1 million:
                                               from this proposed rulemaking. Please                                      workers in construction, extraction,                                             • $8.3 million in mines with 1–19
                                               be specific to facilitate any benefits                                     farming, fishing, and forestry                                                employees (10,599 mines × 1 exam/day
                                               quantification that may be possible.                                       occupations (Index available at http://                                       × 300 days/yr × 5 mins × $31.14/hr);
                                                  Net benefits under MSHA’s current                                       data.bls.gov/timeseries/                                                         • $1.8 million in mines with 20–500
                                               analysis would be negative (zero                                           CIU2010000405000I).                                                           employees (1,162 mines × 2 exams/day
                                               quantified benefits minus quantified                                         MSHA also estimates that—                                                   × 300 days/yr × 5 mins × $31.14/hr); and
                                               costs). MSHA also believes that there                                        • Mines with 1–19 employees operate                                            • $40,482 in mines with 501+
                                               would be a financial benefit to MNM                                        one shift per day, 300 days per year; and                                     employees (26 mines × 2 exams/day ×
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               mine operators who conduct working                                           • Mines with 20+ employees operate                                          300 days/yr × 5 mins × $31.14/hr).
                                               place examinations to find and fix                                         two shifts per day, 300 days per year.
                                               adverse conditions and violations of                                         MSHA recognizes that there are many                                         Discounting
                                               health and safety standards before these                                   seasonal and intermittent mines that                                            Discounting is a technique used to
                                               conditions cause injury or death. Mine                                     would be covered by this proposed rule.                                       apply the economic concept that the
                                               operators who conduct effective                                            MSHA requests information and data on                                         preference for the value of money
                                               working place examinations could                                           the Agency’s estimates on the number of                                       decreases over time. In this analysis,


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014        14:36 Jun 07, 2016         Jkt 238001       PO 00000        Frm 00014        Fmt 4702       Sfmt 4702        E:\FR\FM\08JNP1.SGM              08JNP1


                                               36824                  Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 8, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               MSHA provides cost totals at zero, 3,                   substantial number of small entities.                  VII. Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
                                               and 7 percent discount rates. The zero                  The Agency, therefore, is not required to
                                                                                                                                                              A. Summary
                                               percent discount rate is referred to as                 develop an initial regulatory flexibility
                                               the undiscounted rate. MSHA used the                    analysis. The factual basis for this                     This proposed rule contains changes
                                               Excel Net Present Value (NPV) function                  certification is presented below.                      that affect the burden in an existing
                                               to determine the present value of costs                                                                        paperwork package with OMB Control
                                                                                                       A. Definition of a Small Mine                          Number 1219–0089. MSHA estimates
                                               and computed an annualized cost from
                                               the present value using the Excel PMT                      Under the RFA, in analyzing the                     that the proposed rule will result in
                                               function.3 The negative value of the                    impact of a rule on small entities,                    324,375 additional burden hours with
                                               PMT function provides the annualized                    MSHA must use the Small Business                       an associated additional cost of
                                               cost over 10 years at a 3 and 7 percent                 Administration’s (SBA’s) definition for a              approximately $10.1 million annually.
                                               discount rate.                                          small entity, or after consultation with               MSHA requests information and data on
                                                                                                       the SBA Office of Advocacy, establish                  the Agency’s estimates used to calculate
                                               Summary of Costs                                        an alternative definition for the mining               the additional burden hours in the
                                                  MSHA estimates that the total                        industry by publishing that definition in              information collection package for this
                                               undiscounted cost of the proposed rule                  the Federal Register for notice and                    proposed rule.
                                               over a 10-year period would be                          comment. MSHA has not established an
                                                                                                                                                              Records of Working Place Examinations
                                               approximately $101.0 million, $86.2                     alternative definition and, therefore,
                                               million at a 3 percent rate, and $70.9                  must use SBA’s definition. The SBA                       Proposed §§ 56.18002(b)(1) and (2)
                                               million at a 7 percent rate. The total                  defines a small entity in the mining                   and 57.18002(b)(1) and (2) would revise
                                               undiscounted cost annualized over 10                    industry as an establishment with 500                  the existing provisions in §§ 56.18002(b)
                                               years would be approximately $10.1                      or fewer employees.                                    and 57.18002(b) by requiring competent
                                               million per year, $9.8 million per year                    MSHA has also examined the impact                   persons to include in the record of the
                                               at a 3 percent rate, and $9.4 million per               of the proposed rule on mines with                     examination: (1) The locations of all
                                               year at a 7 percent rate.                               fewer than 20 employees, which MSHA                    areas examined, (2) a description of any
                                                                                                       and the mining community have                          adverse condition found, (3) a
                                               V. Feasibility                                          traditionally referred to as ‘‘small                   description of the actions taken to
                                               A. Technological Feasibility                            mines.’’ These small mines differ from                 correct the adverse condition, and (4)
                                                                                                       larger mines not only in the number of                 the date that corrective action was
                                                 The proposed rule contains
                                                                                                       employees, but also in economies of                    taken. The competent person must sign
                                               recordkeeping requirements; the
                                                                                                       scale in material produced, in the type                and date this record before the end of
                                               proposed rule is not technology-forcing.
                                                                                                       and amount of production equipment,                    the shift for which the examination was
                                               MSHA concludes that the rule is
                                                                                                       and in supply inventory. Therefore, the                made. Also, if the record is updated, it
                                               technologically feasible.
                                                                                                       impact of MSHA’s rules and the costs of                must include the date and name of the
                                               B. Economic Feasibility                                 complying with them will also tend to                  person updating the record.
                                                 MSHA has traditionally used a                         differ for these small mines. This                       MSHA estimates that a MNM
                                               revenue screening test—whether the                      analysis complies with the requirements                competent person who conducts
                                               yearly impacts of a regulation are less                 of the RFA for an analysis of the impact               working place examinations earns
                                               than one percent of revenues—to                         on ‘‘small entities’’ using both SBA’s                 $31.14 an hour (includes benefits, see
                                               establish presumptively that the                        definition for small entities in the                   cost section above). MSHA estimates
                                               regulation is economically feasible for                 mining industry and MSHA’s traditional                 that—
                                                                                                       definition.                                              • Mines with 1–19 employees operate
                                               the mining community. The proposed
                                                                                                                                                              one shift per day, 300 days per year;
                                               rule is projected to cost approximately                 B. Factual Basis for Certification                       • Mines with 20–500 employees
                                               $10.1 million per year and the MNM
                                                                                                         MSHA initially evaluates the impacts                 operate two shifts per day, 300 days per
                                               industry has estimated annual revenues
                                                                                                       on small entities by comparing the                     year; and
                                               of $77.6 billion, which is less than one                                                                         • Mines with 501+ employees operate
                                               percent of revenues. MSHA concludes                     estimated compliance costs of a rule for
                                                                                                       small entities in the sector affected by               two shifts per day, 300 days per year.
                                               that the proposed rule would be                                                                                  MSHA’s estimates of MNM mine
                                               economically feasible for the MNM                       the rule to the estimated revenues for
                                                                                                       the affected sector. When estimated                    operators’ additional annual burden
                                               mining industry.                                                                                               hours and burden hour costs for
                                                                                                       compliance costs are less than one
                                               VI. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis and                 percent of the estimated revenues, the                 examination records are presented
                                               Small Business Regulatory Enforcement                   Agency believes it is generally                        below.
                                               Fairness Act                                            appropriate to conclude that there is no               Additional Burden Hours
                                                 Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility                significant economic impact on a                         • 10,599 mines (with 1–19
                                               Act (RFA) of 1980, as amended by the                    substantial number of small entities.                  employees) × 1 exam × 300 days × 5 min
                                               Small Business Regulatory Enforcement                   When estimated compliance costs                        = 264,975 hr
                                               Fairness Act (SBREFA), MSHA has                         exceed one percent of revenues, MSHA                     • 1,162 mines (with 20–500
                                               analyzed the impact of the proposed                     investigates whether further analysis is               employees) × 2 exams × 300 days × 5
                                               rule on small entities. Based on that                   required. MSHA projects that the                       min = 58,100 hr
                                               analysis, MSHA certifies that the                       proposed compliance costs of $10.1                       • 26 mines (with >500 employees) ×
                                                                                                       million for MNM mines with 1 to 500                    2 exams × 300 days × 5 min = 1,300 hr
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               proposed rule would not have a
                                               significant economic impact on a                        employees is less than one percent of                    • Total Burden Hours = 324,375 hr
                                                                                                       the $66 billion revenue of these mines
                                                  3 Office of Management and Budget, Office of         in 2014. Proposed compliance costs for                 Additional Burden Hour Costs
                                               Information and Regulatory Affairs, Regulatory          MNM mines with 1 to 19 employees is                      • Total Burden Hour Costs = 324,375
                                               Impact Analysis: Frequently Asked Questions,
                                                                                                       $8.3 million, which is less than one                   hr × $31.14/hr = $10,101,038
                                               February 7, 2011. [http://www.whitehouse.gov/
                                               sites/default/files/omb/assets/OMB/circulars/a004/      percent of the $23.5 billion revenue of                  There are no other associated burden
                                               a-4_FAQ.pdf.]                                           these mines in 2014.                                   hour costs because the proposed rule


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:36 Jun 07, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00015   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\08JNP1.SGM   08JNP1


                                                                      Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 8, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                  36825

                                               only adds documentation requirements                    D. Executive Order 12988: Civil Justice                of approximately $10.1 million to the
                                               to a record already required by existing                Reform                                                 metal and nonmetal mining industry,
                                               standards.                                                 Section 3 of Executive Order (E.O.)                 only the impact on uranium mines is
                                               B. Procedural Details                                   12988 contains requirements for Federal                applicable in this case. MSHA data
                                                                                                       agencies promulgating new regulations                  show only three active uranium mines
                                                 The information collection package                    or reviewing existing regulations to                   in 2014. The Energy Information
                                               for this proposed rule has been                         minimize litigation by eliminating                     Administration’s annual uranium report
                                               submitted to OMB for review under 44                    drafting errors and ambiguity, providing               for 2014 4 shows 4.7 million pounds at
                                               U.S.C. 3504, paragraph (h) of the                       a clear legal standard for affected                    an average price of $39.17, for sales of
                                               Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, as                     conduct rather than a general standard,                approximately $185.9 million. Using
                                               amended. Comments on the information                    promoting simplification, and reducing                 average annual costs, the impact to all
                                               collection requirements should be sent                  burden. MSHA has reviewed this                         active uranium mine operators is less
                                               to both OMB and MSHA. Addresses for                     proposed rule and has determined that
                                               both offices can be found in the                                                                               than $4,000. MSHA has concluded that
                                                                                                       it would meet the applicable standards                 it is not a significant energy action
                                               ADDRESSES section of this preamble.                     provided in E.O. 12988 to minimize                     because it is not likely to have a
                                               VIII. Other Regulatory Considerations                   litigation and undue burden on the                     significant adverse effect on the supply,
                                                                                                       Federal court system.
                                               A. The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                                                                            distribution, or use of energy.
                                               of 1995                                                 E. Executive Order 13045: Protection of                Accordingly, under this analysis, no
                                                                                                       Children From Environmental Health                     further Agency action or analysis is
                                                 MSHA has reviewed the proposed                        Risks and Safety Risks                                 required.
                                               rule under the Unfunded Mandates
                                               Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C. 1501 et                      MSHA has determined that this                        I. Executive Order 13272: Proper
                                               seq.). MSHA has determined that this                    proposed rule will have no adverse                     Consideration of Small Entities in
                                               proposed rule does not include any                      impact on children. Accordingly, E.O.
                                                                                                                                                              Agency Rulemaking
                                               federal mandate that may result in                      13045 requires no further Agency action
                                                                                                       or analysis.                                             MSHA has reviewed the proposed
                                               increased expenditures by State, local,
                                               or tribal governments; nor will it                      F. Executive Order 13132: Federalism                   rule to assess and take appropriate
                                               increase private sector expenditures by                                                                        account of its potential impact on small
                                                                                                         MSHA has determined that this
                                               more than $100 million (adjusted for                    proposed rule does not have federalism                 businesses, small governmental
                                               inflation) in any one year or                           implications because it will not have                  jurisdictions, and small organizations.
                                               significantly or uniquely affect small                  substantial direct effects on the States,              MSHA has determined that the
                                               governments. Accordingly, the                           on the relationship between the national               proposed rule would not have a
                                               Unfunded Mandates Reform Act                            government and the States, or on the                   significant economic impact on a
                                               requires no further Agency action or                    distribution of power and                              substantial number of small entities.
                                               analysis.                                               responsibilities among the various                     IX. References
                                               B. The Treasury and General                             levels of government. Accordingly, E.O.
                                               Government Appropriations Act of                        13132 requires no further Agency action                  Salzer, Krista Noyes, survey results
                                               1999: Assessment of Federal                             or analysis.                                           compilation ‘‘2012 U.S. Coal Mines Salaries,
                                               Regulations and Policies on Families                                                                           Wages, and Benefits—2012, U.S. Metal and
                                                                                                       G. Executive Order 13175: Consultation                 Industrial Mineral Mine Salaries, Wages, and
                                                  Section 654 of the Treasury and                      and Coordination With Indian Tribal                    Benefits’’, InfoMine USA, Inc.
                                               General Government Appropriations                       Governments                                              U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S.
                                               Act of 1999 (5 U.S.C. 601 note) requires                  MSHA has determined that this                        Geological Survey, Mineral Commodity
                                               agencies to assess the impact of Agency                 proposed rule does not have tribal                     Summaries 2015, February 2015, page 8.
                                               action on family well-being. MSHA has                   implications because it will not have                    U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor
                                               determined that this proposed rule will                 substantial direct effects on one or more              Statistics, Employment Cost Index
                                               have no effect on family stability or                   Indian tribes, on the relationship                     CIU2010000405000I, total compensation for
                                               safety, marital commitment, parental                    between the Federal Government and                     private industry workers in construction,
                                               rights and authority, or income or                      Indian tribes, or on the distribution of               extraction, farming, fishing, and forestry
                                               poverty of families and children.                       power and responsibilities between the                 occupations, Index.
                                               Accordingly, MSHA certifies that this                   Federal Government and Indian tribes.                    U.S. Energy Information Administration,
                                               proposed rule would not impact family                   Accordingly, E.O. 13175 requires no                    Independent Statistics & Analysis: Domestic
                                               well-being.                                             further Agency action or analysis.                     Uranium Production Report 2014, April
                                                                                                                                                              2015.
                                               C. Executive Order 12630: Government                    H. Executive Order 13211: Actions                        U.S. Office of Management and Budget,
                                               Actions and Interference With                           Concerning Regulations That                            Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs,
                                               Constitutionally Protected Property                     Significantly Affect Energy Supply,                    Regulatory Impact Analysis: Frequently
                                               Rights                                                  Distribution, or Use                                   Asked Questions, February 7, 2011.
                                                  Section 5 of Executive Order (E.O.)                     Executive Order 13211 requires
                                                                                                                                                              List of Subjects in 30 CFR Parts 56 and
                                               12630 requires Federal agencies to                      agencies to publish a statement of
                                                                                                                                                              57
                                               ‘‘identify the takings implications of                  energy effects when a rule has a
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                               proposed regulatory actions . . . .’’                   significant energy action that adversely                Explosives, Fire prevention,
                                               MSHA has determined that this                           affects energy supply, distribution, or                Hazardous substances, Metals, Mine
                                               proposed rule does not include a                        use. MSHA has reviewed this proposed
                                               regulatory or policy action with takings                rule for its energy effects because the
                                               implications. Accordingly, E.O. 12630                   proposed rule applies to the metal and
                                               requires no further Agency action or                    nonmetal mining sector. Although this                    4 http://www.eia.gov/uranium/production/

                                               analysis.                                               proposed rule will result in yearly costs              annual/pdf/dupr.pdf, page 6.



                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014   14:36 Jun 07, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00016   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\08JNP1.SGM   08JNP1


                                               36826                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 110 / Wednesday, June 8, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                               safety and health, Reporting and                          year; shall make the records available                 DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
                                               recordkeeping requirements.                               for inspection by authorized
                                                                                                         representatives of the Secretary and the               Mine Safety and Health Administration
                                               Joseph A. Main,
                                                                                                         representatives of miners; and shall
                                               Assistant Secretary of Labor for Mine Safety              provide these representatives a copy on                30 CFR Parts 57, 70, 72, and 75
                                               and Health.
                                                                                                         request.                                               RIN 1219–AB86
                                                 For the reasons set out in the
                                               preamble, and under the authority of the                  PART 57—SAFETY AND HEALTH                              [Docket No. MSHA–2014–0031]
                                               Federal Mine Safety and Health Act of                     STANDARDS—UNDERGROUND
                                               1977, as amended by the Mine                              METAL AND NONMETAL MINES                               Exposure of Underground Miners to
                                               Improvement and New Emergency                                                                                    Diesel Exhaust
                                               Response Act of 2006, MSHA is                             ■ 3. The authority citation for part 57
                                                                                                         continues to read as follows:                          AGENCY:  Mine Safety and Health
                                               proposing to amend chapter I of title 30                                                                         Administration, Labor.
                                               of the Code of Federal Regulations as                         Authority: 30 U.S.C. 811.
                                                                                                                                                                ACTION: Request for information.
                                               follows:                                                  ■ 4. Revise § 57.18002 to read as
                                                                                                         follows:                                               SUMMARY:   The Mine Safety and Health
                                               PART 56—SAFETY AND HEALTH                                                                                        Administration (MSHA) is requesting
                                               STANDARDS—SURFACE METAL AND                               § 57.18002    Examination of working places.           information and data on approaches to
                                               NONMETAL MINES                                              (a) A competent person designated by                 control and monitor miners’ exposures
                                                                                                         the operator shall examine each working                to diesel exhaust. Epidemiological
                                               ■ 1. The authority citation for part 56
                                                                                                         place at least once each shift, before                 studies by the National Institute for
                                               continues to read as follows:
                                                                                                         miners begin work in that place, for                   Occupational Safety and Health
                                                   Authority: 30 U.S.C. 811.                             conditions that may adversely affect                   (NIOSH) and the National Cancer
                                               ■ 2. Revise § 56.18002 to read as                         safety or health.                                      Institute (NCI) have found that diesel
                                               follows:                                                    (1) The operator shall promptly notify               exhaust exposure increases miners’ risk
                                                                                                         miners in any affected areas of any                    of death due to lung cancer. In June
                                               § 56.18002       Examination of working places.           adverse conditions found that may                      2012, the International Agency for
                                                 (a) A competent person designated by                    adversely affect safety or health and                  Research on Cancer (IARC) classified
                                               the operator shall examine each working                   promptly initiate appropriate action to                diesel exhaust as a human carcinogen.
                                               place at least once each shift, before                    correct such conditions.                               Because of the carcinogenic health risk
                                               miners begin work in that place, for                        (2) Conditions noted by the person                   to miners from exposure to diesel
                                               conditions that may adversely affect                      conducting the examination that may                    exhaust and to prevent material
                                               safety or health.                                         present an imminent danger shall be                    impairment of miners’ health, MSHA is
                                                 (1) The operator shall promptly notify                  brought to the immediate attention of                  reviewing the Agency’s existing
                                               miners in any affected areas of any                       the operator who shall withdraw all                    standards and policy guidance on
                                               adverse conditions found that may                         persons from the area affected (except                 controlling miners’ exposures to diesel
                                               adversely affect safety or health and                     persons referred to in section 104(c) of               exhaust to evaluate the effectiveness of
                                               promptly initiate appropriate action to                   the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act                 the protections now in place to preserve
                                               correct such conditions.                                  of 1977) until the danger is abated.                   miners’ health.
                                                 (2) Conditions noted by the person                        (b) A record of each examination shall               DATES: Comments must be received or
                                               conducting the examination that may                       be made and the person conducting the
                                               present an imminent danger shall be                                                                              postmarked by midnight Eastern
                                                                                                         examination shall sign and date the                    Standard Time on September 1, 2016.
                                               brought to the immediate attention of                     record before the end of the shift for
                                               the operator who shall withdraw all                                                                              ADDRESSES: Submit comments and
                                                                                                         which the examination was made.
                                               persons from the area affected (except                                                                           informational materials, identified by
                                                                                                           (1) The record shall include the
                                               persons referred to in section 104(c) of                                                                         RIN 1219–AB86 or Docket No. MSHA–
                                                                                                         locations of all areas examined and a
                                               the Federal Mine Safety and Health Act                                                                           2014–0031, by one of the following
                                                                                                         description of each condition found that
                                               of 1977) until the danger is abated.                                                                             methods:
                                                                                                         may adversely affect the safety or health                • Federal E-Rulemaking Portal:
                                                 (b) A record of each examination shall                  of miners.
                                               be made and the person conducting the                                                                            http://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
                                                                                                           (2) The record also shall include:                   on-line instructions for submitting
                                               examination shall sign and date the                         (i) A description of the corrective
                                               record before the end of the shift for                                                                           comments.
                                                                                                         action taken,                                            • Electronic Mail: zzMSHA-
                                               which the examination was made.                             (ii) The date that the corrective action
                                                 (1) The record shall include the                                                                               comments@dol.gov.
                                                                                                         was taken, and                                           • Mail: MSHA, Office of Standards,
                                               locations of all areas examined and a                       (iii) The name of the person who
                                               description of each condition found that                                                                         Regulations, and Variances, 201 12th
                                                                                                         made the record of the corrective action               Street South, Arlington, Virginia 22202–
                                               may adversely affect the safety or health                 and the date the record of the corrective
                                               of miners.                                                                                                       5452.
                                                                                                         action was made.                                         • Hand Delivery or Courier: 201 12th
                                                 (2) The record also shall include:
                                                                                                           (3) The operator shall maintain the                  Street South, Arlington, Virginia,
                                                 (i) A description of the corrective
                                                                                                         examination records for at least one                   between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
                                               action taken,
                                                                                                         year; shall make the records available
ehiers on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                 (ii) The date that the corrective action                                                                       Monday through Friday, except Federal
                                               was taken, and                                            for inspection by authorized                           holidays. Sign in at the receptionist’s
                                                 (iii) The name of the person who                        representatives of the Secretary and the               desk in Suite 4E401.
                                               made the record of the corrective action                  representatives of miners; and shall                     • Fax: 202–693–9441.
                                               and the date the record of the corrective                 provide these representatives a copy on                  Instructions: All submissions must
                                               action was made.                                          request.                                               include ‘‘RIN 1219–AB86’’ or ‘‘Docket
                                                 (3) The operator shall maintain the                     [FR Doc. 2016–13218 Filed 6–7–16; 8:45 am]             No. MSHA–2014–0031.’’ Do not include
                                               examination records for at least one                      BILLING CODE 4520–43–P                                 personal information that you do not


                                          VerDate Sep<11>2014     14:36 Jun 07, 2016   Jkt 238001   PO 00000   Frm 00017   Fmt 4702   Sfmt 4702   E:\FR\FM\08JNP1.SGM   08JNP1



Document Created: 2016-06-08 03:10:17
Document Modified: 2016-06-08 03:10:17
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; notice of public hearings.
DatesComments must be received or postmarked by midnight Eastern Time on September 6, 2016.
FR Citation81 FR 36818 
RIN Number1219-AB87
CFR Citation30 CFR 56
30 CFR 57
CFR AssociatedExplosives; Fire Prevention; Hazardous Substances; Metals; Mine Safety and Health and Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements

2025 Federal Register | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy
USC | CFR | eCFR